“What did he say?”
Walker looks close to a full-on panic attack, barely managing to answer, “H-he’s—”
A knock at the door whirls him around to face it.
“Fuck.” He whirls back toward me. His voice is hushed now, a fervent whisper. “Since he knew I’d be back, he said he was coming over. He has more evidence. He won’t wait for me to keep dodging him. What do we do?No,” he hisses in answer to his own question, surging toward me. “Please, Trey—”
“Walker—”
“Doctor Hammond, it’s Detective Clancy!” The detective knocks again. “I really need to speak with you.”
Walker grabs his inhaler off the kitchen island and takes a puff. He leaves it and his phone there and darts toward me. “I’ll be right there, detective!” He grabs me by the shoulders and starts pushing me toward the laundry closet.
I do not resist, letting him move me as desired, but I tell him, “Walker, you know I might need—”
“No,” he says again and holds me there against the running washer. “Let me see what he says. Let me try to fix this first. Please.”
He wants to protect the innocent so badly, just as I do, so I can’t refuse him. I nod and close myself into the closet. There is barely enough room for me, but at least this door has slats, narrow so the detective won’t be able to see me, but I can see out, however minimally.
Walker tries to calm himself before he opens the door, but he is visibly agitated. I am doubtful the detective will be easily deterred given his persistence thus far—and Walker’s projection ofguilt.
I take stock of the physicality of the detective as best as I can from my angle and limited visibility. Tall, husky but not overweight, confident in how he holds himself. He will put up a good fight if attacked, so best to be able to take him out in one swift strike. I just need to wait for my moment—should it be needed.
“May I come in, Doctor Hammond?” the detective asks after some forced pleasantries.
“Uh, sure.” Walker reluctantly opens the door wider to let him in. “I literally just got home, and I start my fellowship tomorrow, so I’m a little frazzled, sorry. Lots to do and prepare for, you know? No offense, but constant calls from you didn’t exactly help me enjoy the last few days of my vacation.”
What I can make out of the detective proves he is also armed, wearing a shoulder holster and no jacket to hide it. Likely on purpose.
He has already pegged Walker as guilty and is here to prove it.
“Where did you go this weekend exactly?” the detective asks.
“Visiting family.”
“Was Mr. Fisher with you?”
Walker laughs in a very un-humored sort of a huff. “Can we skip the misleading bullshit and just get to whatever evidence you think you have?” Oh Walker. You need to stay calm. “Because all I know is you refuse to leave me and my boyfriend alone despite Curtis’ case being officially closed weeks ago.”
The detective remains unmoved, so it’s clear he knows what he is doing and getting everything he wants out of Walker. “Maybe not for much longer.” He turns before Walker can respond and approaches the island, giving me a slightly better view of him,since the laundry closet faces it and is at the edge of the hallway toward the bedroom and bathroom. “Did you know Mr. Van Kirk had a web cam?”
What?
“Doesn’t everyone?” Walker asks.
“Many keep their cameras covered when not in use, but Mr. Van Kirk’s was uncovered the night of his disappearance.” The detective removes a small flash drive from his pants pocket and sets it on the countertop, as Walker joins him. “It turns out Mr. Van Kirk had it specifically set up as surveillance to keep watch over his apartment when he was away. Sort of like a Ring device, where it takes still shots when detecting unexpected movement.”
That can’t be right. I check for such things and delete any storage, any cloud backups, everything if such a device or setup exists. Could I have missed something?
“I watched the footage and while you can’t see clearly enough to determine if the person captured on camera is Mr. Fisher—”
“So you don’t have any real evidence?” Walker asks too rushed, too telling.
“But”—the detective pushes on—“the existence of this footage does point to possible foul play. Someone other than Mr. Van Kirk was in his apartment the last night he was seen, which reopens the case as a possible murder investigation, and gives me access to many more resources to continue inspecting Mr. Fisher as a person of interest. Andyou, Doctor Hammond.” He faces Walker, blocking him from me, so the detective’s back and shoulder holster are all I can see. “Maybe you were in on this together.”
“I would never—”
“First do no harm.” The detective tilts his head around Walker to indicate the poster on the wall. “Do you believe in that, Doctor Hammond? Because if you do, you should understand that harm is exactly what Mr. Fisher is and does. We both knowthat Mr. Van Kirk is not the first person Mr. Fisher helped make disappear.”