The Collector

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motion part of her story rather than an attempt to leave. “She invited him inside. She punched in the alarm code, disarming the security system.”
    Gia acted out the gesture, stabbing her finger in the air as if punching in the numbers herself. Seven noticed that her hand was at the same level as Tran’s actual keypad.
    “It was a horrible death. But she didn’t die the way you think.” It was almost as if she were reading some script in her head. She opened her eyes. “And he isn’t near done.”
    “You’re talking about another victim?” Seven asked, standing as well.
    She nodded. “The demon. He’ll kill again. And if my dream is correct,” she said, speaking as if it were nothing to her, what she was saying, “I’m next.”
     
    Mimi Tran wasn’t worthy. Her death lacked finesse.
    You prefer to remember another time. Another woman. A better experience.
    Puerto Rico.
    You smile. You never forget your first time.
    You’re in San Juan, the night of the festival. At midnight, everyone will walk backward into the ocean, dreaming of love.
    You make a wish. There is nothing wistful about your dreams.
    The palm trees on the beach are permanently bent from the sea breeze. At that moment, the sky above doesn’t threaten, as it has all day. As the music pumps the bikini-clad crowd into a frenzy, you watch families, children, lovers, on the beach, all preparing for their ritual baptism.
    You feel their energy pulse with the beat of the conga drums from the salsa band. They walk around as if the party never stops. You, on the other hand, know exactly when this party will end. You’re in control.
    Security is tight. There are armed police in Kevlar vests everywhere. Some convention of elected officials is in town, your only bit of bad luck. But you don’t care. You have the power of life and death. You’re not afraid. You’re God.
    Tonight’s festival is a pagan ritual. Every man, woman and child will walk backward into the ocean and throw themselves into the sea, cleansed of their sins. Only, you know that it’s you who will do the cleansing. You look forward to it.
    Palm tree trunks glow with artificial light on the manicured grounds. A band performs on a floating stage set up in the shallows of the private beach. Three women dressed in white sway their hips in a motion as old as time.
    The crowd doesn’t need encouragement. Grandmas dance on the shore with toddlers, husbands stare adoringly into the eyes of their wives as they salsa knee-deep in the ocean. On the floating stage, men and women wearing cowboy hats follow along in a dance with the natives—a contingent from Texas.
    You stare at the ramparts of an ancient fortress dating back to when this was an important military post, its shores decorated with cannons, the walls built to keep out the English Armada. The fortress is lit up tonight. Lightning flashes in the distance.
    The women at the Bacardi booth keep the rum flowing. Every other man or woman carries a plastic cup, laughing and drinking. The cups are stamped with the Barcardi emblem: a bat. Here, the bat is a symbol of good luck.
    As midnight approaches, the pulse of the party revs up. Couples once dancing poolside become part of the mass migration to the beach. Suddenly, the crowd converges. You stand body to body with strangers, getting drunk on their alcoholic stupor, but your eyes follow only her. You were at dinner when she and her boyfriend fought. You’ve learned women take all sorts of shit from men, but now, she’s alone.
    One of the singers in the band explains the ritual for the tourists. People grab hands and begin wading backward into the warm water.
    You come to stand alongside the woman. Like everyone else, she wears a barely there bikini. You’ve been waiting all night for this moment.
    She takes your hand and smiles. She’s blond with blue eyes. You hear her slur her words as she tells you how amazing this all is. Like New Year’s, she says. You hear a touch of the

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