Strings of Fate (Mistresses of Fate) (14 page)

BOOK: Strings of Fate (Mistresses of Fate)
6.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

When Agent Helmer came back in the room, she set aside the lingering irritation she felt at his attitude and she waved for him to come look at Sandeep’s laptop, where she’d pulled up the Facebook profile of a woman she knew, Caroline Coffee, who ran the local bakery—best cupcakes and cookies in town. Caroline was also single, having been widowed several years back when her husband died of cancer. She was in her late forties, slightly overweight, with bleached blond hair.

When Ryan half bent to get a better view of her screen, the scent of clean male skin and his freshly dry-cleaned suit made her pause. She breathed in slowly, trying to control the flush that had risen to her cheeks.

“I know her,” she told him without preamble, clicking back to show him where the killer, acting as Fennick, reached out to Caroline to add as a friend.

“She lives in Fate?” he queried sharply, bending down and pushing up his glasses to look more closely.

Christina swallowed. He didn’t like her, which in her twisted mind was likely part of his appeal, but she couldn’t help but find him attractive, especially when his mouth was set in that firm line.

“Yes,” she managed. He was a big man; she felt tiny and delicate sitting next to him, though she was anything but. She carried on, pointing at the screen. “And it’s weird. Caroline would never date Dylan Fennick.” She paused, considering. “Well, I don’t think she would. It has been a while, I think.” She shook off that thought. “What’s interesting is that he did the same thing with some of the other victims.”

“Interesting besides the fact that it’s someone in Fate, someone you know?”

He sounded a little pissed, for some reason, like she was missing some important point. “Yes, besides that. Look.” She pointed to the screen. “Okay. Bear with me a second.” She put a hand on his forearm, as if to force him to pay attention. “Based on the patterns we’ve identified so far, it’s clear that the unsub scheduled a meeting with his intended victim, but never showed. Right?”

“Yes, it seems to be that way.”

“None of the victims were killed on the night of the scheduled meeting, men or women. Correct?”

“We’d have to verify, but I believe you’re correct.”

“So what if he just wanted to get a look at them?”

“Why not go by the picture?”

She snorted. “Because, hello? How easy is it to fake a photo? Super-easy, I can tell you, especially if you have Photoshop and a bit of patience.”

“Come on, with this guy’s computer skills, surely he’d be able to get ahold of a real picture of the victim? Or even follow them around, for that matter. People post where they’re going and what they’re doing all the time. There’d be no need to set up a meeting.”

Chris pursed her lips. “That’s a good point. Maybe there’s something else he wants to see about them. Maybe he wants to follow them around. I don’t know, but it’s clear that he schedules a hookup with a variety of people, doesn’t show up for the meeting, and then some he kills and some he doesn’t, for whatever reason.” She paused, considering. She had a hunch, based on what he’d written about strings on the
Mysteries of Fate
blog and the weird vision she’d had in the graveyard. Summer had mentioned a story that they’d read in school, about the red strings that connected to soul mates.
What if this guy thinks he can see the connections between soul mates or something?
“Maybe it’s something to do with that string crap he goes on about.”

Helmer nodded, considering it. “We’ve already come to the conclusion that we’re dealing with someone who has some kind of psychosis.”

Chris nodded.
Psychotic.
She was the object of the fascination of a serial killer.
Psychotic serial murderers were actually not that common, but they did exist, and he was her number one fan. A shiver, unrelated to the temperature in the room, made her shudder slightly and rub her arms. Her light jacket wasn’t warm enough at the moment.

Helmer noticed her movement and removed his suit jacket, handing it to her without asking if she wanted it. Chris took it, noting that it was warm from his body, and laid it in her lap like a blanket.

“So what’s your point besides the fact that he likes to take a look?” Agent Helmer’s voice had taken on a slightly flattened drawl, more Texas than Georgia.

“Well . . .” Christina spoke slowly, working it out in her head. “Most of these victims reached out to him. It’s like he regularly trolls, like a fisherman with one of those sonic detectors, and then sometimes he seems to find a target he really likes and goes hunting for it.”

Chris waited for someone to call her on the mixed metaphor, but no one did, probably because they were men and they got it without caring whether or not it made sense. Chris liked men, such straightforward creatures.

“So, let me see if I’ve got this.” Helmer turned to her, his gray eyes focused and intense. “You’re saying that he uses the identities you created to have conversations with potential victims, but he doesn’t actually decide to kill them until he’s seen them in person.”

“Right,” she confirmed. “In most cases, he used an identity and waited until people contacted him. In some cases, he was in contact with over fifty people using a particular identity, but he’s never killed using that identity more than once.”

“But the victims you highlighted are different because they weren’t on a dating site or actively socializing on the Internet. He sought them out, even though the identity he was using was obviously not a match for the person targeted.”

“Yes,” she agreed, punching him on the shoulder.

He gave her a quelling look. “So did they all respond to his messages? Have conversations with him?”

She shook her head. “No, they did not. In two of the cases, they deleted the friend request or blocked the email, but they ended up dead anyway, along with all the others he contacted directly. There’s only one exception, a woman named Martha Cooper.”

“She’s alive?”

“As far as I can tell.”

“What do you mean?”

“Well, he reached out to her over two months ago, but she’s not on your board.”

Helmer looked over at an agent who’d entered the room while they were having their discussion. “Curtis, go tell Jenkins to look into Martha Cooper. Have one of the county deputies or the local PD see if they can get in touch with her.”

The agent ran off to do as he was told. Helmer turned back to Chris. “Okay. So, if I understand your point, he always waits to see the person before deciding to kill them, and he deliberately targeted these people, so it stands to reason that they were targeted because he’d already met or at least seen them, somewhere, at least once.”

“Yes,” she agreed, thrilled that he understood. “So if you take these victims and look at where they lived, odds are that he lived there as well, or maybe worked nearby.”

“So if your Ms. Coffee is one of the people he’s reached out to target, then he’s in Fate, right now, and he’s met her before.”

Chris felt the blood drain from her face. Yeah, that did seem to be what she was saying. But she hadn’t thought about what that meant for her until just now.

Sandeep chose this moment to offer his input, very gently. “This is all just speculation; it’s possible he noticed our intervention last night or our activity today and wants to frighten Ms. Pascal. When did he reach out to her?”

“Yesterday,” Chris muttered, “before you guys knocked on my door.”

“Even better,” Helmer muttered. “I better go discuss this with the guys from BAU. In the meantime, Pascal, you hungry?”

Chris blinked and looked up.
Hungry?
She was starving, actually. “Yeah, sure.”

“Okay, as soon as I get back we’ll get something to eat.”

“Okay,” she agreed, a little suspicious. What had she done to have the straitlaced agent suddenly being friendly to her?

18

TO CHRIS’S SURPRISE,
Helmer didn’t sneak her out a back entrance to a government car in order to avoid the press. Instead, he changed out of his suit into jeans and a polo, switched his FBI hat for a maroon one with
TEXAS A&M
embroidered on it, and led her out the front door. There were nongovernment offices in the same building, so she supposed that between the hats and her bright UGGs, the two of them could pass for college students, just like most of the town of Rome.

Together, they walked over to Broad Street and then several blocks down to the Harvest Moon Café. There weren’t many people inside, a few students and a family, but it was a little after the main lunch hour. Helmer ordered a cheeseburger and a side salad, while Chris ordered a French dip with french fries. She ate salads all the time. A French dip was for a special occasion, like an uncomfortable meal with a rancorous FBI agent, though he seemed to be lightening up . . . maybe. He was currently studying her with a faint frown gathered between his eyes, though his glasses hid it for the most part.

“So, how long have you been an FBI agent?” Chris ventured, for lack of a better conversational gambit.

“Since I graduated from college,” he answered, and took a huge bite of his burger. Chris suffered a brief pang of food envy, something she experienced often when eating salads, but then she took a bite of her French dip and regretted nothing.
Hello, foodgasm.

“A&M?” she managed, though she already knew he’d gone there.

He gave her an affirmative grunt.

After that she left him alone and spent a few quality minutes with her roast beef sandwich.

“So tell me about the witches,” he said once he’d finished half of his cheeseburger.

Chris choked, taken aback, and took a long sip of iced tea to wash it down.

“What do you want to know about them?” she croaked after a minute.

“Just tell me about them.”

Chris thought about it. She’d been familiar with the witches all her life; trying to explain them to an outsider left her at a bit of a loss.

“They’re mostly one family. They’ve been here since, like, the 1700s, probably before then.”

“How do you know?”

“There’re some documents in the Fate library about the Trail of Tears. Apparently one of the officers tried to get them moved with the Cherokee and other Indian tribes, but for whatever reason wasn’t successful, probably because the witches turn out some beautiful people.”

“Beautiful?”

“Gorgeous. Supermodel-gorgeous,” Chris muttered with a sour expression. The only exception to that seemed to be the Triplets, who were the only members of the family who were less than perfect.

He gave a thoughtful grunt, his face impassive.

“Why do you ask?”

“The call we received, telling us about your connection to the killer.”

“I see.” Chris set down the second half of her roast beef sandwich, her appetite gone.

“How would they know that the killer was using your identities?”

Chris shrugged. She didn’t know how they’d known, but she knew why they’d want to sic the FBI on her ass.

“Ms. Pascal?”

“Call me Christina, or Chris, God.”

“Okay, Chris, so what aren’t you telling me?”

Sighing, Chris put her elbows on the table and set her chin on her interlaced fingers. “They hold me responsible for something from a long time ago. Sometimes I feel like they’ve cursed me or something.”

“Cursed you.” He raised an eyebrow and took a long pull of his own iced tea. She couldn’t help but feel a slight twinge in her stomach—there was definitely something sexy about this guy, annoying as he was.

“Yeah.”

“You don’t believe in curses?”

It didn’t really sound like a question, but Chris answered as if it were. “No.” She shrugged. “But I believe in grudges and in the power of grief.”

“Grief?”

“Yeah, the price of love.” She opened her hands and sat back. “They loved someone and lost her. They think it’s my fault.”

He mirrored her motion, shifting back in his chair, tapping his finger on the table. “Your friend? Summer?”

“Yeah.”

“Are they right?”

“Is it my fault that she disappeared?”

“Yeah.”

Chris sighed, because it was so much more complicated than that. It wasn’t, but it felt like it was. But she didn’t have the emotional fortitude tonight to explain that to him. “Of course.”

He studied her, his face cool, but he seemed to sense the distress under her flippant attitude and didn’t press her further on that topic.

“I’d really like to know how they knew about your connection to the killer.”

“Me, too,” Chris muttered, “but good luck getting them to tell you anything. They’re a pretty closemouthed bunch with nonfamily.”

“Where do they live?”

Chris had a bad feeling about this. “They have a kind of compound. It’s in the hills, next to my friend Tavey’s property.”

“Take me to see them.”

Chris didn’t respond to that right away. “Was it Circe who called?”

“Circe?”

“Her real name is Jane Arrowdale.”

“Ahh. Yes, that’s who gave us the tip.”

Chris sighed. “I’m surprised she used her real name; she usually doesn’t even acknowledge it. At any rate, I’m the last person who should take you to see them. Jane hates my guts.”

BOOK: Strings of Fate (Mistresses of Fate)
6.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Genital Grinder by Harding, Ryan
Napoleon in Egypt by Paul Strathern
The Treatment by Suzanne Young
One for the Money by Janet Evanovich
The Walkaway by Scott Phillips
Whiskey & Charlie by Annabel Smith