โAaron left. It didnโt take long to confirm what heโd told us. Victor McKinneyโthe Majestyโs head of security and our latest victimโwas awake. Briggs and Sterling were on their way to the hospital to interview him, armed with Aaronโs accusations. We played the video, which wasโ
exactly what Aaron had said it was, and forwarded the footage to Sterling and Briggs. When they did talk to the Majestyโs head of security, theyโd have some very pointed questions for him.
Half an hour later, my phone rang. I almost answered out of reflex, expecting it to be Sterling or Briggs, but at the last second, I saw the caller ID.
My father.
Just like that, I was twelve years old again, walking down the hallway toward my motherโs dressing room door.ย Donโt open it. Donโt go there.
I knew what he was calling to say.
I knew that once that door was open, nothing could ever be the same. I declined the call.
โThatโs not a happy Cassie face,โ Michael prodded me. โDrink your whiskey,โ I told him.
Sloane raised her hand, like a student waiting to be called on in class. โI think I would like some whiskey now,โ she said.
โFirst,โ Michael told her seriously, โI need to verify that you have no plans to feed this whiskey to a moose.โ
โHeโs kidding,โ Dean said, before Sloane could tell us the exact likelihood of stumbling over a moose in a Las Vegas casino. โAnd nobodyโs drinking any more whiskey.โ
Dean walked over to the counter and picked up the notepad Iโd been making notes on earlier. He stared at the three remaining names.
The professor. Thomas Wesley. Sloaneโs father.
I approached Dean and looked over his shoulder at the list.ย Focus on this, Cassie. These names, this case.
Not the phone call. Not an answer I already knew.
โEleven years ago,โ I said, addressing the UNSUB out loud and forcing everything else from my mind, โyou slit the throats of nine people in a four- month period ranging from August to January.โ
โFive years ago,โ Dean responded, โI did it again. Poison, this time.โ
The changing method had always been one of the more perplexing aspects of the Vegas murders. Most killers had a single preferred method of killingโor, if not a method or weapon of choice, at least anย emotionalย kill type. Poison meant killing without physical contactโnot dissimilar from orchestrating an accident in which a young woman drowns. Slitting someoneโs throat, on the other hand, was closer to putting an arrow through an old manโs chest. Neither was as painful as, say, burning alive.
โThe last time we had an UNSUB who fluctuated this much from kill to kill,โ I said slowly, thinking back to the case weโd worked involving Deanโs father, โwe were dealing with multiple UNSUBs.โ
Deanโs jaw clenched, but when I laid a hand on his shoulder, he relaxed under my touch.
โโI need nine,โโ Dean said after a moment. โI, notย we.โ
As different as the four murders we were dealing with in Vegas were,ย somethingย about them felt the same. Not just the numbers on the wrists, not just the locations or the dates, but the meticulousness of the method, the compulsive desire to send a message with each kill.
That didnโt strike me as the work of multiple UNSUBsโnot unless one of them was the architect behind it all.
You want to be recognized. You want to be heard.
It was there on every wrist, there in the message the UNSUB had carved into the arrow, there in the message a bystander had been hypnotized to
deliver.ย You donโt want to be stopped. But you do wantโvery muchโto be seen. You want to be larger-than-life,ย I thought.ย You want the world to know what you have done. You want to be a god among men.
And for that,ย I thought,ย you need nine.
โWhy nine?โ I asked. โWhat happens after the ninth?โ
Dean echoed the most significant part of that question. โWhy stop?โ Why stop eleven years ago? Why stop after killing Scarlett Hawkins? โI need to see the file,โ I told Dean.
โYou know we canโt.โ
โNot Scarlettโs. The other case Sloane found. The one in New York.โ
Sloane was sitting in front of the coffee table, holding the DVD Aaron had given us. Sheโd put it back in the case and was staring at it. I knew, instinctively, that she was thinking about Tory and what Aaron had done for her.
She was thinkingโpainfullyย hopingโthat maybe Aaron wasnโt like their father after all.
โSloane,โ I said, โcan you hack the FBI database and pull up the New York file?โ
Having a flawless memory herself, Sloane didnโt quite grasp the utility of rehacking a file sheโd already read, but she did as I asked and set the DVD aside. Her fingers flew across the keyboard. After several seconds, she paused, then hit a few keys, then paused again.
โWhatโs wrong?โ I asked.
โThe program I wrote earlier,โ Sloane said, โit finished its search.โ โLet me guess,โ Lia put in. โIt returned the Nightshade case, which we,
under threat of exile, cannot so much as breathe on.โ โYes,โ Sloane said. โIt did.โ
Lia tilted her head to one side. โWhy doesnโt that sound entirely true?โ โBecause,โ Sloane said, turning the computer around so the rest of us
could see, โthatโs not the only case it returned.โ