โโYou got something you want to share with the class, Townsend?โ Liaโs tone was light and mocking, but I knew with every fiber of my being that this wasnโt a joke to her.โ
You came up here because you thought he was hiding something. From you. From all of us.
While Dean and I had been profiling the crime scene, Lia had been watching Michael. She must have seen some kind of tell. Even if he hadnโtย lied, she must have noticed something that made her suspectโฆ
What? What do you suspect, Lia?
โThatโs not a photograph.โ Michael gave Lia a look. โItโs a digital drawing. Celine took creative license with the old photo and updated it. Obviously. Unless you didnโt happen to notice that her schedule included a class on digital art?โ
As a matter of reflex, I ran through the rest of Celineโs schedule in my head.ย Visual Thinking. Death and Apocalypse in Medieval Art. Theories, Practice, and Politics of Human Rights. Color.
โWhen was the last time you saw her?โ Lia asked Michael. โWhen you went home over Christmas?โ
Michaelโs jaw clenched slightly. โI havenโt seen Celine in nearly three years. But Iโm touched that youโre jealous. Really.โ
โWho says Iโm jealous?โ
โThe emotion reader in the room.โ Michael glanced at me. โMaybe the profiler in the room can tell the lie detector that itโs borderline pathological to be jealous of one of our vics?โ
Vics. As inย victims. The Michael I knew wasnโt capable of thinking of someone he cared about that way. Celine Delacroix wasnโt a nameless, facelessย victimย to him. And I couldnโt help wonderingโif Celine hadnโt seen Michael in three years, how had she captured the way he looked now so precisely?
โTell me youโre not hiding something.โ Lia gave Michael what seemed to be a perfectly pleasant smile. โGo ahead. I dare you.โ
โIโm not doing this with you,โ Michael said through clenched teeth. โThis
isnโtย aboutย you, Lia. This is none of your damn business.โ
They were so caught up arguing with each other that they didnโt see the picture on the screen change again. This time, there was only one face depicted in the drawing.
Thatcher Townsendโs.
โMichael.โ I waited until he looked at me to continue. โWhy would Celine have a picture of your father on her computer? Why would she have drawn him?โ
Michael stared at the computer screen, his face unreadable. โTownsend, tell me you think this case has something to do with the
Masters.โ Lia went for the jugular. โTell me that you havenโt known, from the second you saw that crime scene, that it does not.โ
โIn five seconds,โ Michael said instead, his gaze intent on Lia, โIโm going to tell you that I love you. And if youโre still in the room when I say it, youโre going to know.โ
Whether he loved her. Whether he didnโt.
If sheโd known for certain that the answer was the latter, Lia wouldnโt have moved. If no part of her wanted him to love her, she wouldnโt have cared. Instead, she looked at Michael with something like hatred in her eyes.
And then she ran.
It was several seconds before I found my voice. โMichaelโโ โDonโt,โ he told me. โBecause I swear to God, Colorado, if you say a
single word right now, Iโm not going to be able to keep from telling you exactly what combination of emotions I saw flash across your face when you started to think that Celine might not have been taken by one of your precious Masters.โ
My mouth went dry. If Celine had been taken by the Masters on a Fibonacci date, she was already dead. But if this case was unrelated, she might still be alive. And Iโฆ
I wasnโt happy. I wasnโt hopeful. Part of meโa sick, twisted part of me that I barely even recognizedโwantedย her to be a victim of the cabal.
Because if she was their victim, there was a chance theyโd left evidence behind. We desperately needed a lead.ย Iย needed something to go on.
Even though I knew Celine mattered to Michael. Even though he mattered to me.
YOU
Some things you remember. Some things you donโt. Some things youโll shudder atโand some things you wonโt.