Pick up,ย I thought.ย Pick up, Briggs.
If thisย wasย the killerโs third time going through this patternโnine bodies, killed on Fibonacci datesโwe werenโt dealing with a novice. We were dealing with an expert.ย The level of planning. The lack of evidence left behind.
It fit.
A second realization followed on the heels of the first.ย If our killer was slitting throats more than a decade ago, weโre looking for someone no younger than their late twenties.ย And if the New York murders had been the second set and not the firstโฆ
โBriggs.โ Deanโs voice was terse, but calm. I turned toward him as he began bringing Briggs up to speed. โWe have reason to believe this might not be our UNSUBโs first rodeo.โ
Dean fell silent as Agent Briggs replied. I closed the space between Dean and me and put a hand on his arm. โTell him that Sloane broke the code,โ I said. โThe UNSUB is going to kill againโin the Grand Ballroom
โon January twelfth.โ
Dean hung up the call without saying another word. โWhat?โ I asked him. โWhy did you hang up?โ Deanโs grip tightened over his phone.
โDean?โ
โBriggs and Sterling got a call at three in the morning.โ
There was only one reason to call the FBI at three in the morning.ย Itโs too soon,ย I thought.ย Sloane said the next murder would be on the twelfth. The patternโ
โThe Majestyโs head of security was attacked,โ Dean continued. โBlunt- force trauma.โ
I thought of the man whoโd pulled us into the security office. The one who had come to get Sloaneโs father the night Camille was murdered.
โIt fits the MO,โ Dean continued. โNew method. Numbers on his wrist.โ โWeapon?โ I asked.
โA brick.โ
You bashed his head in with a brick. You took a brick and wrapped your fingers around it, and rage exploded inside of you, and youโ
โCassie.โ Dean cut my thought off. โThereโs something else you should know.โ
Did you get tired of waiting?ย I asked the UNSUB silently.ย Did something set you off? Did you get a rush out of watching this man go down? Did you savor the sound of his skull cracking?ย I couldnโt stop.ย Each time, you feel more invincible, less fallible, less human.
โCassie,โ Dean said again. โThe victim was still alive when they found him. Heโs in a medically induced coma now, but heโs not dead.โ
Deanโs words snapped me out of it.
You made a mistake,ย I thought. This was a killer who didnโtย make
mistakes. Having left a victim alive would gnaw at him from the inside out. โWe need more information,โ I said. โPictures of the crime scene,
defensive wounds on the victim, anything that might help us walk through it.โ
โThey donโt need us to walk through anything,โ Dean said. โExplain how that sentence could possibly be true.โ
I turned in the direction of the voice that had spoken those words and saw Lia. I wondered how long sheโd been standing there, watching the interplay between Dean and me.
โThey donโt need us to profile it, because there was a witness.โ Dean looked from Lia to me. โTheyโve already apprehended the suspect.โ
On-screen, Beau Donovan sat in an interrogation room. His hands were cuffed behind his back. He was staring straight aheadโnotย atย Sterling and Briggs, butย throughย them.
โThis isnโt right,โ Sloane said, plopping down on the floor beside the coffee table. A moment later, she popped back up, pacing. โIt was supposed to happen on the twelfth. It doesnโt add up.โ
She didnโt say that sheย neededย it to add up. She didnโt say that she needed this one thing to make sense.
โMr. Donovan, a witness puts you at the crime scene, crouched over the victim, writing on his wrist.โ Briggs was playing bad cop. It wasnโt so much in the words he said as in the way he said them, like each part of that statement was a nail in Beau Donovanโs coffin.
A muscle in Beauโs cheek twitched.
โFear,โ Michael said. โWith a heaping side of anger, and underneath thatโฆโ Michael searched the lines of Beauโs face. โPlaying around the corners of the lipsโsatisfaction.โ
Satisfaction.ย That was more damning than either anger or fear. Innocent people werenโtย satisfiedย when they were arrested for attempted murder.
โBeau.โ Agent Sterling wasnโt a natural fit for good cop, but based on what we knew of Beau, she must have suspected heโd be more likelyโ though stillย notย likelyโto trust a female. โIf you donโt talk to us, we canโt help you.โ
Beau slumped in his seat, as much as he could with both hands cuffed behind his back.
โYou were found withย thisย in the pocket of your sweatshirt.โ Briggs threw down an evidence bag. Inside was a permanent marker. Black. I registered the color, but didnโt dwell on it. โWhat do you think the chances are that forensics shows us your pen is a match forย this?โ Briggs laid a photo beside the evidence bag.ย The head of securityโs wrist.
Written on it was a four-digit number.
โNine-zero-nine-five,โ Sloane read. She walked forward until she was almost blocking the screen. โItโs the wrong number.ย Seven-seven-six-one.โ She punctuated each number by tapping the middle finger on her right hand against her thumb. โThatโs whatโs next. That numberโโshe gestured toward the screenโโdoesnโt appear anywhere in the first hundred digits of the Fibonacci sequence.โ
On-screen, Agent Briggs wielded silence like a weapon. He was waiting for Beau to crack.
โI donโt have to say anything to you.โ
Michael raised an eyebrow at Beauโs tone, but this time, I didnโt need a translation.ย Bravado.ย The kind born of being kicked too hard for too long.
Agent Sterling walked around to Beauโs side of the table. For a moment, I thought he might lunge at her, but instead, he stiffened as she moved to unlock his cuffs.
โYou donโt have to say anything,โ she agreed. โBut I think you want to.
I think thereโs something you want us to know.โ
Michael took in Beauโs nonverbal response, then made a finger-gunning motion at the screen. โPoint to the lady,โ he said.
โYou told us that Camille Holt was nice to you.โ Agent Sterling retreated back to her side of the table, never breaking eye contact with Beau. โRight now, itโs looking an awful lot like you killed her.โ
โEven if I told you I didnโt,โ Beau grunted, โyou wouldnโt believe me.โ โTry me.โ
For a moment, I actually thought he might. Instead, he settled back in his seat again. โI donโt feel much like talking,โ he said.
โDuring our last interview, you told us you were with Tory Howard when Camille was murdered.โ Agent Briggs leaned forward. โBut weโve recently come to believe that Tory was with Aaron Shaw that night.โ
โMaybe I was trying to protect her,โ Beau spat. โFrom you assholes.โ โOr maybe,โ Briggs suggested, โyou were really trying to protect
yourself. Tory and Aaron have been keeping things on the down low. She didnโt want to give his name as her alibi. She must have thought she was pretty lucky when you volunteered yourself for that role.โ He leaned forward. โShe just didnโt realize that when she allowed you to do so, she becameย yourย alibi for that night, too.โ
Smart,ย I thought. Looking at Beau on paper, it was easy to underestimate him. High school dropout. Working a crappy job. He made no effort whatsoever to give the impression that he was anything moreโbut his success at the poker tournament told a very different story.
Heโs used to being dismissed and ignored, but has a very high IQ,ย I thought.
โTory lied to us.โ Briggs lowered his voice. โMaybe we should be looking at charging her as an accessory.โ
โBriggs,โ Sterling said sharplyโgood cop until the end.
Agent Briggs leaned across the table, getting in Beauโs face and going in for the kill. โTell me, Beau, has Tory ever taught you how to hypnotize someone?โ