Sacred Sins
By
Nora Roberts
Chapter 1
August fifteenth, it was a day following other days of sweat and hazy skies. There were no puffy white clouds or balmy breezes, only a wall of humidity nearly thick enough to swim in.
Reports on the six and eleven oclock news glumly promised more to come. In the long, lazy last days of summer, the heat wave moving into its second, pitiless week was the biggest story in Washington, D.C.
The Senate was adjourned until September, so Capitol Hill moved sluggishly. Relaxing before a much touted European trip, the President cooled off at Camp David. Without the day-to-day shuffle of politics, Washington was a city of tourists and street vendors. Across from the Smithsonian a mime performed for a sticky crowd that had stopped more to catch its collective breath than in appreciation of art. Pretty summer dresses wilted, and children whined for ice cream.
The young and the old flocked to Rock Creek Park, using the shade and water as a defense against the heat. Soft drinks and lemonade were consumed by the gallon, beer and wine downed in the same quantity, but less conspicuously. Bottles had a way of disappearing when park police cruised by. During picnics and cookouts people mopped sweat, charred hot dogs, and watched babies in diapers toddle on the grass. Mothers shouted at children to stay away from the water, not to run near the road, to put down a stick or a stone. The music from portable radios was, as usual, loud and defiant; hot tracks, the deejays called them, and reported temperatures in the high nineties. Small groups of students drew together, some sitting on the rocks above the creek to discuss the fate of the world, others sprawled on the grass, more interested in the fate of their tans. Those who could spare the time and the gas had fled to the beach or the mountains. A few college students found the energy to throw Frisbees, the men stripping down to shorts to show off torsos uniformly bronzed. A pretty young artist sat under a tree and sketched idly. After several attempts to draw her attention to the biceps hed been working on for six months, one of the players took a more obvious route. The Frisbee landed on her pad with a plop. When she looked up in annoyance, he jogged over. His grin was apologetic, and calculated, he hoped, to dazzle.
Sorry. Got away from me.
After pushing a fall of dark hair over her shoulder, the artist handed the Frisbee back to him. Its all right. She went back to her sketching without sparing him a glance. Youth is nothing if not tenacious. Hunkering down beside her, he studied her drawing. What he knew about art wouldnt have filled a shot glass, but a pitch was a pitch. Hey, thats really good. Wherere you studying?
Recognizing the ploy, she started to brush him off, then looked up long enough to catch his smile. Maybe he was obvious, but he was cute. Georgetown.
No kidding? Me too. Pre-law.
Impatient, his partner called across the grass. Rod! We going for a brew or not?
You come here often? Rod asked, ignoring his friend. The artist had the biggest brown eyes hed ever seen.
Now and again.
Why dont we
Rod, come on. Lets get that beer.
Rod looked at his sweaty, slightly overweight friend, then back into the cool brown eyes of the artist. No contest. Ill catch you later, Pete, he called out, then let the Frisbee go in a high, negligent arch.
Finished playing? the artist asked, watching the flight of the Frisbee. He grinned, then touched the ends of her hair. Depends.
Swearing, Pete started off in pursuit of the disk. Hed just paid six bucks for it. After nearly tripping over a dog, he scrambled down a slope, hoping the Frisbee wouldnt land in the creek. Hed paid a lot more for his leather sandals. It circled toward the water, making him curse out loud, then hit a tree and careened off into some bushes. Dripping sweat and thinking about the cold Moosehead waiting for him, Pete shoved at branches and cleared his way.
His heart stopped, then sent the blood beating in his head. Before he could draw breath to yell, his lunch of Fritos and two hot dogs came up, violently. The Frisbee had landed two feet from the edge of the creek. It lay new and red and cheerful on a cold white hand that seemed to offer it back.
She had been Carla Johnson, a twenty-three-year-old drama student and part-time waitress. Twelve to fifteen hours before, she had been strangled with a priests amice. White, edged in gold.
Detective ben paris slumped at his desk after finishing his written report on the Johnson homicide. Hed typed the facts, using two fingers in a machine gun style. But now they played back to him. No sexual assault, no apparent robbery. Her purse had been under her, with twenty-three dollars and seventy-six cents and a MasterCard in it. An opal ring that would have hocked for about fifty had still been on her finger. No motive, no suspects. Nothing.
Ben and his partner had spent the afternoon interviewing the victims family. An ugly business, he thought. Necessary, but ugly.
They had unearthed the same answers at every turn. Carla had wanted to be an actress. Her life had been her studies. She had dated, but not seriouslyshed been too devoted to an ambition she would never achieve.
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