Murder Mysteries

Murder Mysteries is a short story by Neil Gaiman which was adapted first into an audio drama for the Sci Fi Channel website's Seeing Ear Theatre and then into a Dark Horse graphic novel illustrated by P. Craig Russell.

The story is divided into two main layers. The first is a framing narrative that focuses on a British man (the narrator) remembering his younger years when he was stuck in Los Angeles while trying to get back home. During his stopover he briefly hooks up with an old flame named Tink, and after leaving her apartment he meets an older man who tells him a story in exchange for some cigarettes. The older man tells the narrator of when he was the angel Raguel, the embodiment of God's vengeance, and of his investigation of the first murder in the history of existence after the body of another angel, Carasel, was discovered dead in the Silver City. Along the way he interacts with several other members of the divine hierarchy, including a pre-fallen Lucifer.

The conclusion of the story is, not too surprising for Neil, a bit of a Mind Screw. The ending can be interpreted different ways, and Gaiman himself provides an answer (see below), but it's hard to pin things down definitively.

This graphic novel provides examples of:

 * Adaptation Distillation: The radio drama.
 * Anthropomorphic Personification: Sort of, angels have specific roles, which sometimes seem to posses them.
 * Asexuality: Subverted. You would think that angels, especially ones without genitals would be incapable of sexual desire or activity. You would be wrong.
 * Always Murder: It's right there in the title folks.
 * Council of Angels: No official council, but angels seem to be running things without direct contact from God.
 * Determinator: Do not try to stop Raguel from doing his job. It will not end well.
 * Dramatic Irony: Hearing Lucifer say "Azazel would follow you anywhere" is a little chilling when you know what's coming.
 * Everyone Is a Suspect: Not because everyone hated Carasel, but because there was no obvious motive in the first place, and Raguel is willing to interview everyone in the Silver City to get to the bottom of things if he has to.
 * Fair Play Who Dunnit: Your Mileage May Vary, but it is pretty obvious that  even before The Reveal.
 * Foreshadowing:
 * Glowing Eyes of Doom: Raguel, whenever he is angry or using his powers.
 * God: No Silver City populated by angels building the blueprint for the universe would be complete without one.
 * : Or at the very least a bit of a jerk.
 * Have You Seen My God: The angels seem to be working without ever actually knowing where God is, but
 * Hey Its That Voice: Michael Emerson, best known for his role as Ben Linus on Lost, is the narrator in the radio play adaptation.
 * Hidden in Plain Sight:
 * Make It Look Like an Accident: Even though it looks like Carasel had died from falling, Raguel figures out pretty quickly that he was dead before the body hit the ground.
 * Mind Screw:  Word of God:
 * Omniscient Morality License: The only way
 * Our Angels Are Different: They're naked and sexless, for starters.
 * The Plan:
 * Power Floats: Lucifer and Raguel both demonstrate this.
 * Power Glows: Raguel glows whenever his aspect comes upon him.
 * The Reveal: Raguel assembles all of the suspects for his own angelic parlor scene.
 * Squick: The narrator's dream of
 * Start of Darkness: For Lucifer.
 * Sympathetic Murderer: It's pretty hard to not empathize with  Hell, even Lucifer sheds tears for him.
 * Unreliable Narrator: The narrator often mentions that he remembers certain things with crystal clarity and others not at all.
 * ~What The Hell, Hero?~: Raguel manages to deliver one of these to.
 * What You Are in The Dark: Lucifer willingly puts himself through these sorts of tests.
 * You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Technically it's silver with a hint of sea-mist, but Lucifer qualifies.
 * What You Are in The Dark: Lucifer willingly puts himself through these sorts of tests.
 * You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Technically it's silver with a hint of sea-mist, but Lucifer qualifies.