
WHISPERER
Chapter 4
The Police Precinct
The interrogation room door slammed open so hard the thin glass in the observation window rattled. The sudden sound cut the stale air, slicing into the hush that had settled over Detective Ann’s desk. She looked up from her pad to see who had burst in.
A man filled the doorway — impossibly groomed, a blue Italian suit sculpted to his frame, hair the color of pale wheat falling just past his collar. He moved like someone accustomed to being obeyed. When his eyes fixed on Jade, his face folded into a storm.
“Say no word!” he barked, pointing a long-fingered hand at her.
The room smelled like him before she could see him fully: a clean, expensive cologne that carried lemon and cedar, a scent that seemed to smooth the edges of the precinct’s institutional odor. Detective Ann felt it at the back of her throat, like a promise she didn’t want to accept.
“You brought in my client under false pretenses to question her and then booked her under arrest!” the man snapped, his voice sharp with outrage. “Drop the charges now, or I will sue the department.”
Detective Ann folded her arms, keeping her face a neutral mask, but the man’s presence forced the room into a different temperature. He introduced himself without waiting for permission.
“Barrister Kelvin Billy,” he said, the title rolling off his tongue like a flag. “You will release Ms. Billy at once.”
Ann’s jaw tightened. The Dean had called, she’d been told. The body had been discovered in another dorm; witnesses placed Jade with Luke the night before. Procedure compelled questions. But she’d also been briefed on the Billys. Wealth, influence — and a lawyer who did not bluff.
“Ms. Billy is not under arrest for murder,” Ann said slowly, keeping the official cadence. “She’s a person of interest — to be interviewed regarding Luke Anderson’s death. We’re just asking routine—”
“Routine?” Kelvin laughed, a brittle sound. “You haul my client in, humiliate her in a holding cell, and call it routine? Let me make something very clear: charge her if you must, but I will sue you, Detective Ann Cole. I will pursue every legal remedy until your precinct is ruined.”
Ann watched the man speak. He radiated assurance, an aura backed by bank accounts and a family name. Even the officers in the hall peered in, curiosity and caution warring across their faces.
Lucy’s number, on Jade’s emergency contact thread, had lit the family’s phone screens already. Even from halfway across the country, Jade’s parents moved like a tide; they could not come, but they could send leverage — and lawyering in force.
Detective Ann rubbed the bridge of her nose. “Ms. Billy,” she said to Jade, softer now, “you’re free to go.”
Kelvin didn’t let her go. He rounded the table in three long strides and planted himself between Jade and the exit, voice low and thudding.
“That’s not good enough,” he hissed. “This case is dead on arrival. Drop everything or I’ll make you regret it.” He leaned closer to Ann, and for a moment the cold edge of a threat showed. “You and your generation will pay for this.”
A beat of silence. Even the ticking wall clock seemed to pause.
Ann released the tension in her shoulders. “Crystal clear,” she said at last, and she let the detained file slide to the side.
Kingston College
A black limousine glided up to the iron gates of Hillary Dormitory with all the quiet arrogance of something that knew it belonged. Students glanced up from their phones, curiosity snagging at them, but the vehicle swallowed its presence like a shadow.
As Jade stepped from the limo, the leather of her skirt whispering against her thighs, Kelvin’s hand stayed on her elbow, a possessive weight. He hissed, “Speak to no one. Say nothing.”
She forced a smile that did not meet her eyes. Her chest still ached from the cold snap of grief. Luke — missing, then dead — and her name tangled into the same headline in the space of a night. She felt unreal, stitched to the world with thread too thin to hold her.
The sun was a flat disc behind clouds, and the campus smelled of rain and cut grass. Students passed in groups, heads bent like little islands. As she walked, her phone buzzed in a frantic rhythm in her hand. She glanced down, a small, fragile hope flaring in her chest.
“Mummy?” she whispered into the receiver when she answered. Her mother’s voice erupted down the line, sharp and immediate.
“Is this the way you speak to your mother?” Mrs. Billy scolded, but there was warmth buried under the scold. “We are worried.”
“Sorry, Mum,” Jade said, pressing the phone tighter to her ear. “My heart is… it’s heavy.”
“We can fly you home,” Mrs. Billy offered. “Your father and I—”
“No,” Jade cut in, voice steady with resolve. “I need to find out what happened to Luke. Classes start tomorrow. I can’t just—”
“Be careful,” her father said when he took the line. His voice had the same tempered steel she’d heard in Kelvin’s words. “Don’t do anything reckless. I’ve spoken with the Dean. We’ve arranged for a private investigator to look into this.”
A private investigator. The words sounded like a tether thrown to someone drowning. Hope thrummed in her chest. “When?”
“Sometime next week,” her father replied. “We’ll keep you safe. Call us if the police bother you.”
Jade promised she would. She ended the call and slid the phone into her bag. The campus seemed too quiet as she mounted the concrete steps to Dorm 25. Her footsteps met cold stone and echoed, a hollow percussion that amplified the emptiness.
Hillary Dormitory, usually a hive of gossip and laughter, felt forsaken. Doors that should have been open were shut; the usual clump of students at the foot of the stairs was gone as if the building had exhaled and held its breath. The hall lights hummed but the sound had no warmth. It was as if the campus had been scraped clean of life.
She paused, scanning for movement. “Where did everybody go?” she murmured, answering herself with the old tape of last night — the whisper, the vanish, the scar on her thigh. Every step she took felt like going deeper into cotton; her legs were heavy, each one harder to lift.
Halfway up the stairs, a figure slid into her vision. At first she thought it an apparition from last night: an old woman floating rather than walking, her hair a curtain of white that hid the face, a long gown trailing like fog. The woman’s fingers were papery, hooked like dried vines.
Jade’s breath caught. The weight of the air changed, thicker, colder. Her mouth dried. She tried to take another step and her feet clung to the concrete as if welded. Panic rose like bile.
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