
The woman is me.
“Dr. Ferry,” I croak.
“Are you sleeping?” The voice is male, taut with anger.
“No.” My denial is automatic, but my mouth is dry as a cotton ball, and my alarm clock reads 8:20 P.M. I’ve been out for nine hours. The first decent sleep I’ve had in days.
“He hit another one.”
Something sparks in my drowsy brain. “What?”
“This is the fourth time I’ve called in the past half hour, Cat.”
The voice brings up a well of anger, longing, and guilt. It belongs to the detective I’ve been sleeping with for the past eighteen months. Sean Regan. An insightful, fascinating man with a wife and three kids.
“What did you say before?” I ask, ready to bite off Sean’s head if he asks me to meet him somewhere.
“I said, he hit another one.”
I blink and try to orient myself in the darkness. It’s early August, and the purple glow of dusk filters through my curtains. God, my mouth is dry. “Where?”
“The Garden District. Owner of a printing company. Male Caucasian.”
“Bite marks?”
“Worse than the others.”
“How old was he?”
“Sixty-nine.”
“Jesus. It is him.” I’m already getting out of bed. “This makes no sense at all.”
“Nope.”
“Sexual predators kill women, Sean. Or children. Not old men.”
“We’ve had this conversation. How fast can you get here? Piazza’s hovering over me, and the chief himself may be coming down for a look.”
I lift yesterday’s jeans off the chair and slip them over my panties. Victoria ’s Secret, Sean’s favorite pair, but he won’t be seeing them tonight. Maybe not for a long time. Maybe never again. “Any gay angle on this victim? Did he use male prostitutes, anything like that?”
“Not even a tickle,” Sean replies. “Looks as clean as the others.”
“If he’s got a home computer, confiscate it. He might-”
