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too far away to have heard, Harker glowered at them. Frye waved.

      “This blows,” Carson said.

      “Big time,” Michael agreed.

      She didn’t bluster into the scene but waited for the detectives to come to her.

      How nice it would have been to shoot the bastards in the knees to spare the site from their blundering. So much more satisfying than a shout or a warning shot.

      By the time Harker and Frye reached her, both were smiling and smug.

      Ned Lohman, the uniformed officer, had the good sense to avoid her eyes.

      Carson held her temper. “This is our baby, let us burp it.”

      “We were in the area,” Frye said, “caught the call.”

      “Chased the call,” Carson suggested.

      Frye was a beefy man with an oily look, as if his surname came not from family lineage but from his preferred method of preparing every food he ate.

      “O’Connor,” he said, “you’re the first Irish person I’ve ever known who wasn’t fun to be around.”

      In a situation like this, which had grown from one bizarre homicide to six killings in a matter of weeks, Carson and her partner would not be the only ones in the department assigned to research particular aspects of the case.

      They had caught the first murder, however, and therefore had proprietary interest in associated homicides if and until the killer piled up enough victims to force the establishment of an emergency task force. And at that point, she and Michael would most likely be designated to head that undertaking.

      Harker tended to burn easily—from sunshine, from envy, from imagined slights to his competence, from just about anything. The Southern sun had bleached his blond hair nearly white; it lent his face a perpetually parboiled look.

      His eyes, as blue as a gas flame, as hard as gemstones, revealed the truth of him that he attempted to disguise with a soft smile. “We needed to move fast, before evidence was lost. In this climate, bodies decompose quickly”

      “Oh, don’t be so hard on yourself,” Michael said. “With a gym membership and a little determination, you’ll be looking good again.”

      Carson drew Ned Lohman aside. Michael joined them as she took out her notebook and said, “Gimme the TPO from your involvement.”

      “Listen, Detectives, I know you’re the whips on this. I told Frye and Harker as much, but they have rank.”

      “Not your fault,” she assured him. “I should know by now that vultures always get to dead meat first. Let’s start with the time.”

      He checked his watch. “Call came in at seven forty-two, which makes it thirty-eight minutes ago. Jogger saw the body, called it in. When I showed up, the guy was standing here running in place to keep his heart rate up.”

      In recent years, runners with cell phones had found more bodies than any other class of citizens.

      ‘As for place,” Officer Lohman continued, “the body’s just where the jogger found it. He made no rescue attempt.”

      “The severed hands,” Michael suggested, “were probably a clue that CPR wouldn’t be effective.”

      “The vic is blond, maybe not natural, probably Caucasian. You have any other observations about her?” Carson asked Lohman.

      “No. I didn’t go near her either, didn’t contaminate anything, if that’s what you’re trying to find out. Haven’t seen the face yet, so I can’t guess the age.”

      “Time, place—what about occurrence?” she asked Lohman. “Your first impression was…?”

      “Murder. She didn’t cut her hands off herself.”

      “Maybe one,” Michael agreed, “but not both.”

       CHAPTER 5

      THE STREETS OF NEW ORLEANS teemed with possibilities: women of every description. A few were beautiful, but even the most alluring were lacking in one way or another.

      During his years of searching, Roy Pribeaux had yet to encounter one woman who met his standards in every regard.

      He was proud of being a perfectionist. If he had been God, the world would have been a more ordered, less messy place.

      Under Roy Almighty, there would have been no ugly or plain people. No mold. No cockroaches or even mosquitoes. Nothing that smelled bad.

      Under a blue sky that he could not have improved upon, but in cloying humidity he would not have allowed, Roy strolled along the Riverwalk, the site of the 1984 Louisiana World’s Fair, which had been refurbished as a public gathering place and shopping pavilion. He was hunting.

      Three young women in tank tops and short shorts sashayed past, laughing together. Two of them checked Roy out.

      He met their eyes, boldly ogled their bodies, then dismissed each of them with a glance.

      Even after years of searching, he remained an optimist. She was out there somewhere, his ideal, and he would find her—even if it had to be one piece at a time.

      In this promiscuous society, Roy remained a virgin at thirty-eight, a fact of which he was proud. He was saving himself. For the perfect woman. For love.

      Meanwhile, he polished his own perfection. He undertook two hours of physical training every day. Regarding himself as a Renaissance man, he read literature for exactly one hour, studied a new subject for exactly one hour, meditated on the great mysteries and the major issues of his time for another hour every day

      He ate only organic produce. He bought no meat from factory farms. No pollutants tainted him, no pesticides, no radiological residue, and certainly no strange lingering genetic material from bioengineered foods.

      Eventually, when he had refined his diet to perfection and when his body was as tuned as an atomic clock, he expected that he would cease to eliminate waste. He would process every morsel so completely that it would be converted entirely to energy, and he would produce no urine, no feces.

      Perhaps he would then encounter the perfect woman. He often dreamed about the intensity of the sex they would have. As profound as nuclear fusion.

      Locals loved the Riverwalk, but Roy suspected that most people here today were tourists, considering how they paused to gawk at the caricature artists and street musicians. Locals would not be drawn in such numbers to the stands piled with New Orleans T-shirts.

      At a bright red wagon where cotton candy was sold, Roy suddenly halted. The fragrance of hot sugar cast a sweet haze around the cart.

      The cotton-candy vendor sat on a stool under a red umbrella. In her twenties, less than plain, with unruly hair. She looked as baggy and as simply made as a Muppet, though without as much personality

      But her eyes. Her eyes.

      Roy was captivated. Her eyes were priceless gems displayed in a cluttered and dusty case, a striking greenish blue.

      The skin around her eyes crinkled alluringly as she caught his attention and smiled. “Can I help you?”

      Roy stepped forward. “I’d like something sweet.”

      ‘All I’ve got is cotton candy.”

      “Not all,” he said, marveling at how suave he could be.

      She looked puzzled.

      Poor thing. He was too smooth for her.

      He said, “Yes, cotton candy, please.”

      She picked up a paper cone and began to twirl it through the spun sugar, wrapping

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