
“I know my job, Cat.”
“I know, but-”
“Cat.” The single syllable is a probing finger. “Are you sober?”
A column of heat rises up my spine. I haven’t had a sip of vodka for nearly forty-eight hours, but I’m not going to give Sean the satisfaction of answering his interrogation. “What’s the victim’s name?”
“Arthur LeGendre.” His voice drops. “Are you sober, darlin’?“
The craving is already awake in my blood, like little teeth gnawing at the walls of my veins. I need the anesthetic burn of a shot of Grey Goose. Only I can’t have that anymore. I’ve been using Valium to fight the physical withdrawal symptoms, but nothing can truly replace the alcohol that has kept me together for so long.
I shift the phone from shoulder to shoulder and pull a silk blouse from my closet. “Where are the bite marks?”
“Torso, nipples, face, penis.”
I freeze. “Face? Are they deep?”
“Deep enough for you to take impressions, I think.”
Excitement blunts the edge of my craving. “I’m on my way.”
“Have you taken your meds?”
Sean knows me too well. No one else in New Orleans is even aware that I take anything. Lexapro for depression, Depakote for impulse control. I stopped taking both drugs three days ago, but I don’t want to get into that with Sean.
“Stop worrying about me. Is the FBI there?”
“Half the task force is here, and they want to know what you think about these bite marks. The Bureau guy is photographing them, but you have that ultraviolet rig;and when it comes to teeth, you’re the man.”
Sean’s admiring misstatement of my gender is typical cop talk, and it tells me he’s speaking for the benefit of others. “What’s the address?”
“Twenty-seven twenty-seven Prytania.”
“Sounds like an address with a security system.”
“Switched off.”
“Just like the first one. Moreland.” Our first victim-one month ago-was a retired army colonel, highly decorated in Vietnam.
