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
âAnyone else come to mind,â Jillian asked.
âWell, obviously Nelda knowsâŠâ he stopped mid-sentence and exhaled ââŠshe knew a lot of peopleâŠin Business and I would guess in English, too. And for that matter, across campus. But, I think Miriam and David are your best bets in terms of a real connection. I mean, theyâre friends.â He looked down and pursued his lips.
As the interview drew to a close, Wes and Jillian exchanged cards with Seay. They promised theyâd be in contact as they learned more, he promised to call if he thought of anything important, and he provided campus phone numbers for Miriam Moser and David Roberts. Wes and Jillian again offered their condolences.
Wes and Jillian re-entered the BAC to check if Forensics had arrived at that office. They found another room full of people. Theyâd been there about ten minutes.
Wes asked Jaime Lopez who was in charge, âAnything so far?â
âNot so far, Wes. Weâll follow our protocol, but everything looks OK, at least on the surface.â
âAppreciate it,â Wes answered. âAnything on the office over in the English Department?â
âThere was a dead woman in there,â Jaime said in his usual drole manner. âBut, I expect you mean beyond the obvious.â
Wes canted his head, but said nothing.
Jaime smiled and said, âOK, Detective Sergeant WebbâŠthere were blood smears on the floor, and some of the furniture, although not a lot...probably due to the nature of the head woundsâŠI saw more trauma than laceration. Also, blood smears on the victimâs blouse. And, I donât know if you guys noticed, but there was blood on that paperweight thing. Given those smears and its shapeâŠcould have been the murder weaponâŠbut donât hold me to that.â
âThanks Gil,â Jillian laughed.
âNo worries,â Wes assured him. âBut, youâre done over there?â
âYes, everything is logged and bagged and on its way to the lab. Angel took charge of all of it herself. You know Angel. By now, sheâs already running tests on everything.â
Wes looked around the office again, then said, âOK, guys, weâre heading out. Let us know when you know.â
Jaime said, âWill do, and by the way, we released the ASU campus cop guy. I hope that was OK.â
âWeâre good, Jaime.â
Back out at the golf cart, Jillian said, âItâs a pretty big deal that Angel is working this.â
âWell sure, she manages the lab, but she still gets out into the field now and then. You know, on really high profile casesâŠI guess like this one. Or on cases that are near and dearâŠlike when children are victims. But yes, youâre right. Her being all âhands-onâ says a lot. ButâŠbecause it is so high profile, sheâll make us the labâs top priority.â
Jillian nodded, âHope so.â They were seated in the cart now, but she didnât start it yet. âOK, so what next?â
âWell, I was thinking about that. OK, why donât you cart me to the edge of campus and Iâll walk back to Headquarters from there. I want to check-in, mainly to start the ball rolling about getting you assigned to the case. Iâll check with Chief McCaslin first, on the Tempe PD side of thingsâŠthen call Al, and clear it with him since heâs your boss.â
âOK, sounds good. And what do you want me to do?â
âI thought about that, too, Jilly. You go ahead and interview the woman whoâs the Assistant Chair in English. When I finish with our chiefs, maybe Iâll call that student, the one who missed her appointment with the Professor, and talk with her. Or, I may just wait and you can talk with her. You were an ASU student not so long ago and Iâm thinking that might put her more at ease.â
Wes bit his lip, paused, and said, âI think thatâs about it. When you finish-up in the English Department, why donât you come over to Tempe and weâll see whatâs what.â
Jillian started the cart. As they moved forward, they saw the Tempe PD Forensics Van parked on their right.
She set outâŠa straight shot across the campus. As they passed MU and then the original building of Hayden Library on their right, she maneuvered between students and traffic cones and small orange and red and white stripped barricades. The students had noticeably thinned although there were still some. Jillian assumed they were heading to nearby parking structures or to the edge of campus on University.
Jillian said, âIn about fifteen minutes, the campus is going to look as empty as it does during Christmas.â
Wes nodded, then said, âGeez, you can tell this is ASUâs Tempe campus thoughâŠthereâs as much construction here as there is on Tempeâs city streets.â
âTell me about it. This construction is all over the campus. And as for Tempe, thereâs so much construction over around College Avenue where I live that sometimes I wonder if Iâll be able to get home. And, whatâs even crazier, you never know from day to day what streets will be closed, so you canât even plan your route. Itâs a secretâŠlike a Rave.â
âSame in our neighborhood, Jilly. Yeah, Tempe needs new water pipes, but this is insane. I was kidding Marilyn the other day that pretty soon the only way in or out of our street will be by chopper.â
They passed the Social Sciences Building on the right, and then, as they neared the Language and Literature Building, also on the right, Jillian slowed the cart. âSo, this is where the English Department was when I was a student. They just recently moved to where we were earlierâŠlike I said, that used to the library for ASUâs law school.â
âWhatâs that building called again? Some sort of hyphenated name, right?â
âYes, itâs Ross-Blakely Hall.â
And the one we just past isnât just Language and Literature. Says, Dunham Language and Literature. Whatâs with all the names?â
As she braked to
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