โRiding with Lia was a bit like playing Russian roulette. She had a need for speed and a liarโs disregard for limitations. We barely made it to the safe house in one piece.โ
Michael shuddered. โI think I speak for all of us when I say that I am in dire need of either an adult beverage or a live feed on Sterling and Briggs as they dig into this case.โ
Agent Starmans opened his mouth to reply, but Judd gave a quick shake of his head. We were here. We were under armed guard. We were safe. Judd knew as well as I did that, left to his own devices, Michael wouldnโt be any of those things for long.
The last time you went home, you came back covered in bruises and spiraling out of control. I couldnโt keep my mind from going there as Judd set up the video and audio feeds.ย And now, a girl you know is missing. One of the so-called Masters might have burned her alive.
Within minutes, the view from Briggsโs lapel pin came into focus on Juddโs tablet. We saw what Briggs saw, and all I could think, as Briggs and Sterling climbed out of their FBI-issued SUV, was that if this case was anything other than open-and-shut, none of us would be able to keep Michael from spiraling for long.
The Delacroix house was modern and vast. It was also, we soon learned, unoccupied. Celineโs parents had apparently decided to meet with the FBI on more neutral ground.
โHome, sweet home.โ A sardonic edge crept into Michaelโs voice a few minutes later as the house next door to the Delacroixโs came into view on the camera.
Large, I thought.ย Traditional. Ornate.
โMost people call it Townsend House,โ Michael said lightly, โbut I prefer to think of it as Townsend Manor.โ
The more Michael joked, the more my heart thudded in my throat on his behalf.ย You were supposed to be done with this place. You were supposed to be free.
โIs that a turret?โ Lia asked. โI love a man with a turret.โ
If Michael was going to crack jokes about his own personal hell, Lia would find a way to one-up him. Theyโd both had plenty of practice over the years at making the things that mattered most matter least.
On-screen, Briggs and Sterling made their way to the front porch. Briggs rang the bell.ย One Mississippi. Two Mississippi. The massive mahogany front door opened.
โAgent Briggs.โ The man whoโd answered the door had thick charcoal- brown hair and a voice that commanded attention: rich and baritone and warm. He reached out and clapped a hand on Agent Briggsโs shoulder. โI know you canโt have appreciated the lengths I went to in order to get you here, but if I didnโt do everything possible to help Remy and Elise at a time like this, I would never forgive myself.โ He turned from Briggs to Sterling. โMaโam,โ he said, holding out a hand. โThatcher Townsend. The pleasure is mine.โ
Sterling took the proffered hand, but I knew in my gut that she wouldnโt offer the man even a hint of a smile.
โPlease,โ Townsend said smoothly, stepping back from the threshold, โcome in.โ
This was Michaelโs father. I tried to wrap my mind around that fact. He had Michaelโs air of confidence, Michaelโs presence, Michaelโs irrepressible charm. I waited for something to ping my inner profiler, for some hint, however small, that the man whoโd answered that door was a monster.
โHe hasnโt lied yet,โ Lia told Michael.
Michael flashed her a sharp-edged smile. โItโs not lying if you believe every word you say.โ
Iโd expected Thatcher Townsend to be a man who threw his weight around, a man who needed toย ownย andย possessย andย control. Iโd expected someone like Deanโs father, or Sloaneโs. At the very least, Iโd expected a man whose demons might be invisible to the average person, but not to me.
Nothing.
โWhat can you tell us about your fatherโs business partner?โ Dean asked Michael as the introductions got under way on camera.
โRemy Delacroix?โ Michael shrugged. โHe likes pretty things and pretty people. He likes being in control. And, God knows why, he likes my father. The two have been in business together since before I was born. Remy frowns when heโs unhappy, snaps when heโs angry, and hits on anything in a skirt.โ
What you see is what you get. Earlier, when Michael had said those words, heโd been parroting his father. And heโd been lying. Thatcher Townsend wasnโt transparent. If Michaelโs father had been as easy to read as Remy Delacroix, Michael never would have become the type of person who could read a world of meaning in the blink of an eye.
โSo youโre saying weโll know fairly quickly if Delacroix had anything to
do with his daughterโs disappearance.โ I focused on that in an effort to help Michael do the same.
โIโm saying that Remy wouldnโt touch a hair on Celineโs head.โ Michael kept his gaze locked intently on the screen. โAs I said, he likes pretty people, and CeCeโs been beautiful since the day she was born.โ
Lia didnโt stiffen, didnโt bat an eye, didnโt so much as lean away from Michael. But she would have heard the truth in those words. She would have heard the affection when Michael referred to Celine Delacroix as CeCe.
โWhatever resources you need, youโll have them.โ Remy Delacroixโs words brought my attention back to the video feed. He looked like a shadow of Michaelโs father: slightly shorter, slightly blander features, more tightly wound. โI donโt care what it costs. I donโt care what laws you have to break. You get my little girl home.โ
Agent Sterling didnโt tell the man that the FBI wasnโt in the business of breaking laws. Instead, she eased him into questioning with a query that should have been easy to field. โTell us about Celine.โ
โWhat is there to tell?โ Delacroix replied, obviously agitated. โSheโs a nineteen-year-old girl. A damn Yale student. If youโre trying to say that she might have done something to bring this on herselfโโ
Beside him, his wife laid a hand on his arm. I knew from reading the case file that Elise Delacroix was older than her husband, a former economics professor with an Ivy League education and the connections to match. As Remyโs ranting subsided, Elise glanced at Michaelโs father, and after a moment, Thatcher went to pour his business partner a drink.
โWhat do you see?โ I asked Michael.
โOn Remyโs face? Agitation. Part bluster, part fear, part righteous indignation. No guilt.โ
I wondered how many parentsย wouldnโtย feel guilty if theyโd discovered their daughter had been missing for nearly a week before anyone had noticed.
โCeline is independent,โ Elise Delacroix told the agents once her husband had a drink in his hand. She was an elegant African American woman with her daughterโs tall, lithe build and shoulders she kept squared at all times. โPassionate, but unfocused. She has her fatherโs temper and my drive, though she tries her best to hide the latter.โ
That the woman had mentioned her husbandโs temper to the FBI stuck out to me.ย You have to know that the parents are always suspects in cases like these. Either you have nothing to hide or you simply donโt care about throwing your husband under the bus.
โElise is always in control,โ Michael told me. โOf her husband, of her emotions, of the family image. The one thing she canโt control is Celine.โ
โDoes she miss her daughter?โ Dean asked, his eyes still on the screen. Michael was quiet for the longest time as he watched Elise Delacroix. The
tone in her voice never changed. The control she exerted over her facial features never wavered.
Michael managed an answer to Deanโs question. โSheโs broken. Terrified.
Guilt-ridden. And disgustedโwith her husband, with herself.โ โWith Celine?โ I asked quietly.
Michael didnโt answer.
On-screen, Agent Briggs had moved on to establishing a time line, and I tried to put myself in Celineโs shoes, growing up with a father who, when asked about his daughter, said there was nothing to tell, and a mother whose first instinct had been to talk about her daughterโs temper and drive.
Independent, I thought.ย Passionate. Stubborn. I could see shades of Elise in the Celine from the pictures.ย Solid colors, not prints. You paint like youโre dancing, paint like youโre fightingโand you look at cameras like you know the secrets of the world.
In the background of the feed, Thatcher Townsend made two more drinks: one for Elise and one for himself. It occurred to me for the first time to wonder where Michaelโs mother was. It also occurred to me to wonder why Remy and Elise had chosen to give this interview in the Townsendsโ house.
โWhatโs your father feeling?โ I asked Michael, hating myself for asking, but knowing we had to treat this like any other case.
Michael scanned his fatherโs face as Thatcher held, but didnโt drink, his bourbon on the rocks. Within seconds, Michael was texting Agent Briggs.
โYou want to know what I see when I look at my father, Colorado?โ he asked, his voice utterly devoid of emotion, like whatever heโd read on Thatcher Townsendโs face had numbed something inside him, deadened it like a dentist would before removing a dying tooth. โBeneath that somber expression, heโs furious. Affronted. Personally insulted.โ
Insulted by what?ย I wondered.ย By the fact that someone took Celine? By the FBIโs presence in his home?
โAnd every time someone says CeCeโs name, he feels exactly what heโs always felt, every time heโs looked at Celine Delacroix since she was fourteen years old.โ Michaelโs words set my gut to twisting, deep inside me.ย โHunger.โ
YOU
You know the Seven, almost as well as they know you. Their strengths. Their weaknesses. The Masters thirst for power. They drape you in diamondsโone for each victim. Each sacrifice. Each choice.
Diamonds and scars, scars and diamonds. The men whoโve turned you into this pretty, deadly thing go out into the world. They live their lives. They prosper.
They kill.ย For you.