โโHow long?โ I asked Michael, my eyes locked on his wrist.โ
He knew exactly what I was asking. โIt showed up this morning, itching
like hell.โ
More than thirty-six hours after weโd left Vegas.
โToxicodendrons.โ Sloane pulled her legs back to her chest, her hands worrying at the knees of her jeans. โPlants in the toxicodendron genus produce urushiol. Itโs a sticky oil, a powerful allergen. If Michaelโs been exposed before, the delay of onset for the rash the second time would be between twenty-four and forty-eight hours.โ
โPretty sure Iโd know if Iโd been exposed before,โ Michael pointed out. โPoison ivy and poison oak are toxicodendrons.โ
Michael did a one-eighty and nodded sagely. โI have been exposed before.โ
Liaโs grip on his arm tightened painfully. โYou think this is funny?โ She loosened her hold and pushed away from him. โYouโre scheduled to die tomorrow. Hilarious.โ
โLiaโโ Michael started to say.
โI donโt care,โ Lia told him. โI donโt care that you probably got that coming after me. I donโt care that you wore long sleeves to hide it from the rest of us. I donโt care if you have some sick death wishโโ
โI didnโt ask for this,โ Michael cut in.
โSo youโre not planning to sneak off to Vegas tomorrow by yourself to try to lure this UNSUB out?โ Lia folded her arms and tilted her head to one side, waiting.
Michael didnโt respond.
Tomorrow. January twelfth. The Grand Ballroom. The knife.
โThatโs what I thought,โ Lia said. Without another word, she turned and walked out of the room.
โSo,โ Michael commented, โthat went over well.โ
โYou arenโt going back there to play bait.โ Dean got up and went to stand toe to toe with Michael. โYou arenโt leaving this house.โ
โIโm touched, Redding,โ Michael said, bringing a hand to his heart. โYou care.โ
โYou arenโt leaving this house,โ Dean repeated. There was a quiet intensity in his voice.
Michael leaned forward, his face in Deanโs. โI donโt take orders from you.โ
There was a beat, during which neither one of them backed down.
โI get it. You donโt like running away.โ Deanโs voice was quiet, his eyes never leaving Michaelโs. โYou donโt run. You donโt hide. You donโt cower. You donโt beg.โ
Because none of those things ever work.ย Dean didnโt say that. He didnโt have to.
โGet out of my head.โ Michaelโs expression matched the one heโd worn before heโd plowed his fist into that fatherโs face at the pool.
โDean,โ I said. โGive us a minute.โ
With one last hard look at Michael, Dean did as I asked, leaving in the direction Lia had gone minutes before and taking Sloane with him.
Silence sat heavily between Michael and me. โYou should have told us,โ I said quietly.
Michael studied my expression, and I didnโt even try to keep him from seeing what I felt.ย Iโm angry, and Iโm terrified. I canโt do this. I canโt sit around and wait for them to identify your body, too.
โYou know me, Colorado,โ he said, his voice soft. โIโve never been very good atย should.โ
โTry harder,โ I told him fiercely.
โLook what trying gets you.โ Michael might not have meant to say those words, but he meant them. He was talking about me. And Dean. Heโd spent the past few months pretending heโd never been interested in me.
Heโd flipped his emotions off, like Iโd never mattered to him at all.
Look what trying gets you.
โYou donโt get to do that,โ I said, feeling like heโd kicked me in the teeth. โYou donโt get to make me the reason you do or donโt do anything. Iโm not a reason, Michael. Iโm not something youย tryย for.โ I took a step forward. โIโm your friend.โ
โYou used to look at me and feel something,โ Michael said. โI know you did.โ
Michael was marked for death. A serial killer from Juddโs past was stalking us all. But we were doing thisโright here, right now.
โI never had friends,โ I said. โGrowing up, it was just me and my mom.
There was never anyone else. She never let there be anyone else.โ
For the first time since Iโd gotten the call from my father, Iย feltย something about my motherโs death.ย Angerโand not just at the person who killed her. Sheโd gone away, and even if that hadnโt been her choice,ย sheย was the reason there was no one elseโno friends, no family,ย nothingย until social services tracked down my dad.
โWhen I joined the program,โ I told Michael, โI didnโt know how to really be with people. I couldnโtโฆโ The words wouldnโt come. โI kept everyone at a distance, and there you were, smashing through every wall. I felt something,โ I told Michael. โYou made me feel something, and I am grateful for that. Because you were the first, Michael.โ
There was a long silence.
โThe first friend,โ Michael said finally, โthat you ever had.โ
โThat may not mean much to you.โ It hurt me to admit that. โTo you, I might not be worth anything, if Iโm with Dean. But it means something to me.โ
The silence that followed was twice as long as the first.
โI donโt like running away.โ Michael brought his eyes from the floor to mine. โI donโt run, I donโt hide, I donโt cower, I donโt beg, Cassie, because running and hiding and beggingโit doesnโt work. It never works.โ
Michael was repeating the words Dean had said to him. He was admitting it out loud. To me.
I looked down at the angry red numbers on his arm.ย 7761.
January twelfth. The Grand Ballroom. The knife.
โItโs not running,โ I told Michael, โif we catch him first.โ