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Chapter 2 - One

12:59

The sirens ripped through the quiet of the upscale neighborhood, a raw, screaming sound that felt utterly alien among the manicured hedges and a wrought-iron fence to a potted olive tree, a flimsy barrier against the leaking dapolished sports cars. In front of "Michelin's," a club that usually whispered of money and discretion, the scene was a chaotic contradiction. Police cars were angled haphazardly across the pristine cobblestone driveway, their spinning blue and red lights painting the minimalist facade in frantic strokes. The ubiquitous yellow tape-"CRIME SCENE DO NOT CROSS"-was strung fromthe darkness within.

Another one. The first this week, but the seventh this month. The pattern was a grim, tightening noose around the precinct's neck. All women. All lost. All just trying to survive. Detective Davon Deshaun felt the weight of each one like a stone in his pocket.

He sought a moment of fractured quiet, leaning against the cold, familiar door of his unmarked black Camry. The autumn chill bit sharply through the worn leather of his jacket, a sensation he welcomed for its clarity. His ritual was a small anchor: the click of his Zippo, the brief sun of the flame, the first long drag of the cigarette. Smoke filled his lungs, a harsh, familiar burn, before he exhaled a plume that the wind instantly shredded. He was building a wall in his mind, brick by psychic brick, fortifying himself against what awaited inside. And then he saw her.

Of course it was her. Claire McGuire moved through the chaos of the response teams with unnerving grace. Her long black coat was tailored and severe, flowing around her like a shadow. Her hair was a perfect, obsidian sheet, and her face-a beautiful, sharp masterpiece-was set in an expression of cool, professional detachment. His former partner. His ex. The one person who could find the cracks in his foundation with infuriating ease.

"Claire," he said, the word materializing in a cloud of frosty air. He kept his voice flat. "Never could stay away from a mess, could you?"

A ghost of a smile played on her lips and was gone. It was a look that had once undone him completely. 'Perfect,' he thought, the old bitterness rising in his throat. 'Just when I'm getting myself together, she shows up and kicks it all over again.' He remained rigid, arms crossed, as she stepped into his space and gave him a brief, perfunctory hug. He didn't hug her back.

"What can I say, Davon? Trouble and I go way back. Looks like he's still hanging around you, too." She released him, shoving her hands deep into her coat pockets. The height difference was significant; she had to tilt her head back to look at him, but he deliberately avoided her gaze, scanning the scene until it landed on a familiar face.

It was Archie. Officer Archibald Archer, a fifty-five-year veteran whose head of stark white hair made him look older than his gym-honed frame suggested. A man who still moved with the quiet confidence of someone who could handle himself.

"Hey, Archie!" Davon called, pushing off his car and injecting a false heartiness into his voice.

Claire turned, her professional mask seamlessly back in place. "Officer Archer. Good to see you." Her tone was warmer, more genuine than the one she'd used on Davon.

Davon dropped his cigarette and ground it into the pristine cobblestones with his boot. A small, petty act of defiance.

"Well, well, well," Archie said, a weary, knowing smile briefly touching his eyes as he hitched his thumbs on his duty belt. "If it isn't the dream team, reassembled. Claire McGuire and Davon Deshaun. Planning a little reunion tour without sending me an invite?"

Davon pushed a hand through his thick, unruly black hair. "Christ, Archie." Not a chance in hell. Never again.

Archie's smile faded, replaced by the grim look of a man who had cataloged too many horrors. The banter was a necessary prelude. "What's the word inside?" Davon asked, his voice dropping into its serious, lower register.

"Victim's name is Cassey Salazar," Archie began, pulling out a well-worn notebook. He didn't need to look at it. "Twenty-three. Latina. Pretty girl." He paused, letting the deliberate use of the past tense hang heavily in the air.

"What do you mean, 'was'?" Davon asked, though his stomach had already clenched into a cold knot. He knew what it meant.

"Her face, Davon... it's bad. Really bad. Not just cut up. Carved. Her nipples are... gone. Clean cuts. And there's... other damage. Down there. Worse stuff." He glanced apologetically at Claire, who just gave a tight, dismissive shake of her head, her face a shade paler. "She was a working girl. Worked here and a few other spots. But damn, she was somebody's kid. She didn't deserve this. No one does."

"Has anyone called Victim Services for her family?" Claire asked, her voice soft but steady. She was already thinking about the aftermath.

"Vice has her info. They talk to the other girls working tonight? Anyone see her leave with a client?" Davon added. It was an old habit, the seamless tag-team questioning. He caught himself and shot her a quick glance, part challenge, part acknowledgment.

"Still trying to outdo me, Holmes?" she said, a faint smirk touching her lips. It was an old joke.

Archie let out a dry laugh that held no humor. "About that... thing is..." He looked from Davon's set jaw to Claire's composed face. They all knew what was coming. "The Captain. He assigned you both. You're co-leading this. Effective immediately."

Davon's face darkened. "What? No. That's not happening, Archie. That's bullshit."

"Come on, D. Orders are orders. The press is all over this. You wanna go tell the Captain why his two best detectives can't work together? Want to give him your list of reasons? I'll hold the door." Claire's voice was calm and logical, which was utterly infuriating. She punched his arm, a familiar gesture that felt like a challenge. "Still solid. Maybe some things don't change. Maybe we can find our groove again."

Davon looked away, his jaw clenched. "Don't," he said, sharp and final. "Archie, just... take me in. Let me see it."

"Right this way," Archie said, his voice heavy. He turned toward the club's entrance.

"I'll take that as a 'yes, partner'," Claire said quietly, falling into step beside him.

They followed Archie inside, leaving the cold night for the silent, garish heart of the club. It was a jarring transition. The music was dead. The dance floor was empty, littered with half-finished drinks, a lone high heel, a forgotten sparkly purse. A giant disco ball hung motionless overhead, throwing idiotically cheerful specks of light over the somber scene. The silence was oppressive.

They moved through the main room, their footsteps echoing, and down a long, plush hallway lined with expensive abstract art that now seemed sinister. The air grew heavier. At the end was a single heavy oak door, closed, with a CSU tech standing guard.

Archie gave a nod, and the tech stepped aside. He pushed the door open.

The smell hit them first-a thick, coppery, cloying sweetness that invaded the nostrils and stuck to the back of the throat. The smell of massive blood loss and the early stages of death. The room was blindingly bright from forensic lamps, scorching away all shadow, all mercy.

"Oh, my God," Claire whispered, the words a choked exhalation. She brought her hand up to cover her nose and mouth, her eyes wide with a horror her professionalism couldn't fully suppress.

Davon clenched his teeth, breathing through his mouth, forcing his detective's mind to start its inventory as a shield against the nausea. Blood was arced across the cream-colored walls in a violent spray. A small side table was overturned, its crystal ashtray shattered on the Persian rug. A lamp lay on its side.

And then the bed. A large king-sized four-poster, its white duvet now saturated a deep, ugly crimson. It was the gruesome centerpiece.

Cassey Salazar was contorted on the mattress, her body frozen in a moment of terror and pain. Her wrists weren't just cut; they were shattered, bone jutting through torn flesh. One eye was a ruined, punctured hole. The other wounds were unspeakable, a level of hatred that was difficult to comprehend.

"The medical examiner on the way?" Davon asked, his voice rough. He couldn't look away.

"Yeah, he should be here any-" Archie started, but was interrupted by a noise at the door.

A young man, lean and pale, almost tripped as he maneuvered a large, heavy black case into the room. He looked like a teenager in an ill-fitting, cheap suit. His hair was lank, his posture stooped. His presence felt immediately wrong-an unsettling dissonance among the seasoned cops.

He straightened up, adjusting crooked wire-rimmed glasses. His pale blue eyes darted around the room, taking in the blood, the body, the detectives, with a strange, flat curiosity. "I'm... I'm Clifford Burton. From Omini Forensics. I was sent to-" His voice was reedy, hesitant.

"Where's Kim Kruger? Or Stephen Chase?" Davon interrupted, his impatience sharpening his tone.

"Davon," Claire said, a warning in her voice. She stepped forward, her demeanor shifting to professional calm. "I'm Detective McGuire. This is my partner, Detective Deshaun. Thanks for coming so quickly. We're glad you're here."

The young man's gaze slid slowly from Davon to Claire. His expression was blank. Empty. "They're unavailable. Big crash on the 405. This is my first solo field assignment. They sent me." His voice had evened out into a flat, emotionless monotone. It was chilling. A visible shiver traced its way down Claire's spine.

Davon pulled out a business card and held it out. "This is my direct line. You call me. The second you find anything. I don't care if it's 3 a.m. Understand?"

Clifford Burton took the card. His fingers were long and thin, and ice-cold through the latex glove. He didn't look at the card. Instead, he held Davon's gaze for a beat too long, his head cocked slightly. A faint, almost imperceptible smile might have flickered at the corner of his mouth. Then it was gone. He turned away without a word.

As the three of them filed out, the heavy door clicking shut behind them, Clifford Burton was left alone in the blinding, stinking silence. The snap of him pulling on a second pair of latex gloves was unnaturally loud. He knelt, opened his case with two precise clicks, and arranged his tools on a clean white towel with fastidious care: scalpels, probes, scissors, specimen jars.

He approached the bed, his movements now sure and fluid. He leaned over the ruined body of Cassey Salazar, his shadow falling across her mutilated face. A small, curious, and utterly genuine smile finally touched his lips, a flicker of dark life in his otherwise dead eyes.

"Well, well, well," he murmured to himself, his whisper a dry rustle in the terrible room. "What have we got here?" He reached out a gloved hand, not in

revulsion, but with the eager anticipation of a connoisseur examining a fine piece of art.

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