Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) đ
- Author: Gray Cavender
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âWesâŠitâs just thatâŠWes, Iâm just not interestedâŠâ
âOK, I understand.â
âWell good, although I donât know that I doâŠâ
âYeah, Jilly, I guess the question is, are you just not especially interested in Peter Voss or not interested in general?â
âMaybe a little of both,â she grimaced. âFor sure, Iâm not interested in Officer VossâŠOK, Iâm sure heâs a nice guyâŠI just didnât feel any attraction toward him. As for the âin generalâ part, I donât know, WesâŠsometimes I think that maybe seeing someone who you work with isnât such a good idea.â
âYou mean, like Brian?â
âLike Brian...â she noddedâŠâbecause if it doesnât work out, then you have the problem of continuing to work together, and that can beâŠuncomfortable.â
âI hear you. Also, I think you are correct that Peter has some non-professional interest in you. Heâs been asking âthose sorts of questions:â whatâs she like, is she seeing anyoneâŠyou know, things like that.â
âYes, I sensed âthatâ sort of interest. Like I saidâŠIâm sure heâs a perfectly nice guy, Wes, I just donâtâŠâ
âHe is, indeed, a perfectly nice guy, but no worries, JillyâŠthatâs your call. Iâm not playing match-maker.â
Wes was a good partner AND a good friend. He rarely stuck his nose in her businessâŠOK, now and thenâŠbut the nice thing about them as partners AND as friends, is all of the stuff that didnât need to be said. So, Jillian smiled, relieved.
âThanks, Wes. Now, take a look at thisâŠitâs a Wiki entry for Ayn Rand.â
Wes pulled a chair around so that he could see her screen and took a seat. He glanced at the page and then scrolled down to the notice of continuing pages. âHoly molyâŠyou read all this?â
Jillian laughed, âNo, I just pulled it up. I was going through the entries for some of the other people weâve run acrossâŠthey were more manageableâŠIâll make a summary for you. And, I will read through this Ayn Rand stuffâŠsometime. But enough about all this. In your phone message you said you were going to Phoenix to interview Professor SpannâŠwhatâs up?â
âYeah, well, like I told you, my plan was to do phone interviews with the two guys Susan Moser said were the Professorâs former loversâŠwhile you were interviewing your former professorâŠIan Naremore. By the way, I take it that he didnât confess during your interviewâŠ?â
When Jillian just shook her head, Wes continued, âNoâŠOK, so weâll need to continue with our investigation then,â he gave a deadpan smile. âAnyway, I called BradleyâŠheâs the lawyerâŠand it was basically what Moser told us. But, Professor Carlton SpannâŠthat was a whole other ball game. It took less than thirty seconds to know that their relationship didnât end like Moser said it ended. He told me heâd ended the relationship AND because of something she did.â
âReallyâŠwhat?â
âWell, he gave me a quick overview over the phoneâŠenough to know that I wanted to interview him in personâŠyou know, to see him up close and personal. You know what, let me run get my notes.â
âWes, we can go back to the officeâŠâ
âNo, no, youâre all set-up hereâŠI just want to grab my notes to be sure I donât leave anything outâŠbe right back, Jilly.â
While Wes was gone, Jillian looked again at the entry on Ayn RandâŠmainly at her photo on the right side of the screen. She thought about the other two photosâŠone in each of the Professorâs offices. Sheâd just closed the Ayn Rand site when Wes returned.
He was excited and talking even as he closed the door and took a chair. âSo, first things firstâŠall the biographical stuff Susan Moser told us about Carl SpannâŠthatâs all correct. Also, Iâd say heâs about Professor Siemensâ ageâŠmaybe a year or two olderâŠâ he made a wavy hand motion.
âAnyway, according to him, the trouble came when he had this idea an about ASU/community partnershipâthis is right up his alleyâŠif you remember what Moser said about his specialty. And from how he saw it, it heâd had a very original ideaâŠwhich is why he ran by Professor SiemensâŠhe wanted her opinionâŠand because they were seeing each other.â
As Wes told this story, he occasionally referred to his notes. He had developed his own system of shorthand, largely unintelligible to anyone but himâŠexcept now and then you could see, more clearly spelled-out, direct quotesâŠcomplete with quotation marks. Jillian could see his note pad, and it made her smileâŠsheâd forgotten about his notes. She used to tell Wes that he should switch to an IPAD because you can type faster than you can write. He had tried to show her how to decipher themâŠwith absolutely no successâŠexcept for the quotes.
âSo, he said she asked him a lot of questions, but he didnât think anything about itâŠjust figured she was trying to help him hone his idea. UntilâŠnext thing he knows, he sees an interview with Professor Siemens in The Republic where she lays out her innovative idea for ASU/community partnerships. And get this, she doesnât mention himâŠat all. From talking with him, I had the sense that he was as mad that she didnât give him any credit as that she stole his idea.â
âAnd so thatâs why he broke-up with her?â
âThatâs what he said.â Wes referred to his notes again. âHe told me the problem was that, after this, he didnât trust her anymoreâŠsaid you needed trust to maintain a relationshipâŠbut that she was too competitive. He told me that heâd had that kind of competitive relationship with his wifeâwho is also a professorâwhich is why they broke-up.â
âWow, soâŠdid you have a sense that Professor Spann had it in for her so much thatâŠyou know? Did he sayâŠhas he seen her lately?â
Wes smiled, âGood question, Jilly. And yes, he saw her at a meeting week-before-last. He said everything was cordial enoughâŠâ Wes glanced at his notes again, ââŠbut he added that sheâŠProfessor SiemensâŠstill didnât get it.â
Jillian was quiet, taking it all in. Then, âSo what do you think, Wes?â
He
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