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
He nodded. âWell, obviously thatâs more than I remembered. So, GilroyâŠâ
She smiled and asked, âAnything in particular that you want from Gilroy?â
âNo, just the usual. He did seem to have the most to say about Professor Siemens.â
âCome in,â Gilroy answered her knock. His door was about three-quarters open, enough to say, âIâm in,â but to afford some privacy from people walking by. His front window was also translucent, like the one in Professor Siemensâ office.
âThanks, Professor Gilroy,â she said as she entered. As Detective Sergeant Webb mentioned, weâll be conducting follow-up interviews. Iâm Detective Sergeant Jillian Warne, and Iâm with ASU PD.â Jillian displayed her ID again as she spoke.
âThat was quickâŠso Iâm first?â As he answered, he gestured to a chair in front of his desk. He seemed to take some measure of pride in being the first interview subject.
âYes, you are.â She took the proffered chair.
He carefully scrutinized her identification. âSo, Detective Warne, Detective Sergeant Warne,â he corrected himself, âIâve no doubt that you want to hear more regarding my exchange with Jonathan about Neldaâs hiringâŠâ Before Jillian could answer, he added, âNo worries, Iâm an open book and Iâll be happy to fill you in on all of ourâŠdirty linen,â he chuckled. âBut first, I have to say, you donât look like a police detective, much less a sergeant. As my students might so inelegantly ask, âSup with that?â
Jillian got this a lot. Sometimes it was amusing, sometimes it was annoying because it could be read as a critique of women police officers being somehow out of place. She wasnât sure how Professor Gilroy meant it, so she offered what she hoped was a thoughtful answer, but one that left her options in terms of how she handled whatever followed. And, this was the sort of an answer that sheâd given before.
âWell, Professor, police officers are a very diverse population, from very old schoolâmaybe thatâs a stereotype that youâre more familiar withâto people of all races and ethnicities and age groups. I donât think thereâs any one-size-fits-all way to describe us.â
Gilroy, a bit taken aback, said, âWell spoken, and point taken. I am to assume then that youâve been to college?
For some reason, Jillian felt herself getting a little annoyed. âYes. Actually, I went to ASUâŠâ she paused for affectâŠâfor both my degrees.â Gilroy again looked surprised, and she continued, âI have my undergrad degree and my MS degree in Justice Studiesâ
âWell, well. Justice StudiesâŠI thought they a bunch of lefties?â
âIsnât it interesting that talk of justice is considered somehow to be on the left politically, âshe answered. âEven so, thereâs no reason that a person couldnât hold politically left views while also being a police officer. They arenât mutually exclusive positions.â
Again, Professor Gilroy looked surprised.
Jillian really was getting annoyed now although she couldnât tell whyâŠif he was simply being condescending because he was an older professor and she was younger, or if he was âmansplaining.â WhateverâŠshe knew that she could use his attitude to get more information about departmental politics. She took control of the conversation and brought the discussion back to the issue at hand. âBut, in any case, Iâm here to follow-up on the matter of Professor Siemens.â
âRight you are. OK. OK.â
âFrom your exchange with Professor Keefer a few minutes ago, I take it that there were issues in terms of hiring Professor Siemens? You mentioned the matter of a Center for Ayn Rand Studies?â
âYes, thatâs correct. Incidentally, Detective Warne, ever heard of Ayn Rand?â
âYes. We read Atlas Shrugged in freshman English.â
âReallyâŠIâm surprised. Who was your professor?â
She thought for a second, then said, âI donât really remember. I think he was a PhD student.â
âIâm not surprised, but stillâŠâ
She added, âI think he was really into dystopian novels. We also read 1984.â
âYou are just full of surprises, Detective Warne.â
âNot your stereotype,â she said and had to consciously avoiding rolling her eyes. âAnyway, so tell me about the Ayn Rand grant.â
As she listened, Jillian took-in Professor Gilroy and his office. She estimated his age as in his 50s, Caucasian, salt and pepper hair cut short, but he obviously spent some time styling it, a little gel, she thought, and he must work out and watch his diet because he looked fairly fit. He wore tan slacks, nicer than chinosâsheâd notice that in the corridorâand a dark gold shirt, with a tee shirt underneath. He enunciated his words clearly and for affect, and with a slight Southern accent. He seemed to be a man who was used to being taken seriously.
His office was about the same size as Nelda Siemensâ office, but not as tastefully appointed. Everything looked newish, but stock. His office was two corridor turns and about 40 yards or so from hers. On the wall behind one side of his desk was a medium-sized poster of a book cover, Detective as Poet or Poet as Detective? The name under the title was large enough that she could see that heâd written it. Behind the desk on the other side was a large photo of a man who looked familiar, but she couldnât place. Seeing that photo reminded her that sheâd noticed a couple of photos in Professor Siemensâ office: one a woman and one a man. She hadnât paid them that much attention when she and Wes were surveying the roomâŠthe murder scene, she probably should say.
There were two large bookcases along the wall to her left. Sheâd notice as she entered the room two diplomasâshe couldnât make out the details without staring. On the wall near the office door was another poster blow-up of the cover of what must have been a magazine or a newsletter: Center for the Study of Southern Culture, and a subtitle, Special Issue: Faulkner the Poet. She assumed that Gilroy taught poetry.
âWell, as I said, that organizationâactually it was a foundationâanyway, it
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