The only real valuable thing is intuition.
âAlbert Einstein âWhoâs the girl?â Elise asks, clearing her throat as she sits down on the edge of my desk.
Iâm grinning when I put my phone down, but I mask my expression.
âNo clue what youâre talking about,â I lie, controlling all my micro-expressions.
âYou can lie all you want to, but you give yourself away when you look at your phone. There are two reasons a guy smiles at his phone like that. Porn or a girl.â
Chuckling, I look away, studying some new evidence on the âBoogeymanâ case. I hate it when the media gives the unsubs a name. It only feeds into their delusions and gives them the attention they crave. Fortunately they havenât gotten wind of our mutilated, tortured victimsâ case yet. Iâd hate to know the name theyâd conjure up for that one.
âWeâre sending a team to Boston to follow up the new leads for the kills there. Weâve isolated the comfort zone and have narrowed down the suspect pool. You good with going? Iâm staying current on the mutilate and kill case,â I say instead of responding to her other comment.
She blows out a long breath. âSure. Iâll go to Boston. Stop staring at all those pictures though. Theyâre going to give you nightmares,â she says, motioning to the shots scattered across my desk. I always have board copies made for my desk. Seeing things from various angles helps you catch what you might otherwise overlook.
âI need to find the true motive behind these kills.â I motion to the latest dead and castrated victim.
âSometimes there is no motive. We profiled the unsub to be sexually frustrated, most likely because heâs gay and canât accept that. As a result, heâs on his way to becoming a sexual sadist once he does accept it. More than likely he was mocked, taunted, or rejected by these men. The local PD are being slow with getting back to us. I donât think theyâre taking this guy as seriously as they should. I talked to several townies, but they acted like no one there would ever be gay. As though itâs blasphemy to even consider. I wanted to flash pictures of my brother and his husband to them just for shock value at one point.â
My lips twitch.
âThe smaller the town, the more resistant to outsiders they are. They donât like us meddling in their town, and they sure as hell wonât want us there uncovering any dirt that might tarnish their reputation. But eventually weâll have to set up there. The unsub will return for his endgame,â I say on a heavy breath.
She nods as she stands, and she grabs her keys off my desk before staring down at me as I stay seated.
âJust a friendly reminderâ¦weâre all workaholics. Itâs how we made this team. Thereâre always three or more cases going on at once, despite the lovely way TV depicts us as having just one case at a time and free time in between. Dating⦠Well, itâs not so easy. Thereâs a reason weâre all single, divorced, or both. Unless youâre sneaking around with someone who works here, you never get to see the person waiting at home for you.â
She turns and walks away, casting a look over her shoulder. I shrug it off. We do have some free time. Itâs not much, but itâs enough. I hope. Iâd hate to know my life was only spent chasing the psychotic until I die alone.
ME: We really need to see each other again. Texting sucks.
LANA: I agree. My fingers are getting cramps.
ME: Anything going on in two days? I have no breakfast plans.
LANA: Two days from now Iâll be in West Virginia. What about tomorrow?
ME: Canât. I have to fly up to Boston for a quick briefing. Iâll be back tomorrow night, but I have too much work to finish up with. Itâll be well after midnight before I leave. IF I leave.
LANA: So, texting is fun, huh?
I laugh and groan, relaxing in my seat as Craig walks into my office.
âSo the County Sherriff from that one-horse town finally called back. Just got off the phone with him. He actually lives there, and apparently thinks he runs all the police departments in the county. Anyway, he said thereâre âno gaysâ living in his towns. âThose are for city folk who forgot how to be men and women.ââ Craig rolls his eyes, and I curse.
âRepression is a breeding ground for serial killers. Him denying anyone could be something other than who he wants them to be isnât going to help us find this unsub before he strikes again.â
âI said almost the exact same thing. But he didnât budge from his stance. He thinks itâs a coincidence those âpoor boysâ got killed. He blames it on moving away from home, because the rest of the world is full of evil. Pretty sure heâs working with a cult mentality, and I wouldnât be surprised if all the small towns heâs sheriff over drink that water.â
âWeâre going to have to profile the whole town if someone doesnât talk,â I grumble.
âYou think the unsub is still a resident there?â he asks as he takes a seat in front of my desk.
âI think itâs unlikely but possible. We donât have enough information to use for a more specific profile.â
He steeples his hands in front of his mouth, his eyes vacantly staring at the top of my desk.
âThe media will spin all sorts of theories if they get ahold of this story before weâre ready to deliver a concrete profile,â he says absently.
âWell aware. At least we know the sheriff isnât going to be spreading the story before weâre ready.â
He nods, still staring at nothing in particular.
âI donât get how you do it,â he says, moving his eyes away from one of the photographs. âHow do you get inside someoneâs head that is this sick and sadistic?â
âHow do you handle a thousand and one questions from the media?â I ask with a shrug. âWe all have our strengths. I donât get inside their heads. I crawl into their psyche. Itâs the only way to understand their delusional mentality, because you canât think like a rational person would. A convoluted mind is one that forms its own reality. Thatâs why I need to know more about these kills. Heâs not leaving behind enough clues to piece together the puzzle.â