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
Jillian nodded, then asked, âWould you let me knowâŠwhen itâs official?â
âYes, certainly.â
Jillian said, âThank you,â and then as an afterthought, asked, âBy the way, do you know if Professor Keefer was seeing anyoneâŠelse?â
Grace shook her head âno.â âHe is separated, but itâs my understanding that he and his wife have been trying to reconcile,â she paused, then added, âtheyâve been in counseling.â She seemed to be disgusted.
âThank you, GraceâŠvery much.â
âFood truck OK,â Jillian asked.
Earlier, when Jillian was at ASU PD and before Grace Wilson called with her bombshell about Professor Keefer losing out on his promotion, Jillian had seen an email notice that food trucks would be on campus today.
âSounds good,â he said. âThat way we can eat on campus, and weâll be here for the big protest demo.â
As they crossed the campus, Jillian saw little indication of what was to come. But, when they stopped at the fountain, midway between the MU and Wilson Hall, she did a slow â360â and looked along the sight lines in all four directions: past the Social Sciences Building; past the MU; past the Business Complex; beyond Wilson Hall. She spotted motorcycle officers, one in each direction, standing like a lone sentry at an outpostâŠeach one a good 100 yards away (probably more). She glanced at Wes who was looking, too.
At the food trucks, Wes ordered a Rocky Point fish taco (grilled) with a side of rice. From a different truck, Jillian ordered a sandwich: avocado, goat cheese and sprouts on sour dough. They both had iced green tea.
Jillian led them to Wilson Hall and to the ante-room to African, African American Studies on the first floor. It was like a lounge that was dominated by posters and memorabilia commemorating the African diaspora and African American contributions to US history. There were comfy chairs, and they scooted a low table toward them for their food.
Wes looked around the room and said, âPays to have someone on the case with a sense of the campus. Originally, I thought youâd just be helping with the investigation, but now I see that itâs also important to know where to get food, and the best spaces for dining. I assume this spot is on TripAdvisor,â he laughed and toasted Jillian with his tea.
Jillian returned the toast. âThis is a great spot. Sometimes, if I was early for a class, Iâd come here and read. People walk through now and then, but mostly itâs quiet.â
Wes smiled again, âJilly, I really do think it was a good move getting you back on campus. It somehow just seems to fit you.â
âIt is nice being back. A little weird of courseâŠsince Iâm in a different situation, but good, too.â She took a sip of tea, then asked, âSo, what do you make of this business with Professor Keefer?â
âWell, somethingâs upâŠif nothing else because he chose not to mention the affair with the victim.â
Jillian finished a small bite and said, âThereâs definitely campus intrigue going on. Grace told me that both Professors, Siemens and Keefer, were social climbers.â
âSuck up and kick down,â Wes responded.
She nodded. âOne thing for sure, Iâll swing back to Professor Siemensâ condo and show a photo of Professor Keefer. Iâll pull the one from his ASU webpage when we get back to HQ. Actually, I re-show our whole gallery of photosâŠyou never know.â
âSounds good. And you know what, Jilly, Iâm as interested in Keefer being âoutâ as English Department chair as I am that he lost his promotion. That had to come from higher-up.â
âYou mean President Davidos?â
âI assume so, yeah.â
âWes, remember, I thought he showed something âpersonalâ when we were interviewing him. Do you think that maybe these decisions against Professor Keefer are some kind of revenge?â
âYeah, I remember your take on Davidos after our interview. You could be right,â he said and sipped his tea. âCourseâŠthis could be simply trying to avoid any embarrassment for ASU. I mean, do you want to promote some guy, some married guy, whoâs having an affair with one of his subordinates, who ends up being murdered in her officeâŠwhich is one floor above his?â
He thought for a couple of seconds, then added, âThese decisions about Keefer have a lawyerâs thumb print on them. Donât you know someone in the Legal Counsel officeâŠwhatever itâs called?â
âItâs the Office of General Counsel. And yes, I do, but she might not be permitted to discuss thisâŠyou know, the lawyer confidentiality thing? Also, Wes, in university-think, I donât know if a department chair and the faculty are superior and subordinate, strictly speaking. I mean, professors are fairly independent.â
âYeah, yeah, I remember all that from my U of A days. Still, to the non-university public AND the media, too, the chain of command is the chain of command. So, for Keefer to be promoted to dean when heâs been sleeping with a murder victimâŠnot the kind of headline a university wants. But, youâre probably right about your ASU lawyer contact and the Keefer decision being confidential.â He shrugged and pursed his lips. âYou want to re-interview DavidosâŠam I right?â
Before Jillian could answer, Professor Zuzana Szabo said, âHello again.â She emerged from the corridor to their left frontâŠleaving the African, African American Studies faculty offices, which were down the hallway and out of sight from where they were seated.
Jillian and Wes said âhiâ at the same time, and Wes stood.
âSo, the first floor of Wilson Hall has become the police canteen,â she laughed.
Wes smiled and said, âYes, Jillian is showing me ASUâs top 10 places to eat.â
âAnd food trucks, I see,â and laughed again.
Jillian said, âThis room was always one of my favorite places to eat, especially when I was in a hurry.â
âIt is a convenient spot.â She paused, then added, âDonâtâ forget, youâve promised me a visit, Jillian.â
Jillian glanced at her wrist watch and said, âI could come by later this afternoonâŠmaybe around 3pm or soâŠwould that work?â
âYes, of course. Chao, Jillian, Detective Sergeant Webb.â
They said their goodbyes, she left the anteroom, took a right
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