[center][img=http://i1090.photobucket.com/albums/i374/bensundeitestutho/raptor-man_zps06c95bcc.png][/center] An FBI agent sat in his airplane seat, musing over the papers that were in front of him. He was from the BAU, the Behavior Analysis Unit, a department in the FBI that specializes in behavior science and uses this knowledge to predict the culprits of almost any crime. When a crime stumps the local authorities, the BAU is called in as a support unit, assisting the local police in any way possible. “We’ve been called to assist the authorities near Albany, New York,” the FBI agent said to his team who sat around him on the plane, “The police reported that between 1 and 3 o’ clock in the morning, there was a home invasion in a rural neighborhood just outside of Albany. Both the parents were found dead in their beds, while their 10-year old daughter is missing. Neither parent showed any resistance, so it is obvious that the unsub murdered them in their sleep.” “How could a single person dispatch both parents without the other waking up? How could the other partner not show any resistance?” One of the other agents asked. “Maybe we are not dealing with an unsub, but rather unsubs?” A third agent said, “If there were two unsubs, each one could simultaneously slit the through of the parents.” “But why did the unsubs place those animal masks on the parents? Are they trying to dehumanize the parents, making appear as if they were sacrificing an animal instead of murdering two parents?” “Those aren’t masks,” the first agent replied. The handful of agents sitting around him gave him blank stares, not understanding what this could mean.