Chapter 6
Dangerous Liaisons
The overhanging smell of coffee dug into Lucyâs senses as she was exposed to the criminalistics floor of the LA FBI office, surrounded on all sides by the suited agents that had brought her in.
âWelcome to the FBI, Miss Hamilton,â Vance said with a smirk, stepping out of the elevator in front of the group.
Lucy rolled her eyes as she followed the agent out, drawing stares from all around as she was escorted out. âSmells like hierarchy and sleep deprivation.â
âDeveraux,â SSA Philips called from across the office, a steady click of heels bringing her to the small cluster of agents at an alarming speed. She cleared her throat, eyes glazing over Lucy for only the briefest of moments. âPaperwork and then you can question her. Ramos,â Marina looked over her shoulder, waving the slick agent toward her, âI want you to escort Miss Hamilton to the questioning room.â
âYou can call it an interrogation room,â Lucy interrupted rather flatly. âYou donât have to sugar coat it for me.â
âFine,â Marinaâs eyes went from a bitter Deveraux to Ramos, âtake her to the interrogation room. Get her some coffee too. From the look in Deverauxâs eyes, thisâll take a while.â
Although Carson, Parrish, Dane and Danielson parted to return to their desk, Ramos put a hand on Deverauxâs shoulder before he could go anywhere, Philips already in an aggressive retreat to her office.
Ramos leaned in to Vance, âNext time you pull something on a case weâre working together, you tell me. Got it? I donât like surprises.â
Vanceâs eyes stayed on Ramosâ, jaw clenched in subdued anger. âSure thing, Ramos,â he bit with a lack of sincerity.
âGood man,â Ramos said, patting his back before taking Lucyâs attention. âFollow me Miss - Hamilton, was it?â
âI hope Iâm worth the trouble,â Lucy said, winking at Deveraux as she passed, following Ramos towards the back of the office.
The two dipped into the long stretch of hallway that led to the interrogation rooms, footsteps quiet as they continued on.
Ramos softly sighed, keeping his voice low. âWhat the hell are you doing here? I told you he was coming. That moron doesnât know how to keep anything quiet. You shouldâve run.â
âIâm not running from anything,â Lucy murmured, a slick suited woman passing by the pair. She glanced over her shoulder, judging the distance before lifting her voice. âDoes he know youâre involved?â
âHe doesnât know a damn thing,â remarked Ramos as he opened the door to interrogation room B.
âGood. Letâs keep it that way.â
With her mind elsewhere as time ticked away, Lucy was situated in a metal chair, her cup of caffeine leaving a heat ring on the silver table that was separating her from an empty seat. Her thin blouse did little against the temperature of the room, goosebumps arising on her legs when she ceased to bounce them.
Minutes had turned into hours in front of Lucyâs eyes, her coffee seeming to drain itself as she waited for someone - anyone - to come in.
After it seemed unbearable, the door of the interrogation room finally opened to reveal Vance with several files in hand. He didnât address Lucy immediately, instead filling the seat across from her. Setting his papers onto the metal table, he looked up.
Silence lingered, Lucy remaining voiceless as she waited for the accusation.
Vance hesitated, âDid you really name your dog Alexander Hamilton?â
Having to take a moment to process his words, Lucyâs eyebrows lifted. âIs that seriously what youâre asking me in an FBI interrogation room?â
âAnd in your authorâs description, his name is John. As in John Laurens? As in Hamiltonâs best friend?â
Lucy held back a laugh, softly shaking her head, âMore like lover, but I donât see what my pseudonym has to do with anything.â
Deveraux pinched the bridge of his nose before forcing himself to move forward, âOkay, all right, why do you use a pseudonym, Miss Hamilton?â
âI prefer a simple life, Agent Deveraux,â Lucy replied. âIâd rather surf and spend time with my dog, and be seen as a normal person to my neighbors. I donât like being looked at or held up, so the situation works. Stella St. Laurens writes and publishes a book, I still get my beach day.â
âAnd when you started writing, did you think that your work would blow up like it had?â Vance questioned, trying to get anything he could out of her that would amass to something useful.
Lucy gave a light shake of her head, âNot in the slightest. I just didnât want its publication to inflict with my personal life at the time.â
Deveraux searched for a way into her brain, contemplating his words cautiously. âHow long have you been surfing?â
The womanâs eyebrows narrowed, âWhat?â
âSurfing. How long have you been surfing?â Vance repeated.
âSince I was a kid, I learned on a trip to Hawaii.â Her beat quickly switched, âI donât see how any of this is relative. I deserve to know what Iâm doing here.â
âHow about murder?â
Lucy looked appalled within a split second, âIâm an author, not a murderer.â
âKrystian Bala, used his own killing to plot a best seller. Anne Perry, Michael Peterson. It isnât an impossible route, Miss Hamilton.â
âI would like to be presented with the said evidence incriminating me, â she coldly said, blue eyes dead set on Vance.
Vance smirked, opening the top file and spinning it to face Lucy. âYour novel oddly matches to the Neil Hunter case as well as the Emily Morrison one. Have you heard of either of them?â
âThe media makes it a little hard not to hear about most people,â Lucy vaguely replied. âHunter has been on TV for the past couple of days, as well as Morrison.â
Agent Deveraux held eye contact with the writer for a moment of silence worthy enough for the grave, forcing himself not to show any outward signs of frustration. âYour novel depicts Emily Morrisonâs time while held by Hunter, does it not?â
âIâm a fiction novelist, Agent Deveraux, my novel depicts fictional characters.â Lucy leaned back in the metal chair as comfortably as she could, not even bothering to look into the file set in front of her. âThere are coincidences in the world.â
âNot in mine, Miss Hamilton. When it comes to murder, there are no coincidences. Everything is intentional, including every single novel youâve written.â Deveraux spread out seven files, all with sharpied titles that matched those of Lucyâs books. âIâve got a team busy with the rest of your works, but letâs start with these, shall we?â
Lucy lifted a hand lightly, âBy all means.â
â
, tied to a similar case of a girl drowning in the gulf, killed supposedly by her father while your novel shows that it was the mother.
, a Halloween haunted house turned to be a den of a real killer, tied to an oddly familiar one from five year ago in Omaha.
, in the Satanic Panic era with a city worshiping the Devil - an urban legend of said city that turned into the death of a young child, near exact to a suburb outside of Seattle four years ago.
two joggers find a body in the woods, cut in half. How strange that it was overlooked upon publication despite the exact same thing happening two years before in lower wine country. Tell me, how does this happen?â
âI wish I could tell you,â Lucy flatly responded.
Deverauxâs jaw clenched, having to take a moment. âMiss Hamilton, you do realize youâre in custody of the FBI, donât you?â
âIf Iâm in custody, then tell me what the charges are. I came willingly, I can leave in just the same manner.â Lucy leaned forward on her elbows, tone lacking any insincerity or fear. âIf youâd like to keep me, charge me.â
âWe donât work under the police-â
âBut you do work under the law,â Lucy quickly objected. âSo, I would recommend you remain within your limits or I will take you to court.â
Agent Deveraux idly kept a finger against his lips, an arm balancing on the table. âWith such strong statements, donât you think you shouldâve asked for a lawyer by now?â
âI have nothing to be guilty for,â she countered without hesitation.
âIt doesnât make sense.â Vance spoke firmly, losing his professional mannerism within minutes.
Lucy weirdly managed to keep her composure, looking directly into the agentâs eyes. âLots of things in the world donât make sense, but what also doesnât make sense is attempting to holding someone without charges, on a claimed federal offense. And yes, it would be considered a federal offense if you were to use the alleged plots of my books to assume I had something to do with multiple deaths across the country. You know what also doesnât make sense? That youâre accusing me of affiliation in cases that some of which I wasnât old enough to have been capable, or that I wasnât anywhere near them.
âIâve never left this part of the country. I grew up in Phoenix, came to California for school and decided to stay. Yes, maybe it does seem odd, but you have no right to treat me like a murderer.â Lucy shut the open file in front of her, standing up from the uncomfortable chair. âAnd as a non-murdering crime writer, Iâm going to leave because you have nothing to hold me on. If you do find something tangible, although highly unlikely, I will willingly come back. Thank you, Agent Deveraux.â She looked to the reflective panel of glass, motioning to what seemed herself. âAs to you, Agents.â
Vanceâs fist gripped underneath the table, not saying a word as Lucy left the interrogation room. He swore to himself, able to hear laughter from the room over behind the one-way mirror.
SSA Phillips came through the door of the room, a light smile on her lips instead of the expected scowl. âShe knows how to handle herself, and apparently you, too.â
Agent Deveraux began leafing the papers back together, shaking his head as he did so. âShe can handle herself all the way to jail.â
âSheâs got fire,â said Marina as she glanced over her shoulder. âI like her.â