chair, stunned.
“What?” he gasped.
Latham stared at Fullerton for several seconds before he spoke again.
“Did you think we wouldn't find out about your drug use, Fullerton? Do you think we're stupid? Was that your intention, to join the Met and show us all how much smarter you are? To rub our noses in our own stupidity?”
Fullerton put his hands on his knees, forcing himself to keep them from clenching.
“I don't know what it is you think that I've done, sir, but I can assure you .. .” He tailed off, lost for words.
“You can assure me of what?” asked Latham.
“Someone has been lying to you, sir.”
“Oh, I'm quite sure of that, Fullerton,” said Latham.
“Whatever they've told you, it's lies. Someone is trying to set me up.”
“Why would anyone do that?” asked Latham.
Fullerton shook his head. His mind whirled. What the hell had happened? What did Latham know? And what did he want?
“Are you denying that you are a regular user of cocaine?” asked Latham.
“Emphatically,” said Fullerton.
“And that you smoke cannabis?”
“I don't even smoke cigarettes, sir. Look, I gave a urine sample as part of the medical, didn't I? Presumably that was tested for drugs use.”
“Indeed it was.”
“And?”
“And the sample you gave was as pure as the driven snow.”
“So there you are. That proves something, doesn't it?”
Latham smiled thinly.
“All it proves is how smart you are, Fullerton. Or how smart you'd like to think you are.”
Fulleiton leaned forward again, trying to seize back the initiative.
“My background was checked, sir. No criminal record, not even a speeding ticket.”
“Are you denying that you take drugs on a regular basis?”
“Yes.”
“And that you were caught dealing cannabis while at university?”
Fullerton's eyes widened and his mouth went dry.
“Caught with three ounces of cannabis resin in the toilets at an end-of-term concert?” Latham continued, his eyes boring into Fullerton's.
Fullerton fought to stop his hands from shaking.
“If that had been the case, sir, I'd have been sent down.”
“Unless your tutor also happened to be a customer. Unless you threatened to expose him if he didn't pull strings to get the matter swept under the metaphorical carpet. Might also explain how you managed to graduate with a first.”
“I got my degree on merit,” said Fullerton, quickly. Too quickly, he realised.
“There's no proof of any of this,” he said.
“It's all hearsay.”
“Hearsay's all we need,” said Latham.
“This isn't a court, there's no jury to convince.”
“Is that what this is all about? A conviction for possession that wouldn't even merit a caution?”
“Do you think I'd be here if that was all that was involved, Fullerton? Don't you think I'd have better things to do than interview someone who thinks it's clever to get high now and again?”
Fullerton swallowed. His nose was itching and he badly wanted to scratch it, but he knew that if he took his hands off his knees they'd start trembling.
“I'm not interested in slapping the wrist of a recreational drug-user, Fullerton, but I am very interested in knowing if you're serious about wanting to be a police officer. A real police officer.”
“Yes, sir. I am.”
Latham looked at Fullerton, his mouth a tight line. He nodded slowly.
“Very well. From this moment on I want absolute truth from you. Do you understand?”
Fullerton licked his lips. His mouth was bone dry.
“Agreed, sir.”
“Thank you,” said Latham.
“Exactly what drugs do you use?”
“Cocaine, sir. Occasionally. Cannabis. Ecstasy on occasions.”
“Heroin?”
“In the past, sir. Only inhaling. Never injecting.”
“LSD?”
“Not since university, sir. I didn't like the loss of control.”
“Would you consider yourself an addict?”
Fullerton shook his head emphatically.
“I don't have an addictive personality, sir. I use because I enjoy it, not because I need it.”
“That's
Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child