The story is the continuation from my previous story, The Sorority. If you have not read that, I recommend you do for continuity.
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Friday - December 12, 2025
-Chase Kramner-
A body was found on the roof of an eight-story condominium complex by the cleaning crew about to work on the windows in the early morning hours. The body is positioned face down, arms straight back and to the sides. It is not in a perfectly flat position, the buttocks very slightly elevated as if the torso slumped down upon death. The face is against the gravel on the roof, facing left with the left eye still open. The right eye exploded when the bullet fired at a downward angle into the skull of the victim exited. Everything in my head is screaming execution.
Her driver's license we found in her pocket -- which is very strange -- gives a few pieces of information to work with. Willow Goldberg. Female, age twenty, Caucasian. Willow was rather plain looking, and that always sounds mean to say, but that is how I categorize them. Her short dyed black hair is not on her driver's license which shows a long-haired blonde girl, and neither is the neck tattoo. Her skin is unmarked when she had this picture taken two years ago when she turned eighteen. Now she has a neck tattoo of a crow with extended wings, viper fang piercings, a nose ring, and four piercings on her left ear.
Awfully big change for just the two years.
The lab techs are doing their sweeps, starting with the crime scene photos of her body and the surrounding area. The blood spray is in front of her body, starting thick then becoming more like mist as it widened. The pooling of the blood spread under the gravel, creating the illusion of large rocks in a lake of red.
Jill is not leading the charge today, as she had her twins a few months ago, and will be on maternity leave for at least an additional month. Her and the Chief had twin girls; Piper and Lydia. Poor bastard. I have missed her expertise, but her lackies have been doing an admirable job.
The techs also dust the doorknob to the roof, and then down the railings a full floor. Not much in the prints department. Her body has not decayed much, and they chock that down to it being December, and cold as fuck up here. Not much birds or bugs to eat away at her. There was no missing person report on her, and that could mean it was a relatively recent time of death.
On the physical evidence side, I do not think we will find much. There is no shell casing that we have managed to find. We could get lucky and find the slug in the gravel, but it might have ricocheted off the roof entirely or the angle of trajectory is straight off. If this was an execution, that means it was likely a person not prone to leaving the police much evidence. Which makes the driver's license even more peculiar. There are no injuries on her body, not even defensive wounds, which means she very well could have known her killer and accompanied them willingly.
I double check her driver license again, this time looking at her address. It is outside of the city, but still within the metropolitan area. It is likely her parents' home. I guess that will be my first stop after I wrap up interviews here.
I send the uniformed officers on a scavenger hunt with her picture to see if anyone had seen her recently. They start at the top two floors, then move onto the first floor and begin interviewing the employees of the building. I get a radio call to come to the first floor and talk to one of the doormen. Or doorwoman I should say.
"I'm detective Kramner, I was told you recognize her?" I ask, showing her the picture again to refresh her mind. "Name?"
"I don't know her name....you meant mine. Daphne Mason," she replies, and I pull out my small black, leather bound notebook. Daphne appears to be in her early twenties, and likely works here part time. I see a college textbook on her desk open with a laptop and notebook next to it, meaning she is a student working while going to school. I can see her potential testimony falling apart from a half decent defense lawyer just bringing up the fact she could be easily construed as distracted and non-observant.
"Date of birth?"
"August 17, 2004." Damn I am good.
"Number and address?" I ask. She provided me a dorm room at the University and her cell phone.
"You recognize her?" I ask again.
"Yes officer," she starts. I am a detective, but I will let that slide. "She lives here. I don't know what floor, but I see her come through the lobby every day. At least every day that I'm here. Using the door fob to get to the elevator," Daphne says, pointing at a sensor residents place a device next to that opens the door to the elevators.
Willow was a resident here? That is rather shocking to believe. Willow was younger than Daphne, and was living here? Perhaps she did not live here alone. "What does the rent here look like?"
"None of these are rentals. Buying the condo, roughly four hundred," Daphne explains. Why did she know that off the top of her head? Whatever, she must have looked into it due to boredom.
"Was she ever with anyone?" I ask.
"Not that I can recall. I have never held a package here for her either. She was typically just through the lobby and into the elevator," Daphne says.
"How long has she been here?"
"I started here at the start of the semester, and she'd been here the entire time. So at least August of this year," Daphne replies. I thank her for her information and leave her my card in case she remembers anything.
Willow's license said she lived in the suburbs, but she could have in fact lived in the building. It is an old license, scheduled to expire on her twenty first birthday in two months. Willow very likely lived with her parents when that license was issued to her. I am definitely talking to them next.
I walk out of the condo and see an officer parked just outside on the street. News media is already outside -- fucking vultures -- but thankfully my Shield is clipped to my belt and under my suit jacket. Rubbernecking is already happening with horns blaring at people down the street to not gawk at the media and police presence. Across the street people are standing around, just watching the scene.
I walk through the shot of a reporter and straight to the officer who rolls down her window.
"Detective," she says.
"Sergeant Hill," I say, leaning against the roof of the car.
Patrol Sergeant Lauren Hill who commands the uniformed officers in patrol zone two. Strawberry blonde with hair pulled behind her head in a tight bun with glasses over her metallic blue eyes. Beautiful without makeup, and the outlines of her body even under her uniform are apparent. Let me spell it out, big o titties with other curves to match. Athletic curves, not that body positivity with a side of diabetes nonsense.
Great looks and body aside, she is a Sergeant, and she likes to remind others at every opportunity. Sergeant Hill is a dedicated and decorated officer and has been for the last seven years. Some of the more senior guys tell me she reminds them of Jill when she was in uniform. The same no-nonsense attitude and by the book procedural officer who still knew when to lighten up just enough to form relationships and network. She even took the detectives exam a few days ago and the precinct is eager for the results.
"Need something?" Sergeant Hill asks.
"Address lookup," I say and hand her my notebook. She runs her finger down the leather binding with a smile, then looks at the address from Willow's license.
"Give me a sec," Sergeant Hill says, typing in the address on her squad car's computer, then hands the book back to me.
"Address is the claimed residence of Clifford and Savannah Goldberg," Sergeant Hill says once the results come in. "Willow Goldberg their daughter?"
"Looking like it. Didn't want to waste my time before I drove there. Thanks," I say, tucking my book into my jacket inner breast pocket and walking toward my car. I look over my shoulder, and I can see Sergeant Hill is leaning over to watch my ass leave.
I call up Detective William Kaiser to let him know I am at the car waiting for him. The Kaiser comes out of the condo a few minutes later, him wearing his badge over his neck on a lanyard, and he is immediately swarmed by the press.
"Detective, what can you tell us about the murder upstairs?"