#Lore24 – Entry #281 – Sentinel City by Night #7 – Escalation
From the Journal of Sheba O’Rourke, Private Investigator
“Apartment acquired, work area set up, progress made. I’ve been studying all the notes and crime scene reports, coming up with a proper profile for the serial killer. The time between the victims would seem to indicate a compulsive need that slowly builds over approximately a month that finally overtakes the killer, forcing them to act, though the fact that the killer keeps the victims alive for some amount of time before they are finally slain would imply a more contemplative mindset. The lack of commonality amongst the victims, in appearance, lifestyle, background, and locations of residence would indicate that they are selected at random, seemingly when their features trigger a particular preference in the killer’s mind. The collection of additional sections of the victim’s flesh beyond simply skinning their heads could indicate a ritual of some kind, or perhaps even a cannibalistic need to feed upon the flesh. There are certain details that are contradictory based on the data I have so far, which may indicate some form of madness in the killer beyond what drives them to kill in the first place. The lack of evidence thus far in actually obtaining details about how the killer captures the victims could indicate an ability to instill trust in the victims, some way to diminish mental capacity through drugs, or some kind of supernatural compulsion that is not entirely uncommon amongst the Kindred and any number of other supernatural creatures.
As I continued to contemplate the data I had, I received a text from Rebecca Dodgers, linking me to one of the local news sites, and an article recently posted by none other than Delia Emmerson. Troubling was one word for it. The article proclaimed “Vampiric Serial Killer Loose in Sentinel City! SCPD Baffled!” It was topped by a photo of the most recent crime scene, taken before I arrived and from a distance, though there would be other images, even if they were blurred out, taken from the police files themselves, and from the scene I’d been at; thankfully she didn’t catch me in them, at least the ones she posted, anyway. She’d leaked a lot of details the police had been keeping under wraps, namely the specifics about what damage the victims had incurred, and the theory that someone was ritualistically sacrificing these people in the name of some vampire cult. Though the headline definitely made it seem more damning, she at least hadn’t outright proven Kindred involvement, though the accusations were close enough. Most of her fire was directed at the SCPD, though, for being incompetent and dragging their feet while failing to inform the people of the danger lurking on the streets. She did mention a private investigator being brought in on the case as the PD couldn’t handle the job themselves while questioning whether the FBI had even been contacted.
I’d barely finished my read through when my phone rang. It was Sokolova. She wasn’t happy. Don’t know what she was expecting; I had only been in town a few days; not like I could magically find the killer. Wasn’t bold enough to ask if she’d consulted the Tremere chantry about divination on the case, but the thought did cross my mind. Admittedly I may have been too hyper-focused on studying the killer instead of dealing with the media problem I knew about.
I was tasked with seeing to Emmerson in addition to finding the killer. She was adamant that I not simply kill Emmerson if it could be helped, that she should be dissuaded from her current course of investigation, and any sources she may have had found out. Other Princes would have had the human killed without a second thought, but I suppose her vision of a city where humans and vampires got along came first. Some would call that a weakness.
Without any additional clues to consider for the moment, I resolved to see what I could do about Emmerson and find out what she knew and from what other sources than the PD’s files. None of that vampiric cult ritual stuff had come from them, and I got the impression she had to leave some details out because they would have been too far out for the average reader to process. Fortunately, I’m good at getting into places I shouldn’t go.”