Wโe joined the rest of the team in the observation room. Sloane was sitting cross-legged on top of a nearby desk, her blond hair barelyโ
contained in a messy ponytail, her posture unnaturally straight. Agent Sterling stood beside her, a few feet behind Lia, who was still staring at Redding through the two-way mirror, her arms crossed over her chest, painted fingernails resting on her elbows. On the other side of the mirror, Agent Vance entered to transfer the prisoner back to his cell.
A hand grazed my shoulder, and I turned. Michael didnโt say anythingโ he just studied my face.
I couldnโt turn my face away from his. I didnโt tell him I was fine or that Redding hadnโt gotten under my skinโwhatever I was or wasnโt, Michael already knew. There was no use belaboring the point.
โAre you okay?โ Agent Sterling actually verbalized the question. I wasnโt sure if she was talking to me or to Dean.
I sidestepped the question for both of us. โIgnore the bit about my mother,โ I told Lia. โFocus on the case. How much of what Redding told me in there was true?โ
Lia finally managed to pull her eyes away from the mirror. For a few seconds, I thought she would ignore my instructions. I willed her not to. Sheโd said it herself: the best liars were magicians. Whether Deanโs father had been lying or telling the truth when heโd said I would never find my
motherโs killer, I didnโt want to know.ย Misdirection.ย My motherโs case was five years old. Our UNSUB was out there killingย now.
โWell?โ I said. โWhat was everyoneโs favorite psychopath lying about?โ
Lia crossed the room and flopped down into an office chair, flinging a hand to each side. โNothing.โ
โNothing?โ I repeated.
Lia slammed her palm into the side of the chair. โNothing. I donโt even know how heโs doing this.โ She shot to her feet again, vibrating with anger and too restless to stay still. โThere were two versions of every question. I was supposed to be able to contrast his responses. That should have made things easy, but I wouldย swearย that every single answer was true.โ She cursedโcreatively and with impressive verve. โWhat isย wrongย with me?โ
โHey.โ Dean reached out and grabbed her arm as she paced by him. โItโs not your fault.โ
She jerked out of his grasp. โThen whose fault is it? The other deception reader in the room who is apparentlyย completely useless?โ
โWhat if youโre not?โ Sloane interjected. Her eyes werenโt quite focused on the here and now. I could practically hear the gears in her head turning. โNot useless, I mean,โ she said, haphazardly pushing white-blond bangs out of her eyes with the heel of her hand. โWhat if heย wasย telling the truth, every single time?โ
Lia shook her head hard enough to send her ponytail swishing. โThatโs not possible.โ
โIt is,โ Sloane said, โif thereโs more than one apprentice.โ
Is your apprentice a college student?
Is your apprentice someone whoโs never been to college? Is your apprentice over the age of twenty-one?
Is your apprentice under the age of twenty-one? Oh, God.
Sloane was right. Redding could have answered every single question truthfully if he was working withย twoย people on the outsideโvery different people on paper, but equally easy for Redding to manipulate, with equal tastes for violence and control.
Briggs weighed the possibility. โSo Redding gives us answers specifically designed to make us think heโs just jerking us around, when in reality, heโs telling us exactly why this case has never added up.โ
Why Emerson Coleโs murder had appeared to be the work of a primarily organized, extremely precise offender who left behind no evidence, while Trina Simmsโs killer had killed her within earshot of her neighbors and left his DNA at the scene.
Briggsโs phone rang. The rest of us fell into silence. Reddingโs promise that the bodies were going to start piling up echoed in my mind.ย Agent Briggs will get the call about one of them any minute.
Beside me, Michael watched Briggs out of the side of his eye, until the older man turned his back to us. I raised an eyebrow at Michael. He shook his head.
Whatever Briggs was feeling, it wasnโt good.
Keeping his voice low, Briggs stepped out into the hallway, allowing the door to slam shut behind him. In the silence that followed, none of us wanted to put the likely into words.
Thereโs been another murder.
I couldnโt just stand there, waiting for Briggs to come back and tell us that someone else was dead. I kept picturing the victimsโ facesโEmersonโs lifeless eyes, Trinaโs widening when she realized who Dean was.
Two killers,ย I thought, focusing on the UNSUBs and not the victims. I let the thought take hold.ย One killer who left evidence. One who didnโt. Both under Reddingโs control.
Briggs came back into the room. He must have hung up, but he still had a death grip on his phone. โWe have another body.โ
โWhere?โ Agent Sterling asked.
The expression on Briggsโs face was grim. โColonial University.โ My mind went straight to the people weโd met there, the others in
Professor Fogleโs class.
โAnyone we know?โ Michael managed to keep his tone neutral. โThe victim was nineteen.โ Briggs was in full-on FBI modeโall
business. โMale. According to his roommate, who discovered the body, his name was Gary Clarkson.โ
A breath caught in my throat. Lia slumped back against the mirror.
Clark.
Briggs and Sterling didnโt take us to the crime scene. They dropped us off at the house, then went themselves. No matter how many lines they crossed, there were still limits. They wouldnโt risk anyoneโincluding the killerโ seeing us at the crime scene. Not when they could, at least theoretically, bring us pictures that would work just as well.
We waited. By the time Briggs and Sterling got back, a restless pallor had settled over the house.
They didnโt come bearing pictures. They came with news.
โForensics is still processing the evidence, but they wonโt find any trace of the killer,โ Agent Sterling said. โThis UNSUB bludgeoned the victim with an iron brand, but followed the rest of Reddingโs MO down to the tiniest detail. He was confident, not frantic. He enjoyed himself.โ
Heโs learning,ย I thought.
โIt sounds more like the UNSUB who killed Emerson Cole than the one who killed Trina Simms,โ I said out loud, my mind flipping into high gear.
Two UNSUBs. UNSUB 1 was organized. Heโd killed Emerson and Clarkโ and quite possibly the professor. UNSUB 2 was disorganized. Heโd murdered Trina Simms right after weโd gone to visit her.
โWhatโs the connection?โ Dean asked. โHow does someone go from targeting Emerson to targeting Clark?โ
โThey were in the same group in Fogleโs class,โ Lia offered. โClark was head over heels for the girl.โ
โHis dorm room was full of pictures of her,โ Briggs confirmed. โThousands of them, under his bed.โ
โWhat about the other two people in their group?โ I asked. โDerek and Bryce. Think UNSUB 1 could be going after them next?โ
First Emerson. Then Clark. Meanwhile, UNSUB 2 kills Trina Simmsโฆ.
My thoughts were interrupted by the ding of incoming textsโone from Sterlingโs phone and one from Briggsโs.
โForensics?โ Michael guessed.
Sloane naysayed him. โItโs too soon. Even if results are being rushed, they canโt have run more than one or two testsโโ
โThe testsย wereย rushed,โ Briggs interrupted. โBut the only thing theyโve managed to do so far is take a sample of our victimโs DNA.โ
โWhy did that merit simultaneous texting?โ Lia asked suspiciously. โBecause a match came up in the system.โ Briggs shrugged off his suit
jacket and folded it neatly over one arm. It was a restrained action, one that didnโt match the look in his eyes in the least. โClarkโs DNA matches the sample found under Trina Simmsโs fingernails.โ
I took a moment to process the implication. Sloane was obliging enough to put it into words.
โSo what youโre saying,โ she replied, โis that Gary Clarkson isnโt just victim number four. Heโs also our second UNSUB.โ
YOU
You can still see the look in that pudgy, pathetic little hanger-onโs eyes when you dug the point of the knife into his chest.
โThis is how youโreย supposedย to do it,โ youโd told him, zigging and zagging your way down his abundant flesh. โEvery moment, perfect control. No evidence. No chances.โ
After youโd received word that Trina Simms was dead, youโd imagined how itย shouldย have gone down. Youโd pictured every detailโhowย youย would have done it. The pleasure you would have gotten from hearing her scream.
But this imitation, this pretenderโheโd done itย wrong. Heโd had to pay.
Sweat and tears had mingled on his face. Heโd struggled, but you took your time. You were patient. You explained to him that you were acquainted with Trina Simms and that she deserved better.
Or worse, depending on your perspective.
Youโd showed that pale imitation, that copy of a copy, what patience really was. The only shame was that you had to gag himโcouldnโt risk Joe College next door coming over to see what the little pig was squealing about.
You smile in memory as you clean the tools of your trade. Redding didnโtย tellย you to kill the pretender. He didnโt have to. Youโre a species apart, you and the boy you just dispatched to hell.
He was weak.
Youโre strong.
He was painting by numbers and still couldnโt manage to stay in the lines.
Youโre a developing artist. Improvisation. Innovation. A rush of power works its way through your body just thinking about it. You thought you wanted to be like Redding. Toย beย Redding.
But now youโre starting to seeโyou could be so much more.
โNot yet,โ you whisper. Thereโs one more person who has to go first.
You hum a song and close your eyes.
What will be will beโeven if you have to help it along.