donât know who he is. Iâve told youeverything I can think of. He has threatened the governor. He murdered that poor old woman in front of the museum. Iâm not making anything up. Iâm not nuts and Iâm not on drugs.â
It did no good. They didnât believe her.
The three men lined up along the wall of the interrogation room didnât say a word. One of them simply nodded to Detective Gordon as Becca walked out of the room.
Â
T hirty minutes later, Becca Matlock was seated in a very comfortable chair in a small office that had only two narrow windows that looked across at two other narrow windows. Across the desk sat Dr. Burnett, a man somewhere in his forties, nearly bald, wearing designer glasses. He looked intense and tired.
âWhat I donât understand,â Becca said, sitting forward, âis why the police wonât believe me.â
âWeâll get to that. Now, you didnât want to speak with me?â
âIâm sure youâre a very nice man, but no, I donât need to speak to you, at least not professionally.â
âThe police officers arenât certain about that, Ms. Matlock. Now, why donât you tell me, in your own words, a bit about yourself and exactly when this stalker first came to your attention.â
Yet again, she thought. Her voice was flat because sheâd said the same words so many times. Hard to feel anything saying them now. âIâm a senior speechwriter for Governor Bledsoe. I live in a very nice condominium on Oak Street in Albany. Two and a half weeks ago, I got the first phone call. No heavy breathing, no profanity, nothing like that. He just said heâd seen me running in the park, and he wanted to get to know me. He wouldnât tell me who he was. He said I would come to know him very well. He said he wanted to be my boyfriend. I told him to leave me alone and hung up.â
âDid you tell any friends or the governor about the call?â
âNot until after he called me another two times. Thatâs when he told me to stop sleeping with the governor. He said he was my boyfriend, and I wasnât going to sleep with any other man. In a very calm voice, he said that if I didnât stop sleeping with the governor, heâd just have to kill him. Naturally, when I told the governor about this, everyone licensed to carry a gun within a ten-mile radius was on it.â
He didnât even crack a smile, just kept staring at her.
Becca found she really didnât care. She said, âThey tapped my phone immediately, but somehow he knew they had. They couldnât find him. They said he was using some sort of electronic scrambler that kept giving out fake locations.â
âAnd are you sleeping with Governor Bledsoe, Ms. Matlock?â
Sheâd heard that question a good dozen times, too, over and over, especially from Detective Gordon. She even managed a smile. âActually, no. I donât suppose youâve noticed, but he is old enough to be my father.â
âWe had a president old enough to be your father and a woman even younger than you are and neither of them had a problem with that concept.â
She wondered if Governor Bledsoe could ever survive a Monica and almost smiled. She just shrugged.
âSo, Ms. Matlock, are you sleeping with the governor?â
Sheâd discovered that at the mention of sex, everyone âmedia folk, cops, friendsâhomed right in on it. It still offended her, but she had answered the question so often the edge was off now. She shrugged again, seeing that it bothered him, and said, âNo, I havenât slept with Governor Bledsoe. I have never wanted to sleep with Governor Bledsoe. I write speeches for him, really fine speeches. I donât sleep with him. I even occasionally write speeches for Mrs. Bledsoe. I donât sleep with her, either.
âNow, I have no clue why the man believes that I am having sex with the