Writer’s Prompt: When a Suicide Feels Too Clean: A Dark Noir Writing Prompt

Everyone calls it suicide. She calls it staged.

Writer’s Prompt

The cigarette smoke always gave her away. That’s how she knew this wasn’t a suicide.

Everyone else in the precinct stood around the body, nodding like bobbleheads. Open window. Empty bottle of pills. A note folded neatly on the nightstand. Case closed before the coffee cooled.

But she didn’t smoke.

The victim, Mara Levinson, had quit years ago. Lung scarring. Hospital visits. An iron will stronger than most men she knew. And yet the ashtray on the windowsill overflowed with cigarette butts—cheap ones, the kind bought in desperation, not habit.

The room smelled wrong. Not of despair. Of performance.

The note was too tidy. The handwriting too steady for someone supposedly drowning in pills and regret. The pills themselves? Carefully arranged. No panic. No mess. Death with manners.

She knelt beside the body, ignoring the ache in her knees. There were bruises on Mara’s wrist, faint but deliberate—finger marks, not gravity. Someone had held her still. Someone patient.

Outside, rain slicked the pavement like a mirror she’d rather not look into. The city always preferred its lies simple. A suicide meant paperwork and silence. A murder meant noise, questions, and enemies.

She stood, straightened her coat, and pocketed the note.

They’d call her cynical. Say she couldn’t let the dead rest. But she trusted patterns more than people, and this scene had too many rehearsed lines.

Someone wanted this to look clean.

Someone wanted everyone to stop looking.

That was a mistake.


✍️ Writer’s Question

What detail will your detective notice that no one else does—and what will it cost her to pursue the truth?

The Night Joe Nix Crossed the Line

Every cop has a night they don’t talk about—Joe Nix is about to face his.

He stood in the alley behind the precinct, staring into the slick black window of an abandoned storefront. The reflection wasn’t kind. A man past his prime stared back—eyes hollow, jaw tightened, spirit cracked. A dinosaur, they called him. Extinct. Irrelevant. A relic from a time when justice wasn’t a negotiation. The captain’s words echoed in his skull: One more step out of line, Nix, and you’re done. But the captain didn’t know the streets like Joe did. He didn’t hear the whispers coming from corners where the law never reached.

Then Marco Sanchez pushed open the club’s back door, exhaling a plume of smoke like a bored dragon. He didn’t even look around—arrogant, untouchable, sure the night was his to burn. Joe watched him take that first drag, the ember glowing like a target.

Joe’s hand slid inside his coat, brushing metal. He knew what the rulebook said. He also knew what men like Marco did when the city slept.

Tonight, the line between justice and survival was going to blur—and Joe was ready.


Reader Question

If you were Joe Nix, standing in that alley, knowing what you know—would you walk away or cross the line? Why?

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