Dโean skipped dinner. Judd fixed a plate for him and put it in the refrigerator. I wondered if Judd was used to Dean disappearing forโ
hours on end. Maybe, when Dean had first come here, that had been a normal thing. I found myself thinking more and more about that Deanโthe twelve-year-old whose father had been arrested for serial murder.
You knew what he was doing.ย I slipped into Deanโs perspective without even meaning to.ย You couldnโt stop it.
Empathizing with Dean: his feelings toward his father, what staring at that girlโs corpse must have done to himโI couldnโt tuck that away in a separate section of my psyche. I could feel it bleeding over into my own thoughts. Right now, Dean was almost certainly thinking about the fact that he had a killerโs blood in his veins. And I had Lockeโs in mine. Maybe Lia was right. Maybe I couldnโt really understand what Dean was going through
โbut being a profiler meant I couldnโt stop trying to. I couldnโt keep from feeling his pain and recognizing in it an echo of my own.
After dinner, I meant to go upstairs, but my feet carried me toward the garage. I stopped, just outside the door. I could hear the muted sound of flesh hitting somethingโover and over, again and again. I brought my hand up to the doorknob, then pulled it back.
He doesnโt want you here,ย I reminded myself. But at the same time, I couldnโt keep from thinking that maybe shutting the rest of us out was less
about what Dean wanted and more about what he wouldnโt let himself want. There was a chanceโa good oneโthat Dean didnโtย needย to be alone so much as he thought being alone was what he deserved.
Of its own volition, my hand reached out again. This time, I turned the knob. The door opened a crack, and the sound of heavy breathing added itself to the rhythmicย thwack thwack thwackย Iโd heard before. A breath hitching in my throat, I pushed the door open. Dean didnโt see me.
His blond hair was beaded with sweat and stuck to his forehead. A thin white undershirt clung to his torso, soaked and nearly transparent. I could make out the lines of his stomach, his chest. His shoulders were bare, the muscles so tense that I thought they might snap like rubber bands or fight their way out from underneath his tanned skin.
Thwack. Thwack. Thwack.
His fists collided with a punching bag. It came back at him, and he fought harder. The rhythm of hits was getting faster, and with each punch, he put more and more of his body into it. His fists were bare.
I wasnโt sure how long I stood there, watching him. There was something animal about the motions, something feral and vicious. My profilerโs eye saw each punch layered with meaning.ย Losing control, controlled. Punishment, release.ย Heโd welcome the pain in his knuckles. He wouldnโt be able to stop.
I took a few steps closer, but stayed out of range. This time, I didnโt make the mistake of trying to touch him. His eyes were locked on the bag, unseeing. I wasnโt sure who he was striking out atโhis father or himself. All I knew was that if he didnโt stop, something was going to giveโthe bag, his hands, his body, his mind.
He had to snap out of it.
โI kissed you.โ I wasnโt sure what possessed me to say that, but I had to sayย something. I could see the moment the words broke through to him. His
movements became slightly more measured; I could feel him regaining awareness of the world around him.
โIt doesnโt matter.โ He continued punching the bag. โIt was just a game.โ
Truth or Dare.ย He was right. It was just a game. So why did I feel like someone had slapped me?
Dean finally stopped punching the bag. He was breathing heavily, his whole body moving with each breath. Casting a sideways glance at me, he spoke again. โYou deserve better.โ
โBetter than a game?โ I asked.ย Or better than you?
Dean didnโt reply. I knew, then, that this wasnโt really about me. Dean wasnโt seeingย me. This was about some make-believe, idealized Cassie heโd built up in his head, something to torment himself with. A girl whoย deservedย things. A girl he could neverย deserve. I hated that he was putting me up on a glass pedestal, fragile and out of reach. Like I didnโt get a say in the matter at all.
โI have a tube of lipstick.โ I threw the words at him. โLocke gave it to me. I tell myself that I keep it as a reminder, but itโs not that simple.โ He didnโt reply, so I just kept going. โLocke thought I could be like her.โ That had been the whole point of her little game. โShe wanted it so badly, Dean. I know she was a monster. I know that I should hate her. But sometimes, I wake up in the morning and for just a second, I forget. And for that second, before I remember what she did, I miss her. I didnโt even know we were related, butโฆโ
I trailed off, and my throat tightened, because I couldnโt stop thinking that I should have known. I should have known that she was my last connection to my mother. I should have known that she wasnโt what she seemed. I should have known, and I didnโt, and people had gotten hurt.
โDonโt make yourself say these things because I need to hear them,โ Dean said hoarsely. โYouโre nothing like Locke.โ He wiped his palms on his
jeans, and I heard the words he wasnโt saying.
Youโre nothing like me.
โMaybe,โ I said softly, โto do what you and I do, we have to have a little bit of the monster in us.โ
A breath caught in Deanโs throat, and for the longest time, the two of us stood there in silence: breathing in, breathing out, breathingย throughย the truth Iโd just uttered.
โYour hands are bleeding,โ I said finally, my voice as hoarse as his had been a moment before. โYouโre hurt.โ
โNo, Iโmโฆโ Dean looked down, caught sight of his bleeding knuckles, and swallowed the rest of his argument.
If I hadnโt interrupted, you would have beaten your hands raw.ย That knowledge spurred me into action. A minute later, I was back with a clean towel and a basin of water.
โSit,โ I said. When Dean didnโt move, I fixed him with a look and repeated the order. Physically, I resembled my mother, but when given proper motivation, I could do a decent impression of my paternal grandmother. A person butted heads with Nonna at his or her own risk.
Taking in the stubborn set of my jaw, Dean sat down on the workout bench. He held out his hand for the towel. I ignored him and knelt, dipping the towel into the water.
โHand,โ I said.
โCassieโโ
โHand,โ I repeated. I felt him ready to refuse, but somehow, his hand found its way to mine. Slowly, I turned it over. Carefully, gingerly, I cleaned the blood from his knuckles, coaxing the towel along sinew and bone. The water was lukewarm, but heat spread through my body as my thumb trailed lightly over his skin.
I put down his left hand and started in on the right. Neither of us said anything. I didnโt even look at him. I kept my eyes fixed on his fingers, his knuckles, the scar that ran along the length of his thumb.
โI hurt you.โ Dean broke the silence. I could feel the moment slipping away. I wanted it back, so ferociously it surprised me.
I donโt want to want this.ย I wanted everything to stay the same. I could do this. Iโd been doing this. Nothing had to change.
I put Deanโs hand down. โYou didnโt hurt me,โ I told him firmly. โYou grabbed my wrist.โ I pushed up my sleeve and brandished my right arm as proof. Next to his tan, my skin was almost unbearably fair. โNo marks. No bruises. Nothing. Iโm fine.โ
โYou were lucky,โ Dean said. โI wasโฆsomewhere else.โ
โI know.โ The night before, when Agent Sterlingโs arrival had sent me into a tailspin, heโd been the one to break the hold thatย somewhere elseย had on me. Dean held my gaze for a moment, and understanding flickered in his eyes.
โYou blame yourself for what happened with Agent Locke.โ Dean was a profiler, the same as me. He could climb into my head as easily as I could climb into his. โTo the girls Locke killed, to Michael, to me.โ
I didnโt reply.
โIt wasnโt your fault, Cassie. You couldnโt have known.โ Opposite me, Dean swallowed hard. My eyes traced the movement of his Adamโs apple. His lips parted, and he spoke. โMy father made me watch.โ
Those whispered words carried the power of a gunshot, but I didnโt react. If I said anything, if I breathed, if I so much as moved, Dean would clam up again.
โI found out what he was doing, and he made me watch.โ
What were we doing, trading secrets? Trading guilt? What heโd just told me was so much bigger than anything I could have told him. He was
drowning, and I didnโt know how to pull him out. The two of us sat there in silence, him on the workout bench, me on the floor. I wanted to touch him, but I didnโt. I wanted to tell him it would be okay, but I didnโt. I pictured the girl weโd seen on the news.
The dead girl.
Dean could whale away on a punching bag until the skin on his knuckles was gone. We could trade confessions that no one should ever have to make. But none of that could change the fact that Dean wouldnโt get a good nightโs sleep until this case was closedโand neither would I.