I made my way to the library to drown my sorrows in serial killer interviews. Wall-to-wall, ceiling-to-floor bookshelves bulged with carefully organized titles: textbooks, memoirs, biographies, academic journals, and the oddest assortment of fiction Iโd ever seen: old-fashioned dime-store mysteries, romance novels, comic books, Dickens, Tolkien, and Poe.
The third shelf from the left was full of blue binders. I picked up the first one and opened it.
FRIEDMAN, THOMAS OCTOBER 22-28, 1993
FLORIDA STATE PRISON, STARKE, FL
Thomas Friedman. Such a normal-sounding name. Gingerly, I flipped through the transcript: a bare-bones play with a limited cast of characters, no plot, and no resolution. Supervisory Special Agent Cormack Kent was the interviewer. He asked Friedman about his childhood, his parents, his fantasies, the nine women heโd strangled with high-sheen dress hose. Reading Friedmanโs wordsโblack ink typed onto the pageโwould have been bad enough, but the worst part was that after a few pages, I couldย hearย the way he would have talked about the women heโd killed: excitement, nostalgia, longingโbut no remorse.
โYou should sit down.โ
Iโd been expecting someone to join me in the library. I hadnโt expected that someone to be Lia.
โDeanโs not coming,โ Lia said. โHe read those interviews a long time ago.โ โHave you read them?โ I asked.
โSome,โ Lia replied. โMostly, Iโveย heardย them. Briggs gives me the audio.
I play Spot the Lie. Itโs a real party.โ
I realized suddenly that most people my ageโmost peopleย anyย ageโ wouldnโt be able to take reading these interviews. They wouldnโt want to, and they certainly wouldnโt lose themselves in it, the way I would. The way I alreadyย had. Friedmanโs interview was horrible and horrifyingโbut I couldnโt turn off the part of my brain that wanted toย understand.
โWhatโs the deal with you and Dean?โ I asked Lia, forcing myself to think about anything other than the fact that part of meย wantedย to keep reading.
Michael might have told me that he and Lia had hooked upโmore than once
โbut Dean was the one who could dial her back a notch just by saying her
name.
โIโve been in love with him since I was twelve.โ Lia shrugged, like she hadnโt just bared her soul to me. And then I realized, sheย hadnโt.
โOh, God,โ she said, gasping for air between giggles. โYou should see your face. Really, Cassie, Iโm not a fan of incest, and Dean is the closest thing to a brother I have. If I tried to kiss him, he might actually hurl on me.โ
That was comforting. But the fact that it was comforting just sent me right back into the tailspin from that morning: why should Iย careย if there was anything between Lia and Dean, when Michael was the one whoโd kissed me of his own free will?
โLook, as adorable as watching you angst is,โ Lia said, โtake a bit of friendly advice: thereโs not a person in this house who isnโt really, truly, fundamentally screwed up to the depths of their dark and shadowy souls. Including you. Including Dean. Including Michael.โ
That sounded more like an insult than advice.
โDean would want me to tell you to stay away from him,โ Lia said. โAnd Michael?โ I asked.
Lia shrugged. โIย want to tell you to stay away from Michael.โ She paused. โI wonโt, but I want to.โ
I waited to see if she was finished. She didnโt say anything else. โAs far as advice goes, that kind of sucked.โ
Lia executed an elaborate bow. โI try.โ Her eyes flitted back to the binder in my hand. โDo me a favor?โ
โWhat kind of favor?โ
Lia gestured to the binder. โIf youโre going to read those,โ she said, โdonโt say anything about them to Dean.โ
โ โ โ
For the next four days, Locke and Briggs were away working on their case, and other than avoiding Michael and Dean and weeding the flower beds for Judd, there was nothing for me to do but read. And read. And read. A thousand pages of interviews later, I got sick of being cooped up in the library and decided to take a little field trip. I took a walk through town and ended up plopping down by the Potomac River, enjoying the view and reading interview twenty-seven, binder twelve. The 1990s had given way to the twenty-first century, and SSA Kent had been replaced by a series of other agentsโamong them, Agent Briggs.
โEnjoying a bit of light reading?โ
I looked up to see a man around my dadโs age. He had a five-oโclock shadow and a friendly smile on his face.
I shifted so that my arm covered my reading material in case he decided to
look. โSomething like that.โ โYou looked pretty absorbed.โ
Then why did you interrupt me?ย I wanted to ask. Either heโd sought me out specifically, or he was the kind of person who didnโt see the contradiction in interrupting someoneโs reading to tell her she looked absorbed in the text.
โYou live at Juddโs place, right?โ he said. โHe and I go way back.โ
I relaxed slightly, but still had no intention of getting sucked into a conversation about my reading materialโor anything else. โItโs nice to meet you,โ I said in my best waitress voice, hoping heโd sense a false note under the cheerfulness in my voice and leave me to my own devices.
โEnjoying the weather?โ he asked me. โSomething like that.โ
โI canโt take you anywhere.โ Michael appeared on my other side and eased himself onto the ground next to me. โSheโs too gregarious for her own good,โ he told the man standing next to us. โAlways chatting up complete strangers. Frankly, I think she over-shares. Itโs embarrassing.โ
I put the heel of my hand on Michaelโs shoulder and shoved, but couldnโt push down the stab of gratitude I felt that I was no longer suffering through Small Town Talk Time alone.
โWell,โ the man said. โI didnโt mean to interrupt. I just wanted to say hello.โ
Michael nodded austerely. โHow do you do?โ
I waited until our visitor was out of earshot before I turned to him. โโHow do you doโ?โ I repeated incredulously.
Michael shrugged. โSometimes,โ he said, โwhen Iโm in a social pickle, I like to ask myself, WWJAD?โ I raised an eyebrow, and he explained. โWhat Would Jane Austen Do?โ
If Michael read Jane Austen, I was the heir to the British throne. โWhat are you doing here?โ I asked him.
โRescuing you,โ he answered blithely. โWhat are you doing here?โ I gestured to the binder. โReading.โ
โAnd avoiding me?โ he asked.
I repositioned my body and hoped the glare from the sun would compromise his view of my face. โIโm not avoiding anyone. I just wanted to be alone.โ
Michael brought his hand up to his face to shield it from the sun. โYou wanted to be alone,โ he repeated. โTo read.โ
โThatโs why Iโm here,โ I said defensively. โThatโs why weโre all here. To learn.โ
Not to obsess over the fact that Iโve kissed more boys in the past week than I have in my entire life, I added silently. To my surprise, Michael didnโt comment on the emotions I had to be broadcasting. He just reclined next to
me and held up some reading material of his own. โJane Austen,โ I said, disbelieving.
Michael gestured toward my binder. โCarry on.โ
For fifteen or twenty minutes, the two of us read in silence. I finished interview twenty-seven and started in on number twenty-eight.
REDDING, DANIEL JANUARY 15โ18, 2007
VIRGINIA STATE PENITENTIARY, RICHMOND, VA
I almost missed it, would have missed it had the name not been printed over and over again, documenting this particular serial killerโs every word.
Redding.ย Redding.ย Redding.
The interviewer was Agent Briggs. The subjectโs name was Redding, and heโd been incarcerated in Virginia. I stopped breathing. My mouth went suddenly dry. I flipped through the pages, faster and faster, skimming at warp speed until Daniel Redding asked Briggs a question about his son.
Dean.