Far Horizons: Tales of Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Horror. Issue #11 February 2015 | Page 60

lab calling. “Hey, boss, I believe we have something for you,” I hear one of the technicians say as I pick the call up, and I can’t help but be surprised. The lab always texts. Even this phrase—I’m so used to seeing this as a message it feels alien to my ears. “Don’t tell me the last corpse has come back to life and told you everything,” I joke. I don’t feel anything about the news. It’s a void. I know I should feel happy about a breakthrough, and I don’t. The case has drained me. I hear several voices laugh on the background; I must be on speaker. “No, actually, we thought we’d go through the clothes again. For any trace at all. And what do you know, the analysis of soil from the shoes shows all victims were at one place before they died.” “And you are certain of this how?” I am still sarcastic. It feels a lot like a staged prank. There is chatter of the background again, I can’t make out any words, but they are obviously excited about whatever they’ve found. They feel all the emotions that I don’t. “Mostly because there is only one place in town with this much cement. While all victims were found near their residences there is still enough cement residue on their soles to infer they had been there within their last twenty-four hours.” “Maybe they were around different piles of cement.” Now I’m sceptical. The answer can’t be so simple. They can’t be telling me after two weeks of nothing that there is an entirely plausible connection. The deserted cement factory on the outskirts of the city. A dream place of drug addicts, bums, and juvenile delinquents. Which none of the victims on the case were, by the way. “No construction sites of that size in town,” I am told PAGE 60 helpfully, but I already know that. I am just grasping at the straws. “Hold onto that analysis result. I’m going to the factory,” I say decisively, giving up. It’s a lead, and I’m following the protocol. The department is breathing down my neck anyway. They want evidence—I’ll give them evidence. “If I find the crime scene, you’ll be the first to know. After backup.” I switch my computer off without saving the report; it’s getting more and more outdated as the minutes pass. I finally start believing in what I’m told. It’s an urgency deep inside me that makes me move quickly to the exit, down the stairs, and into the parking lot for a patrol car. I barely feel the rain that’s become much stronger in the last five minutes. I feel the drops slide behind my collar, but it’s as if they disappear there. They aren’t cold or wet. They just tickle my neck a little. The traffic is rather busy. It’s right past the time when everybody returns home from work, and there still are many people driving. Thankfully, the fact that I’m driving a patrol car helps me avoid the heaviest traffic jams. The abandoned factory is just a couple kilometers out of town. The massive building stands alone, covered in shrubbery and graffiti. It might not be the biggest there is, but it’s still impressive. I park the car next to what looks like the main part of the building and get out, switching on my flashlight. The headlights go off, and the darkness envelopes me except for a circle of light, dancing off the walls as I move my hand. As I enter the building, it feels as if I enter a different reality. The place completely isolates me from the rest of the world. My steps sound like thunder in the vacuumed silence of the rooms. Something crunches under my feet—it’s debris, fallen from the ceiling or left from the old furniture that once stood here. I recognise the place for the offices that used to manage the factory. There are still several tables left