Mysterious Murder
Under Investigation; Suspicions Fall On Millions
New York (AP) A dramatic murder investigation is underway in
the heart of the Big Apple, after one of the city’s biggest landmarks became a
crime scene. Times Square, the commercial intersection serving as ground zero
for thousands of revellers on New Year’s Eve, is now closed off during a police
crime scene investigation, after what police describe as a scene out of the
introduction to the television show Blindspot, which featured Times
Square becoming a crime scene because of the dumping of a live person.
The body of a lone man, shot in the chest 23 times, was
dumped in the Square in the early hours of Friday morning, at some point
between two thirty and two forty five. “We’ve been combing traffic cams,” NYPD
spokesperson Callie Evers told reporters. “That time of night, the square’s not
as busy as during the day, obviously, but no one saw how the body arrived. We
can confirm however that the victim has been positively identified. Um, his
name is... his name is Daylight Saving Time.”
An odd name, to say the least. Time legally changed his name
four years ago from his previous name, Edgar Wallace Kazowski. The fifty four
year old electrician, described by friends as “a social drinker” lost a bet on
a Rangers hockey game and was legally obliged to change his name to whatever
the winner chose. “I was the one who won the bet,” his cousin Harry Kazowski
confirmed to reporters at his home on Staten Island, seeming distraught. “I
mean, I’m a Devils fan, big time, and he was a Rangers fan. We made this crazy
bet over one lousy game, and he lost. I knew how much he hated changing the clocks twice a year, so it seemed natural to
make him change his name to Daylight Saving Time. We were always messin’
around and pulling jokes on each other, but come on, if I’d known his name
mighta gotten him killed, I’d have never gone
through with it.”
While police continue their investigation, experts have
already weighed in on the case. Criminal psychologist Elizabeth Lamont mused on
the specifics of the killing from her offices at Columbia University. “Shot in
the chest twenty three times. That is
significant. We lose an hour out of our twenty four hour day when we set our
clocks back each year, which on a side note, is rather irritating. Hence
twenty three bullets, twenty three hours. What I believe we’re looking at is
someone with a particular hatred of daylight saving time. An obsessive hatred
that runs so deep that they would kill someone by that name. I’m sure the
police have already considered that, but if they want a consult, I’d love to help. Writing up a profile on
this killer would give me enough material for my next book. I’m thinking of
calling it Temporal Homicide: Sex And Death In The Big City. Isn’t that
a great title?”
Columbia physics professor Albert Wentworth, known to his
colleagues as Buzzkill, had his own take when reporters started to ask about
Daylight Saving Time. “Look, I get it. It’s frustrating, it’s irritating, it’s
outdated, it’s a nuisance having to change your clocks every few months. Back
and forth. And it’s not like we ever gain back that one hour of lost
sleep. We just spend a week in a daze as we go through our daily routine,
thinking we’re off by an hour, which we are. Anyway, there’s nothing we can do
about it but complain. Daylight Saving Time is here to stay...” Reporters
interrupted him, telling him about the murder. He paused for a long moment.
“What are you asking me for about a murder? Dammit, man, I’m a
scientist, not a detective! Come back to me when you want my opinion on
temporal theory or the bending of light.”
Millions of people might well be suspects. Daylight Saving Time is used in places across the world, with exceptions here and there, and
there are always complaints and grumbles from every corner when it comes time
to yet again lose that hour every year. “It might be easier to compile a list
of everyone who didn’t have reason to
hate Daylight Saving Time,” Larry King quipped. “I mean, I’d be on the other list, I can’t stand Daylight
Saving Time, and I’m kind of retired.”
One person is already
in the clear, though simply because she is currently incarcerated in Calgary,
Alberta, Canada, awaiting trial on multiple murder charges. Renowned mystery
writer Jessica Fletcher, the infamous and prolific serial killer who stands
accused of potentially thousands of murders over decades, spoke to this reporter
by phone from the detention facility that currently serves as her residence.
“Someone actually killed a person by that name? And dumped their body in
Times Square? And nobody saw it? Sounds like the sort of thing I’d commit,
I mean, that I’d write, if I wasn’t stuck in this cell. But I won’t be
here long. I’ll get out. And when I do, I’ll get even with that insufferable
Mountie who arrested me.”
The last word in the case belongs to the aforementioned
Mountie. The world’s most fearsome lawman, RCMP Inspector Lars Ulrich, who
arrested Fletcher for murder, has often been mistaken for another Lars Ulrich,
who happens to play the drums for Metallica when not yelling at people to speak
up. Ulrich the lawman was reached for comment by phone at his detachment in
the Alberta foothills. Reassured by this reporter that he was fully aware that
the inspector was not that Lars Ulrich, the Mountie confirmed that he
was aware of the murder case in New York. “It’s a hell of a thing,” he said in
that gritty, cranky way that has driven many an entertainment reporter to run
for their lives. “Most people hate
Daylight Saving Time. Narrowing down a suspect list might be next to
impossible.” When asked what he thought of Daylight Saving Time, the Inspector
replied, “To borrow a phrase from Tolkien... Daylight Saving Time was made in
the fires of Mount Doom. Only there can it be unmade. It must be cast back into
the fiery chasm from where it came.”
Best time of the year to tell your boss that you overslept. :)
ReplyDeleteI'd like to kill Daylight Saving Time! I don't mind the fall back part, but spring forward really bites!
ReplyDeleteI never have to change my time !
ReplyDeleteIt is wonderful la la la la la la la. . . . . .
cheers, parsnip and thehamish
Bravo! I hate changing the clocks back and forth. We are not saving anything and wasting a lot of time for nothing. Arizona is the one sane state that I know of that doesn't go through those gyrations. Of course, the Navajos follow the man-made change for some reason, so if you drive onto their reservation, you have to change your clock.
ReplyDeleteI don't like it either. But there are so many things ahead of it on my list these days that I'm just going to shrug my shoulders and set the clocks.
ReplyDeleteWhoever invented this should be murdered!
ReplyDeleteI have to ask my husband which way to roll the clocks--it confuses those of us who are dyslexic (I do not joke!)
@Diane: well the laundromat I go to wasn't open on time this morning.
ReplyDelete@Norma: it does!
@Parsnip: very lucky!
@Mari: it does nothing but cause aggravation.
@Petrea: I would prefer it abolished!
@Lorelei: I expect they are long dead.
Hehe...from our last time change I haven't changed the bedroom clock, I just calculate one hour behind to get the time...even in the dead of night!
ReplyDeleteYep. I want that hour back.
ReplyDeleteAm I to conclude that DST is not one of your favorite things? If only there was a reason for it!
ReplyDelete