โAgent Sterling and Agent Briggs sat in the interrogation room opposite Beau Donovan. He was wearing an orange jumpsuit. His wrists were handcuffed together. A public defender sat beside Beau, continually advising his client not to speak.โ
Back at the safe house, Lia, Michael, Dean, and I watched. Sloane had tried to watch, too, but she couldnโt.
Sheโd been wearing the shirt Aaron gave her for three days straight.
We needed a confession. Weโd laid out enough evidence to convince the DA to press charges, but to avoid a trial, to be sure that Beau would pay, we needed a confession.
โMy client,โ the lawyer said forcefully, โis pleading the Fifth.โ โYou have nothing,โ Beau told Briggs and Sterling, his eyes
simultaneously dead of emotion and strangely alight. โThis is the second time youโve tried to put me in this box. It wonโt work. Of course it wonโt.โ
โMy client,โ the lawyer repeated, โis pleading the Fifth.โ
โNine bodies.โ Agent Briggs leaned forward. โEvery three years. On dates derived from the Fibonacci sequence.โ
This was the final card we had to play.
โKeep going,โ Michael told them, his words going to the earpiece both agents wore. โHeโs surprised that you know about the others. And the way his eyes just darted toward his lawyer? Agitation. Anger. Fear.โ
Beauโs lawyer was an outsider. He didnโt know why his client had done what heโd done. He didnโt know what had inspired him to kill. We were banking on the fact that Beau might not want the man to know.
One by one, Briggs started pulling pictures out of his file. Killsโbut not Beauโs. โDrowning. Fire. Impaling. Strangling.โ
Beau was getting visibly agitated.
โKnife.โ Briggs paused. That was as far as Beauโs pattern had gone. โYou would have beaten your sixth victim to death.โ Another picture.
You werenโt expecting this. You werenโt expecting the FBI to know.ย Beau went pale.ย The FBI canโt know.
You only meant to hint at age-old secrets. To get their attention. To
make themย see you.
You never meant for it to go this far.
โNumber seven would have been poison,โ Briggs continued. He laid the last picture down. In it, a woman with blond hair, green eyes, and a face that tended more toward quirky than cute lay on her back. Her mouth was crusted with blood. Her body was contorted. Sheโd ripped her own fingernails off.
I swallowed as I remembered what Judd had said about Nightshadeโs poison.ย Undetectable. Incurable. Painful.
โShe was my best friend.โ Agent Sterling brought her fingers to the very edge of Scarlettโs picture. โDid they take someone from you, too?โ
โThey?โ the lawyer said. โWhoโs they?โ He gestured angrily toward the pictures. โWhat is the meaning of this?โ
Briggs locked his eyes onto Beau. โShould I answer that question?โ he asked. โShould I tell him why weโre showing you these pictures?โ
โNo!โ The word burst out of Beau as a snarl.
You donโt talk to outsiders.ย Liaโs insight into cult mentality rang in my head.ย You donโt tell them what theyโre not blessed enough to know.
โGet out,โ Beau told his lawyer. โI canโt just leaveโโ
โIโm the client,โ Beau said. โAnd I said get out.ย Now.โ The lawyer left.
โYouโre under no obligation to speak with us without your lawyer present,โ Briggs said. โBut then, Iโm not convinced you want him to hear about this. Iโm not convinced you wantย anyoneย to hear about this.โ Briggs
paused. โYouโre right when you said we might not have enough for a conviction.โ
Sterling picked up where Briggs left off. โBut we do have enough for a trial.
โTwelve people on a jury,โ Sterling said. I recognized her strategy of playing up the numbers, playing into his pattern of thinking. โDozens of reporters. The victimsโ families will want to be there, of courseโฆ.โ
โThey will destroy you,โ Beau said.
โWill they?โ Sterling asked. โOr will they destroyย you?โ
Those words landed. I could see Beau straining against the handcuffs, straining to keep from turning back and looking over his shoulder.
โTell him a story,โ Dean instructed the agents. โStart with the day someone found him in the desert.โ
Dean and I were used to using our abilities to catch killers. But profiling was just as useful in knowing how to break them.
โLet me tell you a story,โ Briggs said on-screen. โItโs a story about a little boy who was found, half-dead, in the desert, when he was six years old.โ
Beauโs breath was coming quicker now.
โNo one knew where heโd come from,โ Briggs continued.
โNo one knew what he was,โ I said. Briggs repeated my words to Beau.
We werenโt positive how Beau had spent those first six years, but Dean had a theory. Iโd wondered, days ago, if Dean had seen any of himself when he looked at Beau. Iโd thought that if the UNSUB was young, his profile wouldnโt be dissimilar from Daniel Reddingโs apprenticesโ.
You didnโt just stumble across the pattern. You knew to look for it. You spent your whole life looking for it. And the reason you did that lies in those first six years.
โYou donโt know what youโre talking about.โ Beauโs voice was no louder than a whisper, but it cut through the air. โYou couldnโt possibly know.โ
โWe know they didnโt want you.โ Sterling went for the kill. Beauโs murders had taken the cultโs pattern to the next level. Heโd been appealing to them, attacking them, showing them just how worthy he was. โThey left you to die. You werenโt good enough for them.โ Sterling paused. โAnd they were right. Look at you. You got caught.โ Her eyes trailed over his orange jumpsuit, his cuffs. โThey were right.โ
โYou have no idea what I am,โ Beau said, his voice shaking with emotion. โYou have no idea what Iโm capable of. Neither do they. No one knows.โ His voice rose with each word. โI was born for this. The rest of them, theyโre recruited as adults, but number nine is always born within their walls. The child of the brotherhood and the Pythiaโblood of their blood. Nine.โ
โNineย is a name to him,โ Dean said. โA title. Tell him itโs not his. Tell him he doesnโt deserve it.โ
โYouโre not Nine,โ Sterling said. โYouโre never going to be Nine.โ
Beau lifted cuffed hands to his own collar. He latched his fingers over his shirt and pulled it roughly off his shoulder. Underneath, etched onto his chest, was a series of jagged cuts, halfway healed and on their way to a scar.
Seven small circles forming a heptagon around a cross.
I stopped breathing. That symbolโI knew that symbol.
โSeven Masters.โ Beauโs face was taut, his voice full of fury. He ran his fingers around the outside of the heptagon.ย Seven circles.ย โThe Pythia.โ He pressed his finger into the wound and pulled it down the vertical line on the cross. His hand trembled as he went to do the same with the horizontal. โAnd Nine.โ
The symbol. I know that symbol. Seven circles around a cross.
Iโd seen it carved into the lid of a plain wooden coffin, uncovered at the crossroads on a country dirt road.
โYouย wishย you were Nine,โ Agent Sterling said, still pressing. I felt my limbs going numb. Blackness crept in on my field of vision.
โDean,โ I wheezed.
He was with me in an instant. โI see it,โ he said. โI need you to breathe for me, Cassie. I see it.โ
The symbol Beau had carved into his own flesh had also been carved into my motherโs coffin.ย Not possible. June twenty-first. Not a Fibonacci date. My mother died in June.
On-screen, Beauโs hands were still trembling. His fingers tensed. They clawed at his neck. His back arched. And then he fell to the floor, convulsing.
Screaming.ย I registered the sound as if it were coming from very far away.ย Heโs screaming.
And then he was gargling, choking on blood as it poured from his lips, his fingernails clawing violently against his own body, against the floor.
Poison.
โBreathe,โ Dean repeated.
โWe need help in here!โ Sterling was screaming.ย Beau is screaming, and Sterling is screamingโand finally, the convulsions stopped. Finally, Beau was still.
Seven small circles forming a heptagon around a cross.
I forced myself to suck in a breath. And then another and another.
Beauโs cracked lips moved. He looked at Briggs in one final moment of clarity. โI donโt,โ he struggled to say. โI donโt wish I was Nine.โ He sounded like a child.
โYouโve been poisoned,โ Briggs told him. โYou need to tell usโโ
โI donโt believe in wishing,โ Beau murmured. And then his eyes rolled back in his head, and he died.