Novel Excerpts—The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, Chapter 27

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.  
The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, written in 2018, is my sixth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Late on New Year’s Eve in the small town of Boaz, Alabama, Snead State Community College teacher Adam Parker was found dead slumped over in his car. A preliminary investigation indicated the fifty-year-old biology professor died of a heart attack.  Marissa Booth, Adam’s daughter and Vanderbilt School of Divinity professor, didn’t agree.

Four days later, Marissa hired the local private detective firm of Connor Ford to investigate her father’s death.  She declared local police officer Jake Stone had likely murdered her father.  She pointed Ford to a multi-month Facebook feud between Adam and several local people, including Stone and Boaz City Councilman Lawton Hawks.  The controversy allegedly related to Adam’s research that contended that, in layman’s terms, long-term indoctrination caused actual genetic mutations that directly affected future generation’s ability to reason.

Over the next year, Connor Ford discovered multiple and independent sources of motivation to quiet and possibly murder the controversial professor.  Ford learned that a civil lawsuit and widespread public outcry had effectively run Adam out of Knoxville, where he was a biology professor for over thirteen years.  Ford also learned that Adam had become the number one enemy of Roger Williams, a self-made local businessman, and his son Alex, who is a Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  Adam had discovered Alex and Glock, Inc., the Austrian-based gun manufacturer, was exploring not only the possibility of setting up a large facility in Boaz but also supplying pistols for Alex’s highly touted and controversial ‘arm the teachers’ proposal.

Connor Ford has his hands full enough with these suspects.  Add in his need to determine whether Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone are friends or foes of Roger and Alex, which accentuate the pressure no normal small-town private detective can handle.  

Will Connor’s discovery there is a link between Dayton, Tennessee, and the 1929 Scopes Monkey trial and a rogue group of CIA operatives bend Connor and his two associates to the breaking point?

Read this mystery/thriller to find out if Adam Parker was murdered and how, and what role the long-standing controversy between science and religion had in destroying the life of a single perfectionist professor.

Chapter 27

 Paige and Natalie had finally fallen asleep in a spare bedroom upstairs.  The five of us had talked until nearly 1:30 a.m. about what was going on including the murder of Beanpole.  Over no one’s opposition, I had decided that Natalie would remain at Hickory Hollow until this whole ordeal could be sorted out and it was safe for her to be in public.

Mark called a few minutes before 8:30 a.m.  I was antsy, about to jump out of my skin, but I had a feeling he would call early.  On a Monday, I never would have stayed at home this late.  Terry Henry, aka Beanpole, was shot one time in the middle of his forehead with what Mark believed to be a nine-millimeter.  I told him about meeting a black Tahoe on Signal Point Road as we had driven away from the Williams’ lake house, and that Natalie was certain it was Jake Stone’s vehicle, although she had not seen the driver. 

Mark stated that Boaz City police all carry Glock nine-millimeter pistols, but he didn’t have enough evidence to arrest Jake.  Mark assured me he would go question him and get an ‘eye-reading’ as he called it.  “If he’s up to no good, he won’t admit it with his mouth, but the eyes are independent little creatures.”

Mark made me promise to bring Natalie in to see if she could identify the other man who had abducted her.  Before hanging up Mark had said, “Tony has your iPad ready, so don’t forget it while you’re here.”  I had almost forgotten that late last Friday afternoon I had driven to Guntersville to drop off Adam’s iPad with Tony.

Before leaving for the office I called Joe and arranged for him to come take the very pregnant Natalie to the Sheriff’s Department.

At 1:00 p.m., Joe dropped by the office and said, “Natalie’s back at Hickory Hollow safe and sound.  I hope it was okay to drop by Burger King.  The girl was starving.  Here’s your iPad.  Let me show you what Tony said.”

It only took Joe a handful of minutes to show me five times how to access an APP called ‘Travel & Talk.’  It was a program developed by Sherlock Technologies to receive, store, and manage the data broadcasted by its Open Curtain GPS/audio transmitting device.  Adam was one to bury folders and files on his laptop.  But he also did the same with his iPad.  Tony had found it, the twenty-sixth APP in an icon folder on the third page of Adam’s iPad.  The folder was called ‘Apple.’

After Joe left to serve a subpoena for Dalton in Glencoe, I broke one of my own rules and carried the iPad into the war room.  I wanted perfect privacy, and this was my best option.  I pressed the Travel & Talk icon and noticed a list of three choices.  Apparently, the APP enabled its user to name each of the Open Curtain devices.  Adam had simply named them: Roger, Robert, Russell, and Marissa.  I thought it strange that the sweet and lovely Marissa was even electronically associated with three men I was growing to fully despise.  I pressed the Roger file and another screen appeared.  It offered two options: Travel and Talk.  No doubt, the App gathered the whereabouts of Roger’s vehicle, the one Adam had attached the Open Curtains device, in the Travel file.  I selected Talk.  I wanted to see if this technology was as good as I had read about on Google.

The Talk file opened to a long list of dates, with the most recent date at the top.  I selected yesterday’s date and again another listing appeared.  This time, there were three items, all denoted with a time.  I selected the third one, which was for 8:45 a.m., the earliest time of the three listed. 

The first voice I assumed to be Roger.  “We got eyes on the ground?”

The second voice: ‘Yep, plane landed two hours ago.”

Roger: “Keep me posted.”

That was it.  I was amazed in two ways.  The technology had not only picked up the voice that spoke out inside the car but had recorded the person speaking outside the vehicle.  I could only conclude that Roger either had his cell phone on speaker or he was using the sophisticated hands-free Apple Carplay system built in to the dashboard of his Cadillac SRX’s dashboard. 

I pressed ‘Back’ to return to the time listing.  I selected 12:18 p.m.  This was the second and middle choice.  “Church is out.  I’m heading home. You need anything?”  Second voice (a woman speaking gruffly): “Cranberry juice and Hall’s cough-drops.  This cold is killing me.”  This must have been a conversation between Roger and his wife.

I returned to the time listing and selected 4:10 p.m.  This first voice was not Roger, the one I assumed from the first two conversations.  This was an incoming call.  Caller: “Are we clear?”  Roger: “Blue sky, no cloud in site.”  Caller: “Not so here.  Been a storm.  Got one dead tree.  We need to meet to discuss the damage.”

I looked again at the time for this call.  It was about the time Natalie had seen the black Tahoe yesterday afternoon and identified it as Jake’s.  Could this call have been made a few minutes later, after Jake arrived at the Williams’ lake house.  After he found Beanpole and shot him?

I was getting way ahead of myself.  I was allowing my inquisitive mind to fill in the gaps in my knowledge.  First, I didn’t know for sure that it was Jake Stone in that black Tahoe.  Also, I didn’t know it was Jake who had called Roger at 4:10 p.m. and who was recorded here in Adam’s Open Curtain system.  One thing I believed I could be certain of.  These two were slick.  They had not said anything incriminating.  As far as I knew there had been no bad weather yesterday.  They had to be speaking in code. 

Before I could back my way to the date screen for the ‘Talk’ portion of the APP, Blair knocked on my door.  “Sorry, Connor, but Mark Hale is on the phone and he says its important.  I hope it was okay for me to knock.”

I walked out of the war room and sat at my desk.  I picked up the land line.  “Mark’s on line two.”  Blair said.

“Hey Mark.”

“I wanted to give you an update.  I just returned from Boaz.  Interesting trip.  But first.  After we talked this morning I returned to the lake house and met with the forensics team.  Other than the one body and its aftermath, they found a bunch of fingerprints.  I suspect they will all be from folks you would expect to be there routinely, the Williams’ that is.”

“Did you see Roger Williams when you came to Boaz?”  I asked.

“I did.  I first went to his house.  Couldn’t get anybody to the door.  Didn’t hear anything.  I then drove to the RAND Corporation in the Industrial Park.  It was good timing because he was just getting out of his truck.”

“He wasn’t driving his Cadillac?”  I asked.

“No, I said his truck.  Ford, F250.  Listen up.  I don’t have a ton of time.”

“Sorry for the interruption.”  I said.

“Roger wouldn’t admit to anything.  Claimed he had no idea his lake house was being occupied by anybody.  He’s not a real good liar, at least in person.  Either way, I don’t have enough to make him come in for formal questioning, much less for an arrest.”

“After leaving Roger I drove to Alex’s place.  I drove up and walked to the front porch.  I heard some yelling, so I didn’t knock.  I couldn’t make out what was being said.  Until, I cracked open the front door.  It wasn’t locked.  Then, I heard the woman.  I later learned it was Alex’s wife.  She said, ‘if you don’t take care of the little whore, I will.’  The next thing I heard was the back-door slam.  For some reason I stayed put.  A few seconds later, Alex drove off slinging gravels for a country mile.”

“Knowing how you think, you stayed and interviewed the lovely, quiet, and timid Erica.  Right?”  I asked.

“You’d have done the same.  That’s the way we were trained.  I pulled the front door shut and rang the doorbell.  Erica opened it within a few seconds.  Finally, she came out onto the front porch after I showed her my badge and told her we needed to talk.  I was surprised she was in a talking mood.”

“She no doubt knows about Natalie and the pregnancy?”

“Right you are my man.  She talked but didn’t incriminate Alex or anybody, except Natalie.  It seems Erica believes her competition is determined to ruin her and her politically aspiring husband’s lives.  She, Erica, threw out a bone I’ve got to pursue at some point.  Erica said, ‘she’s a lying whore and a criminal, probably killed Lawton Hawks.’”

“What?  I guess I can understand her saying most anything.  The perfect life, or so it seems, of a religiously and politically connected couple, with a shit-load of family money backing them, hitting a major speed bump when Alex couldn’t keep his pants up.  She is a scorned woman.”  I said.

“You can do all your surmising on your own dime.  One other thing she brushed against.  After Erica virtually accused Natalie of killing Lawton, she said Natalie would do anything to keep guns out of schools.  She, Erica, said that it was probably Natalie who shot and killed Beanpole.  Get this, I hadn’t even mentioned the lake house or the murder.  I guess news travels fast.  As we ended our talk and as I was walking back to my car, she hollered at me and said, ‘Mark, follow the smoke to put Natalie behind bars so I can leave this shit-hole town.”

“Smoke.  What did she mean by that?”

“All I could think of was guns.  Guns smoke you know.”  Mark said.

“One thing for sure you learned.  Erica hates Natalie.  Tonight, I’ll be having a deep discussion with the sweet and pregnant Natalie Goble.”  I said.

“One final thing and I’ve got to go.  Troy found out the address in Beanpole’s pocket was for an abortion clinic.  A place called Choices: Memphis Center for Reproductive Health.  The number was a cellular number for a Dr. Kerry Langston.  He’s an abortion doctor.”

“It seems Beanpole’s masters had arranged or were arranging a little trip to Memphis.”  I said.

“I would say so.  To get rid of that little speed bump the sweet Erica mentioned.”

I couldn’t help but think of the pregnant Natalie carrying a twenty-three to twenty-four-week-old baby.  It was no longer a fetus, a glob of cells.  To me, after all my reading, it was now a human being, quite capable, especially with modern medicine, to sustain itself outside its mother’s womb.  No doubt in my mind that Alex Williams was ready to kill, to rub out a life, all to further his, and Erica’s own aspirations.  What a fucking hypocrite.

“Talk later.”  Mark said ending our call.  

After drinking half a Coke to settle my sick stomach, I called Garrett on his house phone.  After my question, he made one call on his cellular and told me the location for Roger Williams’ horse farm.  By dark I had driven to Meadowlark Farms.  It was located on Lackey Gap Road, about a half mile before reaching Highway 179 and the beginning of Little Cove Road.  I drove through an open gate several hundred yards to a giant horse barn.  The man who was walking towards an old beat-up Chevrolet pickup said he and Beanpole had worked together nearly ten years, ever since Mr. Roger bought the place and built the barn.  The man was Carlton Ennis.  As I drove to Hickory Hollow, I wondered if Carlton was the one who had helped Beanpole abduct Natalie and carry her to the lake house at Signal Point Road.

Novel Excerpts—The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, Chapter 26

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.  
The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, written in 2018, is my sixth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Late on New Year’s Eve in the small town of Boaz, Alabama, Snead State Community College teacher Adam Parker was found dead slumped over in his car. A preliminary investigation indicated the fifty-year-old biology professor died of a heart attack.  Marissa Booth, Adam’s daughter and Vanderbilt School of Divinity professor, didn’t agree.

Four days later, Marissa hired the local private detective firm of Connor Ford to investigate her father’s death.  She declared local police officer Jake Stone had likely murdered her father.  She pointed Ford to a multi-month Facebook feud between Adam and several local people, including Stone and Boaz City Councilman Lawton Hawks.  The controversy allegedly related to Adam’s research that contended that, in layman’s terms, long-term indoctrination caused actual genetic mutations that directly affected future generation’s ability to reason.

Over the next year, Connor Ford discovered multiple and independent sources of motivation to quiet and possibly murder the controversial professor.  Ford learned that a civil lawsuit and widespread public outcry had effectively run Adam out of Knoxville, where he was a biology professor for over thirteen years.  Ford also learned that Adam had become the number one enemy of Roger Williams, a self-made local businessman, and his son Alex, who is a Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  Adam had discovered Alex and Glock, Inc., the Austrian-based gun manufacturer, was exploring not only the possibility of setting up a large facility in Boaz but also supplying pistols for Alex’s highly touted and controversial ‘arm the teachers’ proposal.

Connor Ford has his hands full enough with these suspects.  Add in his need to determine whether Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone are friends or foes of Roger and Alex, which accentuate the pressure no normal small-town private detective can handle.  

Will Connor’s discovery there is a link between Dayton, Tennessee, and the 1929 Scopes Monkey trial and a rogue group of CIA operatives bend Connor and his two associates to the breaking point?

Read this mystery/thriller to find out if Adam Parker was murdered and how, and what role the long-standing controversy between science and religion had in destroying the life of a single perfectionist professor.

Chapter 26

 Camilla and I dropped Amy off at the Playhouse after church Sunday morning.  “There’s no good reason we should drive separate cars.  It’s a waste.”  Camilla had said as we were backing out of the garage and she was instructing me to drive further down Hickory Lane and pick up Amy.  Only in a fictional story would this crazy scenario be taking place; a man’s fiancé and his ex-wife, becoming best of friends.

We had just walked back into the house from church when my iPhone vibrated.  I didn’t recognize the number, but this wasn’t unusual.  I had intentionally had Joe put my cell number on our website under my photo he had insisted we use as “the number one truth seeker.”  I laid my Bible on the kitchen bar and answered.

“Hello, this is Connor.”

“Mr. Ford, you have to help me.  It’s Natalie.”  The woman’s voice was in a panic: high pitch, shrill even, rapid.  It sounded like she was having trouble breathing.

“Settle down.  Who is this?”  I asked.

“It’s Paige, Paige Todd.  You remember me, and Natalie came to see you.”

“Paige, I know who you are.  What’s happened to Natalie?”

“I can’t find her.  I haven’t seen her in over a week.”

“Have you spoken with her?  On the phone, through Facebook, you know, anyway?”  I asked.

“No, nothing.”

“When did you last see her?”

“Last Friday, a week ago.  I didn’t see her then.  She missed classes at Snead, so I called her early afternoon.  She didn’t answer but called me back in a few minutes.  She didn’t sound right, but said she was going out of town, that she had to get away.  That’s all she said and hung up.”

“Have you been to her house to see if she is there?”  I asked.

“I have twice.  And, I’ve ridden by there about a dozen times this week.”

“When you stopped at Natalie’s did you speak to either her mother or father, Jake?”  I asked.

“Both times it was her stepfather.  He gives me the creeps.  He said she had gone to Atlanta and didn’t know when she was coming back.  There was something weird, like he wasn’t telling me the truth.  I think it was his eyes.”

“Why Atlanta?  What connection does Natalie have to Atlanta?”  I asked thinking that maybe Natalie had been under such pressure she simply needed to get away a week or so.  Then, I remembered what Garrett had said at breakfast last Thursday.  “Is that where Natalie had her abortion?”

“Abortion?  Natalie would never have an abortion.  I don’t care how much pressure Alex Williams puts on her.”

“I heard she had an abortion and that was the reason you two were not going to Centre to help Gina Garrett with her creationism project.”

“I don’t know where you heard that but it’s not true.”

“Back to Atlanta.  Who does Natalie know there?”  I asked.

“The only person I know is a guy she met at Snead a couple of semesters ago.  He came here and the two of them became good friends.  But, the following semester he didn’t return.”

“If Natalie were to want to hide out around here where would she go?”

“I don’t know.  Natalie wasn’t the type to go away, to hide from anything.  She thrived on her social life.”  Paige went silent and I resisted filling in.  “Oh wait, when her and Alex Williams were going strong she told me they would slip away to a cabin his family owned on Guntersville Lake.  But, I never knew where it was.  That can’t be right.  Natalie wouldn’t be wanting to go there.  She hates Alex now.  She wouldn’t go there ever again.”

“Unless she was forced to go there.”  I said starting to feel Natalie might be in trouble.  Paige, I have your number.  Let me make a call and see if I can find out the address of this cabin.  I’ll call you back within twenty or thirty minutes no matter what I learn.”

I ended our call and walked to my study and my computer.  Blair had shown me how to research the county’s real estate database.  The software reminded me of what I used at the Albertville Courthouse to learn about Russell Williams’ criminal record.  At separate times, I entered all three names, and even the Rand Corporation.  The only hits were for real estate I knew about, all in Boaz, nothing in Guntersville.  It was then I remembered that Dalton was representing Sand Mountain Bank in a lawsuit against Roger Williams.  I picked up my phone and pressed ‘call’ after finding Dalton Martin in my Contacts file.

“Connor, make it quick.  We are about to sit down to Freda’s homemade lasagna.”

“This is extremely important.  Do you know if Roger Williams owns a cabin on Guntersville Lake?”  My gut was telling me Paige had been right to be concerned about Natalie.

“Yes, he does.  And, I can tell you because my newest paralegal mistakenly filed Roger’s actual deposition with the court clerk.  You know that’s not the way it’s done.  Apparently, they do things differently in Tennessee.  That’s where she’s from.”  I bit my tongue as Dalton trailed on.  I knew from years of friendship that if I interrupted him he would take even longer to finish his thought.  It was like he couldn’t listen until he sprayed out a mouthful of sentences.

“Good.  Do you remember where it is?  Do you have the address?”  I asked.

“Can I ask what this is about?”

“Natalie Goble.  She’s missing.  Her best friend, Paige Todd, thinks she might be at the cabin.  Against her will.”

“It’s at Signal Point.  I can’t remember the exact address.  Seems like it is one of the last cabins on Signal Point Road.  It ends on something like a peninsula, across from the City Harbor.”

“Thanks Dalton, I have to run.  Talk later.  Enjoy your lasagna.”  I was thankful for Dalton and the critical information, but I didn’t want to waste any time.

“Meet me in the Burger King parking lot, south side across from Dixon Tire.  I’ll be there in twenty minutes or less.”  I said just as soon as Paige answered.

“I’m leaving now.”

At five minutes past one I pulled into the parking lot and Paige was already waiting.  On the way to Guntersville she shared with me how two weeks ago Jake had nearly assaulted Natalie at home.  They had an explosive argument over her refusal to have the abortion.  It seemed that Natalie’s pregnancy was approaching twenty-four weeks, which is the time the fetus becomes viable.  What I had grown to believe from my reading was the time of viability, was the time the mother was carrying a baby, a real human being, and not just a glob of cells.

Traffic on Gunter Avenue was horrible for a Sunday afternoon.  Did people think it was Friday?  After turning right on Highway 227 we headed towards the State Park.  Crossing the bridge before reaching the feed mills on the left, I thought I was caught speeding.  For some reason the cop we met wasn’t interested.  I was going nearly eighty miles per hour.  I drove on and turned left on Signal Point Road.  In less than five minutes we had passed Signal Point Marina on the left and was sitting a hundred feet or so from the dead end and the last driveway.

The Tennessee River was to our left.  To our right was a thick forest and no houses.  Since passing the Marina there had been no houses at all on the right side of the road.  This last driveway was at least two hundred yards past its nearest neighbor.  There was no name on the mailbox, but I saw the Rand logo on the post.

I was able to drive past the driveway and onto a little stretch of grass that led into the dense grove of trees.  The way I parked I felt we couldn’t be seen if someone else drove up.  I got out of the car.  “You stay here.”  I told Paige.

“No way.”  She was closing the passenger side door to my truck before I could respond.  “Natalie would do the same for me.  I’m coming.”

We walked through the grove for about a hundred feet and came to the edge of the front yard.  If this was a cabin I would love to see a lake house as I’d heard them called.  The white clapboard sided mansion was two stories.  I could see the lake off behind it.  The estate was magnificent.

“Let’s walk around the edge of these woods.  It looks like it semi-circles the side yard all the way to the back of the house.”  Paige was, I had long ago determined, the more proactive of the two girls.

Just as the front door of the mansion was about to pass out of our sight it opened, and a tall and skinny man stepped out onto the front porch and lite a cigarette.

“You ever seen that guy?”  I asked.

“That’s Beanpole.  That’s all I’ve ever heard him called.  He works for Alex, maybe his father.  I’ve seen him once at their horse farm.”

“They have horses?” 

“About two dozen.  High-priced stuff.  I dropped Natalie off there once when Erica was out of town.”

For the time being Paige and I ignored Beanpole and walked on to the back of the house.  It didn’t take long for Paige to nearly scream.  “That’s her pink scarf.”  Paige said pointing up at a second story window.  “She carried it in her back pocket all the time.  Look, I have one too.”  Paige pulled a similar looking handkerchief or scarf from her back pocket. 

“You know that’s hers.  Look closer, see the skull and crossbones.  We bought them as a kind of joke one Christmas retreat in Gatlinburg.  It was the church’s annual youth trip.  It was a couple of years ago.  Natalie and I were still in high school.  We both were in process of ditching our Christian fantasy.  We found them in a store but never told the youth pastor or anyone what they represented.”

“We have to get Natalie’s attention.  I’m assuming she’s up there.  Probably a bedroom.  It’s odd there is a metal gate looking thing over her window.”  I said and found a few gravels.  By now we were out of the grove of trees and were standing at the corner of a fence.  The place was on the lake but also had a swimming pool.  I could see through the wood planks.  I started throwing the pebbles towards the window.  It was a good fifty feet.  My fourth toss was with my biggest stone.  My mind thought of Jake Stone. 

“I think you cracked the window.”  Paige said.  Less than ten seconds later, Natalie appeared.  She saw us.  Five more seconds and she raised the window. 

“Help.  I can’t get out.”  Natalie said, something between a loud whisper and a faint scream.  The metal grate over the window prevented her from getting outside, along with being two stories up.  I assumed she was locked in a room, probably a bedroom.

“Stay put Natalie.  We’ll get you out.  How many people are inside the house?”  I hollered.

“Only Beanpole for now.  Hurry, please hurry.”

“Let’s go.”  I said pulling Paige by the hand.  She was reluctant to leave eye contact with Natalie.  “Don’t worry, we’re not leaving.  I’ve got an idea.”

We walked back through the grove of trees until we were directly across from the front corner of the mansion.  I shared my plan with Paige and she darted across the yard and onto the giant front porch.  I followed close behind her.  We both reached the front door at about the same time.  I moved to the side where Beanpole couldn’t see me when he opened the door from hearing Paige’s knocking.  As predicted, he responded to her pounding and screaming.

“Who are you?  What do you want?”  Beanpole said.  I could barely see the door opening. 

Paige said her magic words, “I’ve come to get my matching scarf.”  That’s what we had decided she would say if Beanpole was unarmed when he came to the door. 

She hadn’t gotten scarf off her tongue before I rushed inside the house tackling Beanpole, clutching both my arms around him and lifting him off the ground.  The two of us hit the floor hard, with him feeling my entire weight on his skinny frame.

“What the fuck are you doing?”  Beanpole said trying to punch my face.

I was glad I always carried a couple of cable ties in my back pocket.  If I hadn’t, I guess I could have used Paige’s scarf to tie Beanpole’s hands behind his back.  I was surprised he hardly resisted.  I didn’t have any trouble rolling him over onto his stomach.

By the time I finished securing Beanpole I heard Paige hollering from upstairs.  I ran up what looked like a marble staircase and down a long hall.  Paige was trying her best to break down a solid oak door separating her from a yelling Natalie.

“Stand aside.”  I said.  I backed up to the hall wall across from Natalie’s door.  With all my power I rushed it and hit it with all my weight.  The door didn’t budge.  “Natalie, stand back and to the side of the door as far as you can.  Tell me when you are in position.  I’m about to shoot my gun into the door lock.”

It wasn’t but a handful of seconds when Natalie said, “okay, shoot like hell.”

It took five bullets but my Ruger SR9 once again did its job.  I kicked open the door and Paige ran to Natalie.

“We need to go now.”  I said walking over to Natalie.  “Are you okay?”

“I’ve been here nine days.  I figured they were going to kill me.”  Natalie said.

“Who is they?  But, come on.”  I could tell Natalie didn’t have Paige’s ability to hurry.  She was clearly pregnant, very visibly so.

I decided to leave Beanpole lying on the foyer’s floor.  We reached my truck and backed out of the grove and was halfway down Signal Point road when we met a black Tahoe.

“That’s Jake’s.”  Natalie said.

In thirty minutes I had dropped Paige off at the Burger King in Boaz.  She followed Natalie and me in my truck.  In another fifteen minutes both vehicles were pulling down the long driveway to Hickory Hollow.  I really didn’t know what to do but felt my place in the country was the safest for Natalie. 

During the entire trip back from Guntersville, all Natalie would say was Beanpole and another man she didn’t know had forced her to come to Alex’s cabin.  As we walked in the back door, Natalie said, “something was going to happen tomorrow.  Beanpole let it slip last night.  Something about, ‘all this will be over tomorrow.’  I have a gut feeling I was going to be forced to have an abortion.”

Camilla and Emily were sitting in the den when we walked in.  The four females spent the next hour talking while I was in my study on my iPhone with Mark Hale.  The plan was for us to sit tight until we heard back.  He was heading to 6592 Signal Point Road.

It was almost midnight when Mark called.  He made a shocking statement before hanging up.  “Tony and I found a tall and skinny man handcuffed with a bullet in his head.  The State’s forensics team is there now.  I’ll call you tomorrow.”

I didn’t sleep much Sunday night.

Novel Excerpts—The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, Chapter 25

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.  
The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, written in 2018, is my sixth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Late on New Year’s Eve in the small town of Boaz, Alabama, Snead State Community College teacher Adam Parker was found dead slumped over in his car. A preliminary investigation indicated the fifty-year-old biology professor died of a heart attack.  Marissa Booth, Adam’s daughter and Vanderbilt School of Divinity professor, didn’t agree.

Four days later, Marissa hired the local private detective firm of Connor Ford to investigate her father’s death.  She declared local police officer Jake Stone had likely murdered her father.  She pointed Ford to a multi-month Facebook feud between Adam and several local people, including Stone and Boaz City Councilman Lawton Hawks.  The controversy allegedly related to Adam’s research that contended that, in layman’s terms, long-term indoctrination caused actual genetic mutations that directly affected future generation’s ability to reason.

Over the next year, Connor Ford discovered multiple and independent sources of motivation to quiet and possibly murder the controversial professor.  Ford learned that a civil lawsuit and widespread public outcry had effectively run Adam out of Knoxville, where he was a biology professor for over thirteen years.  Ford also learned that Adam had become the number one enemy of Roger Williams, a self-made local businessman, and his son Alex, who is a Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  Adam had discovered Alex and Glock, Inc., the Austrian-based gun manufacturer, was exploring not only the possibility of setting up a large facility in Boaz but also supplying pistols for Alex’s highly touted and controversial ‘arm the teachers’ proposal.

Connor Ford has his hands full enough with these suspects.  Add in his need to determine whether Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone are friends or foes of Roger and Alex, which accentuate the pressure no normal small-town private detective can handle.  

Will Connor’s discovery there is a link between Dayton, Tennessee, and the 1929 Scopes Monkey trial and a rogue group of CIA operatives bend Connor and his two associates to the breaking point?

Read this mystery/thriller to find out if Adam Parker was murdered and how, and what role the long-standing controversy between science and religion had in destroying the life of a single perfectionist professor.

Chapter 25

 Of all days to start a mini-vacation, today was the worst.  Camilla and I had planned a trip to Mentone since January.  It was now the middle of May, and we had reservations at the Mountain Laurel Inn for tonight through Wednesday morning.  I wouldn’t dare tell Camilla, but all I really wanted to do was further immerse myself in the Adam Parker case, especially since I had learned the perfectionist professor had been murdered.  A smart man knew there were times he had to pivot, to change his mind and his focus on a dime.  Now, was one of those times.  I had to at least act like I was smart.

I heard the car drive up and the engine go silent.  I walked to the rear of the cabin and looked out through the back door.  Pivoting was easy.  How on God’s green earth had I been able to convince the gorgeous Camilla to be my woman?  She was not only beautiful in her yellow and blue flowered dress that outlined a near perfect body, just as importantly, she was all heart and soul.  When Amy moved into the Playhouse three months ago, at first, I thought Camilla was simply playing nice.  How wrong could I have been.  She recognized the reality of the situation, and how important the now sick Amy had been to me for almost thirty-five years.  I still found it hard to believe that these two women were truly friends.

“How was church?”  I asked as Camilla walked up the stairs to the back porch.

“Pastor Caleb’s message was perfect.  He spoke of how Jesus himself needed at times to get away and unwind, to restore his inner strength.  I hate you couldn’t be there to hear his message.  You might be in a better frame of mind to start our little trip.”  Camilla set her purse and iPhone in a chair and walked to the kitchen.  “You want a sandwich before we leave?”

“If you do.  For your information wonder woman, I’ve already been thinking and preparing myself.  If you want me I’m all yours forever, but at least until Wednesday afternoon.”

“I’ll believe that when I see it.  Your bags packed?”

“Yep.  It stays packed.”  I learned while working for Bobby to be ready for a multi-day trip on instant notice.

Camilla and I ate a bologna sandwich and spent the next hour riding to Mentone with me driving her Camry, since my truck was in the shop for a tune-up.  We didn’t talk much but there was quite a bit of communication going on, at least from me.  I liked Camilla’s new Khaki shorts.  I liked her long and bare legs better.  I was thankful the weather was warm.  By 2:30, we had checked in at our favorite bed and breakfast, had delivered our bags to the Sequoya Room (it was the Orange Room when Amy and I had stayed there one weekend during Christmas break from our second year at Auburn, but I didn’t tell Camilla), and I was laying across the giant bed hoping Camilla would take the hint.  Instead, she made me put on my matching shorts and go for a long walk.

We spent the next three hours touring and browsing through Ayres Antiques, Magnolia Rose, Miracle Pottery, and the Mentone Market.  Camilla had apparently done some research and was dead set on buying Emily and Amy, and all six of her beautician colleagues, a ‘Lil River Tumbler’ from Miracle Pottery.  I thought twenty-five dollars each was a little excessive but decided to stay quiet.  As the lady was wrapping each gift she repeated herself at least three times, “Miracle Pottery is signed first with a cross in thanks to our Lord. It is also a prayer that the receiver be forever blessed.”  I couldn’t believe I handed Camilla a fifty-dollar bill and asked her to buy us both a Lil River.  At a minimum, surely Camilla would conclude that my mind wasn’t anywhere else but with her.

After storing the box full of miracles in the Camry’s trunk, we walked back across the street to the Wildflower Cafe.  Two nights ago, Camilla had announced we would eat at this landmark diner at least once during our trip even though our meals were included at the Mountain Laurel Inn.  After sharing the Famous Tomato Pie appetizer, we both ordered the prime rib.  At $34.00 each, I was glad the menu touted the beef as hormone-free.

By 8:00 p.m., after listening to a couple of local musicians at the Wildflower, we were back in our room.  I was happy to see the Inn continued its practice of being completely free of televisions or other electronic distractions.  This, along with only one chair in our bedroom, gave welcome attention to the giant bed standing confidently in the center of the Sequoya Room.  After two hours beneath the sheets I felt guilty for the routine and rapid sessions I had foisted on mine and Camilla’s relationship ever since the Adam Parker case came along.  I realized what a fool I was.

Camilla, if granted full freedom, could create such a satisfying adventure.  Her love of foreplay, and post-play as she called it, could only be weakly compared to a trip to Heaven, meaning, the time spent besides, under, and on top of the gorgeous Camilla was vastly superior to even the most coveted journeys life could offer.  After a quick trip to the bathroom for each of us, we didn’t change sleeping positions for the next eight hours.  And, I don’t think I thought of anything but my Camilla miracle until the innkeeper knocked on our door as she passed at 8:00 a.m. announcing that breakfast was ready and waiting.

Monday and Tuesday were spent in the same routine.  Breakfast in the main dining room at the Mountain Laurel Inn, at least six hours spent at DeSoto Falls, just hiking and basking on the rocks in the sun, dinner back at the Inn, and at least two hours laying horizontal with kissing Camilla’s sweet lips and submitting to her control, thankful she was such a leader in bed.

On our return trip to Boaz Wednesday morning, I was saddened to end the most personal and private time Camilla and I had ever spent, at least for this long a time.  As much as I had regretted abandoning my number one case last Sunday morning, now equally regretful was Camilla’s strong interest in what was going on.

When I exited I-59 South at Collinsville, Camilla said, “oh, I forgot to tell you, Darlene shared something you might be interested it.  She was in last Friday for her weekly wash and set.  Apparently, Lawton had a collection of visitor passes.”

“Paths?”  I had to have my hearing checked.

“Passes.  P A S S E S.”  I liked how patient Camilla was at times.  “After the Sheriff’s Department released Lawton’s house, after their investigation, Darlene was there trying to figure out what to do with all his stuff.  She found a desk drawer full of those clip-on type visitor passes.  I guess he took trips to places, businesses, trying to get them to locate in Boaz.  All of them were mostly retail stores and restaurants.  Places like the Olive Garden, Target, Belk’s, J.C. Penney, and Home Depot.”

“Sounds like he was smoking a pipe dream.”  I said. “I doubt there was a chance in you know where any of those would consider a back hollow like Boaz.  He should have spent his time seeking antique stores and pawn shops, and maybe another thrift or gun store.”  I said.

“Here’s the point you might be interested in.  After I saw the scribbling on your notepad in your study I thought you might want to know that Lawton had a visitor’s pass to Glock in Smyrna.”  Camilla said.

“So, it seems Lawton, a Boaz City Councilman, had made a trip to Georgia, and you’re assuming he went there in that capacity to try and woo the giant gun manufacturer to Boaz.  Right?”

“I guess.  I hadn’t thought of any of that.  I was just passing on the same word you had written on your notepad.  I really don’t know exactly how investigations work.  I just thought it was an interesting coincidence.”

“Thanks.  Seriously, that is helpful.  My only regret is you can’t be by my side 24-7.”  I said, laying my right hand on her freshly shaved left leg, again thankful, this time for her denim shorts.  Right then I fully committed to at least a minimum, quarterly get away with the lovely Camilla.

I spent most of Wednesday afternoon with Blair while she showed me her final product as she called it.  She now had everything from Adam, including every document from his office computer, loaded into Evernote for searching.  I told her I wanted her to focus on anything and everything she could find about the Williams family, including Roger, Robert (Alex), and Russell.  I shared with her how I thought the Knoxville reporter’s phrase, ‘Bullets, Babies, and Bullshit,’ was at the center of our investigation and that the Williams’ and their Glock focus were at the center of the center.  She agreed to pursue as I instructed.  Before she had to leave for a 4:00 dentist appointment she informed me she was sure there was a missing computer.  Blair showed me a tag that Adam used at the end of several entries he made on his computer, in the folder he had labeled ‘Deep State.’  The tag was simply, ‘Deeper State.’  Blair seemed to believe, especially since we didn’t know where the Open Curtain transmitters were sending their information, Adam had another electronic device.  “I bet it’s an iPad.”  I promised her I would return to his home and office to conduct another search.

Thursday, I met Garrett for breakfast at Pirate’s Cove.

“You look ten years younger.”  Garrett said as I sat down.  He, as usual, was already eating.  The man, just a few years short of eighty years old, still gets up at 5:00 a.m., and does a three-mile fast walk around Boaz.  This reminded me I had now forgotten my early morning routine five days in a row.

“I feel it also.  I’m thankful for mine and Camilla’s time away, and for my new commitment to get away at least once a quarter.  Life is more than work.” 

“Speaking of work, your boy Alex has been busy.”  Garrett said motioning a waitress for more coffee.

“Meaning?”

“You know he’s still a legislator, even though he’s running for governor.  He was instrumental in the bill that just passed both houses.  It’s called an abortion ban bill.  Here’s a real kicker.  It’s now illegal, actually a crime, for a doctor to perform an abortion later than the 15-week mark.”

The new waitress had a sweet smile but wasn’t yet as efficient as Gloria.  She was away for a few weeks while her father recovered from hip surgery.  “More strawberry jelly please.”  I looked at Garrett who had set down his fork as though he was waiting on me to respond.  “Ever since I learned about Natalie’s pregnancy and Alex’s insistence she have an abortion, I’ve been doing some reading.”

“You now an abortion expert?”  Garrett asked.

“Funny, but I think I can at least converse about it on a layman’s level.  It takes around 24 weeks for the fetus to become a baby.  Of course, not everyone would agree.  Most Southern Baptists say that the cellular mass is a baby from conception.  Now, you’re saying Alabama has passed a law that says abortions are illegal past 15 weeks?”  I asked.

“Actually, the way the bill was written, vague on purpose I believe, since it’s now a crime for a doctor to perform any abortion, it virtually forces an Alabama woman to either use some shade-tree shop or go out of state.”

“This can’t be legal, in light of Roe vs. Wade.  Doesn’t it give the woman the right to choose, at least until the baby is viable, which is around 24 weeks?”  I asked.

“That may just be the point.  Republicans are ready to put that old seventies case to the test.  You know the Alabama legislature is Republican controlled.  Their aim is to make Alabama the safest place in America for unborn children.”

“Children, babies.  They and a fetus or a glob of cells are not the same thing.  I’m becoming more convinced Republicans care far more about the unborn than they do the baby once its outside its mother’s womb.  They argue for adoption, but it seems to ignore the huge backlog of cases in foster care which necessarily brings so much heartache and suffering on thousands of children.  Also, the failure of Republicans to do anything about gun control.  I could go on with poverty issues, criminal justice issues, military issues.  You know most kids killed in our wars are poor, are from poor families.”

“Take a breath.  Eat your breakfast.  Seems like you’re allowing your closed mind to open a little.”  Garrett said.

“It seems all my life I’ve purposefully chosen to stay on the sidelines.  I’ve listened in church and believed what I’ve been told to believe.  Now, with all the Parker case is churning up, creationism, abortion, and guns, it’s becoming more obvious the South is full of closed-minded folks.”  I said.

“There’s more open-minded folks than you think.  The real danger comes from your Southern Baptist fundamentalists.  One thing we can say for sure is that the new brand of Republicanism, what you spoke of, has co-opted Southern Baptists.  The Christian Right is now the far right.”

“My breakfast has that hypocritical taste.  Let’s change the subject.”  I said.

“Okay, see if this will taste any better.  I think I told you Paige and Natalie have been working with Gina almost every weekend with her creationism research.”

“I think you mentioned that.”

“I talked with Gina last night.  She asked me to go with her to First Baptist Church in Centre on Sunday.  It seems Natalie has had her abortion and is under the weather.”  Garrett said, placing a ten-dollar bill under the salt shaker.

“That makes me so damn mad.  She didn’t want an abortion.  That asshole Alex finally got his wish.  He is such a damn hypocrite.”

“My friend, welcome to the world of politics.”  Garrett said standing up and putting on a tweed sport coat that looked unnatural for a hot day in late May.

I spent all Friday afternoon in the war room.  Ever since I learned about the falsification of Adam’s autopsy and his murder, my mind had felt it was riding the top of a tsunami.  This was nothing new, but it still left me feeling out of control.  It should have been the other way around.  My feet should be solidly planted and headed forward.  Joe’s work in Wyoming should have left me believing we were getting close to solving Adam’s murder.  Several hours in the war room made me realize the truth of what Bobby Sorrells always said, “just when you think you’ve got it figured out, you better transform into a defense attorney.  Explore what he or she is going to say in response to your allegation.”

Even though Jake Stone was a kingpin in hiding Adam’s murder didn’t mean the Williams’ were involved.  No doubt I could paint a pretty good picture they would have a motive to silence the professor, I had no tangible evidence.  Heck, Bart, Dr. Culbert, could be one hundred percent wrong that Jake Stone was the one who had called him.  Twice.  As I tried to integrate the recently acquired new evidence, facts were a better word, I was reminded of one thing.  Adam Parker was poisoned.  I wrote this down on an index card and was pinning it to what I called my ‘scene board’ when I felt a wave of near nausea roll through my stomach.  Truthfully, I didn’t know that.  That’s what Dr. Culbert said, but is that the gospel truth?  I knew then I had to ask Marissa to do something that I suspected would be the hardest thing she had ever done.  If she wanted a chance to know, to absolutely know, what had happened to her father, his body had to be exhumed and a drug screen performed.

I walked out of the war room and spent the next thirty minutes on the phone with Marissa.  I shared with her what Joe had learned in Wyoming.  She volunteered that it was the Marshall County coroner who had given her Dr. Culbert’s name and phone number to begin with; the coroner had even encouraged her to make the call.  As expected, Marissa resisted the idea to pursue an exhumation, and wanted to explore other possibilities.  In the end, her commitment to the truth won out.  I told her I would engage my attorney friend Dalton to prepare the necessary court petition, and that I would also share the new information with Mark Hale at the Sheriff’s Department to have them initiate a murder investigation.

Blair walked in right as I ended the call and said she had been needing to speak with me for over two hours.  It reminded me I needed to create a better rule than simply, ‘do not disturb’ me when I am in the war room.  Blair said Hannah Knott had called three times wanting to speak with me.  “I told her that more than likely you would be free by six.  Was that okay?”

“It’s nearly six now.  Yes, that’s okay.  Seriously, you did the right thing by not bothering me, but in the future, if you perceive it to be a real emergency then you have my permission to tap on the war room’s door.”

“Connor, I haven’t said it in a while, but thanks again for hiring me.  These last few weeks, working on the Parker case, have been the most intriguing and rewarding of my life.  I feel I have a real purpose, helping people find the truth.”  Blair said.  She had already said many times how much she loved her job.  From what she had shared about her rocky marriage that ended in divorce, it was obvious she was becoming more attached to Connor Ford Investigations, than she had ever been to the asshole who abused her.  Only an idiot would have mistreated her and ignored such a kind, sweet, and adorable young woman.

“You don’t have to keep saying that.  But, it works both ways.  I am blessed to have found you.  I hope you stay satisfied working here.”

“You don’t have to worry about that.”  At that moment the front door dingy thing sounded.  “I’ll go check.  That’s probably Hannah.”  Blair said.

I walked to the conference room and before I sat down Hannah and Blair stood in the doorway.  “If there’s nothing else you need, I’m heading out.”  Blair said.

“Have a nice weekend, and thanks again for all your hard work.”  I said motioning for Hannah to come in and sit down.

“Hi Connor, thanks for seeing me.”   Hannah said looking a little disheveled.

“No, thank you for coming.  I hear you’ve been out of town.  Yes, I dropped by your office yesterday and your assistant said you were at a conference.”

“I’ve been gone a week today.  I flew out to Los Angles to attend the annual conference of the Shakespeare Association of America.  It’s a top highlight of my year.”

“Sounds interesting.”  I said making small talk.  I didn’t know a thing about Shakespeare.

“This is the reason I wanted to see you just as soon as I could.  I flew back a day early.  I did this on purpose, thinking that I might catch Steven with his guard down.”  Hannah said, laying a slim leather briefcase on the conference room table.

“You’re sounding like an investigator.”

“Last night on the phone I told him I’d see him late Saturday, tomorrow afternoon, and asked him to meet me at Top ‘O the River in Gadsden.  He loves that place.”

“Is that Steven’s?”  I said motioning my head towards the tan-colored bag.

“No, it’s Adam Parker’s.  When I got home early this afternoon I went into Steven’s study.  He was still at the church, so I snooped around.  He normally is very neat and prides himself on having no clutter on his desk.  Today, that wasn’t the story.  I recognized Adam’s briefcase, satchel, whatever.  I’d seen him carrying it on many occasions.”  Hannah turned it over and pushed it towards me.  “See, here’s his initials.”  She had opened one of the little flaps.  Engraved on a gold-looking metal strip was the initials ANP.”

“What does the N stand for?  I asked.

“Nathaniel.  I always kidded him that he was named after a grocery store chain.  Do you remember the A & P’s?”

“Yea, kind of.”  I was dying to know why on earth Steven Knott had Adam’s leather bag.  Just as much, I wanted to know what was inside.  “What’s in it?”

“An iPad.  That’s all.  I’ve already looked at it.  I was surprised it wasn’t password protected.  I didn’t see anything that caught my attention.”  Hannah said.

“Do you have any idea why Steven would have Adam’s briefcase?”  I asked.

“None.  As far as I can remember, Steven never mentioned Adam Parker.  I’m not sure they knew each other.”

“I really need to keep this, but I’m worried about you.  Steven will know you took this from his desk.”  I said.

“I brought it here for you, figuring you would want it for your investigation.  I’ve decided if Steven asks about the briefcase I’m going to say I don’t know anything about it.”

“So, you’re willing to lie?”  I asked.

“Temporarily, just to get Steven to talking.  I hope, after I tell him I don’t know anything, that he will simply tell me the truth.”

I couldn’t believe Hannah was so gullible.  “I suggest you not hold your breath.  If Steven is having an affair with Peyton Todd, I suspect he won’t be the type to volunteer why he has Adam’s bag.” 

“He might if I then tell him I saw it and brought it to you.  He might get scared and be willing to say something, even possibly talk with you.  Connor, I still have hopes that Steven is caught up in something way bigger than himself and that he’s not having an affair.”  Hannah said, looking down at Adam’s bag.  “I have a feeling, I don’t know why, that Adam knew something that got him killed.” 

“So, you don’t think Adam died of natural causes?”  I asked.

“No.  Not really.  Call it a woman’s intuition.  I remember something Jake Stone said that Sunday Steven and I had lunch with him and Sandra, his wife.  Jake said that Natalie had a teacher who she was talking to about not having an abortion.”

“He didn’t say the teacher was Adam Parker?” 

“No, but it had to be.  Natalie, and Paige Todd, were too close to Adam for it not to be him.  When he came to me about the NRA letter and essay that Paige had written was when I could tell he cared a lot about them.”

“I really appreciate you bringing this to me.  I hope there is something on this iPad that will answer a few questions.  Thanks.  Also, if you will, let me know what Steven says.  If you need me, don’t hesitate to call.  Anytime.”  I gave her my cell number.

Hannah left a few minutes later and I spent another thirty minutes exploring Adam’s iPad.  I, like Hannah, didn’t find anything that caught my attention.  I made a mental note to ask Mark when I talked to him about reopening Adam’s case to ask him if Tony could look at Adam’s iPad.

Novel Excerpts—The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, Chapter 24

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.  
The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, written in 2018, is my sixth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Late on New Year’s Eve in the small town of Boaz, Alabama, Snead State Community College teacher Adam Parker was found dead slumped over in his car. A preliminary investigation indicated the fifty-year-old biology professor died of a heart attack.  Marissa Booth, Adam’s daughter and Vanderbilt School of Divinity professor, didn’t agree.

Four days later, Marissa hired the local private detective firm of Connor Ford to investigate her father’s death.  She declared local police officer Jake Stone had likely murdered her father.  She pointed Ford to a multi-month Facebook feud between Adam and several local people, including Stone and Boaz City Councilman Lawton Hawks.  The controversy allegedly related to Adam’s research that contended that, in layman’s terms, long-term indoctrination caused actual genetic mutations that directly affected future generation’s ability to reason.

Over the next year, Connor Ford discovered multiple and independent sources of motivation to quiet and possibly murder the controversial professor.  Ford learned that a civil lawsuit and widespread public outcry had effectively run Adam out of Knoxville, where he was a biology professor for over thirteen years.  Ford also learned that Adam had become the number one enemy of Roger Williams, a self-made local businessman, and his son Alex, who is a Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  Adam had discovered Alex and Glock, Inc., the Austrian-based gun manufacturer, was exploring not only the possibility of setting up a large facility in Boaz but also supplying pistols for Alex’s highly touted and controversial ‘arm the teachers’ proposal.

Connor Ford has his hands full enough with these suspects.  Add in his need to determine whether Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone are friends or foes of Roger and Alex, which accentuate the pressure no normal small-town private detective can handle.  

Will Connor’s discovery there is a link between Dayton, Tennessee, and the 1929 Scopes Monkey trial and a rogue group of CIA operatives bend Connor and his two associates to the breaking point?

Read this mystery/thriller to find out if Adam Parker was murdered and how, and what role the long-standing controversy between science and religion had in destroying the life of a single perfectionist professor.

Chapter 24

 The following Wednesday I decided to call Marissa.  Camilla and I wouldn’t be able to drive to Nashville on Saturday.  Just like last Saturday, Camilla had to work, and the weather looked like a late winter snow storm was definitely on the horizon.

“Marissa, this is Connor, is now a good time to talk?” 

“It is, just let me close my office door.”  I heard her lay down her land line phone and could hear her heels clapping against what I figured were old wooden floors.  I had her cell number but had chosen to call her at the Divinity School instead.  “Okay, I’m back.  Do you have some news?”

“Yes and no.  I’m not really sure if what I’ve learned directly connects to Adam’s death.”  I said.

“Tell me and maybe I can add some context.”

I spent nearly half an hour telling Marissa about Blair’s chance discovery of the ‘Deep State’ folder and Adam’s interest in the Williams family.  I described to her all three male members of the family and how, because of their giant bridge building company, they had the financial resources to position the younger son, Alex, as a viable candidate for governor of Alabama.  I also told her about Adam documenting a connection between the Williams family and Glock’s pending decision to build a large gun manufacturing facility in Boaz.  Finally, I told her about her father installing a tracking and listening device known in spyware circles as Open Curtain.

“All of that comes as a complete surprise except the curtain thing.  Well, I didn’t know about dad installing them on the Williams’ vehicles, but he did put one on my car.  He said that it was a device that could locate my car if it ever got stolen.”  Marissa said.

“You wouldn’t happen to know how your father monitored those devices?”  I asked.

“No.  I’m sorry.  Back to what you said earlier, you haven’t been able to connect anything about Glock or the Williams family to dad’s murder?”  Marissa asked.

“I’d prefer you not call his death a murder.  We simply don’t know that.”

“Okay, but my question stands, does what you’ve just told me have anything to do with my father’s death?”

“I have no proof whatsoever, but I have to admit it has gotten me interested, even intrigued.  There’s several puzzle pieces that all seemed to revolve around Alex, the candidate for governor.”  I said.

“Funny, you called today.  Just yesterday I attended a meeting at the Southern Baptist Convention.  Your man Williams spoke.  Along with the Republican candidates for governor from Mississippi, Tennessee, Georgia, and both North and South Carolina.”

“What was the meeting about?”  I asked.

“Dad would roll over in his grave.  Creationism.  It seems Southern Baptists are determined to have their silly beliefs taught in public schools.  They, the Southern Baptist Convention, are apparently working a plan with governor hopefuls to institute their curriculum change.”

“I perceive you feel differently.  You said, ‘their silly beliefs’ in reference to Creationism.”  I said.

“Connor, you may not know but Vanderbilt University Divinity School and the Southern Baptist Convention are not the best of buddies.  My school is one of the most liberal in the country, meaning we don’t hold to a literal interpretation of the Bible.  In other words, our interpretation is vastly different from that of Southern Baptists.  Here’s an example, our Dean is an open lesbian.”

“Yep, that clearly makes your point.  So, let me ask, I assume your school is much more on board with evolution than the Southern Baptist Convention?”  I asked.

“Connor, are you trying to be funny?  The differences couldn’t be starker.  Evolution is a fact.  I, along with my colleagues, accept it just as strongly as we accept the theory of gravity.  The Convention and its churches are still in the dark ages.  Something else I was going to say.  There was a whole entourage from Boaz at yesterday’s meeting.  How I know this is that I saw an old classmate of mine from our seminary days.”

“Who might that be?  First, you’ve never told me where you earned your theology degree.”

“Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas.  It’s one of six seminaries affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention.”

“Thanks, so who did you see, the former classmate you mentioned?”  I asked.

“Steven Knott.  When I saw him, I didn’t know he was in Boaz.  Last I heard he was at First Baptist of Montgomery.” 

“Gosh, I’m never surprised at how small the world actually is.  His wife, Hannah, teaches English at Snead.  She knew your father.  We’ve discovered this during our investigation.”  I said.

“Now, that makes sense.  Dad mentioned an English teacher there at Snead that he liked, you know, as a friend and fellow professor.  But, Dad, as far as I recall, never mentioned her name.  I never met Steven’s wife.  Like me, he wasn’t married during our days at seminary.  I heard he met a woman and got married after he moved to Montgomery.  As it seemed to always happen, school mates lose touch after a while, after graduating.”

“I know I’ve taken too much of your time and need to let you go, but would you mind telling me about your conversation with Steven, when you saw him yesterday?  I assume you too chatted for a few minutes at least.”

“We did.  Even though we didn’t get to talk much, I could tell he was troubled.  When he told me where he was living and working, he mentioned that he didn’t know how much longer he would stay in his current job.  This is what struck me as odd.  Steven said, ‘Boaz is a weird place.  Things are not what they appeared to be when I moved there.’”

“He didn’t say anything else, anything more specific?”  I asked.

“No.  I wanted to talk with him longer but a round and jolly man pulled Steven away.” 

“That sounds like the pastor, Caleb Patterson.”  I said.

“That’s right.  Steven mentioned him by name.”

“Thanks Marissa.  Feel free to call me anytime.  By the way, I’ll be sending you a detailed billing within the next week or so.  I’ll go ahead and apologize for taking so long.”  I said.

“Of course, I’d like this all to be over with very soon, but if you need more money, let me know.  I’m as determined as my dearly departed father, once I set my mind.”

“Okay, thanks.  Take care.”

After hanging up, I sat and pondered mine and Marissa’s call.  Two things that really struck me.  That she knew Steven Knott, and that Adam had failed to tell Marissa the name of his Snead College colleague.  I made a mental note to talk further with Hannah Knott.

Sunday morning, I was just getting into the shower when my phone vibrated.  I was already wet, so I finished my shower before turning over my iPhone which was laying on top of the dirty clothes basket. 

It was a text from Joe.  “We need to talk ASAP.”  Three weeks ago, I had pulled him off the Hannah Knott case and sent him to Jackson, Wyoming (why not start our search in the most popular town in the vast and wild Wyoming?).  I knew it was a long shot.  My feeling was simply a hunch.  Something that Bobby Sorrells would have told me (if I had asked) to investigate locally to obtain a more solid confirmation before going off on a wild goose chase and spending thousands of dollars.  I had rationalized by concluding that I already had done this, that no pathologist retires at 43 after investing well over ten years in a post-college education.  Ten days ago, Joe had called to tell me he had a lead on a family that was living in Dubois, Wyoming.

I dried off, pulled on a sweat suit and pair of house shoes.  Camilla wasn’t happy that I told her to go on to church.  She, at first, thought I was rebelling against her, Emily’s, and Amy’s latest conspiracy.  This would be the third Sunday in a row the three Musketeers had gone to First Baptist Church of Christ together, with me in tow on two of those occasions.

After Camilla and Emily left, I walked down the hall to my study and dialed Joe.

“Hello Connor.  I hoped I would catch you before you left for church.”  Joe said.  I could hear music in the background.  I pictured him sitting in one of those western type saloons I’d always loved from TV.

“Good timing actually.  What you got?”  I asked.

“Dr. Harry Culbert is now Bart Collins and he works part-time for Fremont County EMS.  I guess he couldn’t stay away from the medical field.  He and his family, wife and two young children, live on one of those mini-ranches just west of Dubois.  It’s a little over an hour from Jackson.”

“You’re sure this is our guy?”  I asked.

“Positive.  Once I learned where he lived (that’s a whole other story) I watched him for six days.  Most boring time of my life.”  Joe said.

“Your longest stakeout.  It was good training.”  I said.

“Once I learned his and Danielle’s, that’s his wife, patterns, I did a little snooping.  I won’t say how I got in their house because you already know.  Anyway, I found some letters postmarked from Huntsville.  Seems like Bart and Danielle’s parents miss their grandkids more than their children.”

“Have you approached, Bert?”  I asked.

“Bart, Bart Collins.  You still need to get your hearing checked.  Joe was now sounding like Blair.

“Have you confronted Bart?”

“Yesterday.  After his ambulance riding shift, he dropped in the Whiskey Creek Saloon, that’s where I am now.  He sat by himself at a corner table and I joined him.  After I bought him a couple of drinks, I dropped a bomb in his lap.  I said, ‘I’m not here to cause you any problems but I need to know about your last autopsy, the autopsy of Adam Parker.’  I thought he would faint.”

“Joe, please, jump to the heart of what you learned.  The suspense is killing me.”  I said, wanting to be patient.  I was proud of Joe.  He had accomplished a lot just by finding our mystery doctor.

“I’m getting there.  Two things pushed him into our corner.  Your suggested statement, ‘we’ve had the body of Adam Parker exhumed.  Your autopsy was a fraud.  That’s a crime,’ and my gentle threat I would have him arrested before the sun went down.  These loosened his tongue.  The shots of whiskey didn’t hurt.”   Joe wasn’t yet at the heart of things.

“Before you tell me, no matter what you tell me, I want to say congratulations on a great job.  I’m proud of your work, your commitment and determination, and your ingenuity.  What you’ve accomplished was no small feat.”  I felt better after giving some praise.  I needed to remember that.  Thanks Camilla.

“The bottom line is that you were right.  Somebody persuaded the doctor to falsify the autopsy.  There’s no doubt Adam Parker was murdered.”  Joe said and then went silent.  I kept thinking he would start filling in some details, but he waited on me to ask.

“Okay, you got me.  I should have just let you tell me the details to start with.  I’m all ears now.”  I said, giving Joe an open door, or, was it, an open curtain.  That was another subject I dared not introduce now.

“He said he and his family were threatened.  First, it was a phone call telling him he was about to be asked to conduct an autopsy on an Adam Parker from Boaz.  The caller seemed to know that Parker’s daughter would be calling him.”  Joe said.

“That’s really strange.”

“I agree.  I pursued that line a little more.  The doctor said he received a call from a Marissa Parker, who said the Marshall County coroner had given her his name.  The doctor said that he didn’t know the coroner but later assumed that someone, maybe the first caller, had pressured the coroner to give the daughter his name.”

“So, it was all carefully choreographed from the beginning.  Whoever was behind this figured Marissa would want an autopsy.”  I said.

“At first I thought that, but now, I wouldn’t be surprised if someone hadn’t planted that idea in her head.”  Joe said.  If that was true, then Joe and I had to be dealing with some pretty sophisticated folks.

“Then what happened?”  I asked.

“The caller told the doctor to accept the daughter’s request to perform the autopsy and to report that Parker’s death was from natural causes.  Here’s the persuasive part.  The caller said that if he, the doctor, refused, that he would never see his family again.”  Joe said.

“They had already kidnapped his family?”

“Seems so.  It was just a few minutes after that the doctor received a call from his wife.  She urged him to do as he was told or her and the two children would be killed.  Get this.  It was the next day after Parker’s body arrived at Huntsville Pathology Center that the doctor received the second call.  This time, he was given specific instructions to ignore anything he discovered, but to report that Parker had died of a heart attack.”

“What didn’t the doctor report?  In other words, what did he discover?  What killed Adam Parker?”  I asked, not pleased with either way I had asked my ultimate question.

“Cyanide poisoning.  Injected between Parker’s big toe, on his right foot, and the second toe.  I think it’s called the long toe.”

“That’s actually pretty ingenious.  A gunshot wound would obviously have been noticed.  But, not even the coroner would have suspected foul play.  The obvious cause of death would have simply been a heart attack.  No autopsy would have been required or requested by the coroner.  The caller, whoever he was, was bright.  In instigating an autopsy, he thought he was forestalling a further investigation.  I guess he didn’t know Marissa Booth.”  I said.

“That’s not the only thing the bad guys thought of.  They even allowed for a first level investigation to take place.  They assumed someone, Parker’s loved ones, might inquire into the autopsy and naturally call the pathologist.  Therefore they forced our doctor into hiding.”  Joe said.

“How did that work exactly?”  I asked.

“It seems there was a review process for the autopsy.  The doctor said another man called encouraging him to ‘go west young man,’ that was the callers exact words.  This second caller demanded the doctor move his family to Wyoming.  He already had a place waiting on him.  And, he and his wife and children all had new identities.  The doctor was instructed to tell no one where he was going.  I guess Bart and Danielle didn’t fully abide by that rule, given the letters I found.  Anyway, Bart, our doctor, was told the deed to the mini-ranch would be on the kitchen table when he and his family arrived.  And, there would be a deposit for a million dollars to a local Dubois bank.  The caller gave the doctor the ultimatum.  Leave Huntsville the next day, leaving house, furniture, everything.  Two one-way airline tickets were delivered to the medical practice within an hour, with a note inside a sealed envelope that said Danielle would arrive home at 5:30 but the kids would be held until the two parents were in Dubois.  I felt sorry for the doctor.  He had been put in a horrible situation, without any control.  He had no choice.  He said he thought he would never see his wife and children again.  But, the caller had done what he promised.  Two days after arriving in Dubois, the doctor received the third call and said the children could be picked up at the Jackson Hole, Wyoming airport the following morning at 11:30.  They arrived safe and sound.”  Joe said without a hint of impatience from me.

“So, I assume the doctor doesn’t have a clue who forced him to retire and move to Wyoming?”  I asked.

“Caution my friend.  Isn’t that what you tell me?  That I must be careful about reaching a conclusion, that there is something else, at least one other something I haven’t considered?”  Joe was sounding more like Bobby Sorrells every week.

“Okay, I suspect I’ve just kicked my own ass.”  I said.

“The doctor says he’s convinced the first caller was a Boaz police officer named Jake Stone.”

“This is unreal.  How on earth would he reach that conclusion?”

“He said he had heard a radio in the background during the first two calls.  He said it was after nearly a month of living in Wyoming, after he had taken a part-time job with the ambulance service, that he was at a car accident scene and heard a police radio through the vehicle’s open window.  This caused our doctor to do a little investigating himself.  Seems like he Googled the death of Adam Parker and found an archived news report out of Huntsville, WAAY TV.  They had interviewed a Boaz Police officer who had been the first one on the scene behind Snead College after Parker’s body was found.  Our doctor said he’s convinced Jake Stone’s voice is identical to the man who called him two times.”

“What about the third call?”  I asked.

“Nothing there.”  Joe said.

“Here’s my take on what you’ve learned.   Jake Stone was a part of a conspiracy to get rid of Adam Parker.  We now know we are investigating a murder.”  I said, imagining seeing about a dozen puzzle pieces sliding together in my mind.  I wasn’t ready to verbalize the core of my thinking.  Adam Parker had gotten too close to the truth.  He had gained enough evidence to hurt someone, probably financially, and that someone had figured out they were at risk.  I asked myself, ‘who had the most to lose?’  I could think of nobody except the three R A W’s.

Novel Excerpts—The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, Chapter 23

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.  
The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, written in 2018, is my sixth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Late on New Year’s Eve in the small town of Boaz, Alabama, Snead State Community College teacher Adam Parker was found dead slumped over in his car. A preliminary investigation indicated the fifty-year-old biology professor died of a heart attack.  Marissa Booth, Adam’s daughter and Vanderbilt School of Divinity professor, didn’t agree.

Four days later, Marissa hired the local private detective firm of Connor Ford to investigate her father’s death.  She declared local police officer Jake Stone had likely murdered her father.  She pointed Ford to a multi-month Facebook feud between Adam and several local people, including Stone and Boaz City Councilman Lawton Hawks.  The controversy allegedly related to Adam’s research that contended that, in layman’s terms, long-term indoctrination caused actual genetic mutations that directly affected future generation’s ability to reason.

Over the next year, Connor Ford discovered multiple and independent sources of motivation to quiet and possibly murder the controversial professor.  Ford learned that a civil lawsuit and widespread public outcry had effectively run Adam out of Knoxville, where he was a biology professor for over thirteen years.  Ford also learned that Adam had become the number one enemy of Roger Williams, a self-made local businessman, and his son Alex, who is a Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  Adam had discovered Alex and Glock, Inc., the Austrian-based gun manufacturer, was exploring not only the possibility of setting up a large facility in Boaz but also supplying pistols for Alex’s highly touted and controversial ‘arm the teachers’ proposal.

Connor Ford has his hands full enough with these suspects.  Add in his need to determine whether Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone are friends or foes of Roger and Alex, which accentuate the pressure no normal small-town private detective can handle.  

Will Connor’s discovery there is a link between Dayton, Tennessee, and the 1929 Scopes Monkey trial and a rogue group of CIA operatives bend Connor and his two associates to the breaking point?

Read this mystery/thriller to find out if Adam Parker was murdered and how, and what role the long-standing controversy between science and religion had in destroying the life of a single perfectionist professor.

Chapter 23

 Tuesday morning, I had just sat down with Garrett for breakfast when I received a text from Blair.  “Be sure and come by the office after breakfast.  Deep State.”

For the past month Blair had been working nearly nonstop on scanning all of Adam Parker’s documents to the $5,000 scanner Marissa had approved.  After Blair had spent a week or so reading Adam’s private journals, she got the idea of how good it would be to run a digital search across every document Adam possessed, both at his home and office.  She felt this might reveal connections that would otherwise remain unknown.  I think she subconsciously knew there had to be a better way than what she had seen that one time I had shown her my war room.  Now, with the aid of a powerful note-creating software known as Evernote, Blair was racing around Adam’s brain as though it were the Internet.

I replied to her text with, “I will.  Deep Shit.”  I didn’t have a clue what she meant by ‘Deep State.’

After breakfast I walked across the street and found her sitting in her little office behind the receptionist desk with the biggest smile I’d ever seen.  “Adam had a secret file.  He called it ‘Deep State.’  Here, look.” 

I walked over and stood behind Blair and stared at a folder icon.  It had been labeled ‘Deep State.’  “I’ve heard that term, even recently.  Don’t Trump supporters use it to refer to Washington insiders or something?”  I asked.

“I think you’re right.  The official definition is a group of people, typically powerful government people or agencies, such as the military, who are believed to secretly manipulate the government.”  Blair said rolling in her chair over to an eight-foot table she had me buy a few weeks ago at Walmart.  “Here, this is what made me run a search on Adam’s computer.”

Blair stood up and showed me a journal entry in Adam’s most recent private journal.  It was a short note at the end of his Thanksgiving entry where he talked about his day with Marissa.  After skipping a line, he had written, “RAW and RAND.  Deep State.”

“Could that be Rand Construction Company?  You know, owned by Alex Williams’ father?”  I asked.

“That’s a 10-4.  Fully confirmed.”  Blair had shared with me when I interviewed her last October that she was thinking about becoming a long-haul trucker if I didn’t hire her.  I wondered if she had renewed that dream.

“How so?  You’ve lost me.”

“Last night I finished scanning the last of Adam’s documents.  The first search I ran was ‘RAW’ thinking, ‘wouldn’t it be something if I could kill two birds with one stone?’  I hadn’t had much time to do any research related to that text Hannah gave you and Joe, the R A W one you know.  None other than Adam himself had written R A W and he had written it with R A N D.  See, look again.”  Blair pointed to Adam’s Thanksgiving entry wanting it to sink into my mind.

“Interesting.  You mentioned running something on Adam’s computer.”  I said.

“I don’t know what prompted me to run a search on Adam’s computer.  I guess it had something to do with me knowing that his computer, what was on it, wasn’t fully covered in my Evernote searches.  You don’t need to know exactly how I’m using this totally awesome software other than knowing everything from Adam’s documents are searchable.  Anyway, I ran a search on Adam’s computer to see if he had named any file R A W or R A N D.  He hadn’t.  It was nearly midnight and I was about to head home when I ran one more search, ‘Deep State.’  That’s how I found this folder.

Blair guided me back to Adam’s computer.  She showed me again a folder icon named ‘Deep State.’  “I would never have found it simply by looking at his desktop.  He had it buried deep in his state flowers folder.  Deep state, get it?  Irises are Tennessee’s state flower.”  Blair could be funny.

“So, what’s in this hidden folder?”  I asked.

“There are six subfolders.  The first one is a document, like a journal.  Listing events, phone calls, Facebook posts and comments.  The others all relate to specific individuals.  Look.”  Blair said clicking on the ‘Deep State’ folder.

I saw the six subfolders.  The individual names got my attention: Roger Allan Williams, Russell Adam Williams, Lawton Hawks, Jake Stone, and Jerry Todd.  I couldn’t help but notice.  Roger Allan Williams initials were RAW.

“So, Alex was right.  His father’s initials are the same as his.”  I said.

“Yes, and so is his brother, Alex’s brother.  His name is Russell Adam Williams.” 

My cell phone vibrated just as Blair clicked on the Roger Allan Williams folder.  It was Dalton.  “Blair, excuse me for a second.  I need to take this.”

“No problem.”

“Hey Dalton, what’s up?” 

“I just wanted to let you know that Bobby found the boyfriend.  He’s in Illinois.”  Dalton’s Jackson County client was charged with triple homicide and one of his victims was his sister.  I had learned in my preliminary investigation that she had a boyfriend in town just before she was murdered.  I had been unable to determine who he was.  All I knew was the sister had met the guy online.  It seemed Bobby was still head and shoulders the better investigator.

“That’s good to hear.  You calling to rub it in?  To show me what Sherlock himself was able to do?”  Sometimes I didn’t like Dalton.

“No, just thought you’d want to know.  You would have found it too.  Judge Holt granted my motion to inspect the sister’s cell phone.  That’s how we learned the boyfriend’s name.  Anyway, got to run.”

“Hey Dalton.  Hold on.  I have a question.”  Blair was motioning for me to look at an entry Adam had made in his deep state journal folder.  It read, “Sand Mountain Bank vs. Roger Adam Williams.”  I paused just a second and thought, ‘what the heck, if he doesn’t want me to know he will shut me down.’  “Dalton, I know you represent the Sand Mountain Bank.  You must.  I’ve seen you talking with Kurt Prescott several times when I’ve been in to make a deposit.”

Dalton cut me off.  “And, why would that concern you?  You trying to show me you are in Bobby Sorrells’ league?”

“No.  What I need to know is if you are representing the bank in a lawsuit against Roger Adam Williams?”  I asked.

“Well, that’s public record so I can admit to that.  You know you can go read the court file, see what the lawsuit is about.”  Dalton said.

“Yea, I know, but summarize it for me.  Please.”

“Williams is the single biggest investor in the bank, but he’s just one vote of five on the Board.  He’s been trying to act as though he were the CEO.  Can’t do it.  Kurt and the Board had to take a stand.  We sued Williams last fall.  Connor, we can talk more later, but I’ve got to take Judge Holt’s call.”  Dalton said ending our conversation.

“Blair, can you send me a copy of the documents in Adam’s deep state folders?”  I asked.

“No problem.  There’s six docs.  I’ll email them to you as an attachment.” 

“Thanks.”  I left Blair doing her magic.  I wished I knew half of what she did about computers.  As I walked to the kitchen to pour a cup of coffee I couldn’t help but think the Adam Parker case had taken on another layer of complexity.

After pouring a cup of coffee and warming a cinnamon roll that Blair had brought from home, I walked to my desk and opened my email.  I chose to start with the Roger Williams document she had sent me.

The first thing I noticed, but had missed it before, was that Adam had placed a question mark after his top entry.  The line read: “Sand Mountain Bank vs. Roger Adam Williams?”  I assumed this meant one of two things.  Either Adam wasn’t sure such a lawsuit existed, or, he did, but was unsure whether it had any relevance to his case.”

My last word rippled through my mind.  It was an odd word choice.  Why had I used it?  Was I finally at the point of concluding that Adam was trying to prove something?  Up until now, I guess I had assumed that if Adam’s death wasn’t from natural causes, that it was because someone had a beef against him.  In other words, as Adam was going about his research (I’ll call it, ‘Bullets, Babies, and Bullshit’) he was creating enemies.  Now, I sensed more was going on.  The ‘case’ word transformed into, ‘what case was Adam working on?’  Or, maybe better put, ‘what was Adam trying to prove?’.

One other thing.  This line was the first line on Adam’s document for Roger Allan Williams.  Did that mean it was the last thing Adam had written or the first?  After reading the entire three-page document, I concluded the line was the last.  Adam had used the principle of adding the most recent information to the top of the document.  Thus, the first entry would be the last line or paragraph of the document.

I flipped again to the third page and reread Adam’s first entry: “Roger Allan Williams dropped by my office today.  He didn’t like last week’s SMR article.  Said I was a disgrace to humanity.  Used polite language to threaten me if I attempted to publicly argue his son was unfit to be governor of Alabama.  This RAW is a perfect asshole.”  Adam hadn’t dated this entry, nor any of the others in the three-page document.  I guess he assumed no one would read this but him and all he needed to know was the order he became aware of the information.

It didn’t take Blair five minutes to email me a link to the Sand Mountain Reporter article.  I had figured Adam was referring to our one and only local newspaper when he referred to ‘SMR.’  The article was titled, “Local Professor Links Brain Damage to Religious Fundamentalism.”  It was published in the Saturday, October 7th edition.  Adam’s hypothesis was that a functional impairment in a brain region known as the prefrontal cortex promotes religious fundamentalism by diminishing cognitive flexibility, and curiosity, creativity, and open-mindedness. 

Adam acknowledged that he wasn’t the originator of the hypothesis, that Dr. Kramer Dickson from the University of Tennessee had posited this several years earlier.  What was original with Adam was whether functional impairment of the prefrontal cortex could arise from extreme religious indoctrination.  The reporter’s final quote got my attention.  She had asked Adam, almost in jest, what positive result could come from his research.  Adam had responded, “maybe a requirement that politicians be properly evaluated before including them on a ballot, to determine whether they are fit for the office they seek.  Trump comes to mind.”

I again reread the article, this time noting a paragraph where Adam quoted Dr. Dickson: “Based on previous research, the prefrontal cortex is known to be associated with something called ‘cognitive flexibility’.  This term refers to the brain’s ability to easily switch from thinking about one concept to another, and to think about multiple things simultaneously. Cognitive flexibility allows organisms to update beliefs considering new evidence, and this trait likely emerged because of the obvious survival advantage such a skill provided. It is a crucial mental characteristic for adapting to new environments because it allows individuals to make more accurate predictions about the world under new and changing conditions.” 

In another paragraph, Adam had related the term ‘cognitive flexibility’ to his own hypothesis, “Religious fundamentalism refers to an ideology that emphasizes traditional religious texts and rituals and discourages progressive thinking about religion and social issues. Fundamentalist groups generally oppose anything that questions or challenges their beliefs or way of life. For this reason, they are often aggressive towards anyone who does not share their specific set of supernatural beliefs, and towards science, as these things are existential threats to their entire worldview.”

As I pondered Adam’s visit from Roger Williams, I concluded it was an overreaction.  Adam was just an unknown Biology professor at a small and nondescript college.  I chuckled at my thought that popularizing Adam’s hypothesis would garner Alex Williams great support.  Alabama was its own type of deep state, deeply entrenched in Christian fundamentalism.  It’s an absolute requirement that political candidates are fully indoctrinated in the Christian faith.  This seemed too simple, too irrelevant.  I couldn’t help but wonder if there was something else Roger Williams didn’t want Adam Parker to know about his political son.

After a call from Joe I couldn’t get Dalton’s lawsuit off my mind.  I decided to drive to the Marshall County Courthouse and look at the public file. 

I knew most of the ladies in the Clerk’s office.  This was a benefit.  As usual, they let me borrow a desk in a little office beside the Circuit Clerk’s office.  After thirty minutes of reading Dalton’s Complaint and Roger Williams’s Answer, I felt I was wasting my time.  I closed the file and pushed it aside.  In doing so I bumped the mouse that was attached to the computer sitting on the desk.  The computer screen came to life and the cursor was blinking, inviting me to enter a name or file number.  I couldn’t resist.  I typed in Roger Allan Williams and clicked enter.  One case listing appeared.  It was the Sand Mountain Bank case.  I returned to the search page and this time entered, “Robert Alex Williams.”  There were no results.  Finally, I entered, “Russell Adam Williams.”  This time the screen lit up with hits.  I quickly noticed each of the case listings referred to a criminal case.  The County’s system was simple.  The first two letters of a civil case were CV and CR for criminal cases.

I did a quick review of each case.  They were all drug cases, anything from misdemeanor marijuana possession all the way to drug trafficking.  It was interesting to see that Russell hadn’t been sentenced to a day in prison.  I guess it helped having a wealthy father.  The final case was different.  It was an assault case.  The only one of the eleven cases listed that involved violence.

After having one of the clerk’s pull the court file, I learned that Russell Adam Williams, age thirty-two, was charged with second degree assault, a Class C felony.  The file contained the Indictment and I was shocked to learn the victim was none other than Robert Alex Williams, the defendant’s own brother.  Normally, court files don’t contain a copy of the Incidence and Offense Report, and this file was no different. I wanted to know what had happened.  I called Mark at the Sheriff’s office and he referred me to his partner, Tony.  Within five minutes he had both read me the entire report and emailed me a copy.  It was nice having friends in high places.

The report was written by the arresting officer, Jake Stone.  This told me that most likely the incident had occurred within Boaz City limits.  It seemed on the afternoon of Friday January 27th, over a year ago, Boaz Police officers had been called to the headquarters of the Rand Corporation in the Boaz Industrial Park.  When they arrived, they found a badly beaten Alex Williams slouched against his car in the parking lot.  He said that his brother was the attacker.  Roger Williams had seen the beginning of the attack from his third story office window but by the time he could reach the parking lot, Russell had fled.  Stone later arrested Russell at William’s Bar (no relationship) on Highway 431.  The case had been disposed of by guilty plea in September.  Russell was sentenced to ten years in prison, which was suspended pending successful completion of a drug rehabilitation program.

I drove back to the office knowing one thing for sure.  Wealthy families are not immune to spawning at least one black sheep.

Saturday morning came too quickly.  I wouldn’t have dared to tell Camilla.  We had planned on going to Nashville first thing, but she had been called in to cover for a vacationing Barbara who had delayed her return trip from the coast until noon.  At least I had this morning to continue my RAW pursuit.

Since Tuesday I had fallen head first into a deep state, at least that’s what Blair called it.  She claimed it would be the deciding factor in the Adam Parker investigation.  In Adam’s deep state file for Russell Adam Williams I had learned he was a former executive with Glock, Inc. of Smyrna, Georgia which was the United States headquarters for the Austrian based gun manufacturer.  It seemed Russell had introduced his brother, Alex, to Gaston Glock, the grandson of the company’s founder.  Adam hadn’t written much else about Russell.

I had also learned that Adam Parker wasn’t opposed to pushing the envelope.  It confirmed everything Marissa had said about her father and everything I had observed about him since I began the investigation.  Adam Parker was a determined man.  He had installed a device he had acquired from Open Curtain; I loved the name.  From my separate research, I learned the device was dual purpose.  It was designed to be placed on a vehicle.  It would track the location of the vehicle and it served as both a receiver and a transmitter of human conversations.  The technology was so advanced it canceled all other noises.  Adam’s entry to document his action read, “Open Curtains installed: RAW, RAW, RAW.”  I could only conclude that Adam had someway been able to attach an OC to all three vehicles the Williams trio drove.

Since Camilla had to go into work early, I ate breakfast with Garrett.  I was glad I had called him Wednesday night and assigned him the task of learning what he could about Russell Adam Williams.  After motioning my order to Gloria, I sat down and noticed Garrett had a sour look on his face.

“You feeling bad?”  I asked.

“Simply, soul sick.”  Garrett had an uncanny ability to make his point and do it with alliteration.

“I’m all ears if you need to talk about it.”

“Oh, you’ll hear it alright.  I figure the news will have the same effect on you.”

“Okay, you’ve got my attention.”  I said.

“Glock, Inc.  You know, the gun manufacturer.  First, the bottom line.  It seems they are contemplating building a facility in the Boaz Industrial Park.  One like their Symrna, Georgia operation.”  Garrett said pushing his plate back.  It looked like he hadn’t eaten a thing.

“How on earth did you learn this?”  I asked.

“Gina.  My main source, as always it seems.  Don’t ask me how she knows so much or has ways of finding out.  If guns being built in Boaz, you catch those three ‘b’s? aren’t bad enough, the deal seems to hinge on whether Alabama will approve a $50,000,000 contract to purchase roughly 60,000 Glock 34’s.  That’s their most accurate long-range pistol.”

“You haven’t said, but I’m assuming those guns are for Alabama’s teachers?”  I asked.

“You’re correct.  Here’s a kicker.  You know from the news we’ve heard that the proposed legislation makes it strictly voluntary for teachers to decide if they want a weapon in their classroom.  From what Gina is hearing, Alex Williams is going to propose an amendment.  It would be mandatory for every Alabama teacher to become a gun-toting ninja.”

“That’s one way to put it.”  I said.

“Here’s the part that might get closer home in your Adam Parker case.  Two things.  Roger Williams owns the Industrial Park property that Glock is considering.  And, Russell, you know Roger’s other son, seems to be the key link in making all this happen.  Gina has found out that Alex and Russell basically hate each other but are trying to set aside their differences to achieve their mutual goals.  Russell and Gaston Glock are tied at the hip.  This gives Russell an inside advantage to be named CEO of Glock-Boaz.  As to Alex, Gina suspects, although she’s yet to confirm, that Alex’s political pocketbook will explode with dollar bills if Alabama contracts with Glock.”

I spent the next hour listening to Garrett.  It seemed this subject, guns, had him seriously depressed.  He finally admitted that it was Gina he was worried about.  He felt she was positioning herself inside a danger zone.  Garrett said she was expanding her Creationism research, from the part where she is trying to determine why so many people believe that Genesis is virtually a science book, into an attempt to determine if there is a connection to guns and violence.

After breakfast, I walked across the street and sat at my desk in the war room for another hour trying to visualize a scenario where Adam Parker had become an obstacle along the Williams’ road to securing the Glock deal.

It was noon when I walked out of the war room and picked up my phone (I was adamant about having no technology in the war room) and saw Camilla’s text: “I have to work all day.  Sorry.”  I immediately called her and learned that Barbara had decided to stay in Gulf Shores until late Sunday and that there was nobody else to cover her afternoon appointments.  I told her not to worry, that we could hopefully make our Nashville trip next week.  After our call ended, I couldn’t help but feel bad about not telling her that one of the main reasons I wanted to go to Nashville to begin with was to meet with Marissa.  My Adam Parker case demanded it.  I always felt I walked a fine line between work and my relationship with Camilla.  I reminded myself that I didn’t own the beautiful Camilla and that she could walk away at any time. At a time she felt I wasn’t giving her all the attention she needed.

Novel Excerpts—The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, Chapter 22

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.  
The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, written in 2018, is my sixth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Late on New Year’s Eve in the small town of Boaz, Alabama, Snead State Community College teacher Adam Parker was found dead slumped over in his car. A preliminary investigation indicated the fifty-year-old biology professor died of a heart attack.  Marissa Booth, Adam’s daughter and Vanderbilt School of Divinity professor, didn’t agree.

Four days later, Marissa hired the local private detective firm of Connor Ford to investigate her father’s death.  She declared local police officer Jake Stone had likely murdered her father.  She pointed Ford to a multi-month Facebook feud between Adam and several local people, including Stone and Boaz City Councilman Lawton Hawks.  The controversy allegedly related to Adam’s research that contended that, in layman’s terms, long-term indoctrination caused actual genetic mutations that directly affected future generation’s ability to reason.

Over the next year, Connor Ford discovered multiple and independent sources of motivation to quiet and possibly murder the controversial professor.  Ford learned that a civil lawsuit and widespread public outcry had effectively run Adam out of Knoxville, where he was a biology professor for over thirteen years.  Ford also learned that Adam had become the number one enemy of Roger Williams, a self-made local businessman, and his son Alex, who is a Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  Adam had discovered Alex and Glock, Inc., the Austrian-based gun manufacturer, was exploring not only the possibility of setting up a large facility in Boaz but also supplying pistols for Alex’s highly touted and controversial ‘arm the teachers’ proposal.

Connor Ford has his hands full enough with these suspects.  Add in his need to determine whether Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone are friends or foes of Roger and Alex, which accentuate the pressure no normal small-town private detective can handle.  

Will Connor’s discovery there is a link between Dayton, Tennessee, and the 1929 Scopes Monkey trial and a rogue group of CIA operatives bend Connor and his two associates to the breaking point?

Read this mystery/thriller to find out if Adam Parker was murdered and how, and what role the long-standing controversy between science and religion had in destroying the life of a single perfectionist professor.

Chapter 22

 Saturday night Camilla and I went to Gadsden and saw the movie “Red Sparrow.”  It was an okay spy movie with too much sex and too little substance.  I did like Jennifer Lawrence as Dominika Egorova who was conscripted into Russian intelligence.  I also liked that she was tasked with seducing Dimitry Ustinov, a Russian politician, and covertly replacing his phone with a state-provided phone.  Tech stuff always got my attention.

Sunday morning was spent in church listening to Pastor Caleb trying his best to support the Genesis story and the literal interpretation of Adam and Eve.  I guess Saturday’s seminar prompted his sermon.  From all my recent evolutionary readings it seemed the Pastor was making a lot of leaps in logic to conclude that the creation story was a historical fact.  I had to give it to him, he made a plausible argument if you looked strictly at scripture itself.  I made a mental note to do a little research on a man named Ken Ham and his Answers in Genesis organization.

Yesterday afternoon after church Emily and Camilla left me alone at Hickory Hollow as they went on their quarterly adventure.  Shortly after Emily moved to Boaz the two had conspired that each quarter they would have a date of sorts and pursue a unique adventure.  I had no problem with it until right before they left Camilla announced they had invited Amy to go along.  I was clearly reminded of what a strange situation had developed right under my nose.  Amy, my ex-wife, was living next door (we shared the same driveway) and my fiancé was going out of her way to befriend the woman I’d spent most of my life sleeping with.  I couldn’t figure out exactly what Camilla was up to, but I chose to trust her judgment.  No doubt she was a peacemaker.  At 10:30 last night I learned the three of them had gone to visit the Benedictine Sisters Retreat Center in Cullman to learn how prayer and a peaceful environment can produce spiritual growth.  I thought it was rather odd that after nearly three hours with the nuns, the three found some real peace at Jim and Nick’s eating and drinking two glasses of red wine before heading back to Boaz.  I didn’t ask who drove home.

I skipped breakfast with Garrett this morning to arrive at the office a little after seven.  While Camilla and her two musketeers were away yesterday I had spent several hours in my war room.  It had been Camilla’s idea.  Not yesterday’s visit but constructing the small room to begin with when we were contemplating the renovation and build-out of our new offices.  Camilla was aware of how messy I could be.  At first, I had included this space behind my office as a large pantry for the kitchen.  She had suggested I reverse my plans by putting the door in the corner of my office and using it to hide all my sketches, bulletin boards, strings, push pins and index cards.  No doubt she had seen what a mess my office had been the two years I had rented space at Scott Plaza.

My mess had a lot to do with Bobby Sorrells and how he had trained me.  He attacked his cases like an unwritten book.  He showed me how to use three visuals to plot out an unsolved crime; all incorporated the use of a spare wall.  The first one was a mind map of sorts.  It was like a tree with multiple branches.  In the center you started out with your main subject (Adam Parker).  Basically, the purpose was to create various clusters of knowledge, trying to think logically, keeping similar topics and subtopics together.  Bobby always said, “we have prior knowledge, X. Now we have acquired this new knowledge, Y.  Let’s run all of this by an expert (which often was ourselves) and see what future knowledge will likely arise.”

The second method was simply using index cards to develop our story.  It was closer to an outlining tool, but was similar to mind-mapping.  It provided a little more flexibility in rearranging thoughts and ideas.  Since moving to Boaz, I had taken the liberty to alter Bobby’s third method, which was more like fishing than anything.  He called it cooking.  He printed every piece of existing evidence on separate slips of paper and put them all in a hat.  When he felt like he was spinning his wheels, he would draw two items out of his big cowboy hat.  It was almost like a game.  He would then try to ascertain some type relationship with the two items drawn.

It was this method that I had adapted.  I had discovered a piece of software that artists were using to discover new colors.  Camilla had read about it in, of all places, a cosmetology magazine.  It was easily modified to generate associations among the many colors (in my case, facts or items) that had been inputted.  It was this third method I had tried to use yesterday afternoon and that had caused much frustration.  But, in a semi-conscious state during the middle of the night, an idea had come to me. 

The two items the program had spun out that I was to attempt to associate was Kurt Prescott and Steven Knott.  The only reason Prescott was even in my database was that he was Peyton Todd’s boss.  This also reminded me of the other major modification I had made to Bobby’s ‘cooking’ method.  I had created a version that I could use to combine facts/evidence/paper slips from the top two cases I was working on.  To every other average intelligent person on earth, I would be labeled a professional rabbit chaser.

Until 3:00 a.m. this morning, I would have agreed.  What made me think I was at least semi-sane was that I had been seeing some overlap in my two main cases.  For example, I now knew Steven Knott was present in both the Adam Parker case and the Hannah Knott case.  It didn’t seem a leap that the boss of Steven’s girlfriend (of course we still didn’t have hard evidence of this) might have a slight role in at least our love-affair case.

After Blair arrived at 8:00 a.m., I told her I didn’t want to be disturbed by anyone, and that included her and Joe.  I locked my office door and shut my war-mapping door.  I had spent the hour before Blair arrived online trying to learn all I could about Kurt Prescott.  What had awoken me at 3:00 a.m. didn’t make any sense at all.  I knew dream-like phases of the night often brewed up pure nonsense.  What I had seen in my mind’s eye was Mr. Prescott wearing one of those gowns they make you put on in a hospital.  Your front side is covered but your backside is open to the world.  And, he was walking out in the desert.  This image was still with me during my one-hour online search.   

I was immediately encouraged when my first Google query produced two results that revealed Kurt had spent the eight years prior to starting the Sand Mountain Bank in Boaz as President of First Bank of Dayton, Tennessee.  I couldn’t help but relate this with the fact Adam Parker had spent some time in Dayton exploring the Scopes Monkey Trial.  The second result included a link to an article from the Herald-News, Dayton’s local newspaper.  I clicked on that link and read the article.  It was dated August 13, 2014 and mainly focused on First Bank’s new president, a Kerry Ryder, who was from Nashville.  The article had one sentence that interested me.  It read, “Kerry Ryder is replacing Kurt Prescott who is leaving First Bank to start his own bank in Boaz, Alabama.”

I decided to search the archives of the Herald-News, thankful that many older newspapers had invested into new technology.  Their website touted the fact all 119 years of Dayton’s newspaper history was now online.  What a feat that must have been.  A search of ‘Kurt Prescott’ turned up three articles, including the one I had just read.  The first of the remaining two articles dealt with Kurt’s tireless efforts to promote reading.  It seemed he spent an afternoon every week at Rhea County High School in a revolving process of meeting with ten seniors to motivate them to become avid readers.  I didn’t think this article could ever relate to the death of Adam Parker.

The second and final article was a letter to the editor of the Herald-News.  It was written by a Debbie Wray thanking Kurt Prescott for all his support during the months since she had lost her son, Josh Wray, to gun violence.  Apparently, Josh was found dead behind Rhea County High School two days before he was to graduate in May 2015.  Ms. Wray said that Kurt Prescott had been instrumental in persuading Josh to decide on college versus joining the military.  At the end of the article, Ms. Wray said, that she didn’t believe a word of the rumors that were floating around about Kurt Prescott. 

After I locked myself in my office and entered my war room I spent the next four hours (without technology; another one of my war room rules) brainstorming what, if anything, connected Kurt Prescott to Steven Knott.  I tried each of my three methods and the best I could come up with was they were connected by Peyton Todd.  No doubt, my day, so far, had been extremely productive. I loved sarcasm.  As I walked out of my office a few minutes before noon, I couldn’t help but feel depressed over my insane interest and ability in rabbit chasing.

Thursday morning, I made myself get up and go walking and jogging.  I had realized yesterday afternoon when Blair and Joe were talking about enrolling in an aerobics class at Health Connections that I was rapidly becoming soft.  If the two of them, both fit and trim, saw the need to toughen up and further tone their bodies I had no choice if I wanted to command respect as a bounty hunter. 

The idea had come a few days ago when Mark Hale had called and said the Marshall County Sheriff’s Department was thinking about starting a program to deputize a few folks to assist them in serving warrants and arresting non-violent folks, such as deadbeat dads avoiding child support orders.  It was a way for the Sheriff to balance his budget and still fulfill his duty of enforcing the law.  Mark had encouraged me to sign up, saying, “I know you’re getting a little pudgy but this ain’t like arresting a serial killer.  It’ll be a way to help pay for that fancy office.”

Half way to Oak Drive I was pouring sweat even though it was two degrees above freezing.  As I was trying to decide what I wanted to eat for breakfast, I heard a loud rumble coming from the approaching curve.  The one thing I had always hated about living down Cox Gap Road was having to put up with the James clan that lived in Sand Valley.  They were a multi-generation family of rednecks that, according to rumor, did some dirty work for some shady characters out of Atlanta.  Some locals referred to the Atlanta boys as mobsters.  I had never had dealings with a single James, but I had on many an occasion gotten an ear full of their giant Ford pickups with missing mufflers.

As the sound got louder I saw the burnt red Ford around the corner and top the hill this side of Oak Drive.  I made a mental note to start wearing some form of ear protection.  The roaring engine was that loud.  I stopped my jogging and moved off the road and into a shallow ditch to my left.  When the truck was within thirty or forty feet it slowed to a crawl.  A dark-haired man that I didn’t immediately recognize stuck his head out the passenger side window and yelled, “Connor Ford, you lying sack of shit.  It’s such a blessing seeing you out here.”  As the pickup pulled next to me I realized the man was Tommy Lee Gore.  He had acquired glasses and a beard since I had last seen him at the Huddle House restaurant.

I decided not to respond but kept on walking.  The driver of the pickup put his truck in reverse and started rolling back, keeping Tommy Lee right beside me.  “Hey dickhead, you think you’re too good to talk to me?”

“Mr. Gore, you know that’s not true.  I always enjoy our deep conversations.”  I should have kept walking with my mouth shut.

“You smart ass, always thinking you are the smartest cat in the room.”  Tommy said and turned to look at the truck’s driver.  “Gator, you think we ought to have a little fun with the professor here?”  Gator and Grady his brother, were twins and well known, especially down in Sand Valley.  They, along with their twin sisters, Gretchen and Georgia, were the youngest generation of James’ who were just starting to have kids of their own.  None of these four were out of their teens.  I imagined the first crop of babies would result from Gator and Grady’s exploitation of Gretchen and Georgia.

“He looks too sweaty for my taste.”  Gator looked over at me and smiled, revealing a mouthful of either black teeth or chewing tobacco.

“You’re right Gator, I think I’d rather have a piece of that pretty little woman that cuts the sweaty man’s hair.  You know, the one we saw with the lovely Emily and the aging Amy.”  This was all it took to wake my weak-kneed ass up.  I wasn’t going to be cowered by these redneck animals, especially when they started spewing out threats. 

I reached behind me and pulled out my Ruger SR9 from my nearly new leather holster.  Before Tommy Lee’s shit-faced smile evaporated I had his truck door open and my left hand on the shoulder of his denim jacket.  I yanked hard and he slid out of the truck head first, rolling onto the shoulder of the road and then down into the ditch.  I knelt beside him pointing my ready Ruger on the bridge of his nose.  “Okay dickhead, let me be clear.  You stay the fuck away from me and my family or I’ll blow your fucking head off.  Do I make myself clear?”

“You gonna shoot me like you did my brother.  You gonna kill me and lie your way again out of prison.  Go ahead.”  I hadn’t forgotten Tommy’s partner.  He was now exiting the truck and making the last turn around the hood.  I spun and saw him welding a double-barrel shotgun that was pointed my way.

“Back off Gator.” I said as a horn blared behind me coming from out of the curve and pulling to a stop within ten feet of the Ford’s bumper.  “Pull that trigger and you’ll spend the rest of your miserable life in prison.” 

“What we got going on here Connor?”  It was my neighbor Chuck Holland.  He was an older guy, probably sixty or so, but the type you knew was hard as nails.  His land joined the east side of my eighty acres and he spent most of his time cutting and selling firewood.

“Looks like the James family has taken up with one of my old friends.  Chuck meet Tommy Lee Gore.  You probably know Gator James.”  I said lowering my Ruger while seeing Gator remove his right index finger from the Browning’s trigger and lowering it to his side. 

“You boys need to get on down the road.  Butch is probably getting a little antsy.”  I had met Butch a couple of times.  He was a cross between a rottweiler and a pit bull.  He went everywhere with Chuck.  I could hear him in the bed of the old Chevy sharpening his teeth, probably on the bar of an old chainsaw.

I had backed away from Tommy Lee and he was now on his feet.  “Let’s go Gator.  I guess Connor don’t want to talk.”  The two men got back in the big Ford and drove off.

“What’s up with them assholes?”  Chuck said as he eyed my Ruger.

“History.  Bad blood between me and the dark-haired, thick glassed man.  He’s Tommy Lee Gore.  I had to kill his brother a few years back.  He’s not forgotten.”  I said.

“You better watch yourself.  I don’t know Mr. Gore, but the James boy is a spitting image of his grandfather.  He’s the only man that cranks up my fear.  Give him a reason and he’ll gut you before you can breathe.  You take care.  I gotta run.  Ms. Saunders ordered two loads of hickory.”

As Chuck drove away, I continued my walk towards Oak Drive, finally remembering I was still holding my Ruger.  I slipped it back in its holster and started contemplating what I needed to do to protect Emily, Camilla, and Amy from, what was no doubt in my mind, the determined stalking of Tommy Lee Gore.

Novel Excerpts—The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, Chapter 21

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.  
The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, written in 2018, is my sixth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Late on New Year’s Eve in the small town of Boaz, Alabama, Snead State Community College teacher Adam Parker was found dead slumped over in his car. A preliminary investigation indicated the fifty-year-old biology professor died of a heart attack.  Marissa Booth, Adam’s daughter and Vanderbilt School of Divinity professor, didn’t agree.

Four days later, Marissa hired the local private detective firm of Connor Ford to investigate her father’s death.  She declared local police officer Jake Stone had likely murdered her father.  She pointed Ford to a multi-month Facebook feud between Adam and several local people, including Stone and Boaz City Councilman Lawton Hawks.  The controversy allegedly related to Adam’s research that contended that, in layman’s terms, long-term indoctrination caused actual genetic mutations that directly affected future generation’s ability to reason.

Over the next year, Connor Ford discovered multiple and independent sources of motivation to quiet and possibly murder the controversial professor.  Ford learned that a civil lawsuit and widespread public outcry had effectively run Adam out of Knoxville, where he was a biology professor for over thirteen years.  Ford also learned that Adam had become the number one enemy of Roger Williams, a self-made local businessman, and his son Alex, who is a Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  Adam had discovered Alex and Glock, Inc., the Austrian-based gun manufacturer, was exploring not only the possibility of setting up a large facility in Boaz but also supplying pistols for Alex’s highly touted and controversial ‘arm the teachers’ proposal.

Connor Ford has his hands full enough with these suspects.  Add in his need to determine whether Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone are friends or foes of Roger and Alex, which accentuate the pressure no normal small-town private detective can handle.  

Will Connor’s discovery there is a link between Dayton, Tennessee, and the 1929 Scopes Monkey trial and a rogue group of CIA operatives bend Connor and his two associates to the breaking point?

Read this mystery/thriller to find out if Adam Parker was murdered and how, and what role the long-standing controversy between science and religion had in destroying the life of a single perfectionist professor.

Chapter 21

 Camilla and I had spent the entire weekend together.  Saturday was her once-per-month Saturday to be off.  We had spent the day clearing off our garden spot and cutting up an old oak that had fallen across the long-winding driveway.  Sunday was beautiful, and we had finally gotten to have our DeSoto Falls picnic.  A real blessing had arrived on Monday.  Camilla’s apartment manager had called and asked if she was going to renew her lease.  If not, there was a family desperate for a one-bedroom even though they had two elementary-aged children.  After discussing with me, I was able, along with a phone call from Emily, to convince Camilla to not renew but instead to move in at Hickory Hollow.  We had spent nearly all day yesterday clearing out her apartment and placing most of her furniture into storage.  Wednesday morning came too early.  I was sore and stiff and needed my morning walk, but an early morning appointment made that impossible.

At 6:00 a.m., I was sitting at my desk waiting for Paige and Natalie.  Paige had called late Monday afternoon and asked if we could meet.  The reason for the early time was they both had an eight o’clock class at Snead.  I was glad Paige had called.  I too had something to talk about, thankful for Blair’s hard work.

Just after the back door dinged I heard, “Connor, you here?”  It sounded like Paige.  I had told them to come in the rear entrance.

“In here.  I’ve got coffee ready.”  I walked down the hallway and met them before they passed the kitchen on their right.  “Good morning ladies.  I’ll let you prepare your own coffee.”  They did and we walked back to the conference room.

“Sorry, if I seem a little groggy.  I’m beat from yesterday’s physical work.”  I said.

“Maybe Camilla will give you a back rub tonight.”  Natalie chimed in.

“Do you know Camilla?”  I asked.

“She’s now my favorite at Serenity.  I was using Barbara but last time I went, a couple of weeks ago, she was busy.”  Paige said, looking at Natalie and smiling.

“We also know she’s your girlfriend.  She’s open about that.  Especially, after I told her it was neat having a detective in town.”  Natalie said.

“Okay ladies.  Why are we here?”  I said, once again it seemed I was the one to push a conversation forward.

“There’s something going on with my mom.  It’s weird and may not have anything to do with our investigation.”  Paige said.  I didn’t know exactly what to make of her “our investigation.”  I had asked for their help, but we hadn’t discussed anything particular.  I think all I had said the time we met was that I might have some more questions.

“Why do you say that?”  I asked.

“Peyton’s phone.  We looked at her phone.  Tell him Paige.”  Natalie too was moving the conversation forward.

“Last Saturday afternoon, Mom was in the shower, getting ready to go shopping or something.  Natalie had just arrived and told me about seeing her, my mom, with Steven Knott on Thursday, and wanting to know if I thought they might be having an affair.”

“That’s either perceptive or naive.  I’m not sure.”  I said, looking at Natalie.

“Anyway, Jerry, that’s my adoptive dad, was at the pharmacy so Nat and I looked at her phone.  Mom’s as predictable as an ant, leaving it laying around in the open anywhere.  She thinks because she has it password protected she’s safe.  I won’t tell you how I learned her password.”  Paige looked over at Natalie and nodded.

“There was a text from Steven Knott that said, ‘I sent you an email.’  Paige then opened her mom’s Gmail and there was a forwarded email that Steven had received from Erica Williams.  It contained a photograph of Alex’s car parked at Natalie’s house.”  Paige said.

“The only time he’s ever been to my house was when he came with the check for $50,000 and the agreement for us to sign.”  Natalie added, standing up.  “I’ve got to have more coffee.  Anyone else?”

“Before you go to the kitchen, I assume you are talking about the deal he offered in exchange for your silence over the baby?”  I asked.

“Yep.”  Natalie said and walked out to refill her coffee cup.”

Paige pulled out her phone and scrolled to a photo of her mom’s phone, including the text and the photo within the email from Steven.  “I can’t figure out why Erica would be sending Steven anything, much less that photo.  You know he’s the minister of music at First Baptist Church of Christ?” 

“Yes, I know.”

“Let me offer a suggestion.  I’ve learned that Steven is also a counselor, has a counseling degree, and has been known to ply his little sideline.”  I stopped while Natalie walked in trying to balance an over-filled cup.  “I’ve heard he, Steven, has been counseling Jake Stone and Sandra Goble.  Natalie, do you know anything about that?”  I asked.

“No, nothing.”

“Here’s a thought.”  Paige reached in her purse and pulled out a small notepad.  She then started to draw some squares and rectangles.  “My stats teacher says sketching out relationships sometimes helps.  Connor, based on what you’re saying, what if Steven was counseling Erica?  What if she knows about her philandering husband and maybe even the pregnancy?”

“Possibly.  Let me share something Blair, my assistant, found a couple of days ago in Adam Parker’s journals.  But first, I must request that we keep all of this to ourselves.  I’m still operating on what we discussed a few weeks ago, that you want to find out what happened to Adam Parker.  Can we agree?”  I asked.

The two girls nodded their heads, and both said at the same time, “of course.”

“What did Blair discover?”  Natalie asked.

“I think it was mid-November, last year.  Adam had written in his private journal that he had met with Steven Knott.  It seems he, Steven, was curious about Adam’s research, asking questions about guns and how to save lives.  Adam made one statement that now, after what you’ve shared, seems relevant.  ‘Steven has a client with two young children. He is trying to encourage her to take a stand against guns in the house; husband is a gun-loving tyrant.’  The relevance may not be apparent but that’s the way connections start off, seeming unconnected to begin with.”  I said.

Natalie reached over and touched my hand as though she needed to say something.  “Something seems off.  Don’t counselors keep their conversations with their clients confidential?  Why then would Steven be sharing this with Paige’s mom?”

“My philosophy professor says that everybody is motivated by self-interest.  What if my mom has a special interest in Erica.  That’s funny.  I didn’t mean to imply a sexual interest, but what if, let’s assume, mom hated Erica and wanted to do her harm?”  I liked Paige.  She obviously listened in class; she has the makings of a good investigator.

“Or, what if Peyton was trying to help Erica.  Maybe, both Steven and Peyton are trying to help Erica.  She is the one, sorry Natalie but I must be open, Erica is the one whose husband had an affair and got a young girl pregnant.  Wouldn’t that upset her just a little?”  I said.

“It could also make her madder than hell?”  Natalie said.

For the next thirty minutes or so we brainstormed, particularly trying to figure out if the connections between Peyton, Steven, and Erica, had anything to do with Adam Parker.  Said another way, did any one of those three know anything about Parker’s death?

After breakfast, Garrett and I walked the six blocks to First Baptist Church of Christ.  He was more excited than I was to watch his daughter debate the charismatic Alex Williams.  Garrett had called last night to ask me to attend, what he dubbed, ‘the uncreative debate.’

We arrived early.  I wondered if the thing had been canceled.  There were two older ladies sitting on the far left side of the auditorium, and Paige and Natalie were with a woman who, at a distance, reminded me of Marissa. 

“Come on.  I want you to meet Gina.”  Garrett said waving her way as she looked up from her conversation.

As we walked down the aisle towards Gina, I saw Jake Stone, Jerry Todd, Steven Knott, and Pastor Caleb enter from the choir room at the back of the auditorium.

“Hey darling.  I want you to meet my good friend and breakfast partner.”  Garrett said hugging Gina and smiling at Paige and Natalie.

“Hi Gina, I’ve heard a lot about you.  Seems your Dad is a big fan.”  I said.

“I could be a serial killer and this adorable bear would still love me.”  Gina was tall like Marissa, but with a plainer face, not pretty or even femininely handsome.  But, she certainly wasn’t ugly.  She had straight brown hair, the type that just shines.  Her eyes were also brown but darker than her hair.  Her face was clean, like it had just been scrubbed.  As far as I could tell, she wasn’t wearing any makeup.

“Oh, daughter dear.  After this conference everybody will know that you are a serious killer.”  Garrett said.  I didn’t know what he meant.  I suspect he and Gina had some type of inside joke.

“Gina, let us know if you need anything.  Natalie and I are heading to the front to pass out your brochures.  Thanks again for coming.”  Paige said with Natalie nodding in agreement.  They walked away but not before picking up a notepad and a stack of, what I assumed were, brochures.  I made a mental note to get one for myself.

After a few minutes of Gina quizzing Garrett about family issues, I sat down and watched as the auditorium, surprisingly, filled to nearly half capacity.  I could tell by glances from Jake Stone that I had chosen the enemy camp. 

Straight up at 9:00 a.m., Pastor Caleb introduced both Gina and Alex.  I hadn’t even seen him come in.  Apparently, he had been outside in the vestibule, with Paige and Natalie, probably passing out his own brochure, or trying to assess what was going on with his former lover.  I obviously was in the assuming mood; for all I knew, the two continued to have an occasional tryst.

After the introductions, Pastor Caleb stated that each guest would make an opening statement, then they would take turns asking each other questions.  At 10:30 there would be a fifteen-minute break and then would resume with a time for questions from the audience.  He promised the seminar would end by noon.

From the beginning, I was impressed with Gina.  She was all professional, which necessarily included her being direct and confident.  She laid out how Alex’s idea that Creationism to be taught in Alabama’s public schools was a clear violation of the law.  She cited the 2005 landmark legal case, Kitzmiller v. Dover (Pennsylvania) as clear and binding precedent that the teaching of intelligent design (a dressed-up version of Creationism) in public schools was unconstitutional.  The reason: the idea is fundamentally religious, not scientific.

Ever since I discovered Adam Parker’s interest in the Scopes Monkey Trial, I had spent quite a bit of time reading about the creationism versus evolution controversy.  It seemed there were basically three camps on the subject.  One, made up of more liberal and progressive Christians, held to the belief that evolution was true but it had been superintended by God, thus the Genesis version of creationism was metaphor.  The second camp held that creationism and evolution were wholly incompatible.  The infamous evolutionary geneticist Jerry Coyne of the University of Chicago, was a main champion for this position.  Finally, the third camp was populated by what seemed to me a rapidly dwindling crowd of folks like Alex Williams, Pastor Caleb, and an aging group of Southern Baptist fundamentalists; this group obviously held to a literal reading of the creation story as embodied in Genesis.

What Gina talked about clearly reconciled with what I had read.  From the beginning of her talk I knew she was rooted smack in the middle of the second camp, anchored to the belief that evolution and creationism were incompatible.  Gina spent much of her introduction explaining that the theory of evolution had attained the highest status in science and that it is analogous to the theory of gravity and relativity.  This meant, it was well established because of the evidence.  Gina also used human evolution as an example of why creationism is simply a mythological story. 

She referred everybody to the brochure they were handed to see the fossil record of how modern-day humans had changed from their multi-million-year-old ancestors.  Gradually, the prehistoric creature had transformed from apelike to what we are today.  She mentioned in detail the discoveries of a creature she referred to as ‘Lucy.’  She was a female skeleton of the hominin species Australopithecus afarensis found in 1974 in Ethiopia by Donald Johansson and Tom Gray.  Dating of the geological strata in the Hader Basin indicated the Lucy skeleton was likely more than three million years old.

Gina compared the Lucy discovery to a more recent hominin fossil find in the Rising Star cave in south Africa.  Naledi, unlike Lucy, was much younger, probably living two to three hundred thousand years ago.  This pre-human species continued to possess apelike characteristics but much less than Lucy.  Naledi was much more like modern humans in that the hands suggested finely tuned motor skills.  Also, the feet suggested Homo naledi was capable of walking efficiently for long periods.  This part of her introduction drew several moans from the crowd.  She said, “Science has proven there could not have been a literal Adam and Eve.”

Gina also cited a multitude of discoveries from non-biological science, including geological and cosmological.  She said that although science does not yet know exactly how the universe began (if it had a beginning at all) science was still working on it.  She was clear that life on earth had begun from a single-celled organism that went on to evolve into millions of different species over the nearly 4.6 billion years the earth had existed.  She said that our known universe was at least 13.6 billion years old.

Gina concluded her remarks by expressing the importance of facts.  She said science defined a fact (and thus, evidence; as what is true) as any observation that has been repeatedly confirmed and accepted as true; any scientific observation that has not been refuted.  She emphasized that in science, truth is never final, for what is accepted as a fact today may be modified or even discarded tomorrow.  She said all it takes is for new facts to be discovered that overturns previous facts.  Unsurprisingly, her final statement prompted several boos from the crowd.  Gina said there was absolutely no evidence the world and life began as the Bible relates.  She said that creation as described in Genesis is simply a metaphor and shouldn’t be taken as science.  Anyone who takes the story literally is doing so in the face of science which provides facts that are in direct opposition.

Alex’s opening statement revealed why he is likely to become the next governor of Alabama.  He knew how to work a crowd.  Of course, it was easy when the crowd was your own kith and kin.  His first statement, “ladies and gentlemen, Ms. Lane’s statement shows a complete ignorance of our Christian faith.  I’m a little surprised that she is also rather ignorant of science.  She speaks of truth, well, truth is, the fossils she speaks of just as easily could be those of apes and chimpanzees, having nothing at all to do with humans.  Scientists are known for their theories.  They make leaps in logic.  Ms. Lane knows that if she can ridicule the Bible and say it’s full of falsehoods that her and her liberal friends can say that God also got a lot of other things wrong.  That’s when all hell breaks loose.  Folks, we get our morals from the Bible.  Without it, the world would be in chaos.  Without objective morals there wouldn’t be anything wrong.  A man could go about robbing and raping whoever he wanted.”

At that moment I heard a voice that sounded eerily like Paige Todd.  I heard her say from the back of the auditorium, “isn’t that what the Old Testament calls for?”  Brother Caleb stood up and said, “let’s keep our questions until after the break.  With that statement I felt the atmosphere shift.  I couldn’t put my finger on it but the thought crossed my mind that the Q and A time might be anything but boring.

During the next portion of the seminar or debate the pattern was quickly and easily established.  When Alex would ask Gina a question, she responded clearly and tightly, keeping her response to facts and discoveries, and openly confessing when she didn’t know something.  Alex’s performance couldn’t have been more different.  He really didn’t say anything that me or anyone else present could go and verify.  His approach revealed that he certainly wasn’t a scientist.  His typical fall back argument was that without faith we cannot know God and that even then, He is mysterious and has chosen not to reveal everything to us yet.

After the break, Jake asked Alex if he believed the right to own guns and to defend ourselves was a God-given right.  Alex’s response was quick but seemed disjointed at best.  He tried to argue that since man was made in the image of God, that man has the same rights as God if he is being obedient and faithful in his service to his master.  Alex said (without citing any example) that God defends Christians all the time, and that ultimately, God will fight the final battle at Armageddon. It appeared Alex wanted to continue but Pastor Caleb, acting as moderator, said, “everyone please, try to keep your questions more on topic.  We are here talking about creationism, not about guns.”

About ten minutes later, after both Gina and Alex had responded to a question on how a single-cell organism could have started to exist if it weren’t for God, I noticed a man about Garrett’s age walk in and sit down three rows in front of where we were sitting.  It seemed that occurred at the same time there was an absence of questions.  Brother Caleb stood up and said, “surely, there are more questions.  Folks, this is your time to ask and to learn.”

Another minute or so of silence ensued, then the newest guest stood up and said, “Sorry, I was late, but I have a question if that’s okay.”  Caleb seemed to be thankful anyone at this point would ask any question.  “I’m Kramer Dickson from Knoxville and have come to Boaz to pick up a few books I loaned several years ago to a dear friend of mine.  Many of you would either know him or would have heard of him.  He was Professor Adam Parker.  Now, to my question, and I’ll direct it to Professor Lane.  “Is there a biological basis for religion?”  Just as soon as Mr. Dickson mentioned his name, where he was from, and that he was a friend of Adam Parker, I knew he had to be his mentor, and the man who probably had gotten Adam started on his multi-year quest to discover how a person’s environment can alter a person’s genetic code.

The now gracious Alex deferred to Gina and she went into a deep discussion of how likely it was that, to survive out on the savannah, our ancestors learned the hard way.  A hunter might hear a rustling in the bushes.  If he concluded it was likely the wind, he might become a lion’s supper, but if he concluded it was danger, he might save himself.  Gina said this lesson would have been taught to the hunter’s children.  So, children learned to listen to their parents and to others in authority.  She said her response was certainly abbreviated, but this same scenario likely led to religion.  Over time, tribes began to believe that thunder and lightning were signs the gods were disappointed.  They associated calamities with forces beyond themselves and they began creating stories of how to please these forces or gods as they were later known to be, including child sacrifice.  Again, parents, and those in authority, shared their beliefs with their children and advised them, if they wanted to survive, to listen and follow their beliefs.

Gina said that two to three thousand years ago men began to document their beliefs and thus the Bible was born.  She said, until the past fifteen or twenty years, especially in Christian fundamentalism, children tended to adopt the beliefs of their parents.  Someone, it may have been Natalie, asked, “what changed, you seemed to indicate that something changed twenty or so years ago?”  Gina responded by saying, tersely, “the Internet.”  Now, more and more children are growing up with a vast library of information at their fingertips.  This change is the single greatest force to overturn centuries of indoctrination.”

The crowd certainly didn’t like Gina’s last word.  There were groans and a few cried out, ‘lock her up, that’s pure heresy.’  Pastor Caleb was making every effort to quiet the crowd when I saw Alex jump up out of his chair at the front of the auditorium and rush back toward the entrance of the church.  His action seemed to calm the crowd.  That’s when I heard two women shouting and screaming.  I couldn’t make out much of what they were saying.  I did hear, the words, bitch and whore.  I stood and watched Alex as he made his way through the door into the vestibule.  Everyone else did the same.  In just a minute or so the screaming match ceased, and Alex returned to his chair.  It was almost 11:45 a.m.  Brother Caleb probably did the right thing by concluding the seminar.

Gina didn’t seem phased by what had just happened.  She walked down from the stage and started talking with Kramer Dickson.  In a few moments Garrett and I joined them.  I think Garrett was surprised to learn that Mr. Dickson and Gina had already been talking by phone and email for several weeks.  She had invited him to not only drop in at the seminar but to spend a couple of days with her and her father.

During this time, I noticed Jake and Alex talking, along with Pastor Caleb.  When they left Alex alone, still sitting in his chair on the stage, I walked over to him.  “Alex, what just happened?  Who was arguing out front?” 

“It seems my dear wife now knows or at least is highly suspicious of Natalie.  That was the two of them nearly coming to blows out in the vestibule.”  Alex said, looking as though God was either testing him or had left him to the wolves.

“Sorry, but I need to ask you a question.  Remember, you promised to help me as much as you could to learn about Adam Parker’s death.”  I said.

“Connor, now isn’t a good time.  I need to think.”

“You are a busy man.  This may just be in your best interest to know what I know.  Why did you pay some money to either Steven Knott or Peyton Todd, or both?”  I asked.

Alex’s face turned even whiter, if that were possible. “Where on earth did you hear that?  That’s a fucking lie.”  I always found it very revealing when a supposed man of God used the ‘F’ word.  Quite frankly, it is refreshing.  It seems to show he is a genuine human.

“I have learned that Peyton sent a text to Steven that said, and I quote, ‘RAW deposit made.’ By the way Alex, I know your initials are RAW.”  I said feeling like I had the mighty politician cornered.

“That’s true, but my father and my brother have the very same initials.  Have you thought about that?  Better put, there’s probably a much better explanation than those letters have something to do with me or my family.”  Alex said.

“I shouldn’t have been surprised.  I never cease to be amazed at how vulnerable my thinking can be.  As Bobby Sorrells always said, you need to always assume there is something relevant you don’t yet know.”

I chose not to pursue my line of questioning any further.  I felt sorry for Alex.  He was in a quandary.  Likely, his lovely Erica now knew about Natalie’s pregnancy, or was highly suspicious.  His governorship campaign could be about to blow up in his face, and he was suspected of paying some mystery money to two people he knew he had nothing to do with.

I left the church and drove home, virtually kicking myself for having jumped to a wrong conclusion and feeling depressed over how little progress I was making in discovering what had happened to Professor Adam Parker.

Novel Excerpts—The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, Chapter 20

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.  
The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, written in 2018, is my sixth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Late on New Year’s Eve in the small town of Boaz, Alabama, Snead State Community College teacher Adam Parker was found dead slumped over in his car. A preliminary investigation indicated the fifty-year-old biology professor died of a heart attack.  Marissa Booth, Adam’s daughter and Vanderbilt School of Divinity professor, didn’t agree.

Four days later, Marissa hired the local private detective firm of Connor Ford to investigate her father’s death.  She declared local police officer Jake Stone had likely murdered her father.  She pointed Ford to a multi-month Facebook feud between Adam and several local people, including Stone and Boaz City Councilman Lawton Hawks.  The controversy allegedly related to Adam’s research that contended that, in layman’s terms, long-term indoctrination caused actual genetic mutations that directly affected future generation’s ability to reason.

Over the next year, Connor Ford discovered multiple and independent sources of motivation to quiet and possibly murder the controversial professor.  Ford learned that a civil lawsuit and widespread public outcry had effectively run Adam out of Knoxville, where he was a biology professor for over thirteen years.  Ford also learned that Adam had become the number one enemy of Roger Williams, a self-made local businessman, and his son Alex, who is a Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  Adam had discovered Alex and Glock, Inc., the Austrian-based gun manufacturer, was exploring not only the possibility of setting up a large facility in Boaz but also supplying pistols for Alex’s highly touted and controversial ‘arm the teachers’ proposal.

Connor Ford has his hands full enough with these suspects.  Add in his need to determine whether Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone are friends or foes of Roger and Alex, which accentuate the pressure no normal small-town private detective can handle.  

Will Connor’s discovery there is a link between Dayton, Tennessee, and the 1929 Scopes Monkey trial and a rogue group of CIA operatives bend Connor and his two associates to the breaking point?

Read this mystery/thriller to find out if Adam Parker was murdered and how, and what role the long-standing controversy between science and religion had in destroying the life of a single perfectionist professor.

Chapter 20

 Ever since Marissa had told me about Adam’s Cymbalta prescription, I had subconsciously pondered if his depression had anything to do with his death.  Without any basis, I had decided that was why he must have been taking Cymbalta.  The extent of my minimum research had revealed this drug was used for treating depression, anxiety disorder, and pain associated with fibromyalgia.  Finally, Saturday, I was determined to learn more.

Marissa had confirmed Adam was depressed and that he felt she would know if her father suffered from either anxiety disorder or fibromyalgia.  I had spent most of Saturday afternoon on Google.  One thing caught my attention.  I’m not sure how I stumbled onto a rare condition called Broken Heart Syndrome.  According to an article from the Mayo Clinic, it is caused by a surge of stress hormones.  What got me really interested in this subject was the article mentioned that it’s possible that some drugs may trigger Broken Heart Syndrome by causing a surge of stress hormones.  And, one of those drugs was Cymbalta. 

Yesterday morning, Monday, I had called my personal physician and good friend, Dr. Michael Luther.  He was with patients and didn’t return my call until last night.  I gave him a brief overview of Adam’s health and his medicines and asked if he knew anything about Broken Heart Syndrome.  I already figured he knew something; the man is a walking encyclopedia, especially when it comes to health issues.

I’ve learned over the two-plus years I’ve been back in Boaz to record my conversations with the brilliant Luther.  I simply didn’t have the mental capacity to both hear and digest what he can spurt out.  As had become my custom, I had Blair transcribe the intelligent side of our conversation. 

Luther: “Broken Heart Syndrome may also be called takotsubo cardiomyopathy, apical ballooning syndrome or stress cardiomyopathy.  It is a temporary heart condition that’s often brought on by stressful situations, such as the death of a loved one.  The condition can also be triggered by a serious physical illness or surgery. People with Broken Heart Syndrome may have sudden chest pain or think they’re having a heart attack.

In Broken Heart Syndrome, there’s a temporary disruption of the heart’s normal pumping function in one area of the heart.  The remainder of the heart functions normally or with even more forceful contractions.  Broken Heart Syndrome may be caused by the heart’s reaction to a surge of stress hormones.

The symptoms of Broken Heart Syndrome are normally treatable, and the condition usually reverses itself in days or weeks, although there are rare instances where the patient dies.  Therefore, the condition should be considered very serious.”

After our call ended, I realized how dumb I can be.  It would seem I would have already revisited Adam’s autopsy.  I couldn’t remember it saying anything about any drugs found in his system.  Sure enough, under “Drugs Detected,” was one simple word, “None.”  I had almost decided to let the issue go, figuring, assuming (which I knew far better than to ever do) Cymbalta wouldn’t show up in a toxicological drug screen.  I think I didn’t want to bother Dr. Luther again.

But finally, my curiosity took over.  Dr. Luther, gracious as always, said that Cymbalta wouldn’t show up in a typical drug screening. However, he said that it is not uncommon for there to be false positives found among people who take Cymbalta.  The false positive would typically indicate methamphetamine.  I provided Dr. Luther with additional details about Adam’s death and the autopsy’s report that no drugs were found in his system.  He stated this didn’t necessarily indicate an error, but I could always call the doctor who had conducted the autopsy to see if he simply hadn’t recorded the false positive.  Luther said sometimes, where there are absolutely no other indications the patient was a meth user, the doctor wouldn’t record a false positive, mainly out of compassion for the family of the deceased.

Since I was still in a mood of kicking myself for not having looked at this issue earlier, I decided to contact Dr. Harry Culbert in Huntsville.  Unfortunately, I would have to wait.  According to the receptionist, Dr. Culbert was no longer with Huntsville Pathology Associates.  He had retired and moved to Wyoming.  A quick search online revealed that Dr. Harry Culbert had graduated from Harvard Medical School in 2000.  He had completed both his pathology residency and forensic pathology fellowship at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore in 2006.  He had practiced in Huntsville for only eleven years.  He was now only 43 years old. 

I thought this was rather young for the highly educated doctor to retire.  After another hour of trying to locate an online lead to Dr. Culbert, I finally recognized that even if I found him and spoke with him it most likely wouldn’t be fruitful.  Whether the toxicological screening revealed the presence of Cymbalta or not, the autopsy listed the cause of death as a heart attack.  It sure looked like the Broken Heart Syndrome was the culprit which could have been triggered by the Cymbalta.  None of this helped my argument that Adam Parker had been murdered.

Dead ends had always been troublesome for me.  For some reason I had thought I should be smart enough to spend my time on relevant issues.  I had now spent at least three or four hours on this little Cymbalta issue.  It had all been a waste of time.

It had been a week since Amy moved into the Playhouse.  I hadn’t seen her at all, not even in passing.  I also had hardly seen Camilla.  Last night after we got off the phone before going to bed I made a promise that I would start making an extra effort in our relationship.  If I didn’t, I ran a huge risk of losing her.  She was simply too beautiful and sweet to put up with inattention, especially from a man seventeen years her senior.  Tonight, things would be different.

I left the office at 5:00 and drove to Serenity Salon.  This used to be my custom but ever since taking on the Parker case, my routine had changed.  Again, not an effective way to show Camilla how much I cared for her.  She normally worked until at least 7:00 on Friday nights.  She was just finishing up with Pastor Caleb when I walked in.

“Hello Pastor.”  I said as he put on his coat.  As I approached, he reached out to shake hands.

“Hey Connor, nice to see you.  Your lady here sure does a good job.  Don’t you like my new cut?”

“It suits you well.”  I said, noticing that his normally long and thick curls were missing.  “Going for the buzz look?   Makes you look thinner.”  After I said it I realized it wasn’t the thing to say.  Caleb was overweight by a half-ton and often mentioned from the pulpit how he was always trying to diet and often met with failure.

“Thanks Connor, that’s just what I need to motivate me tonight.  Looks like a small salad and maybe a cup of oatmeal for me.”

“I love oatmeal.”  I was running out of things to say.   I felt the pastor probably wouldn’t enjoy the joke that Joe had shared with me this afternoon.  It contained an ugly word, and two images of sexually explicit conduct.

I sat in Camilla’s barber chair while she and the pastor walked over to the cash register by the front entrance.  There was a magazine still in the chair.  One, I assumed, he had been looking at.  The cover of Cosmopolitan seemed an odd choice for a Southern Baptist preacher, especially this one with the words, “Ten Sex Tips for Stale Partners” written in bold letters across the magazine’s cover.  The words were steamy enough but on the lower right and left of the cover, beside the title, were couples wearing not much more than their birthday suits.  The couple on the left was two African-American males.  The couple on the right were male and female, both closer to Camilla’s age than mine.  I guessed Pastor Caleb might have enjoyed Joe’s joke after all.

“Hey baby, how are you?”  I asked Camilla when she returned.

“Tired.  I was hoping for a quiet evening with you.  My place okay?”  It rarely ever failed that Camilla was quiet about her desire to be together.  I was a blessed man.

“That’s good but Emily has plans so we’ll have the place to ourselves.”

“What’s she up to?”

“You remember Carl, the guy who came with her back in January when we had our little father/daughter talk about her moving in?”  I said.

“Yes.  He’s a nurse.  He and Emily worked together at St. Vincent’s.  Right?”

“Yes.  Seems like they are becoming a thing.  Apparently, she’s spending the weekend with him at his place on Smith Lake.  What’s your schedule looking like?” I asked.

“I have one more appointment at 5:30.  I should be off by 6:00.  We’re kind of slow for a Friday afternoon.”

“That’s not so good for your pocketbook but it’s wonderful for me.  I’m really ready to spend some time with you babe.”  I said this without strain at all.  See Camilla.  I can be open and romantic.

“There’s my appointment.  She’s early.  I’ll see you later.  Don’t forget to remind me to tell you what Pastor Caleb said.”  Camilla said tying on a new smock.

“I’ll pick up a pizza if that’s okay.”

“Sounds good.  Don’t forget extra onions.”  I loved that Camilla was so genuine and open. 

I swung by Pizza Hut and beat Camilla home, but only by a few minutes.  They were swamped.

As soon as she walked in the back door, I walked over and helped her remove her coat.  “Camilla, I have something I need to tell you.”

“Uh-oh.  This can’t be good.  Tired of me already?”

“You are so absolutely insane.  I wanted to apologize for not spending much time together here lately.  I plan on changing that.  Camilla, you are the most important thing, well, person, in my life.  I love you and need you to know that.”  I said.  I didn’t know why I had always thought that such talk made me appear weaker.

“Is that for real?  Or, since we have the house to ourselves, it’s just a line to get me under the covers.”  Camilla was perceptive, but now, she was wrong, even though I wasn’t against some naked time.

“I have to be honest.  It’s a little scary underneath those sheets.  You are way too much woman for me.”

“Now, I know somethings up.  Is it Blair or that Marissa woman?  You got to be feeling guilty.” 

“Should I be honest?”  I rarely missed an opportunity to slide in a little humor.

“Always.” 

“It’s both.  Neither Blair or Marissa can resist.”

“I’ll wreck their resistance and for you Connor Ford, this hot body is off limits to you all night.  Pastor Caleb said I could come by anytime.”

“So that’s what he said?  That you wanted to tell me?”  I asked.

“Silly, if you can be funny, so can I.”  Camilla said pressing her lips onto mine.  “Enough of that mushy stuff for now, let’s eat.  I’m starving.

We walked over to the bar.  I warmed us both a slice.  She poured us a glass of tea.  We sat across from each other and ate, without saying a word until I got up for more pizza.

“Pastor Caleb invited us to church next Saturday.  I think you’ll want to go.”

“Saturday?  You mean Sunday?”  I asked.

“No, there’s an all-day seminar type thing on Creationism.  It seems Paige Todd and Natalie Goble have persuaded the pastor to schedule this event.”  Camilla said, warming herself another slice of pizza.

“This seems odd.  Are they now experts on Creationism?”

“Apparently they are very interested in this subject.   Pastor Caleb said a lady from Birmingham, a professor of some sort, would be coming.  She’s one side of the debate.  She’s against teaching Creationism in public schools.  Alex Williams will be arguing from the Biblical standpoint.”

“Did he say the name of the professor?”  I asked.

“He did.  Lang, Professor Lang.  I think Gina was her first name.”

“That has to be Gina Lane.  Did he mention which school she taught at?”

“Birmingham-Southern.”

“Yep, that’s Gina Lane.  That’s Garrett’s daughter.”  I said.

“Your breakfast buddy?” 

“Yes.  What a small world.”  I said.

“From what I gathered from Pastor Caleb, Paige and Natalie are determined to persuade other churches to host this type event.”

“I have a feeling this has something to do with Adam Parker.  These two girls were his students.  They were also good friends.  Get this, they also believe Adam Parker was murdered and that, I hate to say this, but it’s the truth, they believe your father had something to do with Parker’s death.”  I said.

“You don’t have to mince words with me.  I wouldn’t put anything past the man.  That was harsh wasn’t it?”

After two more slices of pizza for me and a bowl of Black Walnut ice-cream for Camilla, we watched one episode of Law and Order and hid under the sheets for nearly two hours.  It was refreshing to know the woman I loved and adored still had a special need for my body.  I was certain it wasn’t an act.  Camilla was for real.

Novel Excerpts—The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, Chapter 19

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.  
The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, written in 2018, is my sixth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Late on New Year’s Eve in the small town of Boaz, Alabama, Snead State Community College teacher Adam Parker was found dead slumped over in his car. A preliminary investigation indicated the fifty-year-old biology professor died of a heart attack.  Marissa Booth, Adam’s daughter and Vanderbilt School of Divinity professor, didn’t agree.

Four days later, Marissa hired the local private detective firm of Connor Ford to investigate her father’s death.  She declared local police officer Jake Stone had likely murdered her father.  She pointed Ford to a multi-month Facebook feud between Adam and several local people, including Stone and Boaz City Councilman Lawton Hawks.  The controversy allegedly related to Adam’s research that contended that, in layman’s terms, long-term indoctrination caused actual genetic mutations that directly affected future generation’s ability to reason.

Over the next year, Connor Ford discovered multiple and independent sources of motivation to quiet and possibly murder the controversial professor.  Ford learned that a civil lawsuit and widespread public outcry had effectively run Adam out of Knoxville, where he was a biology professor for over thirteen years.  Ford also learned that Adam had become the number one enemy of Roger Williams, a self-made local businessman, and his son Alex, who is a Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  Adam had discovered Alex and Glock, Inc., the Austrian-based gun manufacturer, was exploring not only the possibility of setting up a large facility in Boaz but also supplying pistols for Alex’s highly touted and controversial ‘arm the teachers’ proposal.

Connor Ford has his hands full enough with these suspects.  Add in his need to determine whether Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone are friends or foes of Roger and Alex, which accentuate the pressure no normal small-town private detective can handle.  

Will Connor’s discovery there is a link between Dayton, Tennessee, and the 1929 Scopes Monkey trial and a rogue group of CIA operatives bend Connor and his two associates to the breaking point?

Read this mystery/thriller to find out if Adam Parker was murdered and how, and what role the long-standing controversy between science and religion had in destroying the life of a single perfectionist professor.

Chapter 19

 Friday came too quickly.  Even though time had inched by all week as I had waited for Alex Williams to call, it seemed my ex-wife had seized control of my mind.  Today was the day I had dreaded since Emily had shared the good news over a month ago.  Amy was moving back to Boaz and she was moving into the house my dearly departed mother had left her in her will.

The real problem was this little house was located at Hickory Hollow, where I lived in the original log cabin my great-grandfather had built in 1899.  It had been remodeled and added onto several times over the past near one hundred twenty years.  My great-grandparents had built the little house that Amy was moving into.  It seemed the women in my life had a way of taking care of themselves.  My grandparents and parents had both lived in the house.  My great-grandmother Nora had dubbed it the playhouse since it seemed to produce a lot of babies.  Originally, my great-grandfather had it built in 1915 to house Frank Martin and his family who helped with the farm.  Over the next ten years Frank and his wife had twelve children, including two sets of twins. 

In the early fifties, my grandparents moved from the Playhouse to the original log cabin after my great-grandparents both died.  Then, in the mid-eighties, my parents followed the same pattern after my grandparents died.  This left the Playhouse empty until Amy and I married in June 1986 and moved in.  In mid-August, the two of us moved to Auburn for college.  We stayed at the Playhouse during all our return weekends, the holidays, and between quarters.  Amy and I graduated from Auburn University in June 1990, and returned to Boaz, living in the Playhouse until I graduated from the police academy and we moved to Dothan, Alabama in September 1992.  Since then, the house has mostly sat empty, although mother would occasionally let a needy mother and her children she learned about from church stay there for a week, a month, and one time, for an entire year.

Mother and Amy had always gotten along like strawberries and ice-cream.  In fact, they had a beautiful relationship.  It was rooted in their mutual love for the Bible and their Christian faith.  When mother and dad redid their wills in 2010 mother thought of Amy.  Someway, maybe it was an insight gained through her faith and her daily devotion to God, mother foresaw tough days ahead for Amy.  It was after Amy and I separated that mother semi-forced my dad to agree in their joint will to leave the Playhouse to Amy.

It’s called a life estate.  Upon the death of Crane and Harriet Ford, Amy acquired the right to live in the Playhouse for as long as she was alive.  Although Amy had this right since my parents both died in 2012, she had continued to live and teach in Dothan.  It was not until the end of her twenty-fifth year as a fourth-grade teacher at Highlands Elementary School that she learned she had Parkinson’s disease.

My problem wasn’t so much that Amy was moving into the Playhouse, but that she had to drive past the log cabin every time she came and went.  Her house was located about a quarter of a mile from the entrance to the eighty-acre Hickory Hollow where my log cabin sat. 

 If this wasn’t bad enough, my dear Camilla and Emily had conspired to enlist me in helping unload Amy’s moving truck and, as Camilla said, “make her feel welcome and at home.”  Sometimes I felt Camilla was more like Emily, a daughter needling her parents to love each other.

I left the office at 12:30 and pulled up to the Playhouse right as the twenty-eight-foot U-Haul arrived.  I was surprised that Tyler Tyson was the driver.  He was Emily’s ex-husband and one I had thought since the end of their one-year marriage, had been long gone.  I figured it was ‘help an ex’ day or something.

After I walked into the Playhouse I realized why I hadn’t seen Camilla and Emily hardly all week.  They had cleaned, and tided up, throwing away half the old furniture.  They had even painted the main bedroom and bath.  Almost as soon as Tyson and I had walked in the house, Camilla and Emily told us to leave to get the truck parked and the gang-plank ready for unloading.  Camilla whispered to me that the three girls wanted fifteen minutes.  Camilla said, “it’s important me and your ex start off right.  I can tell by her eyes; she and I will bond.  Looks like you let a good one get away.”  Man, that made me feel good.

Over the next three hours, Tyler and I unloaded nearly half the truck.  At 3:30, Joe and Dalton showed up, thanks to the co-conspirators.  It was almost six when Blair arrived with three large pizzas.  I later learned, compliments of Connor Investigations.  I had to say, the time was enjoyable the eight of us shared while eating pizza at the giant mahogany table Amy and I had purchased from the Antique Attic in Dothan on May the eighth, 1993, Amy’s twenty-fifth birthday.

By 7:30, Tyler, Dalton, and Joe had joined Emily’s and Camilla’s conspiracy.  They all left, leaving me and Amy alone.  I felt like my entire day I had been a piece of driftwood on a raging sea.  I wasn’t normally the emotional type.  I also wasn’t a piece of driftwood, having since the tenth grade prided myself on controlling my mind and my actions.  Not perfectly of course, but normally remaining semi-active in what I was doing or where I was heading.  Tonight, the waves pushed all that away and instead rolled in a freight-liner of memories.

Amy and I continued to sit at her mahogany table.  I mainly listened, nodded occasionally, and always tried my best to force back a wave of tears that could break through at any time.  It may have been how Amy looked, not whether she was still attractive, she was, but how I could see the affects her Parkinson’s was having.  She almost fell when she got up to make a pot of coffee.  Her left hand was trembling as she insisted on pouring my cup and preparing it just the way she used to.

We spent nearly two hours sharing our regrets and exchanging requests for forgiveness.  Before I left to return to the log cabin, the last thing she said was, “you were always my knight in shining honor.  I’m so sorry for hurting you and destroying the most beautiful relationship that God ever created.”

In response, I simply nodded, turned and walked out her door and down the front porch steps into a cold but clear night.  As I walked the quarter mile home I couldn’t help but notice the clarity of the stars overhead.  Looking up didn’t stop my tears from pouring down my face.

Camilla and I had driven to Huntsville last night and eaten at the new Saban’s.  It was the infamous Nick Saban’s second steak house and sports bar his son had opened since the Alabama Crimson Tide won its fifth national championship.  We had gotten in late, full of beef and beer (half glass; I hated the stuff), and Camilla had fallen asleep in my arms arguing that we would go to church this morning.  We should have had something better to do.  She was there.  She was in my bed and not hers at Sundown Apartments.  I could sometimes be such an SOB.

I had woken up feeling somewhat less full but still consumed by my passivity over Alex Williams’ promise.  Normally, I would have marched over to his house and knocked on his front door if he hadn’t called me in four or five days after he had made his commitment to call.  Today was now the tenth day since he lied to me at the Snead State cafeteria after his self-righteous little political speech.  As Camilla and I got ready for church I promised myself that today was the day.  Even if it was Sunday, I was going to talk with Alex, or Erica would hear some very troubling news.

Pastor Caleb’s sermon was on how to recapture a vision from God when you have no enthusiasm in your life and no one is watching and encouraging you.  His message was rooted in 2 Corinthians 6:4. It likely was a great sermon but all I could really think about was Alex Williams and what type of person he was when no one was looking.  I had learned quite a bit more about him and his background during the ten days I had been waiting on his phone call.

Alex’s parents, Nathan and Denise Williams, had started Rand Construction Company in the late seventies and had built it into one of the largest privately-owned bridge building companies in the United States.  Alex had joined the company after he graduated from the University of Alabama but after several years of travel had quit to pursue an accounting career with MDA Professional Group.  From everything I could gather, Alex’s move hadn’t affected his relationship with his father; he was pretty much bank-rolling his son’s political career.  My conclusion that the Williams’ shared much family unity was supported by seeing all six of them, including grandchildren, sitting on the second row of the far-right side of the auditorium.  The two men, father and son, were both deacons here at First Baptist Church of Christ.

After Pastor Caleb ended the third song and third plea for sinners to come forward and be saved, he called on Alex to say the closing prayer.  It was what he said towards the end of his too-long petition that prompted me to descend the balcony stairs and seek out the lovely Erica Williams.  Alex had asked God to strengthen us all to stay focused on Christ and the vision He had given every believer to serve him faithfully while sharing the Good News.  I felt it was time Erica herself heard some good news.

I made my way down the stairs and across the auditorium while shaking a few hands along the way.  I was within twenty feet of the lovely mother of two adorable children whose family was her life.  I always disliked this part of my job, sharing truth where truth was so damn painful.  The moment I said, “Mrs. Williams,” Alex appeared from behind me.  He must have been off shaking hands and gathering votes.

“Yes, I’m Erica Williams.”  She said turning towards me from buttoning the coat of her younger son.

“Erica, this is Connor Ford.  I forgot to tell you he and I have a meeting at one.  He just wanted to meet you and confirm our appointment.”  Once again, I noted that Alex Williams was quick on his feet.  He showed clearly that he didn’t want me talking with his wife.  I intended to show him something.  That I fully intended on talking with him now or he would face the wrath of a scorned woman.

I told Alex I would see him at one o’clock in my office.  I whispered to him that if he were late I would enjoy an unannounced tour of his grand home in Boaz Country Club no later than 10:00 p.m.

I never doubted he would show.  His first words as he came in the front door was, “Mr. Ford, what is it going to take for you to back off?”

I didn’t even ask him back to the conference room.  We stayed in the waiting room.  I carefully pondered my response.  “Two things for sure.  First, back off from Natalie.  She should have the right to make her own decision about her baby.  Second, tell me the full truth about Adam Parker.  If you will do these two things, I’ll leave it up to you when and how you tell Erica your little secret.  To be clear, if you lie to me, the first thing I’m going to do is share the good news with your sweet wife.”

“It seems to me you’ve got a few secrets yourself.  I suggest we reach some common ground.  It appears you’ve been quite successful in keeping your murder charge under a basket since you moved here.  Connor, I can make things rather difficult for you.  My family has the money and connections to destroy you.  So, don’t go threatening me.”  Alex said, not having a clue he had walked into a lion’s cage.

It was time Mr. Alex had a moment of exhilarating clarity.  “Stand up, you self-righteous son of a bitch.”  By the size of his eyeballs I could tell I had his attention.

“Sir, you better watch your language.  I am the top Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  You might want to calm down.” 

He kept on sitting.  He was ignoring my command.  I walked over to him and pulled him up by his coat and pushed him over against the wall.  Mr. Jefferson’s eyes seemed to turn and look to his right, onto the scene that was transpiring.  “Listen up you sorry sack of hypocritical shit.  Don’t you ever threaten me again or I’ll ram your head through a glass door, like that one right over there.  You treat me with a little respect and we’ll get along very well.  Do you understand.”  I said, pushing him back with both my hands against his biceps, feeling him struggle to remove my grasp.

“Let the fuck go or I’ll have you arrested for assault.”  It was strangely enjoyable to hear the real Alex Williams trot out.  I had decided at his Snead College speech he was a fake.

“Be my guest.  I could call Jake Stone right now to come and arrest me.  Better still, you call him.”  I let go of his arms, stepped back, reached into my back pocket for my iPhone, and handed it to Alex.  “Here, call him.  I dare you.”

“You’re an asshole and a crazy motherfucker.  That could get you killed.”  Alex said straightening his suit coat.

“There you go threatening me again.  This time I should bruise up that pretty face of yours.  For now, why don’t you tell me how much money you are paying Jake Stone?”  I asked.

“I’m not paying him a damn thing.”

“What did I say about lying to me?  Do that again and your Erica might give you a free and very public Facebook ad.  That’ll help your political future.”  I said.

“I’m still trying to figure out what business you have asking me all these questions.”

“Adam Parker, have you forgotten?  I don’t have proof yet but don’t think I’ll stop looking.  I suspect you are someway involved in his murder.”  I said, sitting now across the room from Alex, who was inching towards the unlocked front door.  “By the way, leaving in a haste won’t earn any points.”

“You’re looking at the wrong man.  I admit I didn’t like Mr. Parker.  I also admit that we exchanged a few emails.  He even came to see me once.  He was adamantly opposed to teaching creationism in public schools.  You need to be looking at Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone.  But, please don’t say I told you too.”

“Tell me your reasoning.”  I said.

“I don’t know exactly, but Parker had found out something about Stone protecting Hawks.  All I know is that the two of them may have had a motive to get rid of Parker.”

“Tell me the truth.  How much are you paying Stone and his wife, and Natalie to keep quiet about her pregnancy?”  I asked once again.

“A hundred thousand dollars.  Again, what is it going to take for you to keep this quiet?”

“Two things you need to keep front and center in your mind.  I don’t like threats and I don’t take bribes.”  I said.  “But, to give you a little piece of mind.  I don’t go around talking, unless it is in the best interest of my client.  I’ll make this commitment to you.  If you will be truthful with me and help me, help me your best, to find out what happened to Adam Parker, I will have no reason to share your little secret.”

“I’ll do that.  Erica doesn’t need to know I had the affair.”

“Alabama voters probably don’t need to know either.  Correct?”

“My one-time weakness has nothing to do with my ability to be the best governor Alabama has ever had.”  Alex was so full of his self-righteous, underly-critical horse shit.

“One other thing.  Do you promise to leave Natalie along?  Let her decide what to do?”  I asked.

“I make that promise.  But, she needs to keep this a secret.”  Alex said.

“I don’t represent Natalie but do me a favor.  Take steps to assure that her baby, your baby, will be taken care of.  I would think a tidy little trust fund would go a long way convincing her to stay silent about the father of her baby.”

“I’ll do that.  Now, I need to go.”

“Be sure and report back to me everything you recall or learn about the death of my client.  Remember, you promised.”  I said, hoping that Alex would keep fresh in his mind how I had responded to his bullshit threat.

He walked out without responding.

Novel Excerpts—The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, Chapter 18

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.  
The Case of the Perfectionist Professor, written in 2018, is my sixth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Late on New Year’s Eve in the small town of Boaz, Alabama, Snead State Community College teacher Adam Parker was found dead slumped over in his car. A preliminary investigation indicated the fifty-year-old biology professor died of a heart attack.  Marissa Booth, Adam’s daughter and Vanderbilt School of Divinity professor, didn’t agree.

Four days later, Marissa hired the local private detective firm of Connor Ford to investigate her father’s death.  She declared local police officer Jake Stone had likely murdered her father.  She pointed Ford to a multi-month Facebook feud between Adam and several local people, including Stone and Boaz City Councilman Lawton Hawks.  The controversy allegedly related to Adam’s research that contended that, in layman’s terms, long-term indoctrination caused actual genetic mutations that directly affected future generation’s ability to reason.

Over the next year, Connor Ford discovered multiple and independent sources of motivation to quiet and possibly murder the controversial professor.  Ford learned that a civil lawsuit and widespread public outcry had effectively run Adam out of Knoxville, where he was a biology professor for over thirteen years.  Ford also learned that Adam had become the number one enemy of Roger Williams, a self-made local businessman, and his son Alex, who is a Republican candidate for governor of Alabama.  Adam had discovered Alex and Glock, Inc., the Austrian-based gun manufacturer, was exploring not only the possibility of setting up a large facility in Boaz but also supplying pistols for Alex’s highly touted and controversial ‘arm the teachers’ proposal.

Connor Ford has his hands full enough with these suspects.  Add in his need to determine whether Lawton Hawks and Jake Stone are friends or foes of Roger and Alex, which accentuate the pressure no normal small-town private detective can handle.  

Will Connor’s discovery there is a link between Dayton, Tennessee, and the 1929 Scopes Monkey trial and a rogue group of CIA operatives bend Connor and his two associates to the breaking point?

Read this mystery/thriller to find out if Adam Parker was murdered and how, and what role the long-standing controversy between science and religion had in destroying the life of a single perfectionist professor.

Chapter 18

 “I promise I won’t talk about tomatoes or gardening today.  I guess that’s why you’ve missed the past three days.”  Garrett said, already eating what looked like an omelet.  I needed this week to productive.  I felt I was floundering with every case Joe and I were working on, especially the Adam Parker case, but the Hannah Knott case wasn’t doing much better.  I was hopeful this morning Garrett would have something helpful.  Last night, I had tried something new.  I had called him and asked if he didn’t mind finding out what he could about Alex Williams.  It was like I had assigned the retired Methodist minister a little homework.  I’m not sure he took me seriously.  He had seemed more interested in the church social he was attending in Albertville.  I made a mental note to call him at least an hour later Sunday nights if I intended to assign homework.

“No, I’ve been distracted with Alabama politics.  I knew you wouldn’t be any help.”

“Thanks.  I suppose then I’ll just eat my breakfast and not share what Gina told me.”

“Just kidding my friend.  You know I’m all ears.  Sometimes you stumble upon things that are at least intriguing.”  I said.

“You know about Gina’s little hobby.  I call it that, but it’s become a formal research project.  She’s still gathering data, but she intends on publishing an article by the end of the year.  She’s even developing some ideas for a book.”

“Refresh my memory.  I know your daughter is a Biology professor at Birmingham-Southern College.  Sorry, it’s slipped my mind.  All I remember is that she was visiting here a week or so ago to hear Pastor Caleb.  Right?”  I asked, noticing that the new waitress hadn’t brought me any bacon.

“Creationism.  She’s trying to get ready.”

“Ready for what?”

“Sherlock, this is where your Watson reveals how valuable he is to your operation.  Your man, Alex Williams, is Alabama’s main zealot for teaching Creationism in the public schools.  I suspect this is going to become a big issue in his campaign, especially if he wins the Republican Primary.”  Garrett grabbed the thickest slice of bacon off the plate the new waitress, Rachel, just delivered.

“I’ve never thought much about it, creationism.  What’s the big deal?  Why shouldn’t it be taught?”  I asked.

“It might be okay to teach it in say, a comparative religion class, as something some people believe, but it has no place in a science classroom, and this is where Alex and his buddies want it.”

“Let’s see if my elementary understanding of this is correct.  Creationism would reflect the Bible story, what Genesis states as how the world and all living things came to be.  Right?”  I asked.  It seemed I was full of questions this Monday morning.

“That’s a pretty good summary.  You asked about the problem of teaching this.  Creationist, true creationists, believe God created the world less than ten thousand years ago, and that Adam and Eve were literally the first humans.  God created them basically from nothing and they were the spitting image of what we are today, with a soul and everything.  Of course, nothing includes some dirt for Adam and his rib for Eve, but you get what I’m saying.”

“This clearly is in opposition from what we know from science.  Ever since I learned about Adam Parker’s interest in the Scope’s Monkey Trial I’ve been reading some on evolution.  It’s seems clear that the earth is a whole lot older than ten thousand years.  I’ve read the Big Bang was like 13 billion years ago and our earth is around five billion years old.  I just last night read about Naledi, a prehistoric human found in South Africa.  It’s claimed he dates back a couple of million years.”  I said motioning for Rachel to bring me more coffee.  I wondered where Gloria was today.

“You’re headed right, but only scratching the surface.   Back to my homework assignment.  By the way, always feel free to give me a heads up.  I have plenty of time.  I do like detective work.”

“I’ll keep that in mind if Joe decides to leave Connor Investigations.”

“After I got home from church last night I called Gina and asked what she could tell me about Alex Williams.  She wasn’t too positive.  She thinks he is a pure opportunist, someone who has a long political career in mind.  Unfortunately, he’s bought fully into the new Republican party-line which, according to Gina, and I must say I agree, is dangerous for America’s future.”

“Why do you say that?”  I asked.

“In a way, it’s very simple.  They, Republicans, aren’t interested in facts, in the truth.  You may be surprised to hear a preacher say this but remember, I’m not a Southern Baptist fundamentalist.  I’m a Methodist.  It appears to me, Gina, and quite a few other thinking Americans, that the new Republicans believe almost literally in the Bible, and furthermore, detest science, including what it’s saying about climate change.  Put another way, I did promise simple, didn’t I?  Alex and his cohorts have a closed mind.  They aren’t open to pursuing an education.  Connor, my friend, always remember, when you hold to a position so tightly that you won’t even consider new evidence, then your goose is cooked.  You’re done.  Progress is impossible.”  Garrett said, standing up and heading to the bathroom.  I suspect three or four cups of coffee were talking to him.

While waiting on Garrett I pulled my notepad out and wrote, “Adam Parker.”  What I really needed to know was whether there was any connection between him and Alex Williams.

“Sorry about that.”  Garrett said returning to his chair.

“Thanks for all your help.  I can easily imagine that Adam Parker would be directly opposed to all versions of teaching creationism in the schools.  But, for whatever reason, I still feel compelled to explore whether his path and that of Alex Williams ever crossed.”

“I was about to get to that.  My dear Gina shared, after my prompting, that she had met Adam Parker back in early December at a conference in Atlanta.  He was one of the speakers, something about his research psychology and the evolving mind, or the evolving psychology of the mind.  I’m not sure.  Here’s something you might find interesting.  Gina said that it was rare that a scientist, especially one where he was presenting a hungry hypothesis, that’s her term, would even mention anything political.  But Parker, at the end of his presentation had said.”  Garrett stopped and pulled out his own little note pad.  “Here it is, Gina said, Parker said, ‘the survival of our species could depend on breaking the cycle of indoctrination.  What goes into a child’s mind does matter.’  That’s exactly what Gina said.”

“Well, that’s helpful.”  I said disappointed over the absence of even a twig of connection between Alex and Adam.

“Oh, I didn’t write it down, but she said that during a break she spoke with Adam.  She was interested in his thoughts on her own project.  Gina said he appeared interested in both sharing his research and helping her visit churches to learn what pastors were saying about creationism.  She said he mentioned having a student who also might help since she had a growing dislike for a certain local politician who she knew.”  Garrett said.

“But, she didn’t mention Alex Williams?”  I asked.

“No, not according to Gina’s memory.”

As I walked out of Pirates Cove, I couldn’t help from being disappointed.  Yes, it was helpful to know that Alex Williams and Adam Parker thought differently about creationism, but that was nearly as irrelevant as the fact they differed on which college football team they preferred.  One thing was certain, investigative work could be so dull, boring, and as unproductive as chasing a rabbit.

After leaving Pirates Cove I walked across Main Street and down the sidewalk along Highway 168 to the rear of my building.  Just as I was unlocking the back door I heard a car horn.  It was Mark Hale.

“Hey Connor, you got a few minutes?”

“Sure, come on in.”  I said as Mark got out of his black Tahoe, leaving it parked awkwardly beside our little stoop nearly blocking access to the stairs.

“You got some coffee?”  Mark said as we passed through our file storage room and beside the kitchen.  I could smell the fresh pot Blair had just made.

“Help yourself.  Right in there.  I’ll be in my office right down the hall.”  I said, knowing this was Mark’s first visit and figuring he can find me in my office. 

I hung up my coat and noticed a pink phone message on my desk.  It was from Joe. 

“Nice digs.”  Mark said walking in.  “Now, I know for sure I should have chosen the private side of detecting.”

“Sit there.”  I said, pointing to my round table and walking over to join Mark.  “What brings you here?”

“My pal Lawton Hawks.”  Mark had always used this phrase.  He said that it made him work harder and smarter if he got cozy with his victim.  ‘I have to crawl inside their skin and learn what made them tick.  It’s like I have to become them.’  He always said that a detective was like an actor.  If he wanted to be a good one.  Sounds like something Bobby Sorrells would agree with.

“Good.  I was just thinking about Mr. Hawks this morning, how he had discovered the triple B stuff.”  I said.

“You’re referring to ‘Bullets, Babies, and Bullshit.’  Well, that’s really at the heart of what I had to share with you.”  Mark said.  Blair walked in and introduced herself, placing a cup of coffee in front of me, just the way I liked it.  When she left, Mark continued, “man, she’s a looker.  What is it with you Connor?  The ladies were always drawn to you like a magnet.”

“It’s my intelligence.  The best-looking women are drawn to the wise.  They have great bullshit detectors.  Bullshit repels them.”  I said, joking, but imagining my opinion must have some truth to it.

“Lawton Hawks.  Let me warn you, don’t you get no ideas about hiring him away from me.  Tony, not Lawton, he’s dead.  Tony is one of them brainy types too, I’ve started calling him Tony the Techie, but, his old lady would have to sneak up on a bucket of water to get a drink.  You’ve heard, haven’t you?”  Mark was definitely prong to chase some rabbits.

“You mentioned Lawton Hawks.”  I replied trying to move things along.  Selfish me.

“I was getting to him.  It seems that if it exists, Tony can find it on a computer.  Of course, it helped to have Lawton’s computer.  I think I’ve told you that.”

“Yes, that’s where the triple B stuff originated.”  I said.

“Okay, drink your coffee and listen.  Lawton was, as you know, a long-term Boaz city councilman.  But, he was also a Sunday School teacher at First Baptist Church of Christ, right here in Boaz.  I’ll skip over some of the boring stuff, but Tony learned that he, that’s Lawton, and three members from his Sunday School class, I think it was called the Seekers, were Jake Stone, Steven Knott, and Jerry Todd.”

“That’s interesting.  Lawton taught Sunday School.  Big deal.” 

“Shut up Connor if you can.  Just listen, you’ll thank me shortly.  After Tony’s original research, what I shared with you a couple of weeks ago about the monkey scope.”

“The Scopes Monkey trial, I think it was.”  I clarified.

“Yea, well, that all dealt with Lawton and Jake emailing back and forth, seemed to deal with the controversy between evolution and the Bible.  You remember.  But, it seems Lawton and these three guys were more interested in guns.  Tony finally got a membership list from the Seekers, Lawton’s class.  Don’t ask me how he got that.  Anyway, there are thirteen members, all men.  But, according to the emails back and forth, only Jake, Steven, and Jerry carried on a private gun affair.” 

“That triggers a weird image.”  Why did sex have such an influence on our lives, at least mine?

“Here’s the part where you need to shut-up and listen.  It seems it all got started over an essay a student at Snead wrote about guns.  She, a girl named Paige Todd, had written a scathing letter to the NRA, that’s the National Rifle Association.”

“I know.  Who doesn’t know that?”  I asked.

“Her letter had spawned her essay.  The Jerry guy is Paige’s adopted-father.  Some way your Adam Parker came on the radar.  Remember, ‘Bullets, Babies, and Bullshit’?”

“Yes.  Jerry Todd adopted Paige.  Right?”

“Yea.  Listen.  Parker’s theory, what got him booted out at UT, was about three things.  Bullets, obviously refers to guns, babies to abortion, and bullshit to the Bible.  Tony’s confirmed that from every angle but Sunday.”

“I think it’s, ‘six ways from Sunday,’ meaning every alternative conclusion has been explored or something like that.”

“Anyway, now just know, this isn’t happening in one week, this is going on for several months.”  Mark said.

“What, exactly, is going on?”  I asked.

“The controversy between Lawton and his little group, I’ll call them the Seekers, and your Adam Parker.  Some of the emails got heated.  One, from Jerry, he was the most vocal about the Second Amendment, tried arguing to Parker that the Constitution gave citizens the right to defend themselves from all threats including threats from idiots who are against guns.”

“Can I ask you a question?”  What do you recall Steven saying?  In any of the emails, or otherwise.  I asked.

“He wasn’t nearly as outspoken about guns as Lawton, and Jake, and Jerry.  He was the more civil of the four.  I do remember Steven asking Parker a question.  It had something to do with his research and whether it showed a difference in the thinking of young people over guns.”

“Do you remember how Parker responded?”  I asked.

“Not exactly, but he may have said that it had something to do with whether they had a bad experience, like a friend or family member being hurt or killed with a gun.  Oh yea, Parker also distinguished whether the young person was a Baptist, something like that.  Hey man, it’s almost nine and I’ve got to run up here to the bank.”  Mark said.

“One final question, please.  Who was the name of the English teacher at Snead, the one who the essay was for, the one Paige Todd had caused such a stir?”  Sometimes, I didn’t like how I phrased my questions.

“My question exactly.  When I found out I thought it strange for a while, but then I just concluded it had to do with small towns.  You know they are the weirdest places.”

“They can be.  Are you going to answer my question?”

“Oh yea, the teacher was Hannah Knott, Steven Knott’s wife.”

After Mark left, I made a note to question Hannah about Paige’s essay and Steven’s position on guns.  I also made a note to ask her if she knew he had been communicating with Adam Parker.

After Mark left, I walked to the front office to see Blair.  I hadn’t asked her in several days how she was coming on the assignment I had delegated to her nearly a month ago.  It was to review and organize all of Adam’s journals (both public and private), his emails, his Facebook posts, and anything else she discovered as she explored.  I was thankful Snead’s computer guru had slipped me the password to Adam’s computer; his act was another reminder I needed to continue doing little investigative favors along life’s way; serving that divorce complaint on the guru’s wife and withholding my invoice, had paid off in spades.  The guru’s second act had now left me owing him.  Yesterday morning, he had shown up unannounced with Adam’s office computer.  Blair now had it in her private office next to the reception area.  There is where I found her, sitting at a newly acquired folding table watching ‘It’s Best to Be Exact than an Act,’ streaming across the screen of Adam’s computer.

“That’s an odd screen saver, don’t you think?”  I asked Blair, noticing the beauty of her profile and wondering how on earth could a man, particularly her ex-husband, have been so mean and uncaring to such a treasure.

“It’s the perfect tag line for the perfect man.”

“I’m taking that his words, what you’re discovering about him, is pushing you to that conclusion?”

“Right, I’ve never seen anybody so exacting.  Here, look at this.”  Blair said, turning in her chair and forcing me backwards as she rolled towards her desk.  She picked up and opened one of Adam’s journals.  “Read this paragraph from his December 4th entry.”

In his private journal Adam had written about the experience he had earlier that morning when he arrived at Snead College as he parked behind the Science Building.  Apparently, from the angle he had parked he saw a tree, or, more particularly, several limbs of a tree whose trunk he could not see because it was just around the corner of the building, but these limbs reminded Adam of a hand.  He had written that he had noticed this for weeks but that day, the 4th, he had noticed what looked like to him, was a half-deflated balloon that had gotten stuck on a limb.  He had noted the round and foreign matter was stuck in the center of the imaginary hand.  Adam went on to write another half a page about how the balloon was a metaphor for the core of his scientific hypothesis: that a long-time gene could endure environmental pressures just so long until it was forced to mutate, to change to adapt.  To me, it was a strange metaphor.  Adam concluded his December 4th remarks by expressing almost a contentment he had experienced from seeing the hand and balloon image.  Then, he had written, “I have to be wary of any satisfaction or my life will be like that balloon, floating away, out of control, and into an evil hand.”

“This kind of confirms to me, what Paige or Natalie told me was correct, that Adam was exact in how he parked behind the college every morning.  He had a reason for pulling into his spot, to see this image.  In a way it was a daily reminder for him to not become satisfied, which, from my readings in his journals, was something he detested.

Before Blair could respond, the office phone rang.

“Connor Investigations, may I help you?  Oh, hi Joe.  Good morning to you too.  Just talking with Connor.  Hold on.”  Blair handed me the phone.

“Morning Joe.  I know I owe you a phone call.  Mark Hale dropped by and caught my attention.  I was just about to call you.”

“Hannah should be there any minute.  I hope you have time to meet with us.  That’s what I called about.”  Joe said.

“I was needing to go to Gadsden but that can wait.  Are you close by?”

“Ten minutes or so.”  Joe said, and I heard the front door ding.  It was Hannah; I could barely see her through the glass sliding window at the receptionist’s desk.  “She’s here now, see you in a few.”

I walked back to my office and let Blair greet Hannah.  In less than fifteen minutes, I joined Joe and Blair in the conference room.

“Hello Hannah.  Thanks for coming.  Before we get started on your case, do you mind if I ask you what you thought of Adam Parker?  I assume you knew him since you both taught at Snead College.”  I said, not wanting to spend any time chatting or on unneeded how-do-you-dos.

“At first I didn’t like him.  I tried to be friendly when I’d see him around campus.  I figured he needed a smiling face just like I did, especially since we had both started teaching at Snead at the same time.  Fall 2014.  But, he was so unpredictable.  What I mean is, one time I would see him, and he would look up at me and half smile, maybe nod his head forward.  The next time I saw him it would be like I didn’t exist, even if we were the only two people in the hallway.  After a while I just figured his mind was elsewhere.  He definitely was a loner, always sat by himself at faculty meetings.” 

“From your first statement I assume that at some point you changed your mind about Adam?”  I asked.

“I did.  It was the next year.  One day he showed up at my office with a strange request.  He brought with him a copy of an essay one of my students had written.”

“Was the student Paige Todd?”  I asked.

“Yes, how did you know that?” 

“Just a hunch.”

“Anyway, Adam also brought a letter.  It was the basis of Paige’s essay.  I hadn’t seen the actual letter until Adam came.  After he let me read the letter he asked me if I had encountered anyone else, not just other students writing this assignment, but ever in my career, who had such an experience.” 

“What was the letter, Paige’s letter, about?  It was written to the National Rifle Association.”  I said.

“Another hunch I guess.”  Hannah was sharp.

“Yep.”

“Paige had shared how her best friend in high school had committed suicide.  It seemed the girl had used a gun her father had acquired at a gun show.  Paige, no doubt, had been devastated.  Her letter was simply her way of trying to convince the NRA to have a heart and recognize that there are too many guns.” Hannah said.

“So, Adam was simply looking for data, more evidence to probably use in his own work.  How did this event cause you to see Adam in a different light?”

“I saw that he was passionate about his work and that he deeply cared about people, especially young people.”

Joe had sat still and silent long enough.  “Question.  Just curious.  Did any of your other students have a similar type story, like Paige’s?”

“No, but I did, later, I think it was nearly a week after Adam came to me, I felt guilty and went to him.  I shared Steven’s story.”  Hannah said.

“What was that if I might ask?”

“Please don’t share this.  It is real important you keep this between us.  Okay?”

“I suspect it doesn’t have anything to do with Adam Parker.  I should have told you earlier that we work for Adam Parker’s daughter, investigating his death.”  I said.

“No, it doesn’t.  Steven wouldn’t want anyone feeling sorry for him.  Here’s what happened.  Steven grew up in Eufaula, Alabama.  That’s southeast of Montgomery.

“Just north of Dothan.  I lived there for over twenty years.”

“Steven’s father was a gun nut, hunter and Second Amendment activist.  This all changed when Stan, Steven’s twin, died.”  I noticed Hannah teared up.  She sat silent for maybe thirty seconds.  “Sorry, Steven shot Stan.  It was an accident.  The boys were ten.  Yes, it was their father’s gun.”  Her silence returned.

“It would seem Steven would be adamantly opposed to guns given that experience.”  I said.

“Oh my gosh, he was.  He hates guns now.”  I made a mental note of how that directly conflicted with what Mark had shared with me this morning.

“You sharing this with Adam kind of anchored your friendship?”  Joe asked Hannah.

“It did.  Over the next year I learned to admire him more and more even though I never could quite understand his research project.  One thing I did learn was he was a fish out of water around here.  He shared a lot about how antagonistic several local people were about him.  Sorry, but I have another class to teach.  Can we talk about Steven and Peyton Todd?”  Hannah looked at Joe as though she was talking about her two best friends.

Joe returned a smile. “The only new thing I have to report is that Peyton and Steven left Health Connections last Friday afternoon and drove to her house on Lindo Drive.  Again, it was her car.  I’ve confirmed that Jerry was out of town.  It appears they went there for a two-hour rendezvous.  It was slick that she pulled up to her garage and it opened automatically.  She then drove inside, and the door closed.  Steven was so slumped down in his front seat I could barely see him.  It was as though she was along, came home, stayed a couple of hours, and left.  Again, alone.”

“Here’s why I called Joe and wanted to meet.  This morning I had the rare treat of looking at Steven’s phone.  Funny that I’ve discovered a pattern with him.  Or, what appears to be a pattern.  This was the second time he has left his phone in his gray suit coat.  Both mornings, he has eaten his Kellogg’s Bran Cereal.  You probably can project my story.  What I can’t figure out is why he puts his cell phone in his jacket pocket before breakfast.”  Hannah caught a breath and I jumped in.

“What did you learn from inspecting his phone?”  I asked.

“He had received a text from the lovely Peyton yesterday afternoon a little before 5:00.  It seems the two love birds didn’t have a session planned so she sent him this text.  It said, “RAW deposit made.  C u Saturday.”

“RAW.  Do you know what or who that refers to?”  I asked.

“Not a clue.”

Joe and Hannah continued to talk another few minutes.  Raw had caught my attention.  What was raw?  Who was raw?  This had to be an abbreviation.  It had to be a person or a business, some sort of organization.  Raw couldn’t be a tree or a bird.  Those animals rarely made deposits.

It was long after our meeting had ended, nearly six hours long in fact before I turned my attention from another damn email from Dalton hiring us to investigate another collections matter.  It took less than a minute on Google to learn that Alex Williams full name was Robert Alex Williams.  I got up from my desk and walked over to my round table in front of a thousand legal and crime novels.  Surely, the answer whether RAW was Robert Alex Williams lay safely secure upon one of the three hundred and fifty thousand or more pages vertically aligned on my bookshelves.

It was time to go home.  My unanswered question was making my imagination spiral out of control.