Detective Jim Kahn was not an experienced detective and in fact, he had never taken a case of this magnitude before. Kahn was ordered to investigate a homicide case at the Gorham Shipyard. The shipyard was forced to be shut down and business was stalled for the day. With reporters surrounding the front gaits of the shipyard and the police station very close to the shore of the docks, Kahn and his small crew raced across the water in the police boat to investigate the scene. The docks of the shipyard covered the shore with warehouses covering the grounds behind them.
As Kahn and his crew moved into the docks, they could see the body of a man laying across a massive anchor. The man looked to have been cut and there was blood on the planks of the docks. Kahn reached down to check the man’s pulse but all he felt was the shock of an ice cold neck of a dead man. Ty, one of Kahn’s crew mates, was convinced that the man had gotten himself tangled in the deadly chains of the twisted anchor while unraveling it, which was a probable suspicion. However, Kahn believed that this could not explain the slash wounds across his chest. Kahn glaced across the docks looking for anything to help them with the investigation. Suddenly he noticed a handprint on a barrel that was up against the overhead doors of the warehouse. Kahn strolled over to the barrel and noticed that the print had been created in blood.
At this point, Kahn knew that this was the scene of a murder! A sharp object had obviously struck the man leading to his death. Kahn looked around for a weapon or object that could have been used. He noticed a hatchet leaning up against the frame of an open overhead door. Kahn walked over to the hatchet to inspect it for evidence. However, it seemed to be clean, but maybe a little too clean. As he reached down to picked it up, there was a loud crash inside the dark warehouse. Kahn’s crew members who had been wandering the scene raced over to the door. Kahn lifted his flashlight from his belt and turned it on. Scanning with the beam of light, Kahn moved inside the warehouse. It had become very quiet and everything seemed still. Kahn shouted, “This is the police. Come out with your hands up!” He turned to his left and suddenly a dark figure plunged towards him…


The detail in this scene is insane. The red greenish hint on the shipyard doors definitely helps give the doors a metallic hint. The shadows under the roof and the doc help add a 3D aspect to the image. The last big detail I noticed was that you even lowered the opacity of the water around the pilings so you can see them as they enter the water.
The posts in the water might need a bit of distinction; usually, if the scene is near ocean water, wharf posts tend to have a mix of barnacles at the point where the water meets them. The doors, on the other hand, look a bit tiled rather than metallic, so you should put a bit more emphasis on their reflective nature.