a crime of passion. Premeditated murders are much tidier than this...
Eden Luccetti heaved a sigh as a thought wormed into her brain. The scent of musty, dry blood and
flashing red and blue lights invading through dirty windows would be enough to make a crime scene
uncomfortable for just about anyone. If only Eden was like just about anyone. Instead, she got the
joy of having to filter the outside sensory overload with internal sensory overload thanks to her
“gift.” She wished she could reply. She’d hiss something like, “Tell me something I don’t know.”
Only, she couldn’t. She’d learned long ago to keep her ability to hear other’s surface thoughts a
secret. She’d rather have a headache than be labeled a liar.
Eden traced a blue-gloved finger along the mouth of the body in front of her, stretched wide in a
soundless scream. His name was Tony Esposito, a man who lived alone who’s body had been discovered
earlier that morning by his younger sister. Delicately, she rubbed a swab against his dry tongue and
placed it in the evidence sample bag. His teeth had dried an orange tint, and Eden hoped that even
if he couldn’t shout his killer’s name there may still be justice hiding in his mouth in the form of
a bite. Then, one by one, Eden lifted each of his fingers to check beneath the messy, blood-stained
nails. Along his palm was the shape of a hand painted in a thin layer of blood which was wrapped
between his fingers. Eden furrowed her brows, ’s almost like the killer was...
“Detective?”
A warm voice brushed up against Eden’s ear and she flinched, dropping the corpse’s hand as though
she were a child caught playing with something she wasn’t supposed to. She whipped her head around
as it occurred to her that this voice was a physical one and not someone’s stray thoughts finding a
home in her brain. She’d already known that, though. After all, the voice she’d heard was his
voice.
“A-Atticus!” Eden stammered, her emerald eyes flaring with a half-embarrassed, half-annoyed
light,
“Can’t you make some noise when you walk?!”
A smile curved Atticus’s lips and he gave a chuckle as he took a small step back and blew his wispy
black hair out of his face, “In my defense, I did call out to you as I was approaching,” he told
her. Then, he crouched down beside her. Though he wasn’t necessarily close, he had broad shoulders
and a wide stance, so his side ended up pressing against hers. Even through both their coats, Eden
could feel warmth rising off his body, and it took everything in her not to lean into it.
Eden’s normally pale cheeks flushed a rosy red and she turned her nose from him indignantly, “I’m
going to start putting a bell on you!”
Most of the time, people’s thoughts pressed against Eden’s mind well before she could hear them
physically. Though she had not run any reliable tests on the exact range of her abilities, she knew
when people were approaching her. People that weren’t Atticus, anyway. For reasons Eden could not
deduce, Atticus’s presence blessed her with a mind-numbing effect that suppressed her abilities.
Before, she didn’t even know that her abilities could be suppressed. When she’d met him for the
first time, it was the first time her world had ever truly been quiet. Without meaning to, she’d
begun to cry—which startled both Atticus and the chief immensely.
“Detective, you can take a break if you need to. I can take over.”
Eden blinked. Checking her posture, she straightened her back and took a deep breath. How sloppy of
her to allow herself to get so bogged down by the sensory overload that Atticus had gotten worried
about her, “No need to, I am fine.” She assured him, biting her bottom lip and resuming her
investigation of the body. “I guess I’m just a little squeamish sometimes, that’s all.”
Atticus’s icy-blue eyes looked her up and down. Against his dark hair and dusky skin, his eyes all
but seemed to glow and pierce through her, “Is that right?” He clicked his tongue and crossed his
arms over his chest.
“What?” Eden asked, avoiding his gaze with her brows furrowed in
a knot. “Do I have something on my
face?”
Atticus shook his head, sighing, “No, nothing like that. You’re
just...” He paused as if trying to find the right word and then chuckled, defeated. “... A really
bad liar.”
“W-what?!” Eden squeaked, finally turning back to him. Her voice came
out so loud at first that it caused a few other officers to look in her direction, making her
shrink until they turned their attention elsewhere. Then, she retorted in a whisper, “Lying?! I am
not lying! W-why on earth would you think that?”
Atticus cocked an eyebrow at her, “Because your behavior doesn’t match up to that. Squeamishness
comes with loss of color to the face, light-headedness, nausea, and occasionally vomiting or loss of
consciousness.” He stated, matter-of-factly. “But that isn’t it, is it? Instead, you’re flinching at
every little sound. Rather, you’re not less alert, you’re more alert. I might even go to say you’re
sensitive.”
Eden just stared at him, at a loss for words. There were few instances where her own attention to
detail was thrown back at her so thoroughly. Her heart began to race. It was almost as though
Atticus were reading her mind. Or, even worse, like he’d found out about her secret. Instead of
words, all she could do was look at him with this dumb, shocked expression.
Atticus then gave a huff of amusement, “I got it right, didn’t I?” He
grinned, which then abruptly became a serious look. “You’re not squeamish, you’re in pain.”
Eden just stared at him, at a loss for words. There were few instances where her own attention to
detail was thrown back at her so thoroughly. Her heart began to race. It was almost as though
Atticus were reading her mind. Or, even worse, like he’d found out about her secret. Instead of
words, all she could do was look at him with this dumb, shocked expression.
Atticus nodded, seemingly satisfied with that answer as his features softened into a smile, “That
makes much more sense.” Then he stood up, offering a leather-gloved hand to her. “Let’s go, then. I
think we have done all that we can here for the time being anyway. Don’t you think it’d be a little
better to continue in the office where it’s a little quieter? We could start running some of this
through forensics.”
Just what was Eden supposed to say against that? Gingerly, she took
his hand and let him help her up. Though her head was still pounding, being by Atticus was more
than enough for her. °•°•°
Admittedly, only about half of Eden’s energy was spent on the case at any given point that day.
The other half of the time she spent giving Atticus tasks to keep him distracted while she
investigated something she was actually intrigued by. She had been running miniature experiments
on him over the past few months trying to figure out what it was about him that made her mind
clear. Ideally, she would do this sort of thing in her own time and not on the clock. However,
given that she was only able to focus when she was completely secluded or when she was with
Atticus, her time for research was limited at best. She scribbled her findings in a composition
notebook which she would swiftly hide under other, miscellaneous paperwork whenever he was nearby.
So far, her notes read:
“ATTICUS NOTTE:
AGE: 27
SEX: MALE
RACE AND ETHNICITY: N/A
BLOOD TYPE: O-
FAMILY:
Mother- Annabelle Notte, MD.
Father- Michael Notte (deceased) former lawyer.
Older sibling- Mina Notte. Occupation N/A
ABILITY: Mind-numbing(?)
RANGE OF EFFECT: Between approximately 30-60ft
LIKES: Coffee, thunderstorms...” it trailed off from there. The writing was
neat and uniform, written in blue fountain pen. Whenever she wrote these notes, she took extra
care of them, ensuring that she did not disrespect Atticus with messy letters regardless of
whether he should ever witness them.
What a drag—I wonder what I’ll have for dinner tonight—The wife’s gonna kill me if I’m late
home again.
Without warning, thoughts that weren’t Edens began swarming in her head. She flinched and ink of
her fountain pen smeared from the unintended movement. Monotonies made her mind bleary, and her
emerald eyes darted around the room, “Atticus?” She croaked out. That’s when she noticed how dry
her throat was. When she caught sight of the window, it had already grown dark. Atticus’s desk had
been cleaned up for the day, his computer had gone cold from having been off for some time now.
Where was Atticus? When did he leave? Thought after thought buzzed around her consciousness,
inflaming her senses. An angry hive of uncontrolled brainwaves had been built in her mind while
she’d been too occupied in her research to put back up her walls, and pandemonium had taken over.
Where did I put that form?-- Guess I’m stuck on traffic duty again—My tooth hurts.
Eden covered her ears in vain. How could she have been so careless? Normally, she didn’t stay much
later than Atticus because, ever since he started, the unfiltered thoughts were too overwhelming
whenever she was at the office without him. Before he had become her partner, she had done most of
her work from home due to the overwhelming sensation that thoughts gave her. On one end, she was a
force to be reckoned with in interrogations. On the other, she was so sensitive to the presence of
others that she couldn’t be in the office for long periods of time without loading up on copious
amounts of ibuprofen first.
Stop—I have to wake up early—Quiet—I should call my mother—It's too loud!
It hurts!
Thoughts berated Eden senselessly until she couldn’t tell which were her own anymore. It had been
a long time since panic had settled into her—so long that she almost didn’t recognize the familiar
pounding of fight-or-flight taking over. How long had Atticus been gone? How long had she just had
her mind completely unprotected like that? I can’t get that thought out of my head—It's getting
cold outside again—How long had she been in the whirlpool of other’s voices? A new episode of that
show comes out today—Should I put in my two weeks?-- They pounded against her relentlessly. They
were too fast. Before she knew it, she was flooded. Drowning. It was all she could do to keep her
head above water.
Around her, the city clambered, only worsening her state. They weren’t lying when they said the
city never sleeps at night. Cars blared by with horns and headlights ablaze. People bustled with
noises that were indistinguishable from laughter or shrieking. Alcohol stung Eden’s nostrils
around every corner. Every car, every group, every drink came with people. Every person came with
thoughts. Unintelligible thoughts.
The city lights swirled and pulsated as Eden frantically tried to shove away the thoughts that
throbbed around her head. They didn’t even sound like words anymore. As she pushed through throngs
of humans, she didn’t feel their bodies or process their proclamations of distaste as she clumsily
shoved them aside. Her feet hit the cement in dragging thuds, each new movement sending static
through her body.
Muscle memory was a skill Eden prided herself in. Even if she were completely incapacitated, this
house was one that she could always find her way too. Even if the streets wound and the city
layout was nonsensical, Eden’s compass could always lead her back to here. Her sweaty hand clasped
the cold doorknob, relief flooding every cell in her body. Thank God, it’s unlocked, Eden thought
as she all but collapsed into her radius of safety.
With her back pressed against the door, silence slowly leaked into Eden’s head, replacing the
cacophony of humanity that had wreaked havoc in there. As she regained some control over her body,
all that was left behind was the ache against the soundlessness of safety. Slowly, shakily Eden
staggered to the kitchen for water. Though she could not yet see clearly, she had memorized this
house well enough that she didn’t need her eyes to operate.
Creek... Thump! Creek...
Eden froze with her lips pressed against the glass, her eyes flying wide. The steady sound of
weight on the stairs around the corner grew louder and louder. She looked around herself and it
was only then that it really hit her where her body had taken her. No! She pleaded silently,
scampering to the behind the counter corner and clumsily pulling at the pistol still clipped to
her belt. Not like this! I can’t be seen like this!!
“Hello?...” The voice of a man still waking up croaked into the otherwise empty house. “You
know... breaking and entering someone’s home is a crime. And it’s pretty dumb to commit a crime in
the house of an officer. Why don’t you come out so we can both get back to sleep, yeah?” He
yawned.
Eden closed her eyes and covered her mouth, praying she could make herself small enough that she
wouldn’t be discovered. Even still, she heard the sandy sound of a hand sliding against the
counter, closer and closer to her hiding spot. “Look, I’m not looking for trouble if you’re not.
Just show yourself, I’m sure we can work this out without the law ever having to get involved.” He
stopped moving, inches away from Eden. The man peered over and the words caught in his throat,
“Aha! There you are—Detective?!”
“A-Atticus... please...” Eden whimpered. Although she was a mess, she still held herself in a
stance that said she was ready to fight if she had to. Her amber hair was slicked against her
forehead with sweat and her eyes were bloodshot with tears. She knew she looked like a monster.
When he tried to grab her shoulder, she squirmed and swatted at him, trying to escape.
“Detective, what happened to you?!” Atticus gasped, brushing aside her futile attempts to fight
him. “Hey, stop struggling!”
Once more, Atticus attempted to close the distance between them, which gave Eden an opportunity to
roll out of his reach. Pure instinct on her end—at this point her mind had been robbed of the
ability to command her with any kind of intent. With a grunt, Atticus reached forward and grabbed
her left arm, bending it behind her back and forcing her to drop her gun. “Detective, don’t make
this harder than it should be.” He instructed her sternly. “I can’t help you if you struggle.”
“I don’t... Didn’t mean to...” Eden trailed off, completely subdued. Even under Atticus’s mind
numbing affect, her thoughts came through jumbled. “Hurts...”
“What hurts?”
“Loud... Too loud...”
Atticus sighed, and said something that Eden couldn’t process. Before she knew it, he was helping
her up and taking her to his couch, “You look awful,” He commented, handing her a pill of some
sort. She squinted at it and then looked up at him. “It’s an Excedrin. Good for killing migraines.
I wouldn’t give you something suspicious, Detective.” He explained.
They sat there in silence for some time, Eden’s world coming in and out of clarity. He sat there,
across from her as he watched her every movement. Eden, when she did have a comprehensible
thought, found that she was grateful to come back to a reality of silence thanks to Atticus’s
presence. It was Atticus who finally said something.
“You know, if you’re going to pay me a visit, I don’t mind. I would like some kind of warning
though. Preferably not at,” He paused, checking his watch. “Half past midnight.”
Eden nodded, slowly, “I-I’m really sorry.” She began, still avoiding his gaze. “I... Don’t even
remember how I got here. It’s all a blur.” That much was true. The walk from the office to here
didn’t even register as memories so much as a flashes of sensory input and mind stabbing.
“Do you live close by?” Atticus pressed on.
“I don’t really know where I am,” Eden bit her lip. “I’m scared to admit it... but I think I could
have just as easily ended up in anyone’s house just now—I just so happened to wind up in yours.”
Atticus pressed a finger to his chin in thought. Then he sighed, “That’s even worse, somehow.”
“H-how?" Eden looked up at him again, blinking.
In response, Atticus tossed his gun on the coffee table. The sound of metal ringing on metal
caused Eden to recoil, and cover her ears, “What would you have done had you not landed in my
house? The only reason you did not get shot tonight is because I’m trained in how to handle one of
those things! What if you’d have ended up in some trigger-happy gun-nut's home, Detective?”
In response, Atticus tossed his gun on the coffee table. The sound of metal ringing on metal
caused Eden to recoil, and cover her ears, “What would you have done had you not landed in my
house? The only reason you did not get shot tonight is because I’m trained in how to handle one of
those things! What if you’d have ended up in some trigger-happy gun-nut's home, Detective?”
“I’d have fought them!--”
“Like you fought me?” Atticus shot her down immediately.
Eden winced. She knew he was right. Then again, she also knew it wasn’t just any kind of luck that
brought her to Atticus’s house, either. No, it was more like fate. Fate that caused Atticus’s
presence to nullify Eden’s ability. It was fate that Eden had been given an ability like that in
the first place. Perhaps, she wondered, it was not at all unlike opposite magnetic fields. Just
like one can repel the other, the way that Eden’s power was repelled by Atticus’s presence, they
may very well be intrinsically calling to one another. Why else would Atticus have been assigned
as Eden’s partner out of anyone? Why else would she have ended up in his home when moving on
instinct alone? The only explanation that Eden could come to was that the two of them were fated
to be near each other.