and likable. He smelled eager, like a hunting dog waiting for the scent.Charles wondered if it was the werewolves or the serial killer that caused the young man’s adrenaline rush.
He had a good poker face, though. Charles doubted any of the humans in the room would detect how excited Les Heuter was to be here. Charles had never been human, but he decided it must be like walking around with earplugs and nose plugs in all the time.
Goldstein looked around. “People, let’s get the ball rolling.” He looked at Charles. “The man who set this meeting up tells me that three werewolves weren’t likely to be victims by happenstance. According to him, there just aren’t that many werewolves out and about. He speculated that three victims has to mean that our killer is targeting werewolves and suggested we lay out all the victims from the beginning for you, Mr. Smith, and see what you think before I start asking questions. In that light, I’ll tell you what we know about this one, and would appreciate anything you can give us.”
Charles folded his arms and leaned against the wall, his attention on Anna, telegraphing as loudly as body language could that Anna was in charge.
This was Anna’s job—if Charles had to deal with them, they’d likely run scared and start shooting werewolves themselves.
“Who
did
set this up?” asked Heuter abruptly.
Goldstein turned to look at the younger man and said blandly, “I have no idea. The man who called me didn’t identify himself beyond that, just suggested I take notes and his advice. As most of it seemed common sense, I did so.”
Bran,
thought Anna.
Probably,
agreed Charles.
Or Adam Hauptman.
Anna met Heuter’s gaze and shrugged. “I know who set up our end. I have no idea who set up yours.”
Goldstein had taken out his laptop and hooked it up to the video system in the room. He cleared his throat. “Agent Fisher, would you secure the door, please?Some of these images are graphic and I would rather not startle some poor maid.”
The door was locked and Goldstein took his glasses off and cleaned them as Agent Fisher turned off the lights. When he put the glasses back on, he donned with them the mantle of authority; the faint air of weakness, of age and harmlessness, vanished. For just an instant, Agent Goldstein was a man who hunted other men, then the aura of weakness returned like another man might don a comfortable old shirt.
“We call our UNSUB—” He paused. “That’s FBI-speak for ‘unknown subject,’ which seems a little more professional and less hysterical than ‘killer’ and more grown-up than ‘bad guy.’ This UNSUB is known as the Big Game Hunter, because for the first two decades all the kills took place during the traditional hunting season. The first kill we know of was in 1975, though, given the sophistication of the killings, it is likely that he killed earlier than that.” He looked at Anna, who must have changed expression, and said, “Yes. We are absolutely certain this killer is a man.”
He hit a button and two pictures came up on the big TV screen, side by side. The first was a school photo of a teenage Asian girl—Chinese, Charles thought. She was smiling gamely at the photographer and there was a bright orange headband in her hair. The second photo was very grainy and showed a naked body, head shrouded in shadows and a white sheet or blanket flung over her hips.
“Karen Yun-Hao was fourteen. She was abducted from her bedroom on…”
Charles let the man’s voice drift; he’d remember what Agent Goldstein said later if he needed to. For now he concentrated on the faces, looking for clues, for people he had known, for victims who were pack.
The first year their killer took four girls, each a week apart. Asian and young, none over sixteen or under twelve. He kept them and raped and tortured them until he was ready to take the next victim. The FBIthought he killed one victim just before he took the next—though there was