Sounds Like a Monster
The fluorescent lights of the downtown courthouse hummed, casting a sterile glow over the deserted corridors. Katie Morrison, a court clerk with strawberry-blonde hair pulled back in a practical ponytail, was hunched over a stack of case files. The late hour found her alone, the usual bustle replaced by an unsettling quiet. It was then she heard it – a guttural growl, followed by a series of heavy thuds, emanating from the vicinity of the old evidence locker. It was unlike anything she had ever encountered.

“Officer Kyson Hunter?” Katie’s voice, a little shaky, echoed as she approached the officer and his K-9 partner, a sleek, all-black German Shepherd named Sisko, who was sniffing intently at a scuff mark near the evidence room door.

Kyson Hunter, a 35-year-old officer with short dark hair and a lean, fit build, adjusted his utility belt. “Yes, ma’am. We’re here about the noise complaint. You reported a… monster?”
Wasn’t a normal noise
“It wasn’t a normal noise, Officer. It was deep, like something struggling, and then this heavy scraping. I… I’ve never heard anything like it.” Katie wrung her hands. “Pip would have been terrified.” Pip, her Jack Russell terrier, was currently safe at home.
Sisko, her black fur gleaming under the harsh lighting, let out a low, rumbling growl of her own, her powerful nose pressed to the floor. She nudged Kyson’s hand with her muzzle, then moved towards a ventilation grate.
“She’s picking up a scent,” Kyson stated, his eyes following Sisko’s focused movements. “Something’s been through here.”
Chief Williams, the department head and a veteran officer with decades of experience, arrived on the scene, his presence commanding. “What have we got, Hunter?”
“The complainant, Katie Morrison, heard a disturbance. Sisko’s indicating a trail,” Kyson reported. “It’s faint, but it’s leading away from the evidence room.”
Sisko, with a controlled urgency, began to follow the invisible path, her tail held high. Kyson, his attention solely on his K-9 partner, moved with practiced efficiency, his senses attuned to her every signal. The scent trail led them through a maze of administrative offices, past silent photocopiers and empty cubicles. The courthouse, usually a hive of activity, felt like a tomb.
“It’s like she’s following… a shadow,” Katie whispered, trailing behind them, a mixture of apprehension and fascination on her face.
The trail abruptly stopped at a deactivated service elevator. Sisko whined softly, pawing at the metal doors.
Someone used this
“Someone used this,” Kyson deduced, examining a faint grease stain on the edge of the door. “And it wasn’t a standard maintenance crew.” He looked at Chief Williams. “We might be looking at someone who knows the building’s inner workings.”
Suddenly, Sisko’s ears perked up. She let out a sharp bark and darted towards a seldom-used storage closet. Kyson moved swiftly, drawing his sidearm as he approached. He kicked open the door to reveal not a monster, but a disheveled man, his face streaked with dirt and sweat, crouched behind a pile of discarded furniture.
“Police! Don’t move!” Kyson commanded.
The man, startled, scrambled to his feet, but Sisko’s low growl and unwavering gaze effectively immobilized him. He was apprehended without further incident.
“Who are you?” Chief Williams asked, his voice firm. “And what were you doing in the evidence room?”
The man, later identified as a disgruntled former city employee with a history of minor offenses, confessed to attempting to steal valuable artifacts from the evidence locker. He had used the old service elevator to avoid security cameras. The “monster” Katie had heard was his panicked struggles and the clumsy attempts to disguise his presence.
“Impressive work, Hunter, Sisko,” Chief Williams said, nodding to Kyson. “Another case closed, and in good time.”
Katie Morrison let out a shaky sigh of relief. “Thank you, Officer. And thank you, Sisko. You’re a very good girl.” Sisko wagged her tail, her powerful nose having once again sniffed out the truth.
