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Chapter no 5

The Naturals

I gave Agent Briggs the go-ahead to talk to my father. My father called me. Less than a week after I told my dad this was what I wanted, I got word that Briggs had obtained the necessary permissions. My paperwork had gone through. That night, I quit my job at the diner. I took a shower, changed into my pajamas, and prepared for World War III.

I was going to do this. Iโ€™d known that from almost the moment that Agent Briggs had started speaking. I cared about my grandmother. I did. And I knew how hard she and the rest of the family had tried to make me feel loved, no matter how Iโ€™d come to them or how much of my mother there was in me. But Iโ€™d never really belonged here. A part of me had never really left that fateful theater: the lights, the crowd, the blood. Maybe I never would, but Agent Briggs was offering me a chance to do something about it.

I might never solve my own motherโ€™s murder, but this program would turn me into the kind of person who could catch killers, who could make sure that another little girl, in another life, with another mother, would never have to see what I had seen.

It was morbid and horrifying and the very last life the family would have imagined for meโ€”and I wanted it more than I had ever wanted anything.

I combed my fingers through my hair. Wet, it looked dark enough to pass for brown instead of auburn. The steam from the shower had brought some color into my cheeks. I looked like the type of girl who could belong here, with this family.

With wet hair, I didnโ€™t look so much like my mother.

โ€œChicken.โ€ I leveled the insult at my own reflection and then pushed back from the mirror. I could stay here until my hair driedโ€”in fact, I could stay here until my hair went grayโ€”and that wouldnโ€™t make the conversation I was about to have any easier.

Downstairs, Nonna was curled up in a recliner in the living room, reading glasses perched on her nose and a large-print romance novel open in her lap. She looked up the second I stepped in the room, her eagle eyes sharp.

โ€œYou are ready for bed early,โ€ she said, no small amount of suspicion in her voice. Nonna had successfully raised eight children. If Iโ€™d been the type to make trouble, there would have been none that I could have stirred up that she hadnโ€™t already seen.

โ€œI quit my job today,โ€ I said, and the sparkle in her eyes told me those had been the wrong words to lead with. โ€œI donโ€™t need you to get me a new one,โ€ I added hastily.

Nonna made a dismissive sound under her breath. โ€œOf course not. You areย independent. You do not need anything from your old Nonna. You do not care if she worries.โ€

Well, this was going well.

โ€œI donโ€™t want you to worry,โ€ I said, โ€œbut somethingโ€™s come up. An opportunity.โ€

Iโ€™d already made the executive decision that Nonna didnโ€™t need to know what Iโ€™d be doingโ€”or why. I stuck to the cover story that Agent Briggs had given me. โ€œThereโ€™s a school,โ€ I said. โ€œA special program. The director came to see me last week.โ€

Nonna harrumphed. โ€œHe talked to Dad.โ€

โ€œThe director of this program talked to your father,โ€ Nonna repeated. โ€œAnd what did my son say to this man who could not be bothered to introduce himself to me?โ€

I explained as much as I could. I gave her a pamphlet that Agent Briggs had given meโ€”one that didnโ€™t mention words likeย profilingย orย serial killersย orย FBI.

โ€œItโ€™s a small program,โ€ I said. โ€œAt a kind of group home.โ€

โ€œAnd your father, he said you could go?โ€ Nonna narrowed her eyes at the smiling kids on the front of the pamphlet, like they were personally responsible for leading her precious granddaughter astray.

โ€œHe already signed the papers, Nonna.โ€ I looked down at my hands, which had woven themselves together at my waist. โ€œIโ€™m going to go.โ€

There was silence. Then a sharp intake of breath. And then an explosion.

I didnโ€™t speak Italian, but based on the emphatic gestures and the way she was spitting out the words, I was able to make an educated guess at a translation.

Nonnaโ€™s granddaughter was moving cross-country to enroll in a government-sponsored gifted program over her dead and rotting corpse.

โ€” โ€” โ€”

Nobody stages an intervention like my fatherโ€™s family stages an intervention. The Bat-Signal had nothing on the Battaglia-Signal, and less than twenty-four hours after Nonna sent out the distress call, the family had gathered in force. There was yelling and screaming and cryingโ€”and food. Lots of food. I was threatened and cajoled, browbeaten and clasped to multiple bosoms. But for the first time since Iโ€™d met this half of my family tree, I couldnโ€™t just temper my reactions to theirs. I couldnโ€™t give them what they wanted. I couldnโ€™tย pretend.

The noise built to a crescendo, and I drew into myself and waited for it to

pass. Eventually, theyโ€™d notice that I wasnโ€™t saying anything.

โ€œCassie, sweetheart, arenโ€™t you happy here?โ€ one of my aunts asked finally. The rest of the table fell silent.

โ€œIโ€™m โ€ฆโ€ I couldnโ€™t say any more than that. I saw the realization pass over their faces. โ€œItโ€™s not that Iโ€™m not happy,โ€ I interjected quickly. โ€œItโ€™s just โ€ฆโ€

For once, they heard what Iย wasnโ€™tย saying. From the moment theyโ€™d learned of my existence, Iโ€™d been family to them. They hadnโ€™t realized that in my own eyes, Iโ€™d always beenโ€”and maybe always would beโ€”an outsider.

โ€œI need to do this,โ€ I said, my voice as quiet as theirs had been loud. โ€œFor my mom.โ€

That was closer to the truth than Iโ€™d ever meant to tell them.

โ€œYou think your mother would have wanted you to do this?โ€ Nonna asked. โ€œTo leave the family that loves you, that will take care of you, to go off to the other side of the country, alone, to do God knows what?โ€

It was meant as a rhetorical question, but I answered it: vehemently, decisively.

โ€œYes.โ€ I paused, expecting an argument, but I didnโ€™t get one. โ€œI know you donโ€™t like it, and I hope you donโ€™t hate me for it, but I have to do this.โ€ I stood up. โ€œI leave in three days. Iโ€™d really like to come back for Christmas, but if you donโ€™t want me here, Iโ€™d understand.โ€

Nonna crossed the room in a second, surprisingly spry for someone her age. She poked a vicious finger into my chest. โ€œYou come home for Christmas,โ€ she said in a manner that made it quite clear she considered it an order. โ€œYou even think about not coming home?โ€ She narrowed her eyes and drew her poking finger across her neck in a menacing fashion.ย โ€œCapisce?โ€

A smile tugged at the edge of my lips, and tears burned in my eyes.

โ€œCapisce.โ€

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