Victim died from a singular sharp force: a penetrating wound to the head, resulting in cranial injury.

Left side, approximately 1.53 inches superior to the left orbit.

No murder weapon discovered in the crime scene.

Angela hummed, tapping her lip with her pen.

She paused the voice recorder and wrote her thoughts down on a yellow notebook, leg bobbing, her mind sinking deeper into concentration. By her elbow, a steaming cup of coffee remained untouched, and a nine-hour-old, empty sandwich wrapper laid crumpled up in a ball. Empty coffee cups littered her desk, alongside a mess of sticky notes with crucial thoughts written on them, such as: 'the nasal cavity?' and 'lentil soup'. Keeping her desk a mess was a risk to her professional dignity, and she could already imagine her colleagues giving her the stink eye and spraying air freshener in her direction, but the organized chaos always helped Angela think.

Her uniform smelled freshly of antiseptic and murk from the examination they had performed earlier today. Sinking into her skin, her hair; lingering under her nose. Nothing she wasn't used to, but being used to it didn't mean she wouldn't enjoy a long and hot shower when she got back home. Finally, wiping biscuit crumbs off her wobbling keyboard and cracking her long, crooked fingers - Angela got to work threading the details together. Peering blue eyes did not break from her accumulated notes and sketches, as she typed down observations regarding the case. And after what felt like hours, Dr. Ziegler sat back stiffly, curled hands hovering above the keyboard as she skimmed through her official autopsy report, eyes straining from overexposure to the monitor light.

After minutes of scribbling and typing and biting her pen, she played the recorder again and continued to listen to the sound of her voice, crackling, and interspersed with static:

Body was found by janitorial staff at 1:30 PM.

According to the man in question, he was lying face-down on his desk, his pose suggesting a struggle, which explains various points of discoloration on his skin…

Blunt force trauma found on abdomen… bruising prominent beneath the left rib –

Where was his position when he received that bruise again?

Angela hummed, her thumbs tapping a random rhythm on the keyboard's space-key.

Once she reached the end of the tape, marked by a soft 'click', afternoon had already come and gone, her desktop monitor the only light bathing her in blue. She hid the recorder in the drawer, her free hand busy alternating between drafting a few rough sketches on paper, and typing solid details on the autopsy report. The doctor took a moment to grab a folder for Case #765 on top of a pile, opening it and flipping over to the photos of the crime scene: dried blood splattered outwards in every chaotic direction on the victim's mahogany desk; his leather writing pad askew, probably because of how the body fell upon its expiry. She pinched her pen idly between her nose and upper lip, noting how neat the rest of the victim's desk looked otherwise. She wondered what Satya would say about that particular pattern of blood. It looked like a bunny rabbit.

"Doc Ziegler?"

Cutting herself off in the middle of her thoughts before it drifted too far, Angela reached out to grab her coffee cup, not minding its ice-cold contents, and re-read her notes during their Internal Examination. Angela could only imagine what kind of weapon the murderer used. Or get an idea of what it was, at least, after seeing the results of the death blow herself. This seemed like a tricky one.

"Doc?"

Now if she were to make a guess, it would have been an extremely sharp knife with a serrated edge or…

Angela blindly grabbed for her pen, cocking her head when she realized, during her feverish thought process, she had lost the blasted thing somewhere and could not for the life of her remember where…

"Yo, Dr. Ziegler!" Angela blinked rapidly when Dr. dos Santos' face appeared in front of her peripheral vision, her blurry sight sharpening until she could see the quirk of his eyebrow and his amused smirk up close. "Busy?" After a pause, a few seconds spent allowing her mind to buffer as she forcefully snapped herself back into reality, Angela jumped in her chair and uttered a small and startled 'oh'. Her speeding thoughts halting violently in its tracks, not unlike a race car screeching out of the road in a rabble of chaos. She blinked again and, similar to the spread of colored dye blooming in water, her mind began to consciously feel the kinks and aches in her bones ignored for too long. A beat, and she realized her stomach had also released an embarrassing rumble on top of it all. She sent Lucio a sheepish look.

"Doctor, I'm sorry, I - " Angela shoved her skewed glasses up her nose, "You startled me."

Lucio shook his head and rested hands on his hips while he regarded his frazzled mentor. There were biscuit crumbs dotting the corners of her mouth, and her blonde hair stuck up in several different directions all at once. Her clothing was rumpled and frayed, high heels pushed to the corner of her desk, leaving her feet covered in wrinkled stockings, and - there were coffee stains on her shirt. He sighed, wondering who was really looking after who, in their professional relationship.

"So," he said, elongating the word into a drawl, "Please tell me you ate lunch?"

Dr. Ziegler cleared her throat, "Yes, of course I had lunch." she said, wiping crumbs off her chin. "I had something hot and soup-like almost an hour ago, and – "

"I don't think coffee counts as 'lunch', Ange."

Angela groaned in defeat and closed her eyes, watching bright spots dance beneath her eyelids as her body melted into the chair like putty. She breathed in deep, then stretched her legs out with an exhale. "Just finishing up on some paperwork, that's all. You know how I get carried away sometimes."

"How about all the time? And I think 'carried away' wasn't exactly the term I was looking for. Try 'workaholic', or 'perfectionist'." Lucio leaned his hip against Angela's desk, crossing his arms, and peering down at her with a mock frown, his neon green headset bunched up around his neck. Even if Dr. Lucio dos Santos was many years younger than her, and technically working under her, Angela hunkered down into her seat feeling much like a child under the watchful eyes of a parent. "When was the last time you took a ten-minute break, young lady?"

"I am not working too hard," Angela groused. She sat back up in her seat with a grunt, feeling her back and neck pop. "This is just regular me, doing my regular me things," She shot him a look. "Mom."

"Don't give me lip, young lady, you know you're wrong about this," Lucio said, "As your colleague, you know I respect and look up to you. But as your friend? You gotta start taking care of yourself, Ange."

Angela huffed through her nose and began to get her hands busy, stacking the mess of reports which covered her desk into a neat-ish pile, and actively trying to avoid the look Lucio was giving her. "Just be glad I am out of my funk, Dr. dos Santos. I am happy, motivated, and ready to take on the next seventeen cases." Even the smile on her face felt fake. "Bring it on."

"Uhuh." Lucio wryly glanced at the mess of documents under her desk. "Angela, I'm sorry I gotta tell you this, but you have got to get a hobby. Doing something other than work might help you more with this midlife crisis thing."

"I am not having a midlife crisis thing. I'm not that old, doctor. And–" Angela raised her eyebrows, denial written plainly across her face, "I do have a hobby," she said with a shrug, "It just so happens that my hobby is related to my work."

"Your hobby is dead bodies." Lucio muttered.

"Solving problems. Discovering the unknown."

"… About dead bodies."

"Now, if you would kindly excuse me," Angela threw her entire weight into tossing a giant, teetering stack of documents on the floor next to her feet with a huff. "I was, in fact, about to go and take my break." she said, dusting her hands together, "Want to have lunch with me, doctor? It will be my treat."

"It's seven-thirty in the evening, Doc."

"Oh, well, time flies I suppose." Angela said, opening one of her desk drawers, then absentmindedly shoving Jim Jam wrappers and empty coffee cups inside. As if that would make her trash disappear in the morning.

After six months working in King's Row Forensics Department, the terrifying sight of Dr. Ziegler's desk hygiene was common enough for Dr. dos Santos to see. He learned early from older residents how futile it was to drag Dr. Ziegler away from a job, and Dr. dos Santos no longer stared at her and her atrocious, self-destructive habits in awe. Their student-mentor positions didn't stop Lucio from chastising her about her work ethic, especially after witnessing drawn shadows prominent under her eyes everyday, and her smudged make up only completed Angela's usual look. Now one of Lucio's many fears was finding Angela Ziegler in their morgue someday.

However.

Dr. dos Santos peered at her above the rim of his glasses, and noted the glow about her cheeks with a raised brow.

"Now that I think about it, I haven't seen you this excited about solving a case since…"

"I am always excited about solving cases."

"But where was that Doc Ziegler who was 'tired of it all' and who 'wanted to do something new with her life'?" he asked, "Someone who wanted nothing to do with 'death and dead stuff'? Don't give me that look, you know what I'm talkin' about. Where was that Angela Ziegler who was planning to quit and maybe try being a football coach or a field medic or something?"

"She is still here, and she happened to get a grip on reality after a lot of thinking." Angela said, ducking her head, as if that would hide the dusting of red on her cheeks. "Besides, I am already finished with this case. The precinct needs it urgently tomorrow, and, you know…" she stumbled on her words.

"And?"

"I had to finish it quickly." Angela finished lamely, her voice raising an octave higher as if that would make her sound innocent with her intentions. "Detective Amari was asking about it this morning, and I felt compelled to help her crack this case as soon as possible."

Lucio felt both his eyebrows reach up his hairline. "Oh. I see. I see." he said, a twinkle reaching his eye while he casually turned to check his nails, trying to appear more interested with its polish rather than the conversation itself, "Detective Dimples is an awesome source of motivation, isn't she? Hoping to share a hobby with her, huh?"

"Oh, Lucio!" Angela almost jumped out of her chair, smacking his shoulder with a manila folder. "Don't call her Detective Dimples."

"Hey, you were the one swooning over her 'smoky voice' and 'beautiful smile' a few days ago." Lucio laughed, rubbing at the spot she slapped. "Admit it, doc, you're too gay to handle another meeting with her."

Angela exhaled, and schooled her features before she became too flustered; raking her fingers through her hair, and hoping the red flush now covering her neck down would fade before another nosy nancy came into the office.

Relax. You are a doctor. You are a professional.

She straightened up in her chair, and folded her hands together in her lap. "I wanted to make sure I handed it in right away, that is all." she said, managing an impressive professional lull in the tone of her voice. "I didn't want to make our relationship with the precinct worse than it already is. And secondly," Angela's brows pinched in annoyance, and pointed at her office with a sharp jab of her forefinger: "'Detective Dimples' stays inside this room, doctor."

"Detective Amari's bone structure and cheekbones are so sharp and prominent–"

"Lucio."

"It makes me want to take up anthropology. Oh Detective."

"Lucio!"

"Fine, fine, I promise I won't bring it up again." he said, trying not to double up in laughter, his poor attempt almost making him slip off her desk. "Professional reasons my ass, though, I know you're her favorite in the lab. Always asking about you and your 'thoughts'." he waggled his eyebrows, "You should ask her out instead of doing this–" he motioned his hands at her vaguely, "Weird flirting ritual thing you're doing. I doubt you can woo her by talking about dead bodies, Doc Ziegler."

"I do no such thing, doctor."

"You need to get out there and get a life. Any life. Get a hobby. Get some friends. Ask Detective A out on a sweet date. Live a little."

"I do have friends. You're my friend, yes? Sometimes I even read books."

"Thrilling."

"And the detective and I do connect, socially, but just as acquaintances and nothing more." Angela said, pulling her fingers thoughtfully, "I am a grown woman, doctor, I have complete control of my life."

"Last time you spoke to her, you struck up a conversation about bile."

"Well, I thought it was fascinating." Angela grabbed the rest of her documents and began to rearrange them in a tray next to her monitor, this time with less gusto, feeling herself hunch over as her mind began to conjure up depressing thoughts. "I don't think I am her type, anyways."

"Oh, nonsense."

But it was true. Whether Angela liked it or not, why would anybody consider dating a frumpy, high-strung workaholic, who liked to open up dead bodies for a living?

Dr. Ziegler and Detective Amari were connected through their profession only, no matter what her feelings were. They barely did anything beyond strike awkward pleasantries and empty conversations with each other. Trying anything more proved too much for her to handle. She found it difficult navigating through compelling words above work jargon, while stuttering and pushing through her infuriating and terrifying feelings. Not even the universe was kind enough to let them to meet on different circumstances, thus, they only ever saw each other to discuss murder cases among... other things.

Angela's eyes, tired and unfocused, turned to look back at the autopsy report, wishing she could get sucked back into its world, where things had more clarity and sense and nothing was embarrassing.

'The attacker must have kept the victim from moving away from his desk, since the blow came from behind.'

Angela wondered when speaking with the dead became easier for her than dealing with the living.

She checked the time on her digital clock, blinking when she read it was now seven-forty six in the evening. The lights from the city cast a glow over the smoggy horizon, and as Angela listened carefully, she could hear police sirens echo off from a distance. She wondered if it was going to be another case they would eventually find through their doors.

Another body, another life ended.

She felt a hand on her shoulder ground her, all teasing gone from Lucio's voice. "You won't know unless you try, Doc."