Dusk settles over Hollowâs Row like a widowâs veil. The texture is silky and fine to the touch, a fragile darkness you can just see past, but shields you from the bright world of gawkers.
The young waitress sets a cup of warm chamomile tea on the unsteady table in front of me. I thank her as I submerge the teabag with a dull spoon.
I imagine the local diner is normally busier at this time of day. Early bird special-seekers mingling with high-school kids just letting out of class. But today, as news circulates of the second crime scene discovered in the killing fields within seventy-two hours, there are far more open bench seats than patrons.
The morose atmosphere thickens with wary glances and whispers our way. The town is curious about us. More so about the two strangers than the two obvious FBI agents seated three tables behind.
âIâll have the ribeye. Rare. And baked potato with all the dressings.â
I look up from dunking my tea bag to witness Kallum ordering from the waitress. I must wear a puzzled expression, because his mouth quirks into that heart-stopping grin of his.
âMight as well enjoy the local specialties,â he says as the waitress silently ambles off. âI havenât had much say in what Iâve eaten for the past six months.â
I refrain from mentioning that luxury may soon be taken away again. With what transpired at the second scene, Iâm questioning whether Kallum can be contained on this case.
Either way, my attempt to comb through his mind was obvious and sloppy. If I had any sense at all, Iâd glean what I can from him about this case and then send him away. Far away.
âDonât you eat?â
His question interrupts my thoughts, and I remove the teabag and set it on the napkin. âI donât eat with colleagues.â Or unhinged serial killers. âThis isnât aââ
âDate?â he supplies, his smirk slanting mischievously. âI have no delusions of that fact, little Halen.â He winks.
A tendril of alarm wraps me at the action, inducing a foggy sensation of being outside myself. A sliver of panic coasts through me before Iâm able to brush the eerie feeling away.
âWhatâs wrong?â he asks.
I sip my tea faster than I intend, and my eyes water as I choke back a cough. âFine.â
Ignoring Kallumâs smug expression, I send a reply text to Aubrey, resuming normal behavior. Kallum will only feed off my unease. He said he wanted to watch me squirm. Iâm giving him exactly what he wants.
I have to curb my responses to him. Iâm a wilting flower, yesâbut how much of it is an act on my part? He makes me feel unstable.
Another text from Aubrey pops up, and I reply, explaining why Iâm sitting in a diner as part of my investigation notes. Company phones and GPS aside, I do value my job. Maybe value is the wrong wordâneed feels more appropriate. What I donât need is the stress of having to explain my methodsâsometimes unorthodoxâwhen I want to explore a lead.
I admit, I stepped way out of bounds when I circumvented CrimeTech and presented Kallum as an expert consultant to assist the FBI. I needed their authority to expedite the process, and I did so in spite of any potential consequences.
Which is unlike me.
I donât exactly play by the rules, but I also donât all-out break them.
I used to care more about what Aubrey and my supervisors thought, whether or not I was surpassing expectations, following procedures to keep from disturbing the balance.
I know the exact date those cares faded, and I know everyone in my life is waiting for me to âget better,â âsnap out of it,â âbe the old Halenââbut I also know thatâs more for their comfort level than mine.
Pain makes people uncomfortable.
Strangely, today, that burden didnât feel as heavy. Even with my guard erected, I found myself falling into an ease with Kallum at the scene I donât experience with others. I donât have to force a smile. Place technical labels on my thoughts. Sensor my humanity for his comfortâ¦because he has no humanity to comfort.
Itâs easy to forget, while staring into his divine beauty, the brutality and sadistic manner in which he kills. Charismatic smiles and quipping dark humor with the face of an angelâyet a devil lurks beneath, his depths a purgatory stained in red.
This is what I must remind myself when I feel his draw reeling me in. Iâm feeling at ease with a sociopath who is adept in manipulation, whose very nature is to set mine at ease before he breaks my face with a tire iron and severs my head.
Perspective.
I sip my tea slowly.
âWhere were you just now?â Kallum questions.
Setting the cup down, I link my fingers around the warm porcelain. âI was contemplating how to work with you and keep my distance at the same time,â I answer honestly.
He pushes back in the seat and tilts his head, assessing me seriously. âThatâs going to be difficult for you. Is there anything I can do to make it easier?â
âYes,â I say, locking gazes with him. âStop calling me things like little Halen and sweetness. Stop undressing me with your smoldering eyes. Stop the flirty banter. For one, itâs disturbing. Two, I know youâre doing it to unnerve me. But weâre not colleagues. Weâre not even rivals. We have a deal. One that will be honored on my end if you honor yours. Thatâs all.â
His mouth tips into the faintest, knowing smile. âYou think my eyes are smoldering?â
âYou know they are,â I say. âYouâre very aware of your attractiveness, and you use it to disarm people. Your ego is bigger than this entire town.â
A text from Aubrey flashes on my phone screen and I turn the device over.
âNeed to check in with the parents?â he asks, his tone baiting. âThat must suck to have a curfew.â
His callous remark punches past my defenses, and I look away to drag in a fortifying breath before I can reply. âKallum, I need to hear you say that you understand me.â
Gaze probing, he says, âIâll try my best. But you donât make it easy, either. With your pouty sprite mouth and infuriatingly intoxicating scent. Youâre fucking mayhem on the senses.â
The way his gaze darkens, the defiant spark of hunger igniting within the flinty shadows, makes me question how much of it is an act on his part, also.
âPlease stop,â I demand, tamping down the reactive flame curling in my belly.
âSo youâre the only one allowed to be brutally honest, then.â
I glance away. âYouâre right. Your thoughts are valid. Iâllâ¦try to smell less appealing.â
He chuckles unexpectedly, and the deep sound hits my chest, unfurling in a light, fluttering sensation.
This is why I donât have a partner. Human nature distracts from the work, the purpose. And Kallum Locke is a huge distraction. Besides my body being highly responsive to his, the Harbinger case keeps resurfacing to taint the current case, and itâs increasingly maddening to separate the two when Kallum is purposely trying to put me on defense.
I take a long sip of tea and refocus my thoughts on the second scene, where Iâm assuming weâre still dealing with body parts from the same group of victims.
The ears were a degree less difficult to classify and label based on initial observation. The offender severed the entire ear with precision, shaving it cleanly away from the cranium, possibly with some sort of straight razor.
The same thread and weaving technique was used, denoting the same offender.
Kallum drums his fingers on the tabletop. I finally look him directly in his eyes.
âYouâre agitated again,â he says, then spins the saltshaker three times.
âThatâs because my time is supposed to be spent at the crime scenes, building a profile of the actual scene.â
Instead, Iâm seated across from a dangerously delusional philosophy scholar who claims that, in order to further analyze the scenes, he needs to learn the town philosophy.
On the ride into downtown, Kallum suggested our best way to interview the townies was to start with the local restaurants and watering holes. Socialize, blend, become accustomed to their customs. Observe their philosophy, so to speak, before asking the difficult questions which usually shut people down. Like the feds have been doing with their interrogations since they arrived.
Agent Alister wasnât impressed.
âThis town is one whole crime scene,â Kallum states. âWhen do you think weâll uncover the tongues? Maybe we can make flyers of those little monkeys to hand outââ
âIâd hate to think this was a stall tactic,â I say, cutting him short. âThere areââ
âYes, I know. Lives in peril. Itâs all very dramatic. But letâs consider thisâ¦â He leans forward, his height and large persona crowding the small table. âIâm only here for my own selfish need. Which includes this town being my only taste of freedom. Thereâs no incentive for me to work quickly, is there?â
âIâd say you have that brutally honest thing down.â I pivot back to his earlier comment.
He wets his lips, suppressing a smile. âPeople waste their lives lying, concerned with what others think.â He swipes a lemon wedge from his glass and squeezes the slice into his water. âOnce you realize everyone you know will dieâeven your helpless victims; if not today, then in just a short matter of yearsâthereâs no reason to care about much of anything.â
I lower my gaze, my throat constricting. âIs that your life philosophy, or someone elseâs? Do you have any original philosophical opinions?â
âInteresting you should ask,â he says, smearing the lemon wedge along his fingers. âConsidering itâs your perpetratorâs philosophy. I just tend to agree with that aspect of it.â
âHow can you know his philosophy? We donât know anything concrete about the scenes yet.â My tone echos the frustration starting to unravel me. âMatter of fact, how did you locate the second scene? Can you even give me a straight answer?â
âThe only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.â His mismatched blue-and-green eyes widen, revealing the unstable current drifting below his smooth surface.
He licks the lemon juice from his finger, triggering a wild flutter in my belly. Incensed, I drop my gaze to the plain-white cup. âObviously you canât.â
He reaches across the table and grasps my wrist.
My heart batters my chest as I fight his grip. âLet goââ
âListen.â
His command hits my body like a crash of thunder. I go still, my heavy breaths the only sound between us.
The whole diner fades away as Kallumâs long fingers circle my wrist, his heat bleeding into my skin. Then, with his other hand, he places the lemon to my knuckles. Applying delicate pressure, he slides the peel down the back of my index finger, setting off a riot of heat and frenzy to my nervous system.
As he moves to my middle finger, dragging the slick pulp over my skin, I stare at his hand wrapped around my wrist, at the inked sigils stained into his fingers. Theyâre unique to him. The designs donât pull up on any rune chart that Iâve searched.
I feel every slippery pass of the lemon over my heated flesh, and I know he feels the tremble in my body.
âLemon has amazing cleansing properties,â he says, âmaking it a natural disinfectant.â
My throat tightens. I swallow past the ache lodged at the base, trying to control my breathing. My rapid heartbeat pulses in my veins, fighting against the press of his fingers.
âThose same cleansing agents hide aroma,â he continues, âmasking most scents for at least a while.â He reaches my pinky finger and pauses, forcing my gaze up to lock with his. âYour guy masked the scene to hide the scent. He covered the perimeter. Maybe before, or even after the first scene was discovered.â
I find my voice. âThat doesnât make sense. Why hide one scene and leave the other out in the open?â
He turns my hand over, commencing to apply the lemon to the underside of my fingers. The sensual feel sends a shiver up my forearm, and I struggle to keep my eyes open. The rush of blood sears my veins.
âPsychology isnât my department,â he says, setting the wedge on the table.
As I try to pull away, Kallum maintains his firm hold on my wrist. He draws my hand toward his face and, for an alarming moment, I fear heâs going to lick my fingersâ¦and what havoc that will wreak on my composure, until he brings my hand to his nostrils and inhales.
âNo more traces of Halen.â A sly smile crooks his lips. âIf I bathe you in lemon, we can solve at least one of our dilemmas.â
He lifts his fingers one-by-one, letting me slip free. As my agitation ebbs, I rub my hands together to remove the excess lemon juice, effectively removing the tingling, lingering sensory of his touch.
âItâs not that heâs worried about being caught,â I say, making an effort to sort the offenderâs logic. I retrace our conversation at the killing fields, about the perpetrator having a site he used for practice. âHe just doesnât want to be caught before heâs done.â
âBut done with what is the question.â Kallum eases back against the bench, a defiant gleam behind his shadowed eyes. âIâd also wager uncovering his practice site will make him desperate.â
âDonât ever do that again.â
âWhat? Answer your questions? Help tease the answers from your mind?â
âTouch me.â
In response, Kallumâs teeth clench, feathering a muscle along his sculpted jawline.
The waitress arrives with his order and places the plate in front of him, severing the tense connection. She leaves without inquiring if we need anything, turning away before I can get a read on her expression.
I shake my head, further clearing my thoughts. âThese people are victims themselves,â I say, wondering if sheâs related to one of the missing locals. âQuestioning them directly wonât work. We need a different approach.â
Kallum unrolls a cloth napkin and lines up the silverware, then selects the steak knife. Placing the tip of his finger to the knife point, he inspects the serrated edge. âDonât you think itâs strange sheâs not questioning us?â he says. âWouldnât she be curious about the victims? Who they are, their names?â
I twirl the tea bag string around my finger and glance at the waitress taking an order from the agents. Sheâs maybe twenty-four. Heavily lined eyes, wearing a thick, trendy headband. âPeople are untrusting,â I say in answer. âEspecially after the way this town was spotlighted in the media years ago. The judgement, the rumors. Their guards are up.â
I turn my attention to Kallum, whoâs staring at the steak knife with too much interest. And I realize how easy it would be for him to pocket such a weaponâto lose control of his barely contained urges, as he so clearly demonstrated earlier, and use it on Dr. Verlice, or on meâ¦
He chuckles and wipes a hand over his mouth. âHalen, if I had something diabolical planned, I wouldnât make it so obvious.â He picks up the fork. âAt the institution, I wasnât even allowed to have thumbtacks. Iâm acclimating to my new surroundings.â
His gaze darts to my arm and the long-sleeved thermal before he cuts into the steak. âBesides, you canât make good on what you owe me if youâre dead,â he says, and way too casually for my comfort.
I push my arms under the table. âAs long as you cleared that up, I feel much more at ease,â I say, my tone heavy with sarcasm.
He chews the bite of steak, then: âEven if you canât trust the person, trust their intent.â
âAnd what is your intent for me?â
He waves the fork. âMy intent involves you very much alive.â
âAll right, since weâve thoroughly beat around the vagueness of that bush, I know you have some theory about the hemlock.â
âNice punning segue. But can I enjoy my dinner first?â he asks. Then, as he looks at the overcooked meal: âEnjoy might be too generous.â
âTalk while you eat.â
âSavage.â But the dark twist of his mouth implies how much he embraces being just that.
I watch as he uses a butterknife to slice the baked potato with dexterous movements, as if he relishes the way the tight skin splits on meeting the steel.
âThe hemlock is more mysterious,â he says. âI need more time to work it out.â He takes a bite of potato and pins me with an amused look, suggesting heâs not talking about the hemlock at all.
âAs Iâve said, we donât have time.â
He sets the silverware on the plate. âYou want conjecture?â
âI want conjecture, theories. I want everything rattling around that demented brain of yours. Thatâs why youâre here. An expert to give an expert interpretation. Itâs not up to you to solve the case, to be a hero.â I stress; there will be no renegotiating his deal. âYou explain the philosophy and theology to me. Then I explain it to the FBI in a workable profile so they can find a suspect.â
He regards me with tapered eyes. âI have another request.â
I expel a slow breath and push back against the bench seat. âFine.â I relent. âBut then I get a request.â
âTit for tat. This game could get interesting.â He cuts a bite-sized section of steak. âWhile weâre together, dissecting this town and spinning theories, Iâd like it if you didnât refer to me as delusional. Demented. Deranged. Or any other demeaning terminology, but especially those that begin with the letter D.â He pops the steak into his mouth, watching me expectantly.
I nod slowly, running the tip of my finger around the rim of the cup. âI can accommodate that request.â
âSee how easily weâre acclimating,â he says, pushing his plate aside. âNow, what can I do for you?â
My gaze drops to his fingers interlinked on the table. âWhat are the meanings of the sigils?â
He holds my stare a beat too long before he looks down at his hands, flexes his fingers. âUnfortunately, I canât say.â
âThatâs not how this works.â I push my cup aside and raise my hand to flag the waitress.
âYou donât understand,â he says, and I lower my hand. âI can explain the concept of sigils, the theology, the history. But every sigil is unique and, once charged, should never be thought of again. Iâve purged the meanings from my mind.â
I watch as he flattens his palms on the table, then I glance up to gauge the candor of his expression. I believe him. I believe he believes himself. Dr. Torres made a comment about the mind being the most powerful force, and how Kallumâs belief system, his obsessions, rule him.
I wet my lips and fold my arms on the table. âIf you need to forget them, then why tattoo the marks on your skin? Wouldnât that be a constant reminder?â
His face breaks into an easy smile. âSuch a logical mind,â he says.
âIs that an insult?â
He shakes his head. âNot at all.â He turns the silver ring around his thumb. âThe sigils are neither names of demons nor angels. Theyâre neither good nor evil. The psyche is more powerful than any manmade deity, and the subconscious can be invoked to obtain our most coveted desires.â
Iâm hyperaware of how his heated gaze drags over me, stopping on the pendant around my neck.
âEvery sigil is personal,â he says, âand I find permanently etching my most coveted desires into my skin satisfying. It helps with the unhealthy cravings.â
The air charges between us. The psychologist in me wants to probe further, to uncover the desires he obsesses over and how much control they harbor over his actions. Whether or not those sigils parallel with the Harbinger killings, and if he forced himself to âpurgeâ his actions once carried out.
I hold Kallumâs intense stare, sensing a dare, a challengeâbut knowing I was shutout the moment I tried to push at the crime scene.
He covers his mouth as he leans on his hand. âIt also helps curb envy in the academic realm, knowing you have an edge over your rivals. Put your wants, your aspirations, even your fears, into the sigil, then release it. Far healthier than spite.â
Suppressing my own desires for the truth for how that spite ended in his rivalâs murder, I change course. âYou answered my question.â
âBut you have more.â
âI know you have some initial theory on the hemlock. Iâd really like to hear it.â
He drapes his arm over the seat back. âAt the first sceneâwhat we assume is his exhibitâitâs not about the shocking display of dissected eyes. The symbolism is not art, or representation.â
âBut it was important enough that he arrange them precisely.â
âPrecisionâ¦perhaps. Iâll leave the psychological profiling to your expertise. Iâm more interested in the number. Three trees. Three rows of thirty-three sacrifices. Three, three, three. Do you see the pattern?â
âThe perpetrator likes the number three. So whatâ¦an OCD tic?â
He shakes his head slightly, his dark hair drifting over his forehead. âYouâre thinking too much like a psychologist. Think like a criminologist. You know, that career you gave up major accolades for.â
âThis isnât a test, Professor Locke. Youâre not here to quiz me.â
He licks his lips, dragging his tongue between the seam of his mouth as his invasive gaze pushes against me. âThree is the sacred number. Three is the triad, the trinity. The beginning, the middle, the end. Body, mind, spirit.â He cocks his head. âEvery civilization, every religious sect has some reference to the number three. Not to mention, just about every secret society.â
A strange awareness crashes over me as he says this last part, some element of the crime scene trying to link together. I look down at the table, letting my thoughts drift.
âSecret societyâ¦hemlockâ¦â I say aloud, attempting to fit the puzzle pieces together.
âGood girl,â he says. âThere are a few societies, some public, some hidden, that mention the insane root. But I think what youâll find is your guy is very much hidden. Letâs try out your favorite research tool. Google âhemlock,â and see what fascinating details pull up.â
With a resigned breath, I flip my phone over and, swiping away the many messages, perform the search. A description with an image of the plant pops up, and as I scroll farther down the page, I see a familiar name.
âSocrates.â I blow out a puff of frustration. Kallum stated the answer already with his vague wisdom quote earlier. âWhy do you find it difficult to say things clearly?â I set my phone on the table and look at him expectantly.
A gleam flashes behind his eyes, and he smiles. âHow is that any fun?â
âNone of this is fun.â
âThen why do you do it?â
At my obvious loss of patience, he concedes. âHemlock and Socrates go together like small-town USA and apple pie. Ironically, I think, in this case.â
I rub my forehead. âShit. Iâve already fallen down this research hole once. Socrates, Plato, Aristotleâ¦â
âBut that was before you acquired my services,â he says. âThe philosophers of Western esotericism. There are others, of course, but all schools of thought circle back to the three masters.â
âExplain it to me clearly, without veering off on tangents with pantheons and mythology. Just the historical facts.â I finally succeed in gaining the waitressâs attention and ask for the check as Kallum delves into the details.
Apparently, Socrates was tried in ancient Athens for moral corruption of youths and impietyâthat is, sacrilege against the gods. The charge claimed he tried to introduce new deities into society, and this has always been deemed blasphemous across most religions.
Found guilty on both counts, the jury sentenced Socrates to death by execution, where he was forced to commit suicide by drinking a hemlock concoction.
âI could expound for days just on Greek philosophy alone but,â he says, âas youâve so adamantly declared, you donât have days. And Iâm guessing the cliff notes version wonât impress the feds.â
âCan you surmise it in one word? Justâ¦give me some base to stand on.â
His smile stretches, making a slight dimple pop in his cheek. Itâs a cruel sight.
âNietzsche,â he declares.
By the time Iâve paid for Kallumâs dinner on my company credit card and we exit the diner, the sun has completely set on the town. The chirr of crickets are too noticeable with the lack of vehicles on the road.
The street lights glow against a black, moonless night sky, illuminating the stretch of sidewalk. As I start toward the hotel, Kallum turns back toward the diner.
âI forgot something,â he says.
âYou donât have anything.â
While the agents watch Kallum, I light my phone screen and scroll through the missed calls and texts from Aubrey. I frown at the device. I donât remember turning my ringer off.
Kallum returns wearing a sexy grin, his ego on full display. âLetâs walk,â he says. He glances back at the agents before he slips a folded piece of paper into my hand. âI agree with your assessment that this townâs guard is too high, that we need a stealthier approach.â
âThatâs not how I worded it.â
âAnd then I remembered⦠Iâm a college professor.â
I discretely unfold the note. Itâs an address with a girlâs name: Tabitha.
âKids use any excuse to party,â Kallum says. âEspecially tragedies. This town needs a lubricant, and a party full of young, gossiping locals might reveal some insight.â
I raise an eyebrow, admittedly impressed. âHow? She wouldnât even ask if we needed refills.â
Kallum turns smoldering eyes on me. âI winked and showed her my ankle monitor.â
I stop walking. As Kallum turns my way, I stare at him, look deep into the beautiful blue-and-green of his eyes that wound as sharply as they captivate. Suspicion crowds the small span of air between us, and I question his true motivation for helping.
âBe careful,â he says as he dips close. His warm breath fans my lips, and my own breathing shallows. âYou know what Nietzsche said about staring into abysses.â
He backs away, leaving me with the lingering sensation over my lips. As I watch him walk off, I finally inhale.
The abyss looked at me the day Kallum first laid eyes on me and, if Iâm not careful, heâll pull me right into the pitch-black void of his soul.