Read The Theory of Death Online

Authors: Faye Kellerman

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense

The Theory of Death (25 page)

“Elijah Wolf.”

“Oh dear.” Gold shook his head. “I remember that name. He applied here and was accepted. We offered him a full scholarship, but he turned it down.”

“His family wanted to keep him closer to home. He decided on Kneed Loft.”

“It’s certainly a fine college. He committed suicide? What happened, if I can ask?”

“We don’t know, Mordy,” Decker said. “By all accounts, he was a quiet, well-mannered kid who was obsessed with math. His friends didn’t see any telltale signs. But I don’t think most of them were close friends, nor were they clued in to his emotional ups and downs. No note was left. The tox screen was negative. Who knows what he was thinking?”

“And you’re sure it’s suicide?”

“That is the coroner’s ruling. In light of Belfort’s death, we might have another look at the case.”

Gold flipped through Eli’s pages. “This is Fourier analysis … that’s a cousin to Fourier transforms, but the uses are different. These pages seem to be dealing with the analysis of complex waves and breaking them down into smaller simpler waves.” A pause. “Could I see the first set of papers again?”

“Of course.” McAdams handed him the pages.

“Okay …” Gold looked at the math side by side. “Two different things going on here. She’s using transforms, and in light of what you told me, the calculations probably are related to the stock market. Eli’s doing integration that involves eigenvectors … you know what an eigenvector is?”

Decker said, “Something where a part represents a whole?”

“No, that’s more like fractals.”

“You can start at the beginning,” Decker said. “Math wasn’t my strong suit.”

“Math is one of those things that you either love or hate. No one feels neutral about it. Anyway, a vector is simply a line with direction. It’s marked by a starting point on one end and an arrow on the end representing infinity. When you stretch a vector in space, it warps. Most vectors will change directions. An eigenvector is a specialized subset of vectors. When you stretch an eigenvector, the direction remains the same no matter how you stretch it. It’s an important concept that is used in a variety of applied sciences. In engineering, for instance, if you apply an outside force onto a building, like a wind shear, you want to know how it will affect the stability of the components—the steel, the cement, the wood, the bolts and nuts. Eigenvectors will move in the same direction. The amount of stretch they move by is a multiple of a scalar, which is nothing more than a number. That number is called an eigenvalue. This is probably way more than you need to know.”

McAdams said, “Actually your explanation is almost identical to what Rina had told us.”

“You were a math major in college?” Gold asked her.

“I got as far as linear algebra,” Rina said. “I had a baby at home and then another one on the way, so college was a lot for me to take on. Then we moved to Israel.”

“You lived in Israel?” Gold asked Decker.

“This was with her first husband, Isaac.”

“He passed when we were both very young.” Rina’s eyes watered. She hit Decker’s shoulder. “Then this bum came around.”

“Poor you.” Decker smiled. “You know, Rina? Tyler’s right. You’re a very good teacher.”

Gold said, “Maybe you should think about finishing your BA. We’re open to applications.”

“Now, there’s a thought.” She turned to Decker. “What do you think?”

“Go for it.”

“Right.”

“I’m serious. ‘If not now, when?’ to quote Hillel.”

McAdams cleared his throat. “Uh, I do have a study group to catch, so can we get back to the case?” To Gold: “You were saying that Eli’s papers are different from Belfort’s papers?”

“Related, but not the same thing.”

McAdams handed Gold a final set of papers. “These are also from Elijah Wolf. We found them hidden behind a drawer in his dorm room.”

“Okay …” Gold gave them a once-through. “These equations seem to be more related to Dr. Belfort’s papers. These are Fourier transforms. They are different calculations from the ones pulled from Belfort, but it’s the same methodology.”

“Okay,” Decker said. “So the papers that Elijah asked his brother to hide are dealing with something different from the first and third set?”

“I can’t tell you positively without knowing the context,” Gold told him. “All I’m saying is that the calculations in the first and third set are dealing with Fourier transforms and the second set is Fourier analysis and eigenvectors. And I don’t know what the math was being used for.”

“Got it,” Decker said. “There’s nothing unusual about the math in the second set of papers that deal with eigenvectors?”

“Nope. Of course, Elijah could have been using the math to solve a revolutionary problem, but the math is simple.”

“Thanks,” Decker said. “That was helpful.”

“Great.” Gold looked at his watch. “That took all of twenty minutes. Lunch? I got some kosher sandwiches. If you don’t have time, you can pack them up and take them with you.”

Decker looked at Rina, who said, “I’m in no hurry.”

Gold clapped his hands. “Great. I’ll have my secretary bring them here. We can really catch up. I am curious about the Belfort case.”

“You and me both,” McAdams said. “Unfortunately, there’s a study group due to convene in about a half hour.”

“Good man,” Decker said.

“Can I talk to you in private for a moment?”

Decker tried to read the kid’s face. He was stoic. “Sure.”

The two men got up and went outside into the hallway. McAdams said, “Can we strike a deal? If I spend the next couple of hours deep in my law books, can I please come back with you?”

“Tyler—”

“Don’t make me beg, boss.”

“And here I thought you pulled me aside to lay some insights on me after our meeting with Gold.”

“I have a couple of those as well.”

“I’m listening.”

“How about we save them for the ride back.” McAdams smiled. “Please let me sleep without the sounds of inebriated students banging into walls and/or throwing up? As I said, my walls are very thin.
Please
?”

Decker rolled his eyes. “You’d better fucking pass.”

“I know what’s at stake. I
promise
you I’ll pass.”

Decker shook his head and headed back into Gold’s office.

McAdams grinned as he shouted, “I’ll take that as a yes.”

WITH HIS HEAD
swimming in facts and case history, McAdams cornered the building and collided with Mallon Euler. She was wrapped in a knee-length wool coat, a scarf around her neck, a ski hat on her head, gloves on her hands, and combat boots on her feet. Her big blue eyes were cast downward.

“Mallon?” he said. “What are you
doing
here?”

“I heard you went to Boston. I was wondering if I could stay with you.”

“I thought you were staying with Damodar.”

“I was, but I don’t fully trust him. I think he may be part of the problem. Can I?”

“Can you what?”

“Can I stay with you?”

“No, Mallon, you can’t stay with me. First of all, I’m not staying here. I’m going back to Greenbury.”

“Why?”

“Because I’m still working on the case with Detective Decker.”

“Tyler, I’m scared to be alone and I’m scared to be with Damodar. I don’t know who to trust except I trust you.”

“Thank you for your confidence in me, but that doesn’t mean we can be roomies.”

“It’s just temporary.”

“No, you may not move in with me.” McAdams shuffled his feet. “Look, I’m meeting up with the Deckers, and the three of us are going home together. How about if we talk when we’re all back in Greenbury, okay?”

“If you’re going back, can I hitch a ride back with you?”

“Oh God …”

“Please? Please, please,
please
?”

“Stop, stop.” He exhaled. “I’ll ask them. Come on.”

He fast-walked ahead of her, but she caught up. “This is a very big campus.”

“It’s a university, not a college.”

“All you geniuses walking around … you must feel very special.”

“Don’t you start on me! I get enough crap from Greenbury police.”

“I’d feel special.”

“Fine. You can take my special. It’s never done me any good.”

She suddenly brightened. “You know, I could sleep in Decker’s car.”

“Absolutely not. For one thing, you’ll freeze to death.”

“They don’t garage it?”

“It’s out of the question.”

“How about the police station? I’ll bring my own bedding.”

“No.”

“Could you slow down?”

McAdams complied. “Look, Mallon. I know you’re freaked out. I understand completely. I was really antsy after I was shot. It’s a real violation. But you have to make some workable arrangements for your living quarters. If you don’t trust Damodar, find someone else.”

“Fine, fine. I’ll just stay with Damodar. I suppose it’ll be okay since you’ll be there … in town, I mean.”

“I’ll be there for about a week. Then I really have to come back here and take my finals. And you can’t bunk down in my apartment. It’s too small and it’s totally unprofessional. No, no, no!”

“You don’t have to be so rude about it.”

McAdams stopped and held her bundled shoulders. “Look, Mallon. You’re a very smart girl. And maybe once you graduate from Kneed Loft and the case is all done and resolved and it isn’t ten below outside, we can go out for a nice dinner … at least, a dinner other than Indian buffet. But not now, okay? Now is not the right time for either of us. Got it?”

A big smile graced her lips. “You want to take me out for dinner?”

McAdams slapped his forehead. “Let’s get going before Peter decides to leave without me.”

“He wouldn’t do that.”

“Rina wouldn’t, but Decker would with a cherry on top.”

CHAPTER 23

M
CADAMS DROVE, DECKER
sat shotgun, while the women took up the backseat. The car was quiet for the first half hour since business wasn’t discussed with Mallon in tow. Rina was drifting off. The silence gave Decker a chance to close his eyes and think. A few minutes later, Mallon spoke up.

“Thank you for taking me back.”

“No problem.” Rina opened her eyes and stretched. “Who wants coffee?”

“I’m off caffeine,” Mallon told her.

“Then I guess you won’t be drinking coffee.”

“I’m gonna just put this out there,” McAdams said. “You follow us up here and it’s not just to feel safe. You’ve got to level with us. What are you after?”

Mallon crossed her arms in a huff. “I assume you’re talking to me.”

“Correct.”

“Maybe this conversation is best held another time,” Rina said.

“No, Tyler’s right,” Decker said. “What’s going on, Mallon?”

“Nothing!” she insisted.

Silence.

Then more silence.

She sighed. “You had Eli’s papers looked at?”

“Aha!” McAdams said. “Now we’re getting to the root of all evil.”

“Yes, we had the papers looked at,” Decker said. “Eli wasn’t working on any revolutionary math.”

“How do you know that?” Mallon asked.


I
don’t know,” McAdams said. “But the guy at Harvard does. He told us the math was simple.”

“Maybe he’s lying.”

Decker said, “Why would he do that?”

“Oh rubbish!” Mallon said. “I’m just going to put it all out there since you put it all out there, okay?”

“That would be refreshing,” McAdams said.

“Ha, ha, ha.” Mallon paused. “The papers that have to do with Dr. Belfort … I’m not interested, okay. I know all about them. And you know all about them. Or at least you know what she was doing because Damodar told you.”

“Is he leveling with us?” Decker asked.

“Yeah, he is as far as I know.”

“Could he have also been doing something else for her?”

“Sure. We’re not close. He doesn’t trust me and I don’t trust him. At least we both know where we stand, and that’s more than I can say for most of the people I know.”

Decker said, “Mallon, if you’re not interested in Belfort’s shenanigans, what are you interested in?”

She exhaled. “Before Eli died, he told me that he was doing important research somewhere else. He didn’t want anyone to find out about it because he could get into trouble and also get the professor in trouble.”

“Which professor?”

“He didn’t say.”

“So he never mentioned Lennaeus Tolvard?” Decker asked.

“Oh … so you know.”

“Apparently we do, and some faculty members know as well.”

“Oh … okay. He swore me to secrecy.”

“What was the research about?”

“I don’t know—”

“Mal—”

“Honestly, I don’t know. I’m sure it had to do with eigenvalues and eigenvectors and Fourier analysis, which is what he was studying. Anyway, he told me he wanted
me
to take over his research if something happened to him.” Her eyes suddenly watered. “I asked him what could possibly happen to him … what he was worried about.”

“And?”

“He told me everything was fine. But this was a just-in-case … because he trusted me with his stuff. I had no idea he was thinking about suicide. If I knew, I would have said something. He was never an emotional guy, but certainly he didn’t seem upset or depressed. It was just an odd conversation. He brought it up once and he never mentioned it again.”

“When was this?” McAdams asked.

“About three months ago.”

Decker said, “And you never thought to tell us about this conversation?”

“He wanted to keep it private and I was trying to honor his request, especially since I wasn’t sure how he died. Then this all happened with Professor Belfort. I thought everything might be related.”

“Which is why you should have told us,” McAdams replied.

“Mallon, do you think Eli’s death and Katrina’s murder are related?” Decker asked.

“How should I know? That’s
your
job, right?”

“You’re a smart lady. I’m just interested in your thoughts.”

She was quiet. Then she said, “I dunno. Maybe the timing was a coincidence, but it’s a weird one if it is, right?”

Decker nodded. “Right.”

“All I’m saying is if you have Eli’s personal research papers, he would have wanted me to have them. Do you have his papers?”

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