edenblue:
It takes a moment longer than it should to compose themself on this one, silently grateful all over again for the gift that this case is, to help solve something so strange and uphold the reputation the club has, while also having plenty of beauty to look at, too. They do not need two working eyes to admire Hawk and Glimmer, and it seems that Hawk is admiring Miranda and them in turn, which makes them grin a little. Even if this is all that comes from the case, along with a solution, it is a nice feeling to be admired, especially given how painful things have been lately. This makes them feel almost normal.
They listen closely, though, focusing on the dancer’s words as Miranda questions them, and they are not surprised to hear that he seems to have no better idea than Belladonna of what could have been going on. The description of the Doe, at least, gives a better picture. Rich, no surprise, certainly the type full of shame for something that need not be seen as shameful. A very good target, for someone who would want a great deal of money, without the risk of someone publicly admitting it was him that it was stolen from. A smart move, by whoever it is who was doing this, they think. It does not help them much, though.
“Did you notice anything strange on that night about him, or about what happened before or after the dance?” they ask, with a slight frown.
“I know it’s not helpful, but nothing seemed off. It was just like any other night with him,” Hawk says, shaking his head slightly. “Happened just like it always does, he came in, went to the back, one of the servers came and got me, he was already there waiting when I made it to the back. We talked for a few minutes, then I gave him his dance like usual, and he left the room.”
They believe that he believes all of that. The thing is, though, that something feels wrong, almost as if Hawk’s energy is just a little off as he’s talking about that night and what he remembers. It is a strange feeling, one that they are not quite sure how to take. It does not seem to be that he is lying––they do not think that’s something that they could tell––but just that there’s something not quite right about what he is saying, but they do not know why.
“You do not remember anything odd about that dance?”
“No, just the normal sort of routine I do for him, nothing special, nothing weird. I keep going over it in my head, but I can’t come up with anything. He seemed fine the whole time, and nothing out of the ordinary went on throughout the night,” Hawk explains.
The beginning of an idea is forming. They wish they had a deck of tarot cards with them, but in the absence of some physical anchor for energy, they think they might have another way, as odd as it might sound. But before they show their hand, figuratively and literally, they want to know if Glimmer’s story is any different.
“Was it much of the same for you, Glimmer? Two of the Does often requested dances with you, da?”
.
As pleasant as Hawk is to look at, Miranda can’t help but be a little let down about his story. From what she could tell, Hawk didn’t seem to be lying to them, which meant they were left with very little to run with here. If Hawk didn’t notice anything strange, then it was very likely none of the other dancers did either. He was the werewolf out of the group after all, someone whose senses she felt would likely be sharper than all of the other dancers at the club.
When Eden turns to look at Glimmer, she’s taken aback when she sees what face Glimmer has fallen on. Don’t get her wrong, it was still a very good looking one, but much more “accountant” in nature than the sexpot they’d previously appeared as earlier on the club’s stage.
“I’m afraid so,” they sigh as they look between Eden and Miranda, “Both Doe 2 and 4 were mine, but no matter how much I think back to both of those nights, nothing seemed off about them.”
Thinking back to the case file, Miranda recalls it’d been Glimmer that the Illinois aurors saw as the most likely suspect for this crime. But from what she can see, they seemed no more likely to do this than any of the other dancers. Even now, they seem like they’re being just as genuine as Hawk was when they claim to not remember anything.
“Is there anything similar about the two nights, outside of the usual?” She asks them, grasping for straws.
“Outside of the normal? Not really,” they reply as they slip a pair of glasses on, “both requested very different morphs, so my dance routine differed, but other than that, no. The only thing I can think of is that they both came into the private room at around 10:30.”
“I think that was around the time mine came in too,” Hawk speaks up.
It wasn’t much, but having a similar time the events occurred had to be of some significance, Miranda just wasn’t sure what.










