CHAPTER ELEVEN By ten o’clock, Mackenzie had allowed herself two cups of coffee. She downed them as she worked with Harrison and Yardley to pull together a complete work-up of the life and times of Chris Marsh. And it hadn’t taken long for many of Mackenzie’s assumptions to be proven correct. From early childhood, Chris Marsh had suffered from severe attachment disorder, something he did not fully recover from until the age of twelve. Once the parents had been contacted and told that their son was currently being held by the FBI under suspicion of involvement in a murder case, the mother had been quite helpful in filling in the blanks. Chris had also been diagnosed with autism at a young age, but very low on the spectrum. By the time he was eight, the diagnosis had no longer held any swa

