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Chapter no 14

The Naturals

โ€œLocke working you too hard?โ€ Michael swooped in on me at breakfast, a habit of his, and one Iโ€™d grown to look forward to in the past week. Every day, Agent Locke showed up with a new challenge, and every day, I solved it.

With Dean.

Sometimes, it felt like mornings with Michael were my only real break. โ€œSome of us like working hard,โ€ I told him.

โ€œAs opposed to those of us who are the entitled product of an oh-so- privileged upbringing?โ€ Michael asked, wiggling his eyebrows.

โ€œThat wasnโ€™t what I meant.โ€

He leaned over and tweaked my ponytail. โ€œLikely story, Colorado.โ€ โ€œDo you really hate it here?โ€ I asked. I couldnโ€™t tell if he legitimately

disliked the program or if the attitude was for show. The biggest thing Iโ€™d figured out about Michael in the past week was that there was a very good chance that heโ€™d been wearing masks for longer than heโ€™d been working for the FBIโ€”pretending to be something he wasnโ€™t was second nature.

โ€œLetโ€™s just say that I have the rare ability to be dissatisfied wherever I am,โ€ Michael said, โ€œalthough Iโ€™m starting to think this place has its perks.โ€ This time, instead of messing with my ponytail, he pushed a stray piece of hair out of my face.

โ€œCassie.โ€ Deanโ€™s voice took me by surprise, and I jumped. โ€œLockeโ€™s here.โ€ โ€œAll work and no play,โ€ Michael whispered.

I ignored himโ€”and went to work.

โ€” โ€” โ€”

โ€œOne. Two. Three.โ€ Agent Locke set the pictures down one at a time. โ€œFour, five, six, and seven.โ€

Two rows of picturesโ€”three in one row and four in the otherโ€”stared up at me from the kitchen table. Each picture contained a body: glassy eyes, limbs splayed every which way.

โ€œAm I interrupting?โ€

Locke, Dean, and I turned to see Judd in the doorway. โ€œYes,โ€ Locke said with a smile. โ€œYou are. What can we do for you, Judd?โ€

The older man bit back a smile of his own. โ€œYou, young lady, can point me in Briggsโ€™s direction.โ€

โ€œBriggs is out doing some legwork on a case,โ€ Locke replied. โ€œItโ€™s just me today.โ€

Judd was silent for a moment. His eyes fell on the pictures on the kitchen table, and he raised an eyebrow at Locke. โ€œClean up when youโ€™re done.โ€

With that, Judd left us to our own devices, and I turned my attention back to the photographs. The three on the top row featured women lying lifeless on pavement. The four on the bottom were indoors: two on beds, one on the kitchen floor, one in a bathtub. Three of the victims had been stabbed. Two had been shot. One had been bludgeoned, and one had been strangled.

I forced myself to stare at the pictures. If I blinked, if I turned away, if I flinched, I might not be able to look back. Beside me, Dean was looking at the pictures, too. He scanned them, left to right, up and down, like he was taking inventory, like the bodies in these pictures hadnโ€™t ever been people: somebodyโ€™s mother, somebodyโ€™s love.

โ€œSeven bodies,โ€ Agent Locke said. โ€œFive killers. Three of these women were killed by the same man. The remaining four were the work of four different killers.โ€ Agent Locke tapped lightly on the top of each photo, bringing my eyes from one to the next. โ€œDifferent victims, different locations, different weapons. Whatโ€™s significant? Whatโ€™s not? As profilers, a large part of our job is identifying patterns. There are millions of unsolved cases out there. How do you know if the killer youโ€™re tracking is responsible for any of them?โ€

I could never tell when Agent Locke was asking a rhetorical question and when she expected an answer. A few seconds of keeping my mouth shut told me that this was an instance of the first.

Agent Locke turned to Dean. โ€œCare to explain to Cassie the difference between a killerโ€™s MO and their signature?โ€

Dean tore his attention away from the photos and forced himself to look at me. Studying mutilated bodies was routine. Talking to meโ€”apparently,ย thatย was hard.

โ€œMO stands forย modus operandi,โ€ he said, and thatโ€™s as far as he got before he shifted his gaze from my face to a spot just over my left shoulder. โ€œMode of operation. It refers to the method used by the killer. Location, weapon, how they pick victims, how they subdue themโ€”thatโ€™s a killerโ€™s MO.โ€

He looked down at his hands, and I looked at them, too. His palms were calloused, his fingernails short and uneven. A thin white scar snaked its way from the base of his right thumb to the outside of his wrist.

โ€œA killerโ€™s MO can change,โ€ Dean continued, and I tried to focus on his words instead of his scar. โ€œAn UNSUB might start off killing his victims quickly. Heโ€™s not sure heโ€™ll be able to get away with it, but with time and experience, a lot of UNSUBs develop ways to savor the kill. Some killers escalateโ€”taking more chances, spacing their kills closer together.โ€

Dean closed his eyes for a split second before opening them again. โ€œAnything about an UNSUBโ€™s MO is subject to change, so while it can be

informativeย to track the MO, itโ€™s not exactly bulletproof.โ€ Dean fingered the closest picture again. โ€œThatโ€™s where their signature comes in.โ€

Agent Locke took up the slack in the explanation. โ€œAn UNSUBโ€™s MO includes all of the elementsย necessaryย to commit a crime and evade capture. As a killer, youย haveย to select a victim, youย haveย to have a means of executing the crime unnoticed, youย haveย to have either physical prowess or some kind of weapon to kill them with. Youย haveย to dispose of the body in some way.โ€

Agent Locke pointed to the picture that had captured Deanโ€™s attention. โ€œBut after you stab someone in the back, you donโ€™tย haveย to roll them over

and pose their arms, palms up at their sides.โ€ She stopped pointing, but kept talkingโ€”about other killers, other things that sheโ€™d seen in her work with the FBI. โ€œYou donโ€™tย haveย to kiss their foreheads or cut off their lips or leave a piece of origami next to the body.โ€

Agent Lockeโ€™s expression was serious, but nowhere near as detached as Deanโ€™s. Sheโ€™d been doing this job for a while, but it still got to herโ€”the way it would probably always get to me. โ€œCollectively, we refer to these extra actionsโ€”and what they tell us about the UNSUBโ€”as aย signature. An UNSUBโ€™s signature tells us something about his or her underlying psychology: fantasies, deep-seated needs, emotions.โ€

Dean looked down at his hands. โ€œThose needs, those fantasies, those emotions,โ€ he said, โ€œthey donโ€™t change. A killer can switch weapons, they can start killing on a quicker schedule, they can change venues, they can start targeting a different class of victimsโ€”but their signature stays the same.โ€

I turned my attention back to the pictures. Three of the women had been stabbed: two in back alleys, one in her own kitchen. The woman in the kitchen had fought; from the looks of the pictures, the other two had never had a chance.

โ€œThese two,โ€ I said, pulling out the first two stabbing pictures. โ€œThe killer surprised them. You said the UNSUB stabbed this one from behind.โ€ I indicated the girl on the left. โ€œAfter she was deadโ€”or close enough to it that she couldnโ€™t put up much of a fightโ€”he turned her over. So she could see him.โ€

This was what Agent Locke was talking about when she used the phraseย deep-seated need. The killer had attacked this girl from behind, but it was important to himโ€”for whatever reasonโ€”that she see his face and that he see hers.

โ€œDonโ€™t sayย he,โ€ Dean said. He shifted, and suddenly, I could feel the heat from his body. โ€œSayย you, Cassie. Or say I.โ€

โ€œFine,โ€ I said. I stopped talking about the killerโ€”and started talkingย toย him. โ€œYou want them to see you. You want to stand over them. And as they lie there dying, or maybe even after theyโ€™re dead, you canโ€™t help but touch them. You straighten their clothes. You lay their arms out to the side.โ€ I stared

at the picture of the girl heโ€™d attacked from behind, and something else struck me about it. โ€œYou think theyโ€™re beautiful, but girls like that, women like that, they never even see you.โ€ I paused. โ€œSo youย make themย see you.โ€

I looked at the next picture: another woman, stabbed and found dead on the pavement. Like the first, sheโ€™d been chosen for convenience. But according to the notes on the picture, she hadnโ€™t been stabbed from behind.

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t enough,โ€ I said. โ€œTurning her over after she died, it wasnโ€™t enough. So you took the next one from the front.โ€

Like the first victim, this one had been laid carefully on her back, her hair fanned around her face in an unnatural halo. Without even thinking about it, I took the third picture on the top rowโ€”a gunshot victim whoโ€™d died runningโ€” and set it aside. That wasnโ€™t the work of the same UNSUB. It was quick and clean, and there wasnโ€™t a whiff of desire about it.

Turning my attention to the bottom row of pictures, I scanned them, trying to keep my emotions in check the way Dean did. One of these four women had been killed by the same UNSUB as the first two. The easy answerโ€”and the wrong oneโ€”would have been the third stabbing victim, but sheโ€™d been stabbed in the kitchen, with a knife from her own drawer. Sheโ€™d fought, sheโ€™d died bloody, and the killer had left her there, her skirt on sideways, her body contorted.

You need to see them, I told the killer silently, picturing his silhouette in my mind.ย You need them to see you. They need to be beautiful.

This third victim had been killed after the first two. The UNSUBโ€™s MO had changed: different weapon, different location. But deep down, the killer hadnโ€™t changed. He was still the same person with the same sick underlying needs.

Every time you kill, you need more. You need to be better. Sheย needs to be better. Killing women on the street wasnโ€™t enough anymore. You didnโ€™t want a quickie in a back alley. You wanted a relationship. A woman. A home.

I zeroed in on the two women whoโ€™d been killed in their bedrooms. Both had been found lying on their beds. One had been shot. The other had been strangled.

You catch her at night. In her house. In her bedroom. She doesnโ€™t look through you now, does she? Sheโ€™s not too good for you now.

I tried to imagine the UNSUB shooting a woman, but the math on that one just did not compute.

You want her to see you. You want to touch her. You want to feel the life going out of her, little by little.

โ€œThis was the last one,โ€ I said, pointing to the woman whoโ€™d been strangled in her own bed. โ€œDifferent MO. Same signature.โ€

This woman had died watching him, and heโ€™d posed her, propped her head up on a pillow, fanning her brown hair out around her death-still face.

Suddenly, I was nauseous. It wasnโ€™t just what had been done to these women. It was that for a moment, Iโ€™d connected with the person whoโ€™d done it. Iโ€™dย understood.

I felt a hand, warm and steady, on the back of my neck. Dean. โ€œYouโ€™re fine,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™ll pass.โ€

This from the boy whoโ€™d never wanted me to go to the place Iโ€™d just gone. โ€œJust breathe,โ€ he told me, dark eyes making a careful study of mine. I

returned the favor, concentrating on his faceโ€”here, now, this moment, nothing else.

โ€œYou okay, Cass?โ€ Agent Locke sounded worried in spite of herself. I could practically see her wondering if sheโ€™d pushed me too far, too fast.

โ€œIโ€™m fine,โ€ I said.

โ€œLiar.โ€ Lia strolled into the kitchen like a model on a catwalk, but for once, I was glad for the distraction.

โ€œOkay,โ€ I said, amending my previous statement. โ€œIโ€™m not fine, but I will be.โ€ I turned around and met Liaโ€™s eyes. โ€œSatisfied?โ€

She smiled. โ€œDelighted.โ€

Agent Locke cleared her throat and adopted a stern expression that reminded me of Agent Briggs. โ€œWeโ€™re still working here, Lia.โ€

Lia looked at me, then at Dean, who dropped his hands to his side. โ€œNo,โ€ she said. โ€œYouโ€™re not.โ€

I wasnโ€™t sure if Lia was calling Locke out on a lie or telling the agent to back off. I also wasnโ€™t sure whether she was doing it for meโ€”or for Dean. โ€œFine,โ€ Agent Locke capitulated. โ€œMy brilliant lecture on the difference

between organized and disorganized killers can wait until tomorrow.โ€ Her phone vibrated. She picked it up, glanced at the screen for a few seconds, and then corrected herself. โ€œAnd by โ€˜tomorrow,โ€™โ€ she said, โ€œI mean Monday. Have a good weekend.โ€

โ€œSomebody has a case,โ€ Lia said, her eyes lighting up.

โ€œSomebody has to jet,โ€ Agent Locke replied. โ€œNo rest for the wicked, and as much as Iโ€™d love to take a human lie detector with me to a crime scene, Lia, thatโ€™s not what this program is. You know that.โ€

Iโ€™d gotten nauseous over pictures, long-dead women, and a killer whoโ€™d already been convicted. Locke was talking about an active crime scene.

A fresh body.

โ€œYouโ€™re right,โ€ Dean said, stepping in between Lia and Locke. โ€œThatโ€™s not what this program is,โ€ he told the agent, and even from behind, I could picture the look in his eyesโ€”intense and full of warning. โ€œNot anymore.โ€

YOU

Youโ€™re getting sloppy, killing so close to home, leaving the bodies spread throughout the back streets of the capital, like Hansel and Gretel dropping more and more bread crumbs the farther into the forest they go.

But from the moment you first laid eyes on her, itโ€™s been harder to push back the desire to kill, harder to remember why you make it a point not to play in your own backyard.

Maybe this is the way itโ€™s supposed to be. Maybe itโ€™s fate.ย Time to finish what you started.

Time to get their attention.ย Time to come home.

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