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Chapter no 2

Twelve (The Naturals, #4.5)

โ€Œโ€œMackenzie McBride.โ€ I said the name out loud. It had been years since Iโ€™d so much as thought it, but in the time it had taken to get the assignment from Briggs, grab my go-bag, and get to the plane, it had been playing in my mind on repeat.โ€Œ

Little Mackenzie.

Celine stuck her head into the cockpit to let the pilot know we were ready to go, then took a seat opposite Lia and me. โ€œWho wants to read me in?โ€

Special Agent Delacroix did more than live up to the title. She embodied it. It was hard to connect her to the poor little rich girl sheโ€™d been when weโ€™d first made her acquaintance, but even in a suit, her tone businesslike, I could still see shades of the girl that Celine had been. She was an artist, evident in the calluses on her fingers and the bright print she wore beneath her steel-gray jacket. I gave it fifty-fifty odds that sheโ€™d designed the pattern on the silk shirt herself. Her expression was alertโ€” controlled, but with a hint of adrenaline.

She still moved like a dancer or a fighterโ€”or both.

โ€œMackenzie was a kidnapping victim.โ€ I tried to stick to the facts and not delve down into the emotions I associated with this particular case. โ€œShe was six years old when she was taken. By the time we were read in, the case had been cold for months.โ€

Back in those days, the Naturals program had only allowed us access to cold cases. Mackenzieโ€™s was one of the first weโ€™d solved as a team.

โ€œShe wanted to be a veterinarian pop star.โ€ I hadnโ€™t meant to say that, was surprised I even remembered the details after nearly six years and who- knows-how-many cases, active and cold. โ€œHer favorite color was purple.โ€

โ€œFamily lawyer was a lying liar who lied.โ€ Lia picked up where I left off. Back when weโ€™d solved this case, sheโ€™d done a good job of pretending that it hadnโ€™t touched her, but nowadays she wasnโ€™t quite so intent on seeming heartless. โ€œHe was the one who took Mackenzie, then got off on

the press attention surrounding it. He had her for months, hidden away in some back room or godforsaken hole.โ€

A makeshift shack,ย I thought, remembering Sloaneโ€™s analysis of the property.ย Four feet by four feet, no windows.

Celine flipped through the file sitting on the table between us. โ€œMackenzie is how old now?โ€ The plane took off, but I barely felt it. โ€œTwelve?โ€

When I was twelve years old, my mother had been deemed missing, presumed dead. When Dean was twelve, heโ€™d betrayed his serial killer father, resulting in Daniel Reddingโ€™s arrest and the creation of the Naturals program.

When Lia was twelveโ€ฆ

I stopped my thoughts right there. โ€œMackenzie McBride is twelve years old,โ€ I confirmed. โ€œShe lives in Cape Roane, Maine.โ€ If Sloane were here, she would have rattled off every factoid and statistic imaginable about the small coastal town. I cut straight to the chase. โ€œCape Roane is the home of one of the tallest lighthouses in the United States, and right nowโ€ฆโ€

You climbed the stairs. You opened the window. You crawled out.โ€ฆ

โ€œRight now,โ€ I managed to continue, โ€œMackenzie is standing on the edge of that lighthouse, threatening to jump.โ€

โ€œUnlessโ€ฆโ€ Celine said softly.

Lia finished her sentence for her. โ€œShe said sheโ€™d jump unless someone called in the FBIโ€”specifically, the agent who found her in that shack.โ€

Agent Briggs.ย He was the FBI director now. He couldnโ€™t just run off at a twelve-year-oldโ€™s call. Agent Sterling, his wife, hadnโ€™t been part of the team during the Mackenzie McBride caseโ€”andย she was thirty-six weeks pregnant.

With twins.

That left those of us whoโ€™d worked the case behind the scenes. It left me, because I was the one whoโ€™d crawled inside Mackenzieโ€™s brain, way back when.

โ€œIf her parents and the local authorities hadnโ€™t found her threat credible,โ€ I forced myself to admit, โ€œthey wouldnโ€™t have called us.โ€

โ€œSo weโ€™ve got a potential jumper.โ€ Celine was quiet for a moment, and I wondered if she was thinking about the times in her life when sheโ€™d taken drastic measures for attention. Because she needed to matterโ€”to be seen and heard.

Is that what this is?ย I directed my thoughts toward Mackenzie.ย Are you just trying to make yourself heard?

Iโ€™d been taught to profile in first person or secondโ€”never in third. But right now, I wasnโ€™t profiling. I didnโ€™t know enough aboutย thisย Mackenzie to say with any degree of certainty what she did or did not want.

I only knew the child sheโ€™d beenโ€”and what sheโ€™d survived.

You demanded they call us in for a reason. If you really wanted to dieโ€” if you were sureโ€”you wouldnโ€™t be up there issuing demands.ย That was closer to a reasonable conclusion, but Iโ€™d been taught early on how easily what you wanted to see could interfere with a profileโ€™s conclusions.

I needed to keep my head clear. I needed to hold off on conclusions. I needed to get to know Mackenzieย now.

โ€œWeโ€™ll go straight to the lighthouse when we touch down.โ€ Celine wasnโ€™t giving orders so much as thinking out loud.

โ€œBriggs said that the local PD already have a crisis negotiator and a child psychologist out there,โ€ I said.

Child psychologists.ย Half of my brain was still trying to get acquainted with Mackenzieโ€™s.ย How many of those have you seen since the kidnapping? How well do you know what to sayโ€”or not to sayโ€”to convince the shrink du jour that youโ€™re normal?

How long have you known, deep in the recesses of your mind, that

normalย is a lie?

โ€œCassie.โ€ Lia had to say my name twice before I tuned back in. โ€œArenโ€™t you forgetting to read Celine in on one little thing?โ€ She paused, then prompted. โ€œTheย reasonย Briggs said that Mackenzie wants to talk to the FBI.โ€

Oh, right. That.

I answered in one word. โ€œMurder.โ€

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