MLMM Saturday Mix Lucky Dip — The Mystery of the Gamer’s Murder

Detective Fred Morrisey and his partner, Detective Ron Hayden, looked down at the body outline drawn out on the floor. Morrisey then looked at the uniformed officer who had arrived first at the scene. “You interviewed the family members, right?”

“Yes sir,” the officer said. “Jim and Margaret Nichols. The deceased was their 30-year-old son, Jeff, and they were both asleep when the crime occurred. The ME estimated that death was between 11:00 last night and 1:00 this morning. The deceased’s father found his son’s body on the floor of their recreation room. It was around 6:30 this morning when he came down to fix himself some coffee and breakfast.”

“And neither he nor his wife heard anything last night?” Detective Hayden asked the officer.

“No,” he said. “They were both asleep and didn’t hear a thing. And there’s no sign of a break-in. The parents are in the living room now waiting for you to interview them.”

“Thanks,” Morrisey said to the officer and the two detectives made their way into the living room to talk with the victim’s parents.

“I’m Detective Fred Morrisey and this,” Morrisey said, gesturing to his partner, “is Detective Ron Hayden. We are very sorry for your loss.”

“Some loss,” the father said. “He was a 30-year-old man-child, a video gamer who spent all day and all night sitting in front of the TV playing his stupid video games. He was a freeloader taking advantage of his mother and me.”

“Jim, please,” the mother said. She looked at me with tears in her eyes. “Jeff was a good boy. Who would do such a thing to him?”

Morrisey asked if anything was missing from the recreation room where the body was found. “Yes, the gaming controller, the PlayStation, his laptop, and a book of what he called ‘cheats’ are missing.”

“And the trophy, dear,” Margaret said. “He won that trophy at a video gaming convention of some sort. Oh my, how proud he was of that trophy.”

“Did he have any enemies that you are aware of?” Hayden asked.

“You should ask those people who sponsor that video gaming competition,” James said. “They are a cutthroat bunch of hooligans if you ask me. Jeff has a bunch of flyers and brochures up in his room. I bet one of those good-for-nothing gamers did this.” Morrisey gave Hayden a look and Hayden headed up to the victim’s bedroom.

“Was anything else taken?” Morrisey asked the parents.

“I checked,” James said. “Our passports are still here in a drawer in the desk in the corner, but Margaret noticed that an umbrella was missing from the umbrella holder next to the front door.”

“I did see a snowflake or two falling before we went to bed last night, but now it’s raining out,” Margaret said. Maybe the killer took it to keep dry after he killed our darling boy.”

Hayden came into the living room carrying half a dozen. Flyers about local gaming conventions. “Thank you, Mr. and Mrs. Nichols,” Morrisey said. “You’ve been very helpful and it’s my job, along with Detective Hayden, to put together the puzzle pieces that will help us apprehend the person or persons who committed this crime.”


Written for the Mindlovemisery’s Menagerie Saturday Mix Lucky Dip, where the story cubes are puzzle pieces, trophy, gaming controller, umbrella, book, passports, snowflake, and body outline.

Bits and Pieces — May 25, 2024

Just a few bits and pieces that I thought I might share with you today.

“A wonderful man”

Donald Trump appears to believe that Hannibal Lecter, the fictional character from the 1988 book by Thomas Harris and the 1991 adapted film “The Silence of the Lambs,” was a real person. During a rally in New Jersey, he referred to “the late, great” Hannibal Lecter as a “wonderful man” and even mentioned the iconic scene where Lecter says, “I’m about to have a friend for dinner.”

Does Trump seriously think that “Hannibal the Cannibal” Lecter was a real person? Who knows? But given that Trump often claims that he defeated Barack Obama in an election (it was Hillary Clinton he beat), calls Hamas “hummus,” and said that wind turbines were killing whales “in numbers never seen before,” one can never tell with Trump.

Making liberal heads explode

Donald Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn, to whom Trump granted a pardon after Flynn had twice pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI, is promoting a new real estate firm catering to Trump supporters.

The website for MAGA Realty promises that all employees and partner firms are “thoroughly vetted to ensure that they share our beliefs, so you can rest assured that you are working with fellow patriots who will strive to invest in and uphold a conservative America.” The website also guaranteed that no portion of its earned commissions will go to left-wing causes. But a portion of every sale will go to support the FIGHT LIKE A FLYNN PAC. “No American in modern times has given more to America and been attacked for doing so.

In addition, all MAGA Realty homebuyers will be gifted a 25-foot flagpole, and an AR-15 “to make liberal heads explode.” Seriously, that’s what their website says.

The law is what we say it is

According to political strategist Michael Podhorzer, 74-year-old Clarence Thomas and 76-year-old Samuel Alito, along with the four other Federalist Society-approved Supreme Court justices, know that a second Trump term would enable them to pass on their seats to equally MAGA justices, sealing their legacy on SCOTUS for a generation.

If even one of the three Democratic appointees had a health or other issue leading to an empty seat, Trump could make nominations that add up to a 7-2 Federalist Society majority, with John Roberts the only one over 60 years old. To that, add the additional hundreds of other Trump appointments to federal district and appeals courts. That would enshrine the new “the law is what we say it is” jurisprudence.

Weekend Writing Prompt — The Best-Laid Plans

Robert Burns, the Scottish poet, wrote, “The best-laid schemes of mice and men go oft awry.” I am a victim of that this Memorial Day weekend. What was supposed to be a sunny and pleasant Saturday is, instead, cool and drizzly. And conjunctivitis has gotten to my son and his family, resulting in a pause in my Memorial Day weekend plans.

(Exactly 61 words)


Written for Sammi Cox’s Weekend Writing Prompt, where the challenge is “pause” in exactly 61 words.

SoCS — If He Wins in 2024…

“What did you just say?” Sara asked.

“I said I’m going to move,” Kevin responded. “You can move with me or not, that’s up to you. But if he wins in November, I’m going to move.”

“Move?” Sara said. “Move to where?”

“I don’t know yet,” Kevin said. “Mexico, maybe? Canada? I’ve heard good things about Costa Rica.”

“Oh shut up and quit talking out of your ass,” Sara said. “We’re not moving. Our family and friends are here. We have deep roots here. And maybe he won’t win.”

“Even if he loses the popular vote and the electoral college, like he did in 2020, he’s going to declare himself the winner. And if you think January 6th in 2021 was bad, this time, with all of his gun-toting MAGA maniacs taking to the streets, it will be much worse.”

“You’re painting a very bleak picture,” Sara said.

“I’ve always wanted to go to Australia or New Zealand. Or maybe France or Spain. Italy’s beautiful. Or one of the Scandinavian countries. Or Ireland. They speak English there, don’t they?

“Look,” Sara said, “according to all of the presidential historians, he was the worst president this country has had in modern times. You need to have faith in the American voters to not elect him again.

“To quote George Carlin, ‘Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.’ All of the polls have Trump winning and if he does, I’m definitely moving out of the country. End of story,” Kevin insisted. “I don’t want to live in Trump’s America.”

“Let’s hope and pray that doesn’t happen, Sara said.


Written for Linda G. Hill’s Stream of Consciousness Saturday prompt, where Linda has given us the word, “move” and asked us to write about the first thing that comes to mind.

FOWC with Fandango — Flute

FOWC

Welcome to Fandango’s One-Word Challenge (aka, FOWC). I will be posting each day’s word just after midnight Pacific Time (U.S.).

Today’s word is “flute.”

Write a post using that word. It can be prose, poetry, fiction, non-fiction. It can be any length. It can be just a picture or a drawing if you want. No holds barred, so to speak.

Once you are done, tag your post with #FOWC and create a pingback to this post if you are on WordPress. Please check to confirm that your pingback is there. If not, ÿplease manually add your link in the comments.

And be sure to read the posts of other bloggers who respond to this prompt. Show them some love.