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โ€ŒPart 2: Learning – โ€ŒChapter no 7

The Naturals

I stepped off the jet and blinked, my eyes adjusting to the sun. A woman with bright red hair strode toward the plane. She was wearing a gray suit and black sunglasses, and she walked like she had someplace to be.

โ€œI heard a rumor we were getting in around the same time,โ€ she called out to Briggs. โ€œThought Iโ€™d come to greet you in person.โ€ Without waiting for a reply, she turned her attention to me. โ€œIโ€™m Special Agent Lacey Locke. Briggs is my partner, and youโ€™re Cassandra Hobbes.โ€

She timed this speech to end just as she closed the space between us. She held out a hand, and I was struck by the fact that she looked somehow impish despite the sunglasses and the suit.

I took her hand. โ€œItโ€™s nice to meet you,โ€ I said. โ€œMost people just call me Cassie.โ€

โ€œCassie it is, then,โ€ she replied. โ€œBriggs tells me youโ€™re one of mine.โ€ One of hers?

Michael filled in the blank. โ€œA profiler.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t sound so enthusiastic about the science of profiling, Michael,โ€ Locke said lightly. โ€œCassie might mistake you for a seventeen-year-old boyย withoutย a strong sense of derision for the rest of the world.โ€

Michael held a hand to his chest. โ€œYour sarcasm wounds me, Agent Locke.โ€

She snorted.

โ€œYouโ€™re home early,โ€ Briggs cut in, aiming the comment at Agent Locke. โ€œNothing in Boise?โ€

Locke gave a brief jerk of her head. โ€œDead end.โ€

An unspoken communication passed between the two of them, and then Briggs turned to me. โ€œAs Michael so obligingly pointed out, Agent Locke is a profiler. Sheโ€™ll be in charge of your training.โ€

โ€œLucky you,โ€ Locke said with a grin. โ€œAre you โ€ฆโ€ I wasnโ€™t sure how to ask.

โ€œA Natural?โ€ she said. โ€œNo. Thereโ€™s only one thing Iโ€™ve ever been a natural at, and sadly, I canโ€™t tell you about that until youโ€™re twenty-one. But I did go through the FBI Academy and took every class they offered in behavioral analysis. Iโ€™ve been a part of the behavioral science unit for almost three years.โ€

I wondered if it would be rude to ask how old she was now. โ€œTwenty-nine,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd donโ€™t worry, youโ€™ll get used to it.โ€ โ€œUsed to what?โ€

She grinned again. โ€œPeople answering questions before you ask them.โ€

โ€” โ€” โ€”

The programโ€™s base of operations was a looming Victorian-style house in the tiny town of Quantico, Virginiaโ€”close enough to FBI headquarters on Marine Corps Base Quantico to be handy, but not so close that people were going to start asking questions.

โ€œLiving room. Media room. Library. Study.โ€ The person that Briggs had found to look after the houseโ€”and usโ€”was a retired marine by the name of Judd Hawkins. He was sixty-something, eagle-eyed, and a man of few words. โ€œKitchenโ€™s through there. Your room is on the second floor.โ€ Judd paused for a fraction of a second to look at me. โ€œYouโ€™ll be sharing with one of the other girls. I expect thatโ€™s not a problem?โ€

I shook my head, and he strode back down the hallway and toward a staircase. โ€œLook alive, Ms. Hobbes,โ€ he called back. I hurried to catch up and thought I heard a smile in his voice, though there was barely a hint of it on his face.

I fought a smile of my own. Judd Hawkins might not have been gruff and no-nonsense, but my gut was telling me he had more soft spots than most people would have thought.

He caught me studying him and gave a brisk, businesslike nod. Like Briggs, he didnโ€™t seem to mind the idea that I might be getting a general picture of his personality from the little details.

Unlike a certain other individual I could think of, whoโ€™d done his best to thwart me at every turn.

Refusing to glance back at Michael, I noticed a series of framed pictures lining the staircase. A dozen or so men. One woman. Most were in their late twenties or early thirties, but one or two were older. Some were smiling; some were not. A paunchy man with dark eyebrows and thinning hair hung between a handsome heartbreaker and a black-and-white photo from the turn of the century. At the top of the stairs, an elderly couple smiled out from a slightly larger portrait.

I glanced at Judd, wondering if these were his relatives, or if they belonged to someone else in this house.

โ€œTheyโ€™re killers.โ€ An Asian girl about my age stepped around the corner.

She moved like a catโ€”and smiled like sheโ€™d just eaten a canary.

โ€œThe people in the pictures,โ€ she clarified. โ€œTheyโ€™re serial killers.โ€ She twirled her shiny black ponytail around her index finger, clearly enjoying my discomfort. โ€œItโ€™s the programโ€™s cheery way of reminding Dean why heโ€™s here.โ€

Dean? Who was Dean?

โ€œPersonally, I think itโ€™s a little macabre, but then again, Iโ€™m not a profiler.โ€ The girl flicked her ponytail. โ€œYou are, though. Arenโ€™t you?โ€

She took a step forward, and my eyes were drawn to her footwear: black leather boots with heels high enough to make my feet shudder in spasms of sympathy. She was wearing skintight black pants and a high-necked sleeveless sweater, electric blue to match the streaks in her black hair.

As I took in her clothing, the girl closed the space between us until she was standing so close to me that I thought she might reach out and start twirling my hair instead of her own.

โ€œLia,โ€ Judd said, absolutely unfazed, โ€œthis is Cassie. If youโ€™re finished trying to scare her, Iโ€™m betting sheโ€™d really like to set that bag down.โ€

Lia shrugged. โ€œMi casa es su casa. Your room is through there.โ€

โ€œYourโ€ room, I thought.ย Not โ€œourโ€ room.

โ€œCassieโ€™s really broken up about not rooming with you, Lia,โ€ Michael said, interpreting my facial expression with a wink. Lia pivoted to face him, and her lips twisted upward in a slow, sizzling grin.

โ€œMiss me?โ€ she asked.

โ€œLike a thorn in my paw,โ€ Michael replied.

Coming up the stairs behind us, Agent Briggs cleared his throat. โ€œLia,โ€ he said. โ€œNice to see you.โ€

Lia gave him a look. โ€œNow, Agent Briggs,โ€ she replied, โ€œthatโ€™s simply not true.โ€

Agent Locke rolled her eyes. โ€œLiaโ€™s specialty is deception,โ€ she told me. โ€œShe has an uncanny knack for being able to tell when people are lying.

And,โ€ Agent Locke added, meeting Liaโ€™s eyes, โ€œsheโ€™s a very good liar.โ€

Lia didnโ€™t seem to take offense at the agentโ€™s words. โ€œIโ€™m also bilingual,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd very, very flexible.โ€

The secondย veryย was aimed directly at Michael.

โ€œSo,โ€ I said, my duffel bag digging into my shoulder as I tried to process the fact that Lia was a Natural liar, โ€œthe pictures on the wallย arenโ€™tย serial killers?โ€

That question was answered with silence. Silence from Michael. Silence from Judd. Silence from Agent Locke, who looked a bit abashed.

Agent Briggs cleared his throat. โ€œNo,โ€ he said finally. โ€œThatโ€™s true.โ€ My eyes were drawn to the portrait of the elderly couple.

Smiling serial killers, five-inch heels, and a girl with a gift for lying? This was going to be interesting.

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