Sโloane and I were the only ones left in the basement. โI thought you werenโt supposed to be down here,โ she said abruptly. Her tersenessโ
surprised me, until I remembered the look on her face when sheโd mentioned us sneaking out without her.
โIโm not,โ I said.
Sloane didnโt respond. She walked over to a bathroom set and stood just outside the shower. She stared at it, like I wasnโt even there.
โAre we okay?โ I asked her.
Dean was furious. Michael had taken off for parts unknown. When the dust settled, Lia would probably blame this whole mess on me. I needed Sloane cheerful and spouting statistics. I needed not to be alone.
โYouโre okay, and Iโm okay. It would seem to follow logically that weโre okay.โ Sloaneโs gaze settled on the shower drain. It took me a moment to realize she was countingโcounting the holes in the drain, counting the tiles on the shower floor.
โWe didnโt mean to leave you out,โ I told her. โIโm used to it.โ
With the way Sloaneโs brain worked, sheโd probably spent her whole life before the program on the outside looking in. I was her roommate, and I was a profilerโI should have known better.
โDean is my friend, too.โ Sloaneโs voice was small, but fierce. She looked up from the floor, but still didnโt turn to face me. โIโm not good at mingling, or at parties. I say the wrong thing. I do the wrong thing. I know thatโbut even numbers are better than odd, and if Iโd been there, Lia wouldnโt have had to go off alone.โ Sloane paused and bit her lip. โShe didnโt even ask.โ She swallowed hard. โBefore you came, Lia might have asked me.โ Sloane finally turned to look at me. โThereโs only a seventy- nine-point-six percent chance, but she might have.โ
โNext time,โ I told Sloane, โIย will ask you.โ
Sloane considered my words carefully, then accepted them with a nod. โAre we going to hug now?โ she asked. The question was absolutely clinical. I slipped an arm around her shoulder and squeezed.
โStatistically,โ Sloane told me, sounding more like her usual self, โthe bathroom is the deadliest room in the house.โ
I found Michael working on his car. Or, more specifically, I found him holding some kind of power sander and staring at his car with a diabolical expression.
โJudd let you play with the power tools?โ I asked.
Michael turned the sander on and off experimentally, then he smiled. โJudd is a man of discerning tastes and good sense.โ
โMeaning that Judd doesnโt know that youโre playing with the power tools,โ I concluded.
โIโm going to have to plead the Fifth on that one,โ Michael told me.
There was a beat of silence, and then I asked the question I really wanted an answer to. โAre we okay?โ
โWhy wouldnโt we be?โ Michael turned the power sander on and attempted to attack the rust on the carโs front bumper, drowning out all
conversation.
Iโd thought that I could keep things from changing, but they were changing anyway. With Michael and me. With Dean and me.
โMichael,โ I said, my voice soft enough that he couldnโt hear it over the sound of metal on metal.
Michael turned the sander off. Then he turned to me. I felt naked, the way I always did when I knew my face was giving me away. Why couldnโt he just be a normal boy, one who couldnโt take one look at me and know exactly which emotions were churning around in my gut?
โWeโre fine, Cassie. Itโs just that sometimes, when youโre in the business of being devastatingly handsome and admirably patient, you need an outlet. Or two. Or seven.โ
He was taking his frustrations with me out on this car. โNothing happened between Dean and me,โ I said.
โI know that,โ he replied.
โNothing is going to happen between Dean and me,โ I said.
โI know that, too.โ Michael leaned back against the car. โBetter than you do. You look at Redding and see all the ways the two of you are the same. I look at him, and I see someone whoโs so angry and so terrified of that anger that thereโs not room for anything else. Or anyoneย else.โ
I realized, suddenly: โThatโs your problem with Dean.โ
โThat heโs incapable of romancing a female?โ Michael smirked. โAs far as Iโm concerned, thatโs his best quality.โ
โNo,โ I said, turning the thought over in my mind. โThat heโs angry and holding it in.โ In Deanโs shoes, I would be angry, too. I understood why he wouldnโt let himself express it, why heโd fight tooth and nail against throwing a punch. He couldnโt risk flipping that switch and not being able to turn it off.
But Iโd never thought about the effect that being around a person like Dean would have on someone like Michael.
Michael gave me a look. โYouโre profiling me.โ I shrugged. โYou read my emotions all the time.โ He paused for a moment. โWhat do you see?โ
That was as close to permission to poke around inside his head as I was going to get. โYou grew up in a house where everything seemed perfectโ you had every advantage that money could buy. But it wasnโt perfect.โ Michael had told me that much, but I pushed forward, tiptoeing into more dangerous waters. โYou learned to read emotions because your father was hard to read, and you needed to be able to tell when he was angry.โ
No response.
โEven if there was a smile on his face, even if he was laughing, if he was angry, you needed to see it.โ I swallowed the ball of emotion rising in my throat. โYou needed to avoid it.โ
To avoid getting hit.
โDean said pretty much the same thing to me once.โ Michael crossed his arms, his eyes on mine. โOnly he wasnโt nearly as nice about it.โ
When Iโd met Michael, heโd had an ingrained distrust of profilersโand a strong personal dislike of Dean. It had never occurred to me that Dean might have done somethingย toย Michael to justify those feelings.
โWhat did he say to you?โ I asked, my throat going suddenly dry. โDoes it matter?โ Michael glanced over at the house. โHeโs got dibs on
the screwed-up childhood, right? Heโs the one with the get-out-of-jail-free card.โ Michael smiled, but there was an edge to it. โNo pun intended.โ
โTell me,โ I said.
Michael took a casual stroll around the car, examining it from all angles.
When he spoke, it wasnโt to answer my question. โAnger,โ he said offhandedly. โThis might come as a surprise, Cassie, but I donโt always react
well to it.โ An edge crept into his voice. โIn fact, I tend to have a very particular reaction.โ
I thought about Michael making veiled comments aboutย The Bad Seedย in Deanโs hearing. Michael letting Lia use him to get a rise out of Dean.
โYouโre the guy who waves the red flag in front of the bull.โ
โIf you canโt keep them from hitting you,โ Michael said, โyouย makeย them hit you. At least that way, youโre ready. At least that way, itโs not a surprise.โ
It was easy to see now, what it must have been like when Michael was drafted to join the program. He wasnโt happy about coming here, but at least heโd escaped living with a ticking time bomb. And then heโd arrived to find Dean, who had every reason in the world to be angry and was fighting that rage every step of the way.
โOne night, Lia and I stayed out until sunrise.โ Michael never hid the fact that he had a history with Lia. I was so focused on the picture he was painting for me that I barely noticed. โBelieve me when I sayย thatย had nothing to do with Dean. But when we got back that morning, he was waiting for us, practically vibrating, holding it in check, but just barely.โ
I could see it: Michael being Michael, and Lia being Lia, both of them self-destructive with a taste for chaos and a desire to cause the FBI a little trouble. And I could see Dean, worrying about Lia out all night with an unknown entity that neither one of them had a reason to trust.
โSo you said something to push Dean that much closer to the edge.โ I wasnโt sure I wanted to knowย whatย Michael had said.
โI took a metaphorical swing,โ Michael told me. โRedding hit back.โ โBut not with his fists,โ I clarified. Deanโs gift was like mine. We knew
exactly what to say to hurt someone the most. We knew what peopleโs weak spots were. And Michaelโs was his father. The idea that Dean might have used that to get at Michael made my stomach twist sharply.
โI punched him,โ Michael added in the kind of casual tone most people reserved for chatting about the weather. He took a step toward me, giving me that patented Michael smile. โI get it, you know.โ
โGet what?โ
โYou. Redding. I get it. I get that heโs going through something, and I get that you need to be there. Thatโs who you are, Cassie. You care about people. You need to help. Believe me when I say that I am trying to step back and let you do whatever it is you need to do. But itโs not easy.โ Michael tore his eyes from mine and picked the power sander back up. โI havenโt had a lot of practice at being a decent person. Itโs not something at which I particularly excel.โ
Before I could reply, Michael turned the sander on, drowning out the sounds of the night. I stood there for a couple of minutes watching him. Agent Sterlingโs car eventually pulled into the driveway. It was getting dark enough that I couldnโt make out much of her posture or the look on her face, but as she cut across the lawn, Michael tilted his head to the side. He turned the sander back off.
โWhat?โ I said.
โSheโs not happy,โ he told me. โBrisk pace, no bounce to her step, hands glued to her sides. Iโm guessing the exploration of the professorโs writing cabin did not go particularly well.โ
My stomach dropped. I could suddenly hear the sound of my own breathing, my own heartbeat.
Now it was Michaelโs turn to ask: โWhat?โ
Iโd been so focused on Dean when Iโd been on the other side of that observation glass that I hadnโt spent much time thinking about his father. I hadnโt let myself really dissect him or the things heโd said. But now, all I could think was that Redding hadโat great cost to Deanโfinally given the FBI a tip about where the professor might be hiding.
As an organized killer, Daniel Redding was a man who thrived on mind games. On misdirection. On power. If Redding had thought, even for a moment, that the professor was the killer, he wouldnโt have told Briggs where to find him. The only way Redding would have really told Briggs where to find the professor was if Redding suspected, based on the letters heโd received, that finding the professor would remind Briggsโand Sterling and everyone else at the FBIโthat they werenโt nearly as smart as they thought they were.
The only truly remarkable letters were from students.
When I didnโt respond, Michael called after Agent Sterling. โProfessorโs cabin a bust?โ
She didnโt answer him. She went into the house and shut the door behind her. And that, as much as anything else, told me that I was right.
โIt wasnโt a bust,โ I told Michael. โI think they found the professor.โ I swallowed. โWe should have seen this coming.โ
โSeen what coming?โ
โI think they found the professor,โ I said again, โbut our UNSUB found him first.โ
YOU
The professor was a problem. Youโre a problem solver. It was quick and cleanโa single bullet to the back of his skull. And if there was no artistry to it, no method, at least you were showing initiative. At least you were ready, willing, and able to do what needed to be done.
It makes you feel powerful, and that makes you wonder, just for an instant, if this isnโt the better way. Guns and neat little bullet holes and the glory of being the one to pull the trigger. You could knock the next girl out, tie her up, take her to the middle of nowhere. You could let her loose deep in the forest. You could track her, catch her in your sights.
You could pull the trigger.
Just thinking about it sets your heart to pounding.ย Take them. Free them. Track them. Kill them.
No. You force yourself to stop thinking about it, to stop imagining the sound of bare feet running through the brushโrunning away fromย you.
There is a plan. An order. A bigger picture.
You will abide by it. For now.