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Posted: Wed Jul 13, 2011 9:14 pm
When the questioning period passed, various event workers ushered the guests towards the planetarium lobby. Each player was given a form to list their name and their guess as to the identity of the murderer, and instructed to place their completed form in the lockbox at the center of the room.
((You will have until 9:00 EST on Friday to roleplay casting your vote. Remember, the suspects are:
The Rivals - Christa and Lysander The Collaborator - Bebe The Intern - Tate The Financial Backer - Chris The Ex-Wife - Paris The Lover - Morgan
On Friday night, the identity of the killer will be revealed and the winner will be rolled! Remember, you can only participate in this portion of the event if you have participated in questioning!))
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Posted: Fri Jul 15, 2011 8:41 am
Gigi trailed back into the lobby, lamenting questions still unasked. Her paper was a tangle of circles and arrows, crossings-out and tiny side-notes that cramped the margins. Despite her accusations earlier, she still wasn't sure. There were holes. Big, lawyer-sized holes in her case. She didn't quite make it to a second go-around as she'd hoped, but while she wasn't that confident with her guess, at least she'd achieved the goal of asking everyone -- Except the Inspector. A pang of doubt hit her. He'd given her such a look. Should she have asked him questions too?
Oh well, too late now. Carefully, she wrote her guess onto the paper:
The Rivals
and slipped it into the box.
Her feet hurt and she had a headache coming on, but there was no way she was moving from this spot until the murderer was announced. Well, maybe not this exact spot. Now that the frantic questioning rush was over, she was starting to notice the other players properly. Some she recognised - mostly from the annoyed looks they'd given her when she started talking. But it was a game, it had a time limit and everything - she wasn't going to waste it waiting for them to ask their questions, that was a fast way to lose. She wondered how they'd gone, though, and what conclusions they'd come to.
All that was left was the waiting. Gigi shuffled her sore feet, inspected the area for signs of a coffee machine, read the science displays. Her hand was shaking, just a little bit, as she jittered her pen against the now-full notebook. The excitement was killing her.
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Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2011 9:57 pm
The evening was swiftly drawing to a close, and Jack radiated with an uncontainable sort of energy. His already senseless ego was inflated so much that it was a wonder his head, pumped full of hot air by the curious murmurs of the crowd, didn't float right off his neck. He imagined they were saying sweet things about his commendable performance as the indomitable Detective.
Most of them just wished he'd throw out that soggy cigar. It dangled from his lips, clamped between his teeth, and served only one real purpose: to annoy.
The more time that passed, the more Jack lost himself in his roll, and the more ridiculous his performance became. He strode about the museum as though he owned the place, with his hands on his hips, and waved his notepad at anybody who dared interrupt him during an interrogation. Unless, of course, they happened to be a pretty girl.
On one occasion, upon spotting a particularly lovely face in the crowd, Detective Stark broke away from the script completely and endeavoured to question her.
"Where were you," he'd pointed at her nose, "the night of the murder, sweetheart?"
"Uh," the girl was at once startled and confused. She'd flushed ten shades of red. "Here?"
It was a moment before Jack realized his mistake. He'd blinked, and then blushed, and shoved his little book of paper and his pen into her hands. "Right. I knew that. Now, write down your phone number in case anybody from the bureau needs to contact you."
To Jack's great joy, she'd returned his things a moment later and there was a phone number scrawled across the page. Whether or not it was real remained to be seen, but it hadn't occurred to Jack, who thought himself a veritable catch, to wonder.
The investigation continued. The game was, in Jack's not so humble opinion, a raving success. He was incredibly smug by the time everyday had filled out their ballots, and all but bursting at the seams at the dawn of his big moment.
"Ladies and gentleman," Jack seemed to have misplaced his accent, but he was still as confident as ever, and held out his hands to gather everyone's attention. "It has been a long and trying night. We've been through a lot together."
Jack paused for a heartbeat, sought out the blue eyes of the pretty girl who may or may not have given him her phone number, and was disappointed when he did not find them.
"…we've been through-- oh s**t I already said that."
A couple people in the audience laughed. Jack cleared his throat, shook his head, and then continued;
"We all saw a man die here tonight," his voice boomed, and then cracked. He coughed. Somebody giggled. "A good man, and a good doctor. He was my friend."
Detective Stark hung his head, in grief. But only for an instant. And then he was looking straight up again, struggling to keep the smile off of his face.
"But not everybody loved Dr. Spekter," Jack started pacing about the room. He brushed up against Gigi, purposefully, and looked at each of the suspects in turn. "We know this, because he was murdered."
He paused for dramatic affect, in case somebody happened to gasp. Nobody did.
"After a lot of handwork and deductive reasoning I, your most humble servant, have realized the identity of his killer!"
Detective Stark continued to pace. The heels of his boots thunked ominously against the floor. He glared at everyone, because this was serious ******** business, and lifted his arm. Any moment he was going to reveal the truth; to save these poor people from the wonderful agony of not knowing that accompanies all of the greatest mysteries.
Jack spun sharply, the tails of his overcoat flying around his waist, and then jabbed his finger in Tate's nose.
"It was you!" declared the Detective. He raised his voice over the sudden shocked murmurs of the crowd. "Yes, that's right people. Dr. Spekter was murdered by his very own intern. She's in his will! She did most of the work! And he's more useful to her dead than alive!"
"Isn't that right," Jack glowered at Tate, though his eyes were lit with an excited fire, and not true wrath. The corners of his lips twitched. "Ms. Konstantin?"
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Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2011 10:09 pm
Honestly, the inspector was really, really driving her nuts. What was with the cigar? And the ridiculous speech? She adjusted the goggles on her head, surveyed the crowd. As far as she knew, no one had actually submitted a vote for her; it ought to be an easy night, unless the inspector by some miracle got it right. No way was he competent enough to see through her charade--
Except for, you know, the fact that he was.
Tate leaned away from the jabbing finger, an expression of disgust on her face. She stepped back to give herself space, and assumed the most rigid posture she could--as if she were so affronted by the accusation that she just couldn't believe it. "Hell no," she said, tone fluting in her outrage, "you can't prove a thing! It's not like I was the only one to use the machine today, and I'm not the only one who stood to benefit!"
Over the shocked murmurs, she turned to the crowd and pleaded, "You can't really believe him, can you? He has no proof, just hearsay!"
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