โThe FBI staked out the Grand Ballroom. For those of us whoย werenโtย licensed to participate in stakeouts, the day quickly devolved into a waiting game. The afternoon bled slowly into evening. The darker it got, the brighter the lights outside our marked-red window seemed to grow, and theโ
harder my heart beat in my chest.
January first. January second. January third. January fourth.ย I kept thinking, over and over again, that today was the fifth.ย Four bodies in four days. Next comes number five. Thatโs how you think of them, isnโt it? Not as people. As numbers. Things to be quantified. A part of your equation.
My mind went to the photo Iโd seen in my motherโs file of a skeleton wrapped carefully in a royal blue shawl. Dean had read remorse into the way the body had been buried. I couldnโt help seeing the contrast.
You donโt feel remorse.ย I made myself focus on the Vegas killer. That, I could handle. That, I could do.ย Why would you? There are billions of people in the world, and youโve killed such a very small percentage of them. One, two, three, fourโ
โOkay, thatโs it.โ Lia exited her bedroom, took one look at the rest of us, and flounced into the kitchen. I heard her bang open the freezer. A few seconds later, she was back. She tossed something at Michael. โFrozen washcloth,โ she told him. โPut it on your eye and stop with the brooding, because I think we all know that Dean has that market cornered.โ
Lia didnโt wait to see if Michael followed her instructions before she turned to her next target. โDean,โ she said, her voice wavering slightly. โIโm pregnant.โ
Deanโs eyelid twitched. โNo, youโre not.โ
โWhoโs to say, really?โ Lia countered. โThe point is that sitting here waiting for the phone to ring and mentally going over worst-case scenarios isnโt helping anybody.โ
โSo what do you suggest we do?โ I asked.
Lia hit a switch and a blackout screen slowly covered the wall of windowsโand Sloaneโs writing. Sloane let out an indignant squeak, but Lia preempted any actual complaint.
โWhat I suggest,โ Lia said, โis that we spend the next three hours and twenty-seven minutes doing our best impressions ofย actualย teenagers.โ She flopped down on the couch between Dean and me. โWho wants to play Two Truths and a Lie?โ
โI have been kicked out of no fewer than four boarding schools.โ Michael wiggled his eyebrows, his tone giving no hint whatsoever as to whether or not what he was saying was true. โMy favorite movie isย Homeward Bound.โ
Isnโt that the one with the lost pets trying to find their way home?ย I thought.
โAnd,โ Michael finished elaborately, โIโm thoroughly considering going into Reddingโs room tonight while heโs sleeping and shaving my initials into his head.โ
Three statements. Two of them were true. One was a lie. โNumber three,โ Dean said darkly. โThe lie is number three.โ
Michael couldnโt quite manage a roguish smile with a fat lip, but he made his best attempt.
Lia, who was sprawled on her stomach on the carpet, propped herself up on her elbows. โHow many boarding schoolsย haveย you gotten kicked out of?โ she asked.
Michael gave Dean a moment to process the fact that the deception detector had zeroed in on his first statement as the lie. โThree,โ he told Lia.
โSlacker,โ she opined.
โItโs not my fault Sterling and Briggs havenโt kicked me out yet.โ Michael ran a thumb along the edge of his split lip, an odd sheen in his
eyes. โClearly, Iโm a liability. Theyโre smart people. Expulsion number four is only a matter of time.โ
Better to make someone reject you,ย I thought, understanding more than I wanted to,ย than to let them do it on their own.
โHomeward Bound?โ Dean gave Michael a look. โReally?โ
โWhat can I say?โ Michael replied. โIโm a sucker for warmhearted puppies and kitties.โ
โThat seems statistically unlikely,โ Sloane said. She stared at Michael for several seconds, then shrugged. โMy turn.โ She caught her bottom lip between her teeth. โThe average litter size for a beagle is seven puppies.โ Sloane paused, then offered up a second statement. โThe wordย spatulaย is derived from the Greek wordย spathe, meaning broad, flat blade.โ
Sloane didnโt quite grasp the intricacies of the game, but she knew that she was supposed to say two true statements and one false one. She twisted one hand into the other in her lap. Even if her truths hadnโt been obvious, it was clear she was preparing to lie. โThe man who owns this casino,โ she said, the words coming out in a rush, โis not my father.โ
Sloane had spent her entire life keeping this secret. Sheโd told me. She couldnโt bring herself to tell the othersโbut she could lie. Badly, obviously, in a game devoted to spotting lies.
I could feel the others brimming with questions, but no one said a single word.
โYou have to guess.โ Sloane swallowed, then looked up from her lap. โYouย haveย to. Those are the rules.โ
Michael poked Sloaneโs foot with his. โIs it the one about the beagles?โ โNo,โ Sloane said. โNo, it is not.โ
โWe know.โ Deanโs voice was as gentle as Iโd ever heard it. โWe know which one the lie is, Sloane.โ
Sloane let out a long breath. โBased on my calculations, now would be an appropriate time for someone to hug me.โ
Beside her, Dean opened his arms, and Sloane melted into them. โRaise your hand if you didnโt realize Dean was a hugger,โ Michael
said, raising his own hand. Lia snorted.
โThis hug is now completed.โ Sloane pulled back from Dean. โTwo Truths and a Lie. Someone else go,โ she said fiercely.
I obliged. โIโve never been hypnotized.โย True.ย โIโm double-jointed.โ
Lie.ย I thought of Sloane, baring her heart. โThe authorities found a body
they think is my mother.โ
Sloane had come clean with the others. I owed them the sameโeven if Dean and Lia already knew.
โIโve never seen any physical indication that you possess hypermobility,โ Sloane said. Her hands stilled in her lap. โOh.โ The realization that Iโd been telling the truth about the body washed over her, and she hesitated. โBased on my calculationsโฆโ she started to say, and then she just launched herself at me.
We might as well start calling this game Two Truths, a Lie, and a Hug,ย I thought, but something about the physical contact threatened the wall Iโd put up in my mind, the one that stood between me and the dark place.
โMy turn again.โ Michael met my eyes. I waited for him to say somethingโsomething true, something real. โIโm sorry about your mother,โ he told me.ย True.ย He turned to Sloane. โIโd be happy to punch your father, should the occasion arise.โย True.ย Then he leaned back on the heels of his hands. โAnd Iโve magnanimously decided against shaving my initials into Deanโs head.โ
Dean glowered at Michael. โI swear to God, Townsend, if youโโ โYour turn, Lia,โ I cut in. Given Liaโs uncanny ability to make anything
sound true, her rounds were by far the most challenging.
Lia tapped her fingertips along the edge of the coffee table, thinking. The steady rhythm of her tapping had my eyes drifting back toward the clock on the wall. Weโd been playing for hours. Midnight was drawing closer and closer.
โI killed a man when I was nine years old.โ Lia did what she did bestโ provided a distraction. โIโm currently considering shavingย Michaelโs head while he sleeps. And,โ she finished, her tone never changing, โI grew up in a cult.โ
Two truths and a lie.ย Liaโs distraction took hold. By the age of thirteen, just before sheโd come to the program, Lia had been on the streets. I knew that the ability to lie tended to be honed in certain kinds of environmentsโ and none of them good.
I killed a man when I was nine years old. I grew up in a cult.
Judd came into the room. I was so caught up in what Lia had just saidโ and trying to figure out which of those statements was trueโthat it took me several seconds to process the grim look on Juddโs face.
I looked at the clockโa minute past midnight.ย January sixth.
Sterling called,ย I thought. My heart beat in my throat, my palms suddenly sticky with sweat.
โWhat have we got?โ Dean asked the older man quietly.
Judd cut a brief glance at Sloane, then answered Deanโs question. โNothing.โ