college professor with no criminal record and very few resources. What would I need an attorney for?
“Okay, I have good news and bad news,” Benedict said.
I had instead called Benedict. Benedict wasn’t a member of the bar, but he had gotten a law degree at Stanford. I sat on one of those gurneys covered with what seemed to be butcher paper. I was in the ER of a small hospital. The doctor on duty—who looked almost as exhausted as I felt—had told me that I had probably suffered a concussion. My head ached like it. I also had various contusions, cuts, and maybe a sprain. He didn’t know what to make of the teeth marks. With the adrenaline spikes ebbing away, the pain was gaining ground and confidence. He promised to prescribe some Percocet for me.
“I’m listening,” I said.
“The good news is, the cops think you’ve gone completely nuts and don’t believe a word of what you say.”
“And the bad news?”
“I tend to agree with them, though I add the strong possibility of an alcohol-induced hallucination.”
“I was attacked.”
“Yes, I get that,” Benedict said. “Two men, guns, a van, something about power tools.”
“Tools. No one said anything about power.”
“Right, whatever. You also drank a lot and then you got some strange.”
I pulled up my calf to reveal the bite mark. “How do you explain that?”
“Wendy must have been wild.”
“Windy,” I corrected him. This was pointless. “So what now?”
“I don’t like to brag,” Benedict said, “but I have some top-drawer legal advice for you, if you’d like to hear it.”
“I do.”
“Stop confessing to killing another human being.”
“Wow,” I said, “and you didn’t want to brag.”
“It’s also in a lot of the law books,” Benedict said. “Look, the license plate number you gave? It doesn’t exist. There is no body or signs of violence or a crime—only a minor misdemeanor because you, admittedly drunk, trespassed into a man’s backyard by falling down a hill. The cops are willing to let you go with just a ticket. Let’s just get home and then we can figure it out, okay?”
It was hard to argue with that logic. It would be wise for me to get out of this place, to get back on campus, to rest and regroup and recover, to consider everything that had happened in the sober light of familiar day. Plus, I had taught Constitution 101 one semester. The Fifth Amendment protects you against self-incrimination. Maybe I should use that right now.
Benedict drove. My head spun. The doc had given me a shot that had lifted me up and dropped me in the middle of Loopy Land. I tried to focus, but putting aside the drinking and drugs, the threat to life was hard to shake. I had literally had to fight for survival. What was going on here? What could Natalie have to do with all this?
As we pulled into the staff parking lot, I saw a campus police car near my front door. Benedict looked a question at me. I shrugged and stepped out of the car. The head rush as I stood nearly floored me. I made my way to a standing position and started gingerly up the path. Evelyn Stemmer was the head of campus security. She was a petite woman with a ready smile. The ready smile wasn’t there right now.
“We’ve been trying to reach you, Professor Fisher,” she said.
“My cell phone was stolen.”
“I see. Do you mind coming with me?”
“Where?”
“President’s house. President Tripp needs to speak with you.”
Benedict stepped between us. “What’s this about, Evelyn?”
She looked at him as though he’d just plopped out of a rhino’s rectum. “I’d rather let President Tripp do the talking. Me, I’m just an errand girl.”
I was too out of it to protest. What would be the point anyway? Benedict wanted to come with us, but I really didn’t think it would behoove my position to have my best friend visit my boss with me. The front seat of the campus police car had some kind of computer in it. I had to sit in the back like a real-life perp.
The president lived in a twenty-two-room, 9,600-square-foot stone residence, done up in a style that the experts called “restrained Gothic Revival.” I was not sure what that meant, but it was a pretty impressive structure. I also didn’t see the need for the squad car—the villa sat on a hilltop overlooking the athletic fields, maybe four hundred yards from the staff parking lot. Fully renovated two years ago, the home