It turns out Ramirez isnโt able to talk to me right away, which I suspect is some sort of tactic to break me down. Brock has to take a call from work, so he leaves me alone in the interrogation room, where I spend the next hour silently panicking.
Iโve been at the police station for over two hours when Ramirez finally comes in to talk to me, with Brock following close behind. Brock sits next to me, and he gives my hand a quick squeeze under the table. Itโs comforting to know he doesnโt completely hate me, despite finding out about my prison record. Although the day is still young.
โThank you for your patience, Miss Calloway,โ the detective says. His expression is still a complete blank. โI have some questions for you about Mr. Garrick.โ
โOkay,โ I say. We are being recorded, so I keep my tone calm and measured.
โWhere were you last night?โ Ramirez asks me.
โI went over to the Garricksโ penthouse to do some light cleaning and laundry, then I went home.โ
โWhat time did you leave the penthouse?โ โAbout six-thirty,โ I say.
โAnd did you speak with Mr. Garrick while he was there?โ
I shake my head, remembering what Wendy told me. The two of us just need to keep our stories straight, and we should be fine. โNo.โ
Ramirez looks surprised by my answer. โSo Mr. Garrick did not ask you to meet him at the apartment last night?โ
I blink at him, confused. โNoโฆโ
โMiss Calloway.โ The detectiveโs eyes seem to get darker as he stares at me. โWhat is your relationship with Douglas Garrick?โ
โMy relationship?โ I look over at Brock, who is frowning. โHeโs my employer. Well, him and Wendy, his wife.โ
โDo you have a s*xual relationship with him?โ I nearly choke. โNo!โ
โNot even once?โ
I want to reach out and shake the detective, but thankfully, Brock cuts in. โMiss Calloway answered your question. She is not having a relationship of any kind with Mr. Garrick aside from purely professional.โ
Detective Ramirez picks up the folder he placed next to him on the table. He pulls out a sheet of papers stapled together. He slides it across the table to me. โWe found a burner phone in Mr. Garrickโs dresser drawer. These were the text messages exchanged between the burner phone and your phone.โ
I pick up the papers and start scanning them while Brock looks over my shoulder. I recognize the text messages. They are the same messages that Douglas has been sending me for the last couple of months to confirm my work days. But out of context, they seem to take on a different meaning.
Will you be over tonight? Iโll see you later tonight. Come tonight.
Moreover, all my messages about groceries and laundry have vanished. Every single message seems to involve planning meetings together. Brockโs eyes are popping out as he reads the text messages.
โYes, these are our texts,โ I say, โbut theyโre all about work.โ
โMr. Garrick was texting you about work from a burner phone?โ
I clench my teeth. โI didnโt know it was a burner phone. I just thought it was his regular phone.โ
โI see,โ Ramirez says.
โPlus,โ I add, โthere were other messages. Mostly about groceries and laundry. Theyโre not hereโฆ they look like theyโve been deleted.โ
โDo you have the messages on your own phone?โ
โNoโฆโ Because Wendy told me to delete them. โI got rid of all the messages.โ
โWhy?โ
โWhy wouldnโt I?โ I let out a laugh that sounds way too high. โI mean, doย youย save every text message you get?โ
He probably does. He probably has text messages on his phone going ten years back. Although to be fair, I would never have deleted those text messages if Wendy hadnโt told me to.
โAlso,โ he says, โthere were outgoing calls made to you as late as midnight. Are you saying that yourย employerย was calling you atย midnight?โ
โIt just happened once,โ I say lamely.
I recognize how weak it all sounds. It doesnโt make senseโwhy was Douglas texting me from aย burnerย phone? Itโs not like he was setting me up to take the fall for his own murder. I look over at Brock, who has gone strangely silent at the worst possible time.
โAlsoโฆโ Ramirez opens the folder again. Oh God, thereโs more? How could there possibly be more? โDo you recognize this?โ
Itโs a grainy printed photo of a bracelet. I recognize it as the same bracelet Douglas gave to Wendy after he gave her that black eye. โYes,โ I say. โThatโs Wendyโs bracelet.โ
Ramirezโs eyebrows shoot up. โThen why did we find it in your jewelry box in your apartment?โ
โSheโฆ she gave it to me.โ
His eyebrows creep closer to his hairline. โWendy Garrick gave you a ten-thousand-dollar diamond bracelet?
Aย ten-thousand-dollarย bracelet? Thatโs what this bracelet cost? Iโve had something worth ten thousand dollars in my crappy little jewelry box?
โShe told me it was a gift from her husband,โ I say.
โWhat about the inscription?โ He pulls yet another photograph out of the folder and passes it to me. โDoes this look familiar?โ
The inscription that I had read on Wendyโs bracelet is now blown up on the screen so that both Brock and I can read it clearly.
To W, You are mine forever, Love D
โRight,โ I say. โTo W. Toย Wendy.โ
Ramirez taps the photo. โDoesnโt your name start with W?
Wilhelmina?โ
โIโฆโ My mouth is suddenly dry. I wait for Brock to interject and protest the line of questioning, but he is still mute, also waiting to hear my answer. โI always go by Millie.โ
โBut your name is Wilhelmina.โ โYesโฆโ
โAlsoโฆโ Oh no, thereโsย more? How could there possibly be more? But once again, heโs reaching for that stupid folder. He pulls out another printed photo. โWas this a gift from Mr. Garrick?โ
I take the photograph out of his hands. Itโs that dress that Douglas asked me to return. But then he never gave me any receipt or told me where it came from. With everything going on, Iโd completely forgotten about it. So itโs just been sitting in a gift bag in my bedroom closet.
โNo,โ I say weakly, even though I can already see where this is going. โMr. Garrick asked me to return the dress.โ
โSo why has it been sitting in your bedroom for over a month?โ โHeโฆ he never gave me the receipt.โ
I canโt even look at Brock. God knows what thoughts are going through his head. I want to assure him that this is all a terrible misunderstanding, but I canโt have that conversation with him with the detective in the room.
โLook,โ I say, โI was going to return it. I asked him about the receipt and he said he would get it for me but we just both forgot.โ
โMiss Calloway,โ Rodriguez says, โdid you know that the dress was purchased from Oscar de la Renta for six thousand dollars? Do you really think he would just forget to return it?โ
Holyโฆ
I hazard a quick look in Brockโs direction. He has a glazed expression on his face, and heโs shaking his head ever so slightly. I brought him here to be my lawyer, but heโs proving to be completely useless.
โAlso,โ Ramirez adds. Oh no. There cannot possibly be anything else. I definitely did not accept any other handouts from the Garricks. There is nothing more he can pull out of that folder. โDid you spend the night at a motel with Douglas Garrick last week?โ
โNo!โ I cry.
He clears his throat. โSo you didnโt check into a motel in Albany last Wednesday while Mr. Garrick had a business meeting there, and pay for the
night in cash?โ
I open my mouth but no sound comes out.
โLast Wednesday?โ Brock bursts out. โThatโs the day that we were supposed to meet for dinner and you stood me up! Isย thatย where you were?โ
I canโt lie. I gave the clerk at the motel my driverโs license. โYes, I did rent a motel room in Albany. But itโs not what you think.โ
Ramirez folds his arms across his chest. โIโm listening.โ
I donโt know what to say. I donโt want to give away Wendyโs secret. If they find out about the marital problems the Garricks were having, the murder could get pinned on her. Even though I donโt want to get blamed for this, I donโt want her to get blamed either.
โI just needed a night away,โ I say lamely.
โSo you went to a random motel in Albany to spend the night?โ
โI wasnโt having an affair with Douglas Garrick.โ I look between Brock and Ramirez, and both seem incredibly skeptical. โI swear it. And even if I wereโwhich I wasnโtโthat doesnโt mean that I killed him, for Godโs sake!โ
โHe broke it off with you last night.โ Ramirez keeps his eyes pinned on me as he drops this revelation. โYou were furious with him and you shot him in anger with his own gun.โ
โNoโฆโ My mouth feels horribly dry. โThatโs not even remotely true.
You have no idea.โ
Ramirez nods down at the photographs on the desk. โYou can see why it looks suspicious.โ
โBut itโs not the truth!โ I cry. โI was never having an affair with Douglas Garrick. This is absolutely insane.โ
The detective doesnโt say anything this time. He just stares at me.
โI never even touched him,โ I say. โI swear to you! Just ask Wendy Garrick. Sheโll confirm everything Iโm saying. Ask her!โ
โMiss Calloway,โ Detective Ramirez says, โWendy Garrick is the one who told us about your affair with her husband.โ
What?ย โExcuse me?โ
โShe said that Mr. Garrick came clean with her yesterday, and he invited you over with the intention of ending things,โ he says. โBut when she got home, she found him lying on the floor, shot to death.โ
Noโฆ She didnโtโฆ After all I did for herโฆ
โAnd,โ he says, โyour fingerprints are on the gun.โ