auroraprilmonday​:
Of all three cards laid out on the table, Judgement obviously scares her the most. If they could take down a fully capable auror, and in Quinn’s home no less, than there was no telling just what they could be capable of if they should find out the identities of the two aurors investigating the crime. She was going to have to be careful on this one, more careful than she’d probably ever had to be on a case before.Â
“From the crime scene pictures alone, Quinn certainly put up a hell of a fight,” Langer sighs, as she pulls out a collection of photographs from the folder sitting in front of her. The photographs were the same ones that sat in April’s own folder, showing the chaotic scene in Quinn’s living room of broken furniture, along with that strange purple powder covering nearly everything. “The gun is the last thing Judgement uses is my guess. We’ve only ever found evidence of one round fired at other scenes tied to them. I would guess they duel their victim first, render them incapacitated, then fire the gun.”Â
“Why use the gun at all?” April asks, curious to get a better idea of just who this hitman was.
“I’d guess as either some kind of calling card- or to make a statement. All of their victims are people who’ve angered the NBO in some way. Maybe Judgement views their victims as so beneath them, they won’t even use magic to end their lives. Perhaps they see using the gun as a form of insult against their victims.”Â
It was probably as good as any guess she would have, and it did make sense considering just what kind of group of people they were dealing with.Â
“You said you didn’t think we’d be able to find Judgement. The Magician though, you think they might be an easier find?” She asks.Â
“Yes, I do. Like I said, Quinn’s job was to find the Magician. The fact he was killed tells me he must have succeeded. I suggest you talk to Brooks to see if you can find out anything more about just how much Quinn relayed back to them.”Â
Brooks seemed like a pretty good starting place to her, but she was curious to see what Dante’s thoughts were on it all. Looking over to him, she’s just about to ask when suddenly her telekit goes off, a message from Eli flashing on the screen that reads “[incoming message] medical examiner eli cooke: Vitale, Monday- Come see me when you have the chance, I found something interesting during my examination of Quinn.”Â
“Looks like Eli also has something for us,” she says before reading the message out loud for both Langer and Dante to hear.Â
“Do you want to head to him next? Or see Brooks first?” She asks him, after giving him enough time to ask whatever other questions he may have for Langer.Â
He’d been trained in a lot of things, before starting this job. Alongside his normal lessons at the Academy, he’d had nightly training—occlumency, obliviation, all kinds of skills that would be useful in making sure cases like this had gone his way, and he’d made use of all of them a dozen times over in the seven years he’s been an auror, a constant safety net of last resorts that he’s relied on more times than he likes to admit. But the lessons that had been the most useful to him were the long hours of practice keeping his cool in uncomfortable situations, learning to lie as best he could, learning to look like nothing had shaken him without looking like he had anything to hide.
It’s those skills he’s falling back on now, as Langer talks. Looking unshaken at the same time as he manages looking surprised and horrified enough at what should be new information but isn’t. To hear this stranger guess at motivations he knows all too well and come a little too close for comfort in the faceless picture she summons of the man he’s known for eight years, the man who taught him the very skills he’s relying on now.Â
   “And if we can find The Magician you think she can lead us to this Judgement person?” he starts to ask Langer, but then Monday’s getting a message, reading through it, and he looks back at Langer, shakes his head a little, a silent nevermind. He’d just been filling space, anyway, a stalling tactic while he tried to figure out what to do.Â
   “Might as well see Cooke first,” he offers Monday with a bit of a shrug. It doesn’t much matter where they go first, as far as he’s concerned, but whatever interesting thing the medical examiner’s found by looking at a body, it seems less likely to throw him through a loop than whatever intel Quinn got back to his own squad before being executed. Maybe it will give him half a second to fucking breathe.Â











