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Chapter no 4

Killer Instinct (The Naturals, 2)

โ€œWell, sheโ€™s not lying.โ€ Lia broke the silence. โ€œSheโ€™s really a special agent, her name really is Veronica Sterling, and for some reason, sheโ€™sโ€Œ

operating under the misguided belief that she resides under our roof.โ€

โ€œLia, I presume?โ€ Agent Sterling said. โ€œThe one who specializes in lies.โ€ โ€œTelling them, spotting themโ€”itโ€™s all the same.โ€ Lia executed a graceful

little shrug, but her eyes were hard.

โ€œAnd yet,โ€ Agent Sterling continued, ignoring both the shrug and the intensity of Liaโ€™s gaze, โ€œyou interacted on a daily basis with an FBI agent who was moonlighting as a serial killer. She was one of your supervisors, a constant presence in this house forย years, and no alarm bells went off.โ€ Agent Sterlingโ€™s tone was clinicalโ€”just stating the facts.

Locke had fooled us all.

โ€œAnd you,โ€ Agent Sterling said, her eyes lighting on mine, โ€œmust be Cassandra Hobbes. I hadnโ€™t pegged you for the type to play strip poker. And no, you donโ€™t get credit for being the only person in this room besides me whoโ€™s still wearing a shirt.โ€

Agent Sterling pointedly turned her attention from me to the pile of clothes on the coffee table. She folded her arms over her chest and waited. Dean reached for his shirt and tossed Liaโ€™s to her. Michael didnโ€™t appear overly bothered by the crossed arms, nor did he seem at all compelled to get

dressed. Agent Sterling stared down the length of her nose at him, her gaze settling on the bullet scar on his chest.

โ€œI take it youโ€™re Michael,โ€ she said. โ€œThe emotion reader with the attitude problem whoโ€™s continually doing stupid things for girls.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s hardly a fair assessment,โ€ Michael replied. โ€œI do plenty of stupid things that arenโ€™t for girls, too.โ€

Special Agent Veronica Sterling didnโ€™t show even the slightest inclination to smile. Turning back to the rest of us, she finished her introduction. โ€œThis program has a vacancy for a supervisor. Iโ€™m here to fill it.โ€

โ€œTrue,โ€ Lia said, drawing out the word, โ€œbut not the whole story.โ€ When Agent Sterling didnโ€™t rise to the bait, Lia continued. โ€œItโ€™s been six weeks since Locke went off the deep end. We were starting to wonder if the FBI would ever send a replacement.โ€ She raked her eyes over Agent Sterling. โ€œWhere did they find you, central casting? One young female agent swapped in for another?โ€

Trust Lia to cut through the niceties.

โ€œLetโ€™s just say Iโ€™m uniquely qualified for the position,โ€ Agent Sterling replied. Her no-nonsense tone reminded me of something. Of someone. For the first time, her last name sank in, and I realized where Iโ€™d heard it before.

โ€œAgent Sterling,โ€ I said. โ€œAs in Director Sterling?โ€

Iโ€™d only met the FBI director once. Heโ€™d gotten involved when the serial killer Locke and Briggs were hunting had kidnapped a senatorโ€™s daughter. At the time, none of us had known that the UNSUBโ€”orย Unknown Subjectโ€” was Locke.

โ€œDirector Sterling is my father.โ€ Agent Sterlingโ€™s voice was neutralโ€”too neutral, and I wondered what daddy issues she had. โ€œHe sent me here to do damage control.โ€

Director Sterling had chosen his own daughter as Lockeโ€™s replacement. Sheโ€™d arrived when Agent Briggs was out of town on a case. I doubted the timing was accidental.

โ€œBriggs told me you left the FBI,โ€ Dean said quietly, addressing the words to Agent Sterling. โ€œI heard you transferred to Homeland Security.โ€

โ€œI did.โ€

I tried to pinpoint the expression on Agent Sterlingโ€™s face, the tone of her voice. She and Dean knew each otherโ€”that much was clear, both from Deanโ€™s earlier statement and from the way her face softened, almost imperceptibly, when she looked at him.

A maternal streak?ย I wondered. That didnโ€™t fit with the way she was dressed, her super-erect posture, the way she talkedย aboutย the rest of us rather thanย toย us. My first impression of Agent Sterling was that she was hypercontrolled, professional, and kept other people at a distance. She either didnโ€™t like teenagers, or she disliked us specifically.

But the way sheโ€™d looked at Dean, even if it was only for a secondโ€ฆ

You werenโ€™t always this way,ย I thought, slipping into her head.ย Tying your hair back in French knots, keeping your every statement clinical and detached. Something happened to send you into hyperprofessional mode.

โ€œIs there something youโ€™d care to share with the class, Cassandra?โ€

Whatever sliver of softness had crept into Agent Sterlingโ€™s expression disappeared now. Sheโ€™d caught me profiling her and called me out. That told me two things. First, based on the way sheโ€™d chosen to do so, I sensed a hint of sarcasm buried beneath her humorless exterior. At some point in her life, she would have said those words with a grin instead of a grimace.

And secondโ€ฆ

โ€œYouโ€™re a profiler,โ€ I said out loud. Sheโ€™d caught me profiling her, and I couldnโ€™t keep from thinking,ย It takes one to know one.

โ€œWhat makes you think that?โ€

โ€œThey sent you here to replace Agent Locke.โ€ Saying those wordsโ€” seeing her as a replacementโ€”hurt more than it should have.

โ€œAnd?โ€ Agent Sterlingโ€™s voice was high and clear, but her eyes were hard. This was a challenge, as clear as the earlier subtext between Michael and Dean.

โ€œProfilers put people in boxes,โ€ I said, meeting Agent Sterlingโ€™s eyes and refusing to look away first. โ€œWe take in an assortment of random details, and we use those details to construct the big picture, to figure out whatย kindย of person weโ€™re dealing with. Itโ€™s there in the way you talk: Michaelโ€™s โ€˜the emotion reader with the attitude problem,โ€™ you didnโ€™t โ€˜peg meโ€™ for being the type to play strip poker.โ€

I paused, and when she didnโ€™t reply, I continued, โ€œYou read our files, and you profiled us before you ever stepped foot in this house, which means you know exactly how much itย kills usย that we didnโ€™t see Agent Locke for what she was, and you either wanted to see how weโ€™d deal with you mentioning it, or you just wanted to pick at the wound for kicks.โ€ I paused and raked my eyes over her body, taking in all the tiny detailsโ€”her fingernail polish, her posture, her shoes. โ€œYou seem like more of a masochist than a sadist, so Iโ€™m guessing you just wanted to see how weโ€™d respond.โ€

The room fell into an uncomfortable silence, and Agent Sterling wielded that silence like a weapon. โ€œI donโ€™t need you to lecture me on what it means to be a profiler,โ€ she said finally, her voice soft, her words measured. โ€œI have a bachelorโ€™s in criminology. I was the youngest person ever to graduate from the FBI Academy. I clocked more field time during my stint at the FBI than you will see in your entire life, and Iโ€™ve spent the past five years with Homeland Security, working on domestic terrorism cases. While I am residing in this house, you will address me as Agent Sterling or maโ€™am, and you will not refer to yourself as a profiler, because at the end of the day, youโ€™re just a kid.โ€

There it was again in her voice, the hint of something else beneath her frosty exterior. But like a person staring at an object trapped under several feet of ice, I couldnโ€™t make out what thatย somethingย was.

โ€œThere is no โ€˜weโ€™ here, Cassandra. Thereโ€™s you, and thereโ€™s me, and thereโ€™s the evaluation Iโ€™m writing of this program. So I suggest that you all clean this mess up, go to bed, and get a good nightโ€™s sleep.โ€ She tossed Michael his shirt. โ€œYouโ€™re going to need it.โ€

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