Yโou were in most of Emersonโs classes.ย I slipped into Clarkโs mind without even thinking about it.ย You liked watching her. She was niceโ
to you. You thought she was perfect. And if you found out she wasnโtโฆย โYou got something?โ Michael asked me from his spot across the room. I caught my bottom lip in my teeth. โMaybe.โ
I could see Clark targeting Emerson, but if heโd been the one to attack her, I would have expected it to be messier. Iโd thought it myself the day before: if Clark was a killer, heโd be a disorganized killer. Emerson wasnโt murdered on an impulse. The UNSUB never lost emotional control.
And yetโฆ
A phone rang, breaking me from my thoughts. It took me a second to realize that the ringtone was mine. I reached for my phone, but Lia beat me there. She snatched it and held it just out of reach.
โGive it here, Lia.โ
Selectively deaf, she turned the phone around so I could see the callerโs name.ย TA GEOFFย flashed across the screen.ย What theโฆHeโd given me his number. Iโd plugged it into my phone, but Iโd never given him mine.
โThe two of you have been texting,โ Lia informed me pertly. โYouโve
really grown quite close.โ
I made a mental note to change the password on my phone.
โShall we see what he has to say?โ Lia didnโt wait for a response before she answered the call.
โGeoffrey. I wasย justย talking about you.โ She smiled at whatever he said in response, then put the phone on speaker and laid it on the coffee table between us, daring me to hang up.
I didnโt.
โDid you hear about the professor?โ Geoffrey asked, his voice grave. โItโs all over the news.โ
So the story about the professorโs death had broken.
โThis must be so hard for you,โ Lia said, putting her feet up on the coffee table. Her tone oozing sympathy, she gave an exaggerated roll of her eyes.
โYou have no idea,โ Geoffrey said in response. โThe professor didnโt deserve this.โ
And Emerson did?ย I bit back the question.
โFirst that girl, now the professor,โ Lia said, sounding every inch the tragedy groupie, ready to hang on Geoffreyโs every word. โWho do you think it is?โ
โWeโre dealing with what I like to call anย organized killer,โ Geoffrey intoned. โHighly intelligent and hard to catch.โ
I didnโt know what was more off-putting: the way Geoffrey was acting like heโd invented the phrase โorganized killerโโwhile demonstrating only the smallest fraction of understanding of what that really meantโor the fact that โhighly intelligentโ was probably a descriptor heโd use to describe himself.
โIโll probably have to take over the class now that Fogle is gone,โ Geoffrey added. โI donโt know what will happen to his book,ย Bind Them, Brand Them, Cut Them, Hang Them: The Daniel Redding Story.โ
Geoffrey couldnโt resist dropping the bookโs title. Listening to him talk, I thought back to the way Dean had looked, saying those same words: eyes unseeing, face pale.
โDo you think it could be someone in the class?โ Lia asked. โYourย class?โ
She was so good at changing the direction of the conversation that Geoffrey didnโt even realize sheโd done it.
โIf there were a student in this class with the potential for that kind of thing,โ Geoffrey said, his tone saturated with smugness, โI think I would know it.โ
My first reaction to those words was thatย of courseย he thought heโd recognize a killer. But my second reaction sat heavier in my stomach. Heโd used the wordย potential.
Potential as inย capability, or potential as inย talent?
โWhat about the kid whoโs setting the curve in the class?โ Lia gave Geoffrey another verbal nudge.
โNo way,โ Geoffrey scoffed. โGary something. He wouldnโt hurt a fly.โ
Gary Clarkson. As in Clark.ย I wouldnโt have pegged him as the curve- setting type, and that disturbed me. Maybe he was more of a planner, more type A, moreย organizedย than Iโd realized.
Lia snatched the phone up and abruptly hung up. The sudden movement jerked me out of my thoughts and I tracked her gaze. Dean was standing in the hallway behind me.
He didnโt comment on what heโd overheard. He didnโt threaten to tell Briggs weโd broken the rules. Again. He just turned and walked, his footsteps heavy, toward the stairs.
I snatched my phone back. Lia didnโt stop me. It rang. I expected it to be Geoffrey calling back, but it wasnโt.
โThereโs someone I need you to look up,โ Briggs said, forgoing the customary greeting.
โSame to you,โ I told him. โGary Clarkson. Heโs comfortable with guns, shared a high percentage of Emersonโs classes, and was setting the curve in Fogleโs class.โ I hesitated just a second, then plowed on. โYou should also check out the professorโs TA.โ
The FBI hadnโt given us a file for Geoffrey, but that was an oversight on their part. He wasnโt a student in the class, but heย wasย a student at the universityโand it would be just like Deanโs father to get off on telling the FBI something misleading, but true.
โIโll look into it,โ Briggs promised, โbut right now, I need you to see what you can find out about a Conrad Mayler. Heโs a senior who took Fogleโs class two years ago.โ
โWhy am I looking him up?โ
There was silence on the other end. For a moment, I thought Briggs wouldnโt answer the question, but after a secondโs hesitation, he did. โHeโs the one who posted the video of the crime scene.โ
Briggs had a way of punctuating the end of sentences that shut the door completely on further conversation.
โOkay,โ I said. โConrad Mayler. Got it.โ
Twenty minutes later, Iโd discovered everything there was to online-know about Conrad Mayler. He was a journalism major. He claimed to listen only to indie bands. His favorite movies were documentaries. He had a blog where he wrote snarky recaps of a variety of reality shows. According to his profile, heโd attended a private high school and worked part-time at the student radio station.
His relationship status was โItโs complicated.โ The girl implicated in said relationship was Bryce Anderson.
Your name just keeps coming up.ย I pictured the blond girl in my mind. Iโd made the error once before of erroneously assuming an UNSUB was male. No matter what my gut was telling me this time, I couldnโt risk making the same mistake twice.
Scrolling through Conradโs status updates and profiles, it wasnโt hard to see that he fancied himself a journalist. Heโd probably claim that heโd taken the video of Emersonโs body and posted it anonymously online because the public had a right to know. I was half-surprised he hadnโt actually posted it to his profile.
Seemingly in answer to my thoughts, the page in front of me updated itself. Conrad had posted a new video. Preparing myself for the worst, I clicked play, but instead of a corpse, I saw rows of wooden seats, filled with students. The time stamp on the video read 7:34ย A.M.
โProfessor George Fogle once said that he scheduled his class for 7:30 in the morning as a way of separating the students who were taking his class on a lark from those who were serious about the study of criminology.โ The camera panned the room, and I recognized the auditorium.
Iโd been there before.
โThree days ago, three hundred and seven serious students took the first of three Monsters or Men exams. The three hundred and eighth student, Emerson Cole, was found dead that morning.โ
โThereโs no white noise,โ Sloane commented, sidling up behind me. โWhoever taped the narration has decent equipment. The video, on the other hand, was taken by some kind of smartphone. At least 1080p resolution, maybe higher.โ
The video cut from the auditorium scene to familiar footageโthe clip of Emersonโs body. The narration continued, but I tuned it out.
โIโd ask if this kid was serious,โ Michael said, coming to join us, โbut I can tell that he is. He thinks this is cutting-edge journalism. On his profile page.โ
โHe didnโt kill Emerson,โ I said tiredly. Conrad didnโt fit the profile. Our killer didnโt have a snarky blog. He didnโt have a girlfriend like Bryceโ even if itย wasย complicated. And the person whoโd killed Emerson, whoโd displayed her like a dog dropping a dead bird at the feet of his master, would never have started his โvideo coverageโ of the event with footage of the class.
For the UNSUB, the rest of the class would have been beside the point. โPlay it again,โ Sloane ordered. โFrom the beginning.โ
I did. Sloane shoved me gently out of the way and took over, using keyboard shortcuts to pause the video, play it, pause it. Her eyes flitted back and forth over the screen. โThe voice-over was right,โ she said finally. โThere are three hundred and seven students in that classroom taking that test. Including your suspect,โ she told me, pointing to an unmistakable face
โround, with dull eyesโin the third row. Clark. He was sitting two seats away from Bryce, a row behind Derek.
โWhoโs filming the test?โ I asked. โAnd why?โ
โI donโt know.โ Sloaneโs tongue darted out in between her lips in a look of intense concentration. โThe news report said that Emersonโs body was discovered early that morning,โ she said finally. โThe question is how early?โ
I followed her line of thought. According to the time stamp, this footage was taken at 7:34ย A.M.
โTime of death.โ I said the obvious out loud. โWe need the time of death.โ
Sloane grabbed my phone and dialed a number from memory. When no one answered, she called again. And again. And again.
โWhat?โ Irritation made Briggsโs voice loud enough that I could hear it from a distance.
โItโs considered impolite to talk above seventy-five decibels,โ Sloane sniffed. โI believe itโs called shouting.โ
I couldnโt hear Briggsโs reply.
โIs the autopsy in on Emerson Cole?โ Sloane held the phone to her ear with her shoulder and used her free hands to pull her hair out of its ponytail and refasten it. โWe need time of death. Cause of death would also be helpful.โ
I was fairly certain Briggs wouldnโt want to part with that information.
There was quite a bit of distance between profiling college students on social media and being read in to the nitty-gritty of a classified autopsy.
โYouโre at seventy-eight decibels,โ Sloane said, unfazed by Briggsโs objections. โAnd we still need time of death.โ She paused again. โBecause,โ Sloane said, drawing out the word as if she were talking to a very small, very slow child, โweโre sitting here looking at a video that was taken at 7:34 that morning. If Iโm remembering the campus maps correctlyโand you know I amโDavies Auditorium is a twenty-five-minute walk and a ten-minute drive from the presidentโs house. Which means that if the death of Emerson Cole (a) required the UNSUBโs presence and (b) took place after 7:25ย A.M.ย and before the end of that test, then every single student in that class has an alibi.โ
Sloane was quiet for longer this time. Then she hung up the phone. โWhat did he say?โ Michael asked her.
Sloane closed her laptop and pushed it away. โHe said that the body was found at 8:15 that morning. Time of death was estimated at 7:55.โ