Authors: Barbara Westbrook
Though their pants had been stripped down to their knees,
none of the men showed signs of rape. Time of death for all
four was estimated to be between ten pm and four am.
The severity of the beatings and mutilations indicated
a personal, out of control rage. All had been kept silent with
a type of gag used in BDSM called a ball gag. The search was
on for the manufacturer as a possible lead.
Both couples had ties to the University and they
socialized together from time to time. One couple frequented
a private sex club in Atlanta. He filed that bit of information
away to be examined later. Despite the thorough job Phillips
and Johansen had done of interviewing friends and family,
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University personnel—including those with limited contact
such as delivery people—and students, even the club one
pair belonged to, nothing presented a red flag. They’d had
run into one dead end after another. It was time to try
something a little bolder to draw the killer out, instead of
waiting for the next victims to turn up.
Chad glanced down at his watch and cursed softly
under his breath. He had been so absorbed in the reports
he’d let the time get away from him. He had only fifteen
minutes to get across town to the restaurant where he was
meeting the professor. He pulled on his jacket and hurried
out to his car, hoping the traffic wouldn’t be too bad that
time of day. It wasn’t too far distance wise, but the
restaurant was near the old campus and the downtown area,
where traffic could get heavy at times.
Luck was with him. He not only made it to the area in
ten minutes, but he had no trouble getting a parking spot on
the street outside. What were the odds this close to
lunchtime? Silently sending up thanks to whatever gods
might be responsible for his good fortune, he went inside the
warm interior and scanned the occupants for his man.
Correction,
for the professor, he reminded himself uneasily.
The restaurant, known for its excellent food, was
pretty crowded, but he picked out a man right away he
thought might be the one. He was maybe in his late thirties,
balding a little on top, with glasses he wore on the bridge of
his nose as he looked over the menu. Chad took a step
toward him when the man was joined by two women, one of
whom appeared to be his wife or girlfriend by the squeeze
she gave to his hand.
A warm hand landed on his shoulder, and Chad
turned to gaze up into a pair of deep brown eyes. The man
was at least six-two, with a trim and toned body, a good four
inches taller than Chad. He had artfully mussed brown hair,
a full mouth, and movie-star good-looks. He wasn’t smiling,
however, and didn’t look too happy to be there. Fine lines
around his eyes showed he wasn’t quite as young as Chad
first judged him to be, and Chad adjusted his estimate to put
the man in his mid-thirties.
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“Sgt. Williams, I presume? I’m sorry if I kept you
waiting. A student came to my office without an
appointment.” He frowned a little over the words, and Chad
was glad he hadn’t been the hapless student.
He extended his hand. “Nice to meet you, Professor.
Thanks for taking the time to speak with me.”
Morrison nodded curtly, accepting his hand and
looking around for the hostess. “Let’s find a seat, shall we,
and we can talk.” He looked down at his hand still encased
in Chad’s grip and narrowed his eyes a bit. Chad realized
with a start he’d been holding on for far too long. He dropped
the hand quickly and took a step backward, putting more
distance between them.
A tiny smile played at the corners of the professor’s
mouth as he waved down the hostess and had a word with
her. She led them to a booth in the back. Handing them their
menus, she promised to send their waitress before bustling
back to the reception area.
Morrison met his eyes over the top of the menu. “What
are you going to have, Detective? The black bean soup here
is excellent, as is the frittata.”
“Just a hamburger,” Chad said, folding his menu.
The professor pursed his lips a bit and frowned again,
making Chad feel like he expected him to order what he
suggested, though he didn’t like black beans and had no
fucking clue what a frittata even was. A hamburger obviously
didn’t meet with this guy’s approval. And why did that
bother him, damn it? He didn’t need the guy’s okay on
anything.
Chad settled back in the booth and glanced around
the restaurant. About three-quarters full, people talked and
laughed quietly around the room. It had a nice vibe, with its
old brick walls and snowy white tablecloths, upscale without
being pretentious. Chad liked it right away. Even though the
place had been in town for years, he’d never been there. He
usually didn’t hang out in downtown, preferring to grab
something at a drive-through if he ate out after work. Since
he’d split with his last girlfriend six months before, he hadn’t
gone out much at all.
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The waitress appeared, and he ordered a sweet iced
tea and a hamburger, while the professor ordered the frittata
with water.
“I’m starving,” he confided across the table, adding a
charming little smile. “I had an early class after my workout
this morning, and I didn’t have time for breakfast.”
Chad took in the broad shoulders and the hint of well-
defined clavicle showing beneath his shirt. This guy worked
out all right. “Yeah, you look like you exercise a lot,” he
commented and was instantly puzzled by why the hell he’d
felt the need to comment. More than that, why did the
professor make him uncomfortable? He reminded himself
this was a work situation, and there was no need for him to
feel bothered by a simple observation even if the guy was gay
and likely to take his comment wrong. Police officers were
taught to observe. No need for the urge to squirm as the
professor gazed across the table at him. Get down to
business, damn it.
“Thanks for meeting me, Professor Morrison.”
“No problem. I told the other officers I spoke with that I
was willing to help any way I could. Lt. Johansen and
Philips, I believe. Where are they, by the way? Are they still
on the case?”
“They’re still primaries on the case, yes, but I’ve been
assigned to work with you.”
“With
me
?” One perfect eyebrow rose. “For what
exactly? Consultation?”
“That and more—if you’ll agree to it.”
Chad leaned forward slightly to tell him the chief’s idea
only to straighten when the waitress arrived with their
drinks and food. She put everything down and asked if there
was anything else she could bring them, her attention
centered on Chad. “Are you sure you have everything you
need? I’ll be glad to get you whatever.”
Chad nodded, looking down at his plate. “No, looks
fine, thanks.” She finally left, throwing a flirtatious smile
over her shoulder and twisting her hips a bit more than was
probably necessary as she walked away. Disinterested in the
show, Chad caught amused speculation in his companion’s
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regard.
“You were saying, Detective?” the professor asked.
Irritation put an added crispness in his voice. “My
chief had a little something different in mind other than
consultation.”
“Oh?”
“He’s hoping you’d agree to a bit of an undercover
operation. We’re taking the threat you received very
seriously.”
“Good, because I am too,” he said, his voice grim.
Chad nodded. “We need to draw the killer out, make
him do something to give us some kind of trail to follow.
Right now we’re at a dead end.”
“What do you have in mind?”
Chad took a deep breath and held the professor’s gaze.
Christ, he didn’t want to do this. “You and me. We’d pretend
to be…uh…boyfriends. See if we can draw the killer out.”
Morrison put down his fork and stared across the
table with a cold glint of steel in his eye. “
Boyfriends
?
Seriously? Using me as the
bait
? Are you out of your mind?”
Chad blinked at him for a moment, feeling relieved.
Still he had a job to do. “The chief thought you might. He
said you would possibly…”
Morrison held up a hand. “I did say I was willing to do
what I could, but this is ...”
As much as Chad wanted to drop it right there, in
good conscience, he couldn’t. “Look, I understand your
concerns, but we would mitigate the danger involved for you
in this. You’d be under continuous surveillance, and I’d be
there in the house with you.”
“Excuse me, what do you mean by you’d be in my
house?”
“He only seems to target couples living together. As I
said, I’d be there whenever you are. We can almost
guarantee your safety.”
“Almost?”
Deciding to press for whatever slight advantage he
could, he caught Morrison’s gaze. “One of the men was a
personal friend of yours. Isn’t that right? And it seems the
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killer maybe bypassed you since you and your last boyfriend
broke up. If you were to take another one, he might set his
sights on you.”
His lips tightened, and a dark glare swept over Chad.
“I had a sub who lived with me for a time. I didn’t have a
boyfriend
. And I’m not sure I’m willing to put myself at risk
as a target.”
Chad nodded and pressed his napkin to his lips. Fine,
he’d made the pitch. “Okay. I understand. It was a lot to ask.
I’ll pay for all this and not take up any more of your time.”
He slid about halfway out of the booth before the man across
from him touched his hand. “You give up pretty easily.
Weren’t you going to remind me how dangerous this monster
is? Tell me about my civic duty or mention how these
murders affect the entire LGBT community? Not to mention
the reputation of the University itself? Try to pile on some
worry and guilt?”
Chad might have thought the professor was playing
with him, except for the haunted look in his eyes. He was
worried and trying to hide it. “You said no. I’m not here to
beg you or pressure you into it.”
“Oh, for God’s sake, Detective Williams, all right. I’ll do
it—for all of the above reasons, including the fact John
Anderson was a good friend of mine. I knew him since we
were undergrads together.”
His eyes clouded, and Chad wondered if Morrison had
ever been involved romantically with Anderson. Something
had sure been going on behind those beautiful brown eyes
when he said his name.
Beautiful eyes? Shit, what the hell
was wrong with him?
“Though I’m not sure how this will help,” Morrison
continued. “Surely you don’t think any of my friends have
anything to do with this.”
Chad slid back over into the booth. “Someone sent
those letters, someone who knows details about your
personal life, just as they did your friends. You understand
this means I’d have to move into your home temporarily?”
Morrison sighed. “Yes, I got that. I guess that will
work, so long as you keep your presence as non-intrusive as
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possible. I value my privacy, and I wonder just how real this
threat is to me personally. None of my friends would be
capable of committing a crime like this.”
“Four men are dead, Professor. I’d call that pretty real.
With each of the murders, there was no sign of forced entry,
indicating the victims knew their killer.”
“Points taken, but no cameras or listening devices
inside my home.”
“I’ll inform the chief of your preferences. In the
meantime, if you could make me a list of anyone and
everyone who knows about your lifestyle, so we can start
checking them out.”
“For God’s sake, I don’t have time for that. A lot of
people know about it. I don’t keep it a secret though I don’t
advertise my personal life at work.”
“Maybe so, but what about the club one couple