In Death 24 - Innocent in Death
details on record.”
“I never had sex with anyone in an area the students could access.”
“Okay, that’s a plus. But you did have sex in areas the victim could access. Correct?”
“Possibly, but we’re talking about a grown man. I’d like to know exactly what you meant about some women being insulted, giving statements about their relationship with me.”
“I can’t tell you the names, part of the agreement with them. Like I said, it’s obvious to me it was consensual. Who knows why they’re circling now.”
“I’d say it’s the upset about the murder,” Peabody put in. “These women aren’t used to talking to cops, so when they do, especially about something as shocking as murder, things just jump out of their mouths. We’ve got to follow up, Mr. Williams. It’s not exactly the kind of work we like doing. Live and let live, in my opinion, when it comes to this area. But we’ve got to get it taken care of.”
“I had sex, nobody got hurt. End of story.”
“But Craig Foster disapproved,” Eve prompted.
“For a guy with that hot a wife, he was pretty puritanical.”
“You move on her, too?”
“Just felt her out when he first came on staff. At that point, she was too into him, into them. Now, a few months more, the marriage gets routine, and I might have given her another sniff. But there are plenty of others. I’m good at what I do.”
“Yeah. I bet. Craig might’ve been a little jealous of that. You think?”
Williams lifted his brows. “I never thought of it that way, but yes, maybe. Probably, in fact. He was a nice enough guy, and a damn good teacher, I’ll give him that. For the most part, we got along fine. He did get nosy, and a little pushy, about some of my activities.
Personal ones.”
“Did he threaten you?”
135
“I wouldn’t call it a threat.”
“What then?”
“A lecture.” Williams rolled his eyes.
“Did this lecture cause you to cease those activities?”
“I was a little more discreet, you could say. A little more choosy.” He lifted a shoulder.
“No point in stirring things up.”
“But you weren’t worried about him going to Mosebly with his disapproval, or even over her head to the board?”
He smiled now, serenely. “I never figured he’d have the chops for that. He didn’t like making waves. Basically, it was a nonissue for me.”
“Well.” Eve tugged on her ear. “It may not have been one for him, especially if he was aware that you used illegal substances in some of those private activities.”
“What?”
“Street name Whore, street name Rabbit, which we found in your bedroom toy chest. Oh, didn’t I mention that with the information gathered and statements taken we were able to secure a warrant to enter and search your residence? Bad boy, Reed. Bad, bad boy.”
“This is outrageous! This is entrapment.”
“This is the warrant.” Eve slid the hard copy from the file. “We take a very dim view on the use and possession of these particular substances, no live and let live about it. So does the PA. I bet the board of Sarah Child and the teachers’ union also take dim views.
“And here’s something else,” she continued, and for the first time, he began to sweat. “It makes me, with my suspicious mind, wonder if a guy who can score those particular items might just be able to score enough poison to eliminate a threat. He put the pressure on you, didn’t he?”
She rose now to walk around behind him, lean in over his shoulder. “Interfering little bastard, shoving his puritanical views into your personal life. You have a good thing going. Coworkers, support staff, mothers, guardians, caregivers. Like plucking plums off a low branch for a guy like you. He was going to cut you off from that branch, he jeopardized your job. No, your whole career.”
“No, it wasn’t like that. No, he didn’t.”
136
“Sure he did. Others might have known, or suspected, but they looked the other way. No skin off theirs. But this one, he takes it on himself to do something about it. Lecture you?
Asshole had no right, did he? And there he is, day after day, in your face, keeping his eye on you in case he doesn’t like what you’re up to. Sitting at his desk every day with his neatly packed lunch from home. Routine. Boring. And a sticky thorn in your side.
Where’d you get the ricin, Reed?”
“I never had any ricin. I didn’t even know what the hell it was before this. I didn’t kill
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher