Chapter 1 - Seokjin

Hunted

Seokjin couldn’t think of a worse way to start his day.

He slammed the door as he got out of the car, the momentum of it causing him to spill hot coffee on his thigh. Switching the cup to his other hand so that he could wipe his fingers on his coat, Jin swore and kicked the front tire.

“Well,” said Yoongi, coming around the front of the black sedan to join Seokjin on the street. “If you’re upset, you’re doing a great job hiding it.”

Fruitlessly trying to wipe away the wet, brown splotch on his pants, Jin glared at him. It was a death stare, really, one with several different layers and many motivations. Five years they’d been partners and just now had Yoongi’s face started to bug him – his smug, gummy smile, his narrow eyes, the annoying way the fierce East Coast winters did nothing to damage his skin or dull his platinum hair.

That morning, Yoongi’s unyielding handsomeness was just another thing pissing Jin off.

“This puts me in a bad mood,” Jin mumbled. He’d given up on the stain. No matter what he did, he was going to look like he’d pissed himself. Better to accept that now and hope that a bunch of cops standing around a crime scene would be mature enough not to draw attention to it.

“Everything puts you in a bad mood,” Yoongi pointed out. The wind picked up, chilling Jin to his bones and sending his already unruly bangs flopping across his forehead. He tried to use his fingers to smooth it down but the weather had other ideas. Through messy patches of brown hair, Jin looked to Yoongi.

Somehow, his hair looked better than it had before.

“Don’t you ever have a bad hair day?” he griped harshly. Jin was letting his mind fixate on petty jealousies for just a minute, reveling in the way he could be upset about something so small, so insignificant.

In another few minutes, when Jin caught up with the rest of New York’s finest, it would be impossible to ignore the glaring ugliness of the world. Why not focus on the ugliness of Yoongi’s inability to look ugly instead?

Yoongi shrugged his shoulders, not because he didn’t understand the question but because he wanted to shield his neck and ears from the chill of late January.

“Sometimes,” he said, looking both ways before crossing the street. He shoved his hands into the pockets of his long winter coat, wishing he hadn’t forgotten his hat, his scarf and his gloves on his dresser that morning. He hadn’t gotten a lot of sleep the night before – choosing the company of a young, pretty EMT over getting a full eight hours – and Jin’s unexpected wake-up call had startled him. In his haste, he’d forgotten everything but his wallet, badge and gun. “But I’m so good-looking that it doesn’t matter. I’d look just as good bald.”

Jin glared at him again, another death stare that made him wish he had magical head-exploding or hair-ruining laser powers, but shook it off.

Another three seconds of childish petulance was all he’d allow himself.

“You’re a real ,” he said, stepping up on the curb.

Yoongi laughed, the same loud, dry laugh as always, and then they were back at work.

No longer was he Jin, angry guy with a vaguely heart-shaped splotch of coffee on his crotch.

It was 9 AM, Monday morning, and he was Detective Seokjin Kim of the New York City Police Department.

And the Downtown Strangler had just struck again.

The call came in at 7:45. A guy walking his dog had stumbled upon the body. (Actually, and Yoongi would be the only one to make this sort of correction, the dog found it. Rocky, a mutt that looked like he was part German Shepard and part something else. He was the one who’d found the body. He just didn’t have the thumbs to call it in.)

Seokjin didn’t know the specifics – didn’t know the identity of the victim, didn’t know the time of death, didn’t know any of the details. There were only two things he’d known for sure – the body had been dumped in the same five-block radius as the last three, and the cause of death had been strangulation.

This body, like the ones that had preceded it, had been left in a construction site. And this crime scene, like the others, was flooded with nosy rubberneckers. They pushed at the boundaries that had been set, tried to take pictures of the body and drew loud, wildly inaccurate conclusions about the identity of the Downtown Strangler.

“The fourth victim in two months!” an older woman shouted. She fiddled with her scarf and huffed loudly like she was somehow more important than every other busybody in the group. “What are the police doing to protect our daughters?”

“They know who it is,” said a Hispanic teenager in a Chicago Bulls jacket, “but they’re not going to do anything. It’s all a big conspiracy! My buddy works for the mayor. He knows all about it.”

Jin took a very deep breath, willing himself not to do something he’d regret.

“Excuse us, folks,” he said, his back teeth grinding. “NYPD. We need to get through.”

As was protocol, they flashed their badges. Reluctantly, and while grumbling critiques and obscenities, the crowd parted to allow them a very narrow passageway.

“Thank you,” Yoongi said, offering a smile too warm for the day. He looked to the older woman, the loud one, and said, “I love your scarf, ma’am.”

She blushed the way all women did when Yoongi spoke and magically stopped spewing anti-police nonsense. Jin looked to Yoongi expectantly once they’d crossed under the yellow police tape but Yoongi just said, “Told you. I’m really good-looking.”

It wasn’t hard to spot the body, a human-shaped lump under a while sheet and surrounded by a bunch of cops pretending not to stare.

“What do we got?” Jin asked, sipping his coffee and gesturing to a baby-faced patrol cop who happened to be standing close-by. Without waiting for a response, he crouched down beside the body and reached for the sheet, but the young office stopped him.

“You might not want to do that,” he said, then pointed to the other side of the yard to where a pale, blonde officer was sitting on the ground. “Officer Wang threw up when he saw.”

Yoongi snorted.

“I remember those days,” he said, then offered the officer his hand. “We’re Detectives Min and Kim.”

“Officer Mark Lee,” he said. “I guess you guys get used to this stuff after a while, huh?”

“Unfortunately,” Jin mumbled. Then he took a deep breath and pulled back the sheet.

Whoever she was, she’d been young and pretty. Judging by the clothes and the makeup, she’d probably been a worker. That was consistent. The Downtown Strangler had killed three other es and that was just what they knew about. The bruising pattern around her neck was certainly consistent with strangulation but there was something else.

Something odd.

“Overkill,” Seokjin said quietly.

“Hmm?”

“Overkill,” he repeated and motioned for Yoongi to join him on the ground. He pulled the sheet back further and Officer Mark Lee grimaced before fully turning away. “All these slash marks, evidence of torture.” He shook his head. Whoever this girl was, she’d been through something awful. Her body had been broken, stabbed, violated. Her clothes were torn and soaked in blood, her skin pierced, split and, in some places, stripped away.

Yoongi raised an eyebrow, attempting to connect the dots.

“This is the work of the Downtown Strangler?”

“The Downtown Strangler?” Officer Mark Lee asked, facing the crowd. “Didn’t you hear?”

Jin and Yoongi exchanged a look.

“Hear what?” Jin asked. Because Officer Mark Lee was still a little green, Seokjin replaced the sheet and stood up, not needing anyone else to vomit all over his crime scene. “What about the Downtown Strangler?”

“They caught him last night,” he said.

“They what?” Jin demanded. “They, who?”

“Officers Sehun Oh and Junmyeon Kim, I think. They’re from your precinct, right?” Officer Mark Lee shook his head, making a clicking noise with his tongue. “They got him last night. Said the guy’s name was Lu Han or something like that.”

Jin’s head was spinning. Why hadn’t they known about this?

Actually, he knew why. They’d worked a lot of overtime that week. The night before, he’d passed out as soon as his hit the couch, and he’d slept straight through until morning. And Yoongi? He was busy maintaining his reputation as perpetual playboy of the NYPD.

Still, to think that two knuckleheads from his own squad had gone and solved the case of the Downtown Strangler while he was asleep…

“If they caught the Downtown Strangler,” Yoongi said, holding up a hand as if to somehow stop time for a moment, “who the hell is this?”

Their eyes all fell to the body beneath the sheet.

“Her name is Vanessa Simms,” said Officer Mark Lee. “Before he lost his breakfast, Officer Wang found her bag. Wallet, ID, everything was inside.”

“Was she a worker?” Yoongi asked.

“Beats the hell out of me,” said Officer Mark Lee. “But the profilers said that it wouldn’t matter. According to them, this wouldn’t be the work of the Downtown Strangler anyway.”

Jin tensed up and Yoongi saw it, catching himself just before he rolled his eyes.

“Profilers?” he spat bitterly. “What profilers?”

“The BAU,” he said, “from the FBI. They were here just a little bit ago. I think your lieutenant called them. Anyway, they’d looked over the Downtown Strangler case and that guy? Lu Han? He really did kill all three es. They said he had… what was it? Oh, yeah. Gender identity issues. All three of them were girls he’d seen while he was out clubbing. They disrespected him, emasculated him even. He and killed them to assert his dominance and prove he was a man. They said he probably had mommy issues, too. They said he was quick and clean. The ual assault and the murder didn’t take very long, and he dumped the body and left.” Officer Mark Lee pointed down at the body. “Whoever did this took their time. It takes a lot of time to cut someone up like that.”

“Then why strangle her?” Jin asked quietly, his eyes narrowed. He was turning over stones in his head, trying to make sense of all the information he’d been given.

“If you ask me,” Officer Mark Lee went on, “I think it was a forensic countermeasure. Whoever did this didn’t know the Downtown Strangler had been caught. He was trying to make it look like the Stranger had struck again. Didn’t much count on him getting busted last night, I suppose. But and strangling a bunch of hookers is a far cry from torturing someone like this.” Officer Mark Lee took a breath and then smiled up at Seokjin. “My dream is to be a profiler someday, too.”

Jin ignored his charming ambition.

“You’re telling me,” he muttered, his teeth clenching so hard that it hurt his jaw, “that this isn’t the work of the Downtown Strangler, but of some other serial killer in our jurisdiction?”

His fists were beginning to clench just like his teeth.

Yoongi sighed and said, “You’re going to want to step back.”

“Why?” asked Officer Mark Lee.

Another two seconds passed, and then…

“Goddamn it!” Seokjin roared, throwing his coffee cup like a fastball. It hit a nearby piece of construction equipment and exploded like a wet, brown firework.

“This will be a fun day,” Yoongi deadpanned. “He’s going to be lots of fun to be around.”

Jin was panting with the exertion of his own anger, his fists opening and closing at his sides. As if he didn’t have enough to worry about. As if he wasn’t already losing sleep over the East Side-Assassin and the Bronx Butcher and whatever the was going on in Chelsea…

Back near the crowd, someone wailed. Yoongi, Seokjin and Officer Mark Lee all turned to see a middle-aged woman in a grey jacket being led under the boundaries. She was speaking with one of the senior detectives, though it seemed like he was doing most of the talking and she was just screaming.

“Who’s that?” Jin asked.

“Victim’s mother,” said Officer Mark Lee.

Letting his shoulders sag with the weight of the cold, hard morning, Seokjin sighed.

As it turned out, he could think of worse ways to start his day.

A lot worse.


“If you keep grinding your teeth like that,” Yoongi said, “they’re going to fall out.”

“Good,” Seokjin said, unfazed, unblinking. “Think of how much time I’ll save when I can drink all my meals.”

“You do like soup,” Yoongi agreed amicably.

“Win-win situation,” Seokjin mused quietly. His arms were folded over his chest as he sat on the corner of his desk. He was staring so intently at his evidence board that he was almost staring through it. A crease had appeared between his eyes, the scary vein in his neck beginning to pop out as his brain struggled to make sense of what he saw.

The real Downtown Strangler, the one responsible for the murder and ual assault of three es, was Lu Han. He’d been caught. (Impossibly so, Jin thought. How could Junmyeon and Sehun find the Downtown Strangler? They could barely find Burger King when they went out for lunch.) Whoever had killed Vanessa Simms was someone entirely different and, arguably, someone much more dangerous.

“Vanessa Simms wasn’t a e,” Jin said.

“Correct,” Yoongi confirmed. “She was a college student.” Seokjin nodded slowly, processing. Sometimes he brain was quick and clear like an expensive computer with high-speed internet. Other days, it was like trudging along with a dial-up modem. When he fell silent again, Yoongi looked up at Jin and said, “You can’t connect dots that aren’t there.”

“They’re there,” he said. “I know they are.”

He had two evidence boards, both entirely covered in notes, samples and crime scene photos. The first had been a magnetic dry-erase board, one of the tall ones on wheels that you’d find in conference rooms. That one had been split in half, one side dedicated to the Downtown Strangler and the other to the East-Side Assassin.

Yoongi locked his hands behind his head and looked at the board. Whatever Jin thought he could see, Yoongi couldn’t.

“You shouldn’t be thinking about this,” Yoongi said.

“I know, I know,” Jin mumbled. “I should be thinking about the Bronx Butcher.”

Yoongi laughed incredulously, looking around like he thought someone else might have heard Jin and found him just as ridiculous as he did. It was one of those ‘can-you-believe-this-guy?’ looks, but nobody had been looking or listening and so Yoongi just blinked through his own disbelief.

“No, Jin,” he sighed, shaking his head. “The East-Side Assassin. That is who you’re supposed to be thinking about.” Jin narrowed his eyes, shot Yoongi a hard glare over his shoulder and then went back to what he’d been doing – staring and muttering. Grunting, Yoongi stood up and came around the side of Jin’s desk. “Let me break it down for you, buddy.” He pointed to the first board, gesturing to the Downtown Strangler’s half. “This can all go in the trash. They caught him. He’s gone now.”

“Only he isn’t,” Jin spat, “because someone killed Vanessa Simms.”

“Only she isn’t our problem,” Yoongi countered, “and neither is her killer.” Ignoring the swears that Jin was hurling in his direction, Yoongi quickly and quietly removed all of the Downtown Strangler’s information from the board and stacked it neatly on the corner of Jin’s desk. Then, he turned to the second board. Though the urge to do so made his fingers itch, he knew better than to touch this one.

This board was Seokjin’s baby.

“Don’t you dare,” Jin warned, following Yoongi’s eyes to the board. But Yoongi shoved his hands in his pockets, fighting the temptation.

“The Bronx Butcher,” he said, “is not our problem.”

Jin bit the inside of his cheek.

The second board, bigger and messier than the first, had been entirely devoted to the Bronx Butcher.

(Yoongi hated that they give serial killers nicknames like that, hated that the media was so desperate to sell stories that they’d proudly memorialize and sensationalize monsters. But maybe he understood it. They were the boogeymen of their realities, the ghouls that roamed the city streets, the things that went bump in the night. Maybe giving them names made it easier to swallow somehow. Maybe knowing your enemy made it possible to keep on living even though you were scared less. Maybe.)

Jin knew that he was on thin ice.

There were three (or now, maybe, four – who the knew?) active serial killers walking around New York City. The East-Side Assassin was, aptly, leaving bodies all over the Upper East Side. The Downtown Strangler might have been caught, but who knew how long it was until this new, mysterious player claimed another victim? Mutilated bodies, all politically motivated, had been found in Chelsea.

And then there was the Bronx Butcher.

And nobody racked up body counts quite like the Bronx Butcher.

The Bronx Butcher had more victims than the East-Side Assassin and the Downtown Strangler combined, and he had a flare for the dramatic. He ripped bodies apart, removed organs and kept them as trophies, left behind elaborate paintings done entirely in the victim’s blood.

He was barbaric but there was something about him that fascinated Seokjin, something artistic, even poetic. There was something that set him apart from the other killers, something that made him different, something that made him special.

Seokjin had, in recent months, become a little obsessed with it.

The problem, though, was that he wasn’t in their jurisdiction.

Seokjin was a Manhattan detective. The Bronx Butcher, of course, cut people up in the Bronx.

There was, however, what Seokjin considered to be a loophole – three of the Bronx Butcher’s victims had been found in Manhattan. It wasn’t much, especially considering the number of bodies he’d left in the Bronx was in the twenties, but it was all that Jin had.

If uncaught, the Bronx Butcher was on his way to becoming one of the most prolific serial killers in the country’s history. Of course it was horrible and scary and bad that there were so many active killers trolling the city, but the Bronx Butcher was the worst by a mile. The other three couldn’t dream of carrying out the type of murders that he appeared to commit with such ease.

And yet, he’d been barred from launching an all-out investigation. Sure, each time a victim magically appeared in his jurisdiction, he’d been granted access but those bodies had come few and far between. What he needed was to collaborate with the Bronx PD. He needed to visit all the crime scenes, examine all the evidence, look into victimology, get inside the Bronx Butcher’s head.

But he couldn’t.

It wasn’t his jurisdiction.

He’d worked his off to find justice for the three victims he’d been given, but each time, he hit a wall.

It had been three months since the last time the Butcher had left a body in Manhattan. Meanwhile, he’d just left a teenage boy completely eviscerated on the steps of a high school in the Bronx. He’d even taken his stomach as a keepsake.

But could Jin check it out? Could he call the lead detective in the Bronx and ask if he had any new leads? Could he visit the crime scene and work backwards the way he liked to do?

No. Of course not. Because that was the Bronx and this was Manhattan and all anyone here cared about was the East-Side Assassin.

Begrudgingly, Jin glanced up at the evidence board.

The East-Side Assassin had killed six women so far, all wealthy, white socialites from the Upper East Side. Days before each murder, witnesses saw the victims engage in some sort of altercation with a service worker. One woman had screamed at a waitress over poor service, another had made a scene about a homeless man eating in the same restaurant as her. So far, these seemed like a cross between vigilantism and revenge killings. Someone saw privileged women abusing those they saw as less-than and stepped in to dole out a punishment that fit the crime.

Each victim had been tortured and each had died from strangulation. (That, Yoongi had remarked once, seemed to be a very popular homicide method those days.)

It wasn’t that Seokjin didn’t care. It was his job to care. It was just that the East-Side Assassin wasn’t in the same weight class as the Bronx Butcher. The Assassin? He was easy. He hated women. Specifically, he hated wealthy women. He probably had some mommy issues, probably had been mistreated by a rich woman in his formative years, and he was lashing out at strangers because he couldn’t go after his real target.

The fact that he was only killing women who he felt deserved it meant that he had some semblance of a conscience and he was probably well-adjusted enough to hold down a job and a social life. His friends and coworkers would have no idea that he tortured women and, frankly, he probably lived a completely normal existence until the moment he saw a woman in designer clothes screaming at a janitor.

Once he’d been set off, once someone had triggered his anger, he became fixated. Probably disappeared from work for a few days (probably had a built-in excuse, too, to reason away these absences to those who knew him) and began the hunt. From there, he’d abduct, torture, kill and dispose of his victim and then jump right back into his other, normal life.

Seokjin had figured him out from the second victim (who needed profilers anyway?) and he was bored. Eventually, the Assassin would make a mistake and they’d catch him. He’d leave DNA behind, or a fingerprint, or one of his friends would realize that his lies about going fishing or visiting his mother didn’t add up, and they’d catch him.

For now, they had no leads to chase.

(And, no, it wasn’t that Jin thought these victims deserved it. Sure, they probably shouldn’t have been so unashamedly nasty to people in public but they didn’t deserve it. They weren’t entirely innocent but they hadn’t deserved what they’d gotten. But what about the Butcher’s victims? There was no pattern there, no connections. He killed men, women, teenagers. He crossed race, gender, social class and uality lines and killed with abandon. What had the stomach-less teenager left sprawled out on the steps of his high school done? He certainly hadn’t screamed racial slurs at a janitor or threatened to call the cops on a bum trying to eat a burger. Shouldn’t he be their priority?)

“I know that,” Jin said bitterly. He was clenching his fists so tight that his nails threatened to pierce the skin of his palm.

Sighing because he knew the look on Jin’s face and he knew what it meant, Yoongi said, “I’m sorry, buddy. I know that case eats at you but you’ve got to let it go. There’s nothing we can do. Not now. Not unless the Butcher drops another body into our laps. For now, we need to focus on the Assassin. They caught the Strangler. Maybe there’s another serial walking around, or maybe it’s just a coincidence and strangulation is just the flavor-of-the-month. I don’t know. What I do know is the Assassin is a ticking time bomb, just waiting for another white yuppie to shout at a poor person. And you know white yuppies, Seokjin. They always shout at poor people. Whether you like it or not, the East-Side Assassin? That’s our burden. Let the Bronx PD deal with the Butcher and let us find yuppie-killer.”

Seokjin’s smile was sad, but it was a smile. Yoongi, in all his wisdom and glory, had this unmatched ability to break through the tension and cut right to the heart of Jin’s problems. Even now, when it was literally a matter of life and death, Yoongi made it all feel okay.

Jin opened his mouth to say something nice, to thank Yoongi and tell him that he felt better, but the familiar sound of a squeaky office door cut through the room. All the hustle and bustle of the department seemed to stop, every busy officer falling silent as soon as the boss showed her head.

“Seokjin,” came a female voice, somehow smooth and sharp simultaneously. “Can I see you?”

Jin shut his mouth so quickly, it felt like his teeth really would break.

He glanced over his shoulder and saw Lieutenant Heeyeon Ahn staring back at him. She was dressed entirely in blue, her new, shorter haircut making her look even less approachable than she did before, I that was even possible.

“Yeah,” he gritted. “Sure thing.”

She nodded once and retreated into her office. As soon the door clicked shut, the buzz of the squad room faded back to its normal hum.

“Oh boy,” Yoongi said, sighing heavily as he came back around his desk and fell into his chair. “I wonder what that’s about.”

Seokjin took a deep breath and stood up, straighten his shirt and his back before turning on the heal of his boot and heading for her office.

This wouldn’t be fun.

On a good day, Lieutenant Ahn wasn’t Seokjin’s biggest fan. But on a day when a probable new serial killer had just popped up and dumped a body smack dab in the middle of their jurisdiction and Jin was still hung up on the Butcher?

He took a deep breath as his hand touched the doorknob, flinching slightly as he twisted it.

“Ma’am?” he asked, bowing his head.

“Take a seat, Seokjin,” she said. She was sitting at her desk, her eyes pointed down inside a folder, and she didn’t bother looking up as Jin made his way to an empty chair. After fifteen seconds had passed in silence, Lieutenant Ahn said, “What do you make of this?”

Seokjin wasn’t sure what this was.

“Ma’am?”

“The body that was found today,” she said, leaning back in her seat and folding her hands over her stomach. “It wasn’t the Downtown Strangler. Not the right victim, not the right MO. Do you think we should look at this as another potential serial, or something else, something random?”

Holding back a sigh, Seokjin inched to the edge of his chair and scratched the back of his neck.

“I think it’s too early to tell,” he answered honestly. “We need to look into the type of person Vanessa Simms was. We need to see if she had any enemies, any habits, any debts. Strangulation isn’t exactly an uncommon way to kill somebody so it could just be a coincidence. I wouldn’t jump to any conclusions just yet.”

Hani nodded slowly as she listened to Seokjin speak, then she closed the folder on her desk and said, “Good. That leaves you completely undistracted to catch the East-Side Assassin, then. I’ll stick some officers on the Vanessa Simms case. You and Detective Min can get back to work, maybe head uptown and follow-up on some old leads, see I anything has changed.”

Seokjin swallowed hard, unable to help the uncomfortable way he shifted in his seat.

“With all due respect, ma’am,” he began uneasily, “I was really hoping to give Sungyeol Lee a call.”

Lieutenant Ahn gave him a hard look, one of her perfectly-trimmed eyebrows arching slightly as she examined him.

“And who exactly is Sungyeol Lee?”

“He’s the lead detective in the Bronx who’s working the–”

She raised one hand, effectively shutting him up and putting an end to the tired tirade she’d heard so many times before. She knew exactly what he was going to say and she didn’t want to hear it. Not today.

“Don’t start, Detective Kim,” she said, the beginnings of a headache starting to throb between her eyes. “We’ve been over this. We’ve been over this several times, in fact. You have your assignment. You know what you’re supposed to be doing.”

“I just don’t understand how the East-Side Assassin outranks the Butcher,” he blurted, regretting it as soon as he said it. He saw the look in her eyes and knew it all too well. It was the one where she was trying to decide whether it was worth firing him or if she should just hit him with her stapler, and Jin decided to push his luck. “The Butcher dumped a body yesterday. A kid. He was sixteen. Wouldn’t my skills be better put to use there? The Assassin hasn’t struck in a while and–”

“And what?” Lieutenant Ahn laughed humorlessly, incredulously. “And you think he’s just done now? You think six is his lucky number and now he’s ready to quit?” She shook her head, her voice growing louder and her tone beginning to sharpen. “And you think that, instead of putting two of my best detectives on that case, I should let you go run around the Bronx, completely out of or jurisdiction, and step on the toes of cops who’ve lost twenty-two people and now a teenager?”

It was silent then. Seokjin’s cheeks were red. He felt like a kid getting scolded by the principal.

“I don’t mean any disrespect,” he said somewhat meekly. “Not to you, not to the Assassin’s victims. But what about Devynn Kirkland? What about Taylor Litchfield and Evan Brass?”

“You don’t need to remind me of the Butcher’s Manhattan victims, Seokjin,” Lieutenant Ahn said shortly. “I know their names. I was at the funerals, too.” She paused for a minute, visibly upset, and then continued with a renewed anger burning in her eyes and rumbling in . “But in case you’ve forgotten what you learned in kindergarten, twenty-two is greater than three. The Butcher may not be outranked but we are. It is the Bronx’s case and unless the Butcher starts dropping bodies on the Upper East Side, I don’t want to hear else about it. Do you understand me, Seokjin? I get that the Butcher is the Zodiac Killer of our time and you want to be the big, tough badass detective who brings him in, but I’m not letting your silly ego and your sillier obsession interfere with an investigation. 1PP and the mayor are breathing down my neck about the East-Side Assassin. This city can’t survive if every rich white person is terrified to go outside. This city’s economy depends on them going out and spending like the world is ending. But if they think the world really is ending, we’re all ed. Do you get that? So shut the up about the Butcher and go catch the East-Side Assassin before I replace you with someone who will.”

She’d shouted those last few sentences and the sound of her voice echoed off the office walls and the inside of Seokjin’s head. His cheeks were flushed now, hopelessly so, and he couldn’t find it in him to look Lieutenant Ahn in the eye. This was a man who’d seen all sorts of atrocities in his ten years on the force and he couldn’t even face his tiny boss.

“It’s not an obsession,” he said finally, his voice small. “It’s a passion.”

Frustrated and no longer interested in this conversation, Lieutenant Ahn began straightening up the papers on her desk.

“You, Detective, are walking a very thin line between passion and insubordination.”

“So we’re not looking into it at all? That’s it? We’re done with the Butcher?”

We’re not,” she said. “You are. I’ve been in contact with the FBI. BAU profilers are in town and they’ll be splitting their time between us and the Bronx PD. They will help us find the Butcher and help us determine whether or not this new killer is a realistic threat.”

Seokjin gaped at her.

“So why did you even bother asking me?” he asked, obviously and unreasonably offended.

“Because you’re a good cop and I value your opinion,” she said. “But the profilers have skills and intel that you don’t, Seokjin. I know you have some weird axe to grind with the BAU but you’ll be answering to them on the East-Side Assassin case, too, if you don’t buck up and get some answers. Is that understood?”

Seokjin could taste bile burning in his throat.

“Yes, ma’am,” he said through gritted teeth. Jealousy, anger and resentment burned in the pit of his stomach, rough and acidic. He’d known his day was going to but this was something else. Being formally taken off the Butcher case and being asked to play second-fiddle to a bunch of profilers?

Maybe he should’ve just stayed in bed.

When Jin didn’t move, and when it was clear to Heeyeon that he was too busy brooding and wallowing in his own self-pity to take a hint, she said, “Please shut the door on your way out.”

Seokjin walked out of Lieutenant Ahn’s office like a puppy who’d just been kicked. He tried to hide it, tried to walk tall and hold his chin up, but Yoongi saw right through it. Seokjin had always been considerably transparent with his emotions, even if he thought he was some sort of closed book.

As Seokjin returned to his desk and dropped into his chair with a dramatic huff, Yoongi smiled. Standing, he put his hand on Jin’s shoulder and said, “Come on, Let me buy you lunch.”


“The food here ,” Jin said, twirling several strands of spaghetti around a water-spotted fork. “Why do we always come here?”

Yoongi shrugged, his mouth full of fries.

“The food but it’s good. It’s a complicated mixture of good and y. Some Italian food is like that.”

Jin thought calling Franchetti’s Italian food was like calling Taco Bell authentic Mexican but since Yoongi was footing the bill, he let it go. It was a popular hangout for cops and the choice of décor only lived to further that connection. Jin didn’t know what came first – the NYPD murals on the wall or all the cops in the booths. Either way, the boys in blue always got a discount and the owner lived with the comfortable knowledge that he’d likely never be held up at gunpoint. It was, at the very least, a successfully symbiotic relationship.

It was the lunch rush, and a sea of blue uniforms stretched all across the dining room. The smell of garlic and tomato sauce was strong and the atmosphere was electric. With all the bodies being dumped around the city, there was a lot to talk about.

“Do you ever miss crimes?” Jin asked, leaning back in his chair as he looked around the room. “On days like these, I mean, when death is just, like, in the air? Do you ever miss live victims?”

Yoongi shrugged and reached for the ketchup. He’d already consumed a third of the bottle and Seokjin wondered if he could even taste the food underneath.

“They weren’t always live victims,” Yoongi said. He’d never been one to get nostalgic. He’d worked crimes for seven years before transferring to homicide. That was where he’d met Seokjin. They were paired up when Seokjin’s original partner retired and the rest was history. “But I guess I miss it. It’s sort of like asking somebody a bad would-you-rather. Would you rather be deaf or blind? Would you rather starve to death or bleed to death? Would you rather work a case with a dead five-year-old, or a five-year-old that’s been ?” He shrugged his shoulders. “Violent crime is violent crime. For what it’s worth, though, I like you more than my last partner.”

Seokjin snorted and said, “Really?”

“Absolutely,” he said. “You never make me drive.”

They worked well together. They were opposites, but the kind of opposites that made each other stronger. Jin was brooding and intense. He had trouble hiding his cynicism, had trouble seeing beyond the scope of his personal reality. His line of work had tainted his view of the world, irreparably darkening the way he saw things, the way he saw people.

It wasn’t that Yoongi was naïve. He’d seen enough heinous crimes to last a lifetime, encountered enough violated, traumatized victims to carry with him through several eternities. But it didn’t faze him the way it fazed Jin. If anything, it had the opposite effect. It made him appreciate what little good he saw in the world. He was charming, talkative, someone who could be friends with anyone. And as it stood, he’d thrown significantly less coffee cups than his partner.

Maybe that was why they’d gotten so many commendations. Maybe that was why Lieutenant Ahn considered them to be her best detectives. Before this boom of serial killers had taken over New York City like a thick, noxious cloud, they’d been the go-to guys on every tough assignment. Nobody cracked the case quite like Detectives Kim and Min. But maybe those days were gone just like the safety and peace of mind of Manhattan.

“Oh, no,” Yoongi said, and his quiet, grated tone was enough to pull Seokjin from his thoughts.

“What?”

Yoongi, who was seated across from Seokjin, nodded his chin towards the door.

“We’ve got company.”

Seokjin looked over his shoulder just in time to see Kim Jongdae approaching.

“Hi, guys,” Jongdae greeted brightly. “How are my favorite detectives?” Their resounding groan was simultaneous. “Oh, don’t be like that,” Jongdae said. As soon as he was close enough, he pointed to Yoongi’s plate. “Mind I I swipe some fries? I skipped breakfast.” Not waiting for a response, Jongdae lifted three wedges from Yoongi’s pile and shoved them into his mouth.

Yoongi glared up at him.

“What’s stopping me from putting this guy through that window over there?” he asked Jin.

“Smartphones,” he said. “Police brutality ain’t what it used to be.”

Jongdae snorted.

While he loudly chewed up Yoongi’s fries, Seokjin looked him up and down. That day, he wore tight green pants and a white button-up shirt. On his head, covering a mop of curly brown hair, he wore an honest-to-goodness newsboy cap.

“Jongdae,” Seokjin sighed, “your column is online. You don’t even have a physical paper. Why do you dress like it’s 1940?”

“Yeah,” said Yoongi, snatching his plate away so that it was out of Jongdae’s reach. “Don’t you have a corner you should be standing on? Extra, extra! Read all about it and go away.”

Jongdae laughed again. No matter how much they teased and belittled him, Jongdae always laughed. Seokjin couldn’t tell if he loved or hated that about him. (And Seokjin hated just about all the journalists of the city, so the fact that he had to consider it at all meant that he probably liked the chatty son-of-a-.)

“I’m not even here for you,” he said. “I’m here for your buddies.”

“We don’t have any buddies,” said Seokjin.

“Officers Oh and Kim,” Jongdae amended, nodding his chin to the back of the dining room. Sehun and Junmyeon were there, laughing as they ate their garlic bread. “They caught the Downtown Strangler and people do, in fact, want to read all about it.”

“Good,” Yoongi hissed. “Go take their fries.”

Snorting, Jongdae nodded and began to walk away, but then he stopped.

“Hey,” he said. “Did you guys hear about Justitia’s Prophet?”

“Is that one of those weird indie bands you like?” Yoongi asked and Jongdae laughed again.

“Boy, you guys are really out of the loop.” He held up one finger, signaling for them to wait, and then began rifling through his messenger bag. When he found what he was looking for – a newspaper, apparently – he slammed it down on the table, narrowly missing Jin’s plate of pasta. “Read it and weep, my dudes.”

Yoongi read the headline aloud.

“Justitia’s Prophet claims responsibility for five dead in art district,” he said, then he looked expectantly to Jongdae. “Fill in the blanks, paperboy.”

Sighing and taking back his newspaper, Jongdae explained: “You know all those bodies in the art district? The ones with poems attached? The ones that the mayor called ‘politically-motivated’? They finally have a guy responsible.”

“Someone caught him?” Seokjin asked.

“Not exactly,” Jongdae said uneasily. “He just claimed responsibility. Named himself, too. He sent a letter to the New York Times. Their story breaks tomorrow.” He gestured with the paper still in his hands. “This is more-or-less a gossip rag but they have a source that leaked the letter early. My story on him will be up at midnight. Be sure to check it out.” He threw a wink at Seokjin and Yoongi, then reached for more fries. Yoongi slapped his hand away and Jongdae threw his head back and laughed. With that, he headed back towards Junmyeon and Sehun.

“The East-Side Assassin,” Yoongi said blankly, “the Bronx Butcher, the new strangler, and now Justitia’s Prophet.” He wiped his mouth with his napkin and threw it down onto his plate, his appetite suddenly gone. “Seokjin, does New York City have four serial killers right now?”

Jin didn’t hear his question. He was lost in thought, trying to remember what he knew about Justitia’s Prophet.

To his knowledge, the Prophet only had five bodies, all left in Chelsea. All five victims had been men, each killed by a single gunshot wound to the head, and each body had been elaborately staged after death and left in public places. Each had been left with a sign around his neck, too, each sign bearing a poem that alluded to a different social problem in the city. The poems had been about homelessness, racism, police brutality, ual assault and healthcare, in that order.

That was about all Jin knew. He hadn’t been assigned that case and, as such, didn’t know the details. The fact that this guy had claimed responsibility, contacted the New York Times and named himself, though, was notable. That was next-level ballsy and Jin couldn’t think of any other serial killer who’d done anything like it before.

“There’s an EMT at my apartment,” Yoongi said, breaking both the silence and the tension. “Her name is Junghwa. She was there when I left this morning and she just sent me a Snapchat. She’s still there. I figured, like most one-night stands, she would have, you know, gone home. But she’s still there.” He cleared his throat. “What should I do?”

“Firstly,” Jin began, “you should probably stop sleeping with paramedics.”

Yoongi snorted in disbelief and rolled his eyes.

“Realistic suggestions only, please,” he huffed and then they both broke into laughter, probably laughing harder than the situation allowed just because they needed it. They laughed and laughed and laughed and then Yoongi’s phone rang.

“It’s probably Junghwa,” he said, and they both laughed some more.

But then Yoongi answered it, listened for a few seconds, and the laughter stopped just as abruptly as it began. He said a few words, thanked the caller and then hung up. Sighing, he reached into his wallet, pulled out some cash and threw it onto the table.

“What is it?” Seokjin asked.

Yoongi sighed again, stood up and shook his head.

“Time to go,” he said. “The Bronx Butcher just struck again.”

Seokjin’s heart leapt into his throat.

“No,” he said. “Where this time? Another school in the Bronx? A church like last month?”

Yoongi just kept shaking his head.

“Three blocks from here,” he said, seemingly unable to believe the words coming from his mouth. He looked down at Seokjin and said, “You got your wish, kid. The Butcher is back in Manhattan and we’ve just been assigned to the case.”

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BlackAshes #1
Chapter 2: I love the dynamics between Jin and Yoongi -I found it so hilarious that Yoongi was the "most handsome one", but of course he is, it's just that it sounds so fun that it's Jin who thinks that and gets pissed off by it haha I love how ill tempered Jin is here, I can totally pitcure him going all red and argumentative. But it fits so well, because Jin is passionate and all-out-there, while Yoongi is soothing and assertive. They work so good, I really love how you create your characters -as if I haven't said it enough already hahaha
I really want to see how the investigation unravels and if there will be overlapping of the cases -since you're talking about four different murderers at the same time, I wonder how you'll work with them simultaneously.
It's kind of odd to see the "villain's" side for me. On one hand, I love seeing into the mind of -in this case- Chanyeol and getting to understand his motivations and the way he analyses his own actions. But on the other hand, I wonder (or worry, maybe?) how giving pov to the murderer will affect the "suspense" or "mystery" of the plot. It might not be a "mysterious" story, but there's is a puzzle game the detectives have to solve -so, I'd have to read more to see how you manage to pull this off.
Great work! I love it!
cnewell16 #2
I can't say that I'd be able to offer any sort of constructive criticism as I myself am really not much of a writer but I want you to know that this is by far one of my favorite stories on this site even with just two chapters!
NocturnalSparrow #3
Chapter 2: I'm still feeling this story out, but the theme really interests me. I'm also willing to try anything that you write. I don't have a tumblr, but I've been following since the dqy days. Happy writing and thanks for sharing your creativity with us, I know how daunting that can be at times.