Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) š
- Author: Gray Cavender
Book online Ā«Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) šĀ». Author Gray Cavender
Sheād do a little work later, but for now Jillian willed herself to relax and enjoy the tea, and not to think about the case. Wes had always emphasized that you needed to relax and have a life, even when working a serious crime case. Heād been adamant about this, saying āyouāll survive and thrive.ā He added that a clear head also made for better thinking. Good advice.
Before Jillian returned her momās call, she had to decide how much to tell her about the case. Her parents had been supportive of her job change from Tempe to ASU PD. Of course, they usually were supportive of everything that Jillian did, but theyād been happy about the shift in jobs because they thought that it was safer to be working as an ASU detective than as a Tempe PD detective. But now she was back in the thick of itāa murder AND of an ASU professor. Neither of them had ever given her even a minute of grief, not when she first started working as a PD researcher, not even when she shifted over and became a detective. Sure, theyād been freaked about how her involvement as a researcher had led to the capture of a killerā¦by herā¦ but, even thenā¦
Oh well, knowing Mom, the issue probably wasnāt how much to tell her about the caseā¦sheād probably already heard about it, and thatās why she was calling. Jillian and her parents talked often, but still, a phone call on the day that an ASU professor is murderedā¦ānot a coincidence,ā she thought.
Her mom answered on the second ring. āHi Jillianā¦I saw it was you on caller ID.ā Mom had always called her āJilly.ā But, when she started grad school and with no warning, āJillyā became āJillian.ā Of course, now as when she was a kid, sometimes when her mom was angry she still got the full name treatment: āJillian Katherine Warne.ā Her dad still called her āJillyā as did Wes.
She also was āJillianā to the Justice Studies faculty and to her former student peers. For some students, a name change in grad school is THE thing. Somehow, they want (or need) more gravitas, so Pat becomes Patricia and Marty becomes Martin. Although sheād seen that with several of her peers, thatās not how āJillyā became āJillian.ā Because her email signature read Jillian Katherine Warne, to people who didnāt know her, she became āJillian,ā because that was the first name listed. OK, so maybe she was shooting for a bit more gravitas, too. Then, when she started at Tempe PD, when Lt. Timms had first called her āJillianā because sheād been talking with Carolyn Patek, somehow, she never got around to correcting her. But then, she had never corrected Carolyn either.
āThanks for calling back so soon.ā
āYes, Mom, of courseā¦ā Jillian left the sentence open.
āYes, Jillian, I know, I heard it on KJZZ on the way home from work. You OK?ā
āIām OK, Mom. Itās just a littleā¦I was one of the first officers at the scene. Soā¦ā
āOh, my god, Jillian. Was it horrible?ā
Itās funny how you revert to being a kid no matter your age when youāre around your parents. Jillian didnāt want to cry, so took a long pull of tea to steady herself. āI was going to say, ānot so bad,ā but, yes, honestly, it was awful. And I know that it shouldnāt make any difference, but somehow it was worse that the victim was a professor.ā
āIām sorry you have to see things like that, Jillian. And Iām not surprised that it seems worse because she was a professor. You were a student there not so long ago, after all. On the news, they said she was fairly new to ASU, so I assume that youād never had a class with her.ā
āNo. And of course my English classes were a long time ago, anyway.ā She was quiet, then said, āMomā¦and please donāt be upsetā¦Iām going to be on the case. Iām working with Wes. The reasonā¦ā
āYou donāt have to explain, Jillian. It makes sense in a bureaucratic sort of a way: youāre an ASU detective and the victimās a professor, soā¦ I do dread your dadās reaction to this news. You know, heāll be upsetā¦just a littleā¦proud, but worried.ā
āI know. But, itāll be OK, Mom. If you want me to talk with Dadā¦ā
āNo, donāt worry about that, but I may call Wes and make him promise to look out for you. Just kidding,ā she chuckled. āI imagine that youāll enjoy partnering with him again.ā
āIn a lot of ways, yes, it already feels comfortable. I learned so much from Wes, so maybe this will be like a refresher course.ā
āI know better than to ask a lot of questions about a caseā¦especially since itās so early in. As always, though, call or better still come over, if youād like to talk.ā
āThanks, Mom, youāre the best.ā
āOK, I just heard the garage door opening so your dadās home. I imagine heās heard the news, too, so Iāll ring off and he and I will have a confab. Donāt worry, it wonāt be a pity-party. But, we are parents so itās our job to worry some, even if weāre very, very proud.ā
āThanks, Mom. Tell Dad hi and Iāll call him tomorrow.ā
OK. And honey, you and Wes catch whoever did this.ā
āWe will.ā
The water in the kettle was still hot, so Jillian re-used her tea bagā¦just let it steep longer the second time around. While it steeped, she went to the bathroom and splashed some water onto her face. As she dabbed her face with a hand towel, she studied herself in the mirror.
Sheād reached the age when genetics were starting
Comments (0)