âSeems Iâm late for another party this evening.â
I still the motion of my shovel and smile into the dark.
âThough Iâm sure chronic lateness is one of your many character flaws, Dr. Sorensen, youâre actually right on schedule.â I glance at him over my shoulder, his lethal frame illuminated by moonlight and a thread of flame as he stands on the rise of the creekâs sharp bank behind me. A snap kills the fire as he closes the lid of the lighter and pockets it. âIn fact,â I say as I return to shoveling the thick silt, the water flooding my efforts, âyouâve been here the whole time.â
Intrigue thickens the silence between us.
I wait for Jack to ask me what I mean, but he doesnât. Thereâs only a near-silent rustle of leaves behind me and I know heâs closing the distance to where Iâm working.
âSplit sobered barons, Jack,â I say without turning around.
The movement behind me stops.
Silence.
âWhat?â
âSplit sobered barons.â
More silence.
I straighten and raise my shovel to point downstream, globs of silt splashing into the dark water. âUnleashing disappeared toast.â I shift to point to the fields beyond the far bank, the tall grasses consumed by night. âMy favorite, missing credited koala. What Three Words, Jack.â
I glance over my shoulder. Heâs much closer than I anticipated, already on the narrow floodplain just a few feet away, his shoulders tight with tension in the dim light. He looks at the black expedition backpack lying beyond me before meeting my eyes with calculating menace. Confusion and curiosity are the only things that have stopped him from creeping closer.
âIs this a puzzle?â he asks.
I beam a smile at him in reply. I was expecting heâd give me an arrogant, derisive smirk and ask me if Iâve lost my shit, but he hasnât. Heâs playing along, trying to figure this out.
âItâs one piece, Jack. Sure.â I drive the sharp end of the shovel into the silt and lean on the handle, my boots squelching, the creek water trickling around the rubber encasing my ankles. âI guess youâve never heard of What Three Words?â
Jack doesnât answer. This wonât do.
I heave a heavy sigh and roll my eyes. âCome on, donât crap out on me now.â
âNo,â Jack replies, his voice deep and stern.
I reward him with a bright grin which does nothing to dim the moonlit malice glittering in his eyes. âItâs a geocoding system. Every three meter section of the globe is assigned its own unique, three-word code. This,â I say, sweeping my hand toward my feet, âis split sobered barons.â
Jackâs head tilts. His eyes narrow.
I work my hand free of my glove and retrieve my burner phone from my pocket, entering the passcode to open the home screen and bring up the app. I press the dot of my current location and face the screen toward him. âSee? Right here. Split sobered barons. Unleashing disappeared toast is the location of the body you disposed of back in March. Missing credited koala is where the man Mason thought he knew was buried in Field Three. There are the others too, all saved away right up here, thanks to Masonâs fastidious data entry skills,â I say, tapping my temple with my free hand as I lock the screen and pocket the phone.
The space between us seems to crackle like static. The air is still and cold. Silver fog escapes my parted lips in the starlight but I canât see Jackâs exhalations. Maybe heâs holding his breath or maybe heâs born of the night and the cold. Either could be true.
We hold one another in a locked stare until I smile and pull my glove back on, twinkling my fingers toward him as I do. âAnd before you slither any closer, you should know that if anything happens to me, anything, you will be the first person they come for. Every location. Every body. Every photograph. Every little scrap of evidence Iâve secured. It will all go straight to the FBI. My well-being is truly in your very best interests.â
I can almost hear Jackâs muscles tensing, his sinew scraping. Bone bracing. Iâm sure heâs ready to throw caution into the creek and attack. But he doesnât. He stays planted in a sliver of moonlight, his eyes holding mine as though fused.
âWhoâs in the bag, Kyrie?â Jack asks, his voice a threat wrapped in velvet.
I resist the urge to clap my hands and squeak, driving the shovel into the silt instead. Iâve loosened a deep and wide enough area now that I can move to the next step in the process, so I lumber out of the suctioning mud and head to the backpack.
âYou know, Jack, this is probably the most interaction weâve had all month and I have to tell you, Iâm having a great time, for once,â I say as I release the first clip from the top of the bag with unnecessary slowness, keeping my eyes on Dr. Sorensen as I do. Even though Iâve both piqued his curiosity and threatened him with his most feared consequences, I donât trust the fucker. Not one bit.
âWho is in the bag,â he repeats. There might be a tiny twinge of desperation hidden in the depths of his words.
âAre you worried I took someone important to you?â I pout as my fingers stall on the second clasp.
âKyrieââ
âYou have no sense of fun, Jack,â I lament with a dramatic shake of my head. I release the clip and the drawstring holding the top of the bag closed, peeling back layers of plastic. The twist of hair rustles against my gloves and my fingers clutch around it, and then I tug, withdrawing the severed head. A lifeless face and half-lidded, glassy eyes swivel between us. âMason Dumont.â
To his credit, Jack does a pretty good job pretending heâs not surprised. But he is. And heâs pissed, too. I hear it in the way his leather gloves creak as his hands fold into tight fists.
âYou killed Mason Dumont,â he says slowly, not a question, but a confirmation.
âNo. You killed Mason Dumont.â I walk back to the water and lower Masonâs head into the silt, those gelatinous blue eyes staring at the stars. I raise one foot to squish against his face and push his head deep into the mud. âYour boots are a bit large for me. I had to wear, like, six pairs of socks and theyâre still too big.â
Jackâs eyes dart down to his waders before he pins me with a feral glare. I smile and flutter back the edges of the jacket I stole from his lab two years ago to rest my fists on my hips, revealing a weighted vest and belt.
âYouâve gotta be whatâ¦one hundred and ninety pounds? That was my guess,â I say as I walk back to the bag and pull out Masonâs disarticulated arms, shreds of his torn shirt fluttering as I give Jack a little wave with both of the limp hands as I take them back to the creek and drop them in the silt. âDonât worry, I made sure to strut here all âImportant Serial Killer Manâ style so that the diligent detectives of Westview will know it was you if you decide to do anything stupid. Iâm so important I canât say fucking thank you to the one person whoâs given me everything I could ever want, like research money and facilities and this big-ass farm for dead bodies galore. No, no, no. Now watch out, forest creatures, Important Serial Killer man coming through.â
âJesus fucking Christ, Kyrie,â he hisses. âThis is all because I didnât kiss your ass in gratitude?â
I donât answer as I head back to the bag with long strides and grab a severed thigh, tossing it into the water with a splash. When I pull the other free of the bag, I give the dark and empty interior of the backpack a thoughtful frown. âYou seem to have forgotten some important pieces, Jack,â I say as I rise. For the first time since the gala, my glare is just as lethal as his.
Thereâs a long silence as I take the last severed hunk of flesh to its watery grave, blood tapping across the damp grass as I go. When I drop it in, I walk atop the limbs, working them deeper into the silt, knowing the tread of Jackâs boots will leave marks in the cooling flesh. âPigeage, Jack. Iâve always wanted to try that in Les Pastras. Stomping some grapes in Provence in August? Please. Sign me the fuck up. I need a holiday after trying to provide for your ungrateful ass for the last three years.â
âSo, thatâs really what this is all about. When I didnât fall at your feet like everyone else, you decided to frame me.â Jack pauses as though he expects me to reply. When I donât, he lets out a dark and mirthless chuckle. âDie Rache einer Frau kennt keine Grenzen. I didnât think you were quite that much of a cliché, Dr. Roth.â
âI guess I break all your expectations then, donât I, Dr. Sorensen?â I reply with a bright smile.
With Masonâs limbs pushed down into the silt, I grab the shovel and start dismantling the pile of dirt Iâve set aside to cover them over. Jack observes me, calculating, weighing, maybe butting his big brain against every wall in the maze Iâm creating between us. But he doesnât move. He doesnât come closer. Not even when I tip a little in the awkward waders and have to right myself by plunging the shovel down into the bodily remains with a surprised squeak. When I turn around, heâs right where I left him, and I know my confidence in his obedience unnerves him just as much as anything else heâs seen or heard tonight.
When Iâm done, I use the shovel as a cane to slurp my way out of the thick, heavy mud, then I toss it next to the bag.
âWhat do you want?â Jack asks.
I could close my eyes and bask in the honeyed need that drips in my chest when I imagine a thousand possibilities of how I could answer. The richness of his voice wraps around me. The smoothness of his every word has a sharp and hidden edge, one I want to run my finger across, to see if it will really make me bleed.
We stand and regard one another, the creek trickling behind me. A barred owl calls far in the distance. The windless night carries the sound.
I draw closer to Jack, my eyes never leaving his, though I sense him tensing in the periphery. I stop when Iâm close enough to touch him, letting my hands slip into my jacket pockets in a show of trust. In the dim light, I see him raise a dark brow, a soundless question. What do you want? he soundlessly repeats.
âI want you to tell me about the first time we met,â I say.
Thereâs a flicker of movement in Jackâs brows, a stutter in the cadence of his blink. He glances away to the dark water and back again, his full lips set in a straight line. If there was more light, Iâd be able to see the changes in those gray eyes that pick up the colors of his surroundings like camouflage.
He looks away again, his expression smoothed out once more but distant. âAngélique Noire perfume. Thatâs the first thing I remember.â
âI didnât take you for a perfume guy,â I say with a smile.
Jack glances at me before returning his gaze to the creek. âI turned and you were at the door to the old lab with Dr. Cannon. You wore a deep purple dress. Your hair was up. Your perfume carried into the room.â
My smile fades as Jackâs eyes find mine and donât let go. I nod for him to continue and he takes a step closer. I let him.
âYou came into the room with your hand extended. Dr. Cannon introduced you as Dr. Roth, but I already knew who you were,â Jack says. My heart thuds faster in my chest. A long neglected hope stirs beneath my sternum, and I tip my head to the side in a question. âHeâd sent a departmental message with your photo that morning. But it didnât look like you, not when you were standing before me with a smile that could consume every sin.â
My heart detours as though itâs been stitched to a pendulum. I want to step back from Jack, but I donât.
âIâd asked if your first name was pronounced keer-ee-yay, like the prayer, Kyrie eleison. I didnât think your smile could get brighter, but when I said that, it did. âKeer-ee is fine,â you replied. âMy parents wanted me to have Christâs name, but it never really fitâ. I suppose that makes a lot more sense now.â
I try not to nod, but a faint bob of my head escapes my control. Something thickens in my throat. I remember that moment of our meeting so clearly that itâs like watching it through a polished crystal ball. For a fleeting breath of time, it had felt like everything fit together, like our first conversation was exactly as Iâd hoped for. A recognition of likeness. A connection with someone like me. The way Jack tells this story, it feels like that connection was real, like it existed for him too.
But thatâs a lie.
Jack is just trying to bridge the gulf between us now in the hope that Iâll have mercy on him. Everything that came after the conversation heâs just described has buried that possibility beneath the thick sediment of time.
And he knows it. Thatâs why Jack is silent now.
His eyes glint in the moonlight as they take in the curves and angles of my face, dropping to my lips. They linger there before resting on my neck for a moment that seems too calculating to be intimate, too cold to be anything but cruel. And cruel is exactly what he was from that pivotal moment onward. Questioning my experience, my merit, my worthiness at every turn. No matter how hard I worked or how much my efforts benefited him, he was always there with those steel gray eyes to watch for a mistake and then slice me down.
âItâs quite a pretty story the way you tell it,â I say, my voice barely more than a whisper. I take a step closer and his gaze slides back to mine. His face is a perfect balance of silver light and deep shadows, so hauntingly, achingly beautiful. But he is a beast. Heâs feral beneath this angelic façade.
And he still canât seem to accept that heâs not the only apex predator here.
âThe only problem is, Jackâ¦youâre wrong,â I say, striking out with the last word.
I hit Jackâs chest with a Taser. He lets out a strangled, gritty groan and drops to the dirt. His body convulses in distress as I uncap a syringe with my other hand. When I kill the shock of the device, I drive the needle into his jugular and deliver the pre-filled dose of midazolam to the delicious sound of his protesting moan.
I pull Jack into the recovery position and watch for just a moment as his breathing deepens. His eyes donât leave mine, not even as their sharpness dims and dulls beneath the pull of the sedative.
Iâve been waiting for this moment, this look between us when Jack realizes heâs gotten me wrong all this time. Iâve wanted it since the time he berated me for the notorious CRYO freezer incident in the lab, when he accused me of destroying his tissue samples through sheer ineptitude. It was the first time I truly accepted that I might have to put my little beast down.
Whoâs inept now, you fucker.
Just before he falls unconscious, I lean in close. I press a gentle kiss to his cheek. And then I bring my lips to his ear, giving him a gift he might not remember when he wakes.
âYouâre wrong, Jack,â I repeat in a whisper, a wraith to follow him into a dreamless sleep. âThat wasnât the first time we met.â
When I pull away, heâs unconscious.
I rise to stand over my sleeping nemesis, and then I leave him in the darkâ¦
â¦right where heâs always been.