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Chapter no 11

All In (The Naturals, #3)

โ€ŒWe spent the next six hours buried in the evidence. Sloane and Michael went over and over the video. Dean and I made our way through the final dossier, then worked back through all of them in more detail. We found everything we could online about Camille Holt. I watched interview afterโ€Œ

interview with her. She was a self-professed method actor, who embodied her characters the entire time she was filming a role.

You like trying different peopleโ€™s skin on for size. Youโ€™re fascinated by the way the mind works, the way it breaks, the way people survive things no one should be able to survive.

It was there, in the roles she chose: a mentally ill woman on death row, a single mother weathering the loss of her only child, a homeless teenager turned vigilante after an assault.

So, Camille,ย I wondered,ย what role are you playing now?ย According to our files, sheโ€™d been at the party where Alexandra was killed. That meant she was present at a minimum of two of the three murders.

โ€œEnough.โ€ Judd had stayed mostly out of our way, observing, but unobtrusive. Now, he reached for the remote control and turned the television off. โ€œYour brains need time to process,โ€ he said gruffly. โ€œAnd your stomachs need food.โ€

We objected. That didnโ€™t go well for us.

After we pried ourselves away from the evidence, Lia โ€œsuggestedโ€ Sloane and I change for dinner, which I took as a threat that she would pick out an outfit for me if I didnโ€™t comply. Unwilling to tempt fateโ€”and Liaโ€™s fashion senseโ€”I put on a dress. When I went to fold my jeans, the USB drive Agent Sterling had given me fell out of the pocket. I bent to pick it up, half expecting Sloane to come out of the bathroom and catch me in the act.

She didnโ€™t.

I forced myself to open my hand and stared at the drive. No amount of throwing myself into the Vegas case could make this matter less. Iโ€™d wanted to see the filesโ€”neededย to see themโ€”but now that I held the answers in my hand, I was paralyzed.

When people ask me why I do what I do,ย Lockeโ€™s voice whispered in my memory,ย I tell them that I went into the FBI because a loved one was murdered.

Sensory detail broadsided me: the light reflecting off the knife, the glint in Agent Lockeโ€™s eyes. There wasnโ€™t always a rhyme or reason to what triggered my flashbacksโ€”and there was nothing I could do except ride it out.

Iย was supposed to kill her,ย Locke continued in my memory, manic with the desire to have been the one to end my motherโ€™s life. Iย was supposed to be the one.

I shuddered. When I came back to the present, my palms sticky with sweat, I couldnโ€™t keep from slipping into Lockeโ€™s mind.ย If you were here, if you had access to new information on my momโ€™s case,ย I thought,ย youโ€™d find the person who killed her. Youโ€™d kill him, for killing her.

I swallowed back the emotion rising up inside of me, grabbed my computer, and made my way out into the suite. Judd had forbidden me from looking at my motherโ€™s file alone.ย Iโ€™m not alone,ย I told myself. I was never really alone.

Part of me would always be in that blood-spattered dressing room with my mother. Part of me would always be at the safe house with Locke.

I made it to the door to the suite and began to open it, planning to slip out into the hallway.ย I just need a few minutes to look atโ€”My thought cut off abruptly as I realized the hallway outside our suite was already occupied.

Lia was leaning against one wall, four-inch heels on her feet, one leg crossed over the other at the ankles. โ€œWe both know that when you told

Cassie you were in one piece, you were lying.โ€

From where I was standing, with the door only partially ajar, I couldnโ€™t see Michael, but I could imagine his facial expression exactly as he replied, โ€œDo I look like Iโ€™m inย multipleย pieces to you?โ€

Still leaning against the wall, Lia uncrossed her ankles. โ€œTake off your shirt.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m flattered,โ€ Michael replied. โ€œReally.โ€ โ€œTake off the damn shirt, Michael.โ€

There was silence then. I heard a light rustling, then Lia stepped out of my view.

โ€œWell,โ€ Lia said, her voice light enough to send chills down my spine. โ€œThatโ€™sโ€ฆโ€

โ€œLeverage,โ€ Michael filled in.

Lia had a habit of sounding like things werenโ€™t important when they mattered the most. I eased the door open just far enough to see Michael, rebuttoning his shirt.

Underneath, his chest and stomach were mottled with bruises. โ€œLeverage,โ€ Lia repeated softly. โ€œYou donโ€™t tell Briggs, and in

exchange, your fatherโ€”โ€ โ€œHeโ€™s very generous.โ€

Michaelโ€™s words cut into me. The car heโ€™d been driving, this hotelโ€”that was the price Michael was exacting for the damage his father had inflicted?

You make him pay because you can. You make him pay because at least then youโ€™re worth something.

I swallowed down the ball of sorrow and anger rising in my throat and backed away from the door. I hadnโ€™t consciously thought of myself as eavesdropping until Iโ€™d heard something I had no right to hear.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ I heard Lia say.

โ€œDonโ€™t be,โ€ Michael told her. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t suit you.โ€

The door clicked into place. I stood there, staring at it, until someone came up behind me. Without turning around, I knew it was Dean.

I always knew when it was Dean.

โ€œFlashback?โ€ he asked quietly. Dean knew the signs, the same way I could tell when heโ€™d become absorbed in red-tinged memories of his own.

โ€œA few minutes ago,โ€ I admitted.

Dean didnโ€™t touch me, but I could feel the warmth of his body. I wanted to turn toward him, toward that warmth. Michaelโ€™s secret wasnโ€™t mine to

share. But I could tell Dean my ownโ€”if only I could make myself turn around. If only I could make my mouth form the words.

I had a flashback because I was thinking about my mother. I was thinking about my mother because the police found a body.

โ€œYouโ€™re good at being there for people,โ€ Dean murmured behind me. โ€œBut you donโ€™t have much practice at letting people be there for you.โ€

He was profiling me. I let him.

โ€œWhen you were a kid,โ€ he continued, his voice even and low, โ€œyour mother taught you to observe people. She also taught you not to get attached.โ€

I hadnโ€™t told him thatโ€”not in words. Finally, I turned toward him.

Brown eyes held mine.

โ€œShe was your whole world, your alpha and your omega, and then she was gone.โ€ His thumb gently traced the line of my jaw. โ€œLetting your father and his family be there for you would have been the worst kind of betrayal. Lettingย anyoneย be there for you would have been a betrayal.โ€

Iโ€™d been thrust into a family of strangersโ€”loud and affectionate and overbearingย strangers. I hadnโ€™t been able to share my grief. Not with them. Not with anyone.

Youโ€™re not doing it alone.ย This time, Juddโ€™s words didnโ€™t seem as much like an order. They were a reminder. I wasnโ€™t twelve years old anymore. I wasnโ€™t alone.

I leaned into Deanโ€™s touch. I closed my eyes, and the words finally came.

โ€œThey found a body.โ€

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