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Chapter no 48

All In (The Naturals, #3)

โ€ŒIย woke up on the banks of the Potomac River. It took me a moment to realize that I was back in Quantico, and another after that to realize that I wasnโ€™t alone.โ€Œ

There was a thick, black binder open on my lap. โ€œEnjoying a bit of light reading?โ€

I looked up at the person whoโ€™d asked that question, but couldnโ€™t make out his face.

โ€œSomething like that,โ€ I said, realizing even as I did that Iโ€™d said these words before.ย The river. The man.

The world around me jumped, like a jarring film cut.

โ€œYou live at Juddโ€™s place, right?โ€ the faceless man was saying. โ€œHe and I go way back.โ€

Way back.

My eyes flew open. I sat upโ€”in bed this time. My hands grappled with the sheet. I was tangled in it, shaking.

Awake.

My hands worked their way over my legs, my chest, my arms, as if looking for assurance that I hadnโ€™t left part of myself back on the Potomac, in the dream.

The memory.

The stage, running, being buried aliveโ€”that was the work of my twisted subconscious. But the conversation on the riverbank? That was real. That had happened, right after Iโ€™d joined the program.

Iโ€™d never seen the man again.

I swallowed, thinking of the envelope Nightshade had left for Judd on the plane. I thought of the message heโ€™d signed from โ€œan old friend.โ€ Nightshade had known all of our names. Heโ€™d made the ticket arrangements, because he wanted Judd to know:ย you could have gotten to any of us, at any time.

If I was right about thatโ€”about why Nightshade had left the note, about his fixation on Scarlett as his crowning achievement and, through her, on Juddโ€”it was all too easy to believe that Nightshade might have dropped by to say hello when a new person arrived in Juddโ€™s life.

The rules are specific. Nine victims killed on Fibonacci dates.ย Normal killers kept killing until they got caughtโ€”but this group was different. This group didnโ€™t get caught.

Because they stopped.

Judd was in the kitchen. So were two of the agents on our protection detail. โ€œCan you give us a minute?โ€ I asked them. I waited until theyโ€™d left to speak again. โ€œI need to ask you something,โ€ I told Judd. โ€œAnd youโ€™re not going to want to tell me the answer, but I need you to anyway.โ€

Judd had a crossword in front of him. He laid down his pencil. That was as close to an invitation to continue as I was going to get.

โ€œGiven what you know about the Nightshade case, given what you know about Nightshade himself, given whatever was in that envelope on the planeโ€”do you think he came here for our killer and just happened to spot you while he was here, or do you thinkโ€ฆโ€ My mouth went dry. I swallowed. โ€œDo you think that heโ€™s been watching us all this time?โ€

Theories were just theories. My intuition was good, but it wasnโ€™t bulletproof, and Iโ€™d been given few enough details to work with that there was no way of knowing how far off the mark I might be.

โ€œI donโ€™t want you working on Nightshade,โ€ Judd said.

โ€œI know,โ€ I told him. โ€œBut I need you to answer the question.โ€ Judd sat, stone-still and staring at me, for more than a minute.

โ€œNightshade sent something to the people he killed,โ€ Judd said. โ€œBefore he killed them, he sent them a flower. A bloom, taken from a white nightshade plant.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s how he got the name,โ€ I said. โ€œWe assumed heโ€™d used poisonโ€ฆ.โ€

โ€œOh, he did,โ€ Judd said. โ€œIt wasnโ€™t nightshade, though. The poison he used was undetectable, incurable.โ€ A shadow flickered across Juddโ€™s eyes. โ€œPainful.โ€

You sent them something to let them know what was coming. You watched them. You chose them. You marked them.

โ€œIt never occurred to me he might still be watching.โ€ Juddโ€™s voice was harder now. โ€œBest we could figure, the person who killed Scarlett was in jail or dead. But knowing what I know now?โ€ Judd leaned back in his seat, his eyes never leaving mine. โ€œI think the son of a bitch was watching. I think heโ€™d have killed a dozen more if theyโ€™d have let him. But if he had to content himself with nineโ€ฆโ€

He would have made the most of it.

I closed my eyes. โ€œI think I met him,โ€ I said. โ€œLast summer.โ€

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