I search for the arms of strangers, of friends, of my family.
People pass by me and their eyes drop to my arms before they meet my face again.
They found a woman's body hands, feet and face burned. Naked tossed into the woods.
Her killer still unidentified.
They asked for tips. She struggled they said, her violator may have been wounded. Scratches and bruises may still be visible on the forearms of her attacker.
So I find myself staring down at the pale arms of men, of the unkempt elderly man at Honey Farms, of the teenage gas attendant who never quite meets my eyes, but also at the father of my daughter's afternoon playdate, the teenage sons of my neighbors and at an evening barbecue, my own father, questioning against doubt what they are capable of.
And when I am alone, even though I know, in the mornings I look down at my own arms unmarked.