Difference between revisions of "Log:13am: Interviewing Gisa"
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Latest revision as of 16:25, 11 September 2017
13am: Interviewing Gisa | |
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Participants
Plot:Thirteen at Midnight - ST: Annapurna. Player: Gisa |
11 September, 2017 Detective Hewitt and Officer Lopez go to the Jewish Bookstore to interview Gisa about kabbalah possibilities for the numbers involved in the case. |
Location
Tamarack Falls Jewish Books - MT03 | |
Mid-morning on a Monday: it's not exactly busy in the Jewish Bookstore. Gisa Cohen has brought in shipment and is currently stocking all of the Rosh Hashanah stuff: honey pots, apple dishes, plates with honey and bees on them, red aprons with yellow lettering, potholders with beehives, paper products and charms and planners with the year '5778' on them. There's no one currently here at this hour. The shop isn't exactly the most profitable thing in the universe, but it manages to keep the lights on. Sipping coffee from a large blue earthenware mug, Gisa carefully sets up a display of apple-and-honey-themed kitchenware. Israeli pop plays, and the golem hums along with it, if not very well.
The younger man, with a much-broken nose, is of mixed African and European descent, skin a milky chocolate. He does a double-take at Gisa, seeming surprised, then returns to his inspection of the shop. His hair is buzzed close to his scalp, and while one eye is coffee-bean brown, the other is bright blue.
The younger man's startle is not openly acknowledged, though her eyeflames -- or her eyes, whatever the viewer sees -- slide to him, and then back to the older officer. She crosses the room, holds out her hand to the older officer. In America, everyone shakes hands, right?
The younger officer tips his hat, but leaves it up to his superior to speak. "Ms. Cohen, we're here to ask some questions about the disappearances and subsequent deaths of thirteen men, women and children. As your business is what it is, we're hoping you can help." He pulls out a spiral-bound paper notepad, but doesn't write anything yet, waiting for her consent.
Taking in a deep breath, Gisa lets it out slowly from her bellows lungs; it sounds like a blacksmith working at the forge to her, a leathery sort of thing, but it only sounds like sighing to those who see her mask. "As my business is what... what is, Detective? I am sorry, I do not think that I understand that statement. How may I help you, and what makes my business ... helpful?" Her brow knits up, and she smooths her face, calming any reactions she might have or display so as to give only her most helpful, placid golem face. Hopefully.
She pauses, allowing the Detective to catch up in note-taking, and then she goes on. "For aleph, the value is one, for chet eight, for daled, four, and so the total numerical value of echad, that is, the word one, is 13. So the number thirteen is a number of unity, symbolizing oneness. Echad is the word we use to say The Lord Is One, and so it is a significant word, liturgically." A pause. "I imagine that is not particularly helpful, but that is the meaning of the number thirteen in Kabbalah."
The Detective writes quickly, and stops her a few times to get the spelling on the letters and foreign words down correctly, but at the end, after a glance at his younger colleague doesn't net more than a brief shake of his head, the officer closes his notepad and pulls out a business card. "Thank you, ma'am. I'll get this back to the station. If you think of anything else, call the number on the card, and Betty'll get the information to us. We're doing our best to see this case gets closed as quickly as possible." They'd darn well better be. Who wants murders and bizarre occult arrangements of bodies in -their- neighbourhood?
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