JONATHAN KELLERMAN. THE CLINIC

“When?”

“The night you dropped in.”

“I only saw him carry out one box.”

“He came back later. I’d asked him to move them before. Right after Hope was murdered. I was afraid of something exactly like this.”

“Why didn’t he comply?”

Seacrest shook his head. “He said he would but kept delaying.”

“More games,” said Milo.

“I suppose. He was a rather . . . calculated fellow.”

“You didn’t like him.”

“Hope did, that’s all that mattered.”

“Your feelings didn’t matter?”

Seacrest’s smile was eerie. “Not one bit, Mr. Sturgis.”

“If Locking was delaying, why didn’t you just throw them out?”

“They were Hope’s.”

“So?”

“I . . . felt they should be preserved.”

He licked his lips, averted his eyes.

“Before she died they were hers, Professor. Wouldn’t that make them yours? So why give them to Locking?”

“For safety,” said Seacrest. “I thought the police might search Hope’s room.”

“But still,” said Milo. “You didn’t want to sully Hope’s name, yet you kept a couple hundred photos?”

“I hid them,” he said. “In my University office. Not that I needed to. Those first two detectives never even bothered to search Hope’s room. You never really did, either.”

“So you brought them to your University office, then back home.”

“Correct.”

“Then you waited for Casey Locking to take them off your hands—but what role did they play for you?”

Seacrest gave a start. “What role should they have played?”

“I’m asking you, sir. All I know is you kept them instead of destroying them. That tells me you had some use for them.”

Seacrest flexed his neck again. Adding a forward bend, he opened and closed his fingers. “Because, Mr. Sturgis, they were the only pictures I had of her, except for her book jacket. She hated the camera. Hated having her picture taken.”

“Except this way.”

Seacrest nodded.

“So these were mementos.”

Seacrest’s jaws clenched.

“But you let Locking have them, anyway.”

“I . . . kept some.”

“Where?”

“In my home.”

“Special ones or did you just stick your hand in and grab randomly?”

Seacrest shot to his feet. “I am terminating this.”

“Fine,” said Milo. “I guess I’ll have to get my information elsewhere. Ask around at some bondage clubs and see if anyone knew your wife. If that doesn’t work, I can go to the press, see what that stirs up.”

Seacrest shook a finger. “Sir, you are . . .” His hands fisted. “You said if I came down and talked to you here, you’d be discreet.”

“I said if you came down and cooperated.”

“That’s exactly what I’m doing.”

“Think so?”

Seacrest flushed deeply, the way I’d seen in his office. I watched his breathing get quicker until he closed his eyes and seemed to concentrate on slowing it down.

“What more do you want?” he finally said. “I keep telling you this had nothing to do with Hope’s murder.”

“Yes, you do, Professor.”

“I knew her! Better than anyone. She didn’t go to bondage clubs! She’d never have countenanced anything so . . .”

“Plebeian?”

“Vulgar—and stop looking at the pictures every time I defend her. They were private.”

“Private games.”

“Yes!” Striding forward, Seacrest swiped at the table, knocking most of the photos to the floor. Snapping his eyes toward Milo, as if expecting retaliation, he placed his hands on his hips and stood there.

Milo looked at him briefly, wrote something down.

Seacrest’s shoe had settled near one of the pictures. He stepped on it, ground it under his heel.

“Private,” said Milo, softly. “Hope and Locking and you.”

“Exactly. Nothing illegal—absolutely nothing! Neither of us killed her.”

I expected Milo to follow that up but instead he said, “Are you terminating this interview, sir?”

“If I stay will you promise not to expose Hope?”

“I’m not promising anything, Professor. But if you cooperate, I’ll do my best.”

“The first time we met,” said Seacrest, “you told me we were on the same side. What a line.”

“Show me we are, Professor.”

“Are we?”

“I’m out to catch your wife’s murderer. How about you?”

Seacrest started to lurch forward, stopped himself, his whole body shaking. “If I found him I’d kill him! I’m well-versed in medieval torture devices, the things I could do!”

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