Itโs as if the answers have been in front of me all alongโdancing, just out of reach. Twirling, like Lenaโbottle in the air, her ripped-up shorts and double French braids, the remnants of weeds sticking to her skin, the remnants of weed heavy on her breath. Like that ballerina, chipped and pink, spinning to the rhythm of delicate chimes. But when I had reached out, tried to touch them, tried to grab them, they had turned into smoke in my grip, swirling through my fingers until I was left with nothing.
โThe jewelry,โ I say, my eyes on Cooperโs silhouette, his aging face morphing into that of my teenaged brother. He had been so young, only fifteen. โIt was yours.โ
โDad found it in my room. Underneath my floorboard.โ
The floorboard I had told him about after I found Cooperโs magazines.
I bow my head.
โHe took the box, wiped it down, and hid it in his closet until he could figure out what to do with it,โ he says. โBut he never had the chance. You found it first.โ
I found it first. A secret I had stumbled upon in my search for scarves. I had opened it up, plucked Lenaโs belly-button ring from the center, dead and gray. And I knew. I knew it was hers. It had seen it that day, my face cupped against her stomach, her skin smooth and warm against my hands.
Somebodyโs watching.
โDad wasnโt looking at Lena,โ I say, thinking of my fatherโs expressionโdistracted, afraid. Preoccupied by some unspoken thought tormenting his mindโthat his son was sizing up his next victim, preparing to strike. โThat day at the festival. He was looking at you.โ
โEver since Tara,โ he says, the spider veins in his eyes flushing pink. Now that heโs started talking, the words are flowing freely, like I knew they would. I look down at his glass, at the puddle of wine left at the bottom. โHe would just watch me like that. Like he knew.โ
Tara King.ย The runaway, a year before any of this started. Tara King, the girl Theodore Gates had confronted my mother withโthe outlier, the enigma. The one nobody could prove.
โShe was the first,โ Cooper says. โI had wondered, for a while. What it would feel like.โ
My eyes canโt help but dart to the corner, to the place where Bert Rhodes once stood.
You ever think about what it feels like? I used to keep myself up at night, wondering. Imagining.
โAnd then one night, there she was. Alone on the side of the road.โ
I can see it so vividly, like Iโm watching a movie. Screaming into the void, trying to stop the impending danger. But nobody hears me, nobody listens. Cooper, in my fatherโs car. He had just learned how to driveโthe freedom, Iโm sure, a breath of fresh air. I can picture him idling behind the wheel, quiet, watching. Considering. His entire life, he had been surrounded by people: the crowds around him at school, in the gym, at the festival, never leaving his side. But in that moment, alone, he saw an opportunity. Tara King. A suitcase hanging heavy over her shoulder, a note scratched on her kitchen counter. She had been leaving, running away. Nobody had even thought to look when she vanished.
โI remember feeling surprised, how easy it was,โ he says, his eyes drilling into the countertop. โMy hands on her throat, and the way the movement just โฆ stopped.โ He pauses, looks at me. โDo you really want to know all this?โ
โCooper, youโre my brother,โ I say, reaching my hand out to cover his. Right now, touching his skin, I want to vomit. I want to run away. But instead, I force myself to regurgitate the words,ย hisย words, that I know work so well. โTell me what happened.โ
โI kept expecting to get caught,โ he says at last. โI kept expecting someone to show up at our houseโthe cops,ย somethingโbut nobody ever did. Nobody even talked about it. And I realized โฆ I could get away with it. Nobody knew, exceptโฆโ
He stops again, swallowing hard, like he knows these next words will hit harder than any that came before them.
โExcept Lena,โ he says finally. โLena knew.โ
Lenaโalways out late, by herself. Picking her way out of her locked bedroom before running outside, wandering into the night. Seeing Cooper in that car, creeping slowly behind as Tara walked down the side of the road, unaware. Lena had seen him. She didnโt have a crush on Cooper; she had been pushing him, testing him. She was the only one in the world who knew his secret and she was drunk with power, playing with matches the way she always did, getting closer and closer before the fire singed her skin.ย You should pick me up in that car of yours sometime,ย calling over her shoulder. Cooperโs rigid back, hands punched into his pockets.ย You donโt want to be like Lena.ย I picture her lying on the grass, that ant creeping up her cheekโher, motionless and still. Letting it crawl. Breaking into Cooperโs bedroom, the smile that twisted across her lips when he had caught usโthat knowing grin, hands on her hips, almost as if to tell him:ย Look what I can do to you.
Lena was invincible. We all thought it, even she herself.
โLena was a liability,โ I say, trying hard to swallow the tears crawling up the back of my throat. โYou had to get rid of her.โ
โAnd after thatโโhe shrugsโโthere was no reason to stop.โ
It wasnโt the killing that my brother had cravedโI know that now, looking at him hunched over my countertop, decades of memories swirling around him. It was the control. And somehow, I understand it. I understand it in a way only family can. I think back to all of my fears, the lack of control I constantly imagine. Two hands wrapped around my neck, squeezing tight. It was that same control I feared losing that Cooper loved to take. It was the control he felt in the moment those girls realized that they were in troubleโthe look in their eyes, the quiver in their voices as they pled:ย Please, anything.ย The knowledge that he and he alone was the deciding factor between life and death. He had always been that way, really
โthe way he had pushed his hand into Bert Rhodesโs chest, challenging him. Walking in circles on the wrestling mat, his fingers twitching at his sides like a tiger circling a weaker rival, ready to sink in its claws. I wonder if thatโs what he was thinking when he had his opponents by the neck: squeezing, twisting. Snapping. How easy it would have been, the pulsing of
their jugular beneath his fingers. And when he let them go, he felt like God. Granting them another day.
Tara, Robin, Susan, Margaret, Carrie, Jill. That was a part of the thrill to himโchoosing, fingers outstretched the same way you would choose an ice cream flavor, perusing your options behind a glass case before making your decision, pointing, taking. But Lena had always felt different, special. She had felt like something more, and thatโs because she was. She wasnโt random; she was taken out of necessity. Lenaย knew,ย and for that, she had to be killed.
My father knew, too. But Cooper had solved that problem in a different way. He had solved it with his words. Eyes wet, pleading. Talking about the shadows in the corner, the way he had tried to fight them. Cooper had always managed to find the right words, using them to his advantageโ controlling people, influencing people. And they had worked. They had always workedโon my father, using him to set himself free. On Lena, letting her believe that she was invincible, that he wouldnโt hurt her. And on me,ย especiallyย on me, his fingers pulling the strings attached to my limbs, making me dance in just the right way. Feeding me just the right information at just the right time. He was the author of my life, always had been, making me believe the things he wanted me to believe, spinning a web of lies in my mindโa spider pulling in insects with his crafty tendrils, watching them fight for their lives before devouring them whole.
โWhen Dad found out, you convinced him not to turn you in.โ
โWhat would you doโโCooper sighs, looking at me, skin drooping
โโif your son turned out to be a monster? Would you just stop loving him?โ
I think of my motherโreturning to my father after our trip to the station, the rationalizations she had formed in her mind.ย He wonโt hurt us. He wonโt. He wonโt hurt his family.ย Me, looking at Daniel, the evidence I had seen stacking up, but still, didnโt want to believe. Thinking, hoping: There must be good in there somewhere. And surely, thatโs what my father had thought, too. So I had turned him inโmy father, for Cooperโs crimesโ and when they came to take him, he didnโt resist. Instead, he looked at his son, at Cooper, and he had asked him to make a promise.
I glance at the clock. Seven thirty. Half an hour since Cooper arrived. I know that this is the moment. The moment Iโve been thinking about since I invited Cooper here, running through every possible scenario, thinking through every outcome. Turning them over and over in my mind like knuckles kneading dough.
โYou know I have to call the police,โ I say. โCooper, I have to call them. Youโve killed people.โ
My brother looks at me, his eyelids heavy.
โYou donโt have to do that,โ he says. โTyler is dead. Daniel doesnโt have any proof. We can leave the past in the past, Chloe. It can stay there.โ
I entertain the thoughtโthe single scenario I havenโt yet considered. I think about standing up, opening the door. Letting Cooper step outside and walk out of my life for good. Letting him get away with it, the way heโs gotten away with it for the last twenty years. I wonder what a secret like this would do to meโknowing that he was out there, somewhere. A monster hidden in plain sight, walking among us. Somebodyโs coworker, neighbor. Friend. And then, as if I had stretched out my finger and touched static, I feel a shock run down my spine. I see my mother, the way she had been pushed against the television screen, hanging on to every moment of my fatherโs trial, every wordโuntil his lawyer, Theodore Gates, had come over, telling her about the deal.
Unless you have anything else I can work with. Anything at all you havenโt told me.
She knew, too. My mother knew. After we got home from the station, after turning in that box, my father must have told her, stopping her in her tracks as I ran up the stairs. But by then, it was too late. The wheels were in motion. The police were coming for him, and so she sat back, let it happen. Held out hope that maybe it wasnโt enoughโno murder weapon, no bodies. That maybe he would go free. I remember Cooper and I on the stairs, listening. His fingers digging into my arm, leaving bruises like grapes at the mention of Tara King. Without even realizing it, I had witnessed the moment my mother had made her choiceโthe moment she had chosen to lie. To live with his secret.
No, I donโt. You know everything.
And thatโs when she changed. That slow unravel, it was because of Cooper. She had been living under the same roof as her son, watching as he got away with it. The light had been extinguished from her eyes; she had retreated from the living room to her bedroom, locking herself inside. She hadnโt been able to live with the truthโwhat her son was, what he did. Her husband in jail, the rocks through the window, and Bert Rhodes in the yard, arms flailing, nails ripping at his own skin. I feel her fingers dancing across my wrist, tapping the blanket as I pointed to those tiles:ย Dย thenย A.ย I understand now, what she had been trying to say. She had wanted me to go to my dad. She had wanted me to visit him so he could tell me the truth. Because she had understood, listening to me talk about the missing girls, the similarities, the dรฉjร vuโshe knew, more than anyone, that the past never stays where we try to keep it, stuffing it deep into the back of a closet and hoping to forget.
I had never wanted to return to Breaux Bridge, never wanted to walk
the halls of that house. Never wanted to revisit the memories I had tried to keep stranded in that tiny town. But the memories didnโt stay there, I know that now. My past has been haunting me for my entire life, like a phantom that was never laid to rest, just like those girls.
โI canโt do that,โ I say now, looking at Cooper. Shaking my head. โYou know I canโt.โ
He stares back at me, his fingers curling into a slow fist. โDonโt do this, Chloe. It doesnโt have to be this way.โ
โIt does,โ I say, starting to push my barstool back. But as I begin to stand, Cooper reaches out, his hand gripping my wrist. I look down, his knuckles white as he pinches my skin, hard. And now I know. I know, at last, that Cooper would have done it. He would have killed me, too. Right here, sitting at my kitchen counter. He would have stretched out his hands, clasped them around my throat. He would have looked into my eyes as he squeezed. I donโt doubt that my brother loves meโto whatever extent someone like him can loveโbut at the end of the day, I am a liability, like Lena. A problem that needs solving.
โYou canโt hurt me,โ I spit, yanking my arm from his grip. I push my stool back, stand up, and watch as he tries to lunge at meโbut instead, he
stumbles forward, clumsy. His knees buckling under the sudden pressure of his weight. I watch as he trips on the leg of the barstool, his body crumbling to a heap on the floor. He looks at me, confused, before looking up at the countertop. At his empty glass of wine, that hollow orange bottle.
โDid youโ?โ
He starts to speak, but then stops again, the effort suddenly too much. I think back to the last time I felt that way, the way Cooper does nowโit was that night in the motel room, Tyler pulling on his jeans, ducking into the bathroom. The glass of water he had pushed in my direction, forcing me to drink. The pills that were later found in those very pockets. The pills he had mixed into the water, the same way I had mixed mine into Cooperโs wine, watching as his eyes had gotten so heavy so quickly. The violent yellow bile I had coughed up the next morning.
I donโt bother with a response. Instead, I look up at the ceiling, at the camera in the corner, as small as a pinprick, blinking gently. Recording everything. I raise my hand and gesture for them to come inside nowโ Detective Thomas, sitting in his car outside with Daniel, phone in his lap. Watching everything, listening to it all.
I look down at my brother again, one last time. The last time it will ever be just us two. Itโs hard not to think of the memoriesโrunning through the woods behind our house, tripping on the mangled roots erupting from the soil like fossilized snakes. The way he would wipe the blood from my skinned knees, push a strip of gauze tight against my stinging skin. The way he had tied that rope to my ankle as I crawled deep into that hidden cavern, our secret spotโand suddenly, I know thatโs where they are. The missing girls, hidden in plain sight. Pushed deep into the darkness, somewhere only we would know.
I picture that dark figure I had seen emerging from the trees, shovel in hand: Cooper, always tall for fifteen, muscular from years of wrestling. His head ducked low, the darkness obscuring his face. The shadows swallowing him upโuntil, at last, he had turned into nothing.