I โwoke up in a cold sweat in the middle of the night. I couldnโt remember my nightmare, but knew that Iโd had one. My heart was racing. Myโ
chest was heavy, and I couldnโt shake the feeling that I wasย trapped. I threw off the covers.
My fingers found their way to the Rose Red lipstick of their own accord.
On the other side of the room, Sloane turned over in her bed. I held my breath, waiting to see if sheโd wake up. She didnโt. As quietly as I could, I slipped out of bed and out of our room.
I needed space. I needed air. I needed to breathe.
The house was silent as I crept downstairs. I wasnโt even sure where I was going until I ended up outside the kitchen door.
โI told you, Iโm fine.โ
I came to an abrupt halt as the silence in the house gave way to the muted sound of arguing on the other side of the door.
โYouโre not fine, Dean. Youโre not supposed to be fine with this.ย Iโmย not fine with this.โ
Agent Sterling and Dean. Theyโre fighting.
I heard the sound of a chair scraping across tile and prepared to retreat. I listened for footsteps, but none were forthcoming. It sounded like someone had just pushed back from the tableโangrily.
โYou left.โ
โDeanโโ
โYou left the FBI. I think we both know why.โ
โI left because I wasnโt doing my job, Dean. I was angry. I needed to prove that I wasnโt scared, and I got someone killed. Because I couldnโt follow the rules. Because Tanner couldnโt let even one case go.โ
Tanner was Briggsโs first name. The fact that Agent Sterling was using it in a conversation with Dean made me wonder just how much history the two of them shared. This wasnโt a conversation you had with a kid youโd met once when you arrested his father.
โWhat was the girlโs name?โ Deanโs voice was lower-pitched than Agent Sterlingโs. I struggled to make out his words as he spoke.
โI canโt tell you that, Dean.โ โWhat was her name?โ
โYouโre not authorized to work on active cases. Leave it alone.โ โYou tell me her name. Iโll leave it alone.โ
โNo, you wonโt.โ Agent Sterlingโs voice was getting harder to decipher. I wondered if she was speaking more softly because the alternative was starting to yell.
โI made you a promise once.โ Deanโs voice was controlledโtoo controlled. โI kept it. Tell me this girlโs name, and Iโll promise to leave it alone.โ
My fingers tightened around the tube of lipstick in my hand. Briggs had let me read through Lockeโs file. Iโd memorized the names of every one of her victims.
โIsnโt it enough that I swore we would take care of this?โ Agent Sterling said sharply. โWeโve got some solid leads. I canโt tell you what they are, but I can promise you we have them. Itโs a copycat, Dean. Paint by numbers.
Thatโs all. Daniel Redding is in jail. Heโs going to be in jail for the rest of his miserable life.โ
โWhatโs her name?โ
โWhy do you need to know?โ This time, Agent Sterlingโs voice got loud enough that I would have heard it even if I hadnโt been standing right outside the door. โYou tell me that, and Iโll answer your question.โ
โI just do.โ
โNot good enough, Dean.โ
Silence. Neither one of them spoke for at least a minute. The sound of my own breathing seemed unbearably loud. I was sure that any second, one of them would come storming out. Theyโd discover me standing here, listening at the door to a conversation that Iย knewย was more private than anything Dean had told me.
But I couldnโt move. I couldnโt even remember how.
โHer name was Gloria.โ That was Dean, not Sterling, so I wasnโt sure who theย herย in question was. โHe introduced her to me. He made her say my name. He asked her if sheโd like to be my mom. I was nine. I told him I didnโt want a new mother. And he looked at Gloria and said, โThatโs a shame.โโ
โYou didnโt know.โ Sterlingโs voice was quiet again, but still high enough in pitch that the words carried.
โAnd once I did know,โ Dean replied, his voice on the edge of breaking, โhe wouldnโt tell me their names.โ
Another torturously long silence. The vicious beating of my own heart drowned out the sound of my breathing. I took a step backward, a tiny, silent step.
I shouldnโt be here. I shouldnโt be listening to this.
I turned, but even with my back to the door, I heard Agent Sterling answer Deanโs question. โThe girlโs name was Emerson Cole.โ
Back in my own bed, I closed my eyes and tried not to think about what Iโd overheard, as if by pushing it out of my mind, I could make up for the fact that Iโd listened at the door for far too long.
I failed.
Dean and Agent Sterling hadnโt justย metย each other before. Theyย knewย each other. They had history.ย Stop thinking about it,ย I told myself.ย Donโt do this.ย I couldnโt stop, any more than Sloane would have been able to see a mathematical equation without calculating the answer.
Dean made you a promise once, Agent Sterling, and whatever it was, he kept it.ย The closest I could come to granting Dean privacy was to try getting inside Agent Sterlingโs head instead of his.ย You donโt like thinking about the Daniel Redding case. You care about Dean. Michael said youโre afraid to even look at him, but clearly, you donโt blame Dean for what his father did.
Another implication of their conversation finally sank in.
You know that Dean discovered what his father was doing, donโt you?
You know that Daniel Redding made his son watch.
The words Dean had whispered to me the day before, the secret Iโd been sure heโd never told anyoneโshe knew it, too. Somehow, that made it harder to hold on to my resentment against Agent Sterling.
You think you can protect him. You think if he doesnโt know whatโs happening, it wonโt affect him. Thatโs why you didnโt want to tell him Emersonโs name.
If Agent Sterling knew him so well, if she cared about Dean so much, why couldnโt she see that it was theย notย knowing that was going to kill him? It didnโt matter if this killer was just a copycatโthe fact that Dean had needed to know the girlโs name told me he wouldnโt be able to make that separation in his mind.
Heโd blame himself for this girl, the way he blamed himself for all the others.
I told him I didnโt want a new mother.
And Daniel Redding had replied, โThatโs a shame.โ In Deanโs mindโ and maybe in his fatherโsโat least one of Daniel Reddingโs victims had died because she wouldnโt make a suitable replacement mother for Dean.
Because Dean had said he didnโt want her.
So much for my resolution to stick to profiling Sterling instead of Dean.
Thwap.ย A small, cold projectile hit me in the side of the head. For a second, I thought Iโd imagined it, and thenโthwap.
I opened my eyes, turned toward the door, and wiped the side of my face, which was damp. By the time my eyes had adjusted to the light, Iโd been pelted for a third time.
โLia,โ I hissed, keeping my voice to a whisper to avoid waking Sloane. โQuit throwing ice at me.โ
Lia popped a piece of ice into her mouth and rolled it around with her tongue. Without a word, she beckoned me into the hallway. Fairly certain she would continue throwing ice at me until I agreed, I rolled out of bed and followed her into the hall. She closed the bedroom door behind us and pulled me into the nearby bathroom. Once sheโd locked that door, she flipped the light switch on, and I realized that, in addition to the cup of ice she held in her left hand, she held a sparkly mint-green shirt in her right.
My eyes went from the clothes in Liaโs hands to the clothes she was wearing: black leather pants and a silver top that was held in place by a chain around her neck and had no back whatsoever.
โWhat are you wearing?โ I asked.
Lia answered my question with an order. โPut this on.โ She thrust the shirt at me. I took a step back. โWhy?โ
โBecause,โ Lia said, like the two of us hadnโt foughtย twiceย in the past forty-eight hours, โyou canโt go to a Colonial University frat party dressed in your pajamas.โ
โA frat party,โ I repeated. Then the rest of her statement sunk in.
Colonial University. The scene of the crime.
โThis is a bad idea,โ I told Lia. โJudd would kill us. Not to mention the fact that Agent Sterlingโs already on the warpath, and all Sloane and I did was build a mock-up of the crime scene in the basement.โ
โSloane built a mock-up of the crime scene,โ Lia corrected. โYou didnโt do anything other than get caught.โ
โYouโre a crazy person,โ I told Lia, struggling to keep my voice to a whisper. โYou want us to sneak out of the house to attend a college frat party at a university where there is an ongoing FBI investigation. Forget about Judd and Agent Sterling.ย Briggsย would kill us.โ
โOnly if we get caught,โ Lia retorted. โAnd unlike certain redheads in this room, I specialize at not getting caught. Put on the dress, Cassie.โ
โWhat dress?โ
Lia held up the glittery thing Iโd mistaken for a shirt. โThis dress.โ โThere is no world in which that is long enough to be a dress.โ
โItโs a dress. In fact, as of this moment, itโsย yourย dress, which you are going to put on without complaining, because frat boys are more talkative when youโre showing a little leg.โ
I inhaled, preparing to counter Liaโs statement with one of my own, but she took a step forward, invading my personal space and pushing me back against the bathroom counter.
โYouโre the profiler,โ she said. โYou tell me how okay Dean is going to be if the FBI botches this case. Then tell me that you are one hundred percent certain that we wonโt pick up on something they miss.โ
The FBI had profilers and interrogators. Those agents had training. They had experience. They had a million and one things that we didnโtโbut no one had instincts like ours. That was the whole point of the program. That
was the reason Judd was afraid that if the FBI started using us on active cases, they wouldnโt be able to stop.
โWho do you think college students are going to get chatty with,โ Lia asked me, โFBI agents or two scantily clad and passably nubile teenage girls?โ
Even setting aside our abilities, Lia was right. No one would suspect we were part of the investigation. They might tell us something the FBI didnโt know.
โIf Sterling implied that she could, in any way, get the director to disband this program, she was lying. I can guarantee you thatโs outside her purview. At most, she could send one of us home, and I would bet you a lot of money that the director wouldnโt let her sendย youย home, because youโre a nice, shiny alternative to Dean, who the director has never trusted and never liked.โ Lia took a step back, allowing me some breathing room. โYou say you care about Dean,โ she told me, her voice low. โYou say you want to help. This will help. Iโd lie to you about a lot of things, Cassie, but helping Dean isnโt one of them. I wouldnโt do this for you, or for Michael, or even for Sloane. But I would waltz into hades and make nice with the devil himself for Dean, so either you put on the damn dress or you get the hell out of my way.โ
I put on the dress.
โAre you sure this isnโt a shirt?โ I asked, eyeing the hemline.
Lia manhandled my face and slathered it with base before brandishing a tube of pink lip gloss and a container of black mascara. โItโs a dress,โ she swore.
It was times like these I really wished Lia werenโt a compulsive liar. โHow are we even getting to this party?โ I asked.
Lia smirked. โIt just so happens I know a boy with a car.โ