Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) đ
- Author: Gray Cavender
Book online «Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) đ». Author Gray Cavender
âSo, has the English Department got a new chair?â
âYesâŠProfessor Naomi del Valle. When I finished meeting with ZZ, I went back to Ross-Blakey and met herâŠGrace introduced usâŠsheâs happy about her selection.â
âThatâs goodâŠand what did you think about her?â
âShe seemed pretty self-assured, and I mean that in a good way. At the same time, sheâs smart enough to know that sheâs becoming the chair at a bad time. Professor Siemensâ murder, the situation about Professor Keefer essentially being ousted, and now the business about their affair.â
Wes shook his head. âI would not want to be in her shoes. A new job under bad circumstances AND her predecessor, her deposed predecessor, still around. Sheâll constantly be looking over her shoulder.â
âYes, all true, but she came across as very poised.â
âAnd, you say that Grace Wilson likes her for the jobâ
âRight, but in any case, I donât think Professor del Valle has any bearing on our investigation.â
âOKâŠso, what about your interview with Professor Szabo?â
âNot much new. Actually, she said sheâd never even spoken with Professor Siemens, but she did know her to be a provocative figure.â
As Jillian talked, she scrolling on her IPAD back to her notes of the interview with ZZ. She found her place, then looked up. âThe one thing she did say is that she didnât much see Professor Keefer as a viable suspect. OK, she didnât say it exactly like that, but still, thatâs what she meant. She characterized his research as mainly reactive. Apparently, he criticizes other professors and their research, but he just criticizesâŠhe isnât a doer. ZZ didnât think heâs proactive enough to actually commit a murder.â
Wes waged his head and made a non-committal hand motion. âOK, but âreactâ is maybe exactly what he did. If he is a climber, maybe he was pissed that the affair could cost him a promotion, even cost him his job as chair. Maybe he blamed Professor Siemens. And, as a lover, who knows? Maybe the affair wasnât going well. I mean, heâs in counseling supposedly working on his marriage, then along comes this affair. Maybe he was betting the ranch on a woman after his own heart, but Professor Siemens doesnât seem to be a âone-man woman,â if you know what I mean.
Wes started singing, âIâm a one-man woman, and I want a one-woman man.â
Jillian asked, âDid you just make that up?â
âNo, itâs The Juddâs.
âAnd who are âThe Juddâs?â
âWynonna and her mother, NaomiâŠa big country act from the late 80s, early 90s.â
âOK, I think maybe Iâve heard of Wynonna, but not The Juddâs.
âYes, thatâs herâŠshe became a solo act. And, her sister is Ashley Judd, the actress?â
âOh yeahâŠIâve seen some of her movies. And also, saw her amazing speech about the â#Me, Tooâ movement. I just didnât connect her with Wynonna, the country singer.â
âTalented family. Anyway, back to the professor...maybe for any of several reasons, Keefer did react violently. From what Angel and Forensics said, this was a violent murder.â
âWell, in her defense, ZZ did say that her characterization of Professor Keefer was as an academic, and that as the police, we might see things differently.â
âThatâs sensible,â Wes agreed.
âShe also said that she sensed that you are a good person and a good mentor.â
âReally? I appreciate that.â
âYeah, we were talking about me being a detective. ZZ said that this had initially troubled herâŠbecause sheâs Roma, and they often have trouble with the police.â
Wesâ shoulders sank a bit. âBut sheâs OK now, I hopeâŠwith your decision I mean.â
âYes. She even said that maybe I could make the police better.â Jillian tried to arch her eyebrows, but could tell that she wasnât as effective at it as ZZ.
âSee, Jilly, sheâs also predicting a future in admin. Everyone agrees,â he said, and opened his palms as if presenting a fait accompli.
As she laughed, Jillian thought about ZZâs prediction that they would catch Professor Siemensâ killer. She also remembered her warning about danger. She didnât share any of this with Wes.
Wes said, âOK, two points from me. First, I heard from Crim Intel. They had warrant and got a copy of the Professorâs willâŠin a safety deposit box at her credit union. The will was in a folder with the name and address of her lawyer, who they also called. The will they found was THE WILL. Anyway, nothing heavy in itâŠthe Professor leaves everything to her dad. There were some contingences in should he predecease her, but he didnât.â
Jillian nodded.
âAnd, second, I talked with the Chief. Sheâd never heard any problematic stuff about President Davidos, although she did encourage us to âtread lightlyââŠher words. And, she reminded me that Davidos is a player, especially in Tempe. ASU has a big footprint in terms of the local economy: students and staff and faculty spend money on housing and food and entertainmentâŠnot to mention the development of the lake front. For a lot of reasons, ASU contributes to TempeâŠand everywhere else in the Valley.â
Jillian sighed. âASU as economic engine. This feels like a Sara Paretsky mystery. You know, V.I. Warshawski is trying to solve a murder and runs up against the economic structure of society.â
âBut doesnât V.I. usually capture the bad guy?â Wes smiled.
âPoint taken. Oh, did you have a chance to talk with Al? â
âI actually called him firstâŠbefore the Chief. I asked him point blank about any repâŠDavidos as a womanizer, affairs, rumorsâŠanything.â
âAnd?â
âNothingâŠwith a capital âN.â Al said it could be that Davidos was too smart to be messing around with anybody at ASUâŠor that maybe he was just too smart to get caught. He did say that Davidos fancies himself a playerâŠon many levels. And, sometimes that means⊠Well, who knows what that means? At the very least, itâs something that
Comments (0)