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Chapter no 9

Bad Blood (The Naturals, #4)

โ€ŒHunger wasnโ€™t an emotion. It was a need. A deep-seated, biological, primitive need. I didnโ€™t want to even think about what might make a grown man look at a teenage girl that way, why Thatcher Townsend might be personally insulted that someone had dared to abduct the daughter of a familyโ€Œ

friend.

โ€œGloves.โ€ Agent Sterling held a pair out to each of us. She and Agent Briggs hadnโ€™t responded to Michaelโ€™s text. Instead, Agent Starmans had eventually been the one to tell us that weโ€™d been cleared to visit the crime scene.

You chose to come home over spring break. As I put on the gloves, I tried to slip back into Celineโ€™s perspective.ย You had to at least suspect your parents wouldnโ€™t be here. I stood at the threshold to Celineโ€™s studio. Crime-scene tape had it blocked off. From the looks of it, the studio had been a cabana or single-room guesthouse at some point. It was detached from the main house, overlooking the pool.

Even from the doorway, the smell of kerosene was overwhelming. โ€œSigns of forced entry.โ€ Sloane came to stand beside me, scanning the

door. โ€œLight scratches around the lock. Thereโ€™s a ninety-six percent probability that further analysis would reveal dents on the pins inside the lock.โ€

โ€œTranslation?โ€ Lia asked. Beside her, Michael closed his eyes, an elongated blink that made me wish that I were half as good at reading his emotions as he was at reading mine.

โ€œThe lock was engaged. Someone picked it.โ€ Sloane ducked under the crime-scene tape, her blue eyes taking everything in as she methodically scanned the room.

You locked the door. I stood in the doorway a moment longer, trying to picture Celine inside.ย You came out here to paint, and you locked the door. I wondered if that had been force of habitโ€”or if sheโ€™d had a reason to turn the lock. Taking my time, I entered the studio, careful to avoid the evidence markers on the floor.

Shattered glass. A broken easel. My mind superimposed the images from

the crime scene photos onto the markers on the floor. A second table was overturned near the far wall. A curtain had been pulled down, torn. There were drops of blood on the floor, a hand-shaped smear on the inside of the door frame.

You fought.

No, I thought, my heart thrumming in my chest. Using the wordย youย kept me at a distance. That wasnโ€™t what I wanted. That wasnโ€™t what Celine needed.

I fought. I pictured myself standing in the middle of the studio, painting. Without meaning to, my body assumed the position weโ€™d seen Celine in right before the security footage had cut out. My right arm was elevated, a pretend brush held in my hand. My torso twisted slightly to one side. My chin rose, my eyes on a phantom painting.

โ€œThe door was locked,โ€ I said. โ€œMaybe I heard someone outside. Maybe I heard the light sound of scratching. Maybe the hairs on the back of my neck stood straight up.โ€

Or maybe I was so consumed by painting that I didnโ€™t hear a thing. Maybe I didnโ€™t see the doorknob turn. Maybe I didnโ€™t hear it open.

โ€œI was quiet.โ€ Dean stood at the door, staring at me. My first instinct had been to get inside Celineโ€™s head. His first instinct was always to profile the UNSUB. โ€œThere will be a time for noise, a time for screams. But first I have to get what I came for.โ€

I saw the logic in what Dean was saying: the UNSUB had come here for Celine. She hadnโ€™t been a random target. A killer choosing his victims randomly wouldnโ€™t have chosen a girl protected by a state-of-the-art security system. Only someone whoโ€™d been watching her would have known she was here alone.

โ€œYou thought you could slip in and take me,โ€ I said, my eyes on Dean. โ€œYou thought that if you were quiet enough and quick enough, you could subdue me before Iโ€™d put up much of a fight.โ€

You thought wrong.

Dean ducked under the tape and crossed the room. Standing behind me, he placed a hand over my mouth and pulled my body back against his. The motion was careful, slow, but I let myself feel it the way Celine would have. On instinctโ€”and moving just as slowly as Dean hadโ€”I bent forward, thrusting my elbows back into his stomach.ย The brush, I thought,ย in my hand. I moved as if to stab him in the leg, and at the same time, I bit the hand that held me. Lightly. Gently.

Celine would have bit her captor hard. Dean pulled back, and I escaped his grasp.

โ€œIโ€™m screaming by this point,โ€ I said. โ€œAs loud as I can. I rush for the door, butโ€”โ€

Dean came up behind me again. As he mocked grabbing me, I went for

the edge of the closest table.ย If I hold on tight enough, you canโ€™tโ€”

โ€œNot that way,โ€ Sloane said suddenly, breaking into my thoughts. โ€œBased on the pattern of the debris we saw in the crime scene photos, the contents of the table would have been knocked off the table fromย thisย side.โ€ She came around to the far side of the table and mimicked the motion it would have taken, sweeping her arms over the table lengthwise.

I frowned.ย That side of the table?

โ€œMaybe it wasnโ€™t me,โ€ I told Dean after a moment. โ€œIf I was terrified and fighting for my life, the first chance I got, I would go for the door.โ€

Unless I was looking for a weapon. Unless I had reason to believe that I could fight and win.

Deanโ€™s hands clenched themselves slowly into fists. โ€œI could have done it.โ€ He swept his hands over the table, a vein in his neck jumping out against his suntanned skin. โ€œTo scare you. Toย punishย you.โ€

I pictured glass flying everywhere.ย This studio is mine. My space. My haven. What Dean was saying made sense only if the UNSUB knew thatโ€” and only if heโ€™d known, on some level, that Celine would stay and fight.

That she wouldnโ€™t run.

I took in the rest of the room and integrated it with what Iโ€™d seen in the initial crime scene photos.ย The overturned table. The curtain, torn down from the rod. The broken easel. The remains of Celineโ€™s painting, broken and dying on the floor.

โ€œWhat about the kerosene?โ€ Lia had been remarkably quiet while weโ€™d been profiling, but sheโ€™d reached the limit on biting her tongue.

Her question jarred me out of Celineโ€™s perspective and into the UNSUBโ€™s.

If youโ€™d planned to abduct her, you wouldnโ€™t have brought the kerosene with you. And if youโ€™d planned to burn her alive here, you would have torched the place.

โ€œMaybe I couldnโ€™t do it,โ€ Dean said softly. โ€œMaybe, going in, I didnโ€™t realize what it would be like.โ€ He paused. โ€œHow much I would like it.โ€

How much you would like the fight. How much you would like her fury, her terror. How much you would want to make this one last.

โ€œThe good news,โ€ I said, my voice horrible and bitter and low, โ€œis that if this is the work of one of the Masters, sheโ€™s definitely his first.โ€

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