Chapter One – The Body Returns

1430 Words
The rain had not let up for hours, turning the city into a smear of reflections—neon signs stretched and broken on wet asphalt, every surface glistening with the kind of sheen that made everything feel unreal. Dr. Emily Hale tugged her coat tighter around her frame, the fabric already heavy with water, her curls plastered to her cheek. The air reeked of garbage, gasoline, and copper. She hated alleys, hated the claustrophobic way brick walls seemed to lean inward, like conspirators holding their breath. The body lay crumpled beside an overflowing dumpster. Male. Mid-thirties. His arms were spread in a grotesque parody of welcome, his head tilted toward the wall as though listening for secrets the bricks might whisper. But Emily wasn’t looking at his face. She was looking at the symbols. A spiral carved into his chest. Not a s***h, not a frenzy of rage, but deliberate—clean, almost reverent. The spiral bled outward, crimson mingling with rainwater, curling toward the gutter. Her stomach clenched as her gloved fingers hovered above the wound. The spiral was identical. Her throat tightened. The past surged, unwanted, uninvited, dragging its claws through her composure. She forced a slow inhale, steadying her hands. She would not shake. She would not let the past write itself over the present. Behind her, camera shutters clicked. Officers murmured, their boots splashing in puddles. The world was moving, but Emily stood anchored in place, locked in the pattern carved into flesh. The spiral. Her spiral. No—not hers. His. The Vance Case. “Dr. Hale.” Detective Ramirez’s voice cut through the hum. His tone was careful, too careful, like a man stepping into a minefield. “We’ve got something you’ll want to see.” Emily straightened, peeled her gloves off with deliberate precision, and turned. Ramirez was holding a file, the corner of a photograph sticking out. He hesitated before speaking again. “This matches the Vance case.” The words hit like a body blow. She stiffened, the sound of rain fading, her heart slamming once, twice, in brutal recognition. The alley blurred around her, the symbols burning into her vision. Vance. She hadn’t heard that name spoken in years, and yet it carried the same voltage, the same sharp current that had once jolted her entire life off course. Her voice was flat when it finally came. “You’re mistaken.” Ramirez shook his head. “No mistake. Same carving. Same ritual placement. Hell, even the same staging. You’d know better than anyone.” Emily’s fingers dug into the damp wool of her coat. “Lucas Vance is in prison.” Ramirez’s silence told her everything she didn’t want to hear. Her stomach turned. The alley felt tighter, the air colder. She dragged her gaze back to the body, her pulse hammering. It couldn’t be. Not again. The case had been closed, the nightmare sealed. Lucas Vance—con artist, manipulator, criminal mastermind, the man who had once stood across an interrogation table and smiled at her like he knew the shape of her soul—was gone from her world. And yet here was his signature. His shadow. Ramirez crouched beside the body, gesturing toward the carving. “Whoever did this wanted us to think of him. They wanted you to think of him.” Emily swallowed hard, fighting the memories pressing at the edges of her mind. She should leave. She should let another profiler take it. But she knew the truth, even if she hated it—this crime scene was hers as much as the killer’s. “Bag everything,” she said, her voice clipped, controlled. “Every fiber, every print. I want the victim’s background run top to bottom. If there’s a connection, we’ll find it.” Ramirez studied her for a moment, as though weighing the steel in her tone against the storm in her eyes. Then he nodded. As he moved away, Emily let her hand brush against the wall, grounding herself against the slick, rain-slick bricks. The spiral gleamed at her from the corpse, taunting, pulling her back to the night her life had changed. The night Lucas Vance smiled in handcuffs. It had been seven years ago, but memory had the cruel habit of sharpening instead of fading. The room had smelled of sweat and fluorescent lights. The hum of the overhead fixture buzzed like a hornet, setting her nerves on edge. Lucas Vance sat across from her, wrists bound in steel, yet somehow looking as though the cuffs were just an accessory he had chosen to wear. He leaned back in the chair, posture relaxed, a lazy grin tugging at his lips. His eyes—blue, startlingly clear—never left hers. They saw too much. “You’re good,” he had said, voice smooth as silk. “But you’re not as good as you think.” Emily had kept her expression neutral, her notes crisp, her tone clinical. “You manipulated wealthy investors out of millions. You staged murders to cover your trail. That’s not clever. That’s sociopathy.” He laughed, low and warm, like they were sharing a private joke. “Sociopathy, profiler? Come on. Don’t reduce me to a textbook.” He leaned forward, chains clinking softly. “You studied me. You watched the patterns. You think you know me.” She remembered the chill that ran down her spine when his smile faltered, his voice dropping to a whisper meant only for her. “But the truth, Emily, is that I know you.” Her name had never sounded so intimate, so dangerous. She remembered the tightening of her chest, the instinct to step back though she was safely across the table. He had dismantled her with words, with presence, with the quiet threat of a man who could see cracks no one else noticed. And then, as officers hauled him up, snapping at him to shut his mouth, he had turned his head, locking eyes with her one last time. “You’ll come back to me,” he said, lips curving. “They always do.” That smile—the kind that promised both destruction and salvation—was burned into her memory. Now, standing in the rain-soaked alley years later, Emily felt the echo of that moment like fresh bruises. Her pulse quickened. Because deep down, under the steel of her professionalism and the walls she had built around her heart, a single thought whispered: What if he was right? She crouched again beside the body, ignoring the press of Ramirez’s gaze. The spiral was fresh, meticulous, carved with the same hand—or the same devotion—as before. She traced the air above it with a trembling finger, refusing to let her glove touch the blood. The victim’s face was slack, his eyes still open to the night. She studied the posture, the way the limbs were arranged. It wasn’t random. It was art, in the killer’s mind. A tableau. Lucas had loved his tableaus. He had once told her that chaos was noise, but ritual was music. And this—this spiral carved into the chest of a stranger in a rain-soaked alley—was a symphony conducted in his name. Emily rose, spine rigid. She would not let the past consume her. The present demanded her full attention, no matter how much it echoed old ghosts. “Detective,” she called. Ramirez returned quickly, his brow furrowed. “We need to work fast,” she said. “This isn’t random. Whoever did this is escalating. They want a reaction.” Ramirez nodded, but his eyes flickered with something like sympathy. “They want you.” Emily ignored the sting in his words. She turned back to the corpse, forcing herself to catalog, to analyze, to detach. But her mind betrayed her, overlaying Lucas’s smirk across the blank face of the victim, the sound of his voice threading through the rainfall. Some shadows never leave. She closed her eyes briefly, steadying her breath. When she opened them again, she was no longer the woman trembling under memory’s weight. She was Dr. Emily Hart, profiler. And this was her hunt. Still, as the evidence bags filled, as the cameras flashed, as the alley emptied into routine, one truth gnawed at her beneath the surface calm: If Lucas Vance was still orchestrating this—whether from a cell or from the shadows—then she was already playing his game again. And games with Lucas Vance always ended the same way. With blood.
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