Tโhe next morning, I woke up to find that Michael was outside working on his car again. I stood at my bedroom window, watching him goingโ
at the bumper with the power sander like rust removal was an Olympic sport.ย Heโs going to destroy that car,ย I thought. Restoration was not Michaelโs strong suit.
โYouโre up.โ
I turned from the window to face Sloane, who was sitting up in her own bed. โIโm up.โ
โWhat are you looking at?โ
I grasped for a way to avoid answering the question, but came up empty. โMichael,โ I said.
Sloane studied me for a moment, the way an archaeologist might look at paintings on the wall of a cave. Given the way her brain worked, she probably would have had better luck reading hieroglyphics.
โYou and Michael,โ Sloane said slowly.
โThereโs nothing going on with Michael and me.โ My reply was immediate.
Sloane tilted her head to one side. โYou and Dean?โ โThereโs nothing going on with Dean and me.โ
Sloane stared at me for another three seconds, and then: โI give up.โ Clearly, sheโd expended her capacity for girl talk. Thank God. She
disappeared into the closet, and I was halfway out the door before I remembered my promise.
โI may be going somewhere today,โ I told her. โWith Dean.โ Sloane popped out of the closet, half-dressed. โBut you saidโโ
โNot like that,โ I cut in hastily. โFor the case. Iโm not sure what the plan is, but Iโm getting ready to find out.โ I paused. โI promised Iโd deal you in next time. This is me dealing you in.โ
Sloane pulled on a shirt. She was quiet for several seconds. When she spoke, she beamed. โConsider me dealt.โ
We found Dean in the kitchen with Lia, who was sitting on the kitchen counter, wearing white pajamas and red high heels. Her hair was loose and uncombed. The two of them were talking softly enough that I couldnโt make out the words.
Lia caught sight of me over Deanโs shoulder, and with an unholy glint in her eye, she hopped off the counter. Her heels didnโt so much as wobble when she landed.
โLover boy here says you stopped him from doing something stupid last night.โ Lia smirked. โPersonally, I donโt want to know how youย persuadedย him to hold his horses. Horses were held. Letโs save my tender ears the details, shall we?โ
โLia,โ Dean barked.
Sloane raised her hand. โI have questions about these tender details.โ โLater,โ Lia told Sloane. She reached over and patted Deanโs cheek. He
narrowed his eyes, and she folded her hands primly in front of her body. โIโll behave,โ she promised. โScoutโs honor.โ
Dean muttered something under his breath.
โBlush. Grimace. Smirk.โ Michael strolled into the room, labeling each of us as he passed. โAnd Sloane is perplexed. I miss all the fun.โ
I could practically feel him trying not to read anything into Deanโs grimace and my blush. Michael wasย tryingย to give me space. Unfortunately, he couldnโt turn off his ability, any more than I could turn off mine.
โTownsend.โ Dean cleared his throat.
Michael turned his full attention to the other boy. โYou need something,โ he said, studying the set of Deanโs jaw, the thin line of his lips. โYou really hate asking.โ Michael smiled. โItโs like a Band-Aidโjust pull it off.โ
โHe needs a ride,โ Lia said so Dean wouldnโt have to. โAnd youโre going to give it to him.โ
โAm I?โ Michael did a passable job of sounding surprised.
โIโd appreciate it.โ Dean shot Lia a look, which I read to meanย Stay out of it.
โAnd where, pray tell, are we going?โ Michael asked.
โTo talk to someone.โ Dean clearly didnโt feel like sharing more than that. I expected Michael to draw this out, to actually make Dean ask, but Michael just stared at him for several seconds and then nodded.
โNo comments on my driving,โ Michael said lightly. โAnd you owe me.โ โDeal.โ
โExcellent.โ Lia looked altogether too pleased with herself. โSo Michael will go with Dean and Cassie, and Sloane and I will provide the distraction.โ
โI like this plan,โ Sloane declared brightly. โI can be very distracting.โ
Michael and Dean werenโt so enthused. โCassieโs not going.โ The two of them spoke in unison.
โWell, this is awkward,โ Lia commented, looking from one boy to the other. โAre you two going to start braiding each otherโs hair next?โ
Someday, I was fairly certain that Lia would write a book entitled
Making an Awkward Situation Worse.
โCassieโs a big girl,โ Lia continued. โShe can make decisions for herself.
If she wants to go, she can go.โ
I wasnโt sure why she was so gung ho on my accompanying them, or why she was volunteering to stay home herself.
โDean and I are both profilers,โ I pointed out. โDoesnโt that make me kind of redundant?โ The only thing I would bring to this venture was objectivity. Liaโs ability made her the more obvious choice.
โNo offenseโโLia began her next sentence in a way that more or less guaranteed the next words out of her mouth would be insultingโโbut you simply cannot lie, Cassie. Agent Sterling got the truth about our last littleย adventureย out of you so quickly, itโs embarrassing. Really. If you stay here, youโll get us all caught. Besides,โ she added, a smirk settling over her features, โTweedledee and Tweedledum over here will be less likely to get themselves killedโor to kill each otherโif youโre along for the ride.โ
I thought of Lia and Michael dancing together just to get a rise out of Dean, and Michaelโs inability to keep from poking bears with sticks.
Michael, Lia, and Dean locked in a car together would be a disaster. โDibs on being Tweedledee,โ Michael said blithely.
โFine,โ I told Lia. โIโll go with them.โ
For a moment, I thought Dean would protest, but he didnโt. โIโm ready when you two are,โ he said gruffly.
Michael smiled, first at Dean, then at me. โI was born ready.โ
We passed the ride to Broken Springs, Virginia, in tense and uncomfortable silence.
โOkay, Iโm calling it,โ Michael announced when the quiet got to be too much. โIโm turning on the radio. There will be singing. I would not be opposed to car-dancing. But the next person whose facial expression
approaches โbroodโ is getting punched in the nose. Unless itโs Cassie. If itโs Cassie, I punch Dean in the nose.โ
A strangled sound came from Deanโs direction. It took me a second to realize that the garbled sound was laughter. The threat was so very Michael
โcompletely irreverent, even though I had no doubt heโd follow through with it.
โFine,โ I said, โno brooding, but no radio, either. We should talk.โ
Both of the occupants of the front seat seemed somewhat alarmed by that suggestion.
โAbout the case,โ I clarified. โWe should talk about the case. What do we know about this woman weโre going to see?โ
โTrina Simms,โ Dean said. โAccording to the visitor logs Agent Sterling showed me, sheโs visited my father with increasing frequency over the past three years.โ He gritted his teeth. โThereโs reason to believe that it may be romantic, at least on her part.โ
I didnโt ask Dean to elaborate on what that reason was. Neither did Michael.
โI doubt she knew him before he was incarcerated,โ Dean continued, saying each word like it didnโt matterโbecause if he let it, it would matter too much. โSheโs in her forties. In all likelihood, sheโs either convinced herself that heโs innocent or that the women he killed deserved to die.โ
The real question wasnโt how Trina Simms had justified her interest in a man most people considered a monster. The real question was whether or not she was a killer herself. If so, had she considered the murders a romantic gesture? Had she thought Deanโs dad would be proud of her? That it would bring them closer together?
I knew instinctively Daniel Redding didnโt care about this woman. He didnโt care about people, period. He was callous. Unemotional. The closest he could come to love was whatever it was he felt for Dean, and that was
more narcissistic than anything else. Dean was worth caring about only because Dean wasย his.
โWhatโs our game plan?โ Michael asked. โDo we just knock on the front door?โ
Dean shrugged. โYou got a better idea?โ
โThis is your rodeo,โ Michael told him. โIโm just the driver.โ โIt would be better if I went in alone,โ Dean said.
I opened my mouth to tell him that he wasnโt going anywhere alone, but Michael beat me to it.
โNo can do, cowboy. They call it the buddy system for a reason. Besides, Cassie would try to go after you, and then I would go after her, so on and so forthโฆ.โ Michael trailed off ominously.
โFine,โ Dean capitulated. โWe go in as a group. Iโll tell her youโre my friends.โ
โA clever ruse,โ Michael commented. It hit me then that Michael hadnโt agreed to drive Dean here for me, or for Lia. Despite everything heโd told me about their history, heโd done it for Dean.
โIโll do the talking,โ Dean said. โIf weโre lucky, sheโll be so fixated on me that she wonโt be able to pay attention to either of you. If you can get a read on her, great. We get in. We get out. With luck, weโll be home before anyone realizes weโve left.โ
On the surface, the plan sounded simple, butย luckyย wasnโt an adjective I would have applied to a single person in this car. That thought lingered in my mind as Michael drove past a sign:ย WELCOME TO BROKEN SPRINGS,
POPULATION 4,140.