gate.
âOh . . . Father . . . ,â she whispered. âI didnât . . . I didnât see you.â In her mindâs eye, she saw him as he had been last night: his hair wet with the rain, his face twisted in a dark scowl, blood running from the hem of his cassock.
âLet me help you with that,â he offered, and crossed the short distance as the gate banged shut and the startled crow cawed and flapped away. Deftly, he lifted the sack of flour from her arms. âI think we should talk.â A dusting of flour powdered his shoulder, and the smile heâd forced fell from his lips. âLast night I was upset, and I told you that Sister Camilleâs death was my fault.â His expression was that of a wounded, hunted animal. âI think I should explain myself.â
âYou donât have to explain anything to me,â she said quickly.
A cloud crawled over the face of the sun, casting an eerie gloom over the garden.
âOf course I do, Lucia.â With his free hand, he touched her shoulder, the warmth of his fingertips seeping through the dark fabric of her habit. His dark eyes searched hers in a way she found far too uncomfortable.
Lucia shrank inside. She didnât want to feel his touch, nor did she have any desire to be confessor to his penance. It was his role to hear confession, not hers. The crow, bolder now, landed on the gutter over the kitchen.
An omen.
Lucia felt a chill, as if the Devil himself were watching her.
âYou have to believe me,â he said, his voice a strangled whisper. âI didnât kill Sister Camille. I . . . I would never do that.â He closed his eyes for a second, and a breath of wind toyed with the strands of hair falling free of Luciaâs braid. âGod forgive me, Lucia,â he said, blinking as if battling tears. âI loved her.â
CHAPTER 12
V alerie had made the mistake of letting Slade drive to the morgue. His truck had been parked in front of her Subaru, and heâd insisted on being a part of this madness. After leaving Bo with a bewildered Freya, theyâd taken the old Ford to the hospital.
Slade had followed the police car, and Valerie, lost in thoughts of Cammie, had barely registered the familiar scents of dust and leather inside the pickup. Sheâd kicked aside a tool belt that had been tossed onto the floor and stared out the passenger window, her reflection pale and wan in the glass smudged with nose and paw prints.
She hardly remembered the traffic or the drive through New Orleans, though she did hear the sound of church bells as she stepped out of the truck, their somber tolling emanating from St. Margueriteâs Cathedral not a mile away.
The sun was playing hide-and-seek. Clouds were collecting, moving over the city again, shadowing New Orleans like a pall. Valerie shivered as they reached the back door to the hospital and stepped inside, where voices were hushed and footsteps were softened by a gray, industrial carpet.
In silence, she and Slade followed the two detectives down a staircase to the lowest level of the hospital. Valâs stomach clenched as they made their way along a short hallway and through double doors.
Inside, the morgue was cold.
Even though she stood behind a thick glass window, Valerie felt the chill of the area beyond the pane. She braced herself but couldnât help listening to that disbelieving voice in her head: Thereâs been a mistake, a misidentification. Cammie is not dead. She canât be. Not beautiful, bright, high-spirited Camille. No way!
When the attendant slipped the sheet off Cammieâs face, Valâs knees nearly buckled. Cammieâs perfect face, bluish in death, looked upward.
Val let out a squeak of protest.
Sladeâs strong arm was instantly around her waist, holding her up as she stared at the woman on the slab, her only sibling, so young . . .
âOh, God,â Val whispered. The truth was a razor through her
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