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    Parker Owens
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Predator Prey - 32. Sat Down

Warnings for recollections of non-consensual sex in this chapter.

"Let's go over the timeline again, Mr. Colebrook."

Chief Inspector Wayne Lovett sat back in his chair and exhaled slowly. Inspector Vinson sat mutely to the side, yellow notepad in hand. A small recorder sat on the plain, careworn table in front of him.

He'd been at the State Police offices for quite a while.

They'd taken him, most politely, to a holding room, and asked him to wait. "Chief has to finish with someone. He'll be right in," the man called Snyder had told him.

Yeah, right. He'd sat there for fifty-five minutes, fidgeting. He wondered which of his many sins had brought him to that room. He considered shouting for someone, calling to demand a lawyer. But he hadn't been arrested, had he? Could he just walk out the door?

He stared at the mirror. He didn't doubt that it was a two-way mirror. He had no idea what the observer on the other side expected to see.

Mostly, he worried about Graham. What would his boyfriend think when he arrived at the Feigenbaum and found him gone? He could picture the stages Graham would go through. First, there would be worry. Then frustration, or exasperation. Maybe some phone calls or a search around the dock area would be made. Then anger. Graham would surely think he'd been toyed with and dumped.

And then Graham would take off, pissed as hell.

Perhaps Graham would go out and get drunk. More likely the taller man would just feel lucky to be rid of him.

Eventually, Chief Inspector Lovett, a tall African American with hair just beginning to show gray, had bustled in, radiating efficiency and business. Then the questions began.

At first, it had been fairly straightforward. Lovett began by being pleasant. "Mr. Colebrook, I just want to be clear here. You aren't under arrest. We've detained you as a person of interest in an ongoing investigation, and we hope you will be helpful. But you're free to go at any time."

He wasn't sure he bought that one, but he nodded, cautiously. Inspector Vinson glowered at him from another chair.

"Good," Lovett went on. "I'd like to ask you some questions. If you don't want to answer, well, you don't have to. But it could help us a great deal," he said, emphasizing the last two words.

He blinked. "Okay," he assented.

At first, Lovett asked relatively easy questions, establishing identity, residence, student status, and so on. But it didn’t take long for the going to get rockier. "Mr. Colebrook – Scott? Can I call you Scott? Scott, how long have been dealing?"

There was an incriminating question, and he knew it. He knew his rights. He had the right to consult a lawyer about that question. He had the right to say nothing. Hell, he had the right to march right out of the room, if he wanted, if he believed Lovett.

But at that moment, he remembered Graham; kisses in the night, full of hope, full of life.He remembered his promises – to quit the dealing and to make things right. Even if it meant going to jail. Even if he had to lose Graham. "Four years, maybe," he answered quietly.

He noticed Vinson stir. He'd surprised them. They hadn't expected cooperation, capitulation. At least, not so soon.

"Tell me about your supplier," Lovett followed up.

"Which one?"

Lovett's eyebrows rose a little. "You had more than one?"

"Yeah. I knew five, maybe six regulars."

"Can you name them?"

Now they were down to it. He hesitated. Naming names and giving details would mark him. He had no doubt there would be retribution. But maybe that would be preferable, really. He'd missed his chance with Graham, and now it was too late.

Lovett interrupted his thoughts. "Scott, listen, if you can help us, maybe I can help you out. You know, with the DA, if things come to that. I can't make promises, but I'll do what I can."

He sighed. "Sure. Who do you want to know about?"

"You pick."

"There was a guy I met every other Thursday, regular. He sold me crap weed in quantity. Called himself Seth. Big guy, smiled a lot. Used to meet him at the minimart near the University golf course, you know the place?"

His listeners nodded, faces immobile, betraying no other information.

"He must have grown the stuff himself, but he always had plenty...."

His discourse went on at some length, covering his transactions with dealers who didn't interest Lovett all that much. It was clear to everyone what he wanted to avoid. There were other, far more dangerous sources to talk about. When he faltered, there was silence.

His hosts waited expectantly.

He took a deep breath. He wished he could have told Graham he was keeping his promise before signing his own death warrant. "And there was a guy who called himself Marquez."

Lovett and Vinson exchanged a glance. "Go on."

"I went to Marquez for pills and acid, mostly."

"You buy any heroin from him?"

He shook his head. "No. I didn't deal in that stuff much. I got a better markup on other things."

"So how did you meet Marquez?"

"I never met him directly. My contact was a guy named Kenny. I'd phone him, set up a meet, make an exchange."

"Same place every time?" Lovett was definitely interested.

"No. Different places, never the same way twice."

"What did Kenny look like?" Vinson put in.

He closed his eyes to think. "Shorter than me, kind of thin. Long, stringy hair. He's going gray, sometimes has a mustache."

He decided not to mention Kenny's old Camaro, or terrible teeth.

"When was the last time you met him?" Lovett again.

"End of January, early February. It's been a while."

Lovett grunted, not very satisfied by the answer. "Any other suppliers?"

"Yeah. Once in a while, I'd go to another guy. Worked for someone called the 'Russian.'"

The two inspectors traded looks again.

"How often you see him?"

"Not a lot. I didn’t like dealing with him. He was way too pushy, always trying to get me to buy more shit I didn't want."

"Describe the guy."

"My height, medium build, bald head, goatee. Diamond stud in one ear. Definitely older than me."

Lovett leaned back in his chair and let out a long breath. "I'll be back in a minute," the man said, rising.

Needless to say, he wasn't going anyplace. He and Vinson stared at one another, neither one giving anything away.

Lovett strode in a moment later with a couple of folders. He watched the man sit and pull a photo out. It was placed in front of him. "You recognize this man?"

He inspected the photo.

He hesitated. Every syllable he uttered swept him farther from Graham, from life. But the tide was irresistible. "That's Vassily. The guy who worked for the Russian."

Lovett nodded. "Vassily Golovkin. How well did you know him?"

"Just enough to deal, that's it." He hadn't liked the guy. Then again, he didn't like most of the suppliers.

"You ever romantically involved with Vassily? Sleep with him?"

Now it was his turn to be surprised. "Hell, no. No way." He spoke emphatically.

"But you like the company of men." So Lovett knew he was gay.

"So? Does that make a difference?"

Lovett let the combative tone pass. He fished another photo out of the pile and tossed it on the table.

His ex-roommate stared back at him from the glossy surface of the picture. The red hair and pale skin were unmistakable. Only one small detail marred the likeness of the fey, laughing face he'd known: the small, dark hole in the middle of the forehead. "How about this man?"

He stared back at the dull, half-lidded, lifeless eyes in the picture. He felt sick. "That's my roommate. Ex-roommate, at the University."

"Devin Doyle," the Chief Inspector confirmed. He already knew.

"What happened to him?"

In his long nights in the University library, he'd imagined getting even with the redhead someday. But not like this.

"Looks like he got shot in the head," Lovett replied.

"How? When?"

"We were hoping you'd be able to tell us."

He shook his head, as if to clear it of the image in front of him. "I don't know…I didn't have anything to do with it."

"When did you see your roommate last?" Lovett continued

He did not want to remember that occasion. "Early December, maybe. I don't recall the date."

"Come on, try."

He bit his lip. "First weekend in December. But I really don't know what that date was."

"That's before finals, right?"

He nodded.

"And you saw him where, exactly?"

He shut his eyes. The last he'd seen of his roommate was the boy's dick as he'd been forced to suck it. As he'd been raped.

"Mr. Colebrook, your cooperation is vital here. Where did you last see your roommate?" Lovett had misinterpreted his silence.

"Before a party. There was a party in the suite that weekend, and he was there."

"Uh huh. A party. What kind of party?"

How the hell was he supposed to respond to that? What did Lovett think went on in party dorms? Tupperware sales?

"Devin organized it." The redhead must have done that much.

"Was this guy at the party?" Lovett produced another photograph, taken with a long-range lens. His roommate featured largely in it, kissing a rugged, handsome looking guy on the cheek. He recognized the face.

"Yeah. His name's Ted." He shuddered.

"Ted? Ted what?"

"I don't know. He just said his name was Ted."

"Not surprising. His name was Teodor. Teodor Golovkin."

His mind reeled. Ted was Vassily's – what – brother? Part of the Russian's network?

"When did you meet Ted?" Lovett didn't give him time to think.

His stomach clenched. "The night before the party."

"You sure it wasn't before that?"

"Yeah, I'm sure." He was sorry he'd ever met Ted. Sorry he'd ever started down the long road that led to that bar, that night.

"What was your relationship with Ted?"

"Relationship? What do you mean?"

Lovett didn’t give him any room to squirm in. "Business or pleasure? Was he a convenient hook up?"

"No. It wasn't like that."

"So what was it?"

He was cornered. He didn't want to talk about this, but Lovett wasn't going to give him a choice. "Ted fucked me, okay? I woke up, he slapped me around, and then he fucked me." It was close enough to the truth.

"Are you saying you were forced?"

He didn't answer immediately. The truth was he had been forced. "Yes."

"How many times did he have sex with you?"

"Just that one time." That one weekend. He prayed Lovett hadn't seen the video, too.

"When was the last time you saw Ted?"

"The morning after the party. He was asleep on the couch."

"What kind of condition was he in?"

"I don't know, I didn't stop to ask."

Lovett slid another photo in front of him. A full face shot of Ted stared back. Ted's face had the same sleepy, half-amused look as his ex-roommate's. The same dark hole graced the man's forehead. He felt a sudden chill. He looked back up, eyes wide.

"He look anything like this when you left?"

"He was alive, I know that much. He and Devin screwed on the couch that night and fell asleep there."

"Any idea how Ted wound up like this?" Lovett asked neutrally, tapping the photo.

"No. No idea." He felt bewildered. Who had killed his roommate and Ted with identical bullets to the center of the forehead? "When did this happen?"

Lovett wasn't about to give away information. The Chief shifted in his chair. "Let's talk about something else. After the party, what happened?"

He felt on firmer ground here. He recounted fleeing the suite, living in the library, and finding a place on the Feigenbaum. He was led, question by question, through a timeline of events – when he joined the ship, when the January cruise ended, and when he returned for the spring semester cruise. Lovett zeroed in on the time between cruises. He was questioned closely about those days he'd spent with Javier and Oscar.

"Let's go over what happened when you got off the Feigenbaum in January. You went to stay with your friend Javier Cabrera. You hung out at the Cabrera house. You went back to the ship. Is that right?"

"Pretty much. I biked around a little."

"You met up with Kenny, Marquez' courier during this time?"

"Yes."

"When?"

"I stopped at a bar for a beer before going back to Javier's house. Flappy Jack's was the name of the place. Kenny found me there."

"Sure it wasn't you who called him up to meet him there?" Lovett pressed.

"No, I told you, Ted stole my phone."

"What did you talk about?"

"Kenny offered to give me some goods to sell. Kind of like a loan."

"And you weren't interested."

"I wasn’t interested."

"Just out of curiosity, why not?" Lovett seemed genuine.

"I…I didn't think I could start over again. It would have killed me, inside, you know? What I was doing…was bad…I hurt people. I didn't want to get back into all that."

Lovett narrowed his eyes, looking at him in a calculating way. "Maybe you'll forgive me if I find that hard to believe," he said drily.

"I…I had a change of heart," he replied at length, staring at the table.

"So you wouldn't take Kenny's help in getting set up again?"

"No way. You borrow from Marquez, and you kiss your ass goodbye," he said with conviction.

"And he just let you go? Just like that?"

"No, he tried to push me into some kind of deal, wanted me to trade my ass for goods."

"And you just walked away."

"No I ran away – as fast as I could."

Lovett wrote something down on his pad. "Exactly when did you get back to the ship?"

This line of questioning went on for another hour or more. They covered the same points, the same topics, over and over. Where had he been? Who with? When was that, exactly? His answers were compared with dates from a calendar Vinson called up on his phone. When Lovett decided to get up and leave the room, Vinson took over until his boss returned. His replies never changed; he stuck unshakably to the bare truth.

And the stark truth of Ted and his roommate's lifeless faces stared back at him the whole time.

Lovett finally came to the decision that no more information could be wrung from his memory. "Mr. Colebrook, you are still very much a person of interest in this investigation, do you understand?"

He nodded.

"You've been cooperative, and I'm going to note that. Where are you supposed to be staying?"

"With a friend. He was going to pick me up at the ship at five o'clock."

"Where does he live?"

"Sand River."

"Where in Sand River?"

"I don't know," he admitted. "I've never been to his apartment."

"Mr. Colebrook, I'm not going to arrest you or have you charged right now. But I am instructing you not to leave Fernando County, is that clear?"

"Yes."

"And while you are not under arrest at this time, I would advise you to retain a lawyer."

Where the hell was he going to get a lawyer? He sure as hell wasn't going to ask his father. Or maybe he ought to try calling up one of his father's lawyer pals directly – tell the whole story – and see how fast the scandal spread through town. Now that would be sweet revenge. But he wasn't going to do that. He wanted nothing to do with that world, either.

Lovett stood, interrupting his reverie. "Well, Mr. Colebrook, for the time being, you are free to go. But if you remember anything else, anything at all, I want you to call me at this number." The Chief Inspector proffered a business card.

Numbly, he took it. Where was he going to go? He didn't have Graham's number. Graham would be frantic, pissed, and long gone by now. He wondered if he'd ever get a chance to explain. Wearily, he guessed he could look up Javier's number – if it was listed – and grovel for a room. Maybe he could beg a ride back to Sand River. He gathered his things.

The Police Inspectors exited the room ahead of him.

He turned down the long hallway toward the front entrance where they had come in. There, on a long bench against the dull colored wall, sat a familiar figure. The bearded face turned in his direction and broke into an expression of relief, mixed with equal parts concern and discomfort.

Graham.

Craftingmom edited this and every chapter, and I offer her my unstinting thanks for her help and encouragement. tim, Carlos and Spike all read parts or all of this story, and gave me the insight and courage to write and post it.
If you would like to leave a comment, I would welcome it. I appreciate all remarks, rants and raves.
Copyright © 2017 Parker Owens; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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Chapter Comments



Okay, That was actually worth the momentary grief of thinking that Scott and Graham might possibly be parted. Some new and interesting depth has been added with all this. I love a good mystery, and you've set out some nice things for us to gnaw on and think about.

 

Glad that Graham was there at the station, waiting. That tells me that he has already put his faith in Scott.

 

I was just a bit hesitant about the cops letting our boy go, though. Scott certainly admitted to enough for them to hold onto him. That they kicked him out only rings true if they are purposely hanging him out in the hopes that someone tries to grab him or take a shot at him. Not a pleasant scenario, either way.

 

I'm willing to wait to see what nefarious plans you have for our happy couple. In a way, a payment has yet to be made here. It isn't quite enough that Scott has renounced his former life and now is looking to walk on the side of decency and love. I am assuming he is going to need to make an effort to help clean up the dirty mess that he was involved with in dealing, and maybe help right a few wrongs to those he trod upon in his old life.

 

I think he and Graham are up to that.

Edited by Geron Kees
  • Like 3
On 4/13/2017 at 6:57 PM, droughtquake said:

When did you find the time to ‘like’ all those comments on A to Z and still write this chapter?  ;-)

 

On 4/13/2017 at 7:13 PM, Parker Owens said:

And I have been methodical, haven't I?

Can you teach @Timothy M that trick?  ;-)

 

(I’ll just keep posting hints everywhere so he can’t possibly miss them!)

Edited by droughtquake

"When was the last time you met him?" Lovett again. "End of January, early February. It's been a while." -- But . . . but he just saw/heard Kenny on the boat?

the small, dark hole in the middle of the forehead. -- Sad. Red got himself murdered.

"His name was Teodor." -- was?

The bearded face turned in his direction and broke into an expression of relief, mixed with equal parts concern and discomfort. Graham. -- Graham isn't abandoning Scott. Good on him.

And good on Scott for telling the truth and nothing but the truth, and 2 out of 3 is an excellent start.

This is hard. The police are not Scott's friends. Sure, they're looking for information on these dealers, but they won't hesitate to pin it all back on Scott if he's the only fish they catch.

As for the prostitution biz that Scott was running . . . .

And now he's on Marquez' AND the Russians' radar as a snitch. More than a lawyer (which he certainly needs) Scott needs protection. He is in SERIOUS danger of ending up just like Devin and Ted. But for the police it's just tying another piece of bait to a tree.

  • Love 1
5 hours ago, BlueWindBoy said:

"When was the last time you met him?" Lovett again. "End of January, early February. It's been a while." -- But . . . but he just saw/heard Kenny on the boat?

the small, dark hole in the middle of the forehead. -- Sad. Red got himself murdered.

"His name was Teodor." -- was?

The bearded face turned in his direction and broke into an expression of relief, mixed with equal parts concern and discomfort. Graham. -- Graham isn't abandoning Scott. Good on him.

And good on Scott for telling the truth and nothing but the truth, and 2 out of 3 is an excellent start.

This is hard. The police are not Scott's friends. Sure, they're looking for information on these dealers, but they won't hesitate to pin it all back on Scott if he's the only fish they catch.

As for the prostitution biz that Scott was running . . . .

And now he's on Marquez' AND the Russians' radar as a snitch. More than a lawyer (which he certainly needs) Scott needs protection. He is in SERIOUS danger of ending up just like Devin and Ted. But for the police it's just tying another piece of bait to a tree.

Scott isn't going to mention Kenny on the boat - that would be too awkward to try to explain. Graham didn't abandon Scott; that in itself is a huge change in Scott's life. He expected to be abandoned. You're right that the police are not Scott's friends, and Scott is not off the hook. His cooperation may mean a lot to them, but in the end, he will have to face a certain amount of music. You are absolutely right that Scott is in danger, yet Scott thought that danger was worth it to come clean in honor of his promise to Graham. Thanks so very much for reading and for responding!


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