When Agent Locke showed up Monday morning, she had dark circles under her eyes. Belatedly, I remembered that while weโd been watching TV and playing Truth or Dare, she and Briggs had been out working a case. A real case, with real stakes.
Aย real killer.
For a long time, Locke didnโt say anything. โBriggs and I hit a brick wall this weekend,โ she said finally. โWeโve got three bodies, and the killer is escalating.โ She ran a hand through hair that looked like it had been only haphazardly brushed. โThatโs not your problem. Itโs mine, but this case has reminded me that the UNSUB is only half the story. Dean, what can you tell Cassie about victimology?โ
Dean stared holes in the countertop. I hadnโt seen him since Truth or Dare, but it was like nothing had changed between us, like weโd never kissed.
โMost killers have a type,โ he said. โSometimes, itโs a physical type. For others, it may be a matter of convenienceโmaybe you focus on hikers, because no one reports them missing for a few days, or students, because itโs easy to get ahold of their class schedules.โ
Agent Locke nodded. โOccasionally the victims may be serving as a substitute for someone in the UNSUBโs life. Some killers kill their first girlfriend or their wife or their mother, over and over again.โ
โThe other thing victimology tells us,โ Dean continued, flicking his eyes over to Agent Locke, โis how the victim would have reacted to being abducted or attacked. If youโre a killer โฆโ He paused, searching for the right words. โThereโs a give-and-take between you and the people you kill. You choose them. You trap them. Maybe they fight. Maybe they run. Some try to reason with you, some say things that set you off. Either way, you react.โ
โWe donโt have the luxury of knowing every last detail about the UNSUBโs personality,โ Agent Locke cut in, โbut the victimโs personality and behavior account for half of the crime scene.โ
The moment I heard the phraseย crime scene, I flashed back to opening the door to my motherโs dressing room. Iโd always thought that I knew so little about what had happened that day. By the time Iโd gotten back to the dressing room, the killer was gone. My mother was gone. There was so much blood.โฆ
Victimology, I reminded myself. I knew my mother. She would have fought
โnail-scratching, breaking-lamps-over-his-head, struggling-for-the-knifeย fought. And there were only two things that could have stopped her: dying or the realization that I was due back in the room at any second.
What if she went with him?ย The police had assumed she was deadโor at the very least unconsciousโwhen the UNSUB had removed her from the room. But my mother wasnโt a small woman, and the dressing room was on the second floor of the theater. Under normal circumstance, my mother wouldnโt have just let a killer waltz her out the doorโbut she might have done anything to keep her assailant away from me.
โCassie?โ Agent Locke said, snapping me back to the present. โRight,โ I said.
She narrowed her eyes. โRight what?โ
โSorry,โ I told Locke. โCould you repeat what you just said?โ
She gave me a long, appraising look, then repeated herself. โI said that walking through a crime scene from a victimโs perspective can tell you a lot about the killer. Say you go into a victimโs house and you find out that she compulsively writes to-do lists, color-codes her clothes, and has a pet fish. This woman is the third victim, but sheโs the only one of the three who doesnโt have defensive wounds. The killer normally keeps his victims alive for days, but this woman was killed by a strong blow to the head on the day she was taken. Her blouse was buttoned crookedly when they found her.โ
Putting myself into the killerโs head, I could imagine him taking women.
Playing with them. So why would he let this one off easy? Why end his game early, when she showed no signs of fighting back?
Because she showed no signs of fighting back.
I switched perspectives, imagining myself as the victim.ย Iโm organized, orderly, and type A in the extreme. I want a pet, but canโt bring myself to get one that would actually disrupt my life, so I settle for a fish instead. Maybe Iโve read about the previous murders in the paper. Maybe I know how things end for the women who fought back.
So maybe I donโt fight back. Not physically.
The things Locke had told me about the victim said that she was a woman who liked to stay in control. She would have tried reasoning with her killer. She would have resisted his attempts to control her. She might have even tried to manipulate him. And if sheโd succeeded, even for an instant โฆ
โThe UNSUB killed the others for fun,โ I said, โbut he killed her in a fit of rage.โ
Their interaction would have been a game of control for him, tooโand she was just enough of a control freak to disrupt that.
โAnd?โ Agent Locke prompted. I drew a blank.
โHe buttoned her shirt,โ Dean said. โIf sheโd buttoned it, it wouldnโt have been crooked.โ
That observation sent my mind whirring. If heโd killed her in a rage, why would he have dressed her afterward? If heโdย undressed her, I could
understand itโthe final humiliation, the final assertion of control.
You know her, I thought.
โThe UNSUBโs first two victims were chosen randomly.โ Agent Locke met my eyes, and for a second, it felt like she was reading my mind. โWe assumed the third victim was as well. We were wrong.โ Locke rocked back on her heels. โThatโs why you need both sides of the coin. Checks and balances, victims and UNSUBsโbecause youโll always be wrong about something.
Youโll always miss something. What if thereโs a personal connection? What if the UNSUB is older than you thought? What ifย heย is aย she? What if there are two UNSUBs working as a pair? What if the killer is just a kid himself?โ
I knew suddenly that we werenโt talking about the type A woman and the man whoโd killed her anymore. We were talking about the doubts plaguing Lockeย right now, the assumptions sheโd made on her current case. We were talking about an UNSUB that Locke and Briggs hadnโt been able to catch.
โNinety percent of all serial killers are male.โ Sloane announced her presence, then walked up to join us. โSeventy-six percent are American, with a substantial percentage of serial murders concentrated in California, Texas, New York, and Illinois. The vast majority of serial killers are Caucasian, and over eighty-nine percent of victims of serial crimes are Caucasian as well.โ
I could not help noticing that she spoke significantly slower when not under the influence of caffeine.
Briggs followed Sloane into the room. โLacey.โ He got Agent Lockeโs attention. โI just got a call from Starmans. We have body number four.โ
Thinking about those wordsโand what they meantโfelt like eavesdropping, but I couldnโt help myself. Another body. Another person, dead.
Locke clenched her jaw. โSame profile?โ she asked Briggs.
Briggs gave a brisk, slight nod. โA palm reader in Dupont Circle. And the national database search we ran came back with more than one match for our killerโs MO.โ
What MO?ย I couldnโt shake the question, any more than I could stop wondering who this new victim was, if sheโd had a family, who had told them that she was dead.
โThat bad?โ Locke asked, reading Briggsโs face. I wished Michael were there to help me do the same. This case was none of my businessโbut I wanted to know.
โWe should talk elsewhere,โ Briggs said.
Elsewhere. As in somewhere that Sloane, Dean, and I werenโt.
โYou didnโt have trouble coming to Dean for advice when he wasย twelve,โ I said, unable to stop myself. โWhy stop now?โ
Briggsโs eyes darted over to Dean, who met his gaze without blinking.
Clearly, that wasnโt information Dean was supposed to share with the rest of
usโbut just as clearly, Dean wasnโt going to look away first.
โThe flower beds could use some weeding.โ Judd broke the tension, coming into the room to stand between Briggs and Dean. โIf youโre done with the kids for a bit, I can put them to work. Might be good for them to get their hands dirty, get some sun.โ
Judd directed those words at Agent Briggs, but Locke was the one who replied. โItโs fine, Judd.โ She glanced first at Dean, then at me. โThey can stay. Briggs, you were saying the database turned up more than one case with the same MO?โ
For a moment, Briggs looked like he might argue with Locke about letting us stay, but she just stood there, stubbornly waiting him out.
Briggs gave in first. โOur database search returned three cases consistent with our killerโs MO in the past nine months,โ he said, clipping each word. โNew Orleans, Los Angeles, and American Falls.โ
โIllinois?โ Locke asked.
Briggs shook his head. โIdaho.โ
I processed that information. If the cases Briggs was talking about were related, we were dealing with a killer whoโd crossed state lines and had been killing for the better part of a year.
โMy go bag is in the car,โ Locke said, and suddenly, I rememberedโweย werenโt dealing with anything. Locke hadnโt let Briggs shuffle the three of us out of the room, but at the end of the day, this wasnโt a training exercise, and it wasnโtย myย case, or evenย ours.
It wasย theirs.
โWe leave at sixteen hundred hours.โ Briggs straightened his tie. โI left work for Lia, Michael, and Sloane. Locke, do you have anything for Cassie and Deanโbesides weeding the flower beds?โ he added with a glance at Judd.
โIโm not leaving them a cold case.โ Locke turned to me, almost apologetically. โYou have an incredible amount of raw talent, Cass, but youโve spent too much time in the real world and not enough in ours. Not yet.โ
โShe can handle anything you throw at her.โ
I looked at Dean, surprised. He was the last person I expected to be making this argument on my behalf.
โThank you for that glowing endorsement, Dean,โ Locke said, โbut Iโm not going to rush this. Not with her.โ She paused. โLibrary,โ she told me. โThird shelf from the left. Thereโs a series of blue binders. Prison interviews. Make your way through those, and weโll talk about getting you started on cold cases when I get back.โ
โI donโt think thatโs a good idea.โ Deanโs voice was curiously flat. Locke shrugged.
โYouโre the one who said she was ready.โ