I'm about to become Kent Shepherd's confidante.
And I can't wait to see what he has to give me.
Chapter 12 - Kent
OCTOBER 2025
The interstate stretches ahead like a gray ribbon cutting through October farmland, and I've been driving for three hours now with nothing but the radio's static and my own churning thoughts for company. Mile markers tick by in steady progression—237, 238, 239—each one bringing me closer to a confrontation I'm not sure either of us is prepared for.
Six and a half hours. That's how long this drive takes when you observe speed limits and stop for gas like a normal person traveling for normal reasons. Far enough from the city that I could disappear completely if I needed to, close enough that I could monitor news coverage and track developments in cases that might concern me. The distance was calculated, like everything else about the life I built in that trailer park.
But calculations only work when all the variables remain constant. And Dr. Lila North represents a variable I never saw coming.
Delilah Jenkins. The name sits in my mind like a word in a foreign language I'm trying to remember how to speak. Because the sixteen-year-old girl who helped me position her father's body with clinical precision—she was Delilah. The woman consulting on Marcus Chen's murder, analyzing crime scenes with the methodology I taught her through letters written in careful block script—she's Dr. Lila North.
Same person. Different name. Different life. Different world entirely. Right?
How long has she been Dr. Lila North? The name change would have happened during college, probably—that carefulreinvention that trauma survivors sometimes require to function in the world. Delilah Jenkins carried too much history, too many associations with violence and loss. Dr. Lila North could build a career studying criminal psychology without anyone connecting her to the decorated police officer whose brutal murder made headlines nine years ago.
Smart. Strategic. Exactly what I would have done in her position.
But it means she's been living a lie as carefully constructed as my own. The furniture restoration business, the trailer park anonymity, the relationship with Mara—all of it designed to keep Kent Shepherd separate from the man who once carved confessions from monsters in their own kitchens. She's done the same thing, just with more credentials and better clothes.
The question that's been gnawing at me since I found her professional website is simpler than the implications: Does she remember?
Nine years is a long time. Long enough for trauma to fade into manageable memory, for teenage gratitude to mature into adult perspective. Maybe she looks back on that night as the moment her real life began—not because of what I did, but because of what it freed her to become. Maybe our correspondence was just a sixteen-year-old's way of processing something too complex for normal grief counseling.
Maybe I've been carrying the weight of that connection alone all this time.
But even as I think it, I know it's not true. The letters we exchanged weren't the product of teenage fascination with danger. They were conversations between two people who understood something fundamental about justice that the rest of the world refuses to acknowledge. She asked questions thatshowed real insight into methodology, into the philosophy behind careful violence. She understood why precision mattered, why ritual gave meaning to necessary death.
That kind of understanding doesn't just disappear.
A semi-truck passes me in the left lane, its wake buffeting my pickup with enough force to require a slight steering correction. The driver doesn't glance down, doesn't acknowledge my existence—just another anonymous vehicle on an anonymous stretch of highway. It's how I've lived for nine years, invisible by choice and design. But invisibility only works when no one's looking for you.
Someone is definitely looking for me now.
The Marcus Chen murder wasn't random. Someone killed an innocent man using techniques I developed specifically because they knew those techniques would be noticed. Studied. Analyzed by experts in criminal psychology.
By Dr. Lila North.
Whoever's playing this game knows about our connection. Knows she was there that night, knows we corresponded afterward, knows that using my signature would inevitably draw us back into each other's orbit. They're counting on it. Planning around it.
Which means this isn't just about getting my attention. What else could it be? Forcing a reunion?
The thought makes my hands tighten on the steering wheel hard enough that my knuckles go white. Because if someone knows enough about our past to manipulate us both, then they know things that could destroy the lives we've built. They know Delilah Jenkins helped position her father's body. They know Kent Shepherd killed six men and recorded their confessions before disappearing into the wind.
They hold secrets that could send both of us to prison for the rest of our lives.
Mile marker 245 slides past, followed by a green sign promising rest stops and gas stations in two miles. I need to fuel up anyway—the truck's tank is approaching half empty, and I learned long ago never to let resources dwindle when you're operating outside normal parameters. But mostly I need a few minutes to step outside my own head, to process what I know and plan for what comes next.
Because seeing her again is inevitable now. The only question is whether I approach as Kent Shepherd the furniture restorer looking to reconnect with an old friend, or as the man who once killed her father and taught her that monsters deserve to die.
The distinction matters more than it should. Because part of me—the part that's spent nine years trying to be someone else—wants to believe we could meet as civilians. Two people who shared trauma and survived it, who built new lives from the ashes of old violence. We could have coffee, catch up on the intervening years, carefully avoid discussing anything that happened before it all went to shit.
We could pretend we're normal.
Except…normal people don't correspond with serial killers. Normal people don't help position bodies or ask detailed questions about methodology. And normal people definitely don't become forensic psychologists specializing in violent offenders after witnessing their father's murder.