.Ozymandias
Child of Time
- 762
- Posts
- 16
- Years
- Karnac (in RL, The UK)
- Seen Mar 14, 2010
Hi, and welcome to my first pokémon fanfic! I've written for other fandoms, most of which is on my ff.net account, but this is my first go at a pokémon fanfiction, which combines my two passions; pokémon and science. In this case, it's forensic science.
I'm a forensic science student myself, so my knowledge on the subject is pretty good and I have a lot of interest in science in general. I hope that I bring the best out of the science in this fic.
WARNINGS: A little gore, nothing hugely graphic, and then your usual pokémon battles later on.
Huge great big thanks to Laterna, who beta'ed for me and provided a tonne of support while I was writing this.
Enjoy!
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
I'm a forensic science student myself, so my knowledge on the subject is pretty good and I have a lot of interest in science in general. I hope that I bring the best out of the science in this fic.
WARNINGS: A little gore, nothing hugely graphic, and then your usual pokémon battles later on.
Huge great big thanks to Laterna, who beta'ed for me and provided a tonne of support while I was writing this.
Enjoy!
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
*~*~*~*~*~*
I was used to crime scenes being busy with other people and their pokémon milling around. There was always far more people at crime scenes than was totally necessary, though they had learnt from several ear-bashing's that walking on the crime scene was the biggest no-no in the book. I also was used to kneeling beside bodies and picking up evidence, mentally denying what my eyes were seeing, and compartmentalising the visions.
Do you think it was murder? I turned my head to my Gardevoir, who had spoken telepathically to me, shrugged, and she made a small sound that I knew was a giggle. She, like myself, had a strange sense of humour, but I loved her anyway. I peeled my gloves off, chucked them in the nearest bio-hazard bag, and went to Officer Jenny who was guarding the scene. The other officers were keeping a reasonable distance from the body, but they still kept flashing their lights over the scene to get a good look. I would be having words about disrespecting the deceased, but only once this crime scene was finished with.
"Judging by the location of the body and the injuries sustained by the victim, I'd say you're looking for a professional hit-man," I told Jenny, and her frame seemed to crumple slightly at the diagnosis. We had had four other murders just like this in Eterna in the last ten days, and the strain was beginning to show on everybody. She looked worried and tired, and underlying these emotions was that helplessness that we all felt when murders kept happening. It had been a long week so far, and it was only going to get worse if these bodies kept turning up.
You've done it now; there hasn't been a murder in Eterna Forest for a hundred years! I ignored Gardevoir's comment and waited for the officer to respond.
"I just don't understand it; he's a businessman, for one thing, what was he doing in here? It's hardly the most direct route from Floarama Town to Eterna, and anyway, mostly everyone has a Flying pokémon with them these days. What do you think?" she asked me, trying to make sense of the chaos that seemed to exude from these attacks. I shrugged again and rubbed my eyes; it had been a long day and Jenny was not the sort of person to bounce ideas off of at four in the morning.
"It seems like he was lured in here, judging by how close he is to the Eterna-side entrance. It's more common than you'd have thought, because when you need the money, sometimes you'll do anything - including hijacking businessmen. Was he carrying anything worth a lot of money?" I asked her, grabbing my notepad and jotting down some notes about the scene. I'd write them up when I got back home, but that could be hours yet.
"Not when I searched his pockets for an identification. I didn't find anything on him, besides a Pokétech and a half-dozen unused pokéballs," she told me, and I scribbled in my usual untidy handwriting. I wrote my notes in code, a code only I could understand, to maintain confidentiality and the chain of evidence of the case.
"Well, there's not a lot else I can do, until they come from the hospital to take him away," I concluded, and looked past her for a moment at the victim. He was flat on his back, arms and legs spreadeagled across the path through the forest, and to the casual eye, he would have looked asleep. We knew better; his body had familiar marks on it that told us he was poisoned by a Nidoran's Poison Point. He was the fifth person in the last week to died from this poison, and we were drawing a total blank on connecting the victims. "I think I'll head back home to write up my notes and try to catch up on some ground-work."
"What about sleep, Elise?" Jenny asked me, and I laughed.
"Sleep is for teenagers and Snorlax's, Jen, you know that," I replied, laughing still as I retrieved my bag and shoved my notepad forcefully into it. Jenny waved me off as I whipped out my Pokétech and dialled the lab. The night secretary answered, and I told him what had happened for the crime records, and reminded him that the press were to be kept firmly out of the loop. He was a genial man who I had a lot of time for, and he knew his job like the back of his hand. It's always nice to work with a professional. "Jenny, I'll give you a call when the hospital tell me any news," I called into the dark, and the officer waved me away. I shrugged and returned Gardevoir to her pokéball, knowing she'd give me hell for it later. Pulling my bike free from the thorn bush it was entangled in, I hopped on board and pedalled off down the familiar road.
Eterna Forest, and Eterna City beyond, were not usually within my juristiction. However, in this particular case, I'd had to make an exception, when the scenes of crime officer for the Eterna district was counted among the dead men in the forest, and I was enjoying staying away from Sunnyshore City for a while. Generally, there was an officer in every town and a scenes of crime officer too, with a centralised laboratory in Veilstone City, though each scenes of crime officer had their own small laboratory in the town they were based. It was a good system, until something knocked out one of the scenes of crime officers, and then it caused problems.
Alex, the scenes of crime officer for Pastoria City, was covering my patch in Sunnyshore; he was one of the least busy members of the crime lab, so it made sense for him to take my area. He didn't like the distance he had to travel, but as I pointed out to him – it was either travel to Sunnyshore once or twice a week, or stay away from his family indefinately in Eterna. He agreed with me; Sunnyshore wasn't really that far from Pastoria.
I swerved to avoid a pothole in the road, cursing under my breath at the poor quality of the road surface, and straightened myself out to coast down the small hill onto the bridge just outside Eterna City. There was a pink hue on the furthest horizon, and I checked my watch; it was 5:06am. I was used to working strange hours, but I really was starting to dislike seeing dawn's with the alarming regularity offered to me at the moment.
There were a few fishermen on the bridge, and they waved or called a greeting as I cycled past, pedalling quickly to try and beat the dawn back to my little rented apartment. I pulled my bike up outside the Pokémart and dashed in to collect some supplies, paid and stuffed them into the basket on my bike before coasting a little down the incline to the front door of the apartment block.
I punched the code in and the door opened, allowing me to push my bike into the bike locks and hurry up the stairs, barely getting the door closed before the first brush of dawn came through the window. I laughed at my little game, then dropped my bag and opened my six pokéballs. My Gardevoir, Zangoose, Typhlosion, Swampert, Venusaur and, my newest addition, a Zapdos that I had had since he was a hatchling, leapt out of their balls and began to stretch. "You guys should be used to sitting in the pokéballs for hours on end," I told them with a smile, moving to the kitchenette to pour suitable food into the six bowls that were laid on the work surface, labelled with my pokémon's names.
You try being in an enclosed space with five men to deal with. I looked up and laughed at my Gardevoir, and she crossed her arms to show her displeasure. She'd forgive me when she saw that I'd bought them all a Rare Candy for when they'd eaten their main dinner.
"I do, if you remember. And I have to cope with you reading my mind," I replied to her outloud, and those that could understand me made noises I took for laughter. I finished with the food and put the bowls in suitable locations for them to be able to reach them without bother. Zapdos, as usual, was the big problem; his enormous wings meant that he had to perch on the back of the sofa to be able to reach into the bowl with his beak. But he seemed to happily tuck into the seeds and grain I had bought for him, and I laughed to see them all so blissfully happy with their meals.
I myself decided that I wanted an egg on toast, and set to work manufacturing such a meal with what I had in the cupboards and the fridge, trying to avoid being sprayed by Venusaur who was making such a mess with his meal, I knew I'd have to hoover before we could get some sleep.
Have you decided what, or who, could have attacked the businessman? Gardevoir asked me, and I shook my head and I folded my egg into my piece of toast. I needed to find a motive before I could start looking for who, and I had no idea where to start. I began shovelling my food into my mouth as I moved across the room to open the large balcony doors to let Zapdos out for a fly to stretch his wings out, and he let out a happy 'cawing' noise as he took off, cutting a gouge out of the balcony with a trailing claw. I laughed as I polished off my food and tapped my computer's power button to wake it up and try and make some headway on the case.
While it loaded, I cleaned everything up and sent all my pokémon off to their respective beds except Gardevoir, who refused to go to bed until I did. She was my oldest pokémon; as a beginning trainer, barely ten years old, my father had taught me how to catch myself a pokémon, and it had been a Ralts. Over the years, she'd evolved into my beautiful Gardevoir. At first, she'd been a little too forceful with her psychic abilities, one time even knocking me unconscious, but we had grown used to one another and were now inseparable.
My Zangoose had been just an egg when I'd found him at a crime scene – my first, in fact. There were over a dozen eggs that had been stolen from a professional breeder, and as a gift for returning them to her, she gave me the one I chose, which turned out to be Zangoose. Since then, we'd beaten all of the Sinnoh Gym's, and before Cynthia took over, we'd beaten the Elite Four once together with my Gardevoir.
Typhlosion, Swampert and Venusaur had been gifted to me by a man in my home town of Twinleaf, by the name of Professor Rowan to start me off on my journey through life. They had been their basic forms of Cyndaquil, Mudkip and Bulbasaur, but they had grown strong through the years we had spent together, and they, too, had helped me with the league in Sinnoh.
Zapdos, the most recent addition to my party, had come about as rather an accident. Someone had found a small, lifeless bird pokémon laying just beside a hatched egg, and when they had reached out to touch it, the bird had electrocuted them and nearly killed them. It was a Zapdos, and had I not taken him in, he would have been destroyed for being a danger to human society, even though as a hatchling he had little or no control over his electric powers.
The stories behind them was what made my pokémon my motley crew of friends, and, I mused, I wouldn't be without them – even Venusaur, who makes so much mess. My computer had finished loading up, and I sat down in front of it and got my notepad out of my bag. Before I could really get started, Zapdos returned from his flight and began tapping at the window pane to be let in. I obliged, and he hopped through the door to take up his perch in the back of the sofa, his eyes beginning to droop with sleep before he was fully settled.
I read through my encoded notes and began frantically typing them up into more readable English, making sure to include the notes Officer Jenny had given me. The notes were incomplete, and would be until a post mortem could be done on the body to give exact causes of death, and any hints as to what, why or who killed him off.
I knew the autopsy would come back with the same results as the last four; no marks on the body aside from one small puncture wound to the back of the left calf. High levels of Nidoran poison in the blood, cause of death would have been internal bleeding, caused by the poison. But, none of this helped me particularly much.
Nidoran were too common to accurately give us an identification of the assailant, and their poison was the same in every specimen. The only specific the poison could give us was whether the Nidoran was a Male or Female variety, and that had already been idetified as the male line of the Nidoran species. They had no idea whether it was a Nidoran, a Nidorino or a Nidoking, as their poison didn't change in its chemical characteristics as the species evolved, which meant that was a dead end.
I finished with my notes and turned to the registration database, which contained details of every single human being in Sinnoh – from their age and occupation, to their blood type and DNA. I drew up an old session which compared the previous four murder victims, and added in the latest victim's details, like his height, approximate age, eye colour, weight. I scanned through the list, accompanied by pictures, and stopped when I found the picture.
Name - Michael Anderson
Age – 37 Date of Birth - 19th January 1972
Occupation – Developer for Total Centre Electronics
Family – None
Education – University of Sinnoh, Chemical and Biochemical Engineering
I blinked at the screen and felt my head droop to the desk. I hated the fact that I couldn't find anything to link any of the victims and that-
My train of thought paused as I looked at the file again. I flicked to the other files, and suddenly I saw the link. All of them had graduated the same year from the same university, and all of them had studied a science, all of them had no family. I shook my head in disbelief that I had totally missed the obvious link between the victims, and I dialled Jenny's number quickly from memory.
"Hello? Elise, is that you?" She sounded half-asleep, but I knew she wouldn't have been to bed yet – the hospital were always slow in sending someone to collect dead bodies.
"Jenny! I found the link between the victims – they all studied science at Sinnoh, and graduated the same year," I told her, trying to contain the excitement in my voice.
"How did this get missed before?" she asked a little snappily, and I understood her impatience.
"The programme looks for patterns, it doesn't look for individual fields in the database. So, age, date of birth, place of birth and such like will get compared by the programme, but other fields, like graduating from Sinnoh the same year, are not compared by the programme," I explained, jotting a note down to rip someone at the programming department's head off later for their crappy programming.
"So, are there any other links?" Jenny asked me, and she sounded a little more pleased than she had done earlier.
"I need to do some more digging yet, and have a look at what they were working on, but I should be able to report back later today, tomorrow at the latest," I replied, and was already adding a to-do list to my notepad. "I'll probably have to leave Eterna to chase some of these leads, but I'll fly instead of cycling, so I shouldn't be gone too long," I finished, hoping she'd agree.
"Okay, Elise, that's fine. I'll speak to you later; try and go to bed, or else you'll be worthless tomorrow," Jenny warned, then hung up on me. I was used to her hanging up without saying goodbye, and replaced the handset on my own phone before hitting 'Print File' on the computer screen. While it printed out, I changed out of my work clothes into something more suited for sleeping and brushed my teeth, splashing water on my face and drying it quickly before jogging back to the printer. I pulled the files out, sorted them, and stapled them in their correct order and in their piles. I stacked them up, added my to-do list onto the top, turned off all the lights and closed the blinds then wandered into the bedroom.
I pulled the blackout blinds around the large windows, and was cocooned in the dark for a moment before my eyes adjusted to the light. The bed was still unmade as I had left it at midnight, but I jumped into it just the same and snuggled down into the duvet.
You had better not snore all day. I blew a raspberry at Gardevoir, who was laying on top of the duvet next to me, and I rolled onto my side so my back was facing her. Very adult, was the last thing I heard before sleep dragged me under.
I was used to crime scenes being busy with other people and their pokémon milling around. There was always far more people at crime scenes than was totally necessary, though they had learnt from several ear-bashing's that walking on the crime scene was the biggest no-no in the book. I also was used to kneeling beside bodies and picking up evidence, mentally denying what my eyes were seeing, and compartmentalising the visions.
Do you think it was murder? I turned my head to my Gardevoir, who had spoken telepathically to me, shrugged, and she made a small sound that I knew was a giggle. She, like myself, had a strange sense of humour, but I loved her anyway. I peeled my gloves off, chucked them in the nearest bio-hazard bag, and went to Officer Jenny who was guarding the scene. The other officers were keeping a reasonable distance from the body, but they still kept flashing their lights over the scene to get a good look. I would be having words about disrespecting the deceased, but only once this crime scene was finished with.
"Judging by the location of the body and the injuries sustained by the victim, I'd say you're looking for a professional hit-man," I told Jenny, and her frame seemed to crumple slightly at the diagnosis. We had had four other murders just like this in Eterna in the last ten days, and the strain was beginning to show on everybody. She looked worried and tired, and underlying these emotions was that helplessness that we all felt when murders kept happening. It had been a long week so far, and it was only going to get worse if these bodies kept turning up.
You've done it now; there hasn't been a murder in Eterna Forest for a hundred years! I ignored Gardevoir's comment and waited for the officer to respond.
"I just don't understand it; he's a businessman, for one thing, what was he doing in here? It's hardly the most direct route from Floarama Town to Eterna, and anyway, mostly everyone has a Flying pokémon with them these days. What do you think?" she asked me, trying to make sense of the chaos that seemed to exude from these attacks. I shrugged again and rubbed my eyes; it had been a long day and Jenny was not the sort of person to bounce ideas off of at four in the morning.
"It seems like he was lured in here, judging by how close he is to the Eterna-side entrance. It's more common than you'd have thought, because when you need the money, sometimes you'll do anything - including hijacking businessmen. Was he carrying anything worth a lot of money?" I asked her, grabbing my notepad and jotting down some notes about the scene. I'd write them up when I got back home, but that could be hours yet.
"Not when I searched his pockets for an identification. I didn't find anything on him, besides a Pokétech and a half-dozen unused pokéballs," she told me, and I scribbled in my usual untidy handwriting. I wrote my notes in code, a code only I could understand, to maintain confidentiality and the chain of evidence of the case.
"Well, there's not a lot else I can do, until they come from the hospital to take him away," I concluded, and looked past her for a moment at the victim. He was flat on his back, arms and legs spreadeagled across the path through the forest, and to the casual eye, he would have looked asleep. We knew better; his body had familiar marks on it that told us he was poisoned by a Nidoran's Poison Point. He was the fifth person in the last week to died from this poison, and we were drawing a total blank on connecting the victims. "I think I'll head back home to write up my notes and try to catch up on some ground-work."
"What about sleep, Elise?" Jenny asked me, and I laughed.
"Sleep is for teenagers and Snorlax's, Jen, you know that," I replied, laughing still as I retrieved my bag and shoved my notepad forcefully into it. Jenny waved me off as I whipped out my Pokétech and dialled the lab. The night secretary answered, and I told him what had happened for the crime records, and reminded him that the press were to be kept firmly out of the loop. He was a genial man who I had a lot of time for, and he knew his job like the back of his hand. It's always nice to work with a professional. "Jenny, I'll give you a call when the hospital tell me any news," I called into the dark, and the officer waved me away. I shrugged and returned Gardevoir to her pokéball, knowing she'd give me hell for it later. Pulling my bike free from the thorn bush it was entangled in, I hopped on board and pedalled off down the familiar road.
Eterna Forest, and Eterna City beyond, were not usually within my juristiction. However, in this particular case, I'd had to make an exception, when the scenes of crime officer for the Eterna district was counted among the dead men in the forest, and I was enjoying staying away from Sunnyshore City for a while. Generally, there was an officer in every town and a scenes of crime officer too, with a centralised laboratory in Veilstone City, though each scenes of crime officer had their own small laboratory in the town they were based. It was a good system, until something knocked out one of the scenes of crime officers, and then it caused problems.
Alex, the scenes of crime officer for Pastoria City, was covering my patch in Sunnyshore; he was one of the least busy members of the crime lab, so it made sense for him to take my area. He didn't like the distance he had to travel, but as I pointed out to him – it was either travel to Sunnyshore once or twice a week, or stay away from his family indefinately in Eterna. He agreed with me; Sunnyshore wasn't really that far from Pastoria.
I swerved to avoid a pothole in the road, cursing under my breath at the poor quality of the road surface, and straightened myself out to coast down the small hill onto the bridge just outside Eterna City. There was a pink hue on the furthest horizon, and I checked my watch; it was 5:06am. I was used to working strange hours, but I really was starting to dislike seeing dawn's with the alarming regularity offered to me at the moment.
There were a few fishermen on the bridge, and they waved or called a greeting as I cycled past, pedalling quickly to try and beat the dawn back to my little rented apartment. I pulled my bike up outside the Pokémart and dashed in to collect some supplies, paid and stuffed them into the basket on my bike before coasting a little down the incline to the front door of the apartment block.
I punched the code in and the door opened, allowing me to push my bike into the bike locks and hurry up the stairs, barely getting the door closed before the first brush of dawn came through the window. I laughed at my little game, then dropped my bag and opened my six pokéballs. My Gardevoir, Zangoose, Typhlosion, Swampert, Venusaur and, my newest addition, a Zapdos that I had had since he was a hatchling, leapt out of their balls and began to stretch. "You guys should be used to sitting in the pokéballs for hours on end," I told them with a smile, moving to the kitchenette to pour suitable food into the six bowls that were laid on the work surface, labelled with my pokémon's names.
You try being in an enclosed space with five men to deal with. I looked up and laughed at my Gardevoir, and she crossed her arms to show her displeasure. She'd forgive me when she saw that I'd bought them all a Rare Candy for when they'd eaten their main dinner.
"I do, if you remember. And I have to cope with you reading my mind," I replied to her outloud, and those that could understand me made noises I took for laughter. I finished with the food and put the bowls in suitable locations for them to be able to reach them without bother. Zapdos, as usual, was the big problem; his enormous wings meant that he had to perch on the back of the sofa to be able to reach into the bowl with his beak. But he seemed to happily tuck into the seeds and grain I had bought for him, and I laughed to see them all so blissfully happy with their meals.
I myself decided that I wanted an egg on toast, and set to work manufacturing such a meal with what I had in the cupboards and the fridge, trying to avoid being sprayed by Venusaur who was making such a mess with his meal, I knew I'd have to hoover before we could get some sleep.
Have you decided what, or who, could have attacked the businessman? Gardevoir asked me, and I shook my head and I folded my egg into my piece of toast. I needed to find a motive before I could start looking for who, and I had no idea where to start. I began shovelling my food into my mouth as I moved across the room to open the large balcony doors to let Zapdos out for a fly to stretch his wings out, and he let out a happy 'cawing' noise as he took off, cutting a gouge out of the balcony with a trailing claw. I laughed as I polished off my food and tapped my computer's power button to wake it up and try and make some headway on the case.
While it loaded, I cleaned everything up and sent all my pokémon off to their respective beds except Gardevoir, who refused to go to bed until I did. She was my oldest pokémon; as a beginning trainer, barely ten years old, my father had taught me how to catch myself a pokémon, and it had been a Ralts. Over the years, she'd evolved into my beautiful Gardevoir. At first, she'd been a little too forceful with her psychic abilities, one time even knocking me unconscious, but we had grown used to one another and were now inseparable.
My Zangoose had been just an egg when I'd found him at a crime scene – my first, in fact. There were over a dozen eggs that had been stolen from a professional breeder, and as a gift for returning them to her, she gave me the one I chose, which turned out to be Zangoose. Since then, we'd beaten all of the Sinnoh Gym's, and before Cynthia took over, we'd beaten the Elite Four once together with my Gardevoir.
Typhlosion, Swampert and Venusaur had been gifted to me by a man in my home town of Twinleaf, by the name of Professor Rowan to start me off on my journey through life. They had been their basic forms of Cyndaquil, Mudkip and Bulbasaur, but they had grown strong through the years we had spent together, and they, too, had helped me with the league in Sinnoh.
Zapdos, the most recent addition to my party, had come about as rather an accident. Someone had found a small, lifeless bird pokémon laying just beside a hatched egg, and when they had reached out to touch it, the bird had electrocuted them and nearly killed them. It was a Zapdos, and had I not taken him in, he would have been destroyed for being a danger to human society, even though as a hatchling he had little or no control over his electric powers.
The stories behind them was what made my pokémon my motley crew of friends, and, I mused, I wouldn't be without them – even Venusaur, who makes so much mess. My computer had finished loading up, and I sat down in front of it and got my notepad out of my bag. Before I could really get started, Zapdos returned from his flight and began tapping at the window pane to be let in. I obliged, and he hopped through the door to take up his perch in the back of the sofa, his eyes beginning to droop with sleep before he was fully settled.
I read through my encoded notes and began frantically typing them up into more readable English, making sure to include the notes Officer Jenny had given me. The notes were incomplete, and would be until a post mortem could be done on the body to give exact causes of death, and any hints as to what, why or who killed him off.
I knew the autopsy would come back with the same results as the last four; no marks on the body aside from one small puncture wound to the back of the left calf. High levels of Nidoran poison in the blood, cause of death would have been internal bleeding, caused by the poison. But, none of this helped me particularly much.
Nidoran were too common to accurately give us an identification of the assailant, and their poison was the same in every specimen. The only specific the poison could give us was whether the Nidoran was a Male or Female variety, and that had already been idetified as the male line of the Nidoran species. They had no idea whether it was a Nidoran, a Nidorino or a Nidoking, as their poison didn't change in its chemical characteristics as the species evolved, which meant that was a dead end.
I finished with my notes and turned to the registration database, which contained details of every single human being in Sinnoh – from their age and occupation, to their blood type and DNA. I drew up an old session which compared the previous four murder victims, and added in the latest victim's details, like his height, approximate age, eye colour, weight. I scanned through the list, accompanied by pictures, and stopped when I found the picture.
Name - Michael Anderson
Age – 37 Date of Birth - 19th January 1972
Occupation – Developer for Total Centre Electronics
Family – None
Education – University of Sinnoh, Chemical and Biochemical Engineering
I blinked at the screen and felt my head droop to the desk. I hated the fact that I couldn't find anything to link any of the victims and that-
My train of thought paused as I looked at the file again. I flicked to the other files, and suddenly I saw the link. All of them had graduated the same year from the same university, and all of them had studied a science, all of them had no family. I shook my head in disbelief that I had totally missed the obvious link between the victims, and I dialled Jenny's number quickly from memory.
"Hello? Elise, is that you?" She sounded half-asleep, but I knew she wouldn't have been to bed yet – the hospital were always slow in sending someone to collect dead bodies.
"Jenny! I found the link between the victims – they all studied science at Sinnoh, and graduated the same year," I told her, trying to contain the excitement in my voice.
"How did this get missed before?" she asked a little snappily, and I understood her impatience.
"The programme looks for patterns, it doesn't look for individual fields in the database. So, age, date of birth, place of birth and such like will get compared by the programme, but other fields, like graduating from Sinnoh the same year, are not compared by the programme," I explained, jotting a note down to rip someone at the programming department's head off later for their crappy programming.
"So, are there any other links?" Jenny asked me, and she sounded a little more pleased than she had done earlier.
"I need to do some more digging yet, and have a look at what they were working on, but I should be able to report back later today, tomorrow at the latest," I replied, and was already adding a to-do list to my notepad. "I'll probably have to leave Eterna to chase some of these leads, but I'll fly instead of cycling, so I shouldn't be gone too long," I finished, hoping she'd agree.
"Okay, Elise, that's fine. I'll speak to you later; try and go to bed, or else you'll be worthless tomorrow," Jenny warned, then hung up on me. I was used to her hanging up without saying goodbye, and replaced the handset on my own phone before hitting 'Print File' on the computer screen. While it printed out, I changed out of my work clothes into something more suited for sleeping and brushed my teeth, splashing water on my face and drying it quickly before jogging back to the printer. I pulled the files out, sorted them, and stapled them in their correct order and in their piles. I stacked them up, added my to-do list onto the top, turned off all the lights and closed the blinds then wandered into the bedroom.
I pulled the blackout blinds around the large windows, and was cocooned in the dark for a moment before my eyes adjusted to the light. The bed was still unmade as I had left it at midnight, but I jumped into it just the same and snuggled down into the duvet.
You had better not snore all day. I blew a raspberry at Gardevoir, who was laying on top of the duvet next to me, and I rolled onto my side so my back was facing her. Very adult, was the last thing I heard before sleep dragged me under.
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