To Patty Gardner-Evans,
for all the years. (Sorry about
the gator; maybe next time.)
And, as always, to Jay, with love.
Chapter One
New Orleans, Louisiana
I've always adored a Libra man," the blond
purred.
"Have you now?" Nate Callahan grinned and
drew her closer. There were few things in life more enjoyable than making love
to a beautiful woman.
"Oh, absolutely." Cuddling up against him,
she fluttered her lashes in a way only a true southern belle could pull off.
"Why, a Libra man can charm the birds out of the trees and flatter a girl
right out of her lace panties."
"It wasn't flattery, chиre.” He refilled her
crystal champagne flute. "It was the absolute truth."
Nate had always enjoyed females—he liked the way they
moved, the way they smelled, their soft skin and slender ladies' hands. From
the first time he'd filched one of his older brother Finn's Playboy magazines,
he'd flat-out liked everything about women. Fortunately, they'd always liked
him right back.
He toyed with a blond curl trailing down her neck. It
was a little stiff and hadn't deflated much during their session of hot, steamy
sex, but Nate was used to that, since most of the women he dated favored big
hair. Big hair, big breasts, and, he thought with a pleasant twinge of lust,
big appetites for sex.
"Your moon is in the seventh house." She
trailed a glossy coral nail down his chest.
"Is that good?" He skimmed his palm down her
back; she arched against the caress like a sleek, pampered cat.
Outside her bedroom, a full moon rose in a
star-studded sky; inside flames crackled cozily in the fireplace and
gardenia-scented candles glowed.
"It certainly is. You're ruled by Venus, goddess
of beauty."
"Seems that'd fit you better than me,
sugar." He nuzzled the smooth curve of her shoulder. His accent, always more
pronounced when romancing a woman, turned thick as Cajun gumbo. "Bein' how
you've gotten more beautiful every year since you won that Miss Louisiana
crown."
"I was only first runner-up." She pouted
prettily.
"Officially," he allowed. "But everyone
in the state knew the judges were obviously blind as swamp bats."
"You are so sweet." Her laugh was rich and
pleased.
Nate's mind began to drift as she chattered on about
the stars, which, if he were to be perfectly honest, didn't interest him. He'd
never thought much about lunar signs until the afternoon he'd shown up to give
the blond astrologer a bid on remodeling her bedroom.
Although he'd arrived ten minutes late at her Garden
District house, he'd gotten her out of the shower; she'd shown up at the door,
breathlessly apologetic for not being ready, prettily flushed, and smelling of
jasmine. It was only later, when he'd remembered that her hair hadn't been wet,
that Nate realized he'd been set up. Having always appreciated female wiles, he
didn't mind.
She'd hung on to his every word as he'd suggested ways
to open up the room—including putting a skylight over the bed—declared him
brilliant, and hired him on the spot.
"You are," she'd sworn on a drawl as sweet
as the sugarcane his granddaddy used to grow, "the first contractor I've
interviewed who understands that a bedroom is more than just a place to
sleep." She'd coyly looked up at him from beneath her lashes. "It is,
after all, the most important room in the house."
When she'd touched a scarlet fingernail to the back of
Nate's hand, warm and pleasant desire had ribboned through him.
"You've been so sweet. Would you do me just one
teensy little favor?"
"Sure, chиre. If I can."
Avid green eyes had swept over him in a slow, feminine
perusal. "Oh, I think you're just the man for the job."
She'd untied the silk robe, revealing perfumed and
powdered flesh. "I do so need to exorcise my horrid ex-husband's memory
from this room." The robe dropped to the plush carpeting.
That had been six months ago. Not only had Nate done
his best to exorcise her former husband's memory, he'd done a damn fine job on
the remodeling, if he did say so himself. Lying on his back amid sex-tangled
sheets, Nate looked up at the ghost galleon moon, decided he'd definitely been
right about the skylight, and wondered why he'd never thought to put one over
his own bed.
"Of course, Venus is also the goddess of
love." The L word, slipping smoothly from her coral-tinted lips, yanked
his wandering mind back to their conversation.
"She is?" he asked with a bit more caution.
"Absolutely. Make love, not war, is a phrase that
could have been coined with Libras in mind. You became interested in women at a
young age, you make sex a rewarding experience, and will not stop until your
lover is satisfied, even if it takes all night."
"I try," he said modestly. She'd certainly
seemed well satisfied when she'd been bucking beneath him earlier.
She smiled and touched her lips to his. "Oh, you
not only succeed, darling, you set the standard. Libras also rule the house of
partnerships."
"Now there's where your stars might be a little
off, sugar." He stroked her smooth silk back, cupped her butt, and pulled
her closer. " 'Cause I've always enjoyed working alone."
It wasn't that he was antisocial, far from it. But he
liked being his own boss, working when he liked, and playing when he wanted.
"You weren't alone a few minutes ago, and you
seemed to be enjoying yourself well enough."
"I always enjoy passin' a good time with you,
angel."
"If you didn't play well with others, you
wouldn't have run for mayor." She rolled over and straddled him.
"Libras are not lone wolves, darling. A Libra male needs a permanent
partner."
Nate's breath clogged in his lungs.
"Permanent?"
Having grown up in South
Louisiana, where water and land were constantly battling, with
water winning most of the time, he knew that very few things were permanent.
Especially relationships between men and women.
"We've been together six months," she
pointed out, which exceeded any previous relationship Nate had ever had. Then
again, it helped that she'd spent most of that time away, selling her astrology
books at New Age festivals and talking them up on television talk shows around
the country.
Doing some rapid calculation, Nate figured they'd
probably been together a total of three weeks, and had spent most of that time
in bed.
"I've been thinking," she murmured when he
didn't respond. Her clever fingers slipped between them, encircling him.
"About us."
"Us?"
"It occurred to me yesterday, when my flight was
cruising at thirty thousand feet over New
Mexico, that we should get married." Married? Having not seen this coming—she'd certainly
never shown one iota of domesticity—Nate didn't immediately answer.
"You don't want to." Danger sparked in her
voice, like heat lightning flashing out over the Gulf. She pulled away.
Sighing, Nate hitched himself up beside her and saw
any future plans for the night disappearing.
"It's nothing to do with you, chиre," His
cajoling smile encouraged one in return. "But we agreed goin' in that
neither of us was the marrying kind."
"That was then." She left the bed and
retrieved his shirt from where it had landed earlier. "Things
change." The perfumed air swirled with temper. "The moon is also a
mother sign."
"It is?" Nate caught the denim shirt she
threw at him. Christ, he needed air.
"Yes." Her chin angled up. Her eyes narrowed
to green slits. "Which is why Libras often repeat the same childlike
behavior over and over again in their relationships."
It was a long way from charming to childish. Boyish,
Nate might be willing to accept—in the right context. But he hadn't been a
child since that life-altering day when he was twelve and a liquored-up,
swamp-dwelling, gun-carrying idiot had blown away his father.
"If I didn't know better, I might take offense at
that, darlin'." He bent to pick up his jeans from the loblolly pine floor;
one of his boots came sailing toward him. "Mon Dieu, Charlene." He
ducked the first one and snagged the second out of the air an instant before it
connected with his head.
"Do you have any idea how many proposals I get
every month?" She marched back across the bedroom and jabbed her finger
against his bare chest.
"I'll bet a bunch." Nate reminded himself
that he'd never run into a situation he couldn't smooth over.
"You damn well bet a lot!" His chest now
bore little crescent gouges from her fingernail. "I've turned down two in
the past six weeks—from men who make a hell of a lot more money than you—
because I was fool enough to think we had a future."
"You're a wonderful woman, chérie,” he tried
again, hopping on first one foot, then the other, as he pulled his pants up.
"Smart, beautiful—"
"And getting goddamn older by the moment,"
she shouted.
"You don't look a day over twenty-five."
Thanks to a Houston
surgeon whose clever touch with a scalpel had carved a good ten years off her
face and body.
When she began coming toward him again, Nate backed
away and yanked on his shirt. Not pausing to button it, he scooped his keys and
wallet from, the bedside table and shoved them into his pocket.
"Twenty-six, tops." He debated sitting down again to pull on his
boots, then decided not to risk it.
"It's not going to work this time,
Callahan."
A champagne glass hit the wall, then shattered. She
tossed her stiff cloud of honey blond hair. "If I'd taken the time to do
your full chart before hiring you, I never would have let you seduce me."
Deciding that discretion was the better part of valor,
Nate wisely didn't point out that she'd been the one who'd dropped the damn
robe.
"I would have realized that you're suffering from
a gigantic Peter Pan complex."
Peter Pan? Nate gritted his teeth. "I'll call
you, chиre" he promised as he dodged the second flute. PMS, he decided.
"Later in the month. When you're feeling a little more like yourself."
A banshee could not have screamed louder. Nate escaped
the suffocating room, taking the back stairs two at a time. Something thudded
against the bedroom wall; he hoped to hell she hadn't damaged the new plaster
job.
Feeling blindsided, Nate drove toward his home on the
peaceful bank of Blue Bayou, trying to figure out where, exactly, an evening
that had begun so promising had gone offtrack.
"Peter Pan," he muttered.
Where the hell had she come up with that one?
The full moon was brighter than he'd ever seen it,
surrealistically silhouetting the knobby bayou cypresses in eerie white light.
Having just survived Hurricane Charlene, Nate hoped it wasn't some weird
portent of yet another storm to come.
Chapter Two
Los Angeles
Oh God, doesn't that hunk just jump-start your
hormones?"
L.A. homicide detective Regan Hart glanced up at the
billboard towering over Sunset Boulevard. "Not really." He was too
blond, too good-looking, and even with that ragged hair and scruffy beard,
somehow too perfect. Regan preferred men who looked as if they had some mileage
on them.
"Any woman who doesn't respond to Brad Pitt needs
her head examined," Vanessa Kante, Regan's partner, said on a deep sigh.
"Not to mention more vital body parts."
"My head and all my other body parts are working
just fine, thank you." At least Regan assumed they were; it had been a
while since they'd been subjected to a field test. "And in case you've
forgotten, you're married. Aren't you supposed to be directing those leaping
hormones toward your husband?"
"I'm married, not dead. Part of the reason our
marriage is so strong is that Rhasheed doesn't mind who I lust after, so long
as he's the one whose tall, lanky bones I'm jumping when I get home." She
shot Regan a knowing look. "Since you've been in a crappy mood all shift,
I take it the Santa Monica plastic surgeon wasn't exactly Mr. Right."
Regan heaved out a breath. "He wasn't even Mr.
Maybe if a meteor hit Santa Monica and we were the only man and woman left on
earth I might just maybe consider having sex with you only to perpetuate the
species. Enough said."
"Sorry."
She shrugged. "I don't know why I even let you
fix me up with him in the first place."
"Perhaps because it's been too long since you've
had sex that didn't involve batteries?"
"It's not that easy. First of all, we're living
in the land of gorgeous women, where every waitress is a Cameron Diaz wannabe
and any female over a size two is a candidate for liposuction."
"I'm not a size two. And Rhasheed likes me just
the way I am."
"What man wouldn't? I've seen stone-cold killers
swallow their tongues when you sashay into the squad room." A dead ringer
for Tyra Banks, Vanessa even dressed like a supermodel. "And besides,
Rhasheed grew up in Nigeria. You keep telling me the brothers like their women
with curves."
"That's what he tells me, and if actions back up
his sweet-talking jive, it's true. I think it's one of those Neanderthal things
about looking for a woman who'll make a good breeder, even during famine. But
Rhasheed says it's mainly so he'll have something to hold onto so he won't fall
out of bed."
"Then I'm out of luck with Neanderthals, too. All
my adolescent growth hormones went into my height, so I didn't have any left
for curves. As Dr. Bill felt obliged to point out when he suggested I consider
implant surgery."
"Ouch. I never realized he was such a
silver-tongued devil."
"It wouldn't have worked out anyway. If guys
aren't intimidated by a woman who wears a pistol to work, they just want to
hear gory war stories about dead bodies."
"Which kind was Dr. Bill?"
"The first. We were out on the dance floor for
about two minutes when he admitted he couldn't handle getting that close to a
woman who was wearing a Beretta beneath her jacket."
Van shot her a disbelieving look. "Tell me you
didn't actually wear your sidearm on a date?"
"I got a call while I was in court to testify on
the Sanchez case, saying one of the Front Street Crips had some info on that
Diamond Street gangbanger who was killed while collecting drug taxes for the
Mexican Mafia. Would you go into that neighborhood unarmed?"
"I'll have to give you that one."
"Besides, I looked pretty damn good. I was
wearing that suit you talked me into buying last week."
Van had unearthed the designer knockoff at Second Hand
Rose, a trendy consignment boutique on Melrose- The label read
"Armini," the simple change in vowels keeping the counterfeit police
from declaring the suit illegal. It was also several hundred dollars less
expensive than the original.
"Couldn't you have left the gun in the trunk of
your car?" her partner asked.
"And have it stolen like Malloy's? Boy, wouldn't
that be a career booster."
Just last month Devon Malloy, a rookie B&E
detective, had left his pistol in the trunk of his car to keep it away from his
kids. Unfortunately, his car had been stolen, and the gun ended up being used
in an armed robbery that had left a liquor store clerk wounded. By the time IAD
eventually got through dragging Malloy over the coals, he might still be a cop,
but any chances of advancement were nil; if he stayed on the force, he could
look forward to spending all his days on pawnshop detail.
"Actually, it was kind of funny," Regan
said. "We were slow-dancing, and every time he'd pull me close and try to
cop a feel, his fingers would hit cold steel. After the third time, he
suggested we call it a night. Not only was I crushing his libido—apparently
it's a little disconcerting to go out with a woman who can shoot your balls
off— but the metal in my Beretta was screwing up his qi. Whatever that
is."
"It's feng shui. In Taoist thought, everything is
made up of qi—or energy. It's the essence of existence."
"And here I thought that was DNA."
The rain was picking up. Regan turned on the wipers,
which dragged across the glass with a rubbery squeal like fingernails on a
chalkboard. LAPD never retired their crap cars; they just assigned them to her.
The heater hadn't worked for six weeks. By the time it got repaired, the
weather would have warmed up, and she wouldn't need it. Which, she thought
darkly, was probably exactly the department's reasoning.
"Hey, there are a lot of things in this world we
can't understand," Van said. "If it wasn't for feng shui, I wouldn't
have gotten pregnant."
Regan shot her a look. "You got pregnant because
when you and Rhasheed were off cavorting in the tropics, you had one too many
mai tais and forgot to use birth control."
"True. But before we went to Kauai, between the
stress of his job and mine, we were having some sex problems—which is why we
made the reservations at the Crouching Dragon Inn in the first place."
"Ah yes, the sex palace."
"You make it sound like someplace with mystery
stains on the sheets and porno movies playing on a TV bolted to the dresser.
The Crouching Dragon Inn was designed on the feng shui principle that we should
live with nature rather than against it, so it was constructed for all the bed
and beach qi to flow properly. As soon as we got there, all our problems just
flew out the window. Except for going to that luau, we made love all
week."
"So you said." From the play-by-play her
partner had shared, she was amazed Van had still been able to walk when they
got back from Hawaii.
"All that positive loving energy sent out a
special frequency that allowed Rhasheed's essential elements to come together
with mine and create Denzel's life force."
"It's called a sperm swimming up to fertilize an
egg."
With the exception of certain truisms such as full
moons make the crazies come out, and you always get a floater the day you're
wearing new shoes, Regan didn't believe in feng shui, voodoo, fate, or anything
else that she couldn't see with her own eyes or touch with her own hands.
After she'd been set up to be killed by a gang who was
tired of her hauling in their dealers, the psychologist the department had
forced her to see had blamed her skepticism on all those childhood years
waiting for her father to return home from Vietnam. In her child's mind he
would walk in, declare her the most beautiful, lovable little girl in the
world, get down on one knee just like the prince did in Cinderella, beg her
mother to remarry him, and they'd all live happily ever after.
None of which had ever happened. Unfortunately,
Lieutenant John Hart, U.S. Marines, had never returned from Vietnam. Her
mother, who'd filed for divorce before Regan was born, had returned to her law
practice when Regan was a week old, leaving her in the hands of a continuously
changing series of nannies and housekeepers who never quite lived up to Karen
Hart's standards. When her father never showed up in a suit of shining armor to
sweep his daughter onto the back of a prancing white steed and take her away to
his palace, Regan had decided fairy tales belonged in the gilt-edged pages of
books, not in real life.
In a way, she'd always thought that youthful
disappointment had served her well. The very same realism and skepticism the
department shrink had advised her to overcome was what made her a good cop.
"Birth's a miracle." Van repeated what she'd
been saying since the day the little pink cross had shown up on the test strip.
"Rhasheed said he knew I was pregnant that morning when I began glowing
from the inside."
"You sure you didn't get confused about what you
were putting in your mouth, and swallow your mag light?"
"Very funny. The glow was the red lightwave from
baby Denzel's heart." She patted her rounded stomach, which had been
showing her pregnancy for the past two months.
Regan shook her head. "Only in L.A. would cops be
into New Age."
As happy as she was for Van, Regan wasn't looking
forward to losing her as a partner. But Van and her husband had decided a
homicide detective's twenty-four/seven lifestyle wasn't exactly family friendly
and she'd decided to leave the force in another six weeks.
"Feng shui isn't new. The concept goes back eight
thousand years." Van turned in the passenger seat toward Regan.
"Maybe you should have a master check out your apartment. You've been
under a lot of stress lately."
"I'm a murder cop. Stress comes with the
territory."
"Which is why you need to find something that
helps."
"What would help would be for the good citizens
of Los Angeles to take a forty-eight-hour ceasefire."
"Russell Crowe's going to show up in the squad
room in full breastplate and sandals before that happens," Vanessa said
dryly. "You know, I took a class last month with the guy who advised
Donald Trump to change a set of French doors at Mar-a-Lago to the other wall.
If you weren't so hard-minded, you might actually like him."
"I don't need an architectural adviser. I just
need to close the Lancaster case. And the fact that Donald Trump wants to pay
some so-called building wizard big bucks to tell him to tear out some doors is
just proof that some people have more money than sense."
"I hope you didn't tell Dr. Bill all this. He
lives by feng shui."
"I know. We had to wait an hour for a dinner
table that faced the right direction." An hour she'd spent nursing a glass
of wine and eating bar mix. "Give me some credit I merely told him that
the mental vision of scalpels cutting into my breasts had the same negative
effect on me that guns seemed to have on him. So, since cold steel seems to be
destined to come between us, we might as well give both our qis a break
and make it an early night."
"I was really hoping you two would work out. What
about the Century City investment banker? Mike something? He was good
looking."
"His name was Mark Mitchell." Regan had met
him after a real estate developer got shot execution style in a parking garage.
Since Mark had discovered the body, Regan had interviewed him, then given him
her card in case he thought of anything that might prove useful to the
investigation. He'd called that night to ask her out. She'd declined, not
wanting to cross the professional/personal line she'd always firmly maintained.
It hadn't taken long to apprehend the shooter, a
bumbling first-time hit-for-hire guy. The day the jury found him guilty, she'd
received another call from Mark Mitchell. This time she'd made the mistake of
taking him up on his offer of a late dinner.
"He kept an iguana named Gordon Gekko in his
bedroom." And revealed he'd always viewed the "Greed is good"
character Michael Douglas played in Wall Street as a role model.
"That is a little weird," Van allowed.
"You could always go out with someone on the force."
"I'd rather shoot myself than date a cop."
She'd no sooner spoken when she wished she could take the words back. Rhasheed
was an L.A. county sheriff's department deputy. "Hell, I'm sorry.
Rhasheed's an exception."
"He's special, all right." Van's smile
showed she hadn't taken offense. "We were supposed to go out tonight to
celebrate the fifth anniversary of when we met."
Then they'd gotten called out on what could well prove
a wild-goose chase. It was tough enough to have a normal life when you were a
street cop. Homicide detectives might as well forget about relationships,
romance, or any type of social life, especially on weekends, when the majority
of murders occurred.
On the rare occasion she stopped to think about it,
Regan found it ironic that she could have grown up to be so different from her mother,
but still end up in a career that discouraged marriage and a family.
She checked out the block-long white limousine gliding
past. When she'd worked in Vice, she'd busted a prostitution ring doing a
bang-up business using limos as rolling motel rooms. Since this one had a Just
Married sign in the back window, she let it pass.
It was turning out to be a peaceful night in the City
of Angels, almost as if the city had done an aerial spraying of Valium, but
neither Regan nor Van commented on it, since another Murphy's Law of police
work declared that unspeakable evils would befall anyone who said, "Sure
is a quiet night."
The rain streaking down the windshield of the
black-and-white patrol car had driven most of the drunks, batterers, and
robbers indoors, leaving only the neighborhood's homeless sleeping beneath
soaked newspapers and plastic garbage bags. The souvenir shops selling Marilyn
Monroe posters, movie clapboards, and maps to stars' homes were closed, their
heavy metal shutters drawn down.
There'd been a time, before Regan was born, when the
area that made up her precinct had been the glittering home of the motion
picture industry. Glamorous movie stars had dined at the Brown Derby, drank
champagne from crystal flutes, and attended premieres at Grauman's Chinese
Theater in limousines. But T-shirt shops, check-cashing joints, and
pornographic bookstores had invaded the once elite neighborhood, and addicts,
prostitutes, and homeless men and women were as common a sight as Japanese
tourists.
Hollywood was beginning to make a comeback, but Regan
knew that even if the area did succeed in becoming Los Angeles' version of New
York's Time Square, the dispossessed would simply pack up and drift somewhere
else.
"This tip had better pan out," she muttered
as they cruised by the Rock & Roll Denny's. "Even the working girls
have enough sense to come in out of this lousy weather."
Inside the bright, twenty-four-hour restaurant,
forlorn prostitutes seeking relief from the rain hunkered in the booths,
drinking pots of coffee, smoking packs of cigarettes, and rubbing feet sore
from pounding the pavement in ankle-breaking five-inch platform heels, all the
time keeping an eye on the street outside the restaurant window in the unlikely
event a silver Lotus might happen to cruise by.
Unfortunately, the average john who frequented these
blocks was no Richard Gere, and the Pretty Woman Cinderella story about the
tycoon falling in love with the heart-of-gold hooker was so far removed from
these mean streets it could have been filmed on Mars.
"Word is, Double D's back from Fresno to hit some
guy from the Eighth Street Regulars who's been poaching on his territory."
Van repeated the phone tip that had gotten Regan to leave the warmth of the
station. The seventeen-year-old with the yellow sheet as long as a Russian
novel was as elusive as smoke. "He's got a new girlfriend and is laying
low at her grandmother's place. The old lady got busted two years ago for
running a crack house with her son and grandkids."
"And they say the American family's in decline.
How come Granny isn't in prison?"
"Because she looks like she should be baking
cookies rather than cooking dope. The DA couldn't get the grand jury to
indict."
Regan shook her head in disgust. She'd become a cop
because she'd wanted to make a difference, to help make people's lives better.
But lately she'd begun to feel like a sand castle at high tide. It seemed that
more and more of the idealist she'd been when she'd first put on that blue LAPD
uniform was getting washed away each day.
"You're doing it again," Van said.
"What?"
"Humming that damn song."
"Sorry. Sometimes it gets stuck in my head."
Some people's minds grasped onto jingles; whenever her mind drifted, it tended
to break into "You Are My Sunshine." She'd stopped noticing it years
ago; others, who found it understandably annoying, weren't so fortunate.
A gleaming black Lexus with muddy license plates
caught Regan's attention as it passed in the opposite direction.
The passenger was looking straight ahead. The driver
turned his face, but not before she caught a glimpse of him. Adrenaline sparked
like a hot electrical wire hitting wet pavement. "I'll bet my next pay
grade that's our boy."
"Sure looked like him."
Regan made a U-turn, then cursed as a grizzled,
bearded man clad in camouflage with an American flag sticking out of his
backpack began marching across the street with the determination of the soldier
he'd once been.
"Come on, come on." Her fingers tapped an
impatient drumbeat on the top of the steering wheel. Having suffered from
post-traumatic stress herself, she resisted hitting the siren.
Mad Max was a fixture on the street. Since he claimed
to have served in Vietnam, Regan had once, in a rash moment, asked him if he'd
ever served with her father. He'd taken a look at the photograph she always
carried with her, shook his head, and rattled off a string of gibberish from a
mind burned by drugs, alcohol, and God only knew what kind of flashbacks.
It had, admittedly, been a long shot. But Regan could
never stop herself from asking.
She took off the second Mad Max cleared the lane. That
the vet didn't even glance back when the siren began screeching said a lot
about both the neighborhood and his life.
Regan caught up with the Lexus at a red light just
past Hollywood High. Van tapped the car's description, license number, and tag
into her computer. The light turned green.
The vehicle started out slowly, testing the waters.
Testing Regan.
Every instinct she possessed told Regan this was the
murder suspect who'd managed to elude her for the past forty-five days. If she
didn't nab the kid in another two weeks, she'd be forced to write up a
sixty-day report, the closest thing in the murder business to conceding defeat.
The Lexus picked up speed.
"Come on, admit." The computer, ancient and
as cranky as she herself was feeling, seemed to take forever.
"It's him." Van's voice was edged with
excitement. "He and another gangbanger carjacked the vehicle after
committing an armed robbery at the Hollywood Stars Motel."
"Guess the son of a bitch ran through the five
bucks he stole from that old lady," she muttered.
Last month's beating death of the eighty-five-year-old
woman had been the most heinous thing she'd witnessed during her twelve years
working Los Angeles' meanest streets: five in a patrol car, a year lost to
hospitals and office duty, a year in robbery, another in vice, and the past
four in homicide. Regan was thirty-three years old, but there were times lately
she felt a hundred. And counting.
She flipped on the lights, unsurprised when the driver
rebated. Regan took off after it, Code 3, blue lights flashing, siren whooping.
Chapter Three
Blue Bayou, Louisiana
So," Jack Callahan asked His brother, "how's
the search for a new sheriff going?"
"Lousy." Nate frowned as he tackled another
stack of evidence bags from the police property room. Since they'd been
collecting dust for decades, he figured they should be properly dealt with
before he could begin remodeling the office. Opening the bags was like
unearthing an ancient city; the deeper he dug, the older the evidence.
"I wasted Monday morning interviewing yet another
Dirty Harry wannabe from Shreveport, who opted for early retirement to save
himself from being suspended for excess brutality on a prisoner. There's a
lawsuit pending on that case, no surprise."
The envelope held a slug that, according to the
accompanying papers, had been dug out of a wall.
"Do you remember when Henri Dubois and Julian
Breaux fought that duel at Lafitte's Landing?"
"Sure." Jack dug into his brown paper bag
and pulled out one of the thick mufrulettas he'd brought along for lunch with
his brother. "It was Mardi Gras," he said around a mouthful of deli
meats and cheese. "They got the fool idea firearms were the best way to
settle who'd get the first dance with Christy Marchand." He frowned
thoughtfully. "I recall them both being too drunk to hit their targets,
but I don't remember what happened next."
Nate skimmed the papers. "Dad arrested them, they
pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct, and they were sentenced to give ten
percent of their crawfish catch to the parish food bank for the next six
months."
"That sounds like something the judge would come
up with," Jack agreed.
"Not that there was any excuse for shooting guns
off in a crowded dance hall, but I can kind of understand how they might have
been moved to passion. I was in love with Christy myself in those days."
The Blue Bayou Mardi Gras queen had gone on to be Miss
Louisiana, landed a job as weather girl on KATC in Lafayette, then began
working her way up the network ladder through larger and larger markets. She
was currently a foreign correspondent for NBC's nightly news, and although her
long, dark hair was now a short, perky blond bob, Nate still enjoyed looking at
her.
"That's not surprising, since you tended to fall
in love with just about every girl in the parish on a regular basis." Jack
took a swig from a can of Dr Pepper. "Though I have to admit, Christy was
pretty cute. So, got any other hot sheriff prospects?"
"Don't I wish." Since the case had been
settled a dozen years ago, Nate tossed the papers and the slug into the
circular file.
"How about the guy who was just leaving when I
got here? The goofy-looking long-haired guy with the gold stud in his
ear."
"Strange criticism from a man who returned to
town sportin' an earring himself."
"I'm not applying to be a cop. Besides, Dani
likes it. She says it reminds her of a pirate." Jack flashed a rakish grin
Nate had to agree was damn piratelike.
Jack had always been the most dashing of the three
Callahan brothers. And the wildest, having earned his teenage nickname, Bad
Jack, the old-fashioned way: by working overtime to be the baddest-assed
juvenile delinquent in the parish.
"The guy was some sprout eater from Oregon who
wanted me to know right off the bat that he refused to carry a gun because he
was a pacifist. Then asked me if there were any good vegan restaurants in
town."
"Not much call for tofu burgers here in hot sauce
country."
"That's pretty much what I told him."
"Question is, why he'd want the job in the first
place?"
"He's a former soc major." The scent wafting
from the bag was mouthwatering. One bite confirmed that the sandwich tasted as
good as it smelled. "Seems he's got new liberal ideas 'bout law enforcement
that none of the other cities he's interviewed with seem eager to
embrace."
"Let me guess. The theory is based on the idea
that all those murderers and rapists up there in Angola Prison are merely
victims of a harsh, vengeance-driven society."
"From the little I let him tell me, that's pretty
much it."
"Hell, that's an old retread idea."
"Well, like I said, it probably isn't real
popular in the cop community. Which was why he was willing to come all this way
to interview."
"So he thought we were so desperate we'd be
willing to end up with him by default?"
"That'd be my guess. I explained that even though
the last crime spree was Anton Beloit's kid taking that can of John Deere green
paint and spraying his love for Lurleen Woods on the side of every bridge in
the parish, I'd prefer the chief law enforcement officer in Blue Bayou to carry
a weapon. And know how to use it. He told me he'd have to think about it. I
told him not to bother."
"Lucky for you Blue Bayou's a peaceful
place."
"Since the town's entire police force consists of
Ruby Bernhard, who mostly sits behind her desk and crochets afghans for her
hoard of grandchildren while waitin' for someone to call in a crime so she can
play dispatcher; Henri Pitre, who refuses to tell me his age, but has gotta be
on the long side of seventy; and Dwayne Johnson, who's eager enough but green
as Billy Bob Beloit's damn paint, I sure as hell hope things stay
peaceful."
Nate studied the
former-DEA-agent-turned-thriller-novelist over the top of the crusty round loaf
of French bread. "I don't suppose you're startin' to get bored, being out
of law enforcement these past few years?"
"Nope." Jack shook his head. "I figure
it's damn near impossible to get bored with a perfect life with the world's
sexiest pregnant wife, two terrific good-lookin' kids, a great dog, and getting
to tell lies for a living."
The yellow dog in question lifted her huge head,
looking for a handout. She swallowed the piece of cheese Jack tossed her in one
gulp.
"Nice to hear you put Dani in-first place."
"We might have taken a thirteen-year detour, but
she's always been first. Always will be." Jack took another hit of the Dr
Pepper. "You know, marriage could be the best invention going, right up
there with the combustible engine. You might want to give it a try
someday."
"No offense, bro, but I'd rather—"
"I know." Jack shook his head. "Go
skinny-dippin' with gators. Anyone ever tell you that line's getting a bit
old?"
Nate frowned. Three weeks later, and the debacle with
Charlene still irked. "Do you think I have a Peter Pan complex?"
"Probably."
This was not the answer Nate had been expecting. Or
hoping for.
"That's why it's gonna be so much fun watching
when you take the fall, you," Jack said with a pirate's flash of white
teeth.
"I wouldn't hold your breath, you. 'Cause it's
not going to happen."
"That's pretty much what I said, before Dani came
back to town. And I'll bet Finn sure as hell never imagined getting hitched to
some Hollywood actress." Jack shrugged. "When it's right, it's
right."
"Marriage might be right for you guys, but it's
not in the cards for me. Long-term relationships are just too much heavy
lifting."
"Never known you to be afraid of hard work."
"It's different in construction. Eventually
things come to an end."
"I doubt Beau Soleil will ever be done."
"That's beside the point."
"And that point was?"
"When I'm building something or restoring an old
house, eventually I have something to show for the effort, something I can be
proud of. The more time you put into a place like Beau Soleil, the better it
gets. The more time you put into a relationship with a woman, the more likely
it is that you'll mess it up. Then everyone just ends up angry, with hurt
feelings. The trick is to know when to bail, before you get to that pissed-off
point."
Granted, he hadn't pulled that off with Charlene, but
usually he was able to remain friends with a woman after the sheets had cooled.
"Never met a woman yet who didn't feel the need
to change a man," he grumbled.
"Dani's never tried to change me. Guess that's
'cause I'm already perfect."
"Talk about telling lies." Nate looked out
the window at the January rain streaming down the glass. "Do you ever just
want to take off?"
"I did that thirteen years ago," Jack
reminded his brother. "But like the old sayin' goes, there's no place like
home."
"Easy for you to say, since you've been just
about every place in the world."
"That's true." Jack studied him more
closely. "Is there a point to this?"
"I've never been anywhere."
"You went away to college."
"Tulane's in New Orleans, which is not exactly
much of a journey. And I came home my freshman year."
"When Maman was dying." Jack frowned.
"I don't know if I ever thanked you for that—"
"That's what brothers are for. Finn was tied up
with that manhunt, and you were off somewhere in the Yucatan Peninsula chasing
dope dealers."
Since he'd loved his maman dearly, Nate had never
regretted his actions. He was happy in Blue Bayou; it was where his friends
were, where his life was. Life was good. And if truth be told, there wasn't
anywhere else in the world he'd rather live.
But there were still times, on summer Saturday
afternoons, when he'd be watching a ball game on TV and wonder whether if he'd
stayed in school and not given up the athletic scholarship that had paid his
tuition, he might have made it to the pros. After all, the scouts had called
him a phenom, possibly the most natural third baseman since Brooks Robinson.
He stifled a sigh. Yesterday's ball scores, as Jake
Callahan used to say. He tore open the last evidence envelope.
"Hey, look at this." He fanned the yellowed
papers out like a hand of bouree cards.
His brother leaned forward. "Stock
certificates?"
"Yeah. For Melancon Petroleum."
Jack whistled. "They've got to be pretty old,
since Melancon must've quit givin' out paper certificates at least two decades
ago. If they're real, I'll bet they're worth some dough. 'Specially now that
the company's rumored to be bought up by Citgo."
'There's also a death certificate for a Linda
Dale."
"The name doesn't ring a bell."
"It was thirty-one years ago. Back when Dad first
got elected sheriff." Nate frowned. "She died of carbon monoxide
poisoning."
"Heating accident?"
"No." His frown deepened.
"Suicide." He flipped through a small ringed notebook. "But Dad
didn't buy that."
"He thought she was murdered?"
"Yeah," Nate said.
"Blue Bayou's only ever had two murders that I
know of. That one back when we were in high school, when Remy Renault got
wasted and shot that tin roof salesman he found sleeping with his wife."
"I remember that."
He also remembered the long, hot, frustrating summer
when Mrs. Renault hired him to mow her lawn and clean her pool. She'd liked to
sunbathe topless. When he got a bit older and realized that she'd been
purposefully tormenting him, Nate had been real grateful he hadn't been the one
Remy found rolling in the sheets with the woman who'd made the models in Finn's
Playboy magazines look downright anorexic.
He skimmed some more of the notes, written in a wide,
scrawling script not that different from his own. "Seems Dad even went up
to Baton Rouge, to try and get the state cops to come in on the case, but while
he was gone, Dale's sister showed up and had the body cremated."
"Which would have destroyed any physical evidence
he needed to make a case."
"Yeah. But the ashes aren't all the sister took
away with her. There was a toddler in the house. Dad figured she'd been left
alone about forty-eight hours. She'd obviously been scrounging for food; he
found some empty cookie packages on the kitchen floor and an empty bread
wrapper in her room."
"Shit. What about Mr. Dale? Where was he while
all this was going on?"
"Appears there wasn't any Mr. Dale."
"Single woman havin' a baby out of wedlock sure
wasn't unheard of three decades ago," Jack said. "But it could've
created a bit of a stir in a small Catholic town like this one."
"That's what Dad thought." It wasn't that
people were more uptight here than other places around the country; people in
Blue Bayou certainly knew how to pass a good time. But whatever sexual
revolution had taken place during the sixties and seventies had been kept
behind closed doors.
"Linda Dale was a lounge singer at Lafitte's
Landing. Seems like it would have been hard to save up enough money from
whatever salary and tips she was making to buy all this stock."
"How much does it come to?"
Nate checked out the certificates again and did some
rapid calculation. "The face value back then was twenty-five thousand
dollars."
Jack whistled. "Which means that there's a
thirty-three-year-old woman out there somewhere who's due a tidy inheritance.
Though if Dale was murdered, it's strange the killer would leave the stock
behind."
"The sister was from L.A. When Dad tried to find
her, he ran into a dead end."
"That's not surprising. L.A.'s a big place."
"True." Nate picked up a small bound book.
"But Linda Dale kept herself a journal, too. If we'd never known Maman,
but she'd left behind somethin' that would tell us a little about her and then
someone stumbled across it, wouldn't you want them to try to find you?"
"Mais sure. But finding her's gonna be a long
shot. If Dad couldn't find this Linda Dale's sister back then, what makes you
think you can after all these years?"
"He didn't have the Internet. Besides, we've got
ourselves an ace in the hole. Our special agent big brother."
"Finn quit the Feebs."
"Just 'cause he left the FBI doesn't mean he lost
his talent for trackin' people down. And since he's living in L.A., that's
gotta make things easier."
Nate picked up the phone and began dialing.
Chapter Four
Regan called in to Dispatch, requesting all available
units in the vicinity to respond. While Van called off the intersections as
they sped past them, she floored the gas pedal. The Crown Vic skidded around
the corner and flashed through the rain-slick streets, the high-pitched wail of
the siren shattering the night.
The police-issue sedan was no match for the Lexus, but
the fact that she was a lot better driver was on Regan's side. Working against
her was the twinge of fear in the back of her mind at each cross street. It had
been seven years since the car chase that had nearly cost her her life, and she
still had the scars.
Dammit, homicide detectives didn't do chases. They
showed up after the killing and methodically began working a case that would
take them from a dead body to a live suspect.
"Shit!"
There was a flash from the Lexus. A slug hit the
windshield, shattering it into a spiderweb of cracks.
Regan's already hammering heart was flooded with a
burst of adrenaline as the slug buried itself in the backseat. One of the
reasons she'd worked so hard to make this division was because any adrenaline
rushes were supposed to come from the thrill of putting together all the pieces
of a crime so well that when she showed the finished picture of the puzzle to a
jury chosen at random, those twelve men and women would find one human being
guilty of murdering another. Murder cops weren't supposed to be risking the
lives of innocent civilians, not to mention their own, by acting out the raging
pursuit myth created by movie and television scriptwriters.
"Shots fired," Van reported.
"Shots fired," Dispatch echoed.
"Ten-four."
"That was close," Van said.
"Yeah," Regan agreed grimly, trying not to
think about the fact that her Kevlar vest had been supplied by the lowest
bidder.
The chase had been picked up by at least five patrol
cars. The screaming, flashing light parade, which was now hitting speeds in the
sixties, left Sunset to barrel through a quiet residential neighborhood.
Regan's murder books—a stack of three-ring binders that contained all the homicide
cases she was currently juggling—went sailing onto the floor when she hit a
speed bump full-on.
The Lexus took a corner too tight, tilting onto its
right two wheels and looking in danger of rolling over; Regan backed off a bit
to avoid crashing into it. No sooner had it settled back onto four wheels than
it careened over the center line, sideswiping two vehicles parked on the other
side of the street, taking out two mailboxes and a section of Cyclone fence.
Brakes squealing, it came to a shuddering halt in the front yard of a tidy
1930s bungalow.
Two males exploded from the car and took off into the
shadows.
"Suspects are on foot." Regan gave Dispatch
their description, as best as she'd been able to tell from the spreading yellow
glow of the porch light.
"Copy. All units, suspects are fleeing on foot.
Ten-twenty. Officer needs assistance," the disembodied voice announced as
Regan sprinted between two houses.
She was within inches of the passenger when he swerved
and ran straight into a darkened swimming pool. Water splashed into the air and
over the deck, drenching her already rain-wet sweatshirt and jeans.
"One suspect just landed in a pool," she
reported into the radio, pinned to her sweatshirt. "You scoop out
Flipper," Regan called to Van, who was on her heels. "I'll stick with
Double D."
Having begun running years ago, to get back in shape
after surgery and as rehabilitation, Regan was now nearly the fastest runner in
the precinct. The only guy who could beat her was a former USC running back who
had a good six inches on her and legs as long as a giraffe's.
Heart pounding painfully against her ribs, Regan
dashed through a hedge. As branches scratched her hands and face, all her
attention was focused on her perp. The whop-whop-whop sound of the police helicopter
reverberating overhead told her the cavalry had arrived.
They beamed a light down on the scene, turning it as
bright as day. "Freeze! Police!" she shouted, just like they'd taught
her at the academy. Twelve years on the job, and she'd never seen it work. It
didn't tonight. "Dammit, I said freeze!"
She managed to grab the back of his T-shirt, but since
he was as wet as she was, half her age, and outweighed her by at least fifty
pounds, he jerked free, scrambled to his feet on the wet grass, and took off
again, clearing the fence like an Olympic hurdler.
Regan followed, ripping both her sweatshirt and her
arm on the barbed wire along the top of the fence. The shirt bothered her more
than her arm; she'd just bought it yesterday. "There's thirty dollars down
the damn drain!" she cursed.
They pounded down an alley, splashing through the
puddles formed by countless potholes, past huge dogs barking behind fences.
Just when Regan was sure her lungs were going to burst, she launched herself
into the air and nailed him with a flying tackle that sent them both skidding
across what seemed like a football field's length of gravel. They finally came
to a stop when they crashed headfirst into a group of galvanized metal trash
cans.
"When a police officer says freeze, you're
supposed to stop running!"
"How the hell I supposed to know you're a goddamn
police officer?" he shouted back. "You ain't wearin' no
uniform."
"I suppose you figured all those flashing lights
and sirens were just a parade?" Hugely ticked off, she slammed her knee
into his back, holding him facedown while a pair of uniforms arriving from the
other end of the alley grabbed his arms and legs.
"The guy needs peppering," said one cop, who
had to be a rookie. It was obvious he was having a grand time with all this.
Regan was not.
"We don't need it." One absolute truism in
police work was that you were always downwind from pepper spray. He'd find that
out for himself, but Regan would just as soon not be in the vicinity when it
happened. The perp's elbow slammed into her rib cage, nearly knocking the air
out of her.
Once they'd finally gotten the suspect subdued, she
said, "Congratulations. You win tonight's grand prize by racking up at
least a hundred moving violations. That doesn't begin to cover the carjacking
and motel robbery. And let's not forget the original murder and rape
counts."
Regan snagged one of his wrists. Ignoring the string
of epithets, all colorfully graphic, several anatomically impossible, she
caught the other wrist, then yanked on the plastic restraints. While she missed
the decisive sound of the old metal handcuffs clicking closed, the ratchet
sound of the plastic teeth was still damn satisfying.
"What about my rights?" he shouted between
curses. "I got rights, bitch."
She scooped wet hair out of her eyes. She was
breathing heavily, but felt damn good. "You bet you do. Beginning with the
constitutional right to be a boil on the butt of society. But in case you
haven't figured it out yet, even most of your homeboys draw the line at killing
a little old lady who never did anything but give you a job cleaning up her
yard and made you a glass of lemonade."
With the help of the others, she yanked him to his
feet and recited the Miranda warning she suspected he'd first heard in grammar
school. Then, ignoring the pain in her solar plexus and the burning of the
slice on her arm, she walked him down the middle of the street to one of the
cruisers angled at the curb.
Tonight's bust, as satisfying as it was, would create
a mountain of paperwork. She'd be lucky if she managed a couple hours sleep
before having to show up at the courthouse tomorrow.
* * *
Six hours later Regan had showered, changed, and was
hunched over her laptop keyboard, attacking the stack of report forms, trying
to push yet more paperwork through the byzantine legal system.
You never saw television cops doing paperwork.
Homicide cops on TV only handled one or two cases at a time, and except for the
occasional season-ending cliffhanger, always managed to wrap up the crime in an
hour, minus time for commercials. In real life, a detective was forced to
juggle dozens of old cases while struggling to stay ahead of the deluge of new
ones.
The motto of the LAPD homicide division was "Our
day begins when yours ends." What it didn't mention was that it was not
uncommon for a homicide detective to work around the clock.
"So," Barnie Williams, who was two months
away from retirement and a house on the beach in Mexico, said from the
neighboring desk, "this guy calls nine-one-one and says his wife saw a light
on out in the garage. He looked out the bedroom window, and sure enough, there
are some guys moving around in there, looking like they're loading up stuff.
"Dispatch explains that it's Saturday night, cops
are all tied up with more vital shit, there's no one in the vicinity, but stay
put and they'll send someone out as soon as possible.
"Guy says okay, and hangs up. A minute later, he
calls nine-one-one again and says there's no hurry sending the cops out,
because he just shot and killed all the guys in his garage."
He'd succeeded in capturing Regan's reluctant
attention. "So, what happened?"
"Well, the shit hits the fan, and it takes less
than three minutes for half a dozen cars to pull up on the scene, including
Rockford and me, Armed Response Unit, and a producer and cameraman from that TV
show Cops, who just happened to pick tonight to ride around with a couple
patrol officers."
"Jones from Rampart," elaborated Williams's
partner, Case Rockford. He was leaning back in his chair, hand-tooled lizard cowboy
boots up on the desk. "And that rookie with the Jennifer Lopez ass that
even manages to look fine in blues."
"Her headlights aren't bad, either," a
detective from across the room volunteered.
"She spends her own bucks to have her uniform
privately tailored," offered Dora Jenkins, a female detective. "If
she didn't, her ass would look as big as Montana. As for the headlights,
they're silicone."
"No way," Williams said.
"Way. She got them back when she was a Hooters
waitress. The restaurant loaned her the bucks for the surgery."
"Are you saying those Hooters girls aren't
naturally endowed?" another detective asked with mock surprise.
"So what happened with the guy who shot the
robbery suspects?" Regan asked Williams in an attempt to return the
typically wandering cop conversation to its original track.
"Oh, turns out they're all alive, and the
department's own J. Lo and her partner get to make a bust for the
cameras," Rockford replied. "They're happy as white on rice, but
Barnie and I were majorly pissed, 'cause we were at the drive-through at Burger
King and had just gotten our Whoppers when the call came in."
"I hate cold burgers," Williams muttered.
Rockford picked up the story again. "So Barnie
gets in this guy's face and yells, 'I thought you said you killed them!' The
man just stands there, puffing away on a cigarette, cool as can be, and says,
'I thought you guys said there weren't any cops available.'"
The story drew a mixture of laughs and groans. Wishing
caffeine came with an IV option, Regan shook her head and returned to her
typing.
"Hey, Hart," called a deep voice roughened
by years of cigarettes.
Since another Murphy's Law of police work states that
computers only delete reports when they are nearly done, Regan saved her work
for the umpteenth time and looked up at the uniformed cop standing in the
doorway.
"What's up, Jim?"
"There's a guy here to see you. Says it's
personal."
"Obviously he doesn't know anything about cop
shops." She glanced around at the bank of desks crowded together, files
that no longer fit on desktops piled onto the floor beside them, telephones
jangling, computer keys tapping, the cross conversations that kept anything
from being personal.
"Should I bring him on back?"
"No need," a drawled voice offered.
The cop spun around, one hand going instinctively to
his sidearm; Regan stood up, pulled her .38 from the desk drawer, and quickly
skimmed a measuring look over him.
Six-two, one-ninety, blue eyes, brown hair. No scars,
tattoos, or identifying marks that she could see. He was wearing jeans that
looked faded from use, rather than any trendy stone or acid wash. His
unabashedly becoming bomber jacket was unzipped, revealing a blue shirt that
whether by accident or design matched his eyes; his leather boots were scuffed
and, like his jeans, looked well worn. He was carrying a manila envelope.
He didn't look dangerous. Then again, neither had
Ronald Lawson, that Robert Redford lookalike serial killer who'd finally been
arrested by the FBI last summer.
"How did you get back here?" It was her
street voice, controlled, but sharp enough to cut granite.
"Detective Kante was just coming in and was kind
enough to show me the way."
A dimplelike crease flashed at Van, who'd just arrived
with coffee from the espresso shop across the street.
"Hey, he came with a letter of
recommendation." Van smiled up at the guy with the warmth of an old friend
as she handed Regan the brown cardboard cup.
"A recommendation?" Regan lifted her brow,
the only one of the three not smiling.
"From the FBI." He took a folded piece of
paper from his shirt pocket and held it out. "Well, to be completely
accurate, Finn's a former special agent. He said he worked with you on the
Valdez murder."
Valdez was one of Lawson's victims, which could only
mean the letter was from Finn Callahan. Regan snatched it from his hand and
skimmed the few lines, which were as tense and to the point as the special
agent had always been, merely suggesting that she might want to hear Nate
Callahan out. It was signed "Just-the-Fucking-Facts-Ma'am-Finn."
Since Finn Callahan wasn't one for chitchat, Regan
suspected he hadn't told anyone about the late-night argument they'd had after
eighteen hours of canvassing the UCLA area in record-breaking heat, searching
for witnesses in the Lawson case. Finn's cut-and-dried method of keeping
conversation to the subject certainly allowed for more people to be
interviewed, but she'd insisted that by allowing them to chat a bit, you often
learned important facts the witnesses might not have realized they'd known. Regan
rarely lost her temper, but too little sleep and too much caffeine made her
blow up that night. She'd shouted at him, shoved impotently against his chest
(the man was huge), and accused him of being Just the Fucking Facts Ma'am Finn
Callahan.
He'd surprised her by laughing, and instead of causing
things to escalate, her accusation cleared the air. From then on, they'd worked
out, their own version of good cop/gruff cop.
It had taken Finn another year to bring Lawson down,
but the investigation had been a thorough one, with enough evidence gathered
that had the killer been tried for the death of the UCLA coed, the DA would
have won a conviction.
"I didn't know Finn Callahan had a brother."
"Actually, he's got two," Nate said.
"There's another you might have heard of. Jack. He writes books."
That was putting it mildly. Jack Callahan was a former
DEA agent turned blockbuster best-selling author. Touted as a new generation's
Joseph Wambaugh, he'd soared to the top of the lists with his first novel.
Regan had bought all his books for his women characters, who were more richly
drawn than those written by most men. Especially former cops turned writers,
who, even if they managed to make it past the Madonna/whore stereotype, too
often seemed to portray females as victims.
"With both an FBI agent and a DEA agent in your
family, you should be aware that wandering around in a police station can get
you shot." Why was it the good-looking men were always the stupid ones?
"I realize that, officer."
"Detective." For some reason, Regan felt a
need to establish rank in this case.
"Detective," he agreed. His blue eyes
warmed; gorgeous white teeth flashed. "Which is why I enlisted Detective
Kante's help."
"Want me to throw him out?" the desk cop
asked.
Now that she knew the man standing in front of her was
Finn's brother, Regan could see the family resemblance. "No, that's
okay." His eyes were a deeper blue than Finn's chillier hue, his
sun-tipped hair chestnut rather than Finn's black, and his body lankier and more
loose-limbed. He was also more casually boyish, but the masculine
self-confidence was all too familiar. It had surrounded Finn like an aura, it
emanated from the gritty black-and-white author photograph on Jack Callahan's
novels, and Nate Callahan, for all his outward, easygoing charm, possessed it
in spades.
She reached for the phone.
"If you're calling Finn to find out why I'm here,
he won't be able to tell you. Because he doesn't know."
Regan folded her arms across the front of her black
silk blouse, angled her head, and narrowed her eyes. "Why not?"
"Because I didn't want to bother him with
details."
Details. She already had so many damn details to deal
with, she felt as if she was being nibbled to death by killer ducks.
"Look, if your car got towed and you need help getting it out of impound,
you're out of luck, because we don't do that here. Nor do I fix speeding
tickets. If you want me to arrest someone, unless you're talking about a
murder, I don't have the time to get involved, but you're free to file a complaint
with the desk sergeant."
She picked up a heavy blue binder. The murder book
contained everything she'd gathered during the course of her investigation, and
she'd spent the few hours between last night's bust and this morning memorizing
pertinent facts for today's court testimony.
He tucked his thumbs into the front pockets of his
jeans, rocked back on his heels, and appeared to contemplate the matter. Regan had
participated in countless interrogations over the years, and had learned from
some of the best cops in the business, but she'd never met anyone who could
draw a pause out so long.
"My car's back home," he said finally.
"I don' know anyone who's been murdered, at least not lately, and except
for the street crew that spent last night jackhammering through the pavement
outside my hotel room window, I don't really have any complaints."
His slow, easy smile was a contrast to the thoughtful
look he skimmed over her face. Even knowing that after all the surgeries she'd
undergone, her facial scars were more imagined than real, she was still
discomforted by such silent scrutiny. Especially from a man whose own face
could have washed off a cathedral ceiling.
"As for why I came, well, it's a long
story."
"Then you're really out of luck. Because I have
to be in court in thirty"—she glanced down at her watch—"make that
twenty-five minutes. And counting."
"That's okay. I'll ride along with you, and we
can talk on the way."
"The LAPD police force is not a taxi service. And
even if I were willing to allow a civilian to tag along, which I'm not, there
wouldn't be any conversation, because I'll be going over the details of my
testimony on the way."
"Finn's a stickler for details, too." The
nicks and scars on the hand he skimmed over his hair seemed at odds with his pretty
face. "We can talk over lunch."
"I wasn't planning to eat lunch." She'd be
lucky to score a candy bar from the courthouse vending machine. "So, why
don't we just cut to the chase, and you can tell me what you're doing
here."
"Like I said, it's a long story. And
personal."
"I don't want to offend you, Mr. Callahan, but
unless you've committed homicide, I'm not terribly interested in your personal
life."
"Not mine, chиre. Yours."
Regan would have sworn there was no longer anything
that could surprise her. She would have been wrong.
"It won't take very long," he coaxed when
she didn't immediately respond. "If I wanted to dump it on you without any
explanation, I would have used the mail and not bothered flying all this way.
So, since my flight back home doesn't leave until this evening, how about I
jus' come to the courthouse and we can talk after you wrap up your
testimony."
His voice might be as smooth as whiskey sauce over a
rich bread pudding, but she refused to be charmed. "They don't have phones
in Louisiana?"
"Sure they do. Even in Blue Bayou. That's a nice
little town in the south of the state, down by the Gulf," he volunteered.
"I'm mayor."
"Good for you." He was certainly the
antithesis of the stereotypical sweaty, overweight, south-of-the-Mason-Dixon-line
politician wearing a rumpled white suit, seated on a veranda in a rocking
chair, sipping from a silver flask of Southern Comfort. "And the reason
you didn't just pick up a telephone and call was , . . ?"
"I thought you'd rather talk face-to-face."
She really did have to get going. Judge Otterbein, a
stickler fox time, ran his courtroom with the precision of a Swiss watch.
Once again he seemed to sense her thoughts. "I
promise I won't say a word on the way to the courthouse."
The room had gone unnaturally quiet. Aware they were
drawing the attention of every detective in the bull pen, she reached for the
gray wool jacket draped over the back of her chair. Moving with surprising
speed for someone so seemingly laid-back, he beat her to it.
"I can do that," she muttered, taken off
guard as he held it out for her.
"Sure you can," he said agreeably. "But
my daddy taught me to help a lady into her coat."
"I'm a detective, not a lady," she reminded
him as she slid her arms into the sleeves. "And your father might want to
think about joining the twenty-first century."
"Now, that might be a little hard for him to do.
Seein' how he's passed on."
"I'm sorry. I didn't know."
He shrugged. "Don't worry about it. I'm not
surprised Finn didn't mention it, since my big brother's not real talkative on
a good day. Anyway, it was a long time ago."
A less observant woman might have missed the shadow
that moved across his lake blue eyes. Regan didn't need her detective skills to
spot the No Trespassing sign. Nate Callahan wasn't that old, she mused as they
walked out of the station toward the police garage. Maybe thirty, thirty-one
tops. So, how long was a long time ago?
Not that she cared.
Since the remote hadn't worked for weeks, she unlocked
both car doors with the key. "Since I like and respect your brother, I'm
willing to hear you out," she said. "But until court's adjourned, I
have more important things to focus on. Say one word, and I'll have to shoot
you."
"Works for me," he said agreeably as he
climbed in beside her.
"Fasten your seatbelt." She jerked her own
shut.
Neither spoke as they cruised into the steady stream
of traffic, engine valves rattling. Since the teenage Front Street Crip
defendant was the son of a city council woman, this was one of her more
high-profile murder cases. TV news vans, their satellite uplinks pointed
skyward, lined the street outside the courthouse. Wanting to avoid an
appearance on the six-o'clock news, Regan pulled into the underground parking
garage.
"I know I promised to keep my mouth shut, but you
wouldn't shoot me if I say jus' one little thing, would you?"
"What?"
He turned toward her, putting his hand on the back of
her seat. A standard seduction ploy that hadn't worked since she was fourteen
and Tom Hardinger had copped a feel while they'd been sitting in the back row
of the Village Theater in Westwood, watching Indiana Jones and the Temple of
Doom.
Apparently undeterred by the gun in its holster on the
waistband of her skirt, he leaned toward her, close enough so Regan could smell
the coffee and Juicy Fruit on his breath. Close enough to make her muscles
tense. Too close for comfort.
"You sure do smell good, chиre."
"Detective." She cut the engine and climbed
out of the driver's seat. "And I'm not wearing perfume."
His warm blue gaze fastened on hers over the roof of
the car. Regan's stomach fluttered. Telling herself that's what she got for
skipping breakfast, she ignored it.
"I know." His grin was slow and sexy and had
undoubtedly seduced legions of southern belles. "Detective, chиre."
Steeling herself against that bone-melting smile, she
turned and began walking across the garage with long, determined strides, heels
tapping on the concrete floor.
For Finn's sake, she'd listen to whatever Nate
Callahan had to say, which she suspected wasn't nearly as personal or
intriguing as he'd tried to make it sound. Then, before the sun sank into the
Pacific, she'd send the man home and get back to chasing the bad guys.
Chapter Five
She was realty something. Oh, not his type, of course,
Nate had been telling himself from the moment he'd walked into the squad room
and spotted her sitting behind her desk, her forehead furrowed in concentration
as she typed away at blinding speed. In fact, he wasn't even sure he liked her,
which was unusual, since he tended to like most everyone he met. Especially
females.
She was tall and willowy, but not at all skinny. Her
arms, revealed by the short-sleeved blouse she'd covered up with her jacket,
were firm in a way that suggested she worked out regularly. Her hands were
slender, her long fingers with their unpolished nails looking far more suited
to playing the harp in some southern drawing room than pulling a trigger.
Her lips, which were neither too thin nor kewpie-doll
full, but just right, were unpainted. Her hair was styled in a short, thick cut
in order, he imagined, to appear more cop than woman. But it wasn't working,
because he figured most men—himself included—would be tempted to run their
hands through those glossy strands.
The discreet pearl earrings were all wrong. Nate
mentally exchanged them for gleaming hoops that would bring out the gold in her
whiskey-hued eyes. She'd unbuttoned only the top button on her blouse, and in
his mind, Nate unbuttoned another. Then one more.
What was she wearing beneath that unadorned blouse?
Something cotton and practical? Or a bit of feminine fluff and lace? The mixing
of the tailored charcoal wool suit and silk blouse suggested she was a woman of
contrasts.
Her skirt was slim, ending at her knees when she was
standing, but revealing an enticing flash of firm, .stocking-clad thigh when
she crossed her legs.
Like the earrings, the neat and tidy suit was all
wrong for her. She was a woman born to wear rich jewel tones. Nate had no
trouble imagining the smooth flesh of her breasts framed by emerald silk.
He listened as the defense attorney battered away at
her for an hour, the woman's voice rising to stridency as she paced the floor
in front of the witness stand, challenging everything about the investigation,
attacking the chain of evidence, the veracity of the witness reports, Detective
Regan Hart's possible personal prejudice.
"I do have a personal prejudice," Regan
agreed.
At the table, the teenage defendant, wearing a suit so
new Nate was surprised it didn't still have the price tag hanging from the
sleeve, smirked.
"I'm prejudiced against the idea that a human
life in some LA. zip codes is worth less than one in a more affluent
neighborhood; and that if several hundred American soldiers were killed in an
overseas mission, politicians all over this country would be clamoring for a
change in policy, yet when hundreds of citizens die every year in areas of this
city that a politician never ventures into without police guard, and then only
at election time—
"Objection, Your Honor." The defense
attorney popped up like a jack-in-the-box.
Regan didn't spare her a glance, just kept her gaze
directed on the jury as she finished her declaration. "There appears to be
a business-as-usual attitude toward murder. And I hope I'll always be
prejudiced against the cold-blooded murder of a child."
"Objection," the attorney repeated with more
strength,
"Sustained," the judge agreed. "Witness
will keep her answers to the questions and refrain from making any
speeches."
"I'm sorry, Your Honor." She turned back to
the attorney. "Could you repeat the question?"
There was a ripple of laughter among the spectators.
The judge frowned, and the bailiff warned everyone to be quiet.
The attorney, who looked angry enough to chew nails
and spit out staples, tried again. "Do you have any personal prejudice
against my client's race or socioeconomic status?"
Her expression didn't change, but watching her closely
as he was, Nate saw the flash of irritation. "No."
The two women's eyes held, and Nate doubted there was
a person in the room who couldn't hear the clash of swords.
"So," the attorney began again, "let's
walk through what you did when you arrived on the scene. Step by step."
"If we're going to do that, we're breaking for
lunch," the judge decreed. "Court's adjourned until one-thirty."
He slammed down his wooden gavel, signaling the midday
recess. While Regan locked herself away with the DA, planning strategy, Nate
went next door to a bar and grill, ate an order of wings, and watched a lissome
blond on the bar television breathlessly report the latest in the case that
seemed to have captured the city's attention. Although the DA had apparently
fought it, television cameras had been brought into the courtroom, the better,
he thought, for the defense attorney, who appeared prone to dramatics.
"Good-looking broad," the bartender said,
watching a replay of Regan's testimony while spritzing seltzer into glasses for
the lunch crowd. "For a cop."
Nate agreed.
"She comes in here every once in a while. Doesn't
talk much, just orders a Coke, or maybe a glass of white wine at the end of the
day. I figure she might be a former waitress, 'cause she tips real good."
Nate took a drink from his pilsner glass of draft.
"What's the prevailing opinion on this case?"
"The evidence against the gangbanger is rock
solid, but his mother has gotten her kid his own private dream team, so who
knows how the jury's going to vote." He shrugged. "Folks seem to
respond to star power."
Watching the jury as the questioning resumed after
lunch, Nate worried about that. Unlike the defense, Detective Regan Hart's tone
remained cool, matter-of-fact, and, like the rest of her, almost too much in
control. While he wasn't any expert, he wondered if she might not be better off
appealing as much to the jury members' emotions as to their heads. She was
beginning to remind Nate more and more of Finn. What would it take, he
wondered, to make the woman relax?
As she stepped down from the witness stand, Nate found
himself wondering how cool and collected the detective would be when she
learned his reason for coming here to L.A.
* * *
It was over. Despite some initial discomfort caused by
Nate Callahan watching her so intently, Regan had managed to stay calm, cool,
and professional. She hadn't let them see her sweat, and by the time she'd finished
her testimony, everyone knew that the baby-faced defendant was guilty as sin.
Regan knew it, the defense team knew it, the judge knew it, and you didn't have
to be a psychic to sense that the majority of the jury members, who'd remained
engaged but could no longed look the kid in the eye, had known it, too.
Which was why, of course, the defense attorney had
suddenly asked for a recess minutes before the case closed. The deal was
swiftly cut by ' those Great Compromisers, the lawyers on both sides.
Nate Callahan was waiting for her outside the
courtroom. "Good job. You sure as hell impressed me."
"Thank you, Mr. Callahan, but impressing you is
not high on my list of priorities."
"It's Nate," he said easily, falling into
step beside her, adjusting his long-legged stride to hers. "You don't seem
real pleased with the out' come."
She stopped in her tracks and looked up at him.
"Why should I be pleased?"
"He's goin' to prison."
"For second-degree murder." She shook her
head, still fuming. "What the hell does that mean? How can eight-year-old
Ramon Consuelo be second-degree dead?" She raked a hand through her hair.
"He's one hundred percent dead, dammit." She would have much
preferred a slam-dunk win over a lousy, convenient plea bargain.
"You did your best," he said mildly.
"Which Mrs. Consuelo seemed to appreciate."
"He was her last living child." Regan
wondered how any woman survived the pain. "Her seven-year-old daughter was
killed six years ago by a hit-and-run drunk driver who swerved into a group of
kids waiting for the school bus. She lost a two-year-old daughter to AIDs back
in the nineties. She hadn't even realized her drug abuser husband had passed
the virus on to her until the baby was born HIV-positive. She's still alive;
the baby isn't. Ramon was her last child and her only son." She blew out a
long, slow breath. "And now she doesn't have him, either."
"It must be hard," he said. "Doin' what
you do, caring like you do."
"Some days are harder than others." As were
the nights when her sleep was haunted by those whose deaths she hadn't managed
to avenge. "What time is your flight?"
"It's a while yet. We can talk over supper."
"Do you have a pen?"
"Sure." He reached into an inside jacket
pocket and pulled out a ballpoint.
Regan ignored it. "Then write this down. I'm not
having dinner with you."
Her hard stare seemed to deflect right off him.
"You have to eat to keep your strength up for playing cops and
robbers."
"I don't consider my job playing."
"It wasn't meant to be taken literally, detective.
Anyone watching you in court today could tell you take your work real
seriously."
"It's become almost a clichй," she murmured.
"But there's a reason the idea of homicide detectives being the ones who
speak for the dead is always showing up in books and movies. Because it's the
truth." She slanted him a look. "But I suppose, being Finn's brother,
you already know that."
"Mais yeah. Finn can be a serious one, he. But
he's loosened up some since he got married."
"I heard about that." Regan had been amazed
that the most serious man she'd ever met had married one of Hollywood's highest
profile actresses. And not just any actress, but the new Bond Girl, for
heaven's sake. You couldn't turn on a television these days without seeing some
promo for the movie.
"He and Julia didn't hit it off right away, but
they're sure happy now."
"That's nice." She meant it. Having had a
front-row seat for the horrific things people who'd once been in love could do
to one another, Regan had become a conscientious objector in the war between
the sexes.
"It'll take a while to tell you my story,"
he said. "So, how about getting a couple burgers and going out to the
beach? I've never been to the Pacific Ocean, but I hear it's real pretty."
That smooth-talking southern steamroller might work
back home in Louisiana, but it wasn't working on Regan. "Look, Mr.
Callahan—"
"Nate," he reminded her with a quick smile.
She waved his correction away with an impatient hand.
"Why don't you tell me—as succinctly as possible—why you've come here, so
I can get back to work, and you can go back to Big Bayou."
"It's Blue Bayou, like the old Orbison song. It
was originally named Bayou Bleu, after all the herons that nest there, but over
the years it's become Anglicized."
"How interesting." She didn't care about how
the damn backwater town had gotten its name. She also wasn't sure this man knew
the meaning of succinct. "Now, if we could just get down to
business?"
"You know, sometimes it's not a bad idea to take
a little break and clear your head." He skimmed a hand over her shoulder,
which stiffened at his touch. "You seem a little tense, detective."
"What I am, is losing patience." The
roughened tip of his fingers brushed against her neck, causing a spurt of her
pulse. "And I don't know how things are done down in the bayou, but
touching an armed woman without asking permission could get you shot here in
the city."
"You thinking of shooting me?"
"The idea is becoming more appealing by the
moment."
Because that lightly stroking touch stimulated
hormones she'd thought she'd locked away in cold storage, Regan pulled away
just as a detective she'd once worked with walked by. Her week with the man had
been spent dodging clumsy passes, and the smile he gave her was close to a
smirk, suggesting he believed more was going on here than a frustrating
conversation.
"Look." Nate dipped his hands into his front
pockets. "We're wasting a lot of that time you said you don't have,
standing around this parking garage arguing. So, how about we just stop
somewhere, pick up some supper, and drive to the beach, where I'll tell you a
little story, then you can drop me off at LAX and I'll be out of your
hair."
Regan sighed in frustration. Since he was turning out
to be as stub' born as his eldest brother, they'd undoubtedly get things over
with a lot faster if she just agreed to dinner.
Nate didn't appear the least bit surprised by her
caving in, which only heightened Regan's irritation as she drove the two blocks
to the Code Ten, a local cop bar and grill named for the police off-duty lunch
code. After another brief argument, which she won, they each paid for their own
burgers, then headed toward the coast.
Chapter Six
This is real nice," Nate said a few minutes later
as they sat on a bench on the Santa Monica pier. The air was cool and crisp,
and scented with salt and faraway places. "And worth the trip."
"Which was about?" She took a waxed wrapped
burger from the bag and nearly moaned at the scent of grilled meat and melted
cheese. She'd become so used to skipping meals, she'd learned not to notice
hunger pangs. Now Regan realized she was starving.
"Like I said, it's a little hard to explain. See,
my daddy was sheriff of Blue Bayou when he was killed in the line of
duty."
She'd just taken a bite, and had a hard time
swallowing. Having attended more funerals than she would have liked, Regan knew
how hard the loss of a cop killed in the line of duty could be on a community.
She also knew how hard not having a father could be on a child.
"That's tough."
She'd been the only kid she knew whose dad had died.
Oh, there'd been lots of divorced dads who only saw their sons and daughters on
weekends, some that had taken off to parts unknown, and a couple of kids whose
mothers had never married their fathers. But to have a parent, even one your
mother had divorced, die? That definitely made you stand out. Different.
"Yeah, it was hard. But like I said, it was a
long time ago."
"How long?"
"Nineteen years this May." The way he didn't
have to pause and think suggested the memory was still fresh in his mind.
"And you were?"
"Twelve." His expression was
uncharacteristically sober. "Anyway,
I was emptyin' out a storage room in the sheriff's
office before doing some remodeling—I'm a contractor—"
"I thought you were a politician."
"Bein' mayor's a volunteer position. Contracting
pays the bills—at least most months. Anyway, I was goin' through some old
evidence envelopes when I came across something that belongs to you."
"That's impossible."
She'd been to Louisiana twice in her life. Once was
five years ago, when she'd given a workshop about protecting crime scenes at a
cop convention in New Orleans; the other was last month, when she'd flown to
Shreveport to bring back a robbery/murder suspect.
"Your mother was Karen Hart, right?"
"I suppose you learned that from Finn."
"I did," he said on a smooth, genial tone
that probably made him a dandy politician back home. "He was going on the
information I gave him from an old police file. It's one of those funny
coincidences, seein' as how you two worked together and all."
He'd just piqued her curiosity again. "What
police file?"
"The one I got your maman's name from."
"Look, Finn Callahan's a crackerjack detective.
In fact, he's the best I've ever met. But even he can screw up occasionally. My
mother was a partner in a law firm. She was not the type of person to end up in
a police file."
"How old are you, detective?"
"I fail to see how my age is relevant to this
conversation."
"According to this file, your mother had a
sister. One who died and left behind a toddler who'd be thirty-three years
old."
Regan took a sip of coffee she had no business
drinking this late in the day. The caffeine would mean another sleepless night.
"News flash, Callahan, I'm not the only thirty-three-year-old woman in the
world. Besides, my mother was an only child."
He pulled a sheaf of papers from the manila envelope
he'd been carrying when he came into the station. "Karen Hart's listed as
Linda Dale's only living relative. Except for a girl baby named on her birth
certificate as Regan Dale."
Regan hated her hesitation in taking the envelope from
his hand. Shaking off an uneasy sense of foreboding, she forced her shoulders
to relax as she skimmed over what appeared to be a valid police report from
Blue Bayou Parish, Louisiana. Then she looked at the copy of
the birth certificate. Linda Dale, whoever she was,
had been twenty-five years old when she'd given birth to a seven-pound,
three-ounce daughter. The father was listed as unknown.
"I've never heard the name Linda Dale. Or Regan
Dale. My name is Hart. It's always been Hart."
"There's a photograph, too." He reached into
the envelope again. "Linda Dale was a real pretty lady. You might find her
a little familiar."
The photograph had obviously been taken in New
Orleans; Regan easily recognized the ornate cast-iron grillwork on the front of
the red brick building. The woman was wearing a red, white, and blue Wonder
Woman costume, suggesting the picture had been taken either at Halloween or
during Mardi Gras. The color had faded over the years, but there was no
mistaking the face smiling back at her.
Impossibly, although the hair was a bright, coppery
red, not brunette, it was her mother's face. It was also much the same face
Regan had seen every morning in her bathroom mirror, until plastic surgeons had
dug out the bits of metal that had torn apart her skin and sculpted her
features into as close an approximation as possible to what she'd been before
that fateful night she'd driven her patrol car into a trap meant to be a
literal dead end.
There was another, more important difference between
her face and the one in the photograph. Regan didn't think she'd ever
experienced the depth of emotion glowing in Linda Dale's light brown eyes. It
was obvious that the woman was madly, passionately, in love with whoever was
holding the camera.
Regan felt Nate looking at her, waiting for some
response that she refused to give him. "Interesting." Not wanting him
to think she was afraid to look him in the eye, she lifted her gaze. "But
it doesn't prove anything."
"She looks quite a bit like you."
"Somewhat like me," she corrected. "Her
nose tilts up more than mine does, and her jawline's softer." Hers was
more angular, her manufactured cheekbones sharper. "And her hair's a
different color."
"Women have been known to dye their hair. It's
still a pretty close resemblance."
"Even if we looked like twins separated at birth,
it wouldn't prove anything. They say everyone has a double; in fact, there's a
night bartender at the Code Ten who's a plead ringer for Julia Roberts."
She did not reveal that this unknown woman could be a dead ringer for Karen
Hart, since that would only reinforce his ridiculous argument.
"The evidence folder says she's Linda Dale. Karen
Hart's twin sister," he stressed.
"That still doesn't necessarily prove your point.
If there weren't all sorts of ways to interpret evidence, court dockets
wouldn't be so crowded."
"Good point." He tilted his head and studied
her. Quietly. Thoughtfully. "Trust doesn't come real easy to Finn,
either."
If he was telling the truth, the woman in the
photograph was dead. But Regan felt a familiar, palpable emotional pull. While
she was not a fanciful person, Regan knew that it was, indeed, possible for
people to speak beyond the grave. She'd experienced it before, when the unseeing
eyes of a murder victim seemed to be imploring her to find the killer who'd
ended her life.
"Let me put it this way, Mr. Callahan: just weeks
ago I sat next to a Christmas tree in the living room of a house that looked
like a place the Beav might have grown up in, and listened to a woman insist
that the last she'd seen of her four-year-old daughter was when she'd lost her
at the mall on a visit to see Santa Claus.
"Two days later, I arrested her drug-dealing
boyfriend for being a coconspirator in the mother's plot to kill the little
girl for a thousand-dollar insurance policy. A third friend, whom we also
indicted, had taken her from the mall and out into the desert, where he'd shot
her in the head. She never did get to sit on Santa's lap. And it might have taken
us years to get justice for her, if some teenagers hadn't been riding their new
ATVs out on those dunes and came across her body.
"I've had to step over the body of a woman whose
husband shot her while holding a knife at the throat of their toddler son. When
we showed up in response to a neighbor's nine-one-one call, he hadn't even
bothered to change his bloody clothes, but still swore he was innocent and
insisted on lawyering up.
"I've seen children shot while playing hoops on a
public playground, for no other reason than some other kid needed to kill a
stranger to make it through some gang initiation. And I worked with your
brother for twenty-four-hour days during one of the city's worst heat waves,
trying to nail a sicko pervert who got his kicks torturing young women. No, Mr.
Callahan, I do not trust easily."
He tipped his head again. The California sun, buttery
bright even on this winter day, glinted on his short, spiky hair and turned the
tips to a gleaming gold that not even the most acclaimed Beverly Hills colorist
could have pulled off. Regan found it strange that she, who'd worked years to
perfect her intimidating cop look, could be made to feel so uneasy by his
silent scrutiny.
"You've definitely got a cop's brain inside your
pretty head, Detective Chиre."
She bit into a salty French fry. "And you've
obviously got a chauvinist's brain inside your head, Mayor Callahan."
"For noticin' that you're a good-looking woman?
It's a man's right to look at pretty things." He slid an appreciative
glance over her. The light sparkling in his eyes could have been the lowering
sun glancing off the water, but Regan didn't think so. "Doesn't
necessarily mean he intends to do anything more without permission."
While she might not be Nicole Kidman, Regan had had men
look at her before. Even after her cruiser had been turned into a shooting
gallery. But somehow she'd gotten to be thirty-three years old without ever
feeling in danger of melting. When his gaze lingered momentarily on her legs,
she wished she'd worn her usual pantsuit rather than a skirt to court today.
Which in turn made her furious at herself for responding like a giddy high
school girl talking with the quarterback.
"A word of advice: don't hold your breath."
Emotional need always made her defensive, which led directly to the safer
emotion of anger. She crushed the burger bag. "Now if that's all the
evidence you have to show me—"
"Dieu, are you always in such a hurry? Didn't
anyone ever tell you that rushing around is bad on a person's system?" He
shook his head as he took some more papers from the envelope. "These stock
certificates would make Regan Dale a rich woman."
"They could also make you a rich man, since they
appear to be bearer certificates."
"They don't belong to me." He looked
affronted that she'd even suggest cashing them in. "I'm pretty sure
they're yours."
As he held them toward her, Regan reminded herself
that the devil didn't come slithering up to you with horns and a tail and
reeking of brimstone; he came courting with engaging manners and a smooth,
seductive smile.
"So you say. I still say you're wrong."
"Why don't you take them anyway? Do a little
detecting. You might find something that'll make you feel different."
Regan knew otherwise, but there was no way she was
going to let him accuse her of having a closed mind. "We'd better get you
to the airport before you miss your flight."
His smile was slow, delicious, and in its own charming
way, dangerous. "There's still time."
"It's obvious you don't know LAX. It was bad
enough before the heightened security measures. Now it's a nightmare." She
tossed the bag into a trash barrel.
"You know, the Pacific's even nicer than I've
heard," he said as they walked back to the parking lot. "I appreciate
you bringin’ me here."
"Like you said, I had to eat."
Regan had no idea what those papers he'd shown her
meant, but she was certain they didn't have anything to do with her. But still,
the cop in her couldn't quite stop mulling over the what-ifs.
Nate Callahan seemed to have an instinct for knowing
how far to press his case. He didn't bring the subject up again as she drove to
the airport, but instead waxed enthusiastic about his south Louisiana home.
"Well, I can certainly see why you were elected
mayor," she allowed as she pulled up to the curb designated for departing
passengers. "You're quite an ambassador for the place."
"It's a nice little town." He unfastened his
seat belt, reached into the backseat, and retrieved his overnight bag.
"Pretty as a picture on a travel poster and real peaceful." He paused
before opening the passenger door and gave her another of those slow perusals.
Unlike the earlier ones, this didn't seem to have any sexual intent. "We
jus' happen to be looking for a new sheriff. If you ever get tired of life in
the fast lane, you might want to give us a try."
"Thanks for the offer, but I'm quite happy right
where I am." That might not be the whole truth and nothing but the truth,
but she saw no reason to share her private feelings with a total stranger she'd
never see again.
Once again he surprised her with his speed, reaching
out and slipping her shades off her face before she could react. "I'm not
one to argue with a belle femme." Before she could back away, the
roughened pad of his thumb brushed against the skin below her eyes. "But
you look like you could use a little bit of R&R, Detective Chиre."
"Dammit, Callahan—"
"Jus' making a little observation." He
ducked away before she could push him out of the car. He was standing on the
sidewalk, seemingly oblivious to the driver who was leaning on his horn behind
them, urging Regan to move on so he could claim the spot. He reached back into
the car, handing her the sunglasses and a white leather book he'd taken from
his jacket pocket.
"What's this?"
"Linda Dale's journal. I thought you might like
to read it. The details are a little sketchy—she wasn't a real regular
writer—but it does mention her baby. And her sister, Karen Hart. I put my phone
number on a piece of paper inside the front cover, just in case you want to
call and compare notes once you're finished reading." He turned and walked
away into the terminal.
The horn behind her sounded again, a long, strident
demand. A uniformed cop standing on the curb blew his whistle and began heading
toward her.
"All right, dammit." Resisting the urge to
ticket the other driver for disturbing the peace—unfortunately, Nate Callahan
had already succeeded in doing that—Regan shifted the car into gear and pulled
out into traffic.
Chapter Seven
So," Jack asked, "how did it go?"
After arriving in Blue Bayou, Nate had driven out to
Beau Soleil, the antebellum home Jack was in the process of restoring. Nate was
the contractor, and so far the work had been going on close to two years; he
figured it could easily take a lifetime to restore it to its former glory, but
fortunately neither Jack nor Dani—whose family had owned the plantation house
for generations before Jack had bought it—seemed to mind living in a
construction zone. Somehow his brother's wife had created a warm and cozy
atmosphere out of what could have easily been chaos.
The kids were upstairs doing homework, and Dani was
sitting over in the corner of the former library, knitting. Or, as she'd
explained to Nate, attempting to learn to knit, which wasn't nearly as easy as
it had appeared in that big yellow Knitting for Dummies book she'd brought home
from Blue Bayou's library.
"Not as bad as it could have." He bent over
the custom-made green-felt-topped pool table, broke the balls, sunk two in a
corner pocket, and called for stripes. "Not as good as it might have."
Jack leaned against the wall, paneled in a gleaming
burled bird's-eye maple, and chalked his cue. "What's she like?"
"Smart." The ten ball disappeared into a
side pocket. "And real pretty, though outwardly tough as nails, which I
suppose a cop's gotta be." He banked a red-striped ball against the side
and sent it spinning into the far corner. "She reminded me a lot of Finn.
Before he fell for Julia."
"That grim, huh?"
"Not grim, exactly." He thought about that
as he moved around the table. "She's like our big brother in that she
obviously believes in truth, justice, and the American way. And she's
definitely not like any of our bayou belles."
Jack laughed at that. "What's the matter, baby
brother? Did the old Nate Callahan charm finally fail you?"
"I got her to hear me out." Memories of the
unwilling flash of emotion he'd seen in her gaze when he'd touched that
shadowed skin beneath her eyes had him, not for the first time, imagining
touching her all over. Momentarily distracted, he missed the shot. "She
also took the envelope we found in the evidence room."
"What did she have to say about the autopsy
report?"
"Nothing, 'cause at the last minute I decided not
to give it to her. She'd had a rough day in court, and I was already dumping
enough on her, so I figured that could wait until she called."
"She might not be real happy with you, holding
back that way."
"Then I'll just have to smooth things over."
"If she's as much like Finn as you say, I'm goin'
to enjoy watching that."
Having spent a lot more years of his youth in bars and
pool halls than Nate had, jack went to work, sending three balls in quick
succession thumping into holes.
Across the room, Danielle Dupree Callahan cussed as
she dropped another stitch. She'd told Nate that the buttery yellow yarn was
going to end up a baby sweater. But he sure hadn't been able to picture it from
what she'd managed to knit so far.
"Think she'll actually call?" Jack asked.
The solid three ball clicked off Nate's fourteen and sent the seven into the
far corner pocket
"Yeah." Balls were disappearing from the
table like crawfish at an all-you-can-eat buffet. "She's a detective, she.
She'll be curious enough to call." He watched as Jack used the ball he'd
missed to sink the eight ball. "You know, it gets old, having my hustler
brother all the time beating the pants off me."
Jack's smile flashed. "Jus' one of the benefits
of a misspent youth." He held out his hand. "You owe me twenty bucks,
cher."
As he dug into his pocket for the money, Nate glanced
up at the wall clock, calculated that it'd be about eight o'clock in Los
Angeles, and wondered if Regan had gotten through the journal yet.
* * *
She had. As Nate Callahan had said, the journal
entries were sporadic, occurring weeks, months, sometimes even years apart.
After leaving home at seventeen to become the girl singer in a country band,
Linda Dale had bounced from town to town, singing gig to singing gig, man to
man, for seven years. She hadn't seemed to mind the nomadic life. Most of the
men she'd gotten involved with were musicians, and while she appeared to set
limits—bailing on relationships the moment they turned abusive—Regan began to
detect a pattern. It appeared the woman was part free spirit, intent on
enjoying life to the fullest, and part nurturer, needing to rescue lost souls
(even those who might not want to be rescued) and take care of everyone around
her.
The entries, Regan noticed as she ate her way through
a pint of Ben and Jerry's Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough ice cream, seemed to come
at the beginnings and ends of her romances, which gave the impression that when
she was actually in a relationship, she was too busy living life to comment on
it.
None of the men had been the prince in shining armor
Dale professed to dream of; quite a few had been toads. But she'd remained
upbeat, positive that somewhere out there in the world her true soul mate was
waiting for her.
After a gap of nearly two years, an infant girl she
named Regan came into the picture. And then things became really personal.
Regan put her head back against her headboard, closed her eyes, and took a long
deep breath.
The woman in her sympathized with the single mother
trying to balance a singing career and a young daughter. The detective needed
more. She turned to the next page and began to read again.
January 1. J surprised me by slipping away from the
gala. The champagne he brought with him to toast a new year in my dressing room
was ridiculously expensive. It tasted like sunshine, all bright and sparkly,
but didn't go to my head nearly as much as his promise: that this year we'd
finally be able to live together openly. Our love-making, while necessarily
quick and silent, was still every bit as thrilling as it had been that first
time in New Orleans after he'd walked into the Camellia Club and changed my
life. January 15. I think Regan has picked up on my
excitement. Sometimes I wonder if I made the wrong decision, choosing to raise
her alone, to risk her growing up without the stabilizing influence of both a
father and mother. Of course Karen, for whom Regan has always been a sore
subject, scoffed at me when I suggested that on the phone the other day and
said something I couldn't quite understand about women needing men like fish
needed a bicycle, which I took to mean that I was foolish to enjoy having a man
in my life. In Regan's life. Then again, Karen has always been the most
independent person I've ever known. My legal eagle sister makes the Rock of
Gibraltar look like a tower of sand by comparison. It was such a delight watching Regan spin around the
room like a small dervish. She's such a sunny child. I like to think she's
inherited my talent, but she already has so much more confidence than I did at
her age. Sometimes more than I do now, 1 think. And while 1 know all mothers
think their children beautiful and talented, I truly believe she could be a
star someday. When I told her that soon she'll be dancing at our wedding with
her new daddy, she giggled, flung her arms around me, and gave me a huge smack
of a kiss. 1 can't remember being happier. February 14. Valentine's Day. J and I managed to slip
away to be together at lunch. We went out to our secret place and made love,
and afterward he surprised me with a stunning heart-shaped ruby pendant. He
said I'd had his heart from the day we met. As he's had mine. And always will.
He fretted when I wept, but I assured him that they were tears of joy, not
sorrow. February 25. It's the waiting that's so hard. I
understand, as I always have, that J's position is not an easy one, and 1 must
remain patient. He came into the lounge with friends tonight, and just seeing
him without being able to touch him—-and be touched—is so impossibly hard.
Soon, he tells me. Soon. March 4. Regan's second birthday. ] showed up this
evening with a stuffed elephant. It's a silly, fanciful thing, covered with
green, purple , and gold polka dots and wearing a Mardi Gras crown and beads.
Regan loves it.
"No." Regan snapped out a quick, harsh
denial. She pressed the heels of her hands against her eyes, hard enough to see
swirling stars. Emotions she couldn't begin to sort out crashed down on her as
the disbelief she'd been trying to hang on to shattered.
Her heart was pounding hard and fast as she forced
herself to continue reading, her eyes racing over the page.
He seemed a bit distracted, which isn't surprising,
since tomorrow's the day he'll finally tell his wife that he's leaving Blue
Bayou. Regan and I will be leaving with him. Anticipation has me as giddy as if
I've been drinking champagne from a glass slipper. I won't sleep a wink
tonight.
That was the final entry. Regan closed both the
journal and her eyes as waves of emotion crested over her. She lifted a hand
that felt as heavy as stone and dragged it through her hair.
She'd felt this way twice before: during those weeks
she'd spent in the hospital, drugged to the gills, and again three years ago,
when her mother had died suddenly and unexpectedly from a brain embolism. Karen
Hart, L.A.'s own Wonder Woman, had finally run. across something she couldn't
control.
The thing to focus on, Regan told herself, was that
she'd survived both. She'd surprised all the medical experts with the speed of
her recovery, and she'd gone back to work despite the constant need for more
surgery, just as she'd overcome the shock and pain of loss to take care of the
funeral arrangements for her mother.
She dragged herself out of bed on legs that felt as
shaky as they had during her early months of physical therapy, and opened the
cedar trunk.
Fighting for breath, she took the elephant, which for
some reason she'd named Gabriel, from the trunk. He was tattered and worn, as
any child's favorite old toy would be. And while technically in a court of law
he might be considered circumstantial evidence, since he couldn't be the only
such toy in the world, Regan knew, without a shadow of doubt, that she was
holding proof of Nate Callahan's claim.
The gilt crown had long since disappeared, and she
remembered breaking the beads during a playground tug-of-war with six-year-old
Johnny Jacobs. She'd ended up with the elephant, and he had gone home with a
black eye that had caused her to be deprived of television for an entire week
after the crybaby had gone home bawling to his mother.
Regan hadn't minded being banished to her bedroom;
justice was more important than watching Starsky and Hutch. Her father would
have understood, she'd insisted at the time.
Her father. The thought struck like a sledgehammer to
the head. If Karen Hart wasn't her mother, then John Hart was probably not her
father, either. Unless, of course, he was the J in the journal?
Could he have been having an affair with his
sister-in-law? The distance between Louisiana and California would have made it
difficult, but then, there was no indication that Linda Dale had been living in
Louisiana when she'd gotten pregnant.
And would a woman actually take the child her husband
had fathered with another woman into her home, raising her as her own?
Especially if that other woman was her own twin sister?
Regan didn't think many women would, but Karen Hart
could well have been the exception. She might not have taken the child out of
any sense of family or love, but she'd had a steely sense of responsibility. It
also might have explained why Regan could not recall a single warm maternal
moment spent with the woman she'd always believed to be her mother.
"Damn." A predawn light cast the room in a
soft lavender glow. Regan pressed the stuffed toy against her breast, bowing
her head against a sudden onslaught of pain. Had her entire life been built on
a foundation of lies? And if not, what parts had been true, what parts false?
She picked up the piece of hotel stationery with Nate
Callahan's telephone number and stared at it for a long time, trying to decide
what to do next. Part of her wanted to call him, to ask the myriad questions
bombarding her brain.
She removed the receiver from the cradle, dialed the
985 area code, then slammed it down again. She needed time. Time to absorb the
shock. Time to decide her next move.
She had to get out of here. Had to clear her mind,
start thinking like a cop, and not a woman who'd just had her world pulled out
from under her.
Still numb, she changed into her running clothes,
though a cold winter drizzle was falling and fog was blowing in from the
beaches. As she began running through the still dark streets, Regan remained
oblivious to the weather. The very strong possibility that the woman who'd fed
and clothed her, put a roof over her head, and raised her, if not
affectionately, at least dutifully, had also created a sham of a life, left
Regan with a bitter, metallic taste in her mouth.
And so, beneath the thick gray clouds blowing in from
the steely, white-capped Pacific, Regan ran. And ran. And ran.
Chapter Eight
A breakout of gang wars kept Regan working nearly
around the clock, which, while exhausting, at least occasionally took her mind
off her own problem.
She kept her secret to herself for nearly a month,
viewing it on some distant level like a cold case she'd get to as soon as the
hot ones were solved. Finally, after several marches by residents of the
communities that were being torn apart garnered the attention of the press,
politicians loosened the purse strings long enough to pay for more cops on the
beat, which resulted in a string of high-profile arrests.
Once things seemed to have calmed down, Regan tracked
down Finn, whose advice echoed what she'd been telling herself ever since Nate
Callahan's visit. There was no way she was even going to begin to get a handle
on her past if she didn't visit Blue Bayou—and the scene of Linda Dale's death—herself.
Regan made the travel arrangements. Then, after
another long, early morning run on the beach, she called her partner. "Did
I wake you?"
"Of course not." Van's groggy tone said
otherwise. A male voice said something in the background. Regan could hear her
telling Rhasheed who was calling. "So, what's up?"
"I'm going to be taking some leave time."
"Good idea. You've been working killer hours for
too long. A break will do you good."
"I hadn't realized there was anything wrong with
me." Terrific. Could you sound any more defensive?
"You haven't taken any real time for over
eighteen months."
Nineteen. But who was counting?
"Where are you going?"
"Louisiana."
"Oh, lucky girl! New Orleans's got great food,
great jazz, and lots going on, especially now with Mardi Gras coming up."
"I'm not going to New Orleans. I'm going to Blue
Bayou. It's a little town closer to the Gulf," she said, anticipating
Van's next question.
"I've never heard of it."
"I doubt if many people have. It's pretty
small."
"How did you find out about the place?"
"I did an Internet search." The half lie
caused a little pang of guilt. She had looked up the town's website, which had
revealed what Finn had already confirmed; that Nate Callahan was, indeed, the
mayor.
"How long will you be gone?"
"I don't know."
There was a longer pause. Regan could practically hear
the gears turning in her partner's head. "This sudden trip wouldn't have
anything to do with a man, would it?"
"In a way."
They'd known each other too long for Van not to realize
something wasn't quite right. "Would you care to share what you're holding
back on your partner and best friend?"
There was no point in trying to pretend everything was
all right. "I can't. Not yet."
The curiosity in Van's voice changed to concern.
"Anything I can do to help?"
Regan wasn't quite prepared to share details she
didn't even know herself. "Thanks anyway, but I'll be fine. It's just some
little misunderstanding I have to clear up. In case anything urgent comes up,
I'm staying at the Plantation Inn."
"Sounds nice."
"I guess so." It was the only hotel in town.
She recited the number she'd called to book her reservation, then, after
reassuring Van that she really was fine, Regan began packing.
* * *
Fourteen-year-old Josh Duggan had never expected Louisiana
to be so frigging cold. It had been snowing when he'd left Tampa, and he'd
figured it'd stay warmer if he stuck to the southern states, but he'd been
wrong. If someone didn't come along soon, he'd turn into a Popsicle.
He knew it was dangerous to be hitchhiking, "but
it wasn't like he had a whole lot of choices. After seeing the cop talking to
the cook in the restaurant next to the bus station in Jackson, he'd been afraid
to get back on the bus and had decided to take his chances with his thumb on
the back roads, which was proving not to be the most brilliant idea he'd ever
had.
So far only one car had passed on this narrow, lonely
stretch of road. When he'd recognized the black-and-white as a trooper's
cruiser, he'd dived into a ditch until it had passed. Now his clothes were wet
and sticking to his skin, and he could feet the blood from the rock he'd hit
his face on oozing down his cheek.
His stomach growled. He'd been promising it something
to eat for the last twelve hours. Since he was down to about thirty-five cents,
he was going to have to boost dinner. It wouldn't be the first time.
But first he was going to have to get to an effing
town.
His spirits perked up just a little when something
came looming out of the swirling gray mist. The roar of the diesel engine was
unmistakable. But at the speed it was going, would it even see him in time?
Josh was desperate enough to consider leaping in front of the cab when the
eighteen-wheeler's air brakes squealed.
The semi came to a grinding stop about fifteen feet
beyond him. He must have hurt his leg when he'd jumped into the ditch, because
it hurt like hell to run on it, but afraid the driver would take off, he
ignored the pain and sprinted on a limp past the two trailers to the cab. The
big door opened. A man Josh would not want to meet in a dark alley was looking
down at him. His eyes were black as midnight; a red scar started high on his
cheekbone and slashed through a scrabbly thatch of dark beard. "What the
hell are you doin' out here, kid?"
"Car broke down," Josh lied without a qualm.
Everyone lied. "I was walking into town to try and find a mechanic."
Dark eyes narrowed. "Didn't see no car on the
highway."
"I left it on a side road."
"Sure you did. You don't look old enough to
drive."
Josh thrust out his jaw and met the openly skeptical
gaze head-on. "I'm small for my age."
"That so?" The driver studied him for
another long moment that seemed like a lifetime. "It's against regulations
to take on passengers."
He jabbed a thumb at the sign in the window. "But
hell, my old lady would kick my ass six ways to Sunday if she found out I left
some skinny kid out in a frog-strangler like this-" He shrugged. "Get
on in."
Not waiting for a second invitation, Josh scrambled
into the passenger seat. The rush of heat from the dashboard, mingling with the
mouthwatering aroma that could only be doughnuts, made his head spin.
"Thanks. I'd pay you for the ride, but—"
"Hell, I'm not interested in your money, kid.
What I'd like is for you to tell me the truth, so I know whether or not I can
expect the law to be comin' after you." He glanced up into the rearview
mirror as if expecting to see flashing lights behind them.
Blue and red artwork snaked around huge arms the girth
of tree trunks. Josh wondered if he'd gotten any of those tattoos in prison,
then decided he didn't really want to know.
"I'm not some juvenile delinquent runaway, if
that's what you're worried about," he lied.
If the driver picked up that cell phone fastened to
the dash and called the cops, he'd be busted. Not that it'd do any good. They
could drag his ass back to Florida, but he'd just run again. And again.
The driver didn't answer right away. Every nerve
ending in Josh's body jangled as he plucked an empty Coke can from the cup
holder on the dash and spat a huge stream of brown tobacco juice into it.
"Don't much like the law," he said finally. He reached behind him and
pulled a waxed Krispy Kreme bag from the sleeper. "You like
doughnuts?"
"Who doesn't?"
The taste of the sugar-glazed fried dough nearly made
Josh burst out bawling. Exhausted, he leaned his head against the window and
watched the wipers sweeping the rain from the windshield. As the lonely sound
of a train whistle wailed somewhere out in the heavy fog, he almost allowed
himself to relax.
* * *
Nate was up on a ladder, ripping away some
water-stained dry wall, when she entered the sheriff's office. His built-in
female radar detector had never failed him, and it didn't this evening. He
glanced back over his shoulder at Regan Hart standing in the doorway of the
former storage room.
Raindrops sparkled like diamonds in her sleek hair.
She was wearing black jeans, sneakers, and a black Lakers jacket.
"I didn't expect to see you here," she said.
No hello, nice to see you again, what a lovely little town you have.
"I was doin' a little work on the place."
"I came to see the sheriff. There wasn't anyone
in the outer office." Her tone suggested she didn't approve.
"We're still looking for a sheriff. Mrs.
Bernhard, she's the dispatcher, doesn't work after five. Her husband likes his
supper on the table right on the dot, so he can eat it along with WATC's
six-o'clock news." As he looked down into thickly fringed whiskey-colored
eyes, Nate felt a familiar, enjoyable pull. "I never have figured that
out, since it seems watching all that war, politics, and crime'd ruin anyone's
appetite, but that's the way Emil likes it. And after fifty years of marriage,
Ruby says it's too hard to teach her old man new tricks."
"The town doesn't have a night dispatcher?"
"Nope." She clearly did not approve. Nate
shoved the claw hammer back into the loop on his tool belt, wondering how she
could remind him so much of his big brother and still have him wanting to nip
at that stubborn chin.
"What happens when a crime happens at
night?"
"It rings into Henri Petrie's house. He's the
senior ranking deputy. Mostly the only after-hours trouble happens at the No
Name—that's a bar outside of town—or the Mud Dog, another local watering hole
about a mile away from the No Name. Since Henri spends most every evenin' but
Sunday at the Mud Dog playing bouree—that's a card game sorta between poker and
bridge—he's usually already on the scene if trouble does break out."
He climbed down the ladder and noted her slight step
back. Not only was she into control, she liked to be the one setting
boundaries. Which wickedly made him want to press hers a little more.
"Though he's been complaining that being on call
all the time is cuttin' down on his socializing, being as how he can't get
drunk anymore, just in case something does come up."
"He wouldn't be the first cop to drink on
duty."
"Probably true. But so long as I'm mayor, I'd
just as soon he not." He saw the flash of skepticism in her eyes.
"You're surprised."
"I suppose, if I'd given it any thought, I
would've expected you to be a bit more laid-back when it came to law-and-order
issues."
"Stick around a while, Detective Chиre, and
you'll discover I'm just full of surprises."
He could smell the rain on her hair. Accustomed to
women who seemed to bathe in heady perfumes custom-blended in New Orleans, he'd
never realized he could find the fragrance of rain and Ivory soap so appealing.
Underlying the clean aroma was her own scent, which reminded him of those
citrus candles his maman used to like, blended with freshly cut spring grass.
"It's real nice if you can have a job you enjoy,
but that doesn't mean that everyone should go mixin' work and play. Especially
when their job involves guns," he said with a slow smile that more than
one woman had told him was irresistible.
Apparently they'd been wrong. Or, more likely, she was
just a harder case than the average woman.
"But you do," she guessed with what appeared
to be yet more disapproval. "Mix work and play."
Christ, the woman could be a hardass. Though, he
thought, remembering how she'd looked marching away from him in that L.A.
parking garage, as asses went, it was still a pretty fine one.
"Like I said, it's nice to have a job you enjoy.
As for the drinking-on-duty rule, it's hard enough for the parish to make its liability
insurance payments now. The last thing we need is a lawsuit from some city
slicker who came down here to let off a little steam and got himself thrown
into jail on a drunk and disorderly by a cop with whiskey on his breath."
"And you people prefer to handle things yourselves
and leave outsiders ... well, outside."
"That's pretty much the way it's always been down
here," he said agreeably. If he didn't suspect that the weeks since he'd
dropped his bombshell had been pretty damn tough on her, he might have let her
know flat-out that he wasn't real thrilled with the way she seemed to be
looking down not just on him, but on Blue Bayou as well. "How much do you
know about the Cajuns?"
"1 know who Paul Prudhomme is. And that I like
Cajun food, and they have a reputation for partying."
"Laissez le bon temps rouler. That's the name of
a song: 'Let the Good Times Roll.' " If her attitude so far had been any
indication, he suspected it'd been one helluva long time since she'd roulered
any bon temps. "It's pretty much a motto down here."
Nate wondered what it would take to get that cool,
faintly sarcastic mouth to soften. He'd never kissed a cop before. The closest
he'd come had been Jenna Jermain, a reporter who worked the police beat up in
Ascension Parish. They'd passed a few good times before she'd landed herself a
job on the Houston Chronicle.
"I read the journal," she said.
"I was hoping you would." He took another
two steps forward; she held her ground. "So, you've come to Blue Bayou to
track down some loose ends." Forward.
She didn't budge. The challenge was swirling in the
air between them. "That's very perceptive."
"It's what Finn'd do." Forward. He felt a
little tinge of victory when she finally retreated half a step.
"It's undoubtedly also what your father would
have done, if he'd had the opportunity."
"Yeah." Her long legs, which seemed to go
all the way up to her neck, were now pressed against the desk. Don't like bein'
boxed in, do you, sugar? "He was a good man, my father. And a damn good
cop."
"I suppose, never having met him, I'll have to
take your word for that."
The little dig managed to get under Nate's skin and
remind him that she hadn't come here to give a pleasant boost to his libido.
Now that he'd gotten her attention, things could only get complicated, and he'd
never liked complications. Which was why he still couldn't quite explain why
the hell he'd put himself into the middle of this long-ago story and tracked
down Linda Dale's daughter.
"Dad didn't believe the autopsy report," he
revealed.
Although her expression didn't change, Nate thought
she went a little pale.
"You have the autopsy report?" She sounded
more pissed than shaken.
"Yeah." The look she shot him was way too
familiar. Finn, who'd taken on the role of man of the house after their father
had been blown away, hadn't let either of his brothers get away with much, and
Nate had been on the receiving end of it too many times to count.
"And you didn't think that was important enough
to share with me?"
"I wasn't even one hundred percent positive that
you were the right woman." This time he was the one who took a step back.
"Yet you were sure enough to give me some of the
papers."
He swore inwardly. "Not the ones that'd be real
rough to read."
"And you felt it your job to protect my so-called
delicate female sensibilities why?"
"It wasn' that way." Not exactly. "The
autopsy report was an official crime document. The journal was a different
matter. Jack and I figured that if our maman had died without us ever knowin'
about her, and she'd left something like that behind, we'd want to read
it."
"Did you?"
"Did 1 what?"
"Read it?"
"Hell, no. It wasn't any of my business."
Her eyes narrowed, studying him like he was some
murder suspect in a lineup. "But you read the autopsy report."
"It was an official document. I'm a city
official, so I figured I was entitled. The journal's personal."
"Yet your father obviously kept it for a
reason."
"He didn't know where Linda Dale's sister took
off to. And knowin' him, he probably wanted to keep it as evidence."
"In the event he reopened the case."
"Yeah. His notes, by the way, say he tried."
"As a rule, small-town police forces aren't
equipped to handle a homicide."
"I 'magine that's the case. But Pop wasn't just
some small-town, gut-over-his-shirt hack sheriff. He'd been a homicide cop up
in Chicago and had a drawer full of awards."
"Most cops hang them on the wall."
"Dad never believed in skatin' on past
accomplishments. He probably wouldn't have even kept the commendations and
stuff if they hadn't meant a lot to maman. She'd always show them off to any of
her relatives who'd bad-mouth her Yankee husband. After a while, they just shut
up."
"Why, if he'd been working for a big force like
Chicago, would he want to give it all up and come live in this . . ."
"Backwater hick town?" he supplied.
"It seems it would be a step down.
Careerwise."
"Jake Callahan loved bein' a cop. Used to say he
was born to the job. But his family was the most important thing in his life.
Maman was homesick, and he figured Blue Bayou would be a nice safe place to
raise his children. But I don' think it could have been easy on him in the
beginning. From the stories he used to tell, he'd liked being a big-city cop,
and I think the jury stayed out for a long time among the people here as to
whether he was really going to try to fit in."
"Did he?"
"Mais yeah. He taught us boys that man was put on
earth to help out his fellow man and to be part of a community, and that bein'
a cop meant taking care of a community, and how organizing a youth baseball
league, or taking an elderly widow a hot meal, or changing a tire on a pregnant
young mother's car could all be, in their own way, just as helpful as rounding
up stone-cold killers."
"Your father sounds like a good man."
"My father was a great man."
Her gaze shifted from his face, out the window to
where the cobblestone streets wore a satiny sheen from an earlier rain and the
sunset looked like red-and-purple smoke against the western sky. "What was
the cause of death cited on the autopsy report?"
"Same as the death certificate," he hedged,
even though he knew she was about to find out the answer herself. "Carbon
monoxide poisoning."
She returned her gaze to him. "Was it listed as a
natural death?"
Nate could tell that she had a lot more invested emotionally
into the answer than she was letting on. He supposed cops, especially homicide
detectives, grew used to death, but he also knew firsthand that the death of a
parent was an entirely different thing. It was more personal. Even, he
suspected, if you were talking about a mother or father you'd never known.
Maybe Jack had been right; maybe he just should have left well enough alone and
tossed the damn file into the trash.
"Non. It wasn't natural."
"That leaves either suicide or murder."
Jesus, did the woman have ice water in her veins? The
only outward sign that he'd managed to score a direct hit was a quick blink of
the eye. A train whistle sounded at the crossing just outside town. "The
coroner opted for suicide."
Wishing that either of his brothers were around to
handle this, Nate reached into the top desk drawer where he'd stashed the file,
suspecting that, if nothing else, her cop curiosity would eventually make her
want to read it.
"Your father's not alone. Because I don't believe
it, either. I'm going to want to see the house where she died."
"Now, there's going to be a little problem with
that."
"Oh?"
"It got blown to pieces in a hurricane back in
the nineties, and the land where it used to sit is now water."
"It figures." She shook her head and frowned
as she read the top page with absolute concentration.
Nate was idly wondering if she'd give the same
attention to sex when a sound like a bomb going off shook the building.
Chapter Nine
What the hell?" He jerked his gaze from
those tempting, unpainted lips to the window. "That sounded too close to
be a rig explosion."
The oil rigs out in the Gulf had always been a hazard;
his maternal grandfather had died on one before any of the three Callahan boys
had been born. A cloud of smoke billowed over the top of the courthouse.
"Christ. It's coming from the tracks."
He turned back toward Regan. "You remember any
first aid from your patrol days?"
"I passed a disaster response test six weeks
ago."
"Good. Because we're gonna be needin' all the
help we can get." He opened a desk drawer and threw her a badge.
"I don't need that," she said, even as she
snagged the shiny sheriff's badge out of the air.
"Stuff like this tends to brings out the
lookie-loos and Good Samaritans. There are going to be a lot of people getting
in the way out there. This'll give you the authority to get rid of folks who
don't belong or can't be of any real help."
Again proving that he could move damn fast when the
occasion called for it, he was out the door like a shot, Regan right on his
heels. Without waiting to be invited, she jumped into the passenger seat of the
black SUV parked outside and pinned on the badge. It took them less than three
minutes to drive to the redbrick fire station where Blue Bayou's fire and
rescue department garaged its only pumper truck.
"There's not gonna be room for you in the
truck." He was yanking on a pair of tobacco brown fireproof pants that had
been folded down with tall rubber boots already inside them, so all he had to
do was step
into the boots and pull the pants up. "The keys
are in the SUV." He grabbed a heavy coat and helmet. "I'll meet you
out at the crossing."
Unlike the other narrow towns she'd driven past, which
she'd supposed had sprung up in long narrow strips to save valuable waterfront
land for crops, Blue Bayou had been laid out in grids. Sweeps of
sunshine-bright yellow daffodils brightened squares fenced in fancifully curved
wrought-iron fences, and trees lined the clean brick sidewalks. It appeared, as
Nate Callahan had described it, a peaceful town.
There was nothing peaceful about the scene at the rail
crossing. At least a dozen freight cars left a zigzagging trail along the muddy
banks of the bayou. Broken railroad ties were scattered along the track, the
metal rails shredded. On the far side of the track, a trailer from an
eighteen-wheeler was on its side; farther down the other trailer was crushed
and mangled, mute evidence that the semi had been hit trying to cross the
track. The cab was upside down, the roof resting inches from the edge of the
water; the glass lying on the ground had once been a windshield. It could have
been worse. A lot worse.
"Thank God it was a freight," Nate said.
Regan nodded in agreement, not even wanting to think
about the number of deaths and injuries there could have been if the railroad
cars had been carrying passengers.
"I thought my furnace had blowed up," she
heard one onlooker, who appeared to be at least in his eighties, say to another
man. "I heard a bunch of grinding and then boom," he said. "Ol'
Duke jumped clean off the gallerie and started barking." He pointed toward
an old hound dog who was sniffing the air.
One of the train cars had knocked a utility pole down;
its lines were tangled in a tall, moss-draped oak and sagged about ten feet
above the top of the truck's cab. Sparks were flying, and as tree limbs burned,
the lines drooped lower toward the cab.
"The driver's still in the truck," someone
shouted. "There's an arm hangin' out the window."
"Can you tell if he's alive?" a fireman,
whose helmet designated him as the fire chief, asked.
"He's not movin'."
"Christ," another fireman said.
"There's no way to get the poor sucker out."
"We can't just stand by and let him die,"
Nate said.
"Can't run onto an accident scene with downed
power lines, either," the chief said. "That's one of the first things
they teach you in fire school."
A pair of state troopers arrived, sirens blaring,
adding to the din. Walkie-talkies squawked. A crowd began to gather, as if to
watch a Hollywood crew film a disaster-of-the-week movie.
"He's gotta have family," Nate argued
doggedly, once again reminding Regan of his brother. Finn hadn't been one to
back down from an argument, either; not when there was a matter of principal
involved. "Mother, maybe. Wife. Kids." He pulled on his gloves.
"I'm going in."
"You realize, of course, that truck could catch
on fire any time," Regan said. Okay, so it was a pretty impressive
gesture; it was also foolhardy as hell.
"One more reason to get the guy out. But I've
probably got some time, since diesel fuel isn't as flammable as gasoline."
She knew that, but the knowledge didn't stop her from
holding her breath as he cautiously ducked beneath the sagging wires. An odd
hush came over the rescue workers as he dropped down on his belly and crawled
the last eight feet.
"Hey," a voice called out from inside the
cab. "We're trapped in here!"
Regan sucked in a sharp breath at the child's voice.
Watching carefully, she actually saw Nate's shoulders tense beneath the heavy
jacket.
"It's gonna be all right, cher," he said matter-of-factly,
as if train-truck collisions were an everyday occurrence in Blue Bayou. Metal
screeched as the dented truck cab shifted, tilting precariously closer to the
water.
"Shit, we're gonna drown!" the boy shouted.
"Don' you worry," Nate said again, his voice
as calm as it'd been when she'd first met him in the station. "We'll be
gettin' you out soon enough, you."
He yanked on the door. Nothing. "Shit, it's
stuck."
"Can't use the Hurst," the captain pointed
out. The Hurst, more commonly known as the Jaws of Life, could chew up metal
like taffy. "You try takin' that roof off, you'll hit those wires for
sure."
"How about goin' up from the floor?" another
asked.
Nate shook his head. "We're sittin' on marsh,
here. Even if we set it on blocks, they'd just sink into water. Then there's
the little matter of starting up the gas unit while diesel's leaking from the
tank."
He yanked again. Cursed again.
Nearby, another tree limb burst into flame as the
power surged. The wires drooped even lower, nearing the upturned wheels.
"Anyone got a tow strap?" Nate called.
"I got a cable I use for towing breakdowns in the
trunk of the cruiser," a trooper responded.
"That'll do. Go get it and bring it as close as
you can." Once again Regan heard him talking in a low, soothing voice to
the child inside the truck. "And Henri, why don't you back the ladder
truck as near as you can get without hittin' those wires?" Which were
currently lighting up the gathering twilight like Fourth of July sparklers.
"And can someone toss me—very carefully—a blanket?"
Without giving it a moment's thought, Regan grabbed an
army green blanket from a newly arrived ambulance and moved slowly, step by
step, toward the cab.
"That's far enough, chиre," he warned.
"If I throw it to you, it could hit the
wires."
"If you get any closer, those wires could turn
you into a crispy critter."
"Don't you watch TV? We cops get off on taking
risks."
Though her voice was as calm as if she were writing
out a speeding ticket, her nerves were jangling with adrenaline-
"That a fact?" Amazingly, his tone was as
conversational as hers.
"Absolutely." The overhead wires crackled
and sagged. Ignoring his warning, Regan bent lower until she was nearly
doubled, and continued inching toward the truck. "Why, a day without
danger is like a day without chocolate." Despite the chill, sweat was
beating up on her forehead and between her breasts.
"I never heard it put quite that way
before."
"Believe me, it's true." She shoved the
blanket toward him. "It's in our blood."
"Thanks." He carefully pushed the blanket
through the rectangular hole where the windshield used to be. "Hey,
kid."
"Yeah?" The boy's tone sounded remarkably
defiant, but Regan knew some people responded to fear with aggression.
"Put this over the driver as well as you can,
okay? Then hunker down beneath it, because we're gonna have some flying glass
in a minute."
Nate waited a moment for the boy to do as instructed.
Then he
shoved his gloved fingers through a hole in the
driver's side window and tore the glass away. By now the trooper had arrived
with the cable; the two men wrapped one end of it around the windshield post
and the other around the bumper of the fire truck, which began slowly moving
forward.
There was an ominous sound of groaning metal, and the
cab tilted a bit, as if it might pull right side up. Just when Regan thought
for sure they'd land in the water, the door broke off its hinges.
"Hey," Nate said, again to someone in the
truck. "Good to have you back with us. Is anything broken?" There was
a pause, then a mumbled response in a voice far deeper than the boy's.
"Bien. Now, here's what we're gonna do. You take
my arm and climb out of here, real careful like, so you don't rock the cab. And
I'll grab the kid."
A huge bearded man with the look of a renegade biker
appeared in the open door and half jumped, half fell from the cab. Regan
flinched inwardly when she heard the crack of a kneecap breaking, but the
driver didn't have any time to indulge his pain.
The wires let loose, draping over the cab like Spanish
moss just as Nate reached inside, grabbed the boy's denim jacket, and jerked
him from the truck. They'd no sooner rolled aside when the cab burst into
flames.
A collective cheer went up.
"Thanks, man," the grizzled driver groaned
as a paramedic slipped a C-collar around his neck and strapped him onto a
rolling half-backboard to protect his spine. "Weren't for you, my old
lady'd be puttin' plastic flowers on my grave."
"Jus' doin' my job, cher," Nate said
agreeably. "Wouldn't want you to get a bad impression of our little
town." He put the boy onto his feet. "We'll be taking you into the
hospital, too. just to make sure."
Freckles were standing out like copper coins all over
the kid's pale, thin face, but his brown eyes, as he folded his arms, were
resolute. "Fuck that. I'm fine."
"Sure you are," Nate said in that mild,
deceptively laid-back tone. "Problem is, I've heard of folks saying the
same thing at accidents, then passing out without any warning. Wouldn't want to
take a chance on you falling into the water and becoming gator bait."
"I'm not scared of any damn gators."
Regan wasn't sure if he was exaggerating or not. But
having watched a special on alligators on the Nature Channel, she was uneasy
about putting it to the test. Gangbangers she could handle, drug dealers she
knew. But there weren't a lot of man-eating reptiles in the normally dry Los
Angeles River.
"This your kid?" a paramedic asked the truck
driver.
"I just picked him up." He looked decidedly
defensive. Regan hoped it was only because he was worried about having violated
the No Riders sign. "No law against giving people a ride. 'Specially when
it's cold enough to freeze a well digger's ass and getting dark, besides."
"You have to wonder why a grown man was traveling
with a child who isn't his own," Regan murmured,
"I was already there." Nate's serious
expression revealed he shared her concern. He might not be a cop, and Blue
Bayou might look like Louisiana's version of Mayberry, but obviously he'd
picked up some sense of the dark side of the world from his brothers' work.
"If I were you, I'd have one of my deputies
question him."
"Great minds think alike. Fortunately, I've got
an officer capable of doing a bang-up job." He put his hand on her back in
a possessive, masculine way that annoyed her. "Since the fog's really
startin' to roll in and you don't know the way to the hospital, I'll drive you
there."
She shook off the light touch. "Me?"
"You're the most qualified member of the
force."
"Force? What force? This isn't my
jurisdiction."
"Sure it is. I deputized you."
"Dammit, Callahan, this isn't the Wild West. You
can't just put badges on people and make them part of your posse."
"I can, and I did." His expression sobered.
"This needs to be done right. There's no way I'm going to put Dwayne on it.
As for Henri, he's always tried real hard and done a good enough job, but Blue
Bayou doesn't present a lot of opportunities to use real police skills, so even
if he ever possessed any, they'd be real rusty about now."
"I didn't come to Louisiana to apply for a job. 1
already have one back in L.A."
"Where I'll bet you take protectin' kids real
seriously." His gaze moved to the young teenager being loaded into the
back of the ambulance.
Regan counted to ten. Reminded herself that she'd
sworn to protect and to serve. Her professional duty might stop once she went
outside her precinct boundaries, but her moral responsibility was an entirely
different thing.
"Dammit." She folded her arms even as she
felt herself caving. "That's not fair."
"Life's not always fair, detective."
"Tell me something I don't know." She had
proof of that every day, even before she hit the streets looking for the bad
guys. All she had to do was get out of the shower and stand naked in front of a
full-length mirror.
"How about I make you a deal?"
"What kind of deal?"
"You help me out with this one little thing, and
I'll do all I can to help you find out the facts about Linda Dale's
death."
"A thirty-one-year-old case is about as cold as
they get. What makes you think you can find anything out when your father
couldn't?"
"He'd probably have had better luck if your aunt
hadn't disappeared." Your aunt. Even after she had read the journal over
and over again, those words still rang so false. The ambulance pulled away from
the scene, lights flashing, siren wailing.
"Besides, I've lived here all my life, me,"
he said, his Cajun syntax backing up his words. "I know everyone in the
parish, which'll come in handy, since folks around here aren't real eager to
answer questions from strangers."
"Small-town paranoia," she muttered.
"There you go, jumpin' to conclusions again. We
tend to think of it as mindin' our own business. Now, I can understand why you
won't do it for me, or even because, being an independent woman, you don't want
any help digging up the truth 'bout your maman's death. But I'm having a real
hard time believing that cop who just risked her life for a kid won't want to
do whatever she can to find out why that kid isn't sitting at home playing
video games like he should be."
It was emotional blackmail, pure and simple. It also
worked. "You really are shameless."
"You're not the first person to tell me that,
sugar. But that's not the point here. That boy's puttin' on a good enough show,
but beneath the surface, he reminds me of a whupped pup. I'd put hard money on
the fact that he had a pretty good reason for running away."
"Hell. All right." She blew out a breath.
"I'll do it."
"Merci bien."
They drove together through the night, the headlights
bouncing back against a dense wall of fog that surrounded the SUV, cutting them
off from the outside world. Regan was grateful he was driving; she wasn't sure
she could have told road from water.
"I suppose, having grown up here, you know your
way around." She certainly hoped he did. She was in no mood for a
moonlight swim.
"Mais yeah, though it's always changing." He
leaned forward and punched on the radio, which was tuned to a station playing
what seemed to be a sad song in French. "What was water yesterday could be
land today. And vice versa."
"Then how do you know for certain where you're
going?"
"Never gave it any thought." He seemed to
now. "Guess it's just instinct. Like a homing pigeon returning to his
loft. Once the bayou gets in your blood, I don't think you could ever get it
out. Even if you wanted to."
"Which you don't."
"Non. Roots sink deep here. Sometimes I think
'bout taking off and exploring the world, but the truth is, mostly I'm pretty
satisfied doing what I'm doin', where I'm doin' it."
Regan wondered how it would feel to be so at ease with
yourself. So comfortable with your world and your place in it. As long as she
could remember, she'd always pushed herself harder and harder, trying to please
a mother who'd always been incapable of being pleased.
The police shrink she'd gone to, a bearded guy who
seemed to be doing his best to look like Freud's twin—which made her wonder
about his own identity problems—had suggested that it wasn't the ambush or the
resultant injuries and lengthy recovery that had left her feeling constantly
edgy and unable to sleep.
She was, he'd diagnosed, suffering from the impossible
need to prove her worth not only to her remote, perfectionist mother, but also
to the larger-than-life father she'd never known. The man who'd died a hero's
death in a jungle halfway around the world.
"Which is, of course," the Freud wannabe had
added, "impossible."
Perhaps. On one level, Regan understood that. She had,
after all, minored in psychology in college. But on a deeper, more
intrinsically personal level, she couldn't stop trying.
"That was a remarkable thing you did," she
murmured. "Going in under those high-voltage wires."
"I wasn't alone. You were right there with
me."
"Like 1 said, it's my job. Cops get paid to do
stuff like that. I wouldn't think risking your life came under the job
description of mayor."
He shrugged. "I wouldn't be able to live with
myself if I hadn't tried to get him out of there. I lost my dad when I was
twelve. The trucker's kids are going to have theirs. That's all that
counts."
"It was still a brave thing to do."
The grin he flashed her was quick and devastating. And
dangerous. His eyes, surrounded by soot and dirt, gleamed in the glow from the
dashboard like the blue lights atop a police cruiser. "Don' tell me you
just found something about me you can approve of?"
"Don't let it go to your head."
"I wouldn't think of it." They'd driven in
silence for about five more minutes when he said, "You're probably used to
all that."
"Guys with big heads?"
"No. Well, maybe you run into them from time to
time, bein' how you live in L.A. But I was talking about wrecks, flashing
lights, sirens. Injuries. Death."
"Detectives don't, as a rule, handle car wrecks
unless there's evidence of a homicide." She'd thought about death, though.
A lot. Her first week on the job, she'd spent hours on the phone after a shift
trying to find a shelter and counseling for a woman who'd called 911 for a
domestic abuse, then refused, despite two black eyes and a missing tooth, to
press charges against her husband. A veteran cop had warned her against
becoming too emotionally involved.
"Gotta hold back, Hart," he'd growled around
a Reuben sandwich dripping sauerkraut. "The taxpayers of L.A. aren't
paying you to hold people's hands and play counselor. If you want to be a
social worker, then turn in your sidearm and go for it, because you're not
going to be able to keep a cool head and maintain the judgment needed to do
this job if you're too damn sensitive."
Easy for him to say. One of the reasons she'd gone
into homicide was because she'd figured that if she switched to dealing with
bodies, she'd be able to distance herself emotionally from her work. She'd been
wrong. The dead often spoke a lot louder than the living. And they didn't stop
just because she'd gone to sleep.
"I don't think anyone ever gets used to
death." She wouldn't want to.
"Yeah." He pulled up in front of a redbrick
building. "I read that in Jack's last book."
"That happens to be a yellow line you're parking
by."
"I know." He cut the engine, pocketed the
keys, took a placard reading "On Duty" from the center console, and
tossed it onto the dash. She'd done it herself numerous times. Still . . .
"And the sign says it's reserved for police
vehicles." At least he hadn't parked in the red ambulance zone.
"Then we're in luck, bein' how we're the
police," he said reasonably. "At least one half of us is. The other
half's fire, so I'd guess we have a right to park just 'bout anywhere we
like."
"So how many tickets did you get before you were
elected and able to award yourself the privilege of political office?" she
asked as she climbed out of the SUV.
"I still get 'em. Blue Bayou runs on too tight a
budget to let parking infractions slide." He opened the center console to
reveal stacks of yellow slips of paper. "I save 'em up and pay 'em every
month or so."
"Wouldn't it be simpler—and cheaper—to just park
legally?"
"I suppose it would be. But just think of all the
revenue the town'd be missing."
He'd placed his hand on her back again, in that casual
way that suggested he was a toucher. Yet another way he was different from his
brother; Finn had kept a privacy zone the size of Jupiter around himself. Regan
suspected his new bride must really be something to have gotten past that man's
emotional barricades.
"Besides, writing out tickets gives Dwayne
something constructive to do during the slow times. He's one of our two
deputies. Graduated from LSU last summer with a degree in criminal justice, and
I think we're coming as a big disappointment. Sometimes I feel like I oughta
pay some kids to go out and bash in mailboxes just so he'll have a crime to
investigate."
If it were anyone else, Regan might have taken his
words as a joke. Since she hadn't yet been able to get a handle on Nate
Callahan, she wasn't at all certain he was kidding.
Chapter Ten
The door whooshed open automatically. The smell of
disinfectant, blood, and stress sweat was like a fist in the stomach.
Regan hated hospitals. After her accident, when she'd
been extricated from the crumbled mass of metal that had once been her police
cruiser, she'd spent two weeks in ICU, another month on the surgical recovery
floor, and weeks and weeks over the next two years undergoing reconstructive
surgery and rehabilitation.
"You okay, chиre?"
She hadn't realized she'd stopped walking until he'd
turned around. "Of course." She had to remain calm. To think like a
cop, instead of a victim. "Why wouldn't I be?"
"Now see, that's what I don' know." He laced
their fingers together and skimmed his thumb against her palm. "Your
hand's like ice."
"Because I'm freezing." She tugged her hand
free. "1 thought Louisiana was supposed to be warm."
"We have ourselves some cold spells in winter.
It's the moisture that makes it seem colder than it really is; it seeps down
deep into your bones." He brushed the back of his fingers up her cheek.
"That's good."
"What?" She hated to keep backing away from
him, but holding her ground would mean staying in too close proximity.
"Your color's comin' back. You were pale as
Lafitte's ghost a minute ago."
"I was not," she lied. She'd felt the blood
going out of her face as she'd gone light-headed. "I'd really like it if
you'd keep your hands to yourself, Callahan."
"That's not gonna be easy, but I'll try my
best."
"You do that." She resumed walking.
"Who's Lafitte?"
"One of our more colorful citizens. A pirate.
I'll tell you about him later, over supper."
"I ate at the airport." She hadn't wanted to
waste precious time; the fast-food burger she'd eaten in the terminal sat like
a rock in her stomach.
"It's a good story. You'll enjoy it."
The little exchange had given her time to adjust to
being back in an ER. Her legs were much steadier as she walked toward a counter
where a woman sporting an enormous orange beehive was chewing on the end of a
pencil.
"Hey, handsome," the receptionist greeted Nate
as they approached, "what's an eleven-letter word for 'having
magnetism'?"
"Callahan," he answered without missing a
beat.
She counted on fingers tipped in metallic purple.
"Not that I'm arguing your point, cher. But that's only eight
letters."
"Charismatic," Regan said.
The woman filled in the crossword puzzle squares.
"That's sure enough it. Bien merci."
"1 see the ambulance arrived," Nate said.
"It did. Truck driver's down the hall in X-ray. I
figured somebody'd be wanting to talk with him, so I told the tech to take her
time, so he wouldn't be able to take off for a while. Not that I imagine he'd
make it far, with his truck wrecked and his leg broken the way it is. The
bone's sticking clear through the skin. Must hurt like the devil."
It did, Regan thought, but did not say. A hideous
memory of hearing the snap of bone flashed through her mind. "How about
the boy?"
"He's in treatment room A. Lucky thing Tiny
Dupree was mopping the floors when the ambulance showed up. He practically had
to sit on the kid to keep him from leaving."
"Tiny's the Cajun Days crawfish-eating
champion," Nate told Regan. "Probably weighs three-eighty soaking
wet. So, the kid's okay?"
"He got himself some bruising across his ribs
from the seat belt yanking tight, and a cut on his head, but that's all that
showed up when he first came in. That's new, anyway."
"He has old wounds?" Regan asked sharply.
"Mais oui. He's got some old white scars that
look real suspicious, if you ask me. Dr. Ancelet should be finishing up a more
thorough examination any time now."
Regan wasn't surprised by any suspicious scars. Happy,
well-cared-for children did not run away from home.
"We'd like to talk with Eve when she's done
checking him over," Nate said.
"Sure 'nough." Her interested gaze settled
on the badge Regan was still wearing. "So, cher," she said,
addressing her words to Nate, "I see you've finally hired us a new
sheriff."
"I'm. not the new sheriff." Try as she
might, it was difficult not to stare at the woman's blinking red crawfish
earrings.
"You're wearing a badge."
"That's just temporary, so I could help out at
the train wreck."
"Terrible thing, that. If God hadn't had them in
his hands ..." The beehive bobbled a bit as she shook her head. "One
thing medicine's taught me is that sometimes you're blessed with a
miracle."
"Orиlia's husband was Blue Bayou's doctor just
about forever," Nate explained, then introduced them fully.
The woman looked at her more closely through the
rose-tinted lenses of the cat-eyed rhinestone-framed glasses. "1 seem to
recall my husband treating a little girl named Regan. It was a long time
ago."
"Was he the only doctor in town?" She
wondered if he'd signed Linda Dale's death certificate.
"Non. There was a new doctor, came here to work
off his medical school bills through some sort of government program. He was a
Yankee, from New York City, I think. Mebee Boston. Or Philadelphia. One of
those northern cities. He just stayed a couple years." She nodded to
herself. "He worked here at the hospital and picked up some extra money
working as the parish medical examiner."
Which meant, Regan thought, that he would have been
the one who wrote that death certificate.
"My Leon passed on two years ago," the woman
continued, "leaving me to rattle around in our big old house where he used
to have his office. For a while it wasn't too bad, what with Dani and her son
Matt living with me."
"Dani's married to Jack," Nate filled in.
"And about time they finally got together,
too," she said. "Well, like I was saying, Dani and Matt lived with me
a while when they first came back to town, then when she moved out to live
above the library for a time before marryin' Jack, her papa moved in so I could
sort of keep an eye on him, bein' as how he has himself a heart condition. But
he's back to work three days a week, which left me with too much time on my
hands. I was going crazy, me, until Nate saved my life by fixing me up with
this volunteer job."
"Orиlia exaggerates," Nate said.
"And the boy's too humble."
Regan couldn't help snorting at that.
"So, what do you do when you're not rescuing
children from train wrecks?"
"I'm a detective, in LA."
"Are you, now? Isn't that interesting?" Her
appraising gaze shifted from Regan to a woman wearing dark glasses, who'd just
come out of the swinging doors from the treatment rooms. "If this fille really isn't going to be the new sheriff, you need to send Dwayne down to the
No Name and pick up Mike Chauvet," Orиlia told Nate.
"Does it have something to do with Shannon bein'
here ?"
"She says she ran into a door." It was Orиlia's
turn to snort. "But this is the second time in the past ten days she's
shown up in the ER. The first time she had a cracked rib. Claimed she fell off
her horse, and bein' as how she was sticking to the story and the injury
matched the excuse, Eve Ancelet couldn't do much for her, 'cepting give her a
referral card to the free counseling clinic."
"Do you know if she went?"
"She did. Which didn't go over real well with
Mike when he found out she was talking about their so-called private family
stuff."
"Shit. Mike always was a goddamn hothead." A
temper Regan wouldn't have thought him possible of possessing licked at the
edges of Nate's voice.
"And as useless as tits on a bull," Orиlia
said. "Lord knows what Shannon was thinkin' when she married him. She can
sure do a lot better than that, she."
"Would you mind jus' waiting here a minute?"
Nate asked Regan. "While I take care of something?"
"Sure."
Regan watched as he went over to the woman and said
something she couldn't hear. He pulled off her sunglasses, the same way he'd
done to Regan at the airport, and shook his head at the ugly dark bruise
surrounding an eye red-rimmed from crying.
Regan had seen it all too often as a beat cop: a
battered wife seeks medical care, maybe goes so far as to kick her abuser out
of the house.
Occasionally she'd get brave enough to call the cops.
But more times than she cared to count, the woman would inevitably end up
taking the guy back. And the cycle of pain would begin all over again,
inevitably spiraling downward, until in the worst cases, Regan would end up at
the house investigating a homicide.
Obviously something Nate said struck a chord. The
woman slapped him. Hard. Then, wrapping her arms around herself, she turned
away.
"Anybody can talk her into escapin' a dangerous
marriage, it's that boy," Oretia, who was also watching the little drama,
said. "Not many people can resist Nate Callahan once he gets an idea into
his head."
"I've noticed. They seem close."
"They went together for a while in college. Back
when Nate was playin' ball for Tulane. They were Blue Bayou's golden couple:
the local boy headed toward a pro baseball career and the pretty, sweet prom
queen who'd always wanted to be a first-grade teacher."
"Nate Callahan played professional
baseball?" Not that she cared, but it did explain the easy, fluid way he
moved. She was not the least bit surprised to learn he'd dated a prom queen.
She suspected there were a great many cheerleaders and beauty contestants in
the man's past.
"Played all the sports, he, but the big thing was
his baseball scholarship. College recruiters were buzzin' around this place
like bees to a honeycomb his senior year of high school. Like to drive his
maman crazy. A lot of people who know a lot more than me about sports said he was
a phenom—that's like a natural, but better, so they tell me— but then he ended
up havin' to come home his freshman year."
Huh—he'd undoubtedly flunked out after too many frat
parties.
Nate took the former prom queen in his arms; she threw
her arms around his neck and clung. He held her tight for a long, silent
minute, then curved his hands over her shoulders and put her a little away from
him. His expression was warm and caring, but determined.
Shannon Chauvet blinked against the tears that had
begun streaming down her face. Bit her lip. Then nodded.
Regan saw not a hint of seduction in his smile as he
skimmed a knuckle up one of her badly bruised cheekbones, then dropped a quick
kiss on her lips.
"Call Jack," he said to Orиlia when he
returned to the counter. "Ask him to come get Shannon so she and Ben can
stay at Beau Soleil for a while. Then call the state police and ask for Trooper
Benoit. Tell him you're calling for me, explain the situation, and tell him
that I'm claiming that favor he owes me."
"Good idea." She reached for the phone.
"Harboring abused wives can be dangerous,"
Regan said. Violent husbands were often at their most volatile when the women
finally got up the nerve to leave. "Shouldn't you have asked your brother
if he wanted to take her in?"
"Jack won't mind. He and Shannon had a little bit
of a thing back when they were kids, before Jack fell heart over heels for
Dani. They stayed friends."
Both brothers had dated her? "Definitely a
friendly town you have here," she said dryly.
"I told you it was," he reminded her,
ignoring the dash of sarcasm.
"Jack may not mind, but what about his wife?
Surely she won't feel comfortable with one of his ex-girlfriends sleeping in
her house."
"Dani's got a heart as big as all outdoors,"
Orиlia offered.
"The important thing is to get her somewhere safe
before she gets seriously hurt, or Ben, her fifteen-year-old son, gets hurt
trying to protect her. Besides, Jack's thing for Shannon ended long before he
and Dani hooked up," Nate said. "Since he gave his heart to Dani,
he's become a born-again monogamist. She doesn't have anything to worry
about."
"It looks as if you and Shannon stayed real good
friends after your thing, too."
His eyes filled with humor. "Aren't you supposed
to read me my rights about anything I say being used against me before you ask
a leading question like that, detective?"
"Skip it." Disgusted with herself for
asking, Regan gave him a withering look. "It's not germane to the
situation."
"Germane." He chuckled and rocked back on
his heels. "Damned if you aren't reminding me more and more of Finn, which
tends to get a little distracting, since you sure smell a whole lot
better."
He skimmed a finger down her nose.
"I believe we were talking about your brother
Jack." That treacherous finger was now trailing around the line of her
jaw. She batted at his hand. "And would you please stop touching me."
"Sorry. You had a little smudge of dirt on your
face." He dipped his hands into the back pockets of his jeans. "And
touchin' is jus' one of those natural things I do without thinking. Most women
don't seem to mind."
"Maybe they just don't tell you they don't like
it."
"Maybe." He considered that possibility.
"But I don't think so. Women down here might have a reputation north of
the Mason-Dixon line for being too accommodating, and I suppose, on occasion,
some might be. But I've never met one yet who won't let a man know when she's
not happy. We southern men are very well trained."
"What a sterling testimony to southern womanhood.
Scarlett O'Hara would be so pleased."
"You've got a sassy mouth on you, Detective
Delectable. Good thing I always preferred Scarlett over Melanie. As for Jack,
the trick is going to be keeping him from cleaning Mike's clock for laying
hands on Shannon. Which is why I'm having a state cop come make the
arrest."
"That sounds like a sensible decision."
"Why, thank you, darlin'. I do have my
moments."
The doors to the ER swung open again, and a slender
woman wearing a white lab coat came out. She greeted Nate warmly, then drew
back and looked at Regan. "I'm Dr. Eve Ancelet. I hear we have you and
Nate to thank for saving that little boy's life."
"It's good to meet you. I'm Regan Hart, and I'm
just glad I was able to help out."
"As am I." Friendly, intelligent eyes
drifted to the badge. "Looks as if Nate's found the perfect person to be
our new sheriff."
"I'm not the new sheriff."
"Detective Hart keeps telltn' me that she's going
back to L.A. after she gets some personal business taken care of," Nate
said. "I'm hoping to change her mind."
"Blue Bayou would be quite a change from Los
Angeles." The doctor's gaze turned professional, and Regan knew her expert
eye was taking in the faint tracing of scars.
"I suppose it would be," Regan replied
equably.
"How's the kid doin'?" Nate asked.
"Fairly well, considering what he's been through.
He's a little underweight, but I have no way of knowing whether or not that's a
longtime problem, or something that's occurred recently during his time on the
road."
"Did he tell you how long that's been?" Nate
asked.
"He's claiming he doesn't remember anything prior
to the accident, which could be valid, since retrograde amnesia certainly isn't
unheard of after a blow to the head or even some traumatic incidents. But it's
my guess he's attempting to avoid getting sent back home."
"Did the exam show any sign of abuse?" Regan
asked.
"Several, actually."
Every muscle in Regan's body tensed. "What
kind?"
"Small white circular scars over his back and
chest."
Unfortunately, Regan had seen those before.
"Cigarette burns."
The doctor nodded.
"Christ," Nate breathed, "that's out
and out torture. What kind of person would do anything like that to a
kid?"
"A monster," Regan said grimly. "What
else?" she asked the doctor.
"Some longer, narrower scars across his buttocks.
I'd say they'd been made with a belt or some sort of strap."
Nate looked as sick as Regan felt. All these years on
the job but she'd never get used to the idea of anyone purposefully harming a
child.
"What about sexual abuse?"
"There were no physical signs."
"Well, that's good news," Nate said.
"Not all abuse leaves evidence," Regan
pointed out. Personally, she didn't have a very optimistic view in this case.
"True," Doctor Ancelet agreed. "And
he's so closemouthed, it's hard to tell what he's running from. But he claimed
all the truck driver did was give him a ride. I spoke with the driver, who
didn't appear to fit any profile."
"Do you have experience with abuse
profiling?"
"Actually, I do. Before I went into family
practice, I was in a residency program specializing in the treatment of both
abused children and their abusers, who, with the exception of sexual abuse, are
often merely people who never learned parenting skills."
"Even if the driver's not a pedophile, he's still
guilty of breaking regulations against taking on passengers," Regan
insisted. "He could also possibly be charged with criminal recklessness at
the crossing."
"The troopers are handling that, since the
accident was on a state highway," Nate said. "The state cops will
probably also question him about the kid. But meanwhile, we don't even know the
accident was his fault. It was awfully foggy."
"I heard the whistle from your office. He should
have heard it from the tracks."
"Maybe he made a major mistake. But you've got to
give the guy credit for being a Good Samaritan by picking up the kid. What was
he supposed to do, leave the boy alone out there and freezing?"
"He had to know he was a runaway," Regan
argued doggedly. "He should have called the cops." She turned back to
Eve. "1 don't suppose the kid told you where he's from, either."
"No." The doctor shook her head. "I'm
afraid his so-called amnesia struck again. I have a call in to the Department
of Social Services. Hopefully once they get him temporarily settled somewhere,
he might begin to open up."
When they entered the treatment room, the teen was
sitting atop the metal examining table, clad in threadbare jeans and an OutKast
rapper T-shirt. A huge man wearing navy blue coveralls and a custodian's name
tag stood at the doorway, arms like tree trunks folded across his mighty chest.
His speckled face, which appeared perpetually sunburned, was set in a
forbidding scowl. Regan doubted many people would want to test him.
"How are you doing?" Regan asked the
teenager after Nate had introduced her to the misnamed Tiny Dupree.
"Fine. Or I will be when I get the hell out of
here."
"Hospitals aren't the most fun places," she
agreed. "Just tell us where you're from, and we'll call and have someone
come get you. You can be back home by morning."
His face and eyes hardened. "I already told the
doc I don't remember."
"Well, I'm sure we'll be able to help you with
that," she reassured him in her best Good Cop voice. "Have you ever
heard of NOMEC?"
Those hard young eyes narrowed suspiciously.
"No."
"It stands for the National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children. It lists every child reported missing in America. I'm
sure it won't take any time at all to find out who you are."
He met her mild look with a level one of his own.
She'd seen that expression on the faces of kids who'd grown up in dangerous,
violent homes. He wasn't the least hit afraid of the badge she'd pinned to her
shirt. In fact, he seemed to be daring her to do her best.
"Cool 'Cause it's a real bitch not knowing who I
am."
"Well now," Nate entered the conversation.
"I've got myself an idea. How 'bout you and me go get a bite of supper? I
haven't eaten since noon, and after all that happened out at the crash site,
I've got a powerful hunger."
"May I speak with you out in the hall,
mayor?" Regan asked on a frosty tone.
"Sure." He squeezed the kid's too-thin
shoulder. "We'll be right back."
"Like I care."
Regan turned on Nate the moment they left the room.
"You dragged me into this, Callahan. So would you care to explain why you
felt the need to interrupt my questioning?"
"I thought he might find it easier to talk to
me."
"Because you're a man? I'm not surprised you'd
take a chauvinistic view of the problem."
"1 wasn't thinking about the man/woman
thing." When his finger skimmed over the badge she'd yet to take off,
Regan could have sworn the metal heated. "Given his situation, he might
not feel all that comfortable with a police officer."
They were wasting time. As relieved as she was that
they'd been able to get the driver and kid out of the truck, she hadn't come
here to take part in any rescue operation. She certainly hadn't wanted to get
involved with an uncooperative runaway. What she wanted, dammit, was to find
out some facts about the woman who could very well be her birth mother.
Unfortunately, until this situation was taken care of,
she wasn't going to have Nate Callahan's help. Only a few hours ago she
wouldn't have thought she'd needed it, but having watched him in action, she
realized that he could be an asset. Not only did he seem to know everyone in
town, he also possessed some sort of aura, as if he was sending out
brain-altering vibes that made everyone do exactly what he wanted.
No wonder he'd been elected mayor. Regan was just
grateful he'd chosen to use that personality trait for politics, because if
he'd decided to be a con man, he probably would have been a crackerjack one.
"Well?" Nate asked.
"You’ve got a point," she allowed. "But
if he starts saying anything that could implicate anyone in a crime—"
"I promise I'll shut my mouth and save any
further questioning for you so I don't mess up a court case."
It wasn't a bad solution. And right now it was the
best they had. "Okay. Then let's get this show on the road."
She still didn't quite trust Nate Callahan, but didn't
see that she had much choice. The thought of Dwayne the parking-ticket-writer
tackling such sensitive questioning wasn't at all appealing.
Chapter Eleven
The cafeteria was small and designed to cater more to
staff than to family members of patients. Since it was past visiting hours,
most of the Formica tables were empty. Someone was making French fries. The
smell made Josh's mouth water.
The guy who'd dragged him out of the truck handed him
a tray, then picked one up for himself. "You ever have crawfish иtouffиe?"
"Hell, no. Crawfish look like bugs. Who'd want to
eat a bug?"
"They may not be real pretty. And you're right
about them looking kinda buglike, which I guess is how they got the name mud
bugs. But they sure taste good."
"I'd rather have a burger." His stomach
growled at the thought of a huge hunk of ground beef dripping with mayo.
"One burger, coming up," the woman wearing a
hair net and white apron standing behind the open pans of food said. "What
you want on that, cher?"
"Everything."
"You know," Nate said, "I think I'll have
a burger, too. But hold the onions." He shot Josh a grin. "Never know
when you might have the chance to kiss a pretty girl."
"Like that cop?"
"Detective Hart?"
"Yeah. You got something going with the bitch?
Like are you shacked up together or something?"
"Contrary to what you may hear on the radio these
days, life's not a rap song," Nate said mildly. "Why don't you try
calling her a lady?"
"What kinda lady packs heat?"
"An interesting one. And we're not shacked up
together or anything. What gave you the idea that we were?"
"Don't know." He shrugged, wishing he hadn't
brought it up. "She's kind of okay looking. For a cop."
"She's real pretty, cop or not. And she smells
good, too."
She did. But not like she'd bathed in some too-sweet
stink oil, like Josh's mother's old hooker pals. He looked around. This place
wasn't exactly Mickey D's, but it was sure a lot better than some of the places
he'd been eating in lately. Hell, back home if you turned your back on a
bologna sandwich long enough to get a can of Dr Pepper out of the refrigerator,
the roaches would carry it away.
"That sure was some wreck," Nate said
conversationally. "Lucky thing nobody got hurt too bad."
"Yeah." Although he couldn't admit it, he
was grateful to the guy for having saved him. Not that he was sure he deserved
saving.
When he'd been younger and a lot smaller, his mother
had gotten arrested for drug dealing and he'd been sent to live with his
grandmother, who had never let alcoholism get in the way of her old-time
fire-and-brimstone religion. She used to beat him with a leather strap, trying
to knock the devil out of him, and although Josh didn't really believe in God
or the devil or heaven and hell, deep down inside, he wondered if maybe the
reason no one had ever wanted him was because he'd been born bad.
He tried to think of one person he knew who'd risk his
life for strangers and was coming up with a big fat zero when the woman slapped
a white plate onto the tray. The burger had been piled high with lettuce,
tomato slices, and onion.
"Fixin's are on the table," she said.
"You want fries with that, cher?"
"Sure he does," Nate answered for him.
"And dessert."
"We got rice custard or molasses pecan pie."
"Got any vanilla ice cream for the pie?"
Nate asked.
Her gaze flicked over Josh in a measuring way he'd
come to recognize. "I suppose I can round some up. You gonna want whipped
cream on the custard?"
"Darlin', you read my mind. We'll take both for
the jeune homme, here, and I'll take the custard and some coffee."
"I don't want any of that rice crap," Josh
said.
"Is that any way for a risk taker to talk?"
Nate asked. "Joe, the cook, isn't quite up to my maman's standard—she made
a riz au lait that could make the angels sing—but his comes pretty damn
close. Antoine's, up in N'Awlins, tried to hire him away last year, hut his
wife is a nurse up in ICU and neither of them was all that eager to leave Blue
Bayou, after havin' lived their whole lives here, so we were lucky to keep
him."
"They've always lived in one place?"
"Sure. Mos' folks around here were born on the
bayou."
Josh figured that counting the foster homes and two
residential treatment homes, he'd probably moved twenty times in his fourteen
years. Everytime those envelopes with the flourescent red Overdue stickers
would start coming in, his mother would pack up their stuff and they'd take off
in the middle of the night. The last time his backpack had gotten left behind,
along with class records from three previous schools, which always made it
tough to enroll in a new one.
Not that his mother had cared if he showed up in
class, but he did. Not only was school an escape, so long as he could survive
the inevitable challenges from the bullies; the classroom was the only place
he'd ever felt safe. And in charge of his own life.
"Okay," he said when he realized they were
both looking at him, waiting for an answer. "What the fuck. I'll try
it."
"Good choice," the woman said with a nod.
"Maybe I should get you some soap, too. So you can wash out that potty
mouth."
"She's got a point," Nate said as she
retrieved their desserts.
"Excuse me, your Heinass."
"Cute." They carried their trays to a round
table in the far corner of the room. The better, Josh figured, to conduct the
interrogation.
Nate picked up a small bottle of red sauce and doused
his fries and burger. "Want some peppers?"
"On French fries?" Josh reached for the
catsup.
"Pepper juice goes on jus' about anything. You
haven't tasted fried eggs till you've had them with Tabasco. We grow the
peppers right outside Blue Bayou. Most kids grow up eating it as soon as they
graduate off their maman's milk. Guess you're not used to that."
"No."
"So that'd mean you're not from around
here."
The burger was halfway to his mouth. Although it was
one of the hardest things he'd ever done, nearly as hard as spending the past month
on the run, Josh lowered it to the plate. "Did you bring me down here to
feed me? Or pump me for that effing cop?"
"A little of both. But since you're on to me, how
about we skip the questions till after supper?"
They ate in silence, the boy wolfing the food down as
if he'd been starving for days. Which, Nate figured, could well be the case.
"You know," he suggested after a while,
"Detective Hart is only trying to help."
"She's a cop."
"So?"
"So all she cares about is making busts and
taking bribes."
"That's quite a negative viewpoint you've got
goin' there. Did you pick it up on the streets? Or from someone you know? Like,
maybe, your dad?"
"I never had a dad."
His face grew hard, once again reminding Nate of his
brother. Jack had prided himself on being the hellion of Blue Bayou. The truth
was, he'd just been hurting so bad, he hadn't known any other way to deal with
his anger. Nate had been mad, too, but at twelve he'd been a lot more afraid of
Finn than Jack was.
Besides, although no one would have ever said it out
loud, as the baby of the family, Nate had been their maman's favorite. Which
was why it'd fallen to him to try to ease her hurt after that terrible day that
was scorched into his memory.
"That must be tough. I lost my dad when I was
twelve. About your age."
"He take off?"
The kid didn't agree about the age thing, nor did he
correct him. So much for that ploy. "No. He passed on. But at least I got
to know him for a little while."
"Yeah, some guys get all the luck." Ignoring
the big red-and-white No Smoking sign just a few feet away, the teen reached
into a pocket and took out a book of matches. "You got a cigarette?"
"No. Besides, this is a nonsmoking building, and
you're too young to smoke."
"Am not. I'm just small for my age."
"Won't get a whole lot bigger if you smoke,"
Nate said. "And die of lung cancer by the time you're in your
forties."
"Everyone's going to die of something."
"True enough. But me, I'd rather drop dead after
makin' love to a jolie fille rather than go bald from chemo and hacking my
lungs out."
"Is that how your dad died?"
"No. He was shot and killed by some crazy,
mad-as-a-hornet swamp dweller tryin' to murder a judge." Nate sighed at
the memory. "He was as big and strong as ever at breakfast, when he lit
into me for getting caught up in a ball game and forgettin' to mow the lawn the
day before. By lunch he was lying on the courthouse floor, bleeding to
death."
"That sucks."
"Yeah."
A silence settled over them.
"Did it make you mad?"
"Mais yeah. I used to lie in bed at night and
imagine going down to the jail with his service revolver—he was sheriff of Blue
Bayou— and blowing the guy away. But my maman was real torn up about losing
him, so I didn't want to make things worse for her by getting myself sent away
to prison. 'Sides, like we say in bouree, you gotta play the cards you're
dealt."
"What if you're playing against a stacked
deck?"
Nate suspected the kid had been born with the cards
stacked against him. "I don't know," he said honestly.
"You damn bet you don't. Like I said, some guys
get all the luck." This time the silence lengthened. Grew deeper. "I
don't even know who my dad was."
"That's gotta be tough."
"Nah." He drew in on a paper straw, making a
loud sucking sound in the bottom of the milkshake cup. "I figured if she
didn't know, I didn't want to. I never would have wanted any of those scumbags
she brought home to be my dad, anyway."
"Brought? As in the past?"
"She died." She'd died of a drug overdose,
but that wasn't any of this guy's business.
"I'm sorry, cher."
"Well, that makes one of us." The chair legs
scraped on the vinyl tile as he pushed away from the table. As they returned
upstairs, Nate figured it was a good thing he hadn't followed Big Jake Callahan
into law enforcement, because he couldn't even get a confession out of a
half-starved kid.
After leaving the teenager in the more than capable
hands of Tiny Dupree, Regan and Nate went to Eve Ancelet's office, where Judi
Welch of the parish Department of Social Services was waiting.
"Hey, Judi," Nate greeted her with a hug.
"Aren't you lookin' as pretty as a speckled pup?"
"Flatterer." She punched him lightly on the
shoulder. "But actually, you're close. I've been sick as a dog all week
with morning sickness. Which, in my case, is inaccurately named, since it
pretty much lasts all day."
"Sorry to hear that, chиre. But Matt must be real
happy about the news."
"He is. Especially since he got a promotion last
week," she said proudly. "He's now assistant bank manager. It pays
enough to add another bedroom onto the house."
"Good for him." Given the choice between
being thrown into a pool of piranhas in a feeding frenzy or spending his days
wearing a suit and tie and sitting behind a desk counting other people's money,
he'd go with the man-eating fish any old day. "How're the girls?"
She had three. When the third one, Angelique, had been
born and he'd shown up at the hospital with flowers, Matt had jokingly said
that he'd always wanted his own basketball team, but had gotten a harem
instead. Since Judi had always been Blue Bayou's most outspoken, card-carrying
feminist, Nate had been stunned when, instead of lighting into her husband,
she'd laughed as if Matt had been doin' standup on Letterman.
Love, he'd figured, obviously scrambles your brain. Which
was why he'd decided a long time ago to stay clear of it.
Regan watched their easy banter, noticing how the
social worker didn't even back away when he brushed a curl off her temple.
She'd bet her last pay raise they'd slept together. Reminding herself that it
was none of her business if Nate Callahan had affairs with all his
constituents, Regan yanked her mind back to business.
"Mrs. Welch is here to interview the boy,"
she told Nate.
"I figured as much. Not going to be easy,"
he said. "The kid's wearing pretty tough armor. I did manage to find out
that his mom's dead. And he doesn't know who his father is."
"If he's telling the truth," Regan said.
"Well, since we've no idea who he is, DSS is
going to have to take charge of him and find temporary placement," Judi
said.
"He can come home with me," Nate said.
"You?" Judi appeared as surprised by the
offer as Regan was.
"What's wrong with me?"
"You're not married," Judi pointed out.
"So? You never heard of single fathers?"
"Sure. I just never thought of you as being
one." She tapped the tip of her ballpoint pen on her clipboard. "Are
you actually volunteering to become a foster parent? Or to adopt the boy if it
turns out he's available?"
"You said you needed a temporary home. I've got
an extra room. And I think we understand each other well enough that we could
get through the next few days without him burning down my house."
"Don't be so sure of that," Regan said. "He's
at a ripe age for pyromania."
Nate thought of those matches the kid had taken out of
his pocket. "We'll be okay." He hoped.
Judi frowned. "You haven't been
prequalified."
"Got anyone else in town who is?"
"No. Well, there are the Duprees over on Heron,
but they've already got three kids staying at their house along with their own
two. And since the Camerons are currently between kids, they decided to take
that vacation in California they've always dreamed of. The McDaniels just took
a newborn last week, so she's pretty swamped."
"See," he said as if the matter had already
been settled, "I'm the logical solution."
"That's very sweet of you to offer, Nate, but
you're not in the system. I don't have the authority to just let you take him
home like he's some stray puppy you picked up off the street."
"We've kinda bonded." Okay, so it was a
stretch.
"He belongs in an official juvenile care
facility."
"You mean a kid jail." Regan was surprised
by the way his jaw tightened and his eyes turned hard. "Dammit, Judi, you
know what happened to Jack when he landed in one of those."
"From what I've heard, it was difficult. But he
survived and became a better person for it."
"He survived because he was a lot tougher than
this kid, and because he'd come from a family who cared about him with a mother
who never failed to show up on visiting day the entire year he was there."
"That was a boot camp for repeat offenders. I'm
talking about a residential care center."
"Center, boot camp, they're still no place for a
messed-up kid." He folded his arms, which, while not nearly the size of
the gargantuan custodian's, were admittedly impressive. Regan suspected those
rock-hard biceps and well-defined muscles came from swinging a hammer, not reps
on some spa weight machine. "I may not be the perfect solution, but I'm a
helluva lot better than one of those places."
"You'd have to get judicial approval."
"No sweat. Since Judge Dupree got himself
reappointed to the bench, he can vouch for me."
Judi rubbed her forehead with her fingers. Sighed.
Then gave him a warning look. "You know, this isn't going to be a walk in
the park."
"I realize we're not talking about the Beav here.
The kid might try to come off like Eminem, but deep down he's just a kid."
He winked at Regan. "And if he gives me any real trouble, I'll have the
detective shoot him."
Judi shook her head. "Lucky thing 1 know you well
enough to know that you're joking. Some DSS workers might just find that
statement worrisome."
"See? Who better to vouch for me than the lady in
charge of placement, who knows me so well?" he said with one of those
devastating smiles.
She studied him again. "Peter Pan and the lost
boy," she murmured.
Peter Pan again? Obviously she'd been talking to
Charlene. Nate had forgotten the two women had been on the high school prom
court together. Terrific.
"All right. We'll give it a try," she said
finally. "But I can't cut corners just because it's you, Nate. Since
jurisdiction crosses parish and perhaps even state lines, depending on where
the kid ran from, I'm going to have to make sure all the t's are dotted and the
t's crossed."
"The judge is staying with Orиlia during the week
to save himself the drive into town from Beau Soleil, so we can stop on the way
to checkin' Detective Hart into the inn."
Regan held up a hand. "I don't need—"
"Of course you don't need me to drive you, chиre,"
he cut her off. "But I figured you'd want to get down to working on that
project of yours, which I promised to help with," he reminded her.
"You can come along with me, and I'll have Dwayne drive your car over to
the inn first thing in the morning."
"I'm not here for a vacation. I want to get an
early start."
"The car'll be there before you get up," he
promised. "Besides, you'll get a lot better break on the rate if I'm with
you when you check in."
"Oh?" She arched a brow. "I suppose the
night clerk is an old friend?"
The sarcasm slid right off him. "Well now, you
know, she is. But that's not the reason 1 can get you a discount rate. The
reason is that I'm part owner."
"You own a hotel?"
"Only about a third." He glanced at his
watch. "But it's gettin' late, and I hate botherin' the judge at home,
since it wasn't that long ago he had heart surgery. How about we just save the
explanation for after we check you in?"
Chapter Twelve
Nate called the judge to let him know they were
coming. Ten minutes later, they were stopping in front of a white two-story
house on the corner of a tree-flanked cobblestone street.
"I'll wait in the car," the kid said.
"Sorry, cher," Nate said. "But you're
coming in with us."
"1 didn't hear anyone reading me my rights,"
he grumbled.
"And I didn't hear anyone putting you under
arrest," Regan said mildly. "So why don't you make it easier on all
of us and come along? Unless you'd rather the mayor call for a trooper to take
you to the nearest residential facility."
Apparently deciding he was outnumbered and better off with
them than in some juvenile detention center, he gave in.
"You didn't lock the door," Regan reminded
Nate as they began walking up the front sidewalk.
"No need. This is—"
"A peaceful town."
"Got it on the first try."
"This house would cost a small fortune in
L.A.," Regan said as they climbed the steps to the front door. "The
porch is nearly as wide as my apartment living room."
"It was designed for steeping outside during the
summer," Nate said. "Back before air conditioning." He rang a
doorbell that played the opening bars of "Dixie." "It's also
good for sitting out, watching your neighbors, and chatting with folks that
walk by."
"People still actually do that?"
"Not as much as they used to," he allowed.
"But probably more than in the city."
"Sounds boring," the kid said.
Sounds nice, Regan thought. Unfortunately, if the
citizens of her precinct were to try it, they could be hit by a stray bullet.
The judge might be old enough to be her grandfather
and a bit frail looking, but his voice had the deep, sonorous tones made for
projecting throughout a courtroom.
"Heard you're a detective," he said after
Nate had introduced them.
"Yes, sir. I work homicide in L.A."
"So what brings you to town?"
"I was overdue for some R&R, and I've always
enjoyed Louisiana." It wasn't exactly the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth, but this wasn't a courtroom, and she hadn't sworn an
oath.
"Most people go to New Orleans."
"I'm not most people, Your Honor."
He gave her a razor-sharp look she suspected he used
to keep order in his courtroom. Then he turned to Nate. "So you need a
temporary custody order."
"Yessir."
"You have any idea what you're getting
into?"
"No, sir. Not exactly. But it just seems like the
thing to do."
The judge shrugged. "You always were the soft one
in the family. Just like your maman." His stern expression softened for
the first time since he'd opened the front door. "She was a good
woman."
"The best," Nate agreed. "Maman was the
judge's housekeeper," he told Regan. "After my father was killed."
"I would have liked her to be more than a
housekeeper. But Jake turned out to be too tough an act to follow."
Regan noticed Nate looked surprised by that
revelation. "My parents had something special."
"That's what she said when she rejected me."
"I hadn't known you proposed."
"No need for you boys to know, since she turned
my proposal down. Of course, she was real nice about it. No one in the parish
sweeter than your mother." Appearing embarrassed by the glimpse into his
personal life, the judge squared his shoulders, cleared his throat, signed the
temporary custody papers with a flourish, then handed them back to Nate.
"This is just temporary," he warned the
teenager. "You give Mr. Callahan any trouble, and I'll rescind the order
so fast your head will spin." He snapped his fingers to underscore the
warning.
"Well, that scares the shit out of me," the
boy muttered beneath his breath.
"What did you say?" The judge's voice
cracked like a whip.
"I said, okay."
Eyes locked, and challenge swirled between the youngest
and oldest males in the book-lined room. Regan let out a breath when the judge
decided not to wield his authority to just ship the kid off right now.
"You've definitely got your hands full," he
warned Nate.
"We'll get along fine."
"If he doesn't steal you blind," the judge
muttered, as if the teenager wasn't standing right there in the room.
"Always were too good-natured for your own good. Just like your
mother."
"I'm proud to be compared to maman."
"Blue Bayou might be a small town," Regan
said as they drove away from the house, "but the judge could hold his own
on any bench in LA." The teen was in the backseat, nodding along with
whatever was blasting out of his Walkman earphones.
"You should have seen him in the old days. He's
softened a lot the past few months."
"Seems he had at least one soft spot for a long
time. You didn't know about his feelings for your mother, did you?"
"No fooling a cop," he said with a
casualness she suspected he wasn't quite feeling. "That was a surprise.
Though I suppose it does explain a lot of things. Like why he was always
bailing Jack out of trouble and trying to straighten him out, like he was his
own son. Looking back on it, I guess you could say he was giving him tough
love. At least he didn't ignore him, the way he did Danielle."
"Jack's wife?"
"Yeah. I guess I didn't mention that part. She's
the judge's daughter."
"Is everyone in this town connected?"
"Pretty much so, I guess. It's a small place, and
people tend not to move away, or move in. So while there are some distinct
circles, they all pretty much overlap."
"Which means that most of the people, of a
certain age, anyway, would have known Linda Dale."
"Yeah. I'd suspect so." He glanced up at the
rearvtew mirror, then over at her. "Which should make your cold case
not as cold as it might be in the big city."
"True. It also suggests that if she didn't commit
suicide, whoever murdered her may still be living in Blue Bayou, which makes it
personal." For both of them, if Dale did turn out to be her mother.
"Yeah."
Having come to the conclusion that things really were
different in the South, Regan didn't bother to argue when Nate insisted on
seeing her up to her room. Which meant, of course, that they had to take the
teenager with them so they wouldn't risk him rabbiting the minute he was alone.
"Shit, you two are paranoid," he muttered as
he slumped across a lobby boasting huge bouquets of hothouse flowers, lots of
rich wood, exquisite antique furniture, and leafy plants.
"Not really." Nate stuck the coded card in
the slot and pressed the button for the third floor. "You just remind me
of someone 1 used to know, so I just think about what he would have done in a
similar circumstance."
The elevator doors opened onto a luxurious suite that
would not have been out of place in the Beverly Wilshire.
"I need some time alone with the detective,"
Nate told the kid. "We need to talk."
"Yeah, right. That's what everyone does in a
hotel room."
Nate heaved an exaggerated sigh. "You know, you
really can be one pain in the ass." He opened the mini-bar and pulled out
a Coke, a can of peanuts, and a Snickers bar. "This doesn't concern you,
so why don't you go into one of the bedrooms and play some video games on the
TV?"
Mumbling beneath his breath, he snatched the snack
food out of Nate's hands, disappeared into the adjoining room, and shut the
door behind him.
"He's going to have junk-food overload," she
warned.
"Probably won't be the worst thing that happened
to him."
She couldn't argue with that. She skimmed a finger
over the glossy top of a Queen Anne desk. "You didn't have to upgrade my
room to this suite."
"It wasn't any big deal." Nate was bent
down, perusing the contents of the mini-bar. "It was jus' sitting here
vacant."
"So, how did you end up owning a third of a
hotel?"
"The hotel was built in the 1800s but burned down
last year. When the owners rebuilt, they figured they'd get more tourist
business if it was redone to look more like Tara, so they hired me to do the
job, but they couldn't afford what it was going to cost to do it right, So I
took some draws to cover the subcontractor and material bills, then agreed to
take a piece of the place as my cut."
"Blue Bayou doesn't exactly seem like a tourist
mecca. Won't it take an awfully long time to get your money back?"
"Probably. But I've always had this perverse
feeling that it was more important to be happy than rich."
She could identify with that. "And restoring this
hotel made you happy."
"As a crawfish in mud."
"You did a very good job." She studied the
crown molding, surprised that such an outwardly easygoing man would pay such
strict attention to detail.
"Thanks."
"Though, to be perfectly honest, it reminds me
more of Twelve Oaks than Tara."
"Sounds like you've got a nodding acquaintance
with a certain movie."
"I've seen it a few times." She didn't feel
any need to mention that a few translated to a dozen. Her mother once accused
her of having hidden southern blood, to be so taken by a mere movie. Regan
sighed. She'd never realized at the time how true that might be.
"How about a little Bailey's nightcap?"
"At mini-bar prices?" The TV came on in the
other room, the low bass sound of the video game thrumming through the wall.
"Who's buying?"
"It's on the house. Besides, even if it wasn't,
you're a rich lady now. You can afford to indulge yourself."
"We still don't know, for sure, that I am
actually Linda Dale's daughter."
"You wouldn't have come all this way if you
didn't think there was a damn good chance." He took down two glasses from
the overhead rack, poured the Irish Cream, and handed her one.
"Thanks." She took a sip and felt the liquid
warmth begin to flow through her veins. "And no, I wouldn't have come here
if I hadn't thought there was a possibility."
Regan wasn't yet prepared to share the story of the
Mardi Gras elephant. She sank down on the couch, tilted her head back, and
looked out at the flickering gas lights of the town's main street. The Irish
Cream was going straight to her head, conspiring with a lack of sleep last
night and the long flight, followed by the adrenaline rush of the rescue
wearing off.
"I really hate to admit this, hut I think I'm
afraid to discover the truth."
"You're a detective," he reminded her.
"Digging out the truth is your job."
"Yeah, it seems I've done a bang-up job of
that." Her head had begun to feel light, but she took another sip anyway.
"If the woman who died in that garage is my mother, I've been lied to my
entire life and never had a clue."
If there was one thing Nate had always had a handle
on, it was knowing precisely what to say in the getting-to-know-you stage of an
affair. He let out a deep breath and wondered why he couldn't think of a single
word to make this right.
"She probably had a good reason for not telling
you the truth."
"Sure she did. Being honest would have brought up
a lot of questions she probably didn't want to answer." Regan's strangled
laugh held not a hint of humor. "I don't know why I should be surprised.
Everyone lies."
She'd told him that the first day. She'd also told him
to get lost, but there'd already been too much passed between them to walk away
now.
"You'll figure it out, chиre." He sat down
next to her. "Put all the pieces together."
"Yeah." She jerked a shoulder. "You're
damn right I will." Nate found the renewed spark of pride encouraging. It
was good that she was beginning to convince herself. "There was this
detective I worked with when I first got promoted into homicide, who'd drive
everyone crazy because he was so slow and methodical." She ran her finger
around the edge of the glass. Nate was finding it disconcerting to imagine
those smooth lady hands holding a gun, those long slender fingers tipped with
their tidy, unlacquered nails pulling a trigger. Especially when he was
experiencing this low, thrumming need to have them on him.
"Watching him work a crime scene was like
watching a glacier
flow," she continued, unaware of the hot,
uncensored direction of his thoughts. "Whenever anyone'd rag him about it,
or a new partner would complain, he'd just shrug and say that he'd solve no
crime before its time."
"It's been thirty-one years. Seems about time, to
me."
"Cold cases are the hardest."
"Which is why you should be gettin' some
rest." As he'd done at the airport, he skimmed a finger beneath her eyes.
"I'll get the kid, take him home and get him settled, and be back in the
morning."
"Don't you have to work?" Video game
explosions were coming from the bedroom; his outwardly casual touch had ignited
other ones inside her.
"Nothin' that can't be put off."
"What about the boy?"
"That's the nice thing about having family. I'll
drop him off at Jack's."
"What makes you think your brother can handle a
delinquent, runaway teenager?"
"After our dad was killed, Jack became a wannabe
delinquent. This kid reminds me a lot of him back then. He's angry and a whole
lot lost. 'Sides, I figure any guy who can hold his own with Colombian drug
lords should be able to take care of one teenage kid for a few hours."
He went over to the table, where a ballpoint pen
inscribed with the inn's name and a notepad were sitting, scrawled some lines
onto the paper, and handed it to her. His handwriting was as illegible as hers
was neat.
"Is there a codebook that goes with this?"
she asked
Regan knew she was in trouble when his deep laugh
pulled sexual chords. What she'd told Van was true: all her parts definitely
were in working order.
"It's how to get to the library. Not that you
wouldn't have found it yourself—this town's pretty easy to get around, bein'
that it's all laid out in squares like Savannah, but this might save you some
time. The local paper's the Cajun Chronicle. Dani—she's Blue Bayou's librarian—can
help you dig into the archives."
"How did you know I was going to go digging in
the archives?" She'd already tried to do that online, but the
thirty-year-old newspaper issues she'd needed hadn't been uploaded to the
Internet.
"That's what Jack or Finn'd do."
He had her there. "I'm also going to pay a call
on Mrs. Melancon."
"The old one, or the young?"
"Old. Since she was running the company back
then, she might know something about how Linda Dale got those stock
certificates."
"I doubt that visiting the old lady will do much
good, bein' how she's turned pretty reclusive and rumors have her mind going
south, but. . . Jesus," he said on an exasperated breath when she shot him
a sharp, suspicious look. "You really don't trust anyone, do you?"
"Would you, if you were in my situation?"
"I don't know. Maybe. Maybe not."
His smile turned a little distant as he gave her a
considering look.
"What?" she asked, growing uneasy when he
didn't look away for a very long time.
He slowly shook his head. "Damned if I
know," he said, more to himself than to her. Vivid blue eyes, fringed by
lashes most women would kill for, blinked slowly. The air between them grew
thick and far too steamy.
Just when Regan's nerves were feeling stretched to the
breaking point, he broke the silence. "Guess I'd better interrupt the
inter-galactic wars."
He retrieved the teenager, who, not surprisingly,
wasn't all that wild about leaving the video game. "Two more levels, and I
would've been emperor of the universe," he complained.
"Next time," Nate said easily. He paused in
the open doorway and skimmed a finger down Regan's nose. "See you
tomorrow, chиre."
After they left the suite, she listened to the
footfalls on the hallway carpeting, the ding of the elevator, the whoosh as it
opened, then closed.
Regan leaned back against the door, closed her eyes,
and let out a long breath. "Detective chиre to you, Callahan."
The two-year-old girt lay in her trundle bed, huddled
beneath, her sheets, hiding from the full moon that her baby-sitter, Enola, had
told her would make her eyes go crossed. She heard her mother's high heels
tapping on the wood floor. The voices grew harsher. Louder. Angrier. A sound
like a glass breaking had her peeking out from beneath the sheet; the moonlight
streaming in through the window cast a silver light over the bedroom, but the
corners were draped in deep shadows. Regan shivered, fearful that the loud voices would
wake the cauchemar. Whenever her mama went out and Enola stayed with her, the
sitter would sprinkle holy water from a little bottle over Regan's pillow to
protect her from the witch who crept around in the dark, looking for little
girls to eat. They were shouting now. Regan had never heard her
mother shout and wondered if she was fighting with the cauchemar just on the
other side of the door. She tried to climb out of bed, but her legs wouldn't
move. She tried to call for her mama, but the witch had wrapped its bony
crawfish claws around her throat, so no sound came from her lips. Huddling
beneath the sheets at the bottom of the bed, she hid from those shining red
eyes Enola had told her could set children on fire. She heard a scream; then a crash, then silence.
Regan jerked awake, bathed in sweat, her mouth open in
a silent scream she'd never been able to make heard, her heart beating
triphammer hard, triphammer fast.
"It was just a dream," she told herself with
a mental shake as she retrieved the pillow that had fallen onto the floor. The
nightmare was an old one, going back as far as she could remember.
She took a deep breath, looked over at the clock
radio, and saw it was not even three A.M. yet. Groaning, she climbed out of bed
and retrieved the journal from her carry-on bag. There'd be no more sleep
tonight.
Chapter Thirteen
The kid had slept like the dead, revealing that it had
been a long time since he'd had any real rest. He also had the appetite of a
horse. A Clydesdale. He was single-handedly burning through breakfast as if he
hadn't eaten for weeks. Which, Nate considered, just might be the case, seeing
as how he was mostly skin and bones.
"What's this stuff?" he asked, poking at the
milk-drenched hot cereal Nate had gone to the trouble of fixing.
"Couche-couche."
"That doesn't tell me a frigging thing."
"It's cornmeal, salt, baking powder, milk, and
oil." A lot of oil. "My maman used to make it just about every
morning for my brothers and me when we were kids. But she used to serve it with
sucre brule, which is kind of a syrup." Thinking back on the ultrasweet,
golden brown syrup made by cooking water and sugar together, Nate was surprised
any of them had any teeth left.
Food had always been an intrinsic part of the Acadian
culture; his mother had turned it into a celebration.
"It's not bad." The kid pushed aside the
empty bowl. "But I like these better," he said, biting into a
sugar-powdered Cajun doughnut.
"They're beignets." Nate wasn't that good a
cook—never had to learn since, on the occasions when there wasn't a woman
willing to feed him, there was always takeout from Cajun Cal's Country Cafe.
But any idiot could fry up a bunch of dough in a skillet of hot oil. "I
don't suppose that, having slept on it, you remember where home is?"
"Nope." He used his third piece of raisin
toast to wipe up some yolk from the fried eggs.
"You do realize that DSS will probably end up
putting you in some sort of facility if they don't get an answer soon."
His faced closed up. "I thought I was staying
here with you."
"Temporarily. Talking Ms. Welch into letting you
come home with me for a couple days was one thing, since we're old friends from
our school days. But I don't exactly fit a foster family profile. 'Sides, they
don't have any way of knowing that you're not a regular Jesse James, running
from robbin' a bank or something."
"I didn't rob any bank. And the damn social
services assholes can put me anywhere they want, but that doesn't mean I'm
gonna stay there."
Nate sighed. The kid reminded him a bit of Turnip, the
raggedy old stray yellow dog that had shown up at Beau Soleil last spring. The
difference was that the dog had deftly insinuated herself into Jack's life with
her unrelentingly cheerful personality. But thinking about Turnip gave him an
idea.
"You like dogs?"
"They're okay, I guess. I had me a puppy when I was
a kid."
"What kind?"
"I don't know. Some kinda black-and-brown mutt.
Someone dumped it in a field by our house. I brought it home and kept it hidden
in my room, but the guy my mother was livin' with drowned it."
"Damn." This picture the boy was painting
was getting worse and worse. "He still around?" he asked casually.
"I guess." He shrugged and wiped the white
powdered sugar off his mouth with the back of his hand. "He'd moved into
the apartment, anyway."
"Which is why you're not there?"
"I guess you could say that."
"You realize, don't you, that if you'd be a
little bit more open and come clean about your situation, there's a very good
chance I might be able to help."
The kid rolled his eyes.
"I guess that's a no." Nate stood up.
"Come on."
"Where?"
The unrelenting suspicion was beginning to drive him
nuts. "My brother's house."
"Why?"
"Because it's a cool place. With a dog who's
always happy to meet new folks who'll throw her a Frisbee to catch."
"You gonna stick around?"
"Well, now, that's the thing. I promised the
detective—"
"Yeah, yeah. I get it. Why spend time with a kid
when you can be doin' a hot chick?"
"Okay, dammit, that's it." Nate turned on
him, the flare of temper catching them both off guard. "I've been trying
my best to give you the benefit of the doubt, since you look like you've been
rope-drug from the tailgate of a pickup down a long patch of bad road. And if
you're not lyin' about that drowned puppy—"
"I'm not."
"—then I've gotta figure that whatever you're
running from has got to be a helluva lot worse than what you've gone through on
the road, which sure doesn't look like it's been a picnic."
"It hasn't," he mumbled.
"Shut the hell up." It worked. The kid
dropped his eyes to the heart-of-pine floor. "Like I said, I'm willing to
cut you some slack, but if you don't stop talking such trash—"
"Yeah, yeah, you'll dump me back with the
cops."
Nate saw the fear beneath the tough veneer and, though
it wasn't easy, held firm. "If you'd quit finishing my sentences when you
don't know what the hell you're talking about, you'd discover that you're not
the only one with problems."
"Cops don't have problems. They make
problems."
"Like when the detective crawled under that
electrical wire to save your life ?"
"I don't remember asking her to do that."
Damn, what he wouldn't give to have Jack or Finn here
right now. Or both of them. They could double-team the kid, who probably
wouldn't hold up two minutes when being played by experts.
Nate dragged a hand down his face, wondering what the
hell he'd done in a previous life to deserve all this crap dumped on him at one
time. Peter Pan was sounding real good about now. Flying off to the island of
lost boys had to be a lot more fun than dealing with this runaway kid. If that
wasn't bad enough, thanks to him, Detective Delectable's entire life, as she'd
known it for thirty-three years, had just come crumbling down around her. How
the hell was he supposed to make up for that?
"Like I said, the detective's got some private,
personal problems. And I promised to help her solve them."
"What are you, a priest or something?"
Nate laughed at that and put his arm around the kid's
shoulder. When he felt the sudden rigidity he lightened up a bit, but did not
take his arm away. "Son, I am about as far away from a priest as you can
get."
They were on their way to Beau Soleil, the Porchdogs
singing "Hello Josephine" on the SUV's CD player, when Nate turned
toward his passenger.
"You know, it'd be a helluva lot easier to carry
on a conversation if I at least knew your first name. 'Hey, kid' is a little
limiting."
He could see the wheels turning behind those pale blue
eyes, then the kid blew out a long breath of surrender, "Josh."
It wasn't much. But it was a start.
* * *
Regan had to say this about Nate Callahan. He was true
to his word. The rental car was waiting for her at the front of the inn when
she returned from her early morning run. It had even been washed, she noticed
immediately. Since according to Nate's scrawled directions the library was only
two blocks away, Regan decided to walk.
The rain had moved on; the day had dawned bright and
sunny and as warm as she'd been expecting when she'd left L.A. The library was
located on Magnolia Avenue, next door to the Acadian Butcher Shop, which
boasted displays of plump chickens and sausages beneath green-and-white-striped
awnings, and across the street from a small park ablaze with naturalized
daffodils. The interior of the building was brightly lit, and dust covers of
upcoming releases were displayed on a wall covered in green, purple, and gold
burlap (which she'd read in the hotel's visitor guide were Mardi Gras colors).
The windows sparkled like crystal, and old-fashioned oak catalog cases gleamed
with lemon oil, which added a fresh scent to the air.
"Good morning." The blond woman's smile,
which was echoed in her eyes, was as warm and welcoming as her library.
"You must be Regan." She held out a hand. "I'm Dani Callahan,
Jack's wife. Nate called this morning and told me you'd be coming."
"It's good to meet you." Regan was
momentarily put off by Dani's outgoing attitude; cops weren't accustomed to
people being happy to see them.
"Oh, it's wonderful to meet you." Moss green
eyes moved from Regan's face to her wrists. "Though I am a bit
disappointed you're not wearing your bracelets."
"Bracelets?"
"Wonder Woman's magic bracelets. You and Nate
ended up on the front page of the paper." She held up a copy of the Cajun
Chronicle. In color, above the fold, was a photo of her ducking beneath the
wires to hand Nate the blanket. There was another of Nate pulling the boy from
the truck.
"That was a brave thing he did, for a
civilian." Or idiotic.
"I doubt if, in his mind, he had much of a
choice," Dani said. "Though the fact that there was a child in the
truck undoubtedly added to the urgency. Nate's terrific with kids."
"Probably because his emotional growth stopped
about twelve himself," Regan murmured.
"You may have a point, since that's how old he
was when his father was killed. He told me that he'd told you about that,"
she said. "It's not something he talks about often, so it's interesting
that he chose to share it with you."
"It was just part of the general conversation. He
insisted on helping me into my coat because, as he put it, his daddy taught him
to, and I suggested his father might want to join the twenty-first
century." She still felt a twinge of guilt about that. "He seems all
right with it."
"Yes, he does, doesn't he?" Dani braced her
elbows onto the glossy surface of her desk, linked her fingers together, and
rested her chin atop her hands. "You know, that was a dreadful time, but
looking back and seeing all three Callahans from an adult perspective, I think
it ended up being hardest on Nate."
"Why?"
"Jack and Finn were older, so they latched onto
their roles right away. Finn became the man of the family, something he did
very well."
"I'm not surprised."
"No, I expect you're not, having worked with
him."
"Seems Nate's been talking about me."
"He's like my brother. We share everything."
Her eyes momentarily sparkled. "Well, almost everything. Anyway, Finn just
got more adult and serious, and Jack became Blue Bayou's James Dean. He calls
it his rebel-without-a-clue period.
"Nate was closest of the three to his mother,
which I suppose isn't surprising for the youngest child in a family. They lived
out at Beau Soleil, the house I grew up in, so I had a front-row seat after the
tragedy. I don't think he left her side from the time she got the terrible news
to days after the funeral. Wherever she was, he was, holding her hand, talking
her into eating something, telling her jokes."
A small, reminiscent smile teased at the corners of
her mouth. "I remember him making her laugh at some silly story the night
of the viewing. Mrs. Cassidy, from the market, was scandalized a woman could
laugh when her husband was lying in a casket in the same room. I was the same
age, and watched him all during that time and wished, just a little, that I
could fall in love with him."
"You don't seem to be alone, there."
"Women like Nate," Dani agreed mildly.
"I figured that out for myself."
"You don't have to be a detective to see
it." Dani's expression turned a little serious. "He's certainly sexy
enough, and charming, but what attracts women is that he's one of those special
men who genuinely admires all aspects of us. Which is why most of us like him
right back."
"I'll admit he's difficult to dislike."
Regan wasn't quite ready to make the leap into Nate Callahan's female fan club.
"I can't think of anyone who's ever had a reason
to. As I said, there were a lot of times when I thought how much easier it
would be if I'd just fall in love with Nate. Or Finn."
"But you didn't."
"No." She twisted a gold ring as her eyes
warmed with private thoughts. "My heart's always belonged to Jack."
Regan wanted to get on with her reason for coming to
the library, but there was one thought that had been running through her mind
since she'd been jerked from a restless sleep by that nightmare. "I met
this woman volunteer at the hospital—"
"Orиlia." Dani nodded. "She's
definitely one'of-a-kind, isn't she? My father lives with her during the
week."
"So Nate said. He seems like a nice man. Your
father, that is."
"He's a good man." Regan, who was used to
listening for what peo' pie didn't say, caught the qualification in that
statement. "It's no secret that we've had some rough patches, but
fortunately we had a chance to straighten them out before we lost the
opportunity." She shut her eyes
briefly as she realized what she'd said. "I'm
sorry. I didn't mean—"
"I know." Regan sighed. "I guess Nate told
you everything."
"He filled me in on what he knows of your
situation. If it's any consolation, he was unusually reticent. Except for a
brief synopsis of your possible family situation, all he'd tell us was that you
reminded him of Finn, were very pretty, and smelled good."
Regan wasn't at all pleased to hear he'd compared her
to Finn. Okay, maybe they were both cops, but surely she didn't come off as
remote, cool, and rigid as the eldest Callahan. She shook off the momentary
pique.
"It's not easy to have to consider that the woman
I always thought of as my mother may be my aunt," she allowed. "Orиlia
mentioned something about Nate's mother dying, as well." She was not
trying to pump Danielle Callahan, but she couldn't help but be curious.
"Oh, that was a terribly sad time. She was
diagnosed with breast cancer when Nate was a freshman at Tulane. She tried to
keep him in school—he was planning to become an architect—"
"I thought he was going to be a baseball
player."
"Oh, I think he could have been a very good one.
All the Callahan men are naturally athletic, but Nate enjoyed the game-playing
aspect of sports more than the other two. But he was smart enough to realize
that even if he did make it to the majors, he wouldn't be playing all his life,
so he decided it'd be good to have a backup occupation."
"That's more planning than I would have
expected."
Dani smiled at that. "Every once in a while, just
when you think you've got Nate figured out, he surprises you. I think he
probably has more layers than either of his brothers."
"Finn certainly always seemed
straightforward."
"With Finn, what you see is pretty much what you
get," Dani agreed. "Though I have to admit that it was fun watching
Julia Summers pull the rug out from beneath his tidy, orderly world."
Regan definitely could identify with that feeling.
"Nate's always loved construction. When they were
kids playing cowboys and Indians, while Jack and Finn were practicing their
fast draws, Nate was dragging home boards he'd find in the swamp to build the
jail."
Regan laughed at the idea of Finn Callahan in a cowboy
hat, having cap pistol shootouts. "So Nate's an architect?" Her
admittedly sketchy investigation of him hadn't revealed that.
"No. He dropped out of school the day he heard
the news of his mother's cancer and came home to be with her. I've always
thought that he was somehow convinced he could single-handedly save her with
love and determination. I firmly believe he's the reason she lived two years
longer than the doctors predicted. It was a difficult three years, but he was
always there for her.
"Jack was working for the DEA somewhere in
Central America when she died, but Finn and Nate were with her at the end. Finn
said she died smiling at a joke Nate had told her."
"That's nice." Regan didn't run into all
that many people who died smiling in her line of work.
"There was a time when I don't know what I would
have done without him to talk to. He was the only person during some hard times
who could make me forget my troubles for a little while. And if part of him is
still twelve years old, well, perhaps that's what makes him able to slough off
his own problems while taking on everyone else's."
Regan didn't want to consider that possibility. It was
easier to believe that Nate Callahan was just some immature, hormone-driven
southern charmer.
"That's all very interesting," she said, her
smile a bit forced. "Could you tell me where you keep your newspaper
archives?"
"The newer ones have been scanned into the
computer. The ones you're looking for are still on microfiche. I've pulled up
the reels for you." She gestured toward a chair and a reader across the
room. "If there's anything else you need—"
"No, thanks. That'll do it."
"Great. Do you know how long you'll be
staying?"
"I suppose it all depends on what I find and how
soon I find it."
"Hopefully you'll be here for the Fat Tuesday
party out at Beau Soleil."
Regan hadn't come to Blue Bayou to party. "That's
very nice of you, but—"
"Please come, Regan. How else can we live up to
our reputation for southern hospitality? Nate and Jack have done wonders with
Beau Soleil, and I do so love to show it off. Have you ever visited a
plantation house?"
"No."
"Beau Soleil was the model for Tara," Dani
said, sweetening the pot. "Margaret Mitchell was a visitor before she
wrote the book."
"That's quite an endorsement."
"It's really worth the trip to see what Nate's
done with the house. He's more than just a contractor, he's a master craftsman.
His mill-work is phenomenal. There was a time when I felt sorry for him,
dropping out of school and all, but it's obvious that he never belonged
building skyscrapers; he's really found his niche."
"That's important."
Regan had once been certain she'd found hers. She was
no longer quite so sure. It's not burnout, she assured herself. You just need a
break. Like a month in Tahiti. Or maybe in bed. Sleeping.
"If I'm in town, I'll try to come by."
"I'm so pleased. Jack will be, too." Dani's
smile suggested she hadn't expected any other outcome, making Regan wonder if
all southerners had velvet-bulldozer personalities. Had Linda Dale? "Jack
lived in Los Angeles for several years, so you'll be able to share
stories."
Regan liked Dani Callahan. If Dani lived in Los
Angeles, the two of them might have been friends. Other than Van, whose life these
days revolved around Rhasheed and her unborn son, Regan didn't have many women
friends. Her job didn't allow time for socializing. If she did take time from
work, she was likely to be found sharing a pitcher of beer with a group of cops
at the Code Ten.
She realized Dani had asked her a question. "I'm
sorry. What did you say?"
"Nate told me he'd asked you to take the
sheriff's job?" Her voice went up a little on the end of the sentence,
turning it into a question.
"He did. And I turned him down."
"Having met you, I'm doubly sorry you didn't
accept." Her slight frown turned into a smile. "Well, perhaps you'll
change your mind. My brother-in-law can be very persuasive."
That was an understatement. But Regan had no interest
in leaving L.A. for such a small, isolated town. Pigs would be spouting
gossamer wings and flying over Blue Bayou before she pinned on that badge
again.
As if to prove how different the town was from Los
Angeles, the story of Linda Dale's death, which would have been buried in the
back pages of the local section in the Los Angeles Times, had captured nearly
the entire front page. There was also a picture of Dale captioned "In
Happier Days"—the New Orleans Mardi Gras photograph.
Inside were more photographs, including the red car in
which her body had been discovered by her employer. Another picture showed a
woman carrying a toddler out of a tidy, narrow white frame house. Regan
recognized her as the woman she'd always thought was her mother, and a chill
skimmed up her spine as she realized she was, indeed, that toddler.
* * *
Josh was trying his best not to be impressed, which
was frigging hard when the house Nate pulled up in front of reminded him a lot
of the White House.
"Your brother lives here?"
"Yeah. Jack."
"He must be rich."
"I think he probably does okay for himself. He
writes books."
"Yeah?" Josh liked to read; books had often
proven an escape from his life. But he'd never actually given any thought to
people writing them. "What kind of books?"
"Thrillers, I guess they're called."
The name clicked. "Your brother is Jack
Callahan?"
"Yeah, I guess you heard of him."
"Heard of him? Shit, I just finished reading The
Death Dealer! It's in my backpack." He'd swiped it from a CVS in
Tallahassee, along with a can of Vienna sausages and a Milky Way bar. "He
rocks."
"He sure does. And I'd say that even if he wasn't
my brother. But there's a lot of sex, drugs, and violence in those
stories."
"Like there's not a lot of sex, drugs, and
violence in life."
"Not in everyone's life." A cold, lethal
anger uncurled in Nate's gut. It wasn't often he understood the passion that
drove people to do murder. This was one of those rare times. "Look, let's
get something straight, right now, okay?"
"What?"
"The folks at DSS are eventually going to find
out who you are. But when that happens, you're not going back."
"You're damn right I'm not."
"That's not what I mean. You've got to promise me
you won't take off again."
"What kind of chump do you think I am?" Josh
sneered.
"I don't think you're a chump. I think you're a
kid who got dealt a lousy hand. But you're not going back to an abusive
home."
"Says you."
"Yeah." Nate tamped his rare but formidable
temper. He was murderously furious at anyone who'd hurt a child.
"What are you going to do to stop them?"
Murder, while surprisingly appealing, wasn't the
answer. "I don't know." Nate figured after all he'd been through,
josh deserved the truth. "But I will. Scout's honor."
"It figures," Josh muttered.
"What?"
"That you'd be a friggin' Boy Scout."
Nate threw back his head and laughed at that. Even
Josh's lips quirked into a hint of a smile.
"Come on, cher," he said as a huge yellow
ball of fur the size of a compact car came barreling out the front door of Beau
Soleil. "You can meet the family, and Jack can autograph your book for
you."
The dog, which Jack claimed to be a Great Dane-yellow
Lab-Buick mix, leaped up, put her huge paws on Josh's shoulders, and began
licking his scrunched-up face in long, welcoming slurps. When the kid fell to
the ground and began wrestling with Turnip, he looked like any normal teenage
boy. Which, Nate figured, somewhere, deep down inside, past all that hurt and
teenage bravado, he was.
"Uncle Nate!" The nine-year-old wearing a
Baltimore Orioles cap and a shirt declaring him to be a member of the Blue
Bayou Panthers, sponsored by Callahan Construction, tore out of the house
behind the dog. "Guess what?"
Nate pulled off the cap and ruffled his nephew's hair.
"You just got called up for the Orioles' spring training camp."
"I'm too young to play in the majors," he
said with a third-grader's literalness.
"Well, I already know you're gonna have a baby
brother or sister. And I can't think of anything else, so I guess you're just
gonna have to tell me."
"Mrs. Chauvet and Ben moved into the guest house
last night."
"Yeah, seems to me I heard about you havin'
company." He reached down, grasped Josh's arm, and pulled the teenager to
his feet. "Josh, this is my favorite nephew, Matt—"
"I'm your only nephew," the boy reminded
him. "At least for now."
"Well, there is that. Matt, this is Josh. He's
visiting me for a while."
"Cool." The grin was quick and revealed a
missing tooth. "Want to see my Hot Wheels collection?"
Josh shrugged in that uncaring way Nate was getting
used to. "Hot Wheels are for little kids."
"They're for collectors, too. My uncle Finn found
me a deep purple Nomad with Real Rider tires in California. It's really
cool." Matt turned and raced back toward the house, Josh with him and
Turnip happily nipping at their heels, just as Jack came ambling out.
"Does that kid walk anywhere?" Nate asked.
"Not if he can help it. So, Dani says that she
invited your new lady friend to the Fat Tuesday party, and while she didn't
exactly agree to show up, she didn't out-and-out refuse, either."
"Terrific." Nate smiled. As much as he'd
always liked having brothers, there was something handy and decidedly cool
about gaining a sister. "You realize, don't you, that marrying that woman
was the smartest thing you ever did."
"Won't get any argument from me on that
one," Jack agreed cheerfully.
* * *
Nate caught up with Regan as she left the library. She
glanced past him toward the SUV he'd parked across the street. "Where's
the boy?"
"I took him out to Beau Soleil so Jack could keep
an eye on him. And his name, by the way, is Josh."
"Josh what?"
"He wasn't willing to share that yet."
"Well, at least it's a start." As she
crossed the street with him, Regan could almost imagine the sound of horses'
hooves on the rounded gray cobblestones. "So did you take along a whip and
a chair to your brother's?"
"Hey, Jack used to hunt down international drug
dealers." He opened the passenger door, put his hand on her elbow, and
gave her a little boost up into the front seat. "I figured he could take
care of one runaway for a few hours," he said after he'd come around the
front of the SUV and joined her. "Besides, he's got himself this big
friendly mutt I thought might loosen Josh up a bit."
"Animals have a way of making a connection when
people can't. The canine corps is one of the more popular groups in the police
department, and using a mounted patrol at concerts is effective because most
people like the horses . . . And why are you looking at me that way?"
"I was just wondering about something."
"What?"
"If you taste as good as you look."
"In case you've forgotten, this is a public
place."
"The windows are tinted. 'Sides, I don't see
anyone watching."
He could tell she was tempted. Having wanted her the
first time he saw her in that prim no-nonsense gray suit that showcased a
magnificent pair of legs, he opted for giving in to temptation.
"Dammit, Callahan."
"It's Nate," he said absently, not about to
apologize for the desire he knew she was reading in his gaze. "I'd say
we've worked our way up to first names, wouldn't you, Regan?"
"We've only known each other two days."
"True. But you've got to admit that a helluva lot
has happened in those two days."
"Granted. But I definitely don't want to get
involved with you."
"I know," he said.
There was a part of him that didn't, either. With the
exception of the two women his brothers had married, Nate wasn't used to
complex women. Didn't want to get used to them. He preferred easygoing belles
who understood that shared desire was a game, a game both parties, if they kept
things simple, could win. He doubted there was a single simple thing about this
woman.
"Then my suggestion would be to stop before
things get out of hand."
"I don't think I can do that, chиre." He ran
his thumb along the tightly set seam of her lips. What was a man to do hut take
a taste when her lips were so close? So tempting?
"Tell me to take my hands off you," he said,
"and I will."
She drew in a breath.
When her golden brown eyes softened, giving him his
answer, he lowered his mouth to hers.
Chapter Fourteen
Oh, he was good! He didn't ravish, which would have
made it too easy to push him away. He beguiled. He took his time, gently, so
unbelievably gently, his mouth brushing against hers in a touch as delicate as
a dream.
No one had ever kissed her like this. Not ever. How
could such a slow, gentle kiss rock her to the bone?
Regan was unaware she was holding her breath until it
shuddered out when her lips parted. Rather than invading with his tongue, as so
many other men would have automatically done, he surprised her yet again by
scattering light kisses at the corners of her mouth, up her cheek.
Her cheek. She tensed, wishing she were perfect. Or,
at least not so imperfect.
"Nate—" It was the first time she'd said his
name. But the voice couldn't be hers. It was too low. Too ragged. Too needy.
She felt his smile at her temple. "Shhh," he
whispered. "Just a little bit more."
Her brain was shutting down. He was muddling her
thoughts, stirring up unruly needs she'd always managed to keep tightly reined
in.
His lips returned to hers, once, twice, a third time
until they finally—thank you, God!-—lingered. Even then he was patient. So
amazingly, achingly patient.
He drank slowly, savoring her as he might a fine wine.
He drank deeply, stealing her breath, along with whatever ragged bits were left
of her resolve. One of them trembled. Because she feared it was her, Regan drew
away now, while she still could.
Not that he let her completely escape. He pressed his
forehead against hers, even as his fingers continued to stroke the back of her
neck in a way that was far from comforting. "Kissing you could become a
habit, Detective Chиre."
"A bad habit."
His grin was slow and carelessly charming.
"Sometimes those are the most fun."
"You're not my type."
"Well, now, I sure wouldn't want you to take this
the wrong way, but you're not exactly mine, either." His eyes lit with
easy humor. "But sometimes that doesn't have a damn thing to do with
chemistry."
"I suppose you'd know more about that than I
would." Hell, she sounded petulant. Pouty.
"Since we don't know each other real well, I
couldn't be the judge of that. But if you'd like, I can kiss you again. See if
maybe it was a fluke."
"It was. My life's gotten dicey since you charged
into it. I suppose I shouldn't be all that surprised that I respond
inappropriately to events."
"Inappropriately," he said mildly, as if
trying out the word on his tongue. "Now, see, darlin', that's where we're
going to have to agree to disagree. Because it seems to me that when a man and
a woman have electricity together, it only makes sense to enjoy the
sparks." He bent his head again and nipped lightly at her bottom lip.
"I've been wanting to behave inappropriately with you since I watched you
testify."
"Sure you have." She could feel whatever
little control she'd managed to hang onto slipping away. Regan didn't like
losing control. She didn't know how to function without it.
"It's God's own truth." He lifted his right
hand like a man swearing an oath. "When you first got up on that stand, I
started wondering what you were wearing beneath that prim, tidy little suit,
then that thought led to another, and another, and pretty soon I was imagining
getting you out of it and making passionate love to you in that big black
leather chair the judge kept swiveling back and forth in."
"That behavior would have gotten you thrown in a
cell for public indecency."
"But I'll bet we would have had ourselves one
helluva ride. And I know it would have been worth it."
His easy arrogance irked her. All right, so he was the
most gorgeous man she'd ever seen who wasn't up on some movie screen. So he
moved with a natural, lazy grace that suggested he was immensely comfortable in
his skin. So he was really, really built. That didn't mean he had any right to
act as if he were God's gift to women.
"I should have just shot you back in LA."
"And I should have gotten that kiss over with in
L.A. Then we'd have already moved to the next step."
"And that would be?"
He rubbed his jaw. Studied her silently. Then, just
when her nerves had begun to screech like the brakes on her crappy cop car, he
shook his head. "I think I'll just let you figure that out for yourself
when we get there."
She was not going to let him get to her. She was a
cop, dammit. And not just any cop, she was the cream of the cream, the best of
the best. She ate gangbangers for breakfast and sent bad guys up the river for
life plus ten, without parole. She could handle Nate Callahan.
"We have this little thing in law
enforcement," she said. "Perhaps you've heard of it."
"What's that, cherie?"
Her smile was sweet and false. "Excessive
force."
"Well, now, I've never been one who got off on
rough play, but if you want to drag out some handcuffs, I'm willing to give it
the old college try.
"There's this stripper down on Bourbon Street in N'Awlins.
Calls herself Officer Lola Law. She starts out wearing police blues, then
eventually works her way down to a G-string, some pasties that look like
badges, and some shiny black vinyl boots with ice-pick heels that go up to
mid-thigh. I don't suppose you'd have an outfit like that?"
She wasn't about to dignify that with a response.
"Don't you take anything seriously?"
"I try not to. Life's too short for getting
bogged down in details."
"You make details sound like a bad thing."
"Didn't someone once say the devil was in the
details?"
"It's a bit hard to solve a crime without
details. And while I've never restored a building before, I'd suspect it's
probably a good idea to measure before you cut a piece of wood."
"Got me," he said easily. "But since
there's no way of knowing when you get up in the morning if you're going to be
around by nightfall, it only makes sense to enjoy the moment. Drift with the
currents."
"Drifting with the currents can land you into the
doldrums. If everyone shared that philosophy, we'd all still be living in caves,
hunting woolly mammoths and cooking our meals over a fire."
"Doesn't sound that bad to me." When he
tugged on a strand of hair, his knuckles brushed the nape of her neck again and
made her skin sizzle. "I like the idea of ravishing you in the firelight."
"How do you like the idea of getting whacked in
the groin by your woolly mammoth hunting club?"
"Ouch." He winced. "Some people might
think you were a difficult woman, chиre."
"I work at it. And some other people might think
you were a Neanderthal southern male."
"Now, see, that's where we're different. 'Cause I
don't work at it at all."
It was hard not to be charmed by his smile.
"Look, Callahan, this partnership, or whatever you want to call it, isn't
working. Unless you can get me into Mrs. Melancon's house." Regan had
called this morning and had been brusquely told that Mrs. Melancon was not
entertaining visitors. Not today, nor tomorrow, nor anytime in the near future.
"As it happens, I've been doin' some pondering on
that, and have a couple ideas. But since I haven't quite worked them out yet, I
figured you might like to take a little drive out into the country."
She arched an exaggerated brow and looked around.
"This isn't the country?"
"Cute. Who would have guessed the cop had a sense
of humor?"
"I have my moments. And where did you have in
mind?"
"The actual destination wouldn't mean anything to
you anyway, you not being all that familiar with Blue Bayou," he pointed
out. "I just thought you might like to have a little chat with the man who
owned Lafitte's Landing thirty years ago."
She remembered something from the newspaper report.
"The man who found her body?"
"That's him. He just also happens to be the guy
who hired Linda Dale. As well as the guy rumored to be having an affair with
her."
"How do you know that?"
"I stopped by Orиlia's on the way here. Between
her and the judge, there aren't any bodies buried in town they don't know
about." He inwardly flinched when he realized what he'd said. "I'm
sorry. I didn't mean that literally."
"I know." She sighed.
"Anyway, the judge proved a regular font of
information. Seems Boyce's wife was suing Dale for alienation of affection,
then for some reason changed her mind."
"He was married?" It had started to
sprinkle, the drops of rain dimpling the dark water on either side of the road.
"Yeah."
"She mentioned my father was married," Regan
murmured. "In the journal." She was looking at him again in that
hard, deep way that made him feel as if he were undergoing an interrogation.
"That's his name? Boyce?"
"It's his family name. His first name's Jarrett."
He wondered if she even realized that she'd reached
out and grabbed his arm.
"She called the man she was in love with 'J.'
What happened with the lawsuit?"
"Marybeth Boyce dropped her case."
"Maybe he killed her to keep from losing his
business in a divorce division of property."
"I suppose that's always a possibility,"
Nate acknowledged.
"There are probably more cold-blooded murders
done over money than passion. Or perhaps his wife dropped the lawsuit because she
decided to save the legal fees and take care of the problem herself."
"By dragging Dale out to the garage, stuffing her
in her car, and turning on the engine?"
"People can do a lot of things when they're angry
that they wouldn't be able to do otherwise. Women have been known to lift cars
off their children under the force of an adrenaline rush," Regan said.
"I always wondered if that's true. I've spent
most of my life carrying 'round lumber, and I'm not real sure I could lift up a
car, even if I had buckets of adrenaline pumping through my veins. Personally,
I think all those stories about women lifting cars may be urban legend."
"Do you do that on purpose?"
"What's that, chиre?"
"Take a conversation all the way around the block
before you get back to the topic."
"Oh, that." He considered it for a long
moment that had her grinding her teeth. "No," he finally decided.
"No, what?"
"No, I don't do it on purpose." He smiled at
her. "I guess it's like my charm—it just comes naturally. And since you
want to get back to the topic, murder by carbon monoxide poisoning seems an
awfully iffy way to kill someone. Why wouldn't Dale have just gotten out of the
car and opened the garage door to let in some fresh air?"
"Maybe she'd been tied up," Regan
considered.
"Dad would have put that in his report. And even
if whoever'd killed her had stuck around to untie her after she was dead, she
would have been left with rope burns. The medical examiner back then might not
have been the sharpest tack in the box, but I think even he would have spotted
them."
"The wife could have knocked her out. That would
explain the contusion on her skull."
"I'm no expert, but could a woman actually slug a
person that hard?"
"That depends upon the woman. I could."
He slanted her a look. "I'll keep that in
mind."
Regan tapped her fingers on her knee. "She could
have used a weapon."
"Sure. She could have gone in with a baseball bat
and started swinging. She could have hit her with a lamp. Or a telephone. Any
thing's possible."
"But you don't think so."
"Doesn't matter much what I think. You're the
detective."
"True. But I never in a million years could have
imagined I'd be investigating a murder in my own family." The idea was
still incomprehensible. Even more than the fact that her life had been a sham.
Which brought up another thought. "When your dad died, did people make fun
of you?"
He thought about that a minute. "No," he
decided. "But they did treat me a lot like some folks treat Homer Fouchet
when they first meet him. He's this guy who takes the classified ads down at
the paper. He lost both his legs in 'Nam and came home with really bad burns on
his face and hands. He doesn't have any facial hair or eyebrows or lashes, and
although he's a nice enough guy, there are still people who have trouble looking
at him, because he makes them uncomfortable, you know?"
"There but for the grace of God go I," she
murmured, having experienced the same behavior from some of the well-meaning
cops who'd visited her at the hospital.
"I think that's probably it," he agreed.
"Anyway, that's how they treated me. Nobody at school knew what to say,
and that made them uncomfortable, so they mostly stayed their distance. And
couldn't look me in the eye."
"At least you had your brothers."
"Yeah. Life was pretty rocky then for all of us,
but it would have been a helluva lot harder without Jack and Finn."
"Kids can be so mean."
"You won't get any argument there." He
thought some more. "There was this girl in school, Luanne Jackson, who had
an alcoholic mother and a no-good father, Jack found out later that her father
had been raping her and nearly killed the guy, but none of the kids even knew
about stuff like that back in grade school, and if any adults knew, they sure
as hell didn't tell Dad.
"Anyway, her mama used to spend a lot of time
down at the No Name whenever her husband was out shrimpin', which was most of
the time, and she'd leave with men she'd pick up there. Kids would hear their
parents talking about her at home and rag Luanne somethin' awful. She got
suspended a lot for fighting." He smiled at a memory. "If we were
anywhere in the vicinity, Jack and I tended to get into it with her. Which
usually ended up with us gettin' grounded."
"But you stood up for her."
"Mais yeah." He made it sound as if there'd
been no other choice. Which, she was beginning to suspect, there hadn't been.
"Sounds like you were close friends."
"We were. Not as close as Jack, though."
"Let me guess. Luanne and Jack had a 'thing.'
"
"Now, I wouldn't be one to spread tales, but they
were close for a while. But that was before Dani."
"Sounds as if your brother's life is divided into
two periods. Before Dani and after."
"I guess it pretty much is. I never would have
thought it possible, but she's got him downright domesticated."
"You make it sound as if he's been
neutered."
Nate laughed at that. "When you meet Jack, you'll
realize that there's not a woman on earth who could do that. But he's pretty
much settled down these days and seems real satisfied with his life."
She guessed, from his slightly incredulous tone, that
he wouldn't be satisfied to settle into domestic bliss. Which she honestly
doubted she would be, either. Having had no role model of husband-and-wife
behavior to observe while growing up, she wouldn't have the faintest idea how
to be a wife.
"Other than the accusation that Linda Dale was
having an affair with Jarrett Boyce, did the judge have any other information
about them?"
"Not much. Like I said, the case was dropped.
Shortly after that, Dale was found dead, so I guess they just sort of faded
back into a normal life that kept them out of courtrooms."
They fell silent for a time. Clouds rolled across the
sky as they drove past flooded stands of leafless trees the color of elephant
hide. Under ordinary circumstances, Regan would have enjoyed the drive. But
these were far from ordinary circumstances.
The house was small and narrow with a deep front
porch. The white paint had faded, but an explosion of orange honeysuckle
covered a white trellis at one side of the porch. A red-and-white Caddy with
fins hardening back to Detroit's I960s glory days was parked on a white
crushed-shell driveway. A brown-and-black hound dozed in a sunbeam on the porch
amid a green array of houseplants.
"It looks cozy," Regan murmured, wondering
if this was her father's house. And if so, how her life would have been
different if she'd grown up here in Blue Bayou, rather than L.A.
"It's a shotgun house," Nate said.
"There are literally thousands of them scattered all over south Louisiana.
Freed blacks brought the style here from Haiti. They're called shotgun because
all the rooms are lined up behind one another, so if you fired a gun from the
front door, it'd go right out the back door."
"Not a shotgun, unless you were shooting a slug.
When a shotgun's fired using a multiple-pellet shotshell, the pellets spread
out into a pattern that increases in diameter as the distance increases between
the pellets and the barrel. Depending on the size of the shot, the mass starts
to break up somewhere between five and ten feet."
"Anyone ever tell you that you're damn sexy when
you're talking like a cop?"
"No." She shot him a warning look that would
have had most men cowering in their boots. The problem was, Nate Callahan
wasn't most men.
"What's the matter with the men in L.A., anyway?
They an must be either blind or gay."
"Perhaps they know enough not to hit on a police
officer."
"Maybe someone who met you while you're armed and
investigating a murder might want to be a bit cautious about bein' too
forward," he allowed. "But you can't spend all your time chasing down
bad guys."
"There's where you're wrong. Being a cop isn't
just what I do. It's what I am. My life pretty much is my work, and the only
men in it tend to fit into three categories." She held up a finger.
"Suspects." A second finger. "Cops." A third. "And
lawyers."
"Maybe you need to expand your circle of
acquaintances." He brushed his thumb along her jaw.
She shoved his hand away. "What I need," she
said as she unfastened her seat belt, "is for you to back off and give me
some space."
He climbed out of the SUV and caught up with her on
the way to the porch. The rain had lightened to mist. "Okay."
"Okay, what?"
"Okay, I'll give you all the space you
need."
That stopped her. "Why don't I believe you?"
"Maybe 'cause you're a skeptic all the way to the
bone. But that's okay. It's sort of an interesting change for me. I can just
see you, a sober-eyed, serious four-year-old, sitting on St. Nick's knee in
some glitzy L.A. department store, giving him the third degree."
He made her sound grim and humorless. Worse yet was
the realization that she actually cared what he thought.
"I never sat on Santa's knee." She started
walking toward the house again. "My mother never encouraged me to buy into
the myth." Or the tooth fairy or Easter bunny, for that matter.
"Now that's about the most pitiful thing I've
ever heard."
"Then you've been blissfully sheltered."
Despite the car parked outside, no one seemed to be home. The dog obviously
hadn't been bought for his watchdog skills, since he was snoring, blithely
unaware of their presence. "Let's check around back."
They found Boyce in a small cemetery surrounded by a
low cast-iron fence. Some of the standing stones were so old the carving had
been worn down, making it impossible to know who'd been buried there. He was
planting roses into a raised bed beside a small stone angel.
When Nate called his name, he turned, then dropped the
shovel. "Hey, Nate. I figured you'd be showin' up sooner or later."
His rugged face, with its lines and furrows, suggested years of hard living.
His age could have been anywhere from fifty-five to seventy.
He pulled off a pair of canvas gardening gloves as he
studied Regan's face. "The judge was right," he said, revealing that
Judge Dupree had called ahead. "You do take after Linda some, around the
eyes." He skimmed a look over her. "I predicted her little girl was
going to be a heartbreaker when she grew up, and it looks like I was
right."
He glanced toward Nate, who'd leaned down and was
scratching the hound, who'd belatedly awakened and ambled over, behind his ear.
"It's also going 'round that you hired this little lady to take on the job
of sheriff."
"That's a misunderstanding," Regan said, one
she was getting weary of correcting. "The mayor only gave me the badge so
I could help out at an accident scene."
"Heard about that, too. Sounds like you two did a
bang-up job. Maybe you might want to stay on."
"I'm afraid that's not possible. I already have a
job in Los Angeles."
"Too bad. The town really needs a sheriff. Last
one we had was purely pitiful and a crook besides." He cocked his head and
gave her another long look. "Damned if you don't remind me of Linda when
you talk."
"She didn't have a local accent?"
"No, which wasn't real surprising, since she
wasn't a local girl."
"Do you know where she was from?"
"She didn't talk much about her past. I got the
feeling that she wasn't really happy growing up, but it seems she was from
someplace in California." He rubbed a stubbled chin. "Modesto, maybe
Fresno, somethin' like that. Not the places you usually think of, like Los
Angeles or San Francisco."
"Could it have been Bakersfield?" The woman
she'd always believed to be her mother had been born in the San Joaquin Valley
city.
His eyes brightened as if she'd just given him the
answer to the million-dollar question. "That was it. I remember because
she said the Mandrell sisters were from there, and she'd always wanted to grow
up to be rich and famous like them." The light faded from his gaze.
"She could have made it, too, if things had worked out differently. Your
mama was a real pretty woman. Talented, too."
"I haven't yet determined that Linda Dale was my
mother." Her tone was cool and professional and gave nothing away.
"Regan here's a detective," Nate volunteered.
"She likes to get all the evidence in before she makes a decision."
"A detective." His tone was gravelly from
years of smoking too many of those cigarettes she could see in his plaid shirt
pocket. "Don't that beat all. Never met a lady detective before."
A little silence fell over them.
"Roses are lookin' real nice, Jarrett," Nate
said.
The man swept the raised beds with a satisfied look.
"They're comin' along. I got some antique bushes from a plantation down in
Houma that's crumbling away. The new owner's razing the place to build some
weekend getaway, and when I went over there with the idea of buying them off
him, he just told me to take the lot."
"That sure is a lot, all right," Nate said,
looking at all the burlap-wrapped bushes. Bees were buzzing from flower to flower.
"Marybeth has always liked her roses," he
said. "This autumn damask is her new favorite. She's been hankerin' for
one 'cause it's supposed to be real good for making oil. Me, I'm sorta partial
to the color of this General Jack. You don't get many old garden roses that are
such a dark red."
"Your garden's lovely." Having found herself
in a discussion about flowers when she just wanted to solve the mystery of her
birth, Regan was beginning to understand Finn's impatience with detours.
"Marybeth's your wife?"
"Yes, ma'am. We'll have been hitched forty years
this March."
"That's a long time." And obviously not all
of it had been married bliss, according to Judge Dupree. Regan decided to take
a different tack. "How did you meet her? Linda Dale, not Marybeth."
He narrowed his eyes. "You're here about that
alienation-of-affection suit Marybeth filed against her," he guessed.
"I am interested in the circumstances behind
that, yes."
He let out a long, slow breath.
"Thought I'd put that foolishness behind me a long
time ago." He stretched, took a red-checked handkerchief from the pocket
of his overalls, and wiped his brow. "Digging holes is thirsty business.
Marybeth made a pitcher of sweet tea this morning. Let's go sit on the porch,
and I'll fetch you some."
Chapter Fifteen
We're not going to get out of here anytime soon, are
we?" Regan asked Nate as they sat on the porch in rocking chairs, while
Jarrett Boyce went inside to get the tea.
"Nope. But the truth, whatever it is, has been
waiting this long to come out. Won't hurt to sip a little sweet tea, chat a bit
about some roses. You'll find out what you need to know."
"Eventually."
"Things move a little slower down here," he
said, telling her nothing she didn't already know. "You gotta learn to go
with the flow."
She'd never gone with the flow in her life. As she
watched a hummingbird dipping its long beak into the red bloom of a potted
plant by the porch steps, Regan wasn't sure she knew how.
"Here you go." The screen door opened, and
Boyce came out carrying three canning jars filled with a dark liquid.
Nate took a long drink. "That just hits the spot,
Jarrett," he said with a flash of that smile that seemed to disarm
everyone. She watched Boyce's shoulders relax ever so slightly, and decided
that she'd love to have Nate Callahan in an interrogation room playing good
cop.
She murmured her thanks and studied the opaque liquid,
which didn't look like any iced tea she'd ever seen. It was as dark and murky
as the brown bayou water, and there were little black specks floating around in
it that she dearly hoped were tea leaves. A green sprig of mint floated on top.
She took a tentative sip. Surprise nearly had her
spitting it back out. "It's certainly sweet," she managed as she felt
her tooth enamel being eaten away.
"Lots of folks don't take the time to do it
right, these days. Marybeth boils the five cups of sugar right into the water
she brews the tea into."
"Five cups," she murmured. She could feel
Nate looking at her with amusement and refused to look back. "That
much." She imagined dentists must have a thriving practice here in the
South.
"That's why they call it sweet tea." He
leaned back in the rocker, crossed his legs, and said, "It wasn't true.
Those stories about me and Linda."
"Your wife seemed to think so," Regan said
carefully.
"Marybeth wasn't quite right in the head back
then." He frowned and stared down into the canning jar as if he were
viewing the past in the murky brown depths. "On account of what happened
to Little J."
"Your son?"
"Yeah." He reached into his pocket, pulled
out the pack of cigarettes, shook one loose, and lighted it with a kitchen
match he scraped on the bottom of his boot. "He was two when we lost
him." It still hurt—Regan could see it in his eyes, hear it in the
roughened tone of his voice. "He drowned."
"I'm sorry." She'd seen it more times than
she cared to think about when she'd been a patrol cop.
"So were we." He sighed, and suddenly looked
a hundred years old. "Marybeth was hanging laundry, right over
there." He pointed to a clothesline about ten yards away. "Little J
was playing with his toy trucks right here on the porch. She heard the phone
and went into the house to answer it. It was her mama, checking on some detail
for the church supper."
He paused. The silence lengthened.
"Mr. Boyce?" she prompted quietly.
He shook off the thought that had seemed to fixate
him. "Sorry. I jus' realized that I never knew exactly what the detail was
that was so damned important it couldn't wait for some other time." She
sensed the obviously repressed anger was directed more toward whatever fate had
caused his mother-in-law to call at exactly that moment than at either of the
two women. "Carla, that's Marybeth's mama, can talk the ears off a deaf
man. Marybeth used to be the same way." The pain in his gaze was, even
after three decades, almost too terrible to bear. "She never would talk on
the phone again after that day. In fact, she made me rip out the line the day
of the funeral '
A funeral for a toddler. Could there be anything more
tragic? "You don't have to talk about it," she said.
"You wanted to know what was goin' on between me
and your mama, you got to know the circumstances behind it." He squared
his shoulders, blinked away the moisture that had begun to sheen his gaze.
"We had a puppy back then. A blue-tick hound name of Elvis. I'd bought it
the month before, 'cause every kid needs a dog, right?"
"Right," she agreed. She'd never had one;
whenever she'd asked, her mother had said they'd shed and bring fleas and ticks
into the house.
"The sheriff—your daddy"—he said to Nate,
who nodded—"figured that Little J must've gotten bored with playing cars
and decided to play fetch with Elvis. 'Course he couldn't toss real good, and
this old tennis ball was floating on the water, so it seems that's what
happened." He squeezed his eyes shut, as if to block off the memory. Then
he swallowed the tea in long gulps, looking like a man who wished it was
something stronger.
"Marybeth just fell all to pieces. She got the
deep blues and couldn't do much but just lie in bed all day. Talking to her was
like talking to one of them stumps." Ashes fell off the burning end of the
cigarette as he gestured toward the cypress stumps out in the still, dark
water. "She wouldn't eat, wouldn't let me touch her. Never did cry. Not even
when they were lowering Little J's tiny blue casket into the grave.
"Everyone else—her ma, my ma, all the aunts,
cousins—was sobbing. Even my dad teared up some, and her daddy looked to be
about to have a heart attack. I'm not ashamed to admit that I had tears pourin'
down my face, too. But folks who say it's good to get things out must not have
ever lost themselves a baby, because crying sure didn't help me none that
day."
He exhaled another long, slow breath, then drew in on
the cigarette. "Marybeth's eyes stayed as dry as that little stone
guardian angel I'd got to mark his grave."
The small angel in the cemetery. Nate reached over and
laced his fingers with hers; Regan didn't pull her hand away.
"Marybeth didn't want the angel. I found out
later that she'd thought it was too damn late for Little J to have himself a
guardian angel, but since he'd always been afraid of the dark, the idea of him
having an angel nearby comforted me some. So I might have stood up to her about
that, if she'd even said anything at the time, which she didn't."
Like during the conversation about roses, Regan was
wishing he'd cut to the bottom line. She hadn't realized it fully until now,
but she'd just about reached her capacity for human tragedy. Understanding that
he had to tell his story his way, though, she held her tongue and looked for
signs of herself in the lined face that appeared to be a road map of his life.
"After a while, Doc Vallois decided that she
wasn't going to get better here, so he sent her up to this sanitarium in Baton
Rouge, where they knew how to treat people who were suffering depression by
sending electricity through their brains."
"Electroshock treatment." Regan exchanged a
brief look with Nate.
"That's what they called it. She was there six
months,"
Another silence settled over them like a wet gray
blanket.
"Leaving you to grieve all alone," Nate
prompted quietly.
Boyce gave him a grateful glance. "Yeah." He
took one last long drag on the cigarette, dropped it onto the porch, and
crushed it beneath his boot heel. Then he looked back at Regan. "Your mama
wasn't stuck-up like some good-looking women are. She was a lot of fun to be
around. Had a heart big as all outdoors, and when she smiled at you, it was
like the sun came out from behind a cloud. Everybody round these parts loved
her."
"That doesn't sound like a woman who'd commit
suicide."
"No, it don't," he said thoughtfully.
"Didn't know anyone who wasn't real surprised by that. I sure as hell
was." He shook his head. "But I guess you never really do know a
person, deep down inside."
"I suppose not." She certainly hadn't known
the woman she'd grown up believing to be her mother.
"Before she came to Blue Bayou, she was workin'
in N'Awlins. Even tried to break into country-and-western music in Nashville,
but the way she told it, she was playing in this little club way off Music Row
one night when this guy came in and offered her a job singing in some place he
owned in the Vieux Carrи. That's the French Quarter."
"I know. What made her leave New Orleans?"
"Well, now, she never did say, but I was sure
glad when she showed up at the Lounge lookin' for a job. Lord, that girl could
sing like a warbler. First week she was there, I brought home an extra ten
percent. After six months the profits doubled, and the place was packed every
Friday and Saturday night."
"As nice as Blue Bayou appears to be, it seems
she could have had more chance to land a record deal if she'd stayed in New
Orleans."
"That thought crossed my mind, too. A lot, but I
never asked, and like I said, she never did tell me. I always figured it had
something to do with a man. Mebee your daddy."
Regan felt every nerve in her body tense. "Did
you know him?"
"Nope. She never did talk about him, neither. But
I guess that's 'cause she didn't have real happy memories, and besides,
whenever we were alone, she was too busy trying to cheer me up. I was pretty
much of a mess in those days." Pale gray eyes narrowed as he studied her.
"I guess little girls grow up to be like their mamas even if they don't
live under the same roof. She was a fixer, too."
"A fixer?"
"One of those people who always want to help
other people out. Cheer them up, get rid of their problems for them. That's
what Linda was. Isn't it what a police officer does, too?"
"I suppose." How strange to think she might
take after her mother, rather than her father. "It sounds as if you had a
close relationship with Linda."
"Not as close as some of the old gossips around
these parts seemed to think. I never went to bed with her. Never even kissed
her. Not that I didn't think about how it'd be, from time to time," he
admitted.
"Day a man stops thinking about kissing a pretty
woman is the day he's just lost any reason to keep on livin'," Nate said.
Boyce surprised her by laughing at that. A rich, bold
laugh that gave a hint of the man who appeared to have been close friends with
her mother. Unfortunately, not close enough to know what Regan had come out
here to learn.
"Did she have any other men friends?"
"Just about every man in town. Like I said, she
was real popular." The smile Nate had tugged out of him lightened the dark
conversation. "Even with most of the women who'd show up at the Lounge.
Most nights she'd bring you along, and I never met a woman yet who didn't like
playing with a pretty baby."
"She took a baby to a nightclub?"
"Wasn't like the nightclubs you're probably used
to in California,"
Nate explained. "Lafitte's Landing was a family
sort of place, where everyone in town got together on the weekends to pass a
good time. The supper crowd would range from great-grandmиre, who didn't speak
a word of English, to mamas with their newborns, to teenagers showing up to
flirt with one another."
" 'Sides, it was a good deal for Linda,"
Boyce said. "She didn't have to pay for a sitter. And since I knew she
could be earnin' a lot more in the city, but couldn't afford to give her a
raise, I'd toss in dinner on the house. She even worked a little duet into the
routine."
"A duet?" Regan asked. Once again he'd
surprised her.
"Yeah. You couldn't string a whole sentence together,
but you sure knew all the words to 'You Are My Sunshine.' "
Regan drew in a quick, sharp breath of shock.
"It's a favorite 'round here, since it's the
state song and was written by Jimmie Davis, a sharecropper from up north in
Jackson Parish who grew up to be governor. It was a real cute act, especially
since even when you were in diapers, 'cepting for the color of your hair, you
took after Linda. It was kind of like looking at the little girl and seeing the
woman she'd grow up to be, both at the same time."
"You said the other men in town liked her."
It was her cop voice; controlled and impassive, revealing none of the emotions
churning inside her. She felt Nate looking at her again and wouldn't—
couldn't—look at him.
"Yes, ma'am, they sure did."
"So she dated a lot, did she?"
"Now, I didn't say that. I said she had a lot of
men friends. She was a friendly girl, but she wasn't fast. Whenever she went
out, she was always in a crowd of folks. Didn't seem like she had any one fella
she was sweet on. She used to read you fairy tales all the time, and I guess
she sort of bought into the stories, because she told me her prince was going
to show up on a big white horse to take you away from Blue Bayou, and the three
of you were going to live happily ever after." He shook his head.
"Guess it didn't work out that way."
"No. Apparently not."
Perhaps that's why Karen Hart hadn't encouraged Regan
to believe in myths or fairy tales. Perhaps that's why she'd stressed duty and
discipline. Perhaps, believing that her sister's freewheeling temperament had
led to Linda's death, she'd been trying to save her niece from a similar fate.
"I'd just gotten the Fleetwood then, and started
picking her up at her little house and driving her to the club," he said.
"Bein' how her own junker was so undefendable."
Regan glanced over at the red-and-white Cadillac.
"You don't see cars like that on the road much anymore."
"More's the pity," he said. "I'd bought
her off a helicopter pilot over in Port Fourchon. She'd been in an accident,
and the hood looked like an accordion. The interior was shot to hell, and the
paint was primer, but I could see the possibilities. Linda used to help me sand
the primer down on Sunday afternoons."
"It sounds as if you were very good
friends."
"We both had a lot in common, bein' alone, but
not being free to be with anyone else. Oh, we never talked about her man, and I
only told her about Marybeth once, on a really dark day when I got drunk and
broke down and bawled like a baby, but it was always there between us, and
created a bond. But it was always an innocent friendship. Despite, like I said,
what some busybodies liked to say."
"People talked."
"Sure. It's a small town," he said with a
resigned shrug of his shoulders. "There's not a lot to do, so talking about
your neighbor is sorta the local recreation."
Although Regan suspected living in such an environment
could prove stifling, there might be advantages to being a cop here—unlike
L.A., where you could arrive at a club that had broken fire regulations by
packing people in like sardines, have someone get shot in the head at
point-blank range, and not a single person in the place would have seen a damn
thing. Of course, she doubted there were all that many homicides in Blue Bayou,
which made it a moot point.
"Marybeth was a lot better when she got back from
the sanatorium, but she was still about as fragile as glass. I used to walk
around on tiptoe, not knowing what might set her off."
"Did you keep driving Linda to the club after
your wife returned home?"
"Oh, no, ma'am. Not because anything had been
going on," he stressed again. "But because I didn't want to be
responsible for sending Marybeth back to that place. Her being away was hard on
both of us, though it did seem to help with her blues, so I still think it was
probably a good thing."
"But someone shared the gossip with her."
"Oh, there were a few women who were jealous of
Linda and real eager to let Marybeth know what her husband had been doin' while
she'd been gettin' electricity shot through her head." If the sparks
glittering in his eyes were any indication, it still made him angry as hell.
"Meddling old biddies who, since they don't have any real lives of their
own, spend their time sticking their pointy noses into other people's business."
"That's when MaryBeth filed the
alienation-of-affection complaint."
"Yeah." He took off his billed cap and
dragged his hand through his still-thick white hair. "She didn't mean
nothin' by it, though. She was just hurt and went on a tear. By the time I got
over to the judge's house, he'd pretty much talked her out of the idea.
"She and I spent all that night talking, and the
next day she withdrew the complaint. I thought everything was going to be okay.
Then, when Linda didn't show up for work, I went to check on her, and found her
in the garage."
Dead. While a two-year-old child was left to fend for
herself. Regan had witnessed similar things, and while she'd always felt
terrible for the children, never had their loss and the confusion they must
have been feeling hit home as it did now.
"You said you and your wife talked all
night," she said, carefully wading into deeper conversational waters.
"Was that a figure of speech? Or were you literally with her all night
long?"
His eyes narrowed as he read the underlying meaning in
the question. "We were together all night. So, if you're here on police
business, I guess you could say I'm her alibi. And she's mine."
"I wasn't—" Hell, Regan thought, there was
no point in lying. "I didn't mean to imply that either you or your wife
had anything to do with her death, Mr. Boyce." It wasn't an out-and-out
lie. "I'm just trying to get at the truth. If you were as close friends as
you say—"
"I don't lie, ma'am." His tone had turned
from gravel to flint.
"Yessir. I understand that. And for what it's
worth, I believe you. But surely you, as a friend, would want to know what
happened to her."
"Killed herself. It said so right on the front
page of the Chronicle."
"Sometimes newspapers get it wrong,
Jarrett," Nate said.
"I read about there bein' an autopsy."
"Sometimes medical examiners get it wrong,
too," Regan said. Even knowing that it might tell Nate more about herself
than she would have wished, she took the old photograph of her
father from her billfold and held it out to Boyce. "Have you ever seen
this man before?"
He gnawed on his lower lip as he studied it for a
long, silent time. "His face doesn't ring a bell," he said finally.
"Perhaps you never met him," she suggested,
not quite willing to give up. "Could you have perhaps seen this photo at
Linda's house?"
"No, ma'am." This time his answer was quick,
decisive. "The only pictures Linda had around were ones she'd taken of
you." He began thoughtfully turning his cap around and around in his
hands. "You were the cutest little thing. There were times when I used to
hold you on my lap and wonder if things might have been different if I hadn't
met Marybeth first, and Linda wasn't hung up over some guy who sure wasn't actin'
much like a prince, if you want my opinion. I would've liked bein' your daddy.
I told your mama once that if I ever had a daughter, I would've liked her to be
like you."
He put the hat back on his head and stood up,
declaring the conversation closed. "I still would."
Regan was deeply, honestly moved. "Thank you, Mr.
Boyce. That's a lovely compliment."
"It's the truth," he said gruffly. The sound
of a car engine a ways down the road captured his attention, and he cursed
softly under his breath. "That'd be Marybeth, coming home from the
market."
Regan wondered if his wife had entirely recovered.
There were certainly drugs available to treat depression these days, but did a
mother ever truly get over the death of a child?
Not wanting to inflict another wound on the possibly
still fragile Marybeth when there was no hard evidence pointing at any guilt,
she turned to Nate. "We'd better be going."
"Thank you, ma'am." The older man's relief
was obvious. They were nearly to the SUV when he called out to her.
"Yes?" Regan asked.
"If someone did kill Linda, I sure hope you find
him. Lynchin's too good for any sumbitch who'd snuff out such a special
life."
Chapter Sixteen
They backed out of the driveway just as a late-model
Honda pulled in. "That was a nice thing to do," Nate said.
"I didn't want to waste time. After all, we got
what we needed. There was no point in questioning his wife."
"And you believed him? About not sleeping with
her?"
"I got the impression he was being truthful.
Didn't you?"
"Sure. But I'm the civilian here."
She glanced back, watching as Boyce took the groceries
out of the car. He literally towered over his wife, who appeared to be about
four-eleven and probably wouldn't weigh a hundred pounds soaking wet. "You
could have told me Marybeth is so small."
"Seems to me I mentioned my doubts about her
dragging Linda out to the car, and you mentioning adrenaline. Since I knew
you'd want to check out all the loose ends, it made more sense to let you talk
to Jarrett and make your own decision about the involvement of either
one."
"Of course, there's always the chance that he was
lying to me about their relationship," Regan mused. "Which could give
him a motive for killing Dale himself. It certainly wouldn't be the first time
the person who reported finding a body turned out to be the one responsible.
It's obvious he loves his wife, or they wouldn't have survived the loss of a
child and her depression and still be together thirty years later. If he'd
wanted to protect his marriage, he'd have a motive for wanting to stop her from
telling Marybeth the truth about an affair."
"Thus risking the chance of sending her back into
a depression, which in turn would have her returning to the hospital,"
Nate said. "Do you believe that's a possibility?"
"Anything's possible. But no, I don't believe
that's what happened."
"Then I guess we keep looking."
We. Strange, how having Nate Callahan as a partner in
this investigation didn't seem quite as impossible as it did yesterday.
"Do me a favor?" she asked.
"Sure." She didn't know anyone who'd agree
without first finding out what she was asking. "What do you need?"
"Pull over. I need to get out of this car."
He shot a concerned look. "You feelin' sick, chиre?"
"No." She took a deep breath.
"Frustrated. And when I'm frustrated, I need to walk."
"Makes sense to me."
He pulled the SUV over to the side of the road. Regan
jumped out before he could open her door and headed off down the road with no
goal but to try to clear her head and sort things through.
The energy was radiating from her like sparks from a
fire as she marched along the bank of the bayou. Leaving her to her thoughts,
Nate kept quiet and just fit his stride to hers.
"I just keep going over and over it," she
ground out after they'd gone about two hundred yards. "And I still can't
figure out why she never told me the truth."
"Maybe to protect your feelings?"
"Lies always come out."
Sister Augustine had always said the same thing. The
nun had warned her often unruly second graders, who'd technically reached what
the church considered the age of reason, that lies of omission were no
different from those spoken out loud, which meant the transgressor was required
to confess to the priest on those long Saturday-afternoon penance sessions Nate
had spent on his knees, reciting Our Fathers and Hail Marys when he'd rather be
outside playing ball.
"Maybe she kept putting it off until she thought
you were older and could handle the news better."
She spun toward him. "I was an adult when she
died. How long was she planning to wait?"
"I guess that's something you'll never
know."
"I wonder what else she didn't intend me to
know." She shook her head and began walking again, then stopped again and
looked out over the bayou. "Damn. I sound so damn pathetic."
She didn't look anything like the woman he'd first
seen as an island of calm in the midst of a chaotic police station. Nor that
intelligent, capable detective who'd testified so calmly and succinctly at that
gangbanger's murder trial, sticking to the facts no matter how often the
defense attorney had tried to draw her off-track by attacking not just the L.A.
police force in general, but her own investigation.
She looked small. Feminine. And strangely vulnerable.
"You don't sound pathetic at all, you."
Unable to watch any woman in such distress, he smoothed her too tense shoulders
with his palms. "You jus' sound like a woman who's had her world turned
upside down. Suddenly the sky's green." He ran his hands down her arms,
linked their fingers together. "The grass is blue. The sun's spinning in
that green sky, and you're figuring how to handle this new way of seein'
things." He drew her closer; not to seduce, but to soothe.
She slapped a hand against the front of his shirt.
"I realize this will come as a terrible shock, but not every woman on the
planet is panting to fall into bed with you."
"Well, now, that suits me just fine, since I'm
not interested in falling into bed with every woman on the planet."
"Dammit, Callahan, if you don't quit hitting on
me—"
"Non, chиre." He caught hold of the hand
pushing against his chest, lifted it, touched his lips to the soft, warm skin
of her palm, then folded her fingers again, holding the kiss in. "This
isn't hitting."
"People must use a different dictionary in
Louisiana. What would you call it?"
"Fixing." He moved a little closer, so they
were touching, thigh to thigh, chest to chest, her slender curves to his
angles. They fit well. He'd thought they would, back when she'd been on the
witness stand and he'd been fantasizing taking her to bed.
"Fixing?"
"That's what I do." He pressed a kiss
against her hair and drew in the scent of herbal shampoo. "I'll never make
as much money as Jack. Or be as driven as Finn. But I've always been pretty
good at fixin' things."
Having accepted early on that a person couldn't change
nature, Nate had been happy in his role as a handyman of sorts, fixing houses,
people, lives. But until now, until Detective Regan Hart, the only time he'd
tried to fix a broken heart had been that horrific day that his maman had been
widowed.
"I think you and I just might have that in
common, Detective Chиre." He felt the stiffness easing out of her as she
slipped her arms around his waist. "So why don't you let me fix you? Just
a little?"
"I suppose your method of fixing up will involve
getting naked?"
"No. Well, not right this minute," he
amended, wondering if Sister Augustine was looking down from some fluffy cloud
and admiring the deft way he'd avoided committing a sin of omission.
"Maybe later, when you get to know me a little bit better and are more
comfortable with the idea."
He was rewarded by something that sounded a bit like a
smothered laugh, then felt the moisture when she pressed her face into his
neck.
"I am not crying."
"Of course you're not." He slid a hand
through her hair, sifting the silky strands Like sand between his fingers.
"I never cry." Her voice was muffled.
"Not even when my mother died."
He felt her stiffen again as she realized the woman
she'd always thought of as her mother probably wasn't.
"Don't think about that right now." He
cupped her face between his hands. Her eyes, underscored by shadows revealing
too many sleepless nights, were dark with pain.
"That's easy for you to say."
"You know what you need?"
"What?"
"Somethin' to take your mind of all your
problems. Jus' for a little while."
Unlike that earlier kiss, when he'd slowly,
tantalizingly led her into the mists, this time he dragged her, head spinning,
heart hammering, into a storm. Thunder rumbled inside her, lightning sparked
every raw nerve ending, and she could have sworn the ground beneath her feet
quaked.
It shook Regan to the core. She'd never realized she
could feel so much. Never imagined she could want so much more.
Too soon, he drew his head back. "I want
you."
"Now there's a surprise." The surprise was
that she could actually speak when she was so close to begging. "Have you
ever met a woman you didn't want?"
"From time to time." He smiled a bit at
that, but his eyes were thoughtful. "This isn't one of those times."
"Then you're going to be disappointed. Because
I'm not into casual sex."
"I'd be disappointed if you were."
She arched a brow. "Ah, the double standard lifts
its ugly head. Why is it okay for a man to be a player, but if a woman enjoys
variety, she's a slut?"
"I have no idea, never having subscribed to that
belief, myself." He slipped a hand beneath the hem of her white T-shirt;
roughened fingers skimmed over the unreasonably sensitive skin of her abdomen.
"I'm going to touch you, Detective Darlin'. All over." The sound of
those callus-tipped fingers rasping against the lace of her bra was one of the
sexiest things she'd ever heard. "Then I'm going to taste you." He
dipped his head again and touched his lips to the nape of her neck. "Every
last inch of your delectable female body."
Who could have suspected there was a direct link from
that surprisingly sensitive spot behind her ear to her legs, which were turning
to water?
"And then, just to prove I'm no chauvinist, I'm
going to let you do the same thing to me. But not yet."
His quiet declaration took the wind right out of her
sails.
"What?"
"Although I'm surprising the hell out of myself,
I'm thinking we should step back a little. Take our time. Slow things down. Get
to know one another better. It'll be all the more satisfying in the end."
"You make it sound like a foregone
conclusion."
"Isn't it? You say you don't go in for casual
sex, which fits, since from what I've seen, you don't take anything lightly.
Including that kiss we just shared."
"It was only a kiss. No different from any
other."
"You just keep tellin' yourself that, chиre. I
promise not to rub it in too badly when you realize how wrong you were."
She blew out a frustrated breath. "I'm amazed,
given your supposed way with the opposite sex, that it's never sunk in that you
can be annoyingly, insufferably arrogant."
"You know, if you keep talking like that, you're
going to have me falling head over heart in love with you." His smile
warmed and widened. "I've always been a sucker for flattery."
They returned to the car, and after a brief drive Nate
pulled up in front of a building.
"What are we doing?"
"I thought we'd pick up some lunch to eat while
we plan our next move," he said. "You haven't eaten till you've
tasted one of Cajun Cal's po' boys."
Two seconds after they walked into the cafe,
conversation dropped off like a stone falling into a well.
"Small towns," Nate murmured.
"Doesn't it get old?" she asked, pretending
not to notice that everyone was staring at her. Since at least half the people
in the place were too young to have even known Linda Dale's name, Regan could
only assume that the news of her arrival in town had preceded her. "Not
being at all anonymous?"
He thought about that for a minute. "Not anymore.
I guess you get used to it. It was hard when I was in my teens and was trying
to get away with anything. One time Jack and I were cruisin' home from school
in his GTO, and by the time we arrived at Beau Soleil, at least a dozen folks
had already called maman to tell her we'd been speeding."
Regan couldn't help smiling at that idea.
He smiled back, then sobered. "I think it was
also worse because we were just about the only kids in school whose daddy had
died."
"The dead dad's club," she murmured.
"Yeah. Guess you and I are both charter
members."
"I guess we are."
The restaurant seemed to be made up of a connecting
series of small rooms, each of which had an inordinate number of tables crowded
into it. The tables were covered in newspaper, the chairs were a jumble of
different styles and colors, and the front counter was red Formica. Daily
specials had been printed in white chalk on a standing blackboard beside the
counter. The walls, which she supposed had once been white but had become
smoke-darkened over the decades, were covered with huge stuffed fish,
photographs that, from the outlandish costumes, she assumed had been taken
during many Mardi Gras over the decades, and old metal signs advertising
various beers—Jax seemed the most popular—soft drinks, and White Lily flour.
The smells emanating from the kitchen made Regan's
mouth water.
Cajun Cal was the oldest man Regan had ever seen who
was still alive. Nearly black eyes, as bright as a parrot's, looked out at her
from a face as dark and wrinkled as a raisin.
"So, you're Linda Dale's little girl all grown
up."
She forced a smile, as much for the audience as for
the man behind the counter. It was clearly going to be impossible to keep the
purpose of her trip from becoming common knowledge. "That's what I'm in
Blue Bayou to find out."
"Yeah. That's what I heard." The unlit
cigarette in his mouth bobbed up and down as he spooned dark coffee grounds
from a bright red bag of Community Coffee into a huge urn. "Your face
isn't exactly the same, and your hair isn't the same, but lookin' at your eyes,
it'd be my guess you are." He studied her some more. "I also heard
you're a big-city cop."
"I'm a detective, yes."
"Detective, cop, G-man, they're all the same
thing. I got my start in this business when I was still a kid and my uncle
hired me to deliver jugs of white lightnin' around the parish during
Prohibition. Best customers we had were the cops." If there was a challenge
there, and Regan suspected from his tone that there was, she refused to rise to
it.
"That's the trouble with passing a law the
majority of the people in the country don't agree with," she said mildly.
"Sure as hell is. Nobody down here paid much
attention to Prohibition. Hell, my uncle didn't even bother to hide the stuff.
Kept it right behind the counter, servin' it up by the glass to whoever wanted
a snort. He brewed the best hootch in south Louisiana."
"Well, good for him." She smiled. "But
if it's all the same to you, I'll just have a glass of iced tea. No," she
corrected, having already tasted what appeared to pass for tea down here,
"on second thought, water will be fine."
"Why don't you make that two lemonades,"
Nate suggested. "Regan got to sample sweet tea out at Jarrett's
place."
The old man cackled. "Marybeth's sweet tea does
take some gettin' used to, even if you're not a Yankee. You sing, chиre?"
Regan didn't so much as blink at the question that had
come from left field. She could also feel everyone in the restaurant who was
over fifty years old waiting for her answer.
"Not really." She decided belting out Aretha
Franklin in the shower didn't count.
"Now, that's a crying shame. Linda had a real
pretty voice. As pure a soprano as you'd ever want to hear. But I guess genes
are an iffy thing. Lord knows, I'm the best cook in the South, and my daughter
Lilah can't even boil water without burning the bottom out of the pot. As for
my son, well, I've been pulling dinner from the Gulf since God was a pup, but
he's a piss-poor fisherman."
"Maybe there's something your wife never got
around to tellin' you, Cal," offered a man the color of coal, wearing a
stained white apron and shelling shrimp. "I heat the mailman y'all had
fifty years ago couldn't fish worth beans, either."
"Hardy har har," the old man scoffed, then
turned piercing dark eyes back to Regan. "I also heard tell you're gonna
be our new sheriff."
"I'm afraid the grapevine has it wrong."
"Wouldn't be the first time," he said
equably. "We sure could use ourselves one."
"I'm sure Mayor Callahan's doing everything in
his power to find the perfect candidate."
"Seems to me any cop who'll crawl under hot wires
to save a kid is real close to perfect herself." He lifted a basket of
golden fried fish from a deep fryer and dumped it onto a platter.
"We'll have two po' boys," Nate ordered,
saving Regan from having to respond. "You want shrimp, fried fish, or
roast beef, sugar?"
Not only was there something unnerving about eating
fish with all those glass eyes looking down at her, the roast beef in the
display case was so heavily marbled she could feel her arteries clogging just
looking at it.
"I guess the shrimp."
"Good choice," Nate said. "I'll have
the same as the lady, dress 'em both, and throw in a couple cartons of slaw and
some hush puppies."
"Why is it called a po' boy?" Regan asked.
" 'Cause it used to only cost a nickel, so poor
boys could afford it."
She watched the sandwich being made and decided that a
family of six could probably eat quite well on it for a week. She also wondered
if she should just call ahead and make an appointment at the hospital for
bypass surgery rather than wait for the heart attack.
"Do you eat here often?" she asked Nate
quietly.
"Jus' about every day. Why?" '
"I was wondering why you don't weigh a thousand
pounds."
"I work it off." He paused a wicked beat.
"Want to know how?" "No." Her smile was as sweet as
Marybeth Boyce's tea. "I don't." Nate had been teasing, mostly.
Enjoying a little flirtation. Then he made the mistake of looking at her mouth
and remembered, with vivid clarity, the taste of those full, inviting lips. The
blood suddenly rushed from his head to other, more vital regions, making him
feel as dizzy as he had that day jack had swiped a case of Dixie out of a beer
truck delivering out back, and the two of them had taken the pirogue out to
their daddy's old camp and gotten drunk by the light of a summer bayou moon.
Easy, boy, he warned himself as he felt an almost
overwhelming urge to kiss her, right here in Cajun Cal's Country Cafe, in front
of just about everyone in town. He wanted to taste that delectable mouth again,
wanted to feel it roaming all over his hot, naked body. His hunger must have
shown in his expression, because her eyes suddenly widened, and he was caught
in that gleaming amber, frozen in it, which didn't make much sense, since the
air between them had turned about as sizzling hot as a steamy dog-day August
afternoon. Yet he couldn't have moved if someone shouted out a hurricane was
blowing in from the Gulf and they were standing right atop the levee.
Chapter Seventeen
Leave this be, the angel perched on Nate's shoulder
warned. She isn't like Charlene, or Suzanne. Or any other of the women he'd
tumbled happily, easily into bed with over the years since that memorable day
when he'd lost his virginity in the backseat of Jack's borrowed GTO with Misty
Montgomery. Don't listen to him, the devil on the other shoulder
said. She's a grown woman. Nate had already determined that for himself, but
what he hadn't noticed, until now, was how tight those low-slung jeans were. He
wondered if she'd had to lie on the bed at the inn to zip them.
That idea led to another, of knocking all those salt
and pepper shakers, metal napkin holders, and bottles of hot sauce off the
chipped red counter, lifting her up onto it, unzipping those jeans, and
dragging them down those smooth thighs he'd wanted to bite when she'd been up
on that witness stand back in L.A.
He imagined her wearing a pair of skimpy red panties
that barely covered the essentials, and although she'd beg him, "Please,
Nate, rip them off, please, please, darling," he'd torture them both by
taking his time, enjoying the way her eyes glazed with lust when he slipped his
fingers beneath the silk, jangling her senses, causing every nerve ending in
her body to sizzle.
And when he'd tormented them both to the point of no
return, when he had her exactly where he wanted her, hot, needy, ravenous, he'd
peel those panties down her long legs, inch by erotic inch, and as she cried
out his name, he'd—
"Hey, Nate." The voice was deep, way too
deep to be hers.
Nate slowly, painfully, dragged his mind back from the
sensual fantasy, crashing headfirst into reality when he viewed the
fifty-something man standing beside her.
"Hey, Charles," he answered on a voice
roughened with lingering lust. "How's it goin'? " Like he cared.
"Fine, just fine." Charles Melancon turned
his smile from Nate to Regan, who also appeared to be shell-shocked as she
returned from wherever the hell they'd both been. "Hello. You must be the
new sheriff I've been hearing all about."
"She ain't the sheriff," Cal said around his
unlit cigarette as he wrapped the enormous sandwiches in waxed white paper.
"Was just filling in during the accident out at the crossing 'tween that freight
and the eighteen-wheeler."
"What a terrible, terrible thing." Melancon
shook his silver head. "It was a miracle no one was seriously hurt."
"It sure could've been a lot worse," Nate
agreed. His head was beginning to clear, and he was no longer in immediate
danger of bustin' the zipper out of his jeans. "Detective, this is Charles
Melancon. Charles, Detective Regan Hart, from Los Angeles."
"It's a pleasure meeting you, detective." He
shook her hand with the robust action of a small-town politician, which he was.
Along with being CEO of Melancon Petroleum, Charles Melancon was head of
several redevelopment committees, president of the Blue Bayou Rotary Club, and
past president of the Chamber of Commerce. "I was very impressed by your
bravery. Did the mayor happen to mention we're in the market for a new
sheriff?" he asked.
"As a matter of fact, he did. But I already have
a job. I'm an LAPD homicide detective."
"Are you now?" His silver brows shot up.
"That must be exciting work."
"Actually, homicide's pretty much society's
clean-up crew. We're like the guys with the wheelbarrows who follow the
elephants in the parade and shovel up the shit."
Behind the counter, Cal gave a bark of a laugh.
"Still, it must be interesting," Melancon
said. "The closest thing to excitement here in Blue Bayou is watching
paint dry."
"Oh, I wouldn't think running an international
oil company could possibly be dull."
Interest turned to surprise. "You know about
Melancon Oil?"
"It would be hard not to, since I see the blue
sign every time I fill up my car. Though I never realized the home offices were
located in southern Louisiana."
That was, Nate knew, a lie. He suspected that after
having learned about the stock certificates, she could probably quote the
company's latest balance sheet.
"We're not the biggest fish in the pond, but we
make a right nice splash." Charles Melancon might not be the type of guy
Nate would swap stories and go fishing with, but he'd always seemed fairly
down-to-earth for someone whose father had probably owned half of southern
Louisiana at one time. "What brings you to Blue Bayou, detective?"
"Oh, this and that." Despite seeming half
the town knowing what she was up to, and the other half undoubtedly finding out
by Mardi Gras, she wasn't one to give anything away. Her smile turned as vague
as her tone. "Partly I'm here for a little R&R."
"Most folks go to N'Awlins for that."
"I've been there and done all the touristy,
French Quarter things. This trip I decided to see the real Louisiana."
"Well, you've certainly come to the right
place."
"I don't suppose you conduct tours of your
facilities?" she asked.
He frowned. "Not as a rule. Refineries can be
dangerous to those not familiar with the work, and our insurance company likes
us to keep our liability risk down."
"Well, it never hurts to ask." She sighed
heavily in a very undetective-like way. "I suppose I'll just sign up for
the alligator swamp tour instead."
"You'd pretty much be wastin' your money,"
Nate volunteered. "Seein' as how the gators are hibernating right
now."
"Oh." Her mouth turned down in a little moue
that was far more woman than cop. "Well, I'm sure I can find something to
occupy my time. I seem to recall reading that Exxon Mobile has a refinery in
Baton Rouge. Perhaps—"
"I suppose," Melancon interrupted her,
"it would be all right to show you around, just this once." His eyes
swept over her in what Nate decided was an unnecessarily intimate way for a guy
who had a wife at home. "After all, what Louisiana Liability and Trust
doesn't know won't hurt them."
"It'll be our secret." Her smile would have
done a Miss Cajun Days queen proud. "Why don't I drop by Monday
morning?"
"I'm afraid I'm going to be out of town on
Monday. A meeting in Houston."
"Oh. Well, Tuesday will be fine."
"That's Fat Tuesday," Cal volunteered.
"He's right," Charles Melancon said with
what appeared to be a bit of honest reluctance. "Which means that while a
skeleton crew will be working, I'm afraid the offices won't be open."
"How about Wednesday?" she pressed on.
"Say, about eight o'clock?"
"I'm afraid the office isn't open quite that
early."
"Especially on Ash Wednesday, when everyone in
the parish is going to be hung over," Cal said.
"Not everyone," Melancon corrected.
"Why don't we have lunch together in the company dining room at one on
Wednesday?"
Her smile could have lit up Blue Bayou for a month.
"That sounds fab."
Fab? Nate stared down at the surprising metamorphosis
from cop to belle.
"I'm staying at the Plantation Inn, in case
something opens up before then," she said.
"Good choice," he said.
Only choice, Nate thought.
"The inn's a famous historical landmark,"
Melancon continued.
"So Mr. Callahan tells me. I'll be waiting for
your call." She held out her hand like a princess to some duke she was
considering marrying. "It was lovely meeting you, Mr. Melancon."
"The pleasure was all mine, Ms. Hart." He
flashed his Chamber of Commerce meet-and-greet grin and returned to his table
across the room.
"Isn't he a charming man?" Regan said.
"An absolute gem," Nate agreed dryly.
"Order's up," Cal announced.
Nate took the brown bags. "It's on me," he
said when Regan began to take some money from her billfold. She looked inclined
to argue, then merely shrugged.
"What the hell was that all about?" Nate
asked Regan when they were back in the SUV.
"What was what all about?"
"That Scarlett O'Hara act you pulled with Charles
Melancon."
"I've no idea what you mean."
"You're not the type of woman who normally goes
around batting your eyelashes."
"Too bad you missed my days in vice, when I did
undercover prostitution stings." She pulled her seat belt across and
clicked it. "I'll have you know, some men found me very appealing."
"Of course you're appealing, dammit. But not in
that way."
"And what way is that?"
"You know." Feeling as if he'd somehow
landed in verbal quicksand, he skimmed a hand over his hair. "That
over-the-top come-and-get-me-big-boy way. You were sending off signals that you
were open for a lot more than a damn oil refinery tour."
"That's quite a comment from the man who's claimed
he wants to take me to bed, and was undressing me with his eyes when Melancon
interrupted."
"I didn't hear you complaining." He jerked
his own seat belt closed.
"We were in a public place. I didn't feel the
need to embarrass you by telling you to knock it off."
"What a bunch of bullshit." He twisted the
key in the ignition with more strength than necessary and pulled away from the
curb with an angry squeal of tires.
The heat that had sizzled between them in the
restaurant shifted into a low, seething anger. Regan was tempted to tell him to
take her back to the inn; she didn't need his help. After all, if she couldn't
handle one cold case committed in a town where everyone knew everyone else,
which meant someone had to hold the key to solving the murder, she might as
well turn in her shield and go sell Avon products door to door.
The problem was, if she stomped back to the inn, she'd
risk letting him know how affected she'd been by that suspended moment in the
restaurant, when she'd been fantasizing about Nate dragging her down to the
black-and-white-checked floor and making mad, passionate love to her.
"I wasn't flirting with him," she said into
the heavy silence. "I need to talk to him about the stock certificates.
Since I don't have any police powers down here to force the issue, and since
he's undoubtedly used to calling the shots, I figured he might be more amenable
to charm."
"You couldn't just come right out and ask?"
"With everyone in the place watching us and
listening to every word?"
"Yeah, I can see how you'd rather them think you
were coming on to a married guy twice your age than have them overhearing you
ask a basic business question."
"It's not basic when a woman got killed over
it."
He shot her a surprised look. "You think Linda
Dale was murdered for her Melancon Petroleum stock?"
"She wouldn't have been the first person to be
killed over money."
"And wouldn't be the last," he allowed.
"But if that was the motive, then why were the stocks left behind?"
"Maybe the murderer got interrupted and had to
leave before he could retrieve them. Maybe she had them hidden." Regan
shrugged. "There could be any number of answers. Which is why I want
privacy when I talk with Melancon. Not that he sounded real eager for a
meeting." She frowned. "I wonder why that was?"
"Are you suspicious of everyone? Never
mind," he said before she could answer the rhetorical question; "I
know the answer to that. But just because he's CEO of the company doesn't mean
he'll be able to tell you anything. His mother was running the place thirty
years ago."
"From what you said about Mrs. Melancon, the
chances are she wouldn't recall details. But not only would he have access to
the records, this is a small town. It seems implausible that anyone living
here—especially a nightclub singer—would own that much stock without the family
being aware of it."
"Good point."
"Thank you. That's why L.A. pays me the big
bucks." Which barely covered the rent on her closet-sized apartment in
Westwood and insurance on a five-year-old tomato red Neon. "I wonder if he
knew her?"
"Like you said, it's a small town, and it sounds
like she was a local celebrity."
"I got that impression from the newspaper even
before we talked with Jarrett Boyce." She chewed thoughtfully on a buffed
fingernail. "Do you suppose they could have been lovers?"
"That's unlikely."
"Why?"
" 'Cause I already checked it out. Charles got
married two years before Linda Dale's death."
"That doesn't mean anything. They could have been
having an affair."
"That's also unlikely. Not only does the guy
consider himself a pillar of morality, the conventional wisdom around these
parts says that he married into money to keep his family in the style to which
they'd become accustomed back when oil was king."
"You'd think being CEO of a family petroleum
company would pay very well."
"Not well enough. There was a time when his daddy
probably had more power than the governor. He'd had more than one governor and
several congressmen in his pocket. Regulation slowed the money flow, then the
bust tightened things even more. The family's richer than most around these
parts, but if it wasn't for Charles's wife's money, they'd probably have to
give up the plane, the yacht, the ski chalet in Aspen, and the villa in
Tuscany."
"I didn't find any villa when I did my search."
"The title's in his mother-in-law's name. But she
lives in one of those retirement communities in Baton Rouge and hasn't been out
of the country in a decade."
"I suppose you got that from Finn."
"He did a little digging."
"I don't even want to know," Regan muttered.
"I'm beginning to feel as if I'm dealing with the Hardy boys. Maybe
Melancon gave Linda Dale the stock to pay her off."
"To get rid of her once he tired of the
affair?"
"That's always possible."
"Sure it is. But if that was the case, then why
would he kill her?"
"Maybe she refused the offer."
"She had the certificates."
"Okay, maybe she changed her mind. Maybe she took
them, then threatened to go to his wife."
"Because she wanted more money?"
"Or because she was in love and decided that she
couldn't live without him."
"So he killed her to shut her up."'
"That's one scenario."
"You realize, of course, that if you're right,
Melancon could be your father?"
"We can't all have heroes for fathers." It
was looking more and more likely that she probably didn't. "But the name's
wrong. Dale referred to the man she was going to run off with as J," she
reminded him. Then paused. "There's something I haven't wanted to bring
up. But I don't think we can overlook it."
"What?"
"You do realize that there's someone else who
could have been involved with Dale."
"More than one someone. There are a helluva lot
of names in this parish that begin with J."
"Like Jake."
She'd expected him to swear. Maybe even rage. At least
snap back a denial. He did none of that. He threw back his sun-gilded head and
roared with laughter.
"It's not that funny."
"If you'd known my dad, you'd think it was.
There's no way he would have looked at another woman. He and maman used to
embarrass the hell out of us kids, the way they used to neck like teenagers.
They renewed their vows on their twentieth wedding anniversary, right here at
Holy Assumption.
"The very next weekend, on the night before he
was killed, they were partying at his fortieth birthday party. I remember
groaning with Jack when they were dancing to this slow Cajun song about love
goin' wrong and they kissed, right there, in front of God and everyone in Blue
Bayou. And not just a friendly little husband-and-wife public peck on the
cheek. They were really gettin' into it." His expression turned
reminiscent and understandably sad. "Everyone in the parish knew Jake
Callahan flat-out adored my mother. And she adored him back."
"I believe that." It wouldn't be that hard
to fall in love with a Callahan man, if a woman was looking to fall in love.
Which she definitely was not. "But nobody's perfect. People make mistakes.
Get themselves in messy situations they never could have imagined."
"Even if he had slipped, and I'm not saying he
did, since I don' believe it for a damn minute, if he'd gotten a woman
pregnant, he would have done right by her."
"Done right. Does that mean marry?"
"Hell, I don't know." He was no longer
laughing. In fact, he was as sober as she'd ever seen him. Even more serious
than when he was crawling beneath those electrical wires to rescue the trucker
and a runaway teenager.
He blew out a long ragged breath. "Maybe. Maybe
not. I told you, he took his marriage vows seriously, so I can't see him
signing up for a lifetime sentence if he wasn't in love."
"Sentence. Well, that certainly reveals how you
think about marriage."
"Actually, I try not to think about it. I'm also
not real wild about the way you're analyzing every damn word I use, like this
is some kind of interrogation. However, as I was about to point out, even if
Dad were to go plantin' his seed somewhere, he would have insisted on
contributing to his child's support.
"I watched him chase down men who didn't pay
their child support and toss them in jail until they decided it'd be better to
write the checks, long before it got politically popular to crack down on
dead-beat dads. Dad was big on birthdays and holidays, and just taking us boys
out to the camp for a lazy summer day of fishing, or even tossin' a ball around
the backyard before supper. He'd never desert his own flesh and blood."
His hand had curled into an unconscious fist. "He wouldn't have let your
mother live in the same town and never acknowledged you."
"I understand why you'd want to stand up for him,
I also understand why you'd find it hard to believe that he might possibly
commit adultery, since it's obvious you respect him—"
"There's not a man, woman, or child who knew Jake
Callahan who didn't respect him."
"I'm also willing to accept that. But we can't
ever really know our parents, Nate, because they try their best never to let us
see their flaws. I'm proof that an otherwise honest parent might think it's in
everyone's best interest to keep a secret from their children."
"Not my dad, dammit. Look, you've met Finn."
"Of course."
"Let me put it this way: our father would make
Finn look downright flexible."
"You're joking." She'd never met a more
rigid, black-and-white person than Finn Callahan. And living in the world of
cops, that was really saying something.
"This is not exactly a joking matter. It's also a
moot point, because Dad was working in Chicago when your mother got
pregnant."
"He was sheriff of Blue Bayou when she lived
here."
"When she died," Nate corrected. "But
you're the same age as Jack, and he and Finn were both born in Chicago. We
moved here when I was six weeks old."
"Oh. Well, I guess that does take him out of the
picture, since there's no indication Dale ever lived in Illinois."
"Not unless you want to concoct some theory about
them meeting on some plane trip and becoming members of the mile-high club over
Kansas, then going their separate ways after it landed."
The uncharacteristic sarcasm in his tone was sharp
enough to cut crystal. "I suppose I deserved that."
"No.' He sighed and shook his head. "You
didn't. I understand this is tough on you, and you're only doin' what comes
naturally. Detecting."
"I'm sure as hell not doing very well at it so
far," she muttered.
"Like you said, it's a cold case. You've only
been in town two days."
"I know. I just get impatient."
"That's not good for you. Raises your blood
pressure and all sorts of bad stuff. Move here, and you're bound to slow down.
Live longer."
"Maybe it just seems longer."
He chuckled at that.
"Do you know Melancon's wife?"
"Sure. She's on just about every charitable
committee in town. As mayor, I have a lot of dealings with her. She tends to
keep busy, and her fingers are in most of the pies around town. She does a lot
of charity work, but it's seldom the hands-on kind of stuff. She's more likely
to donate a wing to the hospital than drive around in her Jag delivering Meals
on Wheels.
"She can be so condescending your teeth hurt from
being clenched, and she's a snob, along with being Blue Bayou's self-appointed
morality czarina. But I can't see her killing anyone, if that's where you were
going. Especially if it'd involve anything that might involve chipping a
fingernail."
"There's one thing I learned early on in
homicide."
"What's that?"
"Everyone's a suspect."
"You're a hard woman, Detective Chиre."
"I'm a realist." She had to be. "I'm
going to want to meet her."
"Mrs. Melancon?"
"Yeah. The way I see it, I can do it three ways.
I can find out her daily activity pattern and just happen to run into her by
chance and get to chatting, but that's iffy, and if she's in a hurry, it
doesn't give me a real good opportunity to talk with her.
"Or I can just go to her house, knock on the
door, tell her that her husband may be a suspect in a thirty-year-old murder
case, and could we have a little chat about whether or not he used to sleep
around on her back when she was a young bride.
"Or," she said as he pulled up to a four-way
stop, "I can have you arrange things."
He braked and briefly shut his eyes. "Why did I
know you were going to say that?"
"Because you've spent all your life surrounded by
cops. Some of it's got to have rubbed off onto you."
"I use that soap with pumice in it so it doesn't
stick."
"You might not want to admit it, Callahan, but on
occasions, you, too, can think like a cop."
He frowned. "I don't know if I've been complimented
or insulted."
She laughed for the first time, and Nate was struck by
how much he enjoyed the rich, full sound. She reached over and patted his
cheek. "Why don't you think on it."
Chapter Eighteen
They stopped for a while in a peaceful spot next to
the bayou for lunch. The sandwich was the richest she'd ever tasted. She'd only
been able to finish half of it and still didn't think she'd be able to eat
again for a week. They'd parked beside a metal marker memorializing the victory
of a battle against the British.
"Isn't that the pirate you were going to tell me
about?" She remembered him mentioning that when they'd first entered the
ER.
"That's him. Jean Lafitte. Actually, there were
three of them— Alexander, Pierre, and Jean—hut Jean was the most infamous.
Alexander, who, I guess you could say was most respectable, was Napoleon's
artillery officer. Jean and Pierre were privateers who earned their living
attacking the trading ships comin' and goin' between the Gulf and the river
cities."
"I imagine there was a fairly good profit in
piracy."
"Mais yeah. Jean and Pierre had thirty-two armed
warships under their command, they, which was more than the entire American
navy at the start of the War of 1812. Both the British and the Americans
recruited them, but Andrew Jackson was the one who promised them amnesty if
they'd fight in the Battle of New Orleans."
"Which they did," she guessed.
"They did. After they won the battle and sent the
Redcoats packing, they went right back to raiding. Tales about his final
restin' place flow as freely as Voodoo beer at Mardi Gras, but folks here in
Blue Bayou prefer the one where he was buried in an unmarked grave after bein'
on the losing end of a duel with one of his lover's husbands. His ghost is real
popular, showin' up all over the bayou, sometimes at the wheel of his
warship."
"Have you ever seen him?"
"Now, I can't say that I have. But I think I did
hear him one night in Holy Assumption's cemetery, back when I was in high
school."
"What were you doing in a cemetery at night?
Never mind," she said an instant later as the answer came to her.
"I don't expect you'd believe I was studying the
stars?"
"Only if you happened to be studying them with a
girl."
He rubbed his chin. "Studying was always more fun
when you had someone to do it with. I have to admit, the sound of those chains
rattlin' nearly scared the pants off me."
"I have the feeling they wouldn't have stayed on
long anyway."
He put a hand against his chest. "You wound me,
Detective Chиre."
"I strongly doubt that's possible," she said
lightly, enjoying sparring with him. As she'd sat in the SUV and drank in the
absolute silence surrounding them, Regan had found herself beginning to relax.
It had been an odd sensation; she had actually taken a few moments to recognize
the feeling.
Unfortunately, they couldn't suspend time forever.
After driving another ten minutes, Nate turned off the main road again and
headed through a cane break.
"Where are we going, now?" she asked.
"Beau Soleil."
"Jack and Dani's plantation house?"
"Yeah. I've got some work to do there, and it'll
let me check up on the kid."
"Construction work?"
"Sorta. Blue Bayou usually has the Mardi Gras
party in the park, but this year Dani decided it'd be fun to host it at Beau
Soleil., like back in. the old days when her daddy pretty much ran the town.
The party's free, of course, but for an extra five bucks you get a tour of the
house and some autographed books Jack's donating. Between the home's history
and my brother's fame, the tickets have been sellin' like popcorn shrimp. The
money goes into the parish's community chest."
"That's nice."
"It's more of a necessity. The parish still
hasn't fully recovered from the oil bust, when a lot of folks had to leave land
that had been in their families for generations and move into the cities. Those
who stayed behind have to work harder to keep things together."
"You really do fit here, don't you?"
He didn't have to think about that for a moment.
"Yeah. I do."
"There are a lot of things I like about L.A. The
beach, my friends, my work. The fact that I may be making a difference. But
I've never actually felt as if it was home."
"Must be hard for roots to settle in concrete and
asphalt."
Part of Nate had decided long ago that perhaps not
reaching his youthful dream of playing third base for the Yankees hadn't been
such a bad thing, after all. He'd have hated to get to New York and discover
that the fantasy hadn't been anywhere near the reality. He wasn't, after all, a
hustle-bustle kind of guy.
"Maybe you never felt like you belonged in California
because Blue Bayou's your true home," he suggested.
"Even if I do turn out to be Regan Dale, I didn't
live here long enough to have a connection. I certainly haven't recognized
anything, or had any feeling of dйjа vu."
"Maybe you're tryin' too hard. Sometimes the
answer comes when you're not looking for it."
"Is that something else you've read in one of
Jack's books?"
"Nope. That's mine. From when I'll be wrestling a
set of blueprints all night, trying to make something work, and later, while
I'm having morning beignets and coffee at Cal's and arguing sports scores, the
solution will just come right out of the blue."
She'd experienced the same thing, when she'd been
working a case that seemed a dead end, and suddenly the answer would occur to
her.
"Stay around a while, and Blue Bayou will start
to grow on you," he suggested. "Maybe I will, too." He skimmed a
hand over her hair.
"Like that Spanish moss hanging from all these
trees."
He chuckled, unwounded.
Nate turned onto another unmarked road, which took
them down a narrow lane lined with oaks that appeared centuries old. When he
turned a corner and the white Greek Revival antebellum plantation house
suddenly appeared, gleaming like alabaster in the sunshine, she drew in a sharp
breath.
"It really is Tara."
"Pretty damn close," he agreed. "There
are those around here who swear Margaret Mitchell used Beau Soleil for the
model in her book."
"That's what Dani said, but I'm not sure I took
her seriously. Wow. It's stunning. It's also hard to believe that anyone—any
normal person, that is—actually lives here."
"Dani and Jack are as normal as you get,
basically. Her family first got the deed to the place in the mid-1800s. Her
ancestor, Andre Dupree, won it in a bouree game on a riverboat. Her daddy, the
judge, nearly lost it to taxes a while back when he had himself some personal
problems, but Jack came to the rescue and bailed him out."
"That was certainly a grand gesture."
"He said at the time he liked the idea of bein' a
man of property, and wanted to stop this New Orleans mob family from turning it
into a casino, but personally, I think he bought it for Dani's sake, since he
still had strong feelings for her. When they got married, it landed back in the
Dupree family again."
"Well, that's certainly convenient."
"Neither one of them married for the house. When
you see 'em together, you'll realize they could be just as happy living in a
one-bedroom trailer."
"This is certainly not a trailer." Her gaze
swept over the white-pillared facade. "I'd feel as if I were living in
some Civil War tourist attraction. Did you say you grew up here?"
"Not in the big house. We moved into one of the
smaller ones after Dad was killed." He pointed toward a small white house
on the outskirts of the compound. "After maman died, it sat vacant for a
lot of years. Dani's turned it into a guest house. It's real cozy, even bein'
haunted like it is."
"Of course. What would an old antebellum home be
without a ghost!"
"There you go, bein' skeptical again," he
said easily. "He's a Confederate officer who got lost here in the bayou
after the Battle of New Orleans. Since the Union Army had taken over Beau
Soleil, one of Dani's ancestors hid him in the little house. According to the
story, she sent her own personal maid to take care of him during the day, then
every night, she'd be real liberal when it came to pouring the port. After all
the Yankees would pass out, she'd sneak out of the house and take the night
shift trying to nurse that poor Confederate boy back to health, which was a
pretty gutsy thing to do, since harboring the enemy was a hangin' offense. Even
for a woman."
"That couldn't have been an easy decision."
Easier, perhaps, if the southern soldier had resembled the man sitting beside
her. She could see a woman taking foolish risks for Nate Callahan. "I take
it she failed?"
"Yeah. The poor guy's leg had been blown off, and
he ended up dying, probably of sepsis. When we were growing up we heard stories
about the lady, who lived to a ripe old age, tellin' folks that he used to come
visit her at night, but people figured she'd just gotten a little touched in
the head."
"But you believe the stories," Regan
guessed.
"I like the idea of them findin' happiness
together. I've never seen him, though Jack claims to have heard music in the
ballroom, where they're supposed to dance."
"I'll bet Finn never saw the ghost, either."
He rubbed his jaw. "Now, see, that's what you get
for stereotyping. Finn's the only one of the three of us who actually has seen
him."
"I don't believe that." Finn Callahan was
the last person, other than herself, she'd expect to believe in such fantasy.
"My hand to God." He lifted his right hand.
"Though I suppose, in the interest of full disclosure, I oughta add that
he was feverish with flu at the time, and once he got better he tried to back
away from his story about seeing the two of them waltzing."
"It seems as if it'd be hard to waltz with one
leg."
"Oh, I don't know," Nate argued.
"People can do a lot of things when they're in love that they might not do
otherwise. Or so I hear."
She wasn't surprised he referred to hearsay. Nate
Callahan did not strike her as a man who'd fall in love. Lust, sure. But the
forever-after kind of love? No way. Another thing they had in common
The front door opened, and a huge yellow ball of fur
came barreling toward them. "Brace yourself," Nate warned as she
tensed. Every cop who'd ever worked the rough parts of town, and a lot who were
assigned the cozier suburbs, had learned the hard way that it was best to be
wary of strange dogs. "She's not dangerous, 'less you consider gettin'
licked to death a problem."
What appeared to be a mix between a yellow lab and a
school bus came skidding to a halt in front of them. Her tail was wagging like
an out-of-control metronome. "Hey, Turnip." Nate took a Milk-Bone
from his jeans pocket and tossed it to her. The treat disappeared in a single
gulp.
The dog turned to Regan, who did usually carry dog
treats with her, partly because she liked dogs and partly to make friends with
the territorial ones. "Sorry, doggie. I'm all out." Wishing she'd
saved the other half of the sandwich from lunch, she rubbed the huge head
thrust toward her. "Her name's Turnip?"
"Yeah." He grinned as the enormous pink
tongue slurped the back of Regan's hand. " 'Cause she just turned up one
day." He glanced up as Josh appeared on the front gallerie. "She was
a stray. Just like some kid I know."
"You just missed her," Josh announced as
they approached.
"Missed who?" Nate asked.
"That social worker. Isn't that what you're doing
out here?"
"Actually, I came to do some carpentry work.
Didn't even know Judi was coming out today. So, I don't suppose your memory
happened to make a comeback?"
"Nope,"
Nate shook his head. "Terrible thing, amnesia.
Who knows, you might turn out to be a spy, just like that Matt Damon character
in The Bourne Identity. Sure would hate for Blue Bayou to be overrun with
international assassins."
"Like that's goin' to happen." He smirked.
"Never know," Nate said mildly. "You
have any talents you don't remember learning? Like maybe some martial arts or
driving a get' away car?"
"No, but if I did have any, I wouldn't have time
to notice, since the famous author's been making me sand woodwork ever since
you dumped me here."
"Well, then, we'll just have to keep thinkin' on
it and keep alert for any clues. Meanwhile, sanding is an important job. Can't
stain without getting the wood all smooth first."
"It's boring."
"I suppose it can be if you do too much of it for
too long. So, how'd you like to switch to something a little larger?"
"Like what?"
"I've got to build a stage for the band and could
always use an extra hand."
"Shit, this is turning out to be like
prison."
"The detective here might know better than me
about jailhouse fashion, but I've driven past prisoners workin' the fields up
at Angola, and can't recall ever seein' anyone wearing an OutKast shirt. They
all seem, to favor stripes. So, what do you say?"
"What's in it for me?"
"I'm not real sure. But it's always good to learn
a new skill, just in case it turns out you're not a secret agent. Plus, it
could just look good on your juvie report in case you've got some police
problem that's slipped your mind."
Nate glanced over as another teenager appeared in the
doorway. This one was a girl, tall and willowy, with pale hair down to her
waist and thickly fringed green eyes. Looking at her, Regan had a very good
idea what Dani had looked like at thirteen.
"Hi, Uncle Nate." When she went up on her
toes and gave him a peck on the cheek, Regan noticed a flash of something that
looked like old-fashioned envy in Josh's eyes. "Guess what? Ben and his
mom moved into the guest house last night."
"Good for them, Holly.
"Ben's Misty's boy," Nate explained to
Regan. He glanced over at Josh, who was staring at the girl as if she were a
gilt angel atop a Christmas tree. "Guess you and Ben'd be about the same
age,"
The only answer was a shrug.
"They both play ball, too." Holly Callahan's
revelation drew a sharp warning look from Josh, but she appeared unaware that
she'd just given away something he hadn't wanted them to know.
"Is that so?" Nate said casually. "I
played a bit in my day."
"I told him that you played third base for the
Buccaneers and went to Tulane. Josh plays shortstop."
"Must have some fast moves."
"I get by," Josh mumbled. Regan was amused
when he began rubbing the worn toe of his sneaker in the dirt like a shy
six-year-old.
"We usually end up playing a softball game while
the Mardi Gras supper's cooking. I don' suppose I could talk you into bein' on
my team," Nate said.
Josh was tempted. Regan could see it. But once again
trust didn't come easily, and she knew he was looking for the catch.
"You gonna be the cheerleader?" he asked
Holly.
"No." Her eyes flashed in a way that
suggested a bit of steel beneath that cotton-candy blond exterior. "I play
first base. When I'm not pitching, that is." Her smile was sweet and
utterly false. "If you don't want to be on Uncle Nate's team, we could
always use a mascot. Maybe you could dress up like a pirate. Or a
chicken."
The gauntlet had been thrown down.
Josh narrowed his eyes. His cheeks flushed with anger,
embarrassment, or both. "I'll play," he told Nate with all the
enthusiasm of a death-row inmate on the way to the electric chair.
"Great." Nate threw an arm around both Josh
and Holly's shoulders in that easy way he had. Regan saw the boy stiffen again,
but Nate ignored it. "Let's keep the fact that you played back home our
little secret," he suggested. "No point in helping the other team
with the point spread."
"You fixin' softball games again, cher?" a
deep voice rumbled from inside the house.
Jack Callahan emerged from the shadows, looking even
more rakish than he appeared on the back of his books. With his dark hair tied
with a leather thong at the nape of his darkly tanned neck and that gold
earring, Regan thought he could easily be a buccaneer in the flesh.
"Wouldn't be any challenge if there wasn't money
on the line," Nate said.
"With that attitude, it's a good thing you didn'
make the pros, since last I heard, gamblin' on games was illegal." Jack
turned toward Regan. "Hi. You must be the lady I've been hearing about.
Regan Hart."
"Yes." She smiled, truly appreciative he'd
used the name she'd always known. "At least that's always been my
name."
"We've got ourselves a little family experience
with long-lost kids comin' to Blue Bayou to find their roots," he said,
flashing a grin at Holly. The way she beamed back told Regan there was another
story there. "Even if you find out some stuff about your past you didn't
know, it doesn't negate all those other years."
He glanced up as a tall, lanky, dark-haired boy came
around the corner from the direction of the guest house. "Looks like the
lunch break's over," he said. "I'll drive you and Ben back to
school," he told Holly. "If you're going to be here for a
while," he said to Nate.
"Yeah. Josh's gonna help with the stage."
"Good idea." He bestowed another warm smile
on Regan and walked toward the classic cherry red GTO parked beside the house.
Regan watched Josh watching the trio get in the car.
"You just want to make sure I don't run
away," Josh said.
"You thinkin' of running, cher?"
"None of your business if I am."
"Well, now, you know that's not 'xactly true,
since I signed a paper taking responsibility for you."
"I can take care of myself."
"Maybe on a good day. But I get the impression
there haven't been many of those lately."
Josh's only answer was to spit into the dirt. Then his
gaze drifted to the departing car. He looked like a starving child staring into
a bakery window.
"Holly sure is a pretty fille," Nate
observed.
He didn't respond.
"Smart, too. Gets straight As."
Again no answer.
"She and Ben are really close friends, having as
much in common as they do."
"Big freakin'deal." Bull's-eye. "Having a friend is sure enough a big
deal. And, not that you asked, because you're probably not real interested in
pretty blond girls who smell like gardens, but they're not boyfriend and
girlfriend.
"Ben's goin' with Kendra Longworth, whose maman teaches third grade at Holy Assumption school. Holly was seein' Trey Gaffhey
for a time when she first got to town last spring, but they broke up after
Christmas, so she's pretty much available. Not that I'd be all that fond of the
idea of my favorite niece spendin' Mardi Gras with an amnesiac secret agent,"
he said.
"I'm not any damn spy."
"That's good to hear. Seems she might jus' have
somethin' in common with a ballplayer. Bern' how she's on the girls' varsity
team."
"Big deal. It's still just a girls' team."
"You keep that in mind when she strikes you out
with her slider," Nate said. "Now, why don't you go get my toolbox
out of the back of my truck and we'll get to work."
"I'm not sure your brother would be real happy
with you playing matchmaker with his daughter and a runaway juvenile
delinquent," Regan said as they watched Josh make his way in
unenthusiastic slow motion toward the SUV.
"I wasn't matchmaking; jus' suggesting a couple
kids play ball together. After all, there's nothing more American than
baseball. Besides, like I said, Jack spent some time in juvie himself. He's not
one to pass judgment."
"And Dani?"
He laughed at that. "If there's anyone who knows
both the appeal and the downside of bad boys, it's Dani. I figure she can give
her little girl the appropriate motherly advice. Besides, it's not like they're
going to be alone. The entire town'll be here chaperoning them. Meanwhile, it
gives the kid a reason to stick around at least one more day, so maybe we can
find out who he is. And what he's running away from."
Seeing how they all seemed to watch out for each other
somehow made small-town life not quite so suffocating to Regan.
* * *
The outside of Beau Soleil was gorgeous. The inside
quite literally took her breath away. She stared up at the mural that covered
the wall of the two-story entry hall, rose to the plaster ceiling medallions,
then swept up the wide curving stairway she recognized from more than one
movie.
"It's stunning- Is it original to the
house?" she asked.
"No, but it's real old. Andre Dupree had the
mural painted in memory of the Grand Derangement, when the English kicked his
people out of eastern Canada, where they'd ended up after fleeing for religious
freedom even before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock."
He was telling the story as if it'd happened
yesterday. Which, in some people's minds, probably wasn't that far off.
"The Acadians, which is what we Cajuns were
officially called, were pretty much left alone to do their own thing for the
next hundred years, but after the French and Indian War, the British weren't
really happy about these French-speaking people livin' halfway between New
England and New France. They demanded the Acadians renounce their Catholic
religion and pledge allegiance to England. Well, now, they were a pretty
stubborn people—"
"Were?" She arched a brow.
He grinned. "Things don't change much down here
in the bayou. Anyway, when they refused, they were rounded up and deported.
Some were sold as indentured servants to the American colonies, others were
sent back to France, some ended up in concentration camps in England, and a few
managed to evade deportation by hiding out in Nova Scotia.
"Things were looking pretty bleak for them when
the Spaniards entered into the situation. Since the Acadians were staunch
enemies of the British by now and Catholic to boot, the Spanish decided they'd
be dandy people to populate their Louisiana settlements. The Acadians, happy
for a chance to reunite their families—families have always been real important
in the Cajun culture—liked the beauty of the land, not to mention ail the bountiful
fresh foods, which tasted pretty good after their years in exile. So they dug
into the swamp like crawfish."
"Sounds like a happy ending." She wondered
what it would be like to grow up in a place where everyone seemed to be
related, if not by blood then by common experience.
"I guess it pretty much is. There's about a
quarter million descendants of those original Acadians living around here,
though the economy's taken a hit from time to time and caused a lot to move' to
the cities. But wherever a Cajun goes, he always takes a bit of this place away
with him. And his heart always stays here in the swamp."
"Is that why you stay?"
"I don' know." He shrugged. "When I was
a kid, I had big dreams and left for a while, but I ended up coming back and
stayed for family reasons."
"Dani told me about your mother. I'm sorry."
Another shrug. "It was a bad time I wouldn't want
to relive. But there's not much a person can do but keep on keeping on, is
there?"
"No." Regan sighed, thinking about her own
mother's death. Karen Hart's death, she amended.
"Gotta be hard, losing two mothers."
"It's not easy." She no longer doubted that
Linda Dale had been her birth mother. "Which is why I'm going to find out
the truth of what happened, and make certain that whoever was to blame for her
death pays."
"Why if the autopsy report turns out to be
true?"
"Those entries in her journal weren't written by
a woman about to commit suicide."
"Something could have happened. Maybe your father
didn't show up. Or maybe he did, and told her that he wasn't, going to leave
his wife."
"Eliminating maybes is what I do. I need to know
about her life."
"So you'll have a better handle on your
own."
Regan wasn't as surprised as she might have been even
yesterday at his understanding so well how his news had packed an emotional
punch.
"Yeah."
He led her to the huge ballroom, with high ceilings
that had been painted a pale lemon yellow and lots of tall windows designed to
bring the outdoor gardens inside. It took no imagination at all to envision
beautiful women dressed in formal satin, hoop skirts skimming along the
polished floor as they danced in the arms of their handsome, formally clad
partners. The sconces circling the room were electric, but she could easily
picture the warm glow of candlelight.
"It just keeps getting better and better,"
she said on a deep, appreciative sigh, surprised to discover a romantic lurking
inside her.
"You should have seen it back around
Thanksgiving. Since it's the biggest room in the house, we've been using it as
an indoor workshop for winter and rainy days. You couldn't go more than a
couple feet without bumping into a sawhorse. Plaster and sawdust were all over
everything, and the floor was covered with paint cans. After Dani decided to
hold the Mardi Gras festivities here, about every carpenter, painter, and
electrician in the parish has been pulling overtime."
"Well, they definitely earned it." She ran
her fingers over a chair rail that had been sanded as smooth as an infant's
bottom. "I wouldn't have expected to find such craftsmanship in such a
small, out-of-the-way place."
"Actually, towns like Blue Bayou probably hold
the last remaining old-time craftsmen. Since we're not in a real dire need for
more parking spaces, we tend to hang onto our old buildings. Which means that
people who know how to do restoration will probably always be able to find
work, even if the annual income probably isn't what they could make in the
city."
"The city's more expensive to live in,
though." She looked up at the glorious ceiling fresco someone had
painstakingly restored. "And I'd imagine this sort of work is more
artistically satisfying."
"I've always thought so." He smiled easily,
then opened his arms. "Viens ici, sugar."
"I thought we'd agreed you were taking a
moratorium on trying to seduce me."
"I am. We just finished the floor last week and I
figured we should try it out. See if it's smooth enough for dancing, in case it
rains tomorrow and we have to bring the party indoors."
Dammit, she was tempted. Too tempted. "There
isn't any music."
"No problem." When she didn't go to him, he
closed the small distance between them. "We'll make our own."
"Good try, but I think I'll pass."
He tucked her hair behind her ear. "Afraid?"
"Of you?" Her laugh was quick. "No,
Callahan, I am definitely not afraid of you."
His fingers curved around the nape of her neck. As she
watched his eyes turn from calm to stormy, she felt another one of those inner
pulls that both intrigued her and ticked her off. "Maybe you should
be." He slowly lowered his head. "Maybe we should both be."
It would be an easy thing to back away, but just as
she was about to do so, he shifted gears and dropped a quick kiss on her
forehead.
"We'd best go see what's holdin' up the kid,
before he steals all my hand tools and heads off to the nearest pawnshop."
Feeling shaky, Regan followed him outside.
"You're a strange man, Callahan. I can't get a handle on you."
"Me?" His laugh woke up Turnip, who'd been
dozing happily in the shade of a weeping willow. Brown eyes turned limpid, as
if hoping for another Milk-Bone. "I'm an open book."
"And I'm the queen of the Mardi Gras. That
good-old-boy routine may work with your hometown belles, but I'm not buying
it."
He grinned. "Maybe I'm one of a kind, me."
As irritated as she was with him for being so damn
appealing, and herself for being attracted, Regan could not dispute that.
Chapter Nineteen
While Nate and Josh worked on the stage, Regan took
her laptop into the book-lined library and began writing up her notes before
the details began to slip her mind. She'd finished with the Boyce interview and
her impression of Marybeth when she made the mistake of looking out the window,
and her mind went as clear as glass.
The sun had burned off all the morning fog, warming
the day. She watched Nate wipe his brow with the back of his hand. He said
something to Josh, who shook his head in characteristically negative response.
Nate shrugged, then pulled the black T-shirt over his head, revealing a
rock-hard chest that looked gilded in the golden afternoon light. A light sheen
of sweat glistened on tanned flesh, drawing her attention to the arrowing of
gilt hair that disappeared below the waist of his faded jeans.
He took a long drink from a canteen; when some of the
water ran down his body, he casually wiped it off his belly, then returned to
work, the long muscles in his back flexing and releasing, again and again, as
he pounded the nails with that large, wooden-handled hammer.
Determined to avoid the sensual pull of that hard
mahogany body, Regan sighed and returned to work.
After turning down dinner invitations from both Dani
and Nate— after so many sexual jolts to her system today, she didn't want to
risk being alone with him—Regan spent the evening alone in her suite, trying to
create a time-flow chart of Linda Dale's life in Louisiana.
Outside the French doors leading out onto a
cast-iron-railed balcony, the citizens of Blue Bayou began to get an early
start on Mardi Gras celebrations. Music poured from the bar downstairs, people
were
literally dancing in the street, and the sound of
firecrackers being set off all over town—sounding like random gunshots—made her
edgy. Edgy enough that she jumped when the phone rang.
She picked up the receiver.
"There's nothing for you here in Blue
Bayou." The voice was muffled, and so low she couldn't tell the gender.
"You should go back to California where you belong. Before you ruin good
people's lives."
"Who is this?" Regan reached for the phone
pad, but the dial tone revealed that her caller had hung up.
"Damn." She went over to the window and
stared down onto the street and the park beyond. Looking for . . . what? Who?
The phone rang again. This time, when she grabbed it,
she didn't immediately speak, hoping her caller would say something that would
allow her to recognize his voice.
"Chиre?"
"It's you." She let out a deep breath she'd
been unaware of holding. "What do you want?"
"It'll wait." Nate's voice was rich and deep
and concerned. It was also not the voice of whoever had called her earlier.
"What's wrong?"
Her laugh held no humor. "How about what's
right?" She dragged a hand through her hair. "Someone just called me
and warned me off the Dale case."
"You were threatened?" The sharp tone could
have been Finn's.
"Not in so many words."
"Give me thirty minutes to drop Josh with Jack,
and I'll be there."
"That's not necessary." That was also so
Finn, determined to take control of a situation. "Besides, the boy's not a
puppy. You can't just keep dumping him on your family."
"That's what family's for. Not for dumping, but
for taking care of one another."
She thought about pointing out that Josh no-last-name
wasn't family, then didn't. "Well, I'm capable of taking care of myself.
Besides, I'm exhausted, and I'm going to bed. I'll be asleep by the time you'd
get here." Actually, she was so revved up from the call, she wasn't sure
she'd get any sleep tonight.
"I'll call the state cops." The fact that he
didn't suggest spending the night in bed with her showed how seriously he was
taking the anonymous phone call.
"You will not. The only way anyone can get up
here is with a coded key, which probably makes this suite the safest place in
the state, other than the governor's mansion. I'll be fine. Besides, I have a
gun, remember?"
"It's hard to forget when a woman threatens to
shoot you." The edge to his tone was softening. "Maybe we should call
Finn. Get a tap on the phone."
"You've been watching too much television. Even
if Finn was still FBI, getting a judge to sign off on a wiretap isn't that
easy."
"I wasn't thinking about going through a
judge."
"That's illegal."
"And your point is? I don't want anything
happening to you, chиre."
"That's very sweet, but—"
"There's nothin' sweet about it. You and I have
some unfinished business, detective. I want to make sure you stay alive long
enough to experience my world-class, mind-blowing, bone-melting
lovemaking."
She snorted a laugh, her tension finally loosening.
"You really are shameless."
"You just wait and see," he promised on a
low, sexy rumble. "Dwayne's on duty tonight, to make sure people don't
start gettin' a jump on passing too good a time. I'll have him keep an eye on
the inn. Meanwhile, have yourself a nice sleep, and I'll see you in the
morning."
"What's happening in the morning?"
"There's a final meeting of the Mardi Gras dance
committee at the courthouse at eleven-thirty. I thought you might want to
attend,"
"Why would I want to do that?" She'd planned
to use the time to track down the doctor who'd signed Linda Dale's death
certificate.
"Maybe 'cause the head of that committee is Toni
Melancon?"
"Charles Melancon's wife?"
"Got it in one. She and Charles live with the old
lady up at the Melancon plantation. I figured if anything just happened to go
wrong with her Jag-"
"You're going to screw up her engine?"
"I wouldn't even know how to do such a thing,
me."
"But you're not above having someone else do
it," she guessed.
"I think I'm going to have to take the Fifth on
that one, detective. But let's just say that maybe something was to go wrong
with that tricky, hand-built British engine, it'd only be gentlemanly for me to
offer her a ride home. Havin' been brought up to be a southern lady with
manners, she's bound to feel obliged to invite me in for a refreshing beverage
after that long drive, and bein' how you just happen to be with me—"
"She'd have to invite me in, too."
His low whistle caused her lips to curl and something
in her stomach to tug. "Hot damn, you are a clever woman. I'll wonder if
that L.A. mayor knows how lucky he is to have you fighting crime in his
city."
"He hasn't mentioned it lately."
"Well, now, there's another reason for you to
think about comin' to work here. As mayor, it'd be my civic duty to make sure
you felt duly appreciated."
"Dammit, Callahan, I really am beginning to like
you."
"That's the idea," he said easily. "So,
here's the plan. I've got to enroll Josh in school tomorrow morning—"
"I don't envy you that."
"Strangely, he didn't seem down on the idea. If I
didn't know better, I'd say he was actually looking forward to it."
"He's probably scamming you. Pretending to go along
with the idea, then tomorrow morning you'll wake up to find him and all your
silver gone."
"Lucky for me I've only got stainless steel.
Though there was this woman, a while back, who tried to get me interested in
flatware. Which would you pick out if you were gettin' married? Chrysanthemum
or Buttercup?"
"It's a moot point, since I'm not getting
married. And I don't even know what you're talking about. I assume these are
sterling patterns and not flowers?"
"Yeah."
"Gee, Callahan, is this a proposal?"
There was nearly a full minute of dead air on the
phone line. "I'm sorry, chиre, if I gave you that impression." His
earlier light tone was regretful. "I thought we were just talking, fooling
around to lighten the situation up a bit."
"That's exactly what I thought. And it was going
along pretty well until you decided to get domestic."
He chuckled at that. "There are those who'd tell
you that my name doesn't belong in the same sentence as anything resembling
domesticity."
"I've not a single doubt they're right. So why
bring up that question in the first place?"
"It just sorta popped into my head. Suzanne—that
was her name— always said you could tell the kind of person a woman was by her
flatware pattern."
"You're kidding."
"That's pretty much what I said, thinking that
she was just bein' a little precious, but no, she had this book that had it all
laid out, sorta like horoscopes. Apparently Buttercup girls are always cheerful
and upbeat, and Chrysanthemum girls are more flamboyant. She liked to think of
herself as being cheerfully flamboyant."
"Apparently there was a limit to her
cheerfulness. Since you're not married, one of you obviously broke the
engagement."
"Oh, we weren't engaged. She sort of got it into
her mind that we were engaged to be engaged, but I never made her any promises
about a ring, or anything."
"Or brought up registering for silver."
"Not a word."
Regan had begun to relax again. She twined the
telephone cord around her fingers. "So does this story have a happy
ending, other than you escaping the institution of marriage? Should I feel
sorry for poor Suzanne, living alone with felt-lined drawers full of flatware
she never gets to use?"
"Oh, she got hitched to an old boyfriend she met
at an Ole Miss reunion, so it worked out well for everyone. She finally decided
on Chantilly, which hadn't even been in the early running." When she had
no response to that, he added, "I went and looked the book up in Dani's
library after I heard. Seems Chantilly girls can be a bit prissy. And though
they may seem real sweet, they were often fast in high school. Not that I'm
sayin' that about Suzanne."
"Of course not. Being a gentleman and all."
She was starting to get a handle on how this southern thing worked. A man might
roll in the hay with every female in town, but reputations stayed more or less
intact, since a southern gentleman didn't roll and tell. "I realize the
only reason you're telling me about all this is to calm me down so I can sleep.
But since you brought it, up, want to know what kind of girl I am?"
"I already know."
"Oh?"
"You're a mismatched stainless-steel person, just
like me, when you're not using the plastic fork and knife from the takeout
package."
Nailed that one, she admitted.
"But if you did ever decide to go all out, you'd
be an Acorn."
"I'm almost afraid to ask why. Is Acorn for
belles who swear and pack heat?"
"No, but you're close. Brides who choose Acorn
have a rebellious streak. They've been known to drink beer straight from the
bottle, venture north of the Mason-Dixon line to college, and some of them even
marry Yankees."
"Horrors." Regan smiled. "They sound
downright dangerous."
"That's part of their appeal. My maman had Acorn.
And the only other person I've ever met who's as out-and-out spunky as her is
you, Detective Chиre, which is how I know you'd be an Acorn."
"Well." What do you say when a man just
compares you to his mother, whom he obviously adored, during a conversation
where he's reminding you that he's not interested in any serious relationship?
"Thank you."
"C'est rien. Now it's your turn."
"My turn?"
"To pay me a compliment."
Fair was fair. "All right. You may be frustrating
and annoying at times, but you're also very sweet."
"Sweet?" She heard the wince in his voice.
"And here I was hoping for something more along the lines of the sexiest
man you've ever met, who can turn you into a puddle of hot need with just a
single dark and dangerous look."
"Your brother Jack got dark and dangerous. You
got cute and sweet."
"Hell. Well, we're jus' going to have to work on
that." He paused. "If I asked you to do something for me, would
you?"
"I suppose that would depend on what it is."
"Tell me what you're wearing. Right now."
"Is this going to be one of those dirty phone
calls, Callahan?"
"One can hope. What are you wearing, Regan?"
"Why?"
"Because I'd really like to be there, but since I
can't, I'm trying to picture you."
"Well, you're going to be disappointed if you're
looking for sexy, because I'm wearing a navy blue T-shirt that says 'Property
of the LAPD Athletic Department.' " She looked down at the oversize cot'
ton shirt that covered her from shoulders to thighs. "I suppose you would
have preferred me to lie and say I was barely wearing some skimpy lace number
from Victoria's Secret."
"Lace is nice. Skimpy's even better, most of the
time. Sometimes, though, contrast can be real intriguing. How long is it? To
your knees?"
"Not that long. And you're just going to have to
use your imagination from there, because I'm not having phone sex with
you."
"Too bad, because if you want to moan lots of
sweet nothings in my ear, I sure wouldn't object. But since I'm enjoying just
talking with you, how about I tell you a little Cajun bedtime story?"
"Could I stop you?"
"Sure. Anytime you want, you can just hang
up."
"I will."
"Bien. Now, there was this Cajun who called
himself Antoine Robicheaux, and he had himself this camp, which you'd call a
cabin, way back in the bayou, miles from civilization. He was a handsome devil,
he. Tall, real strong from swinging a hammer all day—"
"He was in construction?"
"General contractor." A vision of Nate as
he'd looked this afternoon—shirtless, tool belt slung low on his hips like a
gunfighter— flashed through her mind, bringing with it a hot, reckless, sexual
need.
"Same as you."
"Now that you mention it, I guess we both do have
that in common."
"Life's full of coincidences," Regan said
dryly.
"Isn't that the truth? Well now, one night he was
coming back from checkin' his traps when he came across this jolie blon.
She was on her knees on the bank of the bayou, tears flowing down her cheeks,
mingling with the falling rain, leaves and moss tangled in her hair. And for a
moment, seeing her in the moonlight, he thought he might have stumbled across a
wood nymph.
"But then he looked a little closer, he, and saw
she was really just a pretty fille in trouble. He didn't recognize her, and she
didn't seem able to speak, which made it harder for him to figure out how he
was going to find out where she belonged. But having been raised up by his
maman to be a gentleman, he decided she could spend the night at his place,
then he'd decide what to do with her in the morning."
"And they say chivalry is dead."
"Like I said, he was a gentleman. Though he did
have a bit of misgiving, since he'd heard tales of a witch living out in the
swamp. But since she sure didn't look like your stereotypical wicked witch,
like the one he'd seen when he was a kid in The Wizard of Oz, he helped her
into his pirogue and took her back to his camp.
"Dark clouds drifted over the moon. As the boat
wound through the darkness, lit only by the lantern at the bow, Antoine felt as
if they were being watched. Occasionally, he'd see gleaming points of yellow
amid the moss-draped trees, but he reminded himself that these waters were
filled with animals and he was being overfanciful. Bein' with a beautiful woman
tended to do that to him, 'specially after he'd been working away from
civilization for a while.
"Even though the night was warm, the earlier rain
had drenched the woman, and her cotton dress was still clinging to her like a
second skin when he got her into the little camp. Now, he was a big man, and
knew that his clothes would swim on her, but he gave her one of his shirts,
pointed her to the bathroom, and went to put on some coffee, since she still
seemed a bit in shock.
"After some time, when she still hadn't come out,
he began to worry, so he knocked on the door. Since she hadn't latched it,
there she stood, still standing there in that same wet dress, staring out the
window into the darkness. She was trembling badly, and he was afraid she might
be chilled from the rain."
Regan could see where he was going with this. Still,
she plumped up the goosedown pillows, leaned back, and prepared to enjoy the
journey. "So, Antoine, being a gentleman, decided to help her out of her
wet clothes."
"That's 'xactly what he did. But he could tell
she was a real nice girl, and shy, and he didn't want to give her the wrong
idea about his intentions—"
"Which were only honorable."
"Mais yeah. He decided the best thing to do, so
he wouldn't scare her, would be to take things real slow."
"Sort of like this story."
"Want me to fast-forward to the good parts?"
"No. It's your story; go ahead and tell it your
own way,"
"Like I said, she was a real nice girl, and even
though it was a hot and steamy evening, she'd fastened that dress all the way
up to her pretty throat. So, he began talking to her, real quietly, like you
might if you wanted to get close to a skittish fawn. When he flicked the first
button open, his knuckles brushed against that little hollow where her pulse
took a jump. But not nearly as big a jump as his own."
His voice was deep and vibrantly masculine, without
any overt sexuality. But that didn't stop her from lifting her own hand to the
base of her throat, where it seemed her own blood had begun to beat a little
faster. It had gotten warm in the room, so she threw off the comforter. Then
the sheet.
"He moved down, button by button," Nate
continued, "opening up that flowered cotton as if he was unwrapping a
precious present."
Regan's fingers unconsciously stroked her warming
flesh along a similar path.
"Her bra was a teensy bit of lace that looked
real pretty against the curve of her breasts, which were rosy pink, like the
inside of a summer rose, because she was blushing a little bit, due to the
fact, he figured, that she wasn't used to getting undressed in front of a total
stranger."
"Even if he was a gentleman." Regan could
hardly recognize her voice. It was deep, throaty, undeniably aroused.
"Even if," he agreed, his own voice sounding
more rough itself, as if her reaction might be turning him on.
"Of course the bra had to go, too, but since he
knew his way around women's underwear, he didn't have any trouble unfastening
the front hook. 'Mon Dieu,' he breathed as her lovely breasts spilled into his
hands, 'you are the most beautiful woman I've ever seen.' He wasn't lying and
found the way she blushed even deeper unbearably appealing. And erotic.
"He asked if he could kiss her breasts. Her white
teeth worried her full bottom lip as she considered the request, but he could
see the answer in her eyes before she managed a shy little nod. Her skin was
the color of pink marble, and just as smooth. But a lot softer. And warmer. As
he took one of those little ruby nipples into his mouth and drank in the warm
womanly scent of her, Antoine knew that one taste would never be enough."
Regan slid a hand down the front of the T-shirt and
began touching herself as Antoine was caressing the mystery woman: shoulders,
chest, then breasts. She rolled a taut nipple between her thumb and her index
finger and felt a corresponding tug between her legs. The soft moan escaped
from between her parted lips before she could stop it.
"Tell me what you're thinking. Right now,"
he demanded softly.
"About how Antoine's hands felt on her."
Regan licked her lips, which had gone unbearably dry. And how your hands would
feel on me. She braced the receiver against one shoulder. Both of her hands
moved beneath the shirt, caressing, squeezing, stroking breasts sensitized by
that deep seductive voice and her own erotic imagination. "What are you
thinking?"
His answering laugh was quick and rough. "That
I'm going to have to get bigger briefs."
"Maybe you should take them, off." Had she really
said that?
"I will, if you will."
She had never been a woman to play sexual games. In
bed, as in all other parts of her life, she was straightforward and to the
point. But there was something about being alone in the dark, with just that
deep voice touching her all over, that allowed her to imagine she was the naked
wood nymph in his story. "I'm already one step ahead of you."
There was a pause. Then a groan. "Wait just a
sec, sugar." A longer pause, during which time her hands stilled, waiting
for him to make the next move. And then he was back. "I wanted to make
sure the door was locked."
"You're not used to talking about sex on the
phone with a teenager in the house."
"No. But if Josh wasn't here, I wouldn't be
talking to you on the phone right now. I'd be in the truck on my way over
there, so we could be doing this in person. In the flesh, so to speak."
His flesh against hers was an arousing prospect. It
also wasn't going to happen tonight. "You were telling me about
Antoine."
"Yeah, wouldn't want to leave the poor guy
hanging out there," he said. "Well, as luscious as her breasts were,
Antoine reminded himself that the goal was to get her undressed so he could get
her into a hot shower. So he forced his mind back to the task and finished
unbuttoning the dress, then let it drop to the floor. She was wearing little
bikini panties that matched the bra, and he hooked his thumbs in the elastic
and pulled them down. Over the swell of her hips, past the lush blond curls
between her thighs, down each long, tanned leg to her ankles.
"She stepped out of them without being asked.
Crouched on the floor, looking up at her, he saw tiny beads of moisture
glistening like dewdrops in those soft blond curls, and it took all the
restraint Antoine possessed not to lick them off."
Moisture was flowing from her; Regan lifted the
T-shirt above her waist and let her legs fall open a little bit more, to allow
the breeze from the air conditioning to cool her heated flesh.
"Antoine, he stood up, put his hands on her
shoulders, turned her around, and walked her into the little tin shower, which
barely had room for one person, and turned on the water. Then he stripped off
his own clothes.
"Her eyes widened a little at the amazing size of
his erection, whether from fear or anticipation, Antoine could not tell. Wanting
to reassure her that he'd never do anythin' to hurt her, he touched his mouth
against hers in their very first kiss and felt her sigh against his lips.
"He drew her into the shower and lathered the
soap between his palms, and as the water pelted down on them and the stall
filled with fragrant steam, he smoothed the lather all over her, his slippery
hands sliding over her body from her shoulders to her feet, and everywhere in
between. When he began washing his way down one smooth firm thigh and up the
other, she closed her eyes and leaned back against the wall, her fingers linked
together.
"She was shivering, but not from the cold; it was
as hot as a sauna in the shower. But not as hot as the thoughts scorching their
way through his brain. Seems he wasn't the only one aroused by their situation.
'S'il vous plait,' she said on a soft little moan, which is French for
please. So she could talk, Antoine thought. 'I want... I need . . . Touch me .
. . There.'
"Antoine smiled. Mais yeah, he smiled at this request,
since it was just what he'd been wanting to do himself, but had been afraid of
pushing her."
"Being a gentleman and all," Regan said as
her own wandering hands fluttered down her rib cage and over her bare stomach.
Then lower still.
" 'Xactly. So he carefully, with his softest
touch, parted those slick folds. Now, you have to understand that Antoine
considered himself a bit of a connoisseur of women, and there was nothing he
found more beautiful than the female sex. It brought to mind a flower, with soft
pink petals on the outside, and a deep rosy color inside. The little nub hidden
in there was as hard and gleaming as a perfect pink pearl. She jumped a little
when he brushed his thumb over it."
Regan did the same, imagining Nate's clever, callused
fingertip.
"He stroked it again, then again, changing the
pressure, sometimes hard, sometimes light, fast, then slow. Her back was
against the stall, but her hips were thrust out at him, offering, begging for
more."
The muscles in her legs contracted. Regan was
breathing quickly now, and no longer cared if he could hear her. The world
narrowed to his voice, the story of Antoine and his mystery woman, her
tingling, burning clitoris.
"He knelt at her feet like a man worshiping a
goddess, which to him, she was, and put his mouth on her. She climaxed
instantly, cried out, and tried to jerk away, but the stall was so small there
wasn' any room to move. And besides, his hands were on the backs of her legs,
and he wasn't quite finished with her yet.
"He feasted on her like she was the sweetest,
ripest fruit, loving the way he could make her come again and again, and when
he felt her body going limp, he stood up again and lifted her onto him."
Oh, God! Regan bit her lip to keep from crying out
herself as the orgasm ripped through her.
"Well, when Antoine felt her hot body tighten
around him, it was like nothin' he'd ever felt before, like Mardi Gras
fireworks goin' off inside him. Her lips pressed against his throat while the
water streamed over them, and that's when he found out he'd been right about
her not bein' a witch.
"His blood turned hot and thick as her sharp
white teeth sank into him, and his own explosion, as he came into her, was like
nothing he'd ever felt before. As they sank to the floor, arms and legs entwined,
Antoine found himself looking forward to the idea of spending eternity with
this sexy vampire."
"I should have seen that one coming," Regan
managed to say. "Seeing how we're not that far from Anne Rice
country."
She also belatedly realized that he'd never broken
stride in the narration. "Did you . . . ?" Regan, who never blushed,
felt the blood flow into her face, making her doubly glad he couldn't see her
right now. "Never mind."
"The story was for you, chиre," he said
simply, gently. "A bedtime tale to help you get to sleep."
Amazingly, it had worked, she realized. The sexual
release had left her more relaxed than she'd been in ages. Certainly since Nate
Callahan had arrived in Los Angeles and turned her life upside down.
"It seems I keep having to thank you."
His deep chuckle rumbled in her ear. "Believe me,
sugar, it was my pleasure. Sweet dreams."
She hung up the phone, pulled the crisp sheet back
over her body, and instantly fell into a deep, nightmare--free sleep.
* * *
"I don't see why we're bothering to do
this," Josh grumbled the next morning as they drove from Nate's West
Indies-style home into town.
"It's not that complicated. You're a kid. The
state of Louisiana, in one of its rare acts of wisdom, decreed kids need to go
to school. Ergo, you're going to school."
"My name isn't Ergo. Besides, what's the point of
enrolling in school if I'm just going to be gone in a few days?"
"You still planning on leaving?"
"I may be."
"Well, I'd just as soon you didn't go taking off
without any word."
"Yeah, your life dream has always been to have a
delinquent kid around to screw up your sex life."
"Did I say you're screwing up anything?"
"No." He'd give him that. "But you
probably would have been with that cop last night if you hadn't had to stay
home and play prison guard to me."
"Should I be offended that you called my home,
which I built with my own two hands, a prison?" Nate asked mildly.
"And yeah, I might have driven over to the inn to be with Regan last
night. But not for the reason you think."
"You saying you don't want to fuck her?"
"There are a great many things I'd love to do
with Detective Delectable. But when you get older and have some experience,
you'll discover that there's a huge difference between fucking someone and
making love."
"So you're in love with her?"
"I'm not saying that. I'm jus' stating that
there's more to being with a woman than what fits where. That's just plumbing.
What two people do together should be more special than that."
"Sex is sex," josh said stubbornly. Hell,
he'd probably listened to more sex in his life than this guy, as cool as he
seemed to be, had ever experienced.
"We'll have to continue this discussion later,
when we have more time," Nate said as they pulled up in front of a
redbrick building.
Students were headed up the wide front steps in
groups, talking, laughing, seeming to have a high old time. Josh felt the
familiar new-school clench in his gut and, although he'd chain cement around
his ankles and throw himself in the bayou before admitting it, he was glad he'd
allowed himself to be convinced to take off his Dead Rap Stars T-shirt and
change into a plain old black one Nate had pulled from his own closet.
Apparently the guy wasn't lying when he said there was a no-message-shirts
dress code.
Not that he cared about fitting in. Since he wasn't
going to be staying in Blue Bayou all that long.
Chapter Twenty
Things were definitely going downhill. Not only hadn't
she been able to find a California marriage license for Karen Dale, or a
divorce decree for a Karen Hart, the death certificate was proving yet another
dead end. Regan had been working tier way through neighboring state licensing
files and had found several doctors with the same name, but calls placed to
their offices turned up a big fat zero.
The stocks were obviously the way to go. Surely either
the mother or the son knew something. Twenty-five thousand dollars might not be
a lot of money to a family who owned an oil company. But it wasn't chicken
feed, either.
She was going to solve this crime. Linda Dale deserved
to have her murder solved and the perpetrator put behind bars. Then Regan would
donate the stocks to a local charity, return to Los Angeles, and get on with
her life.
She had just gone off-line when the phone rang. She
paused for a moment, wondering if it was Nate, calling to tell her he was on
his way. Or perhaps it was fast night's first caller, wanting to make certain
she'd gotten the message. The lady or the tiger. Wishing hotel phones had
caller ID, Regan picked up the receiver.
"Hey, partner," Van said, "I was thinking
about you last night. Rhasheed and I rented The Big Easy, and I was wondering
if you'd met up with one of those sexy Cajun men."
"There are a lot of Cajun men down here. Some, I
suppose, are sexy."
"I hope you're passing yourself a helluva good
time."
"Of course." Regan forced a smile she hoped
would be echoed in her voice. She told Van about Cajun Cal and Beau Soleil, and
meeting Jack Callahan, whose books Van enjoyed as well. She did not mention
Nate or her real reason for being in Blue Bayou.
"I'd better run," Van said after about
twenty minutes. "My sister's throwing me this baby shower. Can you picture
me sitting in a room decorated with paper storks, nibbling on cookies with blue
frosting and crustless sandwiches?"
"Just keep focused on all the loot you're going
to get." Regan's contribution, which she'd sent to Van's sister before
leaving L.A., was a music-box mobile from the registry list at Babies R Us.
"Easy for you to say," Van grumbled.
"You're not the one playing name-the-baby games."
"Seems a small price to pay for a feng shui
miracle."
Van laughed. "I'll keep that in mind when I'm
huffing and puffing through delivery."
"That's what you get for being one with nature.
If I ever find myself about to give birth, I'm calling for heavy drugs at the
first contraction."
They joked a bit longer, sharing cop stories about
babies born in patrol cars, on the beach, in jail. After Van had hung up, as
happy as she was for her partner, Regan felt a little tug of regret at how much
she was going to miss their daily bantering. The problem with life, she thought
as she went downstairs to wait for Nate, was that it just kept moving on,
taking you right along with it.
* * *
Regan was vastly grateful when Nate didn't mention
last night's phone conversation, other than to ask if she'd received any other
threats. In the bright light of morning, she was uncomfortable with her
behavior. She would have been even more embarrassed if he'd had any idea of the
dream she had of him just before dawn. A dream that had involved a steamy
shower and a bar of soap.
Blue Bayou might not make much of a mark on the map,
but Regan certainly couldn't fault its architecture. The mayor's office was
housed in a majestic Italianate building with wide stone steps, gracefully
arched windows, and lacy pilasters. A red, white, and blue Acadian flag hung on
a towering brass pole below the U.S. and Louisiana flags. There was a life-size
statue of a soldier astride a prancing horse. The carving at the base of the
bronze statue identified the soldier as Captain Jackson Callahan.
"Is he an ancestor?" she asked.
"A bunch of greats grandfather."
"I thought your father moved here from
Chicago."
"He did. But his grandfather was originally from
the area. Great-grandpиre Callahan moved north looking for work during the
Depression, found it, and stayed. When Maman met Dad at a fraternity party,
they started talking and it turned into one of those 'small world' kind of
things. Dad always said that they were destined to find each other, and though
he didn't buy into a lot of the voodoo stuff that coexists with Catholicism
down here, he also believed that he and Maman had shared previous lives and
kept finding each other over and over again."
"That's sweet."
"I always kind of thought so. Even though I'm not
so sure I buy into the concept, myself."
"Now, why doesn't that surprise me ?"
He laughed at that, then sobered a bit. "I think,
along with wanting a safer place to raise his kids and knowing Maman was
homesick, he wanted to get back to his roots.
"Old Captain Jack was one of our local success
stories. He'd been orphaned on the boat coming to America from Ireland, and had
pretty much grown up wild and barefoot here in the swamp. When they started
recruiting for people to fight against the Yankees in the War between the
States, he figured this might be his chance to make something of himself. Being
Irish, he could identify with the little guy fighting against an oppressive
government, so he signed up with the Irish Sixth Volunteer Infantry, which got
the nickname the Confederate Tigers."
"Because they fought so hard?"
"Like tigers," he agreed. "Jack, he
entered the army as a private and ended up fighting in every eastern-front
battle, beginning with the Shenandoah Valley campaign in 1862 under Stonewall
Jackson. Since those battlegrounds were pretty much killing fields, the men who
managed to survive to fight another day won a lot of battlefield promotions.
When Jackson returned home as a captain, folks around here considered it pretty
much of a miracle. A lot. of people still believe that touching his horse's
nose brings good luck."
Regan was not as surprised as she might have been only
days ago at the way he spoke about hundred-year-old events as if they'd just
happened yesterday. And even though it made her feel a little as if she'd just
landed in Brigadoon, a very strong part of her admired his connection with the
past.
* * *
Antoinette Melancon had strawberry blond hair, a pink
Chanel suit, very good pearls, and an attitude.
"I understand the concept of Mardi Gras,"
she said for the umpteenth time. "After all, my husband is not only a
member of the Knights of Columbus but a deacon at Holy Assumption, and the
women in my family have belonged to the Altar Guild for decades. I understand
that it's an opportunity to party before we begin preparing during Lent for
Easter. I merely do not understand why Blue Bayou can't set the standard as a
community who celebrates with grace and style."
"It's Fat Tuesday," Emile Mercier, owner of
the Acadian Butcher Shop, pointed out. "Not Lean Tuesday. People are
supposed to have a good time."
"It's unseemly." Her pink lips,
color-matched to her suit, turned down in a disapproving frown. Regan suspected
the Puritans had probably passed a better time at their Sabbath meetings than
Charles Melancon's wife did on Fat Tuesday. "However, I suppose I should
not expect anything different from a man who makes a very good living supplying
sausage for the cookout."
He folded massive arms across his chest and glared at
her from beneath beetled gray brows. "Maybe in my next life I can come
back as an oil king," he shot back. "And make a fortune dumping
poison into the bayous and rivers."
She lifted a chin Regan suspected had been sculpted a
bit. "I take offense at that remark."
"Well, some of us take offense at ending up with
bags of three-legged, three-eyed bullfrogs when we go out gigging," a
bearded man in the back of the room growled.
"Melancon does not pollute."
"Tell that to the EPA," a woman who Regan
remembered was an assistant DA for the parish shot back.
"That complaint is in error. My husband is
working with the government to correct the misunderstanding."
"Meaning he's lining some congressman's
pockets," Cal, who'd winked a welcome to Regan when she'd first arrived,
suggested.
Nate was leaning against a wall map of the parish,
legs crossed at the ankles, watching the meeting with patient resignation. Now
he pushed away from the wall and entered into the fray.
"We're here to discuss the band situation,"
he reminded everyone in the same easygoing tone he might use to order a po' boy
from Cal's. "Now, the Dixie Darlings pulling out at the last minute put us
in a bit of a bind, but I played ball with Steve Broussard at Tulane, and since
I read he and his group have given up touring for six months to work on their
new CD, I thought, What the hell, tracked him down in Houma, and invited him to
come play for us."
"Like Broussard and his Swamp Dogs are going to
play for us," the attorney scoffed. "Their last CD went platinum
after they did the sound track for that movie."
"Said he'd be glad to," Nate said calmly.
"And the best part is that the band agreed to donate their fee to the
boys' and girls' club."
"Awright," Cal said as nearly everyone in
the room broke out in spontaneous applause. Even the ADA looked impressed. Toni
Melancon did not, but Regan had already gotten the feeling there was little
about this parish that she would find to her liking.
That the woman was a snob was obvious. That she was
probably as cold-blooded as those hibernating alligators was also apparent. All
of which had Regan wondering, yet again, if her husband might have been
sleeping with Linda Dale. Although she certainly didn't condone adultery, she
could imagine why a man married to such a woman might stray. And now that she'd
gotten an opportunity to see Toni Melancon in action, it didn't take a huge
mental leap to imagine her killing a rival. Not for love; Regan suspected she
didn't have a romantic or passionate bone in her body. But money was always a
prime motive. Granted, the name was still all wrong, but there was still an
outside chance that the murder didn't have anything to do with the mysterious J.
Which didn't, she mused, explain why, if Linda's lover
hadn't killed her, he seemingly hadn't said a word to anyone when she'd died.
The meeting drew to an end. Toni Melancon was the
first to leave, Nate and Regan the last. As they walked from the steps to the
sidewalk, Nate reached out and touched the horse's nose.
"Are we going to need luck?" Regan asked.
"A little luck never hurt, sugar."
Of course, sometimes luck just needed a little help.
Toni Melancon was standing beside her racing-green
Jaguar, the toe of her Bruno Magli pump tapping furiously on the sidewalk.
"Got a problem.?"' Nate asked.
"This stupid car won't run." She looked as
if she was considering kicking the tire. "I told Gerald we should buy
German. But no, he wanted this piece of British trash."
"It's a classic," Nate said. "When it
came out back in '68, it was called the most beautiful car in the world."
"It's classic trash." So much for grace and
style. Her petulant behavior reminded Regan of Josh, who probably had an excuse
for his bad attitude.
"Why don't I take a look at the engine, see if I
can spot anything?"
"All right." She sighed heavily, seeming
more put out than grateful for his assistance.
Regan watched as he opened the hood and began fiddling
with wires as if he knew what he was doing.
"Well, the good news is that it doesn't look like
it's going to be a real big problem to fix."
"What's the bad news?"
"I'm not going to be able to get it
running."
"Why not?" she said, seeming to take it
personally.
"See this red-and-white wire?"
She sighed again and humored him by glancing in the
direction of the engine, but she clearly wasn't willing to risk dirtying her
suit by getting too close. "What about it?"
"It leads to the solenoid on the starter motor.
It's loose, which we could fix, but if you look here"—he pointed to a spot
about three inches from the dangling end of the wire—"it's also stripped.
It'll have to be replaced."
"I knew we should have bought that BMW," she
huffed.
Regan wondered who he'd gotten to take a pocketknife
to that wire.
"No problem. I'll just call Earl on my cell
phone, have him pick it up and tow it over to Dix Automotive, and I'll drive you
out to the house."
His quick, boyish grin appeared to charm even this
gorgon. "I suppose that's the best solution."
"It'll be my pleasure," he assured her.
"You don't mind if Ms. Hart comes along, do you? I've been showin' her
around the parish."
The older woman looked at Regan as if noticing her for
the first time. "You must be the new sheriff I've been hearing
about."
"People are mistaken. I'm just visiting."
"Well, that's too bad, because we could certainly
use one. I still don't know what you were thinking of, hiring Dwayne," she
complained to Nate.
"He's a little green. But he's catching on real
fast."
"But he's—" Her lips curved downward in what
appeared to be her usual expression. "You know."
"A college graduate?" Nate asked blandly.
"Don't be cute with me, Nathaniel Callahan. You
know very well what I mean."
"I believe I do, ma'am, and the way I saw it, not
only is Dwayne qualified, having earned a degree in criminal justice, he's
overly so. We were lucky he even considered coming to work for the force. Along
with his qualifications, he's local, so he's got a real proprietary feeling
about the parish, a bonus in someone hired to keep the peace. Then there's the
little fact that we haven't had an African-American officer since Dad hired
Dwayne's uncle back in the seventies. It seemed about time. Past time."
"I realize Jake Callahan has been raised to hero
status in Blue Bayou, and I'm truly sorry about the tragic way he died, but as
I told him back then, change for change's sake is not always a good thing.
Since the subject's come up, I feel the need to say that it's important that
Blue Bayou maintain the traditions that have kept it above the decline of so
much of the rest of our state."
"Maybe some traditions deserve to die," he
said evenly as he opened the passenger door of his SUV, which was parked behind
the disabled sedan. "Like slavery. Or were you referring to
lynchings?"
"That's precisely what your father said. I made
allowances, since he was, after all, a Yankee. But I would have hoped your mother
would have taught you more about your heritage."
"Oh, Maman sure enough did do that."
Seeming not to notice the way his jaw had gone rigid
and the steely cast to his eyes, Toni Melancon allowed him to help her up with
a hand to the elbow, and settled into the seat like Queen Elizabeth settling
into her gilt coach for a ride from Buckingham Palace to Westminster. It had to
be obvious to anyone less egocentric than Gerald Melancon's wife that she'd
pushed his patience and charm to the limits.
Regan knew Nate had only held his tongue for her sake,
and when his eyes caught hers in the rearview mirror, she mouthed a silent
thank-you.
Chapter Twenty-one
The private driveway to the Melancon house was at
least three miles long, flanked by an oak alley created to build anticipation
in visitors approaching the plantation. Small one-room buildings Regan
suspected were former slave cabins were scattered across abandoned fields,
crumbling relics of another time. Untidy formal gardens that at one time must
have been magnificent were now in need of a guiding hand.
The house was large as Beau Soleil, but lacked its
grace. Unlike the soaring white pillars at Jack and Dani's house, four massive
Doric columns squatted thickly on the thick slabs of granite making up the four
front steps. Green mold tinged red brick that had faded to a dull rose over the
centuries. Although Regan had never been fanciful, St. Elmo's Plantation—named,
Nate told her, for the phosphorous green swamp gas that glowed at night—and its
surroundings seemed to give off a desolate aura, as if it was inhabited by the
Addams family's southern cousins.
Nate pulled up beneath the crumbling portico.
"Well, thank you, Nate," Toni said, as if realizing such manners were
required, if not honestly felt.
"Anytime," he said as he helped her down
from the high seat.
There was a lengthy pause.
"Well, good day," she said. So much for
inviting them in for a cool drink.
"You know," he said, "it's been a long
time since I've visited with Miz Bethany. I think I'll just pop in and say
bonjour. Wouldn't want her to hear the SUV and fret that I've come all this way
out here without payin' my respects."
Regan watched as his trademark slow, easy smile
appeared to do its magic.
"All right." Toni breathed out another of
those deep sighs suggesting she found the world so very tiresome. "But
don't expect her to recognize you. The old woman's gone absolutely batty."
"Now, that's a real shame," he said as they
walked up to the huge front door, carved with what Regan suspected was the
Melancon family crest, surrounded by an unwelcoming quartet of gargoyle faces.
"Maybe we'll get lucky, and she'll be having a good day."
They were met in the great hall by a nearly
six-foot-tall woman who could have been anywhere from sixty to a hundred. Her
black dress was relieved only by a heavy chain loaded down with various charms.
"Mrs. Melancon is not receiving visitors," she informed them in a
deep voice that rumbled like thunder.
"Now, Miz Caledonia, you know I'm not just any
ole visitor, me," Nate said, turning up the wattage on his natural charm.
"I come bearing gifts." He held out two small gilt boxes he'd
retrieved from the glove compartment of the SUV. "Brought you and Miss
Bethany some of those candies you like so well from Pauline's Pralines."
She shook her head and clucked her tongue but took the
boxes. "You shameless, Nate Callahan."
"Now, you know, Miz Caledonia," he said with
a quick wink Regan's way, "you're not the first person to tell me
that."
" 'Xpect not," she huffed, then caved.
"You can only stay jus' a minute. It's time for Miz Bethany's nap."
"I'll be in and out in a flash," he
promised, making an X across the front of his denim shirt.
She shook her head again, then turned and began
walking away.
"You probably never read Rebecca, did you?"
Regan murmured as they walked down a long hallway lined with busts of what she
suspected were former Melancons.
"No. But that fille I told you about, the
Chantilly flatware one, liked to watch the Romance Channel, so I saw the
movie."
"Caledonia makes Mrs. Danvers look like Mary
Poppins."
"She's a tough old bird," he allowed.
"But she's devoted to Mrs. Melancon. Apparently she was her nurse, then
just sort of graduated through the household ranks over the years, until she
pretty much runs the place."
"Toni didn't appear to like her overly
much." The woman had walked past the housekeeper without so much as a
word.
"It's my guess she's afraid of her, since rumor
has it that when she first married Charles, she wanted to move the old lady out
of the house so she could be queen of the manor. Caledonia threatened her with
a voodoo curse, and that was pretty much the end of that discussion."
They were led into a parlor filled with plants. Framed
photographs of yet more Melancon ancestors frowned down from water-stained,
red-silk-covered walls. The atmosphere in the room was so steamy Regan was
moderately surprised that the oriental carpet hadn't sprouted mushrooms. The
scent of all those flowers hit the minute she entered the room, giving her an
instant headache.
Almost hidden by a towering philodendron, an elderly
woman, as fragile appearing as a small bird, was swallowed up by a wheelchair.
Despite the sweltering heat, she was draped in a trio of colorful shawls.
"Bonjour, Miz Bethany," Nate greeted her.
"Aren't you looking as lovely as a spring garden today?"
Her gaze remained directed out the floor-to-ceiling
windows, where a trio of stone nymphs danced around a green algae-clogged
fountain.
"Mr. Nate brought you some of those pralines you
like so much." Caledonia's stern voice had turned surprisingly gentle. She
opened one of the boxes, selected a pecan candy, and held it in front of the
old woman's face.
A beringed, age-spotted hand, laden down with
diamonds, snatched it from the outstretched hand like a greedy toddler, and it
disappeared between lips painted a garish crimson. She thrust out the hand
again, palm up.
"After your nap," Caledonia said, putting
the box high up on an ornately carved black teak shelf. She could have been
talking to a child.
A heated string of what appeared to be French
babbling, interspersed with curses Regan was surprised any southern lady of
Mrs. Melancon's generation ever would have allowed herself to think, let alone
say, turned the air blue.
"You know you can't sleep when you've had too
much sugar," Caledonia said matter-of-factly. "The box will still be
here when you get up." She adjusted the shawls. "You gonna say good
afternoon to Mr. Nate and his friend?" She put dark fingers beneath the
sagging chin and lifted the woman's gaze.
"Miz Bethany." Nate tried again, but he'd
finally found a female impervious to that winning smile. She was looking
straight through them, her pale brown eyes unfocused. They might as well have
been ghosts. Regan's heart sank a little as she realized that her long shot
wasn't going to pay off.
"It's time for her nap," the other woman
said, announcing that the brief visit had come to an end.
"Thank you, Miz Caledonia." If Nate was
disappointed, he didn't show it. "I appreciate your hospitality."
They'd made their way down the hallway, past the
busts, across the slate floor of the great hall, and had just left the house
when Caledonia caught up with them.
"I've got something for the fille," she said.
Reaching into a skirt pocket, she pulled out a dime that had been drilled
through and strung on a narrow black cord.
Regan exchanged a glance with Nate, then took the
necklace. "Thank you."
"You make sure you wear it." Vivid turquoise
eyes burned in her burnished copper complexion. "You've stirred up the
spirits, you. This gris-gris will protect you."
The ancient woman's intensity, coupled with their
brief meeting with the old woman who could have been Norman Bates's mother,
sent a chill up Regan's spine.
"We appreciate that a bunch, Miz Caledonia,"
Nate said, jumping in to rescue her. He took the cord from Regan's nerveless
fingers and slipped it over her head. It had to be her imagination, but she
could have sworn the coin warmed her skin as it settled at the base of her
throat. He bestowed his most reassuring smile on Regan. "No one in the
bayou makes better gris-gris than Miz Caledonia. She's a descendant of the
Marie Laveaus," he said.
"He speaks the truth, he," the woman said,
taking on a queenly bearing as she rose to her full height.
"Isn't that interesting." Regan forced a
smile. "Merci." It was one of the few French words she knew.
The woman didn't answer, just shut the tall heavy door
in their faces.
"Well." Regan let out a long breath.
"That was certainly an experience."
"Caledonia is a little colorful even for southern
Louisiana," he said. "I’m sorry about Mrs. Melancon bein' so out of
it."
"You said she would be."
"I said I’d heard talk. I didn't realize she'd
gone so far downhill since the last time I'd seen her, about a month ago."
"Is it Alzheimer's?"
"That'd be my guess, since the old girl used to
be sharp as a tack. She inherited the chairman's chair at Melancon after her
husband died making love to the mistress he kept in New Orleans's Faubourg
Marigny historical district."
"Why does that not surprise me?" Regan said
dryly as she climbed into the SUV
"It was a pretty good scandal, even for down
here. Turns out that the woman and Charles senior had three kids together. The
fight for inheritance rights took three very litigious years."
"Obviously the family won."
"Mostly, but the mistress and the kids did end up
getting to keep the house and the stock he'd put in each of their names before
he died."
"There seems to be a lot of Melancon stock
floating around down here."
"That's not so unusual, since they're the biggest
employer. It'd be like living in Atlanta and ownin' Coca-Cola stock."
"Who are the Marie Laveaus?"
"Oh, now they were an interestin' pair. The first
Maria was a hairdresser to wealthy New Orleans Creoles back in the 1820s.
Technically she was a practicing Catholic, but she was also the spiritual
adviser to slaves and their masters. And, of course, the master's wives, whose
hair she fixed. She earned a reputation as a voodoo queen, but she must've had
a good heart, since she was also the first to go out and tend to sick folks
whenever the fever epidemics swept through the city.
"She still has her cult of believers who mark her
tomb with red X's and leave coins to pay for spells. Her daughter, Marie II,
took the fame thing one step further and put on elaborately staged voodoo rites
that became real popular among New Orleans society. It's been said that she
grew so influential, even some of the priests and bishops would go to her for
advice."
"And Caledonia's descended from them?"
"So they say."
"Voodoo's just a myth." Regan touched the
dime at her throat and wondered which of them she was trying to convince.
"She couldn't really know anything about me possibly being in
danger."
"Of course not." He shot her a smile
designed to lift any lingering dark mood. " 'Less you're talkin' about
falling under the spell of my expert lovemaking."
She laughed and began to relax. But there was still
the niggling problem of the stock certificates. "I'm really going to have
to talk with Melancon."
"Won't have much of a chance to do that till
after Fat Tuesday," he said. "So you may as well just plan on
enjoying Mardi Gras."
"I suppose you're right."
"Don' worry, Detective Chиre." He skimmed
his right hand over her shoulder and down her arm, took hold of her hand, and
lifted it to his lips, brushing a light kiss against her knuckles. "I'll
be makin' sure you enjoy yourself, you."
As much as he regretted the unproductiveness of the
visit to the Melancon house, Nate couldn't deny that he was grateful for
anything that kept Regan in Blue Bayou a little longer. It was strange, the way
time was beginning to blur. They'd only known each other a handful of days, but
he was beginning to forget how his life had been before she'd come into it.
It was lucky that with the exception of the ongoing
work at Beau Soleil and finishing up the sheriff's office remodel, he didn't
have any jobs demanding his attention at the moment. He wasn't sure he could
have paid enough attention to do them justice. It was as if he'd begun looking
at life through the wrong end of a telescope: nearly his entire focus—except
what the hell he was going to do about Josh—had narrowed down to Regan Hart.
He thought about her too much and too often. Hell, all
of the time. He pictured her intelligent golden brown eyes when he was brushing
his teeth in the morning, and visions of her long, lean body were the last
thing to pass through his mind before he'd finally fall asleep.
She'd pop into his mind during the day when he'd be
fiddling with a set of blueprints, and suddenly, instead of looking at a
bearing wall, he'd picture her as she'd looked out on the Santa Monica pier,
her smooth sleek hair ruffled by the sea breeze, her fresh clean scent more
enticing than the gardens of Xanadu.
During the time he'd been waiting for her to show up
in Blue Bayou, she'd filled his mind. So much so that he hadn't even noticed
that he was painting the wainscoting in Beau Soleil's dining room French
Vanilla, instead of the Swiss Coffee Dani had picked out, until she'd pointed
it out to him, Hell, he hadn't made a mistake like that since those summers
during high school, when he'd begun learning the construction trade.
It had been bad enough before she'd arrived with big
eyes, wraparound legs, and problems any sensible man would stay clear of. And he'd
always considered himself an eminently sensible man when it came to women. But
now, it was as if she'd put a voodoo love spell on him, fevering his mind and
tormenting his body.
Which was, of course, the problem, Nate told himself
as he turned onto Bienville Boulevard, two blocks away from the inn. While his
reputation for romancing the Blue Bayou belles might be a bit exaggerated, he
couldn't remember ever being this sexually frustrated. Not since he'd made the
grand discovery that women liked sex as much as men did. Once he got the
delectable detective into his bed and satiated his lust, while giving her a
damn good time, too, of course, he'd be free of what was rapidly becoming an
obsession.
"Oh, my God."
"What?" The mental image of kissing his way
down her slender torso popped like a soap bubble. She grabbed his arm so hard
they nearly ran off the road.
"You need to stop."
The stress in her voice made him immediately pull over
and cut the engine. "What's wrong?" She looked as pale as Beau
Soleil's Confederate ghost.
"It's that house." Her hand trembled in a
very un-Reganlike way as she pointed toward a bright cottage, built
Creole-style against the front sidewalk. The stucco-covered brick had been
painted in historically correct shades of putty and Egyptian blue, and a For
Sale sign was tacked to the French red door.
"What about it?"
"It's Linda Dale's."
Obviously the unsuccessful meeting with the old lady
and Caledonia's spooky voodoo shit had taken its toll on her.
"Linda Dale's house got wiped out by a hurricane,
chиre," he soothed. His palms stroked shoulders as stiff as the Melancons'
granite steps. "Remember? I already checked the real estate records before
you came to town."
"They've got to be wrong. Dammit, that's the
house." Her eyes were huge and earnest.
"I know the realtor," he said, deciding no
good would come from arguing. Best she discover she'd gotten confused on her
own. "Let me give her a call and we'll get her out here to let us
in."
He knew how serious this was when Regan didn't even make
a crack about him knowing a woman named Scarlett O'Hara.
"The key's under the mat," he said after he
ended his cell phone call to the real estate office. "She leaves it there
in case people want to take a look for themselves without a salesperson hovering
over them."
"The living room, is to the left when you walk
in," she murmured as he retrieved the key from beneath the green mat.
"The dining room to the right."
"That's pretty much the way Creole cottages are
laid out," he said carefully, not wanting to upset her any more than she
already was. "Four rooms, two back to back on either side of the
door."
"How would I know that? I tell you, this is the
house-" She walked into a back bedroom that had been painted black. Nate
figured josh would feel right at home here. "This was my bedroom. It was
yellow with a pale blue sky. The sky had white clouds painted on it."
"That's a nice memory," he allowed, still
certain she was confused.
She didn't respond. "She was killed in the living
room. My bed was there, against that wall." He was losing her; she was
looking at things he couldn't see. "It was covered with stuffed toys, but
my favorite was a purple, yellow, and green elephant I got for my
birthday."
"Mardi Gras colors."
"Yes. I still have him," she surprised him
by revealing. "Back in L.A. His name is Gabriel." Regan's brow
furrowed. "I have no idea why I named him that."
"It'd be my guess your maman helped you name him
after Longfellow's poem about the lovers separated during the Grand
Derangement."
"I've never read it."
"It's one of those typically tragic love stories.
We had to memorize it practically every year in school. Evangeline
Bellefontaine is an Acadian maiden who's torn from her beloved, Gabriel
Lajeunesse, on their wedding day. They're separated, and she finds her way here
to Louisiana with a group of exiles, only to discover that he's already been
here but has moved on. So, she keeps searching and years later, when they're
both old and gray, runs across him dying in an almshouse in Philadelphia. They
embrace, he dies in her arms, she dies of a broken heart, and they're buried
together."
"That is tragic." She sighed heavily.
Wearily. "So many love stories seem to be."
"And a lot aren't. One of these days, I'll tell
you about Jack and Dani. Dieu, they had a hard time, in some ways harder than
Evangeline and Gabriel, but look how great things worked out for them."
"That's nice," she said a little absently.
"That it worked out." She was looking back at the door to the
bedroom. "She died in the living room. I heard shouting and hid under my
sheets because I was afraid the cauchemar had come to eat me."
"That's an old Cajun folktale people used to tell
kids to get them to behave. Be good, or the cauchemar will get you."
"It had crawfish claws for hands." She shook
her head. "Do you know, as many times as I had that nightmare, it never
seemed odd to me that I'd know anything about a witch like that." It had
merely been part of her subconscious, a part of her. "There was a terrible
crash."
She'd faded away again, into the past, leaving Nate
feeling helpless. "I was too afraid to come out of my room. After a while
I did, but Mama was gone. I went from room to room. I was so hungry."
He followed her out of the bedroom to the cheery
leaf-green kitchen. "I climbed up on a chair and got some cookies out of
the cupboard. And some bread." She ran her fingertips over the door of one
of the pine cupboards. "I think I slept. I must have."
She went out the back door, stood on the loggia
beneath the gabled roof, and looked out at the small cottage that was now the
garage. "I don't know how long I waited for her to come back, but I just
kept thinking what Mama had told me about never going outside onto the street
by myself, or I'd get run over by a car. So I just stayed. For what seemed like
forever."
He no longer doubted she'd lived here. Watching her
face, he suspected she was reliving every moment. Not caring whether or not she
came up with any clues, but understanding that she probably needed to get the
memories out, Nate looped his arms around her waist as she continued to stare
toward the garage. She leaned back against him, in what he took as an
encouraging sign that she'd come to trust him.
"A nice doctor gave me a lollipop. It was cherry,
my favorite. And then another nice man with dark hair and kind eyes picked me
up and took me home with him."
"That'd be my dad." He learned that from his
father's notebook, but hadn't wanted to tell her earlier; hadn't wanted her to
think he was trying to somehow take advantage of an act of kindness that would
have been second nature for Jake Callahan.
"I'm not at all surprised by that." She
turned within his loose embrace and looked up at him, her moist eyes shining.
"Finn's not the only Callahan brother who takes after his father."
When she lifted a hand to his face, Nate was lost.
"I don't want you to take this the wrong way,
Regan." He covered her hand with his own, turned his head, and pressed his
lips against her palm. "And I'm honestly not trying to take advantage of
your emotional situation here, and I've been tryin' to do the gentlemanly thing
and give you time—but I don't know how much longer I can wait." He skimmed
his hand over her hair, down her neck, her spine, settling at the small of her
back. Then he drew her to him, letting her feel his need. "I want you to
come home with me."
Her remarkable eyes gave him her answer first. Then
her sweet-as-sugarcane lips curved, just a little. "Yes."
Chapter Twenty-two
Regan had accepted the idea that Linda Dale had been
her mother. She'd even begun to suspect that the terrifying events that had
haunted her sleep for years were more memory than nightmare. But being in the
house had triggered images long buried.
"It was pink," she said as they drove down
the two-lane road along the bayou. "The house," she explained when he
glanced over at her. "It was painted pink. Mama said it was a house just
right for two girls to live in." She pressed her fingertips against her
forehead, where a killer headache threatened. "At least I think it was
pink. I can't separate real life from the nightmares."
"Seems in your case, they'd be pretty much the
same thing, chиre. It could have been pink. Creoles tended to like their
colors, and a lot of people replicate the original look."
"If I can remember the color of the house, and the
clouds on the ceiling, you'd think I could picture who my mother was having an
affair with."
"The trick is probably not to push it."
"I suppose not." Her laugh was short and
humorless. "Boy, Callahan, what is it with you and amnesiacs?"
He was wearing sunglasses to block out the bright
midday sun, but she could sense the smile in his eyes as he glanced over at her
again. "I guess I'm just lucky."
He returned to his driving, and a strangely soothing
silence settled over them. He was a man comfortable with silence, which she
suspected was partly due to having grown up in a land as hushed as a cathedral.
They passed a cemetery, built aboveground as she remembered them in New
Orleans, to prevent the bodies from floating to the surface during floods.
Sunlight glinted off a broken angel's wing.
"This is like another world," she said as a
pair of giant herons took flight from the bayou in a flurry of blue-gray wings.
"I'll bet, before you came to Blue Bayou, if
anyone had mentioned the word swamp, you'd think of snakes, mosquitoes, and
gators."
"You'd be right."
"Tourists come down here from New Orleans and go
out on the commercial boats—which I'm not knockin', since everyone's gotta make
a living, and it's better than not seeing the swamp at all—but they watch the
guide toss some chicken to a gator from a fishing line, down some boiled
crawfish and oysters with hot sauce, hear a little canned zydeco, and think
they've been to the bayou.
"But they've got it all wrong. You can't roar
down here from the Quarter, snap a few pictures, then go racing off on a
plantation tour. It's a wandering kind of place. It takes time to soak
in."
They came around a bend onto what seemed to be a
small, secret lake. On the bank of the lake, perched on stilts, was a
single-story house with a low, overhanging roof and a wide porch that appeared
to go all the way around it.
"It looks as if it just sprang naturally to life
from the bayou."
"It's a West Indies-style planter's house. It's
designed for hot climates. The roof line and the porch allow air to flow from
open windows through all the rooms." He flashed a grin. "I can also
fish from bed, which is a plus."
She smiled at that, as he'd intended.
"Did you build it yourself? Or refurbish
it?"
"From scratch. I was hoping to keep the original,
but carpenter ants and termites had been using it for a smorgasbord, so it'd
been condemned. I mostly kept to the original footprint and tried to replicate
it as close as possible, including pegging the timbers instead of nailing
them."
"I'm impressed." But not surprised, having
seen the work he'd done at Beau Soleil.
He shrugged. "I told you, bein' mayor is pretty
much a part-time thing. Building's what pays the bills."
"You didn't choose to restore old houses for the
money," she said, remembering his saying he'd rather be happy than rich.
Though he could probably make a fortune if he moved to a wealthier area.
"It's important to you. And this house was undoubtedly a labor of
love."
"There are still a lot of things I want to do to
it. It's taken me the last five years, workin' on it part-time between other
jobs, but I figure if there's one thing I've got plenty of, it's time."
"Now I really envy you." She sighed as she
thought of her never-ending stack of murder books, then decided that she wasn't
going to dwell on them. Not here. Not now.
The inside of the house was rustic, but warm and
inviting and surprisingly neat. The wood furniture was sturdy enough for
generations of children to climb on, the upholstered pieces oversize and
overstuffed, obviously chosen more for comfort than style. The floor was wide
planks, and the open ceiling beams appeared hand-hewn.
Another of those little silences settled over them,
this one not nearly as comfortable as the last.
Regan had always thought of herself as a courageous
woman. Now that the moment they'd been leading up to since Nate Callahan had
appeared in her squad room had arrived, she was beginning to lose her nerve.
Nate was backlit by the sun, making him appear to be
cast in gleaming bronze. She remembered how he'd looked with his shirt off, his
muscled arm swinging that hammer. He'd been as close to physical perfection as
she'd ever seen. She was not.
"You're going to hate me."
"Impossible."
She dragged a hand through her hair, appalled at the
way it was trembling. She had the steadiest hands of anyone she knew; she
always made the top score in marksmanship. "This is impossible."
His lips curved slightly at that. "Nothing's
impossible, chиre."
"It can't go anywhere."
"It already has."
He didn't exactly sound any more thrilled about that
idea than she was. "You don't understand."
"Then tell me."
"I have these scars."
"No one can get through life without a few scars,
chиre. Jack has 'em, so does Finn, and even me, as perfect as I am," he
said with a slight smile that turned what could have been arrogance into humor,
"have picked up a few over the years."
"No." She pulled away. Turned away.
Unreasonably nervous, she went over to a window looking out over the water and
wrapped her arms around herself. "I mean real ones." She
closed her eyes to shut off the image of the flawed body she'd taught herself
not to study in the mirror. "Physical ones."
Nate knew that if he was going to stop this from
becoming emotionally heavy, the time to move away had come. If he wanted to prevent
himself from falling into a relationship he hadn't asked for, hadn't wanted,
all he had to do was to back off. Now,
A very strong part of him wanted to do exactly that,
to prove to himself, and to her, that he still could. He hadn't wanted the
responsibility of a woman whose life was turning out to be more complicated
than even she could have imagined. But he wanted Regan.
Whatever was happening to him—to his mind, his body,
and his heart—was beyond his power to stop. Which was why, instead of retreating
to safer emotional ground, he crossed the room. "Where?"
"All over."
He took hold of her shoulders and turned her around to
face him. "Here?" He skimmed his fingertips over the crest of her
breasts. They fit so perfectly into his hands, Nate could almost imagine she'd
been created solely for him and him alone.
With her eyes on his, she nodded.
Every other woman he'd ever been with had approached
this moment with a casual air of experience, expectancy. Regan, who was proving
to be the strongest of them all, trembled when his thumbs brushed her nipples,
which hardened beneath the light touch.
Need hammered at him, along with a previously unfelt
fear that he wouldn't be—couldn't be—gentle enough. His body urged him to
ravish; his mind counseled restraint. His heart, which was expanding in his
chest, opted for a middle ground.
"How about here?" His caressing hand moved
downward, fingers splayed over her torso.
"Yes." As if not wanting to see what he
might be thinking, she closed her eyes. Her usually clear voice was barely a
whisper.
Her stomach. "How about here?"
"Yes.' Dammit, Nate . . ."
"And here?" Down her thigh.
"Everywhere. And they're ugly."
"Now, I wouldn't want to be accusing you of
stretching the truth, sugar, but my maman used to have this saying, about
pretty is as pretty does."
"I've heard it."
"I 'magine you have. So I'm having a hard time
believing that there's anything about you that isn't downright, drop-dead
gorgeous." She didn't resist as he drew her closer. When she sighed and
rested her head against his shoulder, he brushed a kiss atop her shiny cap of
hair.
They remained that way for a long silent time. Outside
the house, clouds gathering for an afternoon rain shower moved across the sun,
casting the room in deep shadows. As he felt her trembling cease, Nate thought
how good she felt in his arms. How perfect.
"I'm afraid," she admitted.
He drew back his head. "Of me?"
"I could never be afraid of you." She
trailed a fingernail along the top of his lips. "I'm afraid of what we're
getting into."
"Don't feel like the Lone Ranger. Since this
seems to be a day for surprises and sharing secrets, want to know what I'm most
afraid of?"
"What?"
"That I'm not going to be able to make love to
you as well as a woman like you should be made love to."
She surprised—and pleased—him by laughing a little at
that. "Now, that may be the only thing in my life I'm not worried
about." She went up on her toes. Her lips brushed tantalizingly against
his, then clung. "Take me to bed, Nate," she said, her words thrumming
against his mouth.
He didn't need a second invitation. He swept her into
his arms, feeling a lot like Rhett carrying Scarlett up that staircase, but
wanting to pleasure more than ravish. Ravishment, he thought with a flare of
hot anticipation, could come later.
"Oh, it's like sinking into a cloud," she
murmured as he laid her with care atop the mattress of the roomy bed he'd made
with leftover pieces of cypress from the house. "I smell flowers."
He lay down beside her. She turned toward him, her
eyes shining like a pair of the pirate Lafitte's gold doubloons. "It's
stuffed with Spanish moss and herbs."
Her rich, throaty laugh started a thousand pulses
humming beneath his skin. "I'm never buying an innerspring mattress
again."
Nate knew he was in big trouble when he almost
suggested she stay here with him. In Blue Bayou. In his house. His bed. He
wasn't prepared to share those thoughts with her yet, not when he hadn't
figured them out for himself, but there was one thing he
wanted, needed, to get straight before they moved on.
He framed her face between his palms. "You're
different from any other woman I've ever known." He could hear a sense of
the wonder he'd tried to ignore in his tone, and suspected she could hear it,
too. "This is different."
"I know." When her gorgeous eyes grew
suspiciously bright, Nate felt something inside him move that had nothing to do
with sympathy, or lust. "It's the same for me."
Because he'd been raised to be a gentleman, Nate felt
obliged to give her one last chance. "We can still stop this. Before
things get out of hand."
"Is that what you want?"
"Hell, no."
"Me, neither."
What was the matter with him? Taking a woman to bed
had never been this complicated. This important. Frustrated with the situation,
even more frustrated with himself for giving in to these sudden self-doubts,
Nate decided if he was going to be this lost, he damn well wasn't about to take
the long fatal fall alone, and took her lips.
She tensed again when he pulled the T-shirt over her head,
and instinctively covered her breast with her hand.
"It's okay." He kissed her again, his tongue
dipping in to seduce hers into a slow, sensual dance. "I want to see you,
chиrie." He caught her lower Up between his teeth. "All of you."
Her body softened in a silent, submissive way he knew
was deceptive as he undressed her slowly, deliberately, taking time to kiss
each bit of uncovered flesh, just as Antoine had done in the erotic story he'd
told her on the phone. He smiled when he got down to her panties, which were
practical cotton woven into a barely there red bikini, just like the one he'd
imagined in his fantasy at Cal's. Contrasts, he thought, as he drew them slowly
down long legs, firm and sleek as a Thoroughbred's from daily running.
"I told you," she said, as he cupped the
weight of her breast in his hand and pressed his mouth against a long jagged
line snaking from her dusky pink nipple to the wall of her chest. What in the
hell had happened to her?
"The plastic surgeon was the best in L.A. You
can't go to a movie or watch television without seeing his work. He couldn't
exactly make me look the way I had before the accident, but he used tiny
stitches on my face, and special dressings, and hid the stitches beneath my
hair as much as possible. But with all the surgeries to put me back together
again, I just got tired of operations, so my body—"
"Is beautiful." He kissed her wounded
breast, then proceeded to move his hands, his lips, over her in a sure,
leisurely way, feeling the pleasure seep through her.
"You don't have to lie."
"I'm not. Perfection is boring." His tongue
glided lower, over her stomach, then lower still. She sucked in a quick, sharp
breath when he scraped his teeth along the pink ridge at the inside of her
thigh, then laved the flesh with his tongue. He was telling the absolute truth.
He found her wonderful. "Whatever marks you might have are merely points
of interest on a fascinating tour, mon ange."
Nate felt her going lax with pleasure, and even as he
enjoyed the absolute control he knew she did not surrender easily, he reined in
his own rampant need, keeping his caresses slow and gentle as he moved over
every graceful curve and sensual hollow. He touched her everywhere, watching
her face. Where his hands played, she burned; where his mouth warmed, she trembled
and arched in utter abandonment.
And still, even as the deep, painfully sexual ache
went all the way to the bone, he waited.
His fingers sketched slow, tantalizing circles in the
dark curls between her legs, then tugged lightly, drawing forth a moan. He did
it again, this time covering her parted lips with his, so he could feel the
ragged sound as well as hear it.
"Mon Dieu, I love you like this." Hot.
Hungry. His. He trailed his hand down the soft, silky, smooth flesh of one
inner thigh, then back up another. "Open for me, chиre," he coaxed.
"Let me see all of you."
She couldn't believe what was happening to her. She'd
known Nate Callahan would be a good lover, skilled in knowing how to please a
woman. But what he was doing to her went far beyond pleasure. Although his
caresses were achingly slow, his clever hands were everywhere as he discovered
erogenous zones she'd never known existed.
Regan had never—ever—ceded control to any man. She'd
always preferred being on top, physically and emotionally. But that was before
Nate. Lying naked on his moss-filled mattress while he was still fully dressed
was strangely erotic, and for the first time in her life she understood that
absolute surrender to the right man, a man you could trust absolutely, could be
glorious. There was nothing, she thought with a stunning sense of wonder, that
he could ask for that she would not give. When he pressed his palms against the
inside of her trembling thighs, she opened her legs, offering the most feminine
part of herself to his view. Despite the rain, there was enough daylight for
him to see her imperfections. But it didn't matter. He still wanted her. Still
found her desirable. Even beautiful.
She smiled, unable to remember when any man had called
her anything beyond pretty.
"Lovely," he murmured. She moaned as those
wickedly clever fingers skimmed over flesh heated from the blood rushing from
her heart. She was as exposed, as helpless as she'd ever been, but felt no
embarrassment as he parted the tingling flesh.
"Like petals, smooth and soft and glistening with
early morning dew."
Her senses swam. Her mind was shutting down. She
reached for him, needing to touch him as he was touching her. She wanted to
yank down that zipper on his jeans and take him into her mouth, deeper than
she'd ever taken a man; she wanted to burrow her face into the crisp male hair
around his penis, she wanted to torment him as he was tormenting her.
"Please, Nate." Another thing that was so,
so different. She'd never begged any man for anything, least of all sex.
"I want you." Need you.
"Soon, chиre." He braceleted both her wrists
in his hands. "There's no hurry."
"Easy for you to say," she complained as he
lifted her imprisoned hands above her head. Never in her life had she been so
helpless. Helpless to resist Nate. Helpless to resist her own escalating
desire.
"Easier to say than to do," he agreed in a
deep, rumbling voice roughened with sex. "But like I said, down here in
the South, we take things a little slower than in the rest of the world."
Just when she thought for certain that she'd die from
the wanting, the waiting, his free hand cupped the source of heat and sent her
soaring. She peaked instantly, sharply, and as she did, he pressed his mouth
between her legs.
He was feasting on her, as a man might devour ripe
passion fruit. Drowning in emotions, Regan writhed beneath his ruthless tongue and
hungry mouth, the line between pain and pleasure blurring as he drove her up
again. Even as this second climax shuddered through her, all Regan could think
was More.
As if possessing the ability to read her thoughts, he
left her only long enough to rip off his clothes. When he took the extra time
to protect her, something that had somehow recklessly escaped her sex-fogged
mind, she felt something powerful move inside her heart.
His long fingers splayed on her hips, lifting her to him
as he slid into her with silky ease. Had anything ever felt so glorious? So
right?
As he began to move with a deep, age-old stroke,
slowly at first, then faster, harder, deeper, driving them both into the
fragrant mattress, she scissored her legs around him and met him thrust for
thrust, matching his pace. They came together, catapulting them both into
oblivion. And into a relationship neither had planned, or been prepared to accept.
Chapter Twenty-three
Nate collapsed on her, loath to move, not sure if he
could even if he'd wanted to. He could feel her heart beating against his
chest, synchronized with the rhythm of his own as they both slowly returned to
normal. He listened to the rain tapping on the roof and knew he'd never hear
the sound again without thinking of Regan. He could cheerfully spend the rest
of his life in this bed, he decided. So long as he could keep his delectable
detective right here with him.
"Incredible." He threaded his hands through
her dampened hair, brushing it back from, her face, which was flushed from her
orgasms. Her eyes were closed, her long, thick lashes looking like dark silk
against her cheeks. "Absolutely incredible."
"Mmmm." She ran a limp hand down his
sweat-slick back. "I honestly never experienced anything like that."
"Neither did I."
That had her opening her eyes.
"It's the truth." Realizing that he was
probably crushing her, he rolled over onto his side, taking her with him. Her
lips were deep rose and swollen from kisses. Unable to resist, he nipped at
them lightly, savoring her taste. "This changes things."
What had just happened between them was no ordinary
event. They'd connected in a way that would have scared the hell out of him if
he hadn't been feeling so satisfied.
"It doesn't have to." He felt a pang of loss
as she put a bit of distance between them. "We're both adults. It was
amazing, hot, mind-blowing sex. But there's no irate father waiting in the
wings with a shotgun."
"Well now, I'll have to admit, that comes as a
relief," he drawled.
"Seeing as how the idea of gettin' peppered with
buckshot doesn't sound all that appealing." Speaking of appealing . . .
Unable to resist the lure of her silken flesh, even after what they'd just
shared, he skimmed a slow caress down her throat and over a pert breast.
"I told you," he said, when she stiffened
again, ever so slightly, "they don't matter."
"I don't want to talk about it."
"I want to know, chиre."
"You do realize that you can't always get
everything you want."
"Believe me, I'm well aware of that," he
said, thinking about the murder of his father, the agonizingly slow death of
his maman.
As if sensing his thoughts, she sighed and hitched up
a little in the bed as the post-sex languor disintegrated. "It's no big
secret. Finn could easily have found the story. Probably even Dani, since I
learned later that it not only made all the local papers but got picked up
nationally. I was even asked to sit next to the First Lady at the State of the
Union address, but I turned the offer down."
"Why?" He knew a lot of women who'd sell
their collection of tiaras for such an opportunity to be in the national
spotlight.
"Partly because I'm not a real fan of
politicians. But mostly because I don't think stupidity deserves a reward."
"You couldn't be stupid if you tried."
"Thank you. That's a very nice thing to say. But
unfortunately, it's not accurate." She breathed a resigned sigh. "It
was several years ago, back when I was still a patrol cop. I wasn't real
popular in the 'hood, because I'd been working with a community policing group
and the narcotics guys, doing a lot of drug busts. I was working the graveyard
shift and went to pull this vehicle over for expired tags, when it took off. I
took off after it."
Her lips curved in an oddly regretful smile Nate
suspected was directed inward. "I'd never taken part in a high-speed chase
before, and I have to admit, I was enjoying the hell out of it. The adrenaline
was jangling in my veins, and everything was intensified—the sound of the
siren, the squeal of the tires, and the smell of burning rubber as we kept
tearing around the corners."
He thought he could see this coming.
He was wrong.
"I must have been going eighty when we went into
the projects." Her voice, her eyes, turned flat and distant. "The car
headed down this alley, with me right on its bumper. The minute it got back
onto the street, a moving van blocked the exit. I slammed the patrol car into
the side of it."
"Christ." His blood went cold as the mental
image seared itself into his mind.
"That would have been bad enough, of
course," she continued with what he thought was amazing
matter-of-factness. "But an accident's chancy, what with airbags and seat
belts, and such. The dealers came up with a plan to shift the odds in their
favor.
"Right after I wrecked the cruiser, they pulled
out the automatic weapons and began firing away. I don't remember anything
after the windshield shattered, but I saw the pictures afterward, and the car
looked like one of those tin cans people use for target practice. There were
more holes than metal left. A lot of that metal and glass ended up in me."
She sighed and unconsciously touched her hand to her breast. "End of
story."
Rage came instantly, steamrolling over sympathy. He'd
always thought what had happened to his father had been tragic, But the
horrific thing she'd been through was nothing short of evil. "And you went
back to those streets?"
Even Jack, after being ambushed by drug dealers down
in South America, had resigned his DEA job, cashed in his pension, and returned
to Blue Bayou, where he'd spent several months trying to drink himself into
oblivion.
"Not right away. There was a lot of recovery time
and rehab." Her slender shoulders lifted and dropped on a long, exhaled
breath. "But I'm a cop. There was no way I was going to let those
gangsters scare me away from doing what I'd always wanted to do."
"Always?"
"Dani told me how you used to drag wood in from
the swamp while Jack and Finn were practicing their quick draws."
"Someone had to build the jail."
She attempted a faint smile she couldn't quite pull
off. "Well, when I was a little girl, I used to have Police Officer Barbie
arrest Ken."
For the first time in his life, Nate understand how
someone could do cold-blooded murder. A very strong part of him wanted to get
on a plane, fly to Los Angeles, find those lowlifes who'd done this to her, and
kill them with his own hands. Slowly. Painfully. Thoroughly.
"You've no idea," he said, "how much I
admire you."
"Why?"
"For surviving such a horrific thing. For being
who you are. What you are." Words usually came trippingly off his tongue.
But Nate couldn't think of any that even began to express the emotions
battering at him. "I can't even begin to tell you."
"Well, then." The light had returned to her
remarkable eyes, and her lips curved in a slow, seductive smile. "Why
don't you show me?"
Outside, the rain continued to fall.
Inside, with slow hands and warm lips, they lost
themselves in a shimmering, misty world of their own making.
Afterward Regan lay snuggled in his arms, listening to
the sound of the rain on the roof, and knew that from this day forward, every
time it rained, she'd think of Nate.
"What are you thinking?" he asked, skimming
down her side with those fingertips that had stimulated every inch of her with
a touch like the finest grade sandpaper.
"How much I used to hate the rain." She
caught his hand as it slid ever lower and lifted it to her lips. "And how
I'm never going to be able to think of it the same way again."
"Great minds." He pulled her tight against
his body. His kiss was slow, deep, and possessive. "I was thinking earlier
how nice it'd be if I could just spend the rest of my life right here in bed
with you."
That sounded wonderful. Too wonderful. If she wasn't
in such a blissful mood, she might have been unnerved by how perfect a scenario
he'd just painted.
"Unfortunately," he continued on a long deep
sigh, "we're going to have company."
"Company?" She touched her mouth to a small
scar on his knuckles.
He glanced over at the watch he'd taken off and put on
the bedside table. "I figure we've got about ten minutes before Josh gets
home from school."
"Oh, my God, how could I have forgotten about
him?" Regan leaped up and raced around the room, gathering up discarded
clothing where it had landed on the wide plank floor and furniture. Making love
with Nate had wiped her mind as clear as glass. She shot him a frustrated look.
"Would you please get out of bed?"
"You don't have to be in such a tizzy, chиre."
He unfolded himself
from tangled sheets that had slid mostly to the floor.
"There's still plenty of time."
"Don't you have any other speed but slow?"
Where the hell were her panties?
"You weren't complaining a little hit ago."
"Actually, I was." There they were. How on
earth had they gotten on top of that floor lamp across the room?
"Next time we'll try for a
slam-bam-thank-you-ma'am session," he said obligingly.
Regan suspected he'd turned her into a sex addict,
since even that sounded appealing.
"What are you doing now?"
"Opening the windows." Thank God for the
overhanging roof and wide porch that allowed her to do so while the rain poured
down. "It smells like sex in here."
"Well, I'd say we'd probably have had a pretty
disappointing time if it didn't. He won't have any reason to come in here,
Regan."
"You never know. I don't want him to know that we
were having hot, wild sex in the middle of the day." She couldn't remember
the last time she'd had afternoon sex. Years, perhaps. She'd always been
careful to arrange for dark rooms brightened only, if her partner insisted on
light, by the soft glow of a single flickering candle.
"I think he knows men and women have sex.
Sometimes even in the daytime."
"It appears he knows a great many things he
shouldn't. I don't want to set a bad example for him." She turned to see
how much progress he was making and discovered he was still as naked as the day
he was born, leaning against an old bureau, with the strangest smile on his
face. "What?"
"I don't want to scare you, chиre. But I think
there's something you should know."
"What?" she repeated impatiently.
"Now, you've got to understand, I may be wrong.
I'm not real familiar with the feeling, having never experienced it
before—-"
"Nate, you're a wonderful man—kind, caring,
talented, and a marvelous lovemaker—but time is running out here. Could you
please, this one time, just cut to the chase?"
"I think I could, just maybe, fall in love with
you."
The bra she'd retrieved from the bedpost dropped to
the floor from nerveless fingers. Stunned speechless, she could only stare at
him. A yellow school bus lumbered to a stop outside the house. Jesus, did she
need any more complications in her life? "Don't."
She scooped up her bra and disappeared into the
bathroom, slamming the door behind her.
"Well." Nate pulled on his briefs and, since
he had no idea where his shirt had landed, pulled another from the cypress
chest. "She certainly took that well."
Chapter Twenty-four
After a long, hot shower intended not only to wash off
the scent of their lovemaking but to clear her mind so she could deal with this
latest problem, Regan took the time to blow-dry her hair so she wouldn't look
like a drowned spaniel.
Before getting dressed again, she unwrapped the fluffy
white towel from her body and studied herself in the bathroom mirror, running
her fingertips over the curved raised lines that truly hadn't seemed to
distract him from his goal of making sure that she'd never be able to enjoy sex
with any other man ever again.
When she finally came out of the bedroom, she found Josh
standing at the old soapstone sink, husking corn. He glanced up.
"Hi," he said almost cheerfully. "Nate's outside. He said you're
invited to dinner, and he'll be right back in."
She wasn't at all eager to stay after Nate's
out-of-the-blue declaration, and Josh's matter-of-fact attitude about her being
there made her feel even more uncomfortable. And what had Nate done with the
foul-mouthed delinquent when he'd replaced him with this Stepford teen?
"How was school?"
"Okay." He shrugged shoulders clad in a
normal denim shirt. "I thought I might be behind, but all except for
geometry, I'm pretty much ahead of a lot of the class. The counselor's thinking
of putting me in the accelerated program. If I'm going to be staying around,
that is."
"That's terrific." Her heart tugged as she
realized that the chances of that were slim unless Judi Welch could find a
family for him to stay with here in Blue Bayou. "I always had trouble with
geometry. The teacher said if you just memorized the theorems you'd be able to
solve any of the problems. But even though I could recite them all, it never
helped me know what to do with them."
"Yeah." He pulled some pale silk off a fat
yellow ear of corn and rinsed the corn beneath the tap. "Same with me. I
hate those effing sines and cosines. I mean, why the hell do I have to learn
that stuff anyway?"
She was almost relieved to see a flash of the Josh of
two days ago. "I suppose it comes in handy for something," She
glanced up at the intricate placement of the pegged wooden beams. "I'd
think Nate would need to know it, to build houses like this."
"Yeah, that's what he said. He also said he'd
help me figure it out." His gaze scanned the homey, if decidedly masculine
room that, as wonderful as it was, could use a bit of a woman's touch.
"This is a cool place, isn't it?"
"It certainly is."
"It'd be way radical to live here."
"Yes," she heard herself saying. "It
would."
The door opened, and Nate came in, carrying a handful
of the purple-and-yellow irises she'd seen growing wild around the house when
they'd first driven up. "I figured," he said, "since Josh and I
are having a lady to dinner, I ought to get some flowers for the table."
"They're lovely." And definitely a woman's
touch. Now he was reading her mind even before she had the thoughts.
Fortunately, there was nothing in his casual manner to suggest that a mere
thirty minutes ago, he'd dropped a bombshell on her.
"Trouble is, while I'm a man of many talents, I'm
not real good at flower arranging."
"I'll do it." Their fingers brushed as she
took the irises from his hand, creating a spark that shot right down to her
toes. She looked up into his face to see if he'd felt it as well, but his
expression remained absolutely smooth.
Perhaps, she thought, as she arranged the flowers in a
hammered pewter pitcher, he'd only been speaking off the top of his head.
Perhaps he'd been carried away by great sex and mistaken it for the start of
something deeper. Or perhaps he was going to do exactly what she'd told him to
do. Not fall in love with her.
As she set the pitcher in the center of the old pine
farm table, Regan told herself she should be vastly relieved.
He might not be the cook his brothers were, but Nate
thought the dinner of spicy grilled shrimp, dirty rice, and salad turned out
pretty damn good for a guy more used to having females cook for him. The
conversation flowed surprisingly easily, considering all the undercurrents.
Josh was amazingly well behaved, watching his language for the most part. He
seemed to respond to Regan, who appeared honestly interested in his desire
about maybe being a writer when he grew up, which led to a discussion about
Jack's books, which in turn led to a discussion of drugs, which, the kid swore
he'd never done and never had any intention of doing.
"Drugs are for chumps," he'd muttered as
he'd polished off his third plate of dirty rice.
Then, as if to prove that miracles did, indeed, exist,
he offered to wash the dishes while Nate took Regan back to the inn.
They were almost down the steps when he called out to
Nate, who returned to the porch. "Thanks, man."
"For dinner? Hey, I may not be Emeril, but any
idiot can stick some shrimp on the grill."
"No. Well, that was okay, too. I liked the rice
stuff."
"Yeah, I could tell."
"I was talking about today. About letting me come
home on the bus instead of making it look like I was living with my probation
officer."
"You're not," Nate said mildly. "If you
decide to take off, there's not much I can do about it." He squeezed
Josh's shoulder. "Why don't you get started on that homework after you
finish the dishes? I'll be back in a while, and we'll tackle the
geometry."
"That's okay." He glanced over at the SUV,
where Regan was sitting in the passenger seat in the dark. "I know you've
got better things to do."
"I said I was going to help you, and I
will." Nate was proud of the firm, paternal tone that sounded a little bit
like Jake Callahan's had when he'd been dealing with his sons.
As he drove away from the house, he could see Josh
standing in the open doorway, watching the taillights until they'd turned the
corner.
"I don't know what you're putting in his
RC," Regan murmured, "but I'd never know that was-the same kid who
was mouthing off at everyone at the hospital the other night."
"He's a good kid. He just needs a little
encouragement. Besides, right now he's on his extra good behavior, trying to
find himself a home."
"I noticed that. It's a little sad. He reminded
me of a stray dog trying to infiltrate itself into whatever family feeds
him."
"Yeah. Turnip was the same way. But she's settled
in with Jack and Dani and the kids like she's been there since she was a
pup."
"There are a lot more people in the world willing
to take on a stray dog than a teenage kid with issues."
"You're probably right about that," he
agreed, thinking of how hungry the kid looked when he'd been driving away. And
not for food.
"About earlier," she said tentatively,
obviously feeling her way. "What you said."
"Don' worry about it. It was jus' something that
came off the top of my head."
She combed her hand through her silky dark hair.
"I wasn't very nice about it."
"A lot happened today. I didn't mean to make you
feel pressured or anything."
"It's just that my life is so confusing right
now."
"I know, sugar." He reached out and laced
their fingers together and rested them on his thigh. "Like I said, it was
just a random thought." He squeezed her hand. "You were right about
that mind-blowing sex. It was probably leftover hormones speaking."
"Now that I can identify with," she said in
what sounded like relief.
When they arrived at the inn he accompanied her up to
her suite but forced himself not to coax her into inviting him in, which, he
suspected from the renewed desire he felt swirling between them in the closed
confines of the elevator, wouldn't take that much effort. He kissed her good
night, a brief flare of heat that ended too soon for both of them, then walked
back to the SUV, absently whistling "You Are My Sunshine."
* * *
She was being ridiculous, Regan told herself the next
morning. It wasn't like they were going steady. She'd gotten along for
thirty-three years of her life just fine without Nate Callahan. Certainly she
could survive one morning alone without him around to stir up her hormones and
tangle her mind.
He was only out at his cabin with his brothers for a
day of fishing that she suspected was mostly a rite of male bonding, which
would involve a Lot of swearing, spitting, and belching. She wondered what Nate
was telling Jack and Finn, who'd come home for Mardi Gras, about her, if
anything. Wondered what they were telling him back.
She'd decided to spend the morning at the courthouse,
searching through old parish real estate records for the names of people who'd
been in the neighborhood when Linda Dale had been living here. So far she'd
found ten names, made ten phone calls, and come up with nine dead ends and a
man who seemed to erroneously remember Linda as a go-go dancer at the Mud Dog.
"Here's another one," Shannon Chauvet said,
bringing a third thick green leather-bound book from a back room,
Regan had immediately recognized the woman as the one
Nate had comforted at the hospital the night of the train wreck. The scrape on
her cheek was healing, and her black eye had faded to a sickly yellow-green hue
that couldn't quite be concealed by makeup. Her surprised expression when Regan
walked into the courthouse suggested she'd recognized her as well, and while
their conversation had revolved around the records, Regan decided that before
she left the office, she was somehow going to bring up the subject of Shannon's
abusive husband and assure her that she was doing the right thing by staying
away from him.
"Hey, Regan." She glanced up and saw Josh
standing in front of the table. She'd been so absorbed in her thoughts, she
hadn't even heard him enter the courthouse.
"Shouldn't you be in school?"
"The sewer line broke, and since tomorrow's Fat
Tuesday, the principal decided she might as well let us out of school
early."
She'd had a hard time believing Nate could have turned
the kid around so quickly. If he was determined to become a juvenile
delinquent, he was going to have to become a better liar.
"Well, that's a lucky thing for you. If you need
a ride to Nate's, I can drive you out there."
"Nah. It's not that far. I could've walked, or
hitched—"
"Hitching isn't safe."
"Life isn't all that safe. But I'm not
hitching," he pointed out.
She began moving her pen from one hand to the other.
"So what are you doing? Other than ditching school and risking being
thrown back to Social Services?"
A red stain filled his cheeks. "Jesus H. Christ,
a guy can't get away with anything around here."
"You might keep that in mind next time you try.
And don't cuss."
"Like you don't?"
"I'm a cop. It occasionally comes with the
territory."
He looked as skeptical as a fourteen-year-old-boy
could look. "Shit, that's a real good excuse."
"Seems to me you're the one who needs an excuse.
What are you doing here?"
"Okay. I saw your car parked outside when the bus
went by, and thought maybe you could use a little help finding out about your
mother."
She lifted a brow. "You know what I'm
doing?"
"Sure." He shrugged. "Just about
everyone at school knows. Except a few Columbine wannabes and some nerds who
haven't looked up from a computer screen since they got their first Game
Boy."
"You have a group of Trenchcoat Mafia kids at the
school?" Blue Bayou looked like a place where the Brady bunch would be out
playing the Partridge family on the softball diamond in the park.
"Nah. They just try to act that way to be cool.
The school board voted in a dress code that got rid of their stupid coats, like
that's going to turn them into human beings. It's also why I'm stuck wearing
these geek clothes of Nate's."
"I think you look very nice. Besides, white
T-shirts are classic. James Dean wore them."
"Who's James Dean?"
She sighed. Somehow, when she hadn't been looking,
she'd landed on the wrong side of a generation gap. "Just an actor who
died tragically young. Well, since you're here, why don't you sit down?"
The way he was shifting from foot to foot reminded her of a bail jumper about
to split town. "You can help me go through a few more pages, then we'll
head over to Cajun Cal's for lunch."
"Okay." He dumped the books he was carrying
onto the table and sat down.
Suspecting she hadn't heard the real reason for him
showing up here, Regan handed him one of the ledger pages and waited for the
other shoe to drop.
She did not have to wait long.
He watched Shannon Chauvet filing some papers.
"She's a nice lady," he said.
"She's certainly been very helpful."
"She invited me to spend the night at the guest
cottage with Ben and her. If Nate says yes."
"I guess you'll have to ask him for
permission." No way was she going to start interfering in disciplinary
matters.
"Yeah. . . . Her husband hit her."
"So I heard."
"He hit Ben, too."
"I didn't know that." But she wasn't
surprised.
"Yeah, he tried to get in between them last
summer, and the son of a bitch broke his arm."
"Domestic violence sucks."
"Now who's cussing?"
"That isn't cussing. But you're tight, I could
have chosen a better word."
"Nicer one, maybe. But not better. If I ever have
a kid, I'm never going to hit him."
"I'm glad to hear that." Warning sirens were
blaring in her mind. She turned the pen around and around, treading softly.
"Did someone hit you, Josh?"
He couldn't quite meet her eyes. "It's no big
deal. It's what adults do,"
"Not all adults."
"Cops can't go around arrestin' everyone who
spanks a kid."
"Flat-handed spankings are allowed in every
jurisdiction I know of." Though just because it was legal, that didn't make
it right.
"How 'bout fists?"
"I suppose again, you're talking jurisdictional
differences. But that would be unacceptable to me, and I certainly wouldn't let
it slide."
"How 'bout pimping?"
The question had been asked so matter-of-factly, and
she'd been so distracted by the way he seemed to be picking up Nate's Cajun
patois, that it didn't immediately sink in. "What did you say?"
He still wasn't looking at her. "I figure you
wouldn't let a guy pimp a kid, either."
"Shit." She dragged a hand through her hair
when he arched a sardonic brow. "Okay, you caught me. That's definitely
cussing." Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Shannon headed toward them
with another thick record book. "Come on." She pushed back from the
desk and stood up.
"Where are we going?"
"For a drive."
"You're not going to call the cops, are
you?"
"Of course I am."
"You can't."
"Dammit, Josh—is that even your name?"
"Yeah."
"Well, you've done a real good job of
stonewalling so far, but you're not going to be able to get away with it forever.
Mrs. Welch is going to find out who you are and where you're from, and she's
going to try to send you back." She put one of his icy hands between both
of hers and held his tortured gaze with a solemn, determined one of her own.
"I'm not going to let that happen. He's never going to hurt you
again." Regan would not allow this to turn out any other way.
"He can't."
"That's what I said."
"No." Josh shook his head. Bit his lip.
Tears were swimming in his eyes. "You don't get it. He can't hurt me
because I killed him."
When she heard the heavy book crash to the floor,
Regan thought Shannon must have heard Josh's heated declaration and dropped it
in her shock.
"Oh, shit," Josh muttered.
Regan followed his bleak gaze to the doorway and felt
exactly like a deer in the crosshairs. The man standing there had a fully
loaded ammo belt strapped across his chest, and a Remington deer rifle pointed
directly at them.
Chapter Twenty-five
It had been planned as a guy's day out, a chance to
get together out at the camp that had been in their family for generations,
shoot the bull, drink some beers, catch some fish, and talk about women, which
admittedly wasn't as raunchy a topic since his brothers had gotten themselves
married. Nevertheless, Nate had been looking forward to this day. He had not
planned to get ragged to death.
"You actually came right out and told her you
loved her?" Finn asked in disbelief.
"I said I thought I might, just maybe, be able to
fall in love with her," Nate responded as he dug through his tackle box
and came up with a silver and copper spinner that had worked real well for him
last week.
"That's pretty much the same thing," Jack
said. "Once you start thinking the L word, you're pretty much
hooked."
"Not like you to be so stupid." Finn was
looking at him the same way he had back when Nate was fourteen and had filched
a pack of cigarettes from the market. "You're supposed to be the Callahan
who knows his way around women. Even I would have known better than to just
blurt out something that important."
Nate cast from the porch, landing the lure precisely
where he'd wanted it. Of the three brothers, he was the only one who actually
used this camp a lot for its original purpose.
"You're a fine one to criticize, you," he
drawled. "I seem to recall, not that many months ago, you screwin' things
up so bad you went on a bender, leaving Jack and me to sober you up and send
you off to Kathmandu to grovel. After you broke my nose."
"I was going to go to Nepal, dammit,' Finn
grumbled. "I was just giving Julia time to adjust to the idea of us being
together."
"You're lucky she didn't use some of that time to
fall for another guy," Jack said.
"Wouldn't have happened." Nate gave Finn
grudging credit for that. "I was there at the beginning. From the time our
big brother met her plane in N'Awlins, she never looked at another man. And God
knows, I tried to get her to notice me," he said with a wicked grin.
He'd taken to Julia Summers the first time he'd met
her at the reception the parish council had held for the visiting TV cast of
that prime-time soap, River Road. Unsurprisingly, ratings had taken a nosedive
after she'd left the show to go to Kathmandu for her role as Bond girl Carmen
Sutra, and there were rumors the show was about to be canceled.
"It was only two weeks," Finn shot back,
ignoring Nate's fraternal dig to reply to Jack's accusation. "You took
thirteen years to get back with Danielle."
"Most of which she happened to be married,"
jack pointed out.
"She only married that politician creep because
you didn't stay around to make an honest woman of her. You're just lucky that
piano dropped on the guy's cheatin' head, or you still might be hanging around
here mooning after her like a lovesick pup."
"Goddammit." Jack shot to his feet, ready to
rumble. "How was I supposed to know she was pregnant when the judge ran me
out of town? If anyone had bothered to tell me—" He shot a blistering
accusatory look Nate's way.
"That's bygones," Nate said quickly, hoping
to defuse things before they got out of hand and he got his nose broken again. He
reeled in the line, cast once more. "Water under the bridge."
"Yesterday's ball score," Finn quoted their
father.
"Yeah." Jack blew out a long, calming
breath, sat down, leaned back in the rocker, and put his booted feet up on the
railing again. "You're right. So," he asked Nate, "what are your
plans regarding the lady?"
"If you're talking about my intentions, I don't
know."
"What a screwup," Finn muttered. "You
take her to bed, have some hot sex—-"
"World-class sex," Nate clarified.
"You have sex," Finn forged on in that
doggedly determined way that had made him such a good serial killer hunter,
"blurt out you love her—"
"Maybe. Possibly. Down the road." He wasn't
about to admit it, but Nate was beginning to agree with them. He had screwed up
by letting his mouth run away with his brain.
"Same thing," Finn echoed Jack's assertion.
"And you bring the subject up when there's no time to talk about it,
because a teenage runaway kid has just arrived home from school. You ever think
of coming up with a plan beforehand?"
"If I'd had a damn plan, I wouldn't have said
anything. I've always been up-front with women; it seemed like the thing to do
at the time." He wasn't about to admit the woman had scrambled his brains.
"Not all of us live our lives in rigid, controlled, planned-out A to Z
fashion. Some of us like to go with the flow."
"Meaning," Jack suggested as he popped the
tops on two bottles of Voodoo beer and handed one to Nate, "you don't have
any idea what you're going to do next, you."
Nate threw back his head and took a long swallow.
"Not a clue."
* * *
"It's going to be okay," Regan quietly
assured Josh as they faced the gunman.
"Oh, dear Lord, he's going to kill us,"
Shannon, who was standing beside them, whispered back.
"No, he's not." Regan certainly hoped she
could stop that from happening. "I've been in this situation before."
Her psychology degree had made her a natural for being called out during
similar situations over the years.
"You moved out on me, bitch!" the man
shouted at Shannon. His throat, his face, even the tips of his ears, were a
brilliant, furious scarlet.
Shannon's hand lifted unconsciously to her face.
"I didn't have any choice. You hit me."
"Because you wouldn't shut the hell up!"
Regan thought she heard more pain than anger in his
harsh voice. Which could be a good thing, so long as he didn't start feeling so
sorry for himself that he became suicidal, and decided to take his wife with
him.
"I was only suggesting that maybe we move to
town. Just for a little while." Shannon Chauvet's voice was little more
than a whisper.
"I'd suffocate in the city. I'd rather die right
here. Right now." Oh, shit.
"It's not exactly the city, Mike." Regan
suspected he'd heard those coaxing words before. "Breaux Bridge only has
about seven thousand people."
"That's ten times the number who live here. How
the hell am I supposed to trap there?"
It sounded like they'd had this argument many times
before. Regan decided it was time to inject herself into the conversation.
"What do you trap ?"
He looked toward her as if noticing her for the first
time, then moved massive shoulders that would not have looked out of place on a
pro linebacker. "Nutria. Gators. Crawfish."
"This must be a good place for that line of
work."
"Not this year. Hell, if the crawfish get any
scarcer, I'll have to start trapping for cockroaches."
"That's why I thought you could work for my
uncle," Shannon said.
"I already told you, goddammit," he said
through gritted teeth. "I'd rather shoot myself atop the Huey R Long
Bridge than sell used cars."
"He happens to make a very good living."
"Selling junkers on the weekly pay plan, then
repossessing them every Monday, ain't living. It's dyin'. Jus' slower than most
ways."
He'd begun cradling the rifle like a security blanket,
his fingers absently stroking the barrel. If they slid downward to the trigger,
they were in real trouble.
Regan had learned in her negotiation training that all
hostage takers had a reason for going off that went beyond just holding some
innocent person at gunpoint. It was up to the negotiator to figure out what
that reason was.
Mike Chauvet's, she suspected, was about regaining
control.
She vowed to make sure he didn't.
* * *
They'd had a good time. Hadn't caught any fish, but
then again, Nate thought as he drove back to Beau Soleil, the morning hadn't
been about fishing. They were about five miles from the house when his cell
phone rang.
He viewed the caller screen and flipped it open.
"Hey, Dwayne. What's up?" The deputy was talking so fast, Nate could
only catch about one word out of four. "Slow down. Take a deep breath. And
start again, okay?"
There was a deep gulping breath on the other end of
the line as Dwayne did as instructed.
"It's that lady, Ms. Hart."
Nate felt his blood turn to ice when he learned that
Regan was locked inside the library with Shannon, Josh, and a drunk, angry, and
armed Mike Chauvet.
Telling himself that there'd be time to be terrified
later, once she was safe, Nate punched the gas.
* * *
Regan heard the squeal of brakes outside.
"Don't move," Mike warned them. "Or you're
toast." Still aiming the lethal rifle at them, he went over to the window.
"Shit. It's the state cops."
Regan had been wondering if anyone knew they were in
there; someone must have seen Chauvet coming into the courthouse with a rifle.
So much for Blue Bayou being a peaceful little town. She'd been in town less
than a week and had already unearthed one murder and landed in a hostage
situation.
Domestic situations could be particularly volatile;
the last thing Regan needed was a SWAT team arriving on the scene like a bunch
of road warriors.
"We haven't been formally introduced," she
said. "I'm Regan Hart."
"Yeah. I heard about you. You're the cop from
California who's going to be the new sheriff."
"I'm a detective. And that's a mistaken rumor
goin' around, about me becomin' sheriff." Strange, now she was dropping
her own g's. Nerves, Regan told herself.
"What kinda detective?"
There was no way she was going to give him any ideas
he might not have already thought of himself by telling him she worked homicide.
"I've handled all sorts of cases over the years. Sometimes I've helped out
guys who have found themselves in your situation."
"I don't need any friggin' help from a
woman."
"Well, now, Mike—that is your name, right?
Mike?"
"Yeah. So what?"
"I was just asking. That's one of my favorite
names."
"Yeah. Sure." His response dripped with acid
sarcasm. "I know what you're doing. You're playing me, trying to get on my
good side."
"No fooling you, Mike," Regan said easily.
"That's pretty much what I'm trying to do, but you know, I really am on
your side."
His response was brief and vulgar.
"The thing is," she continued on an even
tone meant to calm him, "we've got ourselves a little situation here.
Right now, it's not too bad. Everyone gets frustrated from time to time, and we
all need to let off a little steam. I can understand that. But the one thing we
don't want is for things to get out of hand."
His laugh held no humor. "Just my luck there'd be
a cop in here today. Cop killing's probably a one-way ticket to death row. Do
not pass Go; do not collect your fucking two hundred dollars." His eyes
crawled over her in an asexual way that nevertheless made her flesh crawl.
"You carrying?"
"No." She certainly hadn't expected to need
her pistol when she'd left the inn this morning.
"Lift up your arms, turn around, and put your
hands on the wall so I can frisk you and make sure."
At the moment, Regan had a wide wooden table between
them. There was no way she was going to give that up. And while he might put
down the rifle to frisk her, she wasn't prepared to take the chance.
"It's got to be difficult, frisking someone with
one hand. I don't think I could do it."
"Good try, but I’m not putting this down. I got
another idea. Take off your top."
"What?"
"Are you deaf, lady? Take off the shirt!"
She opened her mouth to try to shift his thoughts to
something else when there was an earsplitting squawk from outside.
"Mike Chauvet," the voice shouted.
"Throw out your weapon and come out with your hands up."
Terrific. That's all she needed, some guy on an
electronic bullhorn entering the picture. Hostage negotiation was all about
personalizing the situation. There was nothing personal about a bullhorn.
"Take it off." He shifted the gun a few
inches. "Or the kid's gonna be one knee short."
"Go ahead, sucker," Josh sneered. "Make
my day."
Damn! That's all she needed, for Josh to recover his
stupid teen attitude.
"You don't have to do that, Mike." She'd
been taught to speak calmly and empathetically to hostage takers.
Unfortunately, the guy standing behind the white cruiser continued to shout out
orders.
Some cops, she thought darkly, watched way too much television.
* * *
Nate slammed on the brakes when he came around the
corner and saw the phalanx of state cops and cars. Tires squealed but didn't
skid on the damp cobblestones. Jack and Finn were out of the SUV before he'd
fully stopped; he caught up with them seconds later, frustrated when some giant
cop wouldn't let him pass.
"Hey, Nate." A trooper ambled up to him as
if it was just another rainy afternoon.
He looked familiar, and reading the name tag pinned to
his uniform shirt, Nate recognized him: Steve Tandau had played third base for
the South Terrebonne Gators the year the Blue Bayou Buccaneers had won the
state 4-A finals. He'd been a long ball hitter, and a helluva defensive player
who'd gone on to play for LSU, spending two years in the Atlanta farm system
before a bad knee from Little League days had caught up with him.
"What the hell's going on?" Nate demanded.
"We've got a domestic situation going on.
Remember Mike Chauvet?"
"Sure. He was arrested for domestic abuse the
other day."
"Well, he's out now."
"Shannon withdrew the charges?" He'd been so
sure he'd gotten through to her. If either Regan or Josh were hurt because he'd
been arrogant enough to think he could talk her into doing what her therapist
couldn't, he'd never forgive himself.
"Naw. The way I heard it, he's out on bail."
"Shit." He listened to the cop yelling on
the electronic bullhorn. Though he didn't have any police experience, he didn't
believe that shouting out orders like some marine drill sergeant was a good
idea.
"Have you tried just calling him?"
"Yep. Phones aren't working. It's my guess he
either tore them out of the wall or cut the wire."
"How about tear gas?"
"That's too dangerous." Finn, who knew about
such things firsthand, entered the conversation. "Tear gas doesn't work
all that well on drunks, and it'd be my guess the guy's been drinking."
"Bobby, down at the Mud Dog, said Mike's been
drinking Dixie and Johnny Walker boilermakers all morning," Dwayne Johnson
said. The deputy's expression managed to be both serious and excited all at the
same time. It was obvious this was a helluva lot more adventure than he'd been
expecting when he'd joined the force. Personally, Nate would rather have him
dealing with mailbox bashing.
"Besides," Jack said, "the stronger
stuff is pyrotechnic. You don't want to risk setting the place on fire with
Regan and Josh in there."
If Mike did one thing to harm one hair on either Regan's
or Josh's head, he'd damn well better kill himself, or Nate would do it for
him. "So, what do we do now?"
"He's not going anywhere," the former third
baseman said. "So, what we do is wait. Try to get him to listen to us.
Hope that cop inside can convince him to surrender."
If anyone could, it'd be Regan. But Nate wasn't in a
waiting mood. "And if he doesn't?"
"Then we'll just have to hope he wanders into the
kill range."
Nate followed his gaze to the roof of the building
next door and felt his heart stop when he saw the sniper rifle.
"Most often they come out, though," Tandau
assured him.
"How long do you wait?"
"As long as it takes."
Well, that told him a helluva lot. Nate glanced at
Finn.
"It all depends," Finn said with a reluctant
shrug. "I've seen guys cave after thirty minutes."
"We're already past that. What's the longest
you've ever seen?"
There was a significant pause. "Ever hear of Ruby
Ridge? Waco?"
"Screw that." Before either of his brothers
or the cops could stop him, Nate started walking toward the courthouse. He
paused to touch Jackson Callahan's horse's nose, then headed up the steps.
Chapter Twenty-six
Regan believed she was getting to dim. Chauvet may not
have put the gun down yet, but he was no longer pointing it directly at them.
She was about to suggest again that he allow his wife
to leave, when the courthouse door opened. Mike spun around, pinning the
newcomer in his sights.
"What the hell are you doing here? And how did
you get in? I locked that sumbitch door."
"I'm the mayor. This is the courthouse, where the
mayor's official office is. I may not show up in it all that often, but I do
have a key. As for what I'm doing here—"
Nate held out his arms, revealing he had nothing up
his short sleeves. "I come offering a trade. Let the women and kid go,
Mike. I'll stay. We'll talk."
"I got nothin' to say to you."
"Well, that's too bad, because I've got something
to say to you, and you better damn well listen. I like you, Mike." Okay,
so it was a lie. "I want to help you out here, but you've got to
understand that there are a lot of guys with guns outside, who won't be real
eager to cut you any slack while you've got these hostages in here."
Mike shot a nervous look out the window. Hopefully he
couldn't see the sniper, but there was no way he could have missed all those
State Police cars.
"Let 'em go, Mike. If nothing else, it'll be
easier on you, not having to worry about keeping an eye on three people. You'll
only have me to focus on."
"Why should I listen to anything you have to
say?"
"Because Brittany Callais is the presiding family
court judge."
"So?"
"So, she and I went steady back in high school,
and I dated her some when I first got back from Tulane. Now, I wouldn't want to
brag, but when we were working on the food committee for tomorrow's Fat Tuesday
festivities, I got the impression she's still sweet on me."
Mike's wide brow furrowed. He reminded Nate of a
slow-witted mastodon as he tried to process this piece of information.
"You saying you can get her to cut a deal?"
Nate didn't dare look at Regan. "That's exactly
what I'm saying."
There was more slow, rusty grinding of mental gears.
"Okay," Mike said finally. "The cop and the kid can go." He
pressed the barrel of the rifle against Nate's chest. "But you and Shannon
are stayin' put."
Nate saw Regan sit down on the table and cross those
long legs he'd spent a great deal of time fantasizing about. "I'm not
going anywhere."
Josh, damn the crazy kid, stood next to her and
crossed his arms. "Me neither."
Terrific, Just goddamn terrific.
Nate was trying to come up with an alternative game
plan when the door behind him opened.
"Shit," Mike groaned when Jack and Finn came
in, deflating like a balloon with a slow leak. "One Callahan is bad
enough. No way I need three in my life." He held the rifle out, the wooden
stock toward Regan. "I effin' give up."
* * *
"I still can't believe you did that," Regan
complained later that afternoon. They'd all gathered in the kitchen at Beau
Soleil, where Jack, who was the cook in the Callahan family, had fixed platters
of baked stuffed oysters and smothered chicken over rice.
Dani had broken out the coconut pralines she'd baked
for tomorrow's festivities. Matt, Dani and Jack's eight- year-old, was upstairs
watching The Lord of the Rings for what Dani swore was the hundredth time; and
Holly, Ben, and Josh, who seemed to be no worse off for his threatening
experience, were engaged in a noisy game of horse on the basketball court Jack
had built out back. "You had no business just walking into the courthouse
like that."
"I'm mayor. What happens in Blue Bayou is my
business."
"You could have been killed, you idiot."
He grinned and leaned over and gave her a quick kiss.
"Would you have missed me, chиre?"
"It was irresponsible," she repeated for the
umpteenth time.
"It worked," Nate repeated, as he had every
time she'd brought it up. "Besides, I had backup."
Jack and Finn returned his satisfied grin, as if what
had happened earlier was no more serious than the shootouts they used to have
when they were kids.
"At least now the mystery of where Josh came from
and why he left is solved." Considering all he'd been through, she was not
overly surprised that he appeared to have survived today's excitement with no
ill effects.
"Helluva thing, what his mother's boyfriend
did," Jack said. "Snatching the kid on his way home from
school."
Between their conversation with Josh, and calls to the
Florida State Police and the Department of Children and Families, they'd
determined that the teen had been placed in a foster home after his mother had
died of an overdose. Her boyfriend, angry at having lost the income she'd made
hooking, had decided if he didn't have the mother, he might as well make some
bucks off her kid.
"He must have been terrified all this time,"
Dani murmured, shaking her head. "Believing that he could be arrested for
having killed that monster."
"I can't say I'm not relieved, for Josh's sake,
that the guy ended up with only a concussion from being knocked out," Nate
said. "But I sure wouldn't mind if he ended up being some burly lifer's
girlfriend for the next fifty years."
"I still can't understand why no one was looking
for him," Julia said. Finn and his new wife had returned home for Mardi
Gras, and when she'd first met the actress this afternoon, Regan had been a
little intimidated by her beauty and lush, natural sensuality. But Julia had
turned out to be warm and caring, and had lightened the conversation over
dinner by entertaining them with tales of her recent adventures on location in
Kathmandu.
"Child welfare agencies across the country lose
hundreds of kids every year," Finn said. "Florida's DFC is the poster
child for what's wrong with the system. If these kids had anyone watching out
for them, they wouldn't have ended up in residential care in the first place.
Once they do, it's real easy for a kid to fall through the cracks."
"Especially when they want to disappear,"
Regan said. She'd seen it too many times to count. When she'd been on patrol,
she'd done her best to coax as many street children as possible into nonprofit
agencies who knew best how to help them, and she'd always carried phone cards
paid for out of her own pocket so the kids could call home.
"We can't let him go back," fretted Shannon,
who'd not only filed charges against her husband but also made an appointment
with an attorney to begin divorce proceedings.
"The boy won't be going back to Florida,"
the judge said, speaking with such authority not a single person in the kitchen
doubted him.
"Are you sure you should have left Josh at Beau
Soleil?" Regan asked later that evening, as Nate drove away from the
house.
"He wanted to spend the night. He seems okay, and
after all he's been through, it's probably good to be with kids his own
age."
"I suppose so." She reached over and put a
hand on his thigh.
He covered it with his own and squeezed her fingers.
"You want to go to the inn? Or my place?"
"The inn," she decided. "It's
closer."
What was it about this woman that kept putting him at
a loss for words? As they entered the suite, just the idea of taking her to bed
again had him burning from the inside out. It was as intense a feeling as when
he'd been wracked by chills at the idea of Mike Chauvet deciding to play
shooting gallery. If it wasn't love, it had to be one helluva case of flu.
"You're awfully quiet," she murmured.
"just enjoying the company." He forced a
smile he still wasn't quite feeling. "And thinking how funny life can
be."
"Yeah, today was a real barrel of laughs."
"Not that kind of funny. If I hadn't been
remodeling the office, I never would have been cleaning out those old files.
And if I hadn't been cleaning them out, I never would've found that
journal."
"And if you'd never found that journal, you
wouldn't have come to L.A., I wouldn't have come here, and we wouldn't be about
to spend the rest of the night making each other crazy."
"I'm already crazy, mon ange." His
hands settled on her waist. "Crazy about you."
She looked up at him from beneath her lashes, the way
belles seemed to know how to do from the cradle. It seemed a little out of
character, but he couldn't see a bit of guile in her warm gaze. "I'm
almost beginning to believe you, Callahan."
"You should." He pulled her closer. "
'Cause it's the truth."
He pressed her against him and kissed her. When her
tongue stroked his, it was all he could do not to throw her over his shoulder
and carry her to bed.
"I think I made a mistake," he groaned.
"What mistake is that?" She dipped her
tongue into the space between his lip and his chin he'd never realized was
directly connected to his groin.
"I shouldn't have upgraded you to this
suite."
"Why not?" She brushed her mouth against
his, retreated, then came back for seconds. "Aren't I worth a suite?"
"Sugar, you are worth the entire inn." He
skimmed a hand through her hair and splayed his fingers on the back of her head
as he kissed her again. Harder, deeper, longer. "It's just that there's
somethin' to be said for a room where the bed's closer to the door."
"Well, then, I guess we'll just have to start
here." She tugged the T-shirt from his jeans. "And work our way across
the room." Her fingers played with the hair on his chest, skimmed beneath
the waist of his jeans. "Anyone ever tell you that five buttons might be
considered overkill?"
"They're classic. Traditional."
"Granted." She flicked open the first metal
button with a skill he'd admire later. Much, much later, when his skin didn't
feel as if she'd just set a match to it. A second button opened. "They
also make it harder to seduce you."
"Is that what you're plannin' to do?"
"Absolutely." The blood that had been pounding
in his head surged straight down to his cock as she moved on to the third. And
fourth. He sucked in a quick, painful breath when she skimmed those short
fingernails over his belly. "And you are going to love it."
The final button gave way, allowing his erection to
jut out of his jeans. When she curled her fingers around it, lust tightened
into a painful knot.
"It must be hard," she murmured, moving her
hand up and down in a long stroking motion.
"I'd say that's self-evident," he managed.
Her laugh was rich and throaty and sexy as hell.
"That's what I meant." She continued to torment him with her fingers
and her nails, tracing the shape, the length, breadth, and heft of him.
"There's nothing subtle about you men." She followed a throbbing vein
from root to tip, causing his penis to jerk in her hand when she flicked a
thumb over the hood. "There's no way to hide the fact that you want a
woman."
"Women get wet."
"Well, there is that." She smiled, a slow,
breath-stealing smile. "In fact, my panties are drenched right now."
He groaned at the idea of sliding his fingers into
that hot moist flesh.
"Not yet," she murmured, backing away as he
moved to do precisely that. She undressed him as he had her, driving him to the
brink again and again, teasing, tasting, tormenting. Every time he tried to
caress her, she'd slip deftly away and find new regions to explore.
Somehow they made it to the bedroom, and as he lay on
the antique bed, watching her undress in the silvery moonlight streaming in
through the window, it crossed Nate's mind that this was the first time that he
wasn't expected to do anything but to take.
She returned to the bed, wearing nothing but a wicked
smile. "I love the way you feel." She ran her palms down his chest.
"And taste." Her tongue swirled around his nipple, dampening the
puckered flesh, nipping at it gently before moving on to plant a lingering kiss
against his navel.
Even knowing what was coming, Nate was not prepared
for the slap of lust when she took him into her mouth, her tongue and teeth
following the same scorching trail her devastatingly clever fingers had blazed
earlier. He was about to warn her that she'd pushed him to the very brink when
she went up on her knees and reached over his aching supine body.
"I have a surprise for you."
"You went shopping this morning," he guessed
as she took out the foil package.
"I did." She tore it open. "But that's
not the surprise." Took out the condom. "Watch."
How could he not, Nate thought as he watched her put
it between her luscious lips. Surely she wasn't going to . . . No, he told
himself— his detective was sexy as hell, but she was not the kind of woman
who'd—mon Dieu. She lowered her mouth to him again and without touching him
with her silky lady's hands, smoothed the thin latex all the way down.
The last thin thread of Nate's control snapped.
"That's it." He dug his fingers into her
waist, lifted her up, and thrust his hips off the mattress as he lowered her
onto him. They both froze for a moment, body and eyes locked together, Nate
buried deep inside her, looking up at her as she stared down at him.
Then they began to move. She pressed her knees against
his legs, riding him hard and fast as they both raced over that dark edge
together.
"How the hell did you learn to do that?" he
asked when he could speak again.
She was curled up against him like a kitten, but her
smile was that of a sleek, satisfied cat who'd just polished off a bowl of rich
cream. "Back when I was working vice, we raided this place that had
hookers working upstairs while the owner had a thriving porno studio on the
first floor. Part of the evidence was this so-called instruction video with an
obviously phony nurse showing women how to get men to use a condom."
"If I didn't already practice safe sex, that
little trick would certainly change my mind." He skimmed a hand down her
slick body. "I'll bet it took a lot of practice." He wasn't all that
fond of the idea of his detective tangling the sheets with a string of
California males, but since he couldn't claim to be a monk, he decided the stab
of jealousy was unfair.
"Not that much." Her quick grin pulled a
thousand unnamed chords. "Though the room service waiter did look at me a
little funny this morning, after my third fruit bowl."
"Are you saying—"
"I don't think I'll ever be able to eat another
banana again."
He chuckled and kissed her, enjoying her taste, the
feel of her in his arms. "That's quite a sacrifice. Perhaps we can come up
with some way to make it up to you."
"Well, now that you mention it." She flicked
a finger down the center of his chest. "I've always fantasized about
making love in one of those old-fashioned lion-footed tubs."
Amazed by the surge of renewed energy that shot
through him at the prospect, he scooped her from the cooling sheets. Regan
laughed with throaty pleasure as he flung her over his shoulder and carried her
into the adjoining bathroom.
Chapter Twenty-seven
Blue Bayou's Fat Tuesday festivities demonstrated yet
again that this part of southern Louisiana was a world apart. Beginning with
the fact that they left the inn just as sunlight had begun to spread
gilt-tipped fingers of lavender and shimmering pink over the bayou.
"What kind of party begins before dawn?"
Regan doubted she'd gotten more than two hours sleep. Not that she was
complaining about the way they'd spent the nonsleeping hours.
"A good party," he assured her. "I
promise you'll pass the best time you've ever had."
"I'm not sure that's possible. If I'd passed a
better time last night, I wouldn't be able to move this morning."
He laughed, leaned over, and with his eyes still on
the narrow causeway, gave her a quick hard kiss. "The courir is somethin'
special," he explained. "No one's real sure when exactly it started,
but we do know our Acadian ancestors were doing it before the War between the States.
It's fashioned after a French medieval holiday called the fкte de qué-mande.
It was the one time a year peasants were allowed to mock royalty without fear
of the consequences.
"They'd dress up in outlandish costumes and roam
the countryside, singing and begging for alms. Our coureurs do the same sort of
thing, but these days we dance and sing for une 'tite poule grasse, which is a
little fat hen, and the ingredients for tonight's gumbo pot."
"Like singing for your supper," she said.
"That's pretty much it. These days it's just part
of the tradition, but I suspect that in medieval times the people really did
need help from the farmers to get enough food together for the feast."
A crowd had already begun to gather when they arrived
at Beau Soleil. There were a great many men and women on horseback and others
in the back of pickups. Two tractors had been hooked up to flatbed trailers
outfitted with benches and festooned in traditional Mardi Gras colors of green,
purple, and gold, as well as bright yellow and red.
The mood was already festive; more than half the
people were in costumes reminiscent of the colorful scraps of cloth the
long-ago peasants might have sewn together. Many wore tall conical hats, much
the same as medieval women once favored, and several had donned animal masks
adorned with hair or feathers. Neighbors were milling around, catching up on
any gossip they might have missed, including, Regan guessed, stories of
yesterday's adventure at the courthouse. There was already singing and dancing,
and more than a few celebrants had begun drinking their breakfast.
"It's part of cuttin' loose," Nate said when
he saw Regan's slightly furrowed brow. "But it's the capitaine's job to
maintain control so things don't get out of hand."
Her gaze moved from Josh, dressed in a Harlequin
costume and laughing with Holly and Ben and some other kids she hadn't met, to
Judge Dupree, who was seated astride a gray stallion, wearing a bishop's miter
and looking very much in control of things.
"I doubt the town could have chosen better."
"He's been capitaine since before I was born,
'cept for those years he spent in Angola Prison after bein' framed by a bunch
of wise guys who were trying to get their hands on Beau Soleil to turn it into
a casino. It's good to have him back again." He waved to the judge, who
gave a regal nod in return.
"He doesn't look as if he's having that good a
time." His expression was stern as his gaze swept the crowd.
"Since it's his first courir in seven years, I'll
bet he's having a dandy time. He's just sorta like Finn." Nate waved to
his older brother, who, while not in costume, at least had arrived wearing not
his old standby FBI suit but a pair of neatly pressed jeans and a black
T-shirt. "Dancin' on the inside."
Given the choice between riding a horse and riding on
the flatbed, Regan opted for the flatbed. Although she suspected that Nate
would have preferred being out front with the others, he stayed with her,
explaining events as they unfolded.
"Capitaine, Capitaine, voyage ton flag,"
the throng sang out in unison. "Allons se mettre dessus il chemin."
"Captain, Captain, wave your flag, " Nate
translated. "Let's take to the road."
They continued to sing as they traveled through the
countryside. A great many of the songs were in French, and a few sounded as if
they might actually date back to the Middle Ages. When they broke into
"The Battle of New Orleans," Regan was able to sing along.
They reached a small wooden house set in a grove of
oak trees. "Everyone has to stay here," Nate explained as the judge
rode toward the house, carrying a white flag that symbolized the chase.
"While the capitaine asks the folks if they'll accept us."
A man and woman came out, and there was a brief
discussion, after which the judge turned back to the group and waved his flag.
"Now we have to go start earnin' the feast."
The tractor rumbled into the front yard and everyone
piled off. Musicians with fiddles and accordions began playing, while the
others danced and sang and begged for a contribution to the gumbo pot. After
receiving a bag of onions and several links of sausage, they were off again.
"Capitaine, Capitaine, voyage ton flag. Allons
allez chez l'autre voisin."
"Captain, Captain, wave your flag," Nate
translated again. "Let's go to the neighbors."
And so it continued for the next four hours, each stop
an opportunity for a party that managed to be spontaneous without losing any of
its tradition. Every so often someone would throw a live chicken into the air
for the Mardi Gras celebrants to chase, like football players trying to recover
a fumble. Often when they'd stop, several young men would climb trees.
"I don't know why," Nate said, when she
asked him about it. "I read a book once that said it's some ancient
fertility ritual, like symbolically associating with the tree of life. Or maybe
they're just fooling around. The one thing that professor never mentioned is
that Mardi Gras's supposed to be the last blowout before Lent, and it's hard to
have a bad time when you're climbing a tree."
That explanation, Regan thought as she watched Josh
and Ben scramble up an ancient oak, was as good as any. Swept up in the
timeless event, as the brightly costumed courir advanced across the drab
late-winter countryside, Regan knew if she lived to be a hundred, she'd never
forget this day.
When they finally arrived back at Beau Soleil, they
were welcomed back by those who'd chosen to get up at a more sensible time. The
food they'd gathered was dumped into huge gumbo pots cooking on open fires.
Outdoor tables groaned with more food brought by neighbors.
The sun that had been rising when Regan had dragged
herself out of bed eventually sank with a brilliant flare of red-and-purple
light into the water. Campfires had been lit to ward off the night chill;
sparks danced upward like orange fireflies; smoke billowed from the many
barbecues; dust rose from dancing feet. The mood was joyous, the food lavish,
seasoned with enough Tabasco to clear Regan's sinuses for the rest of her life.
"I am never going to eat again," she groaned
as she swayed in Nate's arms to the slow ballads that were beginning to replace
the jauntier dance tunes. Although she'd never considered herself much of a
dancer, she was able to follow him smoothly as he twirled her with fluid ease.
"That's the trouble with Cajun food." He
pressed his lips against the top of her head. "Four days after you eat it,
you're hungry again."
She laughed lightly, nuzzling against him. She'd tried
to put away thoughts of Linda Dale for this one special day, wanting it free of
any unpleasant memories. But now, as the celebration began winding down toward
its midnight conclusion, Regan couldn't help wondering how her life might have
been different if her mother hadn't been killed.
She knew from the journal that Dale and her lover were
planning to leave Blue Bayou. But would they have stayed in Louisiana?
"A dix for your thoughts," he murmured as he
nibbled on her ear-lobe.
"What's a dix? And if it's anything more to eat
or drink—"
"Non." She could feel his chuckle rumbling
in his chest. "A dix was the French currency. It's where the word Dixie
comes from."
Regan truly doubted that there was any other place in
America, with the possible exception of New England, that clung to its past the
way Blue Bayou did.
"I was just wondering, if things had turned out
differently, if we would have met earlier."
"Probably not."
Having expected him to spin a long, colorfully
creative scenario, Regan was surprised by his uncharacteristic bluntness.
"If there's one thing watchi' Jack and Finn, and
bein' with you, has taught me, it's that people can't fool around with destiny.
We were fated to meet this way, chиre. In this time." He skimmed his lips
along her cheekbone. "If I'd met you earlier, me, I might not have
appreciated you." He tilted his head back a bit. His eyes gleamed a deep,
warm blue in the glow from the campfires as he smiled down at her. "It's
been suggested that I might have been a bit shallow."
"Never." She twined her arms tighter around
his neck and fit her body closer to his. "That's just what you wanted
people to think, so it wouldn't screw up your role in your family."
"Which was?"
"The jester."
"Jester?" Hell, Nate figured, that was even
worse than Peter Pan, "You mean one of those guys with the funny hat and
hells on his curly toed shoes?"
"No. I mean the wise man of the court who was
clever enough to tell the absolute truth, no matter how unappealing, in a way
that left people smiling. When anyone else who tried to be that frank might
have had his head cut off."
He thought about that for a moment. "How do you
see Jack and Finn?"
"Oh, they're a lot easier, because what you see
is precisely what you get. Jack's the half-reformed bad boy with the heart of
gold. Finn's the rock." Her fingers were stroking his neck in a way that
made him want to make love to her. Then again, listening to her read a suspect
his Miranda rights would probably have him wanting to jump her lovely bones.
"No foolin' a woman with a psych degree," he
said easily, deciding he'd best shift his train of thought before giving the
town something else to talk about. He scanned the crowd. "Sure was a good
turnout, Even more than last year."
Although Nate obviously hadn't been real happy about
sharing her, he'd stayed typically good-natured as she'd danced with seemingly
every male in Blue Bayou, including Cal, whose moves had been surprisingly fast
for a man of his years.
"I suppose getting to see what you've done inside
Beau Soleil was a draw for everyone," she suggested.
"I imagine so. Toni cornered me while you were
inside frosting the King cake with Dani. Seems the old lady has mast of the
family money in company stock, but Toni's planning ahead for the day she's no
longer with us, and wants to talk about me givin' St. Elmo's a facelift."
"That house doesn't need a facelift. It needs a
heart transplant." Regan glanced over at the gallerie, where a
stone-faced Caledonia stood guard over her frail charge. "I'm surprised
Mrs. Melancon's here tonight."
"She's never missed a Mardi Gras that I know of.
And she seems more lucid this evening."
"I thought so, too, when I saw her singing along
to some French song a while ago. Music has a way of making connections with
people when other things can't get through." Up on the bandstand, the
Swamp Dogs had broken into a rousing rendition of "You Are My Sunshine,"
which made Regan think of her mother.
"I 'spose so." He cupped her butt in his
hands, pressing her closer. "What would you say to sneakin' off for a
while? I just remembered that I need to measure for the crown molding in one of
the guest bedrooms."
The molding had actually been installed last week, but
it was the best excuse Nate could come up with, while his body was bombarded
with sexual needs like he hadn't even experienced when he'd been thirteen and
learning all about sex by reading Finn's Playboy magazines out at the camp.
Regan laughed. "I love a man who takes his work
seriously."
He led her through the throng of people, and just
before they reached the gallerie, Charles Melancon stepped in front of them.
"May I have the honor of a dance, Ms. Hart?"
Regan instinctively glanced up at Nate and read the
resignation in his eyes as he shrugged. Stifling a sigh, she returned the older
man's friendly smile. It was, after all, only one dance. She and Nate still had
the rest of the night.
"So," he asked as he moved her through a
complex series of steps, "are you enjoying yourself?"
"I'm having a wonderful time. Sorry," she
murmured as she stepped on his toes. He was clearly a better dancer; then
again, he'd probably had a lot more practice.
"My fault. It's too crowded here to' try to
impress you with fancy moves." He slowed the pace. "A lot of people
think of Mardi Gras and they tend to think of Rio, or N'Awlins. But I've always
felt that Blue Bayou's is special."
"You won't get any argument from me about that."
She'd just returned his smile when Bethany Metancon
popped up from her wheelchair like some wild-eyed jack-in-the box, wispy hair
flying around her face.
"Putain!" she screeched, pointing her
scrawny finger at Regan. She spat, then reeled down the steps, leaping on
Regan, fists in her hair. "You have no business here. I won't allow you to
ruin my family!"
"It's okay, Miz Bethany. Nate grabbed hold of her
from behind, lifted her off the ground, and pulled her away. "You're just
a little confused right now." .
Finn and Jack cut through the crowd, putting
themselves between Regan and the old woman, who was screaming incoherently in
French. Ragged nails clawed impotently in the air. If she hadn't been concerned
about breaking her in half, Regan would have just taken her down.
"It's okay," Nate repeated soothingly.
"I'm not letting you take my son away from Blue
Bayou, Linda Dale!" Mrs. Melancon screamed, switching to English.
It took a moment for Nate to realize what he'd just
heard. He knew he wasn't alone when the quiet began to slowly extend outward
from the gallerie. A spooky hush came over the crowd as everyone turned
toward a stricken, white-faced Charles Melancon.
By unspoken consent, Mardi Gras came to an abrupt
halt. People began to leave, the low level of excited conversation echoing over
the swamp.
Eve Ancelet appeared from somewhere in the crowd.
"My bag's in my car," she said. "Try to calm her while I get a
sedative."
"Take her upstairs," Dani suggested.
"You can put her to bed in the guest room."
"I'll go with my mother," Charles said. He
did not look all that eager.
A typically stoic Caledonia took the woman from Nate's
arms. "Mo' better you stay down here, Mr. Charles," she instructed.
"You caused enough trouble as it is."
She lifted the frail woman into her arms as if she
weighed no more than a rag doll, walked into the house, and followed Dani up
the stairs.
Regan's heart was still pounding in her ears as the
rest of them gathered in the library.
"You want to explain what just happened!"
Nate asked Charles, who'd gone from ghost white to a sickly shade of gray.
"The past caught up with me." He looked a
thousand years old.
"The past, meaning me," Regan suggested.
He sighed heavily. Wearily. "You probably won't
believe this, but in a way I'm relieved the truth has finally come out."
Regan still didn't know what, exactly, the truth was.
"Perhaps if you began at the beginning," she suggested.
"I fell in love," he said slowly, painfully.
The fifty-something man was far from the congenial Rotarian she'd met at Cajun
Cal's; he looked drained and grim. He also had not looked once at his wife,
whom, Regan noted, didn't appear that surprised by the revelation. "For
the first time in my life, I was truly, deeply, in love."
"With Linda Dale," Regan said.
"Yes." He dragged both his hands down his
haggard face. "I fell in love with her the first time I ever met her at a
nightclub in New Orleans. I was entertaining clients. She wasn't a star yet,
but every man in the place wanted to be the one to take her home at the end of
her set."
"But you were the lucky one who did," Nate
said.
"Yes."
"Even though you were married," Regan, who
usually was able to keep her mouth shut during questioning, said.
"The marriage was a business arrangement I
entered into at my mothers insistence. Love had nothing to do with my
arrangement with my wife." He finally glanced over at Toni. "It still
doesn't."
"The deal was that you wouldn't embarrass me,
Charles. I believe you're doing a very good job of that tonight." Toni
Melancon rose from her chair with a lithe grace learned in finishing school.
"I'll be calling my attorney first thing in the morning."
A little silence settled over the library as she left
the room. Regan took a deep breath and dove back into the dangerous
conversational waters. "The man Linda Dale wrote about had a name
beginning with the initial J."
"My father was Charles Melancon, senior. I was
called Junior while I was growing up, and it wasn't until he'd been dead for
two decades that I began to finally put that name behind me."
Regan thought about what Nate had told her about the
elder Melancon being so influential. It must have been hard growing up in his
shadow, especially at a time when the family had begun to lose their power and
influence.
"What happened after you took Linda Dale home
from the club that night?"
"We made love. All night long." Both his
expression and his eyes softened at that long-ago memory.
Regan had figured that part out for herself. "And
afterward?"
"I explained to her about my situation. My responsibilities
to my mother and the stockholders. There was no way I'd ever be free to marry
her."
"I can't imagine she was thrilled with the idea
of being your mistress."
"To be honest, I believe the idea of not being
able to make a life with her bothered me more than it did Linda. She was an
amazingly generous person and understood responsibility, more than most. She
was willing to accept whatever life we could manage to carve out for each
other."
"Which is why she moved to Blue Bayou from New
Orleans."
"Yes. I thought it would be easier, having her
here close by, where I could see her more often. But it proved harder. Because
the more time we spent together, the more I wanted to be with her. It became
frustrating, and after a time, my regret and bitterness at my marital situation
threatened to ruin what we had together. That's when I knew I had to do
something drastic."
"So you killed her?" Nate asked, slipping a
protective arm around Regan's shoulders.
"Of course I didn't!" Charles leaped to his
feet. "I loved her, dammit. I wanted to spend the rest of my life with
her. I decided to leave Blue Bayou and start a new life with Linda. Mother did
not take to the idea."
"Because if you ran off with your mistress, your
wife would file for divorce and take her money with her."
"Yes. We argued. She told me I was no better than
my father. I'd promised Linda I'd come over after my talk with Mother, but I
was so angry, I drove to New Orleans and drank my way through the
Quarter."
Regan found it hard to feel sorry for him. He was,
after all, still alive.
"What happened to Linda?" she asked. The
fury that had twisted Bethany Melancon's face flashed in her head. "Did
your mother kill her?"
"Yes." He raked his fingers through his
pewter hair. Shook his head. "No."
"Which is it?" Regan asked, reining in her
impatience.
"Both." He huffed out a deep breath,
"My mother never drove. Never needed to. There was always a chauffeur to
take her wherever she wanted to go. But of course servants talk, and that night
she didn't want the staff to know where she'd been, so—"
"She had Caledonia drive her," Nate guessed.
"Yes. She hadn't believed me when I'd told her
that Linda loved me as much, if not more, than I loved her. She was so sure
this 'white-trash gold-digger,' as she'd called her, was only after my money.
So she took along twenty-five thousand dollars in stock certificates to buy her
off."
"But Linda didn't want the money." Regan had
learned enough about her mother to know this. She'd also dealt with enough
homicides to envision the scene. The old woman, who would have been about the
age her son was now, would have started out cold. Regal. Like a duchess talking
down to a peasant. But she was about to discover she'd met the one individual
Melancon money couldn't buy.
Frustrated, she would have argued. Probably even
started screaming, as she did tonight. Screaming, Regan thought, like the
cauchemar in her nightmare.
Her mother would have stayed calmer. After all, she
had a child asleep in the bedroom. She might have even tried to get past her to
open the door, perhaps to call Caledonia for help. There would have been
pushing. Shoving. The room was small; although Regan couldn't recall the
furnishings, there must have been tables in it.
"It was an accident," she decided,
"That's what Mother said," Charles confirmed
flatly. "Apparently Linda fell and hit her head on the corner of the
coffee table. Caledonia would lie through her teeth to protect my mother, but I
believed her story then." He sighed heavily. "I still do. Mother was
apparently distraught, and together they decided to make it look like a
suicide. Caledonia helped her carry Linda's body out to the garage. They put
her in her car, turned-on the engine, then left."
"Did it occur to either one of them that they
left a two-year-old child alone in the house to fend for herself?" Nate
asked, furious on Regan's behalf.
"That was"—Charles paused, as if searching
for the right word— "one of the worst parts of the tragedy."
Nate felt guilty he'd even brought this mess into
Regan's life. If it hadn't been for him, she'd have gone on thinking that her
father was a war hero, rather than this man who'd chosen to remain quiet and
allow his daughter to be taken from him.
Regan thrust her hand through her hair. "Let's
get one thing straight, Melancon. You don't have to worry about suddenly having
to turn paternal. I've gotten along thirty-three years without a father,
and—"
"What?" His surprise was too genuine to be
faked. "I'm not your father, Ms. Hart. You were an infant when I met
Linda."
Nate could tell Regan was as surprised as he was by
this revelation, but she managed to hang onto that inner strength he admired.
"Then she obviously had another
relationship," Regan said.
"I'm sure she had several before she met me. I
never held that against her."
"That was goddamn big of you," Nate
muttered.
Charles shot Nate a look. "I loved her," he
repeated. "I was willing to give up everything for her." He turned
back to Regan. "And you." Despite the seriousness of the
conversation, his lips curved slightly. "I'd never thought I'd have
children—Toni made it very clear from the start that she wasn't the maternal
type—but I came to care for you as if you were my own daughter."
"Do you happen to have any idea who she'd been
with before you?"
"No. But even if I did, it wouldn't tell you who
your father was."
"Why not?"
His eyes gentled, revealing a caring side of the
businessman Nate had never seen. "Because, detective, Linda Dale wasn't
your birth mother."
Chapter Twenty-eight
I don't understand." Regan felt the blood
drain from her face, and she was distantly aware of Nate tightening his hold on
her.
While she had learned to expect the unexpected during
investigations, she felt as if she'd landed in one of those Halloween haunted
houses, where goblins and ghouls kept leaping out at you as you wandered
through twisting hallways in the dark.
"It's obvious that I'm the toddler the police
discovered in the house after Mr. Boyce found her body." The image of
Linda Dale lying in the front seat of that car would stay in her mind for a very
long time, and she hated that it wasn't softened with happier memories. "I
have the elephant."
"Gabriel." He closed his eyes and exhaled a
long breath. When he opened them again, he smiled faintly. "It was from a
little store in the Quarter. You dragged it around with you everywhere. It was
the first—and last—child's toy I ever bought.
"When I first returned home from my weekend binge
and heard Linda was dead, my first thought was that Toni had killed her. She
might not have any love for me, but she definitely enjoyed being Mrs. Charles
Melancon. Her people had made their fortune in the slave trade, which even down
here was considered unseemly. Marrying into my family bought the respectability
she craved."
"And made her queen of the parish, once your mother
couldn't hold the crown," Regan guessed.
"Exactly." His look was one of respect.
"That's a very good analysis, considering you haven't been in Blue Bayou
very long."
"I'm a quick study." It helped in the murder
business. "When did you realize your mother killed Linda?"
"Decades later. She and Caledonia kept their
secret well; it was only when her mind began to go and she'd have these
flashbacks to the past that I discovered the truth."
"That must have been tough," Nate said.
"Realizing that your mother was responsible for the death of the woman you
loved."
"Yes. But it wasn't as difficult as believing
Linda had committed suicide because she thought I'd betrayed her."
"How do you know she wasn't my mother?"
Regan asked.
"Because she told me, of course. We shared
everything."
Regan's mind spun as she tried to think why on earth
an unmarried woman with a career not conducive to motherhood would take on the
responsibility of an infant. The answer, when it hit, was staggering.
"She was my aunt, wasn't she?"
He nodded. "Karen Hart was your birth mother.
She'd married your father while they were both in law school, and they had
plans to go into practice together. He drew a bad lottery number, so since it
was obvious he was going to get drafted, he enlisted in the marines. While he
was in Vietnam, he discovered he liked being military police and decided he'd
go into law enforcement when he got out, which wasn't what he and Karen had
agreed upon.
"Shortly after she'd filed for divorce, she
discovered she was pregnant. She was going to get an abortion when Linda talked
her into going through with the pregnancy and giving the baby—you—to her."
This time his faint, reminiscent smile touched his eyes. "Karen wasn't the
only tough-minded sister. In her own way, Linda could be very persuasive. And
she knew what she wanted—which was you. She was also a natural-born mother. I
don't think she was ever happier than during those years with you."
That was something, at least, Regan thought, trying to
find some silver lining.
"I called Karen to tell her what had
happened," he continued, answering a question that had been niggling at
Regan: how Karen Hart could have known about her sister's death when Nate's
father hadn't been able to locate her. "She came to get you. I asked if I
could stay in touch, since we'd gotten close and I knew you'd miss the woman
who'd been the only mother you knew. I never knew if Karen didn't believe the
story of Linda's suicide and perhaps didn't trust me, but she said she didn't
want to confuse you about who you were. She also warned me that if I ever tried
to contact you, she'd do everything she could legally to ruin not just my
reputation and my business, but my life as well. I believed her."
As did Regan.
"But the real reason I allowed her to have her way
was because I thought perhaps she was right about it being better if you never
knew about the circumstances surrounding the first two years of your
life."
He heaved out a long breath, as if relieved to finally
get the secret out in the open. "I realize this has all come as a
shock," he said, proving himself the master of the understatement.
"But I'm going to say the same thing to you I did to Karen. I'd like to
stay in touch. If you think that might be possible."
"I don't know." Regan was not going to lie.
"I have to sort things out in my own mind."
He nodded gravely. "I can understand that."
He stood up. "I'd better go retrieve Mother and take her home."
There was no statute of limitation on murder, and
while it might have been an accident, the woman lying upstairs had taken a
life. Even knowing that, Regan didn't make a move to stop him as he left the
room.
* * *
Regan was extremely grateful when Nate didn't talk on
the drive back to the inn. She felt too drained for conversation.
A little more than an hour after Bethany Melancon's
attack, they were back in the suite.
"Well," she said on a long sigh. "I was
thinking earlier that I'd never forget this day. Charles Melancon and his
mother certainly made sure of that."
"Helluva story," he said.
"No kidding."
"What are you going to do next?"
"I can't see that there is much to do. There's no
point in trying to open an investigation. Mrs. Melancon's obviously not capable
of presenting a defense, and Caledonia's an old woman who doesn't need to be
hit with an accessory murder charge."
"Linda must've been a really special
person," Nate offered. "Taking on her sister's baby that way."
"Yes." Regan sighed again, weary from the
strange emotional roller coaster. "She must have been. I suppose I have to
give my mother credit for having carried me, when she certainly didn't have
to."
"I am certainly grateful for that." Regan
seemed to be doing remarkably well with all this. Then again, his detective was
a remarkable woman. "I feel guilty about having opened this can of
worms," he said carefully, trying to find a way to say the words he'd
never thought he'd want to say to any woman.
"I'm fine."
He doubted that was precisely the case yet, but she
would be. He knew that.
"It occurred to me," he said with as much
casualness as he could muster, "sometime between when you were being held
hostage and tonight's party, that the thing to do would be to spend the rest of
my life making it up to you."
He felt her stiffen in his arms. Not a good sign.
"Oh, Nate." She dragged a hand through her
hair.
Damn. Definitely not a good sign.
"I love you, Regan."
"You can't."
That was certainly definitive. "Of course I can.
I was going to tell you earlier this evening, but then things got a little
crazy."
"That's certainly an understatement." She
shook her head and looked out over the moon-gilded bayou. "There's a full
moon."
"It's real pretty."
"It is. But everyone knows people behave
differently during full moons. I've Learned never to schedule weekends off
then, because homicides always increase, and heaven knows, when I was a patrol
cop—"
"What I'm feeling isn't related to any full
moon." Wishing she seemed a little happier about his declaration, he took
her distressed face between his hands. "I love you, Regan. And I want to
marry you." There. He'd said the M word and survived. In fact, hearing it
out loud sounded amazingly cool.
"It's too soon."
"Okay." He could live with that. "I
understand that women like long engagements so they have enough time to plan a
big blowout wedding, and while I'm really looking forward to our honeymoon-Jack
recommends Kauai, by the way, since he and Dani had such a good time there—I’m
open to anything your little heart desires—"
"Nate." It was her turn to interrupt him.
"I'm not talking about needing time to make wedding plans. It's too soon
to fall in love."
"Well, now, I would have thought the same thing
myself, once upon a time. But since meeting you, I've decided that love sort of
makes its own time. When it's right, it's right." He brushed his knuckles
up her cheek. Threaded his fingers through her hair. "And this is
right."
"It's lust."
"That, too," he allowed. "But I think
that's a plus, don't you? That I know I'll still want you when we're old and
gray, and we're watching our grandbabies—"
"Grandbabies?"
"I sorta like the idea. But if you don't want
kids, Regan, I'm okay with that." The idea of a houseful of little girls
who looked just like Regan and who'd dress up their Barbie dolls in police
blues and have them arrest Ken was surprisingly appealing, but Nate figured
he'd have plenty of time to convince her.
"It’s too soon to be talking about this,"
she insisted. "We haven't known each other long enough to even be thinking
about marriage. We both have our own lives, our own work-—"
"They don't need contractors in California?"
"What?"
"Relocating for the woman you love is kind of a
family tradition." He was winging it here, but surprisingly, he figured he
could handle Los Angeles if he had to. For Regan. "My dad moved here from
Chicago for Maman. Finn moved to California for Julia. And I'm willing to
relocate if you want to keep detectin' in L.A."
She was staring at him as if he'd just suggested they
become a modern day Bonnie and Clyde and start robbing banks for a living.
"Besides," he said, realizing that he ought to
let her know what other changes he was planning to make to his life, "Josh
might get a kick out of surfing in the Pacific Ocean."
"You're going to adopt him?"
"Yeah, I thought I would. But I'm not askin' you
to marry me to find him a mother, if that's what you're thinking."
"No." She waved away his suggestion.
"Of course I wouldn't think that." Things were definitely on a
downhill slide here. "I think you're making a good decision, where Josh is
concerned."
"Thank you," he said dryly.
"Even if it is a bit impetuous."
"That's me. Mr. Impetuosity."
He figured it sounded better than Peter Pan, and while
there were a lot of things he was willing to try to change for Regan, Nate knew
it'd be useless to attempt to change his nature. Which had him belatedly realizing
that he never should have expected her to fall into his arms and tearfully
accept his out-of-the-blue proposal. She'd already told him she wasn't a
go-with-the-flow type of person. The gods, who obviously had one helluva sense
of humor, must be laughing their heads off at having fixed things so he'd fall
in love with a female version of Finn Callahan.
"I don't even know who I am," she murmured,
looking away again.
"Of course you do. You're the same person you've
always been. Your family situation might have been a little screwed up, but if
you want an old-fashioned kind of family, you've got one waiting for you."
He held out his arms. "The Callahan clan might seem big to someone who
grew up pretty much all alone, but we've always got room for one more.
"Look, chиre." When he saw a sheen of
moisture that hadn't been in her eyes the entire time she'd been learning the
truth about her past, Nate was sorely tempted to pull her into his arms and
kiss her doubts away. "I'm glad to give you some time to make up your
mind, but there's something you need to know. When I found out you were in that
courthouse with Mike, and realized I could lose you, it dawned on me that part
of the reason I've spent my entire life dodging serious relationships is
because I lost two of the people I loved most, and I didn't want to take the
risk of getting emotionally hammered again.
"Now, I'm not going to beat myself up about that,
since I've never—ever—met a woman I wanted to spend all that much time with,
anyway. Until you. I love you, Regan. Enough to risk someday goin' through the
pain of losing you, because the alternative is not having you in my life at
all. And that flat-out isn't acceptable."
"Dammit, Callahan." A tear escaped to trail
down her cheek. He brushed it away with the pad of his thumb. "When you
said I was an Acorn kind of silverware woman, you said I was like your mother.
But that's wishful thinking. To hear Dani tell it, she was a cross between
Donna Reed and Mother Teresa. I'm nothing like either one of them."
"I think you may be a bit off the mark about
that, but I don't want Donna Reed or Mother Teresa. I want you. What you have
in common with Maman is that you're willing to take risks, that you're brave
enough to trust your instincts, even when they might go against the norm. I
can't imagine it was easy for her to go to college, back in a time when folks
around here tended to think people who went to college were lazy and just
didn't want to work, since an education wasn't going to help you on the farm or
in the sugar refinery. Or help you raise up your babies, which is pretty much
what women were expected to do.
"But she did go to college. Not only that, she
broke family tradition and ventured north across the Mason-Dixon line. Then to
top it all off, she up and married herself a Yankee, which certainly set
tongues a-buzzin'. But you know what?"
"What?"
"She didn't care. Because she trusted herself.
And she trusted my dad. And never, not once, tried to change him."
"That's just as well. Since it's impossible to really
change a person."
"True. Which is another reason why I know we
belong together. You've never once mentioned changin' me."
"Why would I?"
"I have no idea. Bein' how I'm pretty damn close
to perfect." He grinned to lighten the mood a bit. "But every woman
I've ever met starts gettin' the urge to change me."
"Which isn't going to happen." She'd never
met a man more comfortable in his own skin. "And I'd never want to change
you."
"See? We're perfect for each other. You're smart,
and strong, and brave, and honest—"
"Now you're making me sound like a Boy
Scout."
"You interrupted me before I got to the good
parts." He laced his fingers through her hair, pushing it back from her
face. "You're also gorgeous, sexy as all get-out, and I can't get within
twenty feet of you without wanting to do this."
Partly because he couldn't resist those tempting,
sweet lips another moment, partly because he wanted to leave her with something
to remember, Nate bent his head and gave her a long, deep kiss that left them
both breathless.
"I don't supposed you'd be willing to run off and
marry me right now?"
"Of course not."
He hadn't thought so, but it’d been worth a shot.
"Okay. See you around, sugar." If he didn't leave now, he never
would, and Nate knew it'd be a huge mistake to risk her someday feeling that
he'd pressured her into spending the next sixty years with him. "Give me a
call when you make a decision."
Ignoring the shock on her lovely face was the second
hardest thing he'd ever done. Getting up and walking out of the suite was the
hardest.
"Nate?"
He paused in the doorway. Closed his eyes. Braced
himself. Then slowly turned around. "Change your mind already?" he
asked pleasantly.
"I want to donate the proceeds from the petroleum
stock to charity. I thought you might be able to suggest some local ones."
Stifling a sigh, Nate reminded himself that he
shouldn't have expected an instantaneous one-hundred-and-eighty-degree
turnaround. "I'll send you a list. In LA."
"Thank you." She did not, he noted, reject
the notion of returning to California.
"C'est rien. Speaking as the mayor, I can assure
you that the town'll be real grateful."
He left without looking back. And reluctantly prepared
himself for a long, lonely wait.
* * *
Nothing was the same. Her job, which she'd already
begun to find frustrating, grew more so every day. There was nothing wrong with
her new partner, who'd transferred in from Narcotics, but he wasn't Van.
She'd always liked California, but the view of the
swimming pool from her apartment window couldn't live up to herons nesting on
the bayou, and the constant sun, which was such a part of the Los Angeles
lifestyle, now seemed too predictable.
She'd received a letter from Charles Melancon, and on
impulse called him back. She wasn't certain that she'd ever think of him as a
surrogate father, but she thought they might be able to become friends one day.
Other than a polite official letter written on Office
of the Mayor stationery, thanking her for her generous contribution to various
local charities, she hadn't heard from Nate. She might have thought he'd
written her off and moved on had she not received a pager message from Dani a
week after her return to LA., suggesting she might want to call Nate.
The cop in her instantly feared for the worst, and she
immediately called, only to get his answering machine. "Hi. Josh and I are at baseball practice. If
you're calling about a booth at the Cajun Days festival, call Jewel Breaux at
504-555-1112, and she'll be glad to take your reservation. If you're calling
about the upcoming parish council meeting, it's Monday night at seven-thirty,
Give or take a few minutes. We'll be voting on what color to repaint the
bleachers at the Buccaneer baseball park. If you want some construction work
done, leave a message and I'll get back to you as soon as possible. And if this
is Regan calling ... I still love you, chиre."
* * *
Regan's heart was thrumming a thousand miles an hour
with anticipation as the pirogue wove through mist-draped black waters.
"I really appreciate this," she told Jack.
It was a month since Mardi Gras. After having discovered a recent storm had
temporarily turned the road to Nate's house back to water, she'd been afraid
she wouldn't be able to pull off her surprise.
Jack's grin flashed white in the moon-spangled
darkness. "It's easy enough for someone who's lived their entire life in
this bayou to get lost at night. If you got lost, it could take the search-and-rescue
squad until morning to find you. Which would give you the chance to change your
mind 'bout marrying my little brother."
"I'm not going to change my mind."
"I'm real pleased to here that, chиre. Since Nate
isn't, either."
"I know." She'd been calling him every day,
choosing times she guessed he'd be working. While the answering machine message
changed every day, the closing line had remained the same. The idea still
amazed her—delighted her. She finally realized that he'd been right. She'd been
falling in love with him from the beginning—if not when he'd shown up at the
station, at least from that night they'd rescued Josh together.
Time didn't really matter at all. Except for the fact
she'd already wasted thirty long days and nights they could have been together.
It was past time to put her heart before her head.
"It's also very nice of you and Dani to take Josh
for the weekend."
"The three of you have a real good start on a
nice little family." The house came into view as they came around a
corner. Jack cut the electric engine and drifted toward the dock. "But
sometimes a man and woman just gotta have themselves some privacy."
A welcoming yellow light shone from the windows. For
the first time in her life, Regan understood the concept of coming home.
"I don't 'magine you've ever been to a Cajun
wedding?" Jack asked as he tied up the boat.
"No, I haven't." The idea of any wedding was
still more terrifying than facing down an urban riot. "I was thinking of
something quiet. Maybe just for family and a few close friends."
His rich, bold laugh startled a trio of herons nesting
in the reeds. They took to the night sky, wings silhouetted against the full
white moon. "There's no such thing as a quiet Cajun wedding. The womenfolk
have been planning the festivities for weeks."
"They were that sure I'd cave in?"
"We were all that sure the two of you belonged
together." He retrieved her spruce green canvas carry-on from the bottom
of the pirogue. "You sure you don't need me to carry that for you?"
"It's not that heavy." She smiled up at him.
"Thank you. For everything."
"It is truly my pleasure." He bent his head
and brushed a kiss against her cheek. "Welcome to the Callahan family, chиre."
She waited until he'd climbed back into the boat and
disappeared around the corner. She was definitely on her own now. There'd be no
turning back.
She took the cell phone from her purse and dialed the
number she knew by heart.
"Hi," she said when Nate's familiar deep
voice answered on the first ring. "I'm calling about the sheriff's job. If
it's still open, I've just arrived in town—well, actually, I'm here at the
dock—and I'd like to schedule a personal interview."
The door flew open. Regan thought her heart was going
to sprout wings and fly when she saw Nate standing there, illuminated in the
moonlight.
"I'm also looking for a place to live," she
continued into the phone, "so I'd appreciate any suggestions Blue Bayou's
mayor and best contractor might have."
He was coming toward her on long, purposeful strides
as she walked toward him. "Of course, since I've given away all my
inheritance and the parish budget can't afford to pay me nearly what I was
making back in L.A.,
I'm willing to take a signing bonus. I was thinking along the lines of season
tickets to the Buccaneers' home games—I hear the team has a new sophomore
player this year who's a phenom."
They were only a few feet apart.
"This is Regan calling."
She flipped the phone closed and wondered how on earth
she could she have stayed away from this man for so long. A wealth of love was
gleaming in his eyes as she went up on her toes, twined her arms around his
neck, and lifted her lips to his.
"And I'll always love you."
To Patty Gardner-Evans,
for all the years. (Sorry about
the gator; maybe next time.)
And, as always, to Jay, with love.
Chapter One
New Orleans, Louisiana
I've always adored a Libra man," the blond
purred.
"Have you now?" Nate Callahan grinned and
drew her closer. There were few things in life more enjoyable than making love
to a beautiful woman.
"Oh, absolutely." Cuddling up against him,
she fluttered her lashes in a way only a true southern belle could pull off.
"Why, a Libra man can charm the birds out of the trees and flatter a girl
right out of her lace panties."
"It wasn't flattery, chиre.” He refilled her
crystal champagne flute. "It was the absolute truth."
Nate had always enjoyed females—he liked the way they
moved, the way they smelled, their soft skin and slender ladies' hands. From
the first time he'd filched one of his older brother Finn's Playboy magazines,
he'd flat-out liked everything about women. Fortunately, they'd always liked
him right back.
He toyed with a blond curl trailing down her neck. It
was a little stiff and hadn't deflated much during their session of hot, steamy
sex, but Nate was used to that, since most of the women he dated favored big
hair. Big hair, big breasts, and, he thought with a pleasant twinge of lust,
big appetites for sex.
"Your moon is in the seventh house." She
trailed a glossy coral nail down his chest.
"Is that good?" He skimmed his palm down her
back; she arched against the caress like a sleek, pampered cat.
Outside her bedroom, a full moon rose in a
star-studded sky; inside flames crackled cozily in the fireplace and
gardenia-scented candles glowed.
"It certainly is. You're ruled by Venus, goddess
of beauty."
"Seems that'd fit you better than me,
sugar." He nuzzled the smooth curve of her shoulder. His accent, always more
pronounced when romancing a woman, turned thick as Cajun gumbo. "Bein' how
you've gotten more beautiful every year since you won that Miss Louisiana
crown."
"I was only first runner-up." She pouted
prettily.
"Officially," he allowed. "But everyone
in the state knew the judges were obviously blind as swamp bats."
"You are so sweet." Her laugh was rich and
pleased.
Nate's mind began to drift as she chattered on about
the stars, which, if he were to be perfectly honest, didn't interest him. He'd
never thought much about lunar signs until the afternoon he'd shown up to give
the blond astrologer a bid on remodeling her bedroom.
Although he'd arrived ten minutes late at her Garden
District house, he'd gotten her out of the shower; she'd shown up at the door,
breathlessly apologetic for not being ready, prettily flushed, and smelling of
jasmine. It was only later, when he'd remembered that her hair hadn't been wet,
that Nate realized he'd been set up. Having always appreciated female wiles, he
didn't mind.
She'd hung on to his every word as he'd suggested ways
to open up the room—including putting a skylight over the bed—declared him
brilliant, and hired him on the spot.
"You are," she'd sworn on a drawl as sweet
as the sugarcane his granddaddy used to grow, "the first contractor I've
interviewed who understands that a bedroom is more than just a place to
sleep." She'd coyly looked up at him from beneath her lashes. "It is,
after all, the most important room in the house."
When she'd touched a scarlet fingernail to the back of
Nate's hand, warm and pleasant desire had ribboned through him.
"You've been so sweet. Would you do me just one
teensy little favor?"
"Sure, chиre. If I can."
Avid green eyes had swept over him in a slow, feminine
perusal. "Oh, I think you're just the man for the job."
She'd untied the silk robe, revealing perfumed and
powdered flesh. "I do so need to exorcise my horrid ex-husband's memory
from this room." The robe dropped to the plush carpeting.
That had been six months ago. Not only had Nate done
his best to exorcise her former husband's memory, he'd done a damn fine job on
the remodeling, if he did say so himself. Lying on his back amid sex-tangled
sheets, Nate looked up at the ghost galleon moon, decided he'd definitely been
right about the skylight, and wondered why he'd never thought to put one over
his own bed.
"Of course, Venus is also the goddess of
love." The L word, slipping smoothly from her coral-tinted lips, yanked
his wandering mind back to their conversation.
"She is?" he asked with a bit more caution.
"Absolutely. Make love, not war, is a phrase that
could have been coined with Libras in mind. You became interested in women at a
young age, you make sex a rewarding experience, and will not stop until your
lover is satisfied, even if it takes all night."
"I try," he said modestly. She'd certainly
seemed well satisfied when she'd been bucking beneath him earlier.
She smiled and touched her lips to his. "Oh, you
not only succeed, darling, you set the standard. Libras also rule the house of
partnerships."
"Now there's where your stars might be a little
off, sugar." He stroked her smooth silk back, cupped her butt, and pulled
her closer. " 'Cause I've always enjoyed working alone."
It wasn't that he was antisocial, far from it. But he
liked being his own boss, working when he liked, and playing when he wanted.
"You weren't alone a few minutes ago, and you
seemed to be enjoying yourself well enough."
"I always enjoy passin' a good time with you,
angel."
"If you didn't play well with others, you
wouldn't have run for mayor." She rolled over and straddled him.
"Libras are not lone wolves, darling. A Libra male needs a permanent
partner."
Nate's breath clogged in his lungs.
"Permanent?"
Having grown up in South
Louisiana, where water and land were constantly battling, with
water winning most of the time, he knew that very few things were permanent.
Especially relationships between men and women.
"We've been together six months," she
pointed out, which exceeded any previous relationship Nate had ever had. Then
again, it helped that she'd spent most of that time away, selling her astrology
books at New Age festivals and talking them up on television talk shows around
the country.
Doing some rapid calculation, Nate figured they'd
probably been together a total of three weeks, and had spent most of that time
in bed.
"I've been thinking," she murmured when he
didn't respond. Her clever fingers slipped between them, encircling him.
"About us."
"Us?"
"It occurred to me yesterday, when my flight was
cruising at thirty thousand feet over New
Mexico, that we should get married." Married? Having not seen this coming—she'd certainly
never shown one iota of domesticity—Nate didn't immediately answer.
"You don't want to." Danger sparked in her
voice, like heat lightning flashing out over the Gulf. She pulled away.
Sighing, Nate hitched himself up beside her and saw
any future plans for the night disappearing.
"It's nothing to do with you, chиre," His
cajoling smile encouraged one in return. "But we agreed goin' in that
neither of us was the marrying kind."
"That was then." She left the bed and
retrieved his shirt from where it had landed earlier. "Things
change." The perfumed air swirled with temper. "The moon is also a
mother sign."
"It is?" Nate caught the denim shirt she
threw at him. Christ, he needed air.
"Yes." Her chin angled up. Her eyes narrowed
to green slits. "Which is why Libras often repeat the same childlike
behavior over and over again in their relationships."
It was a long way from charming to childish. Boyish,
Nate might be willing to accept—in the right context. But he hadn't been a
child since that life-altering day when he was twelve and a liquored-up,
swamp-dwelling, gun-carrying idiot had blown away his father.
"If I didn't know better, I might take offense at
that, darlin'." He bent to pick up his jeans from the loblolly pine floor;
one of his boots came sailing toward him. "Mon Dieu, Charlene." He
ducked the first one and snagged the second out of the air an instant before it
connected with his head.
"Do you have any idea how many proposals I get
every month?" She marched back across the bedroom and jabbed her finger
against his bare chest.
"I'll bet a bunch." Nate reminded himself
that he'd never run into a situation he couldn't smooth over.
"You damn well bet a lot!" His chest now
bore little crescent gouges from her fingernail. "I've turned down two in
the past six weeks—from men who make a hell of a lot more money than you—
because I was fool enough to think we had a future."
"You're a wonderful woman, chérie,” he tried
again, hopping on first one foot, then the other, as he pulled his pants up.
"Smart, beautiful—"
"And getting goddamn older by the moment,"
she shouted.
"You don't look a day over twenty-five."
Thanks to a Houston
surgeon whose clever touch with a scalpel had carved a good ten years off her
face and body.
When she began coming toward him again, Nate backed
away and yanked on his shirt. Not pausing to button it, he scooped his keys and
wallet from, the bedside table and shoved them into his pocket.
"Twenty-six, tops." He debated sitting down again to pull on his
boots, then decided not to risk it.
"It's not going to work this time,
Callahan."
A champagne glass hit the wall, then shattered. She
tossed her stiff cloud of honey blond hair. "If I'd taken the time to do
your full chart before hiring you, I never would have let you seduce me."
Deciding that discretion was the better part of valor,
Nate wisely didn't point out that she'd been the one who'd dropped the damn
robe.
"I would have realized that you're suffering from
a gigantic Peter Pan complex."
Peter Pan? Nate gritted his teeth. "I'll call
you, chиre" he promised as he dodged the second flute. PMS, he decided.
"Later in the month. When you're feeling a little more like yourself."
A banshee could not have screamed louder. Nate escaped
the suffocating room, taking the back stairs two at a time. Something thudded
against the bedroom wall; he hoped to hell she hadn't damaged the new plaster
job.
Feeling blindsided, Nate drove toward his home on the
peaceful bank of Blue Bayou, trying to figure out where, exactly, an evening
that had begun so promising had gone offtrack.
"Peter Pan," he muttered.
Where the hell had she come up with that one?
The full moon was brighter than he'd ever seen it,
surrealistically silhouetting the knobby bayou cypresses in eerie white light.
Having just survived Hurricane Charlene, Nate hoped it wasn't some weird
portent of yet another storm to come.
Chapter Two
Los Angeles
Oh God, doesn't that hunk just jump-start your
hormones?"
L.A. homicide detective Regan Hart glanced up at the
billboard towering over Sunset Boulevard. "Not really." He was too
blond, too good-looking, and even with that ragged hair and scruffy beard,
somehow too perfect. Regan preferred men who looked as if they had some mileage
on them.
"Any woman who doesn't respond to Brad Pitt needs
her head examined," Vanessa Kante, Regan's partner, said on a deep sigh.
"Not to mention more vital body parts."
"My head and all my other body parts are working
just fine, thank you." At least Regan assumed they were; it had been a
while since they'd been subjected to a field test. "And in case you've
forgotten, you're married. Aren't you supposed to be directing those leaping
hormones toward your husband?"
"I'm married, not dead. Part of the reason our
marriage is so strong is that Rhasheed doesn't mind who I lust after, so long
as he's the one whose tall, lanky bones I'm jumping when I get home." She
shot Regan a knowing look. "Since you've been in a crappy mood all shift,
I take it the Santa Monica plastic surgeon wasn't exactly Mr. Right."
Regan heaved out a breath. "He wasn't even Mr.
Maybe if a meteor hit Santa Monica and we were the only man and woman left on
earth I might just maybe consider having sex with you only to perpetuate the
species. Enough said."
"Sorry."
She shrugged. "I don't know why I even let you
fix me up with him in the first place."
"Perhaps because it's been too long since you've
had sex that didn't involve batteries?"
"It's not that easy. First of all, we're living
in the land of gorgeous women, where every waitress is a Cameron Diaz wannabe
and any female over a size two is a candidate for liposuction."
"I'm not a size two. And Rhasheed likes me just
the way I am."
"What man wouldn't? I've seen stone-cold killers
swallow their tongues when you sashay into the squad room." A dead ringer
for Tyra Banks, Vanessa even dressed like a supermodel. "And besides,
Rhasheed grew up in Nigeria. You keep telling me the brothers like their women
with curves."
"That's what he tells me, and if actions back up
his sweet-talking jive, it's true. I think it's one of those Neanderthal things
about looking for a woman who'll make a good breeder, even during famine. But
Rhasheed says it's mainly so he'll have something to hold onto so he won't fall
out of bed."
"Then I'm out of luck with Neanderthals, too. All
my adolescent growth hormones went into my height, so I didn't have any left
for curves. As Dr. Bill felt obliged to point out when he suggested I consider
implant surgery."
"Ouch. I never realized he was such a
silver-tongued devil."
"It wouldn't have worked out anyway. If guys
aren't intimidated by a woman who wears a pistol to work, they just want to
hear gory war stories about dead bodies."
"Which kind was Dr. Bill?"
"The first. We were out on the dance floor for
about two minutes when he admitted he couldn't handle getting that close to a
woman who was wearing a Beretta beneath her jacket."
Van shot her a disbelieving look. "Tell me you
didn't actually wear your sidearm on a date?"
"I got a call while I was in court to testify on
the Sanchez case, saying one of the Front Street Crips had some info on that
Diamond Street gangbanger who was killed while collecting drug taxes for the
Mexican Mafia. Would you go into that neighborhood unarmed?"
"I'll have to give you that one."
"Besides, I looked pretty damn good. I was
wearing that suit you talked me into buying last week."
Van had unearthed the designer knockoff at Second Hand
Rose, a trendy consignment boutique on Melrose- The label read
"Armini," the simple change in vowels keeping the counterfeit police
from declaring the suit illegal. It was also several hundred dollars less
expensive than the original.
"Couldn't you have left the gun in the trunk of
your car?" her partner asked.
"And have it stolen like Malloy's? Boy, wouldn't
that be a career booster."
Just last month Devon Malloy, a rookie B&E
detective, had left his pistol in the trunk of his car to keep it away from his
kids. Unfortunately, his car had been stolen, and the gun ended up being used
in an armed robbery that had left a liquor store clerk wounded. By the time IAD
eventually got through dragging Malloy over the coals, he might still be a cop,
but any chances of advancement were nil; if he stayed on the force, he could
look forward to spending all his days on pawnshop detail.
"Actually, it was kind of funny," Regan
said. "We were slow-dancing, and every time he'd pull me close and try to
cop a feel, his fingers would hit cold steel. After the third time, he
suggested we call it a night. Not only was I crushing his libido—apparently
it's a little disconcerting to go out with a woman who can shoot your balls
off— but the metal in my Beretta was screwing up his qi. Whatever that
is."
"It's feng shui. In Taoist thought, everything is
made up of qi—or energy. It's the essence of existence."
"And here I thought that was DNA."
The rain was picking up. Regan turned on the wipers,
which dragged across the glass with a rubbery squeal like fingernails on a
chalkboard. LAPD never retired their crap cars; they just assigned them to her.
The heater hadn't worked for six weeks. By the time it got repaired, the
weather would have warmed up, and she wouldn't need it. Which, she thought
darkly, was probably exactly the department's reasoning.
"Hey, there are a lot of things in this world we
can't understand," Van said. "If it wasn't for feng shui, I wouldn't
have gotten pregnant."
Regan shot her a look. "You got pregnant because
when you and Rhasheed were off cavorting in the tropics, you had one too many
mai tais and forgot to use birth control."
"True. But before we went to Kauai, between the
stress of his job and mine, we were having some sex problems—which is why we
made the reservations at the Crouching Dragon Inn in the first place."
"Ah yes, the sex palace."
"You make it sound like someplace with mystery
stains on the sheets and porno movies playing on a TV bolted to the dresser.
The Crouching Dragon Inn was designed on the feng shui principle that we should
live with nature rather than against it, so it was constructed for all the bed
and beach qi to flow properly. As soon as we got there, all our problems just
flew out the window. Except for going to that luau, we made love all
week."
"So you said." From the play-by-play her
partner had shared, she was amazed Van had still been able to walk when they
got back from Hawaii.
"All that positive loving energy sent out a
special frequency that allowed Rhasheed's essential elements to come together
with mine and create Denzel's life force."
"It's called a sperm swimming up to fertilize an
egg."
With the exception of certain truisms such as full
moons make the crazies come out, and you always get a floater the day you're
wearing new shoes, Regan didn't believe in feng shui, voodoo, fate, or anything
else that she couldn't see with her own eyes or touch with her own hands.
After she'd been set up to be killed by a gang who was
tired of her hauling in their dealers, the psychologist the department had
forced her to see had blamed her skepticism on all those childhood years
waiting for her father to return home from Vietnam. In her child's mind he
would walk in, declare her the most beautiful, lovable little girl in the
world, get down on one knee just like the prince did in Cinderella, beg her
mother to remarry him, and they'd all live happily ever after.
None of which had ever happened. Unfortunately,
Lieutenant John Hart, U.S. Marines, had never returned from Vietnam. Her
mother, who'd filed for divorce before Regan was born, had returned to her law
practice when Regan was a week old, leaving her in the hands of a continuously
changing series of nannies and housekeepers who never quite lived up to Karen
Hart's standards. When her father never showed up in a suit of shining armor to
sweep his daughter onto the back of a prancing white steed and take her away to
his palace, Regan had decided fairy tales belonged in the gilt-edged pages of
books, not in real life.
In a way, she'd always thought that youthful
disappointment had served her well. The very same realism and skepticism the
department shrink had advised her to overcome was what made her a good cop.
"Birth's a miracle." Van repeated what she'd
been saying since the day the little pink cross had shown up on the test strip.
"Rhasheed said he knew I was pregnant that morning when I began glowing
from the inside."
"You sure you didn't get confused about what you
were putting in your mouth, and swallow your mag light?"
"Very funny. The glow was the red lightwave from
baby Denzel's heart." She patted her rounded stomach, which had been
showing her pregnancy for the past two months.
Regan shook her head. "Only in L.A. would cops be
into New Age."
As happy as she was for Van, Regan wasn't looking
forward to losing her as a partner. But Van and her husband had decided a
homicide detective's twenty-four/seven lifestyle wasn't exactly family friendly
and she'd decided to leave the force in another six weeks.
"Feng shui isn't new. The concept goes back eight
thousand years." Van turned in the passenger seat toward Regan.
"Maybe you should have a master check out your apartment. You've been
under a lot of stress lately."
"I'm a murder cop. Stress comes with the
territory."
"Which is why you need to find something that
helps."
"What would help would be for the good citizens
of Los Angeles to take a forty-eight-hour ceasefire."
"Russell Crowe's going to show up in the squad
room in full breastplate and sandals before that happens," Vanessa said
dryly. "You know, I took a class last month with the guy who advised
Donald Trump to change a set of French doors at Mar-a-Lago to the other wall.
If you weren't so hard-minded, you might actually like him."
"I don't need an architectural adviser. I just
need to close the Lancaster case. And the fact that Donald Trump wants to pay
some so-called building wizard big bucks to tell him to tear out some doors is
just proof that some people have more money than sense."
"I hope you didn't tell Dr. Bill all this. He
lives by feng shui."
"I know. We had to wait an hour for a dinner
table that faced the right direction." An hour she'd spent nursing a glass
of wine and eating bar mix. "Give me some credit I merely told him that
the mental vision of scalpels cutting into my breasts had the same negative
effect on me that guns seemed to have on him. So, since cold steel seems to be
destined to come between us, we might as well give both our qis a break
and make it an early night."
"I was really hoping you two would work out. What
about the Century City investment banker? Mike something? He was good
looking."
"His name was Mark Mitchell." Regan had met
him after a real estate developer got shot execution style in a parking garage.
Since Mark had discovered the body, Regan had interviewed him, then given him
her card in case he thought of anything that might prove useful to the
investigation. He'd called that night to ask her out. She'd declined, not
wanting to cross the professional/personal line she'd always firmly maintained.
It hadn't taken long to apprehend the shooter, a
bumbling first-time hit-for-hire guy. The day the jury found him guilty, she'd
received another call from Mark Mitchell. This time she'd made the mistake of
taking him up on his offer of a late dinner.
"He kept an iguana named Gordon Gekko in his
bedroom." And revealed he'd always viewed the "Greed is good"
character Michael Douglas played in Wall Street as a role model.
"That is a little weird," Van allowed.
"You could always go out with someone on the force."
"I'd rather shoot myself than date a cop."
She'd no sooner spoken when she wished she could take the words back. Rhasheed
was an L.A. county sheriff's department deputy. "Hell, I'm sorry.
Rhasheed's an exception."
"He's special, all right." Van's smile
showed she hadn't taken offense. "We were supposed to go out tonight to
celebrate the fifth anniversary of when we met."
Then they'd gotten called out on what could well prove
a wild-goose chase. It was tough enough to have a normal life when you were a
street cop. Homicide detectives might as well forget about relationships,
romance, or any type of social life, especially on weekends, when the majority
of murders occurred.
On the rare occasion she stopped to think about it,
Regan found it ironic that she could have grown up to be so different from her mother,
but still end up in a career that discouraged marriage and a family.
She checked out the block-long white limousine gliding
past. When she'd worked in Vice, she'd busted a prostitution ring doing a
bang-up business using limos as rolling motel rooms. Since this one had a Just
Married sign in the back window, she let it pass.
It was turning out to be a peaceful night in the City
of Angels, almost as if the city had done an aerial spraying of Valium, but
neither Regan nor Van commented on it, since another Murphy's Law of police
work declared that unspeakable evils would befall anyone who said, "Sure
is a quiet night."
The rain streaking down the windshield of the
black-and-white patrol car had driven most of the drunks, batterers, and
robbers indoors, leaving only the neighborhood's homeless sleeping beneath
soaked newspapers and plastic garbage bags. The souvenir shops selling Marilyn
Monroe posters, movie clapboards, and maps to stars' homes were closed, their
heavy metal shutters drawn down.
There'd been a time, before Regan was born, when the
area that made up her precinct had been the glittering home of the motion
picture industry. Glamorous movie stars had dined at the Brown Derby, drank
champagne from crystal flutes, and attended premieres at Grauman's Chinese
Theater in limousines. But T-shirt shops, check-cashing joints, and
pornographic bookstores had invaded the once elite neighborhood, and addicts,
prostitutes, and homeless men and women were as common a sight as Japanese
tourists.
Hollywood was beginning to make a comeback, but Regan
knew that even if the area did succeed in becoming Los Angeles' version of New
York's Time Square, the dispossessed would simply pack up and drift somewhere
else.
"This tip had better pan out," she muttered
as they cruised by the Rock & Roll Denny's. "Even the working girls
have enough sense to come in out of this lousy weather."
Inside the bright, twenty-four-hour restaurant,
forlorn prostitutes seeking relief from the rain hunkered in the booths,
drinking pots of coffee, smoking packs of cigarettes, and rubbing feet sore
from pounding the pavement in ankle-breaking five-inch platform heels, all the
time keeping an eye on the street outside the restaurant window in the unlikely
event a silver Lotus might happen to cruise by.
Unfortunately, the average john who frequented these
blocks was no Richard Gere, and the Pretty Woman Cinderella story about the
tycoon falling in love with the heart-of-gold hooker was so far removed from
these mean streets it could have been filmed on Mars.
"Word is, Double D's back from Fresno to hit some
guy from the Eighth Street Regulars who's been poaching on his territory."
Van repeated the phone tip that had gotten Regan to leave the warmth of the
station. The seventeen-year-old with the yellow sheet as long as a Russian
novel was as elusive as smoke. "He's got a new girlfriend and is laying
low at her grandmother's place. The old lady got busted two years ago for
running a crack house with her son and grandkids."
"And they say the American family's in decline.
How come Granny isn't in prison?"
"Because she looks like she should be baking
cookies rather than cooking dope. The DA couldn't get the grand jury to
indict."
Regan shook her head in disgust. She'd become a cop
because she'd wanted to make a difference, to help make people's lives better.
But lately she'd begun to feel like a sand castle at high tide. It seemed that
more and more of the idealist she'd been when she'd first put on that blue LAPD
uniform was getting washed away each day.
"You're doing it again," Van said.
"What?"
"Humming that damn song."
"Sorry. Sometimes it gets stuck in my head."
Some people's minds grasped onto jingles; whenever her mind drifted, it tended
to break into "You Are My Sunshine." She'd stopped noticing it years
ago; others, who found it understandably annoying, weren't so fortunate.
A gleaming black Lexus with muddy license plates
caught Regan's attention as it passed in the opposite direction.
The passenger was looking straight ahead. The driver
turned his face, but not before she caught a glimpse of him. Adrenaline sparked
like a hot electrical wire hitting wet pavement. "I'll bet my next pay
grade that's our boy."
"Sure looked like him."
Regan made a U-turn, then cursed as a grizzled,
bearded man clad in camouflage with an American flag sticking out of his
backpack began marching across the street with the determination of the soldier
he'd once been.
"Come on, come on." Her fingers tapped an
impatient drumbeat on the top of the steering wheel. Having suffered from
post-traumatic stress herself, she resisted hitting the siren.
Mad Max was a fixture on the street. Since he claimed
to have served in Vietnam, Regan had once, in a rash moment, asked him if he'd
ever served with her father. He'd taken a look at the photograph she always
carried with her, shook his head, and rattled off a string of gibberish from a
mind burned by drugs, alcohol, and God only knew what kind of flashbacks.
It had, admittedly, been a long shot. But Regan could
never stop herself from asking.
She took off the second Mad Max cleared the lane. That
the vet didn't even glance back when the siren began screeching said a lot
about both the neighborhood and his life.
Regan caught up with the Lexus at a red light just
past Hollywood High. Van tapped the car's description, license number, and tag
into her computer. The light turned green.
The vehicle started out slowly, testing the waters.
Testing Regan.
Every instinct she possessed told Regan this was the
murder suspect who'd managed to elude her for the past forty-five days. If she
didn't nab the kid in another two weeks, she'd be forced to write up a
sixty-day report, the closest thing in the murder business to conceding defeat.
The Lexus picked up speed.
"Come on, admit." The computer, ancient and
as cranky as she herself was feeling, seemed to take forever.
"It's him." Van's voice was edged with
excitement. "He and another gangbanger carjacked the vehicle after
committing an armed robbery at the Hollywood Stars Motel."
"Guess the son of a bitch ran through the five
bucks he stole from that old lady," she muttered.
Last month's beating death of the eighty-five-year-old
woman had been the most heinous thing she'd witnessed during her twelve years
working Los Angeles' meanest streets: five in a patrol car, a year lost to
hospitals and office duty, a year in robbery, another in vice, and the past
four in homicide. Regan was thirty-three years old, but there were times lately
she felt a hundred. And counting.
She flipped on the lights, unsurprised when the driver
rebated. Regan took off after it, Code 3, blue lights flashing, siren whooping.
Chapter Three
Blue Bayou, Louisiana
So," Jack Callahan asked His brother, "how's
the search for a new sheriff going?"
"Lousy." Nate frowned as he tackled another
stack of evidence bags from the police property room. Since they'd been
collecting dust for decades, he figured they should be properly dealt with
before he could begin remodeling the office. Opening the bags was like
unearthing an ancient city; the deeper he dug, the older the evidence.
"I wasted Monday morning interviewing yet another
Dirty Harry wannabe from Shreveport, who opted for early retirement to save
himself from being suspended for excess brutality on a prisoner. There's a
lawsuit pending on that case, no surprise."
The envelope held a slug that, according to the
accompanying papers, had been dug out of a wall.
"Do you remember when Henri Dubois and Julian
Breaux fought that duel at Lafitte's Landing?"
"Sure." Jack dug into his brown paper bag
and pulled out one of the thick mufrulettas he'd brought along for lunch with
his brother. "It was Mardi Gras," he said around a mouthful of deli
meats and cheese. "They got the fool idea firearms were the best way to
settle who'd get the first dance with Christy Marchand." He frowned
thoughtfully. "I recall them both being too drunk to hit their targets,
but I don't remember what happened next."
Nate skimmed the papers. "Dad arrested them, they
pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct, and they were sentenced to give ten
percent of their crawfish catch to the parish food bank for the next six
months."
"That sounds like something the judge would come
up with," Jack agreed.
"Not that there was any excuse for shooting guns
off in a crowded dance hall, but I can kind of understand how they might have
been moved to passion. I was in love with Christy myself in those days."
The Blue Bayou Mardi Gras queen had gone on to be Miss
Louisiana, landed a job as weather girl on KATC in Lafayette, then began
working her way up the network ladder through larger and larger markets. She
was currently a foreign correspondent for NBC's nightly news, and although her
long, dark hair was now a short, perky blond bob, Nate still enjoyed looking at
her.
"That's not surprising, since you tended to fall
in love with just about every girl in the parish on a regular basis." Jack
took a swig from a can of Dr Pepper. "Though I have to admit, Christy was
pretty cute. So, got any other hot sheriff prospects?"
"Don't I wish." Since the case had been
settled a dozen years ago, Nate tossed the papers and the slug into the
circular file.
"How about the guy who was just leaving when I
got here? The goofy-looking long-haired guy with the gold stud in his
ear."
"Strange criticism from a man who returned to
town sportin' an earring himself."
"I'm not applying to be a cop. Besides, Dani
likes it. She says it reminds her of a pirate." Jack flashed a rakish grin
Nate had to agree was damn piratelike.
Jack had always been the most dashing of the three
Callahan brothers. And the wildest, having earned his teenage nickname, Bad
Jack, the old-fashioned way: by working overtime to be the baddest-assed
juvenile delinquent in the parish.
"The guy was some sprout eater from Oregon who
wanted me to know right off the bat that he refused to carry a gun because he
was a pacifist. Then asked me if there were any good vegan restaurants in
town."
"Not much call for tofu burgers here in hot sauce
country."
"That's pretty much what I told him."
"Question is, why he'd want the job in the first
place?"
"He's a former soc major." The scent wafting
from the bag was mouthwatering. One bite confirmed that the sandwich tasted as
good as it smelled. "Seems he's got new liberal ideas 'bout law enforcement
that none of the other cities he's interviewed with seem eager to
embrace."
"Let me guess. The theory is based on the idea
that all those murderers and rapists up there in Angola Prison are merely
victims of a harsh, vengeance-driven society."
"From the little I let him tell me, that's pretty
much it."
"Hell, that's an old retread idea."
"Well, like I said, it probably isn't real
popular in the cop community. Which was why he was willing to come all this way
to interview."
"So he thought we were so desperate we'd be
willing to end up with him by default?"
"That'd be my guess. I explained that even though
the last crime spree was Anton Beloit's kid taking that can of John Deere green
paint and spraying his love for Lurleen Woods on the side of every bridge in
the parish, I'd prefer the chief law enforcement officer in Blue Bayou to carry
a weapon. And know how to use it. He told me he'd have to think about it. I
told him not to bother."
"Lucky for you Blue Bayou's a peaceful
place."
"Since the town's entire police force consists of
Ruby Bernhard, who mostly sits behind her desk and crochets afghans for her
hoard of grandchildren while waitin' for someone to call in a crime so she can
play dispatcher; Henri Pitre, who refuses to tell me his age, but has gotta be
on the long side of seventy; and Dwayne Johnson, who's eager enough but green
as Billy Bob Beloit's damn paint, I sure as hell hope things stay
peaceful."
Nate studied the
former-DEA-agent-turned-thriller-novelist over the top of the crusty round loaf
of French bread. "I don't suppose you're startin' to get bored, being out
of law enforcement these past few years?"
"Nope." Jack shook his head. "I figure
it's damn near impossible to get bored with a perfect life with the world's
sexiest pregnant wife, two terrific good-lookin' kids, a great dog, and getting
to tell lies for a living."
The yellow dog in question lifted her huge head,
looking for a handout. She swallowed the piece of cheese Jack tossed her in one
gulp.
"Nice to hear you put Dani in-first place."
"We might have taken a thirteen-year detour, but
she's always been first. Always will be." Jack took another hit of the Dr
Pepper. "You know, marriage could be the best invention going, right up
there with the combustible engine. You might want to give it a try
someday."
"No offense, bro, but I'd rather—"
"I know." Jack shook his head. "Go
skinny-dippin' with gators. Anyone ever tell you that line's getting a bit
old?"
Nate frowned. Three weeks later, and the debacle with
Charlene still irked. "Do you think I have a Peter Pan complex?"
"Probably."
This was not the answer Nate had been expecting. Or
hoping for.
"That's why it's gonna be so much fun watching
when you take the fall, you," Jack said with a pirate's flash of white
teeth.
"I wouldn't hold your breath, you. 'Cause it's
not going to happen."
"That's pretty much what I said, before Dani came
back to town. And I'll bet Finn sure as hell never imagined getting hitched to
some Hollywood actress." Jack shrugged. "When it's right, it's
right."
"Marriage might be right for you guys, but it's
not in the cards for me. Long-term relationships are just too much heavy
lifting."
"Never known you to be afraid of hard work."
"It's different in construction. Eventually
things come to an end."
"I doubt Beau Soleil will ever be done."
"That's beside the point."
"And that point was?"
"When I'm building something or restoring an old
house, eventually I have something to show for the effort, something I can be
proud of. The more time you put into a place like Beau Soleil, the better it
gets. The more time you put into a relationship with a woman, the more likely
it is that you'll mess it up. Then everyone just ends up angry, with hurt
feelings. The trick is to know when to bail, before you get to that pissed-off
point."
Granted, he hadn't pulled that off with Charlene, but
usually he was able to remain friends with a woman after the sheets had cooled.
"Never met a woman yet who didn't feel the need
to change a man," he grumbled.
"Dani's never tried to change me. Guess that's
'cause I'm already perfect."
"Talk about telling lies." Nate looked out
the window at the January rain streaming down the glass. "Do you ever just
want to take off?"
"I did that thirteen years ago," Jack
reminded his brother. "But like the old sayin' goes, there's no place like
home."
"Easy for you to say, since you've been just
about every place in the world."
"That's true." Jack studied him more
closely. "Is there a point to this?"
"I've never been anywhere."
"You went away to college."
"Tulane's in New Orleans, which is not exactly
much of a journey. And I came home my freshman year."
"When Maman was dying." Jack frowned.
"I don't know if I ever thanked you for that—"
"That's what brothers are for. Finn was tied up
with that manhunt, and you were off somewhere in the Yucatan Peninsula chasing
dope dealers."
Since he'd loved his maman dearly, Nate had never
regretted his actions. He was happy in Blue Bayou; it was where his friends
were, where his life was. Life was good. And if truth be told, there wasn't
anywhere else in the world he'd rather live.
But there were still times, on summer Saturday
afternoons, when he'd be watching a ball game on TV and wonder whether if he'd
stayed in school and not given up the athletic scholarship that had paid his
tuition, he might have made it to the pros. After all, the scouts had called
him a phenom, possibly the most natural third baseman since Brooks Robinson.
He stifled a sigh. Yesterday's ball scores, as Jake
Callahan used to say. He tore open the last evidence envelope.
"Hey, look at this." He fanned the yellowed
papers out like a hand of bouree cards.
His brother leaned forward. "Stock
certificates?"
"Yeah. For Melancon Petroleum."
Jack whistled. "They've got to be pretty old,
since Melancon must've quit givin' out paper certificates at least two decades
ago. If they're real, I'll bet they're worth some dough. 'Specially now that
the company's rumored to be bought up by Citgo."
'There's also a death certificate for a Linda
Dale."
"The name doesn't ring a bell."
"It was thirty-one years ago. Back when Dad first
got elected sheriff." Nate frowned. "She died of carbon monoxide
poisoning."
"Heating accident?"
"No." His frown deepened.
"Suicide." He flipped through a small ringed notebook. "But Dad
didn't buy that."
"He thought she was murdered?"
"Yeah," Nate said.
"Blue Bayou's only ever had two murders that I
know of. That one back when we were in high school, when Remy Renault got
wasted and shot that tin roof salesman he found sleeping with his wife."
"I remember that."
He also remembered the long, hot, frustrating summer
when Mrs. Renault hired him to mow her lawn and clean her pool. She'd liked to
sunbathe topless. When he got a bit older and realized that she'd been
purposefully tormenting him, Nate had been real grateful he hadn't been the one
Remy found rolling in the sheets with the woman who'd made the models in Finn's
Playboy magazines look downright anorexic.
He skimmed some more of the notes, written in a wide,
scrawling script not that different from his own. "Seems Dad even went up
to Baton Rouge, to try and get the state cops to come in on the case, but while
he was gone, Dale's sister showed up and had the body cremated."
"Which would have destroyed any physical evidence
he needed to make a case."
"Yeah. But the ashes aren't all the sister took
away with her. There was a toddler in the house. Dad figured she'd been left
alone about forty-eight hours. She'd obviously been scrounging for food; he
found some empty cookie packages on the kitchen floor and an empty bread
wrapper in her room."
"Shit. What about Mr. Dale? Where was he while
all this was going on?"
"Appears there wasn't any Mr. Dale."
"Single woman havin' a baby out of wedlock sure
wasn't unheard of three decades ago," Jack said. "But it could've
created a bit of a stir in a small Catholic town like this one."
"That's what Dad thought." It wasn't that
people were more uptight here than other places around the country; people in
Blue Bayou certainly knew how to pass a good time. But whatever sexual
revolution had taken place during the sixties and seventies had been kept
behind closed doors.
"Linda Dale was a lounge singer at Lafitte's
Landing. Seems like it would have been hard to save up enough money from
whatever salary and tips she was making to buy all this stock."
"How much does it come to?"
Nate checked out the certificates again and did some
rapid calculation. "The face value back then was twenty-five thousand
dollars."
Jack whistled. "Which means that there's a
thirty-three-year-old woman out there somewhere who's due a tidy inheritance.
Though if Dale was murdered, it's strange the killer would leave the stock
behind."
"The sister was from L.A. When Dad tried to find
her, he ran into a dead end."
"That's not surprising. L.A.'s a big place."
"True." Nate picked up a small bound book.
"But Linda Dale kept herself a journal, too. If we'd never known Maman,
but she'd left behind somethin' that would tell us a little about her and then
someone stumbled across it, wouldn't you want them to try to find you?"
"Mais sure. But finding her's gonna be a long
shot. If Dad couldn't find this Linda Dale's sister back then, what makes you
think you can after all these years?"
"He didn't have the Internet. Besides, we've got
ourselves an ace in the hole. Our special agent big brother."
"Finn quit the Feebs."
"Just 'cause he left the FBI doesn't mean he lost
his talent for trackin' people down. And since he's living in L.A., that's
gotta make things easier."
Nate picked up the phone and began dialing.
Chapter Four
Regan called in to Dispatch, requesting all available
units in the vicinity to respond. While Van called off the intersections as
they sped past them, she floored the gas pedal. The Crown Vic skidded around
the corner and flashed through the rain-slick streets, the high-pitched wail of
the siren shattering the night.
The police-issue sedan was no match for the Lexus, but
the fact that she was a lot better driver was on Regan's side. Working against
her was the twinge of fear in the back of her mind at each cross street. It had
been seven years since the car chase that had nearly cost her her life, and she
still had the scars.
Dammit, homicide detectives didn't do chases. They
showed up after the killing and methodically began working a case that would
take them from a dead body to a live suspect.
"Shit!"
There was a flash from the Lexus. A slug hit the
windshield, shattering it into a spiderweb of cracks.
Regan's already hammering heart was flooded with a
burst of adrenaline as the slug buried itself in the backseat. One of the
reasons she'd worked so hard to make this division was because any adrenaline
rushes were supposed to come from the thrill of putting together all the pieces
of a crime so well that when she showed the finished picture of the puzzle to a
jury chosen at random, those twelve men and women would find one human being
guilty of murdering another. Murder cops weren't supposed to be risking the
lives of innocent civilians, not to mention their own, by acting out the raging
pursuit myth created by movie and television scriptwriters.
"Shots fired," Van reported.
"Shots fired," Dispatch echoed.
"Ten-four."
"That was close," Van said.
"Yeah," Regan agreed grimly, trying not to
think about the fact that her Kevlar vest had been supplied by the lowest
bidder.
The chase had been picked up by at least five patrol
cars. The screaming, flashing light parade, which was now hitting speeds in the
sixties, left Sunset to barrel through a quiet residential neighborhood.
Regan's murder books—a stack of three-ring binders that contained all the homicide
cases she was currently juggling—went sailing onto the floor when she hit a
speed bump full-on.
The Lexus took a corner too tight, tilting onto its
right two wheels and looking in danger of rolling over; Regan backed off a bit
to avoid crashing into it. No sooner had it settled back onto four wheels than
it careened over the center line, sideswiping two vehicles parked on the other
side of the street, taking out two mailboxes and a section of Cyclone fence.
Brakes squealing, it came to a shuddering halt in the front yard of a tidy
1930s bungalow.
Two males exploded from the car and took off into the
shadows.
"Suspects are on foot." Regan gave Dispatch
their description, as best as she'd been able to tell from the spreading yellow
glow of the porch light.
"Copy. All units, suspects are fleeing on foot.
Ten-twenty. Officer needs assistance," the disembodied voice announced as
Regan sprinted between two houses.
She was within inches of the passenger when he swerved
and ran straight into a darkened swimming pool. Water splashed into the air and
over the deck, drenching her already rain-wet sweatshirt and jeans.
"One suspect just landed in a pool," she
reported into the radio, pinned to her sweatshirt. "You scoop out
Flipper," Regan called to Van, who was on her heels. "I'll stick with
Double D."
Having begun running years ago, to get back in shape
after surgery and as rehabilitation, Regan was now nearly the fastest runner in
the precinct. The only guy who could beat her was a former USC running back who
had a good six inches on her and legs as long as a giraffe's.
Heart pounding painfully against her ribs, Regan
dashed through a hedge. As branches scratched her hands and face, all her
attention was focused on her perp. The whop-whop-whop sound of the police helicopter
reverberating overhead told her the cavalry had arrived.
They beamed a light down on the scene, turning it as
bright as day. "Freeze! Police!" she shouted, just like they'd taught
her at the academy. Twelve years on the job, and she'd never seen it work. It
didn't tonight. "Dammit, I said freeze!"
She managed to grab the back of his T-shirt, but since
he was as wet as she was, half her age, and outweighed her by at least fifty
pounds, he jerked free, scrambled to his feet on the wet grass, and took off
again, clearing the fence like an Olympic hurdler.
Regan followed, ripping both her sweatshirt and her
arm on the barbed wire along the top of the fence. The shirt bothered her more
than her arm; she'd just bought it yesterday. "There's thirty dollars down
the damn drain!" she cursed.
They pounded down an alley, splashing through the
puddles formed by countless potholes, past huge dogs barking behind fences.
Just when Regan was sure her lungs were going to burst, she launched herself
into the air and nailed him with a flying tackle that sent them both skidding
across what seemed like a football field's length of gravel. They finally came
to a stop when they crashed headfirst into a group of galvanized metal trash
cans.
"When a police officer says freeze, you're
supposed to stop running!"
"How the hell I supposed to know you're a goddamn
police officer?" he shouted back. "You ain't wearin' no
uniform."
"I suppose you figured all those flashing lights
and sirens were just a parade?" Hugely ticked off, she slammed her knee
into his back, holding him facedown while a pair of uniforms arriving from the
other end of the alley grabbed his arms and legs.
"The guy needs peppering," said one cop, who
had to be a rookie. It was obvious he was having a grand time with all this.
Regan was not.
"We don't need it." One absolute truism in
police work was that you were always downwind from pepper spray. He'd find that
out for himself, but Regan would just as soon not be in the vicinity when it
happened. The perp's elbow slammed into her rib cage, nearly knocking the air
out of her.
Once they'd finally gotten the suspect subdued, she
said, "Congratulations. You win tonight's grand prize by racking up at
least a hundred moving violations. That doesn't begin to cover the carjacking
and motel robbery. And let's not forget the original murder and rape
counts."
Regan snagged one of his wrists. Ignoring the string
of epithets, all colorfully graphic, several anatomically impossible, she
caught the other wrist, then yanked on the plastic restraints. While she missed
the decisive sound of the old metal handcuffs clicking closed, the ratchet
sound of the plastic teeth was still damn satisfying.
"What about my rights?" he shouted between
curses. "I got rights, bitch."
She scooped wet hair out of her eyes. She was
breathing heavily, but felt damn good. "You bet you do. Beginning with the
constitutional right to be a boil on the butt of society. But in case you
haven't figured it out yet, even most of your homeboys draw the line at killing
a little old lady who never did anything but give you a job cleaning up her
yard and made you a glass of lemonade."
With the help of the others, she yanked him to his
feet and recited the Miranda warning she suspected he'd first heard in grammar
school. Then, ignoring the pain in her solar plexus and the burning of the
slice on her arm, she walked him down the middle of the street to one of the
cruisers angled at the curb.
Tonight's bust, as satisfying as it was, would create
a mountain of paperwork. She'd be lucky if she managed a couple hours sleep
before having to show up at the courthouse tomorrow.
* * *
Six hours later Regan had showered, changed, and was
hunched over her laptop keyboard, attacking the stack of report forms, trying
to push yet more paperwork through the byzantine legal system.
You never saw television cops doing paperwork.
Homicide cops on TV only handled one or two cases at a time, and except for the
occasional season-ending cliffhanger, always managed to wrap up the crime in an
hour, minus time for commercials. In real life, a detective was forced to
juggle dozens of old cases while struggling to stay ahead of the deluge of new
ones.
The motto of the LAPD homicide division was "Our
day begins when yours ends." What it didn't mention was that it was not
uncommon for a homicide detective to work around the clock.
"So," Barnie Williams, who was two months
away from retirement and a house on the beach in Mexico, said from the
neighboring desk, "this guy calls nine-one-one and says his wife saw a light
on out in the garage. He looked out the bedroom window, and sure enough, there
are some guys moving around in there, looking like they're loading up stuff.
"Dispatch explains that it's Saturday night, cops
are all tied up with more vital shit, there's no one in the vicinity, but stay
put and they'll send someone out as soon as possible.
"Guy says okay, and hangs up. A minute later, he
calls nine-one-one again and says there's no hurry sending the cops out,
because he just shot and killed all the guys in his garage."
He'd succeeded in capturing Regan's reluctant
attention. "So, what happened?"
"Well, the shit hits the fan, and it takes less
than three minutes for half a dozen cars to pull up on the scene, including
Rockford and me, Armed Response Unit, and a producer and cameraman from that TV
show Cops, who just happened to pick tonight to ride around with a couple
patrol officers."
"Jones from Rampart," elaborated Williams's
partner, Case Rockford. He was leaning back in his chair, hand-tooled lizard cowboy
boots up on the desk. "And that rookie with the Jennifer Lopez ass that
even manages to look fine in blues."
"Her headlights aren't bad, either," a
detective from across the room volunteered.
"She spends her own bucks to have her uniform
privately tailored," offered Dora Jenkins, a female detective. "If
she didn't, her ass would look as big as Montana. As for the headlights,
they're silicone."
"No way," Williams said.
"Way. She got them back when she was a Hooters
waitress. The restaurant loaned her the bucks for the surgery."
"Are you saying those Hooters girls aren't
naturally endowed?" another detective asked with mock surprise.
"So what happened with the guy who shot the
robbery suspects?" Regan asked Williams in an attempt to return the
typically wandering cop conversation to its original track.
"Oh, turns out they're all alive, and the
department's own J. Lo and her partner get to make a bust for the
cameras," Rockford replied. "They're happy as white on rice, but
Barnie and I were majorly pissed, 'cause we were at the drive-through at Burger
King and had just gotten our Whoppers when the call came in."
"I hate cold burgers," Williams muttered.
Rockford picked up the story again. "So Barnie
gets in this guy's face and yells, 'I thought you said you killed them!' The
man just stands there, puffing away on a cigarette, cool as can be, and says,
'I thought you guys said there weren't any cops available.'"
The story drew a mixture of laughs and groans. Wishing
caffeine came with an IV option, Regan shook her head and returned to her
typing.
"Hey, Hart," called a deep voice roughened
by years of cigarettes.
Since another Murphy's Law of police work states that
computers only delete reports when they are nearly done, Regan saved her work
for the umpteenth time and looked up at the uniformed cop standing in the
doorway.
"What's up, Jim?"
"There's a guy here to see you. Says it's
personal."
"Obviously he doesn't know anything about cop
shops." She glanced around at the bank of desks crowded together, files
that no longer fit on desktops piled onto the floor beside them, telephones
jangling, computer keys tapping, the cross conversations that kept anything
from being personal.
"Should I bring him on back?"
"No need," a drawled voice offered.
The cop spun around, one hand going instinctively to
his sidearm; Regan stood up, pulled her .38 from the desk drawer, and quickly
skimmed a measuring look over him.
Six-two, one-ninety, blue eyes, brown hair. No scars,
tattoos, or identifying marks that she could see. He was wearing jeans that
looked faded from use, rather than any trendy stone or acid wash. His
unabashedly becoming bomber jacket was unzipped, revealing a blue shirt that
whether by accident or design matched his eyes; his leather boots were scuffed
and, like his jeans, looked well worn. He was carrying a manila envelope.
He didn't look dangerous. Then again, neither had
Ronald Lawson, that Robert Redford lookalike serial killer who'd finally been
arrested by the FBI last summer.
"How did you get back here?" It was her
street voice, controlled, but sharp enough to cut granite.
"Detective Kante was just coming in and was kind
enough to show me the way."
A dimplelike crease flashed at Van, who'd just arrived
with coffee from the espresso shop across the street.
"Hey, he came with a letter of
recommendation." Van smiled up at the guy with the warmth of an old friend
as she handed Regan the brown cardboard cup.
"A recommendation?" Regan lifted her brow,
the only one of the three not smiling.
"From the FBI." He took a folded piece of
paper from his shirt pocket and held it out. "Well, to be completely
accurate, Finn's a former special agent. He said he worked with you on the
Valdez murder."
Valdez was one of Lawson's victims, which could only
mean the letter was from Finn Callahan. Regan snatched it from his hand and
skimmed the few lines, which were as tense and to the point as the special
agent had always been, merely suggesting that she might want to hear Nate
Callahan out. It was signed "Just-the-Fucking-Facts-Ma'am-Finn."
Since Finn Callahan wasn't one for chitchat, Regan
suspected he hadn't told anyone about the late-night argument they'd had after
eighteen hours of canvassing the UCLA area in record-breaking heat, searching
for witnesses in the Lawson case. Finn's cut-and-dried method of keeping
conversation to the subject certainly allowed for more people to be
interviewed, but she'd insisted that by allowing them to chat a bit, you often
learned important facts the witnesses might not have realized they'd known. Regan
rarely lost her temper, but too little sleep and too much caffeine made her
blow up that night. She'd shouted at him, shoved impotently against his chest
(the man was huge), and accused him of being Just the Fucking Facts Ma'am Finn
Callahan.
He'd surprised her by laughing, and instead of causing
things to escalate, her accusation cleared the air. From then on, they'd worked
out, their own version of good cop/gruff cop.
It had taken Finn another year to bring Lawson down,
but the investigation had been a thorough one, with enough evidence gathered
that had the killer been tried for the death of the UCLA coed, the DA would
have won a conviction.
"I didn't know Finn Callahan had a brother."
"Actually, he's got two," Nate said.
"There's another you might have heard of. Jack. He writes books."
That was putting it mildly. Jack Callahan was a former
DEA agent turned blockbuster best-selling author. Touted as a new generation's
Joseph Wambaugh, he'd soared to the top of the lists with his first novel.
Regan had bought all his books for his women characters, who were more richly
drawn than those written by most men. Especially former cops turned writers,
who, even if they managed to make it past the Madonna/whore stereotype, too
often seemed to portray females as victims.
"With both an FBI agent and a DEA agent in your
family, you should be aware that wandering around in a police station can get
you shot." Why was it the good-looking men were always the stupid ones?
"I realize that, officer."
"Detective." For some reason, Regan felt a
need to establish rank in this case.
"Detective," he agreed. His blue eyes
warmed; gorgeous white teeth flashed. "Which is why I enlisted Detective
Kante's help."
"Want me to throw him out?" the desk cop
asked.
Now that she knew the man standing in front of her was
Finn's brother, Regan could see the family resemblance. "No, that's
okay." His eyes were a deeper blue than Finn's chillier hue, his
sun-tipped hair chestnut rather than Finn's black, and his body lankier and more
loose-limbed. He was also more casually boyish, but the masculine
self-confidence was all too familiar. It had surrounded Finn like an aura, it
emanated from the gritty black-and-white author photograph on Jack Callahan's
novels, and Nate Callahan, for all his outward, easygoing charm, possessed it
in spades.
She reached for the phone.
"If you're calling Finn to find out why I'm here,
he won't be able to tell you. Because he doesn't know."
Regan folded her arms across the front of her black
silk blouse, angled her head, and narrowed her eyes. "Why not?"
"Because I didn't want to bother him with
details."
Details. She already had so many damn details to deal
with, she felt as if she was being nibbled to death by killer ducks.
"Look, if your car got towed and you need help getting it out of impound,
you're out of luck, because we don't do that here. Nor do I fix speeding
tickets. If you want me to arrest someone, unless you're talking about a
murder, I don't have the time to get involved, but you're free to file a complaint
with the desk sergeant."
She picked up a heavy blue binder. The murder book
contained everything she'd gathered during the course of her investigation, and
she'd spent the few hours between last night's bust and this morning memorizing
pertinent facts for today's court testimony.
He tucked his thumbs into the front pockets of his
jeans, rocked back on his heels, and appeared to contemplate the matter. Regan had
participated in countless interrogations over the years, and had learned from
some of the best cops in the business, but she'd never met anyone who could
draw a pause out so long.
"My car's back home," he said finally.
"I don' know anyone who's been murdered, at least not lately, and except
for the street crew that spent last night jackhammering through the pavement
outside my hotel room window, I don't really have any complaints."
His slow, easy smile was a contrast to the thoughtful
look he skimmed over her face. Even knowing that after all the surgeries she'd
undergone, her facial scars were more imagined than real, she was still
discomforted by such silent scrutiny. Especially from a man whose own face
could have washed off a cathedral ceiling.
"As for why I came, well, it's a long
story."
"Then you're really out of luck. Because I have
to be in court in thirty"—she glanced down at her watch—"make that
twenty-five minutes. And counting."
"That's okay. I'll ride along with you, and we
can talk on the way."
"The LAPD police force is not a taxi service. And
even if I were willing to allow a civilian to tag along, which I'm not, there
wouldn't be any conversation, because I'll be going over the details of my
testimony on the way."
"Finn's a stickler for details, too." The
nicks and scars on the hand he skimmed over his hair seemed at odds with his pretty
face. "We can talk over lunch."
"I wasn't planning to eat lunch." She'd be
lucky to score a candy bar from the courthouse vending machine. "So, why
don't we just cut to the chase, and you can tell me what you're doing
here."
"Like I said, it's a long story. And
personal."
"I don't want to offend you, Mr. Callahan, but
unless you've committed homicide, I'm not terribly interested in your personal
life."
"Not mine, chиre. Yours."
Regan would have sworn there was no longer anything
that could surprise her. She would have been wrong.
"It won't take very long," he coaxed when
she didn't immediately respond. "If I wanted to dump it on you without any
explanation, I would have used the mail and not bothered flying all this way.
So, since my flight back home doesn't leave until this evening, how about I
jus' come to the courthouse and we can talk after you wrap up your
testimony."
His voice might be as smooth as whiskey sauce over a
rich bread pudding, but she refused to be charmed. "They don't have phones
in Louisiana?"
"Sure they do. Even in Blue Bayou. That's a nice
little town in the south of the state, down by the Gulf," he volunteered.
"I'm mayor."
"Good for you." He was certainly the
antithesis of the stereotypical sweaty, overweight, south-of-the-Mason-Dixon-line
politician wearing a rumpled white suit, seated on a veranda in a rocking
chair, sipping from a silver flask of Southern Comfort. "And the reason
you didn't just pick up a telephone and call was , . . ?"
"I thought you'd rather talk face-to-face."
She really did have to get going. Judge Otterbein, a
stickler fox time, ran his courtroom with the precision of a Swiss watch.
Once again he seemed to sense her thoughts. "I
promise I won't say a word on the way to the courthouse."
The room had gone unnaturally quiet. Aware they were
drawing the attention of every detective in the bull pen, she reached for the
gray wool jacket draped over the back of her chair. Moving with surprising
speed for someone so seemingly laid-back, he beat her to it.
"I can do that," she muttered, taken off
guard as he held it out for her.
"Sure you can," he said agreeably. "But
my daddy taught me to help a lady into her coat."
"I'm a detective, not a lady," she reminded
him as she slid her arms into the sleeves. "And your father might want to
think about joining the twenty-first century."
"Now, that might be a little hard for him to do.
Seein' how he's passed on."
"I'm sorry. I didn't know."
He shrugged. "Don't worry about it. I'm not
surprised Finn didn't mention it, since my big brother's not real talkative on
a good day. Anyway, it was a long time ago."
A less observant woman might have missed the shadow
that moved across his lake blue eyes. Regan didn't need her detective skills to
spot the No Trespassing sign. Nate Callahan wasn't that old, she mused as they
walked out of the station toward the police garage. Maybe thirty, thirty-one
tops. So, how long was a long time ago?
Not that she cared.
Since the remote hadn't worked for weeks, she unlocked
both car doors with the key. "Since I like and respect your brother, I'm
willing to hear you out," she said. "But until court's adjourned, I
have more important things to focus on. Say one word, and I'll have to shoot
you."
"Works for me," he said agreeably as he
climbed in beside her.
"Fasten your seatbelt." She jerked her own
shut.
Neither spoke as they cruised into the steady stream
of traffic, engine valves rattling. Since the teenage Front Street Crip
defendant was the son of a city council woman, this was one of her more
high-profile murder cases. TV news vans, their satellite uplinks pointed
skyward, lined the street outside the courthouse. Wanting to avoid an
appearance on the six-o'clock news, Regan pulled into the underground parking
garage.
"I know I promised to keep my mouth shut, but you
wouldn't shoot me if I say jus' one little thing, would you?"
"What?"
He turned toward her, putting his hand on the back of
her seat. A standard seduction ploy that hadn't worked since she was fourteen
and Tom Hardinger had copped a feel while they'd been sitting in the back row
of the Village Theater in Westwood, watching Indiana Jones and the Temple of
Doom.
Apparently undeterred by the gun in its holster on the
waistband of her skirt, he leaned toward her, close enough so Regan could smell
the coffee and Juicy Fruit on his breath. Close enough to make her muscles
tense. Too close for comfort.
"You sure do smell good, chиre."
"Detective." She cut the engine and climbed
out of the driver's seat. "And I'm not wearing perfume."
His warm blue gaze fastened on hers over the roof of
the car. Regan's stomach fluttered. Telling herself that's what she got for
skipping breakfast, she ignored it.
"I know." His grin was slow and sexy and had
undoubtedly seduced legions of southern belles. "Detective, chиre."
Steeling herself against that bone-melting smile, she
turned and began walking across the garage with long, determined strides, heels
tapping on the concrete floor.
For Finn's sake, she'd listen to whatever Nate
Callahan had to say, which she suspected wasn't nearly as personal or
intriguing as he'd tried to make it sound. Then, before the sun sank into the
Pacific, she'd send the man home and get back to chasing the bad guys.
Chapter Five
She was realty something. Oh, not his type, of course,
Nate had been telling himself from the moment he'd walked into the squad room
and spotted her sitting behind her desk, her forehead furrowed in concentration
as she typed away at blinding speed. In fact, he wasn't even sure he liked her,
which was unusual, since he tended to like most everyone he met. Especially
females.
She was tall and willowy, but not at all skinny. Her
arms, revealed by the short-sleeved blouse she'd covered up with her jacket,
were firm in a way that suggested she worked out regularly. Her hands were
slender, her long fingers with their unpolished nails looking far more suited
to playing the harp in some southern drawing room than pulling a trigger.
Her lips, which were neither too thin nor kewpie-doll
full, but just right, were unpainted. Her hair was styled in a short, thick cut
in order, he imagined, to appear more cop than woman. But it wasn't working,
because he figured most men—himself included—would be tempted to run their
hands through those glossy strands.
The discreet pearl earrings were all wrong. Nate
mentally exchanged them for gleaming hoops that would bring out the gold in her
whiskey-hued eyes. She'd unbuttoned only the top button on her blouse, and in
his mind, Nate unbuttoned another. Then one more.
What was she wearing beneath that unadorned blouse?
Something cotton and practical? Or a bit of feminine fluff and lace? The mixing
of the tailored charcoal wool suit and silk blouse suggested she was a woman of
contrasts.
Her skirt was slim, ending at her knees when she was
standing, but revealing an enticing flash of firm, .stocking-clad thigh when
she crossed her legs.
Like the earrings, the neat and tidy suit was all
wrong for her. She was a woman born to wear rich jewel tones. Nate had no
trouble imagining the smooth flesh of her breasts framed by emerald silk.
He listened as the defense attorney battered away at
her for an hour, the woman's voice rising to stridency as she paced the floor
in front of the witness stand, challenging everything about the investigation,
attacking the chain of evidence, the veracity of the witness reports, Detective
Regan Hart's possible personal prejudice.
"I do have a personal prejudice," Regan
agreed.
At the table, the teenage defendant, wearing a suit so
new Nate was surprised it didn't still have the price tag hanging from the
sleeve, smirked.
"I'm prejudiced against the idea that a human
life in some LA. zip codes is worth less than one in a more affluent
neighborhood; and that if several hundred American soldiers were killed in an
overseas mission, politicians all over this country would be clamoring for a
change in policy, yet when hundreds of citizens die every year in areas of this
city that a politician never ventures into without police guard, and then only
at election time—
"Objection, Your Honor." The defense
attorney popped up like a jack-in-the-box.
Regan didn't spare her a glance, just kept her gaze
directed on the jury as she finished her declaration. "There appears to be
a business-as-usual attitude toward murder. And I hope I'll always be
prejudiced against the cold-blooded murder of a child."
"Objection," the attorney repeated with more
strength,
"Sustained," the judge agreed. "Witness
will keep her answers to the questions and refrain from making any
speeches."
"I'm sorry, Your Honor." She turned back to
the attorney. "Could you repeat the question?"
There was a ripple of laughter among the spectators.
The judge frowned, and the bailiff warned everyone to be quiet.
The attorney, who looked angry enough to chew nails
and spit out staples, tried again. "Do you have any personal prejudice
against my client's race or socioeconomic status?"
Her expression didn't change, but watching her closely
as he was, Nate saw the flash of irritation. "No."
The two women's eyes held, and Nate doubted there was
a person in the room who couldn't hear the clash of swords.
"So," the attorney began again, "let's
walk through what you did when you arrived on the scene. Step by step."
"If we're going to do that, we're breaking for
lunch," the judge decreed. "Court's adjourned until one-thirty."
He slammed down his wooden gavel, signaling the midday
recess. While Regan locked herself away with the DA, planning strategy, Nate
went next door to a bar and grill, ate an order of wings, and watched a lissome
blond on the bar television breathlessly report the latest in the case that
seemed to have captured the city's attention. Although the DA had apparently
fought it, television cameras had been brought into the courtroom, the better,
he thought, for the defense attorney, who appeared prone to dramatics.
"Good-looking broad," the bartender said,
watching a replay of Regan's testimony while spritzing seltzer into glasses for
the lunch crowd. "For a cop."
Nate agreed.
"She comes in here every once in a while. Doesn't
talk much, just orders a Coke, or maybe a glass of white wine at the end of the
day. I figure she might be a former waitress, 'cause she tips real good."
Nate took a drink from his pilsner glass of draft.
"What's the prevailing opinion on this case?"
"The evidence against the gangbanger is rock
solid, but his mother has gotten her kid his own private dream team, so who
knows how the jury's going to vote." He shrugged. "Folks seem to
respond to star power."
Watching the jury as the questioning resumed after
lunch, Nate worried about that. Unlike the defense, Detective Regan Hart's tone
remained cool, matter-of-fact, and, like the rest of her, almost too much in
control. While he wasn't any expert, he wondered if she might not be better off
appealing as much to the jury members' emotions as to their heads. She was
beginning to remind Nate more and more of Finn. What would it take, he
wondered, to make the woman relax?
As she stepped down from the witness stand, Nate found
himself wondering how cool and collected the detective would be when she
learned his reason for coming here to L.A.
* * *
It was over. Despite some initial discomfort caused by
Nate Callahan watching her so intently, Regan had managed to stay calm, cool,
and professional. She hadn't let them see her sweat, and by the time she'd finished
her testimony, everyone knew that the baby-faced defendant was guilty as sin.
Regan knew it, the defense team knew it, the judge knew it, and you didn't have
to be a psychic to sense that the majority of the jury members, who'd remained
engaged but could no longed look the kid in the eye, had known it, too.
Which was why, of course, the defense attorney had
suddenly asked for a recess minutes before the case closed. The deal was
swiftly cut by ' those Great Compromisers, the lawyers on both sides.
Nate Callahan was waiting for her outside the
courtroom. "Good job. You sure as hell impressed me."
"Thank you, Mr. Callahan, but impressing you is
not high on my list of priorities."
"It's Nate," he said easily, falling into
step beside her, adjusting his long-legged stride to hers. "You don't seem
real pleased with the out' come."
She stopped in her tracks and looked up at him.
"Why should I be pleased?"
"He's goin' to prison."
"For second-degree murder." She shook her
head, still fuming. "What the hell does that mean? How can eight-year-old
Ramon Consuelo be second-degree dead?" She raked a hand through her hair.
"He's one hundred percent dead, dammit." She would have much
preferred a slam-dunk win over a lousy, convenient plea bargain.
"You did your best," he said mildly.
"Which Mrs. Consuelo seemed to appreciate."
"He was her last living child." Regan
wondered how any woman survived the pain. "Her seven-year-old daughter was
killed six years ago by a hit-and-run drunk driver who swerved into a group of
kids waiting for the school bus. She lost a two-year-old daughter to AIDs back
in the nineties. She hadn't even realized her drug abuser husband had passed
the virus on to her until the baby was born HIV-positive. She's still alive;
the baby isn't. Ramon was her last child and her only son." She blew out a
long, slow breath. "And now she doesn't have him, either."
"It must be hard," he said. "Doin' what
you do, caring like you do."
"Some days are harder than others." As were
the nights when her sleep was haunted by those whose deaths she hadn't managed
to avenge. "What time is your flight?"
"It's a while yet. We can talk over supper."
"Do you have a pen?"
"Sure." He reached into an inside jacket
pocket and pulled out a ballpoint.
Regan ignored it. "Then write this down. I'm not
having dinner with you."
Her hard stare seemed to deflect right off him.
"You have to eat to keep your strength up for playing cops and
robbers."
"I don't consider my job playing."
"It wasn't meant to be taken literally, detective.
Anyone watching you in court today could tell you take your work real
seriously."
"It's become almost a clichй," she murmured.
"But there's a reason the idea of homicide detectives being the ones who
speak for the dead is always showing up in books and movies. Because it's the
truth." She slanted him a look. "But I suppose, being Finn's brother,
you already know that."
"Mais yeah. Finn can be a serious one, he. But
he's loosened up some since he got married."
"I heard about that." Regan had been amazed
that the most serious man she'd ever met had married one of Hollywood's highest
profile actresses. And not just any actress, but the new Bond Girl, for
heaven's sake. You couldn't turn on a television these days without seeing some
promo for the movie.
"He and Julia didn't hit it off right away, but
they're sure happy now."
"That's nice." She meant it. Having had a
front-row seat for the horrific things people who'd once been in love could do
to one another, Regan had become a conscientious objector in the war between
the sexes.
"It'll take a while to tell you my story,"
he said. "So, how about getting a couple burgers and going out to the
beach? I've never been to the Pacific Ocean, but I hear it's real pretty."
That smooth-talking southern steamroller might work
back home in Louisiana, but it wasn't working on Regan. "Look, Mr.
Callahan—"
"Nate," he reminded her with a quick smile.
She waved his correction away with an impatient hand.
"Why don't you tell me—as succinctly as possible—why you've come here, so
I can get back to work, and you can go back to Big Bayou."
"It's Blue Bayou, like the old Orbison song. It
was originally named Bayou Bleu, after all the herons that nest there, but over
the years it's become Anglicized."
"How interesting." She didn't care about how
the damn backwater town had gotten its name. She also wasn't sure this man knew
the meaning of succinct. "Now, if we could just get down to
business?"
"You know, sometimes it's not a bad idea to take
a little break and clear your head." He skimmed a hand over her shoulder,
which stiffened at his touch. "You seem a little tense, detective."
"What I am, is losing patience." The
roughened tip of his fingers brushed against her neck, causing a spurt of her
pulse. "And I don't know how things are done down in the bayou, but
touching an armed woman without asking permission could get you shot here in
the city."
"You thinking of shooting me?"
"The idea is becoming more appealing by the
moment."
Because that lightly stroking touch stimulated
hormones she'd thought she'd locked away in cold storage, Regan pulled away
just as a detective she'd once worked with walked by. Her week with the man had
been spent dodging clumsy passes, and the smile he gave her was close to a
smirk, suggesting he believed more was going on here than a frustrating
conversation.
"Look." Nate dipped his hands into his front
pockets. "We're wasting a lot of that time you said you don't have,
standing around this parking garage arguing. So, how about we just stop
somewhere, pick up some supper, and drive to the beach, where I'll tell you a
little story, then you can drop me off at LAX and I'll be out of your
hair."
Regan sighed in frustration. Since he was turning out
to be as stub' born as his eldest brother, they'd undoubtedly get things over
with a lot faster if she just agreed to dinner.
Nate didn't appear the least bit surprised by her
caving in, which only heightened Regan's irritation as she drove the two blocks
to the Code Ten, a local cop bar and grill named for the police off-duty lunch
code. After another brief argument, which she won, they each paid for their own
burgers, then headed toward the coast.
Chapter Six
This is real nice," Nate said a few minutes later
as they sat on a bench on the Santa Monica pier. The air was cool and crisp,
and scented with salt and faraway places. "And worth the trip."
"Which was about?" She took a waxed wrapped
burger from the bag and nearly moaned at the scent of grilled meat and melted
cheese. She'd become so used to skipping meals, she'd learned not to notice
hunger pangs. Now Regan realized she was starving.
"Like I said, it's a little hard to explain. See,
my daddy was sheriff of Blue Bayou when he was killed in the line of
duty."
She'd just taken a bite, and had a hard time
swallowing. Having attended more funerals than she would have liked, Regan knew
how hard the loss of a cop killed in the line of duty could be on a community.
She also knew how hard not having a father could be on a child.
"That's tough."
She'd been the only kid she knew whose dad had died.
Oh, there'd been lots of divorced dads who only saw their sons and daughters on
weekends, some that had taken off to parts unknown, and a couple of kids whose
mothers had never married their fathers. But to have a parent, even one your
mother had divorced, die? That definitely made you stand out. Different.
"Yeah, it was hard. But like I said, it was a
long time ago."
"How long?"
"Nineteen years this May." The way he didn't
have to pause and think suggested the memory was still fresh in his mind.
"And you were?"
"Twelve." His expression was
uncharacteristically sober. "Anyway,
I was emptyin' out a storage room in the sheriff's
office before doing some remodeling—I'm a contractor—"
"I thought you were a politician."
"Bein' mayor's a volunteer position. Contracting
pays the bills—at least most months. Anyway, I was goin' through some old
evidence envelopes when I came across something that belongs to you."
"That's impossible."
She'd been to Louisiana twice in her life. Once was
five years ago, when she'd given a workshop about protecting crime scenes at a
cop convention in New Orleans; the other was last month, when she'd flown to
Shreveport to bring back a robbery/murder suspect.
"Your mother was Karen Hart, right?"
"I suppose you learned that from Finn."
"I did," he said on a smooth, genial tone
that probably made him a dandy politician back home. "He was going on the
information I gave him from an old police file. It's one of those funny
coincidences, seein' as how you two worked together and all."
He'd just piqued her curiosity again. "What
police file?"
"The one I got your maman's name from."
"Look, Finn Callahan's a crackerjack detective.
In fact, he's the best I've ever met. But even he can screw up occasionally. My
mother was a partner in a law firm. She was not the type of person to end up in
a police file."
"How old are you, detective?"
"I fail to see how my age is relevant to this
conversation."
"According to this file, your mother had a
sister. One who died and left behind a toddler who'd be thirty-three years
old."
Regan took a sip of coffee she had no business
drinking this late in the day. The caffeine would mean another sleepless night.
"News flash, Callahan, I'm not the only thirty-three-year-old woman in the
world. Besides, my mother was an only child."
He pulled a sheaf of papers from the manila envelope
he'd been carrying when he came into the station. "Karen Hart's listed as
Linda Dale's only living relative. Except for a girl baby named on her birth
certificate as Regan Dale."
Regan hated her hesitation in taking the envelope from
his hand. Shaking off an uneasy sense of foreboding, she forced her shoulders
to relax as she skimmed over what appeared to be a valid police report from
Blue Bayou Parish, Louisiana. Then she looked at the copy of
the birth certificate. Linda Dale, whoever she was,
had been twenty-five years old when she'd given birth to a seven-pound,
three-ounce daughter. The father was listed as unknown.
"I've never heard the name Linda Dale. Or Regan
Dale. My name is Hart. It's always been Hart."
"There's a photograph, too." He reached into
the envelope again. "Linda Dale was a real pretty lady. You might find her
a little familiar."
The photograph had obviously been taken in New
Orleans; Regan easily recognized the ornate cast-iron grillwork on the front of
the red brick building. The woman was wearing a red, white, and blue Wonder
Woman costume, suggesting the picture had been taken either at Halloween or
during Mardi Gras. The color had faded over the years, but there was no
mistaking the face smiling back at her.
Impossibly, although the hair was a bright, coppery
red, not brunette, it was her mother's face. It was also much the same face
Regan had seen every morning in her bathroom mirror, until plastic surgeons had
dug out the bits of metal that had torn apart her skin and sculpted her
features into as close an approximation as possible to what she'd been before
that fateful night she'd driven her patrol car into a trap meant to be a
literal dead end.
There was another, more important difference between
her face and the one in the photograph. Regan didn't think she'd ever
experienced the depth of emotion glowing in Linda Dale's light brown eyes. It
was obvious that the woman was madly, passionately, in love with whoever was
holding the camera.
Regan felt Nate looking at her, waiting for some
response that she refused to give him. "Interesting." Not wanting him
to think she was afraid to look him in the eye, she lifted her gaze. "But
it doesn't prove anything."
"She looks quite a bit like you."
"Somewhat like me," she corrected. "Her
nose tilts up more than mine does, and her jawline's softer." Hers was
more angular, her manufactured cheekbones sharper. "And her hair's a
different color."
"Women have been known to dye their hair. It's
still a pretty close resemblance."
"Even if we looked like twins separated at birth,
it wouldn't prove anything. They say everyone has a double; in fact, there's a
night bartender at the Code Ten who's a plead ringer for Julia Roberts."
She did not reveal that this unknown woman could be a dead ringer for Karen
Hart, since that would only reinforce his ridiculous argument.
"The evidence folder says she's Linda Dale. Karen
Hart's twin sister," he stressed.
"That still doesn't necessarily prove your point.
If there weren't all sorts of ways to interpret evidence, court dockets
wouldn't be so crowded."
"Good point." He tilted his head and studied
her. Quietly. Thoughtfully. "Trust doesn't come real easy to Finn,
either."
If he was telling the truth, the woman in the
photograph was dead. But Regan felt a familiar, palpable emotional pull. While
she was not a fanciful person, Regan knew that it was, indeed, possible for
people to speak beyond the grave. She'd experienced it before, when the unseeing
eyes of a murder victim seemed to be imploring her to find the killer who'd
ended her life.
"Let me put it this way, Mr. Callahan: just weeks
ago I sat next to a Christmas tree in the living room of a house that looked
like a place the Beav might have grown up in, and listened to a woman insist
that the last she'd seen of her four-year-old daughter was when she'd lost her
at the mall on a visit to see Santa Claus.
"Two days later, I arrested her drug-dealing
boyfriend for being a coconspirator in the mother's plot to kill the little
girl for a thousand-dollar insurance policy. A third friend, whom we also
indicted, had taken her from the mall and out into the desert, where he'd shot
her in the head. She never did get to sit on Santa's lap. And it might have taken
us years to get justice for her, if some teenagers hadn't been riding their new
ATVs out on those dunes and came across her body.
"I've had to step over the body of a woman whose
husband shot her while holding a knife at the throat of their toddler son. When
we showed up in response to a neighbor's nine-one-one call, he hadn't even
bothered to change his bloody clothes, but still swore he was innocent and
insisted on lawyering up.
"I've seen children shot while playing hoops on a
public playground, for no other reason than some other kid needed to kill a
stranger to make it through some gang initiation. And I worked with your
brother for twenty-four-hour days during one of the city's worst heat waves,
trying to nail a sicko pervert who got his kicks torturing young women. No, Mr.
Callahan, I do not trust easily."
He tipped his head again. The California sun, buttery
bright even on this winter day, glinted on his short, spiky hair and turned the
tips to a gleaming gold that not even the most acclaimed Beverly Hills colorist
could have pulled off. Regan found it strange that she, who'd worked years to
perfect her intimidating cop look, could be made to feel so uneasy by his
silent scrutiny.
"You've definitely got a cop's brain inside your
pretty head, Detective Chиre."
She bit into a salty French fry. "And you've
obviously got a chauvinist's brain inside your head, Mayor Callahan."
"For noticin' that you're a good-looking woman?
It's a man's right to look at pretty things." He slid an appreciative
glance over her. The light sparkling in his eyes could have been the lowering
sun glancing off the water, but Regan didn't think so. "Doesn't
necessarily mean he intends to do anything more without permission."
While she might not be Nicole Kidman, Regan had had men
look at her before. Even after her cruiser had been turned into a shooting
gallery. But somehow she'd gotten to be thirty-three years old without ever
feeling in danger of melting. When his gaze lingered momentarily on her legs,
she wished she'd worn her usual pantsuit rather than a skirt to court today.
Which in turn made her furious at herself for responding like a giddy high
school girl talking with the quarterback.
"A word of advice: don't hold your breath."
Emotional need always made her defensive, which led directly to the safer
emotion of anger. She crushed the burger bag. "Now if that's all the
evidence you have to show me—"
"Dieu, are you always in such a hurry? Didn't
anyone ever tell you that rushing around is bad on a person's system?" He
shook his head as he took some more papers from the envelope. "These stock
certificates would make Regan Dale a rich woman."
"They could also make you a rich man, since they
appear to be bearer certificates."
"They don't belong to me." He looked
affronted that she'd even suggest cashing them in. "I'm pretty sure
they're yours."
As he held them toward her, Regan reminded herself
that the devil didn't come slithering up to you with horns and a tail and
reeking of brimstone; he came courting with engaging manners and a smooth,
seductive smile.
"So you say. I still say you're wrong."
"Why don't you take them anyway? Do a little
detecting. You might find something that'll make you feel different."
Regan knew otherwise, but there was no way she was
going to let him accuse her of having a closed mind. "We'd better get you
to the airport before you miss your flight."
His smile was slow, delicious, and in its own charming
way, dangerous. "There's still time."
"It's obvious you don't know LAX. It was bad
enough before the heightened security measures. Now it's a nightmare." She
tossed the bag into a trash barrel.
"You know, the Pacific's even nicer than I've
heard," he said as they walked back to the parking lot. "I appreciate
you bringin’ me here."
"Like you said, I had to eat."
Regan had no idea what those papers he'd shown her
meant, but she was certain they didn't have anything to do with her. But still,
the cop in her couldn't quite stop mulling over the what-ifs.
Nate Callahan seemed to have an instinct for knowing
how far to press his case. He didn't bring the subject up again as she drove to
the airport, but instead waxed enthusiastic about his south Louisiana home.
"Well, I can certainly see why you were elected
mayor," she allowed as she pulled up to the curb designated for departing
passengers. "You're quite an ambassador for the place."
"It's a nice little town." He unfastened his
seat belt, reached into the backseat, and retrieved his overnight bag.
"Pretty as a picture on a travel poster and real peaceful." He paused
before opening the passenger door and gave her another of those slow perusals.
Unlike the earlier ones, this didn't seem to have any sexual intent. "We
jus' happen to be looking for a new sheriff. If you ever get tired of life in
the fast lane, you might want to give us a try."
"Thanks for the offer, but I'm quite happy right
where I am." That might not be the whole truth and nothing but the truth,
but she saw no reason to share her private feelings with a total stranger she'd
never see again.
Once again he surprised her with his speed, reaching
out and slipping her shades off her face before she could react. "I'm not
one to argue with a belle femme." Before she could back away, the
roughened pad of his thumb brushed against the skin below her eyes. "But
you look like you could use a little bit of R&R, Detective Chиre."
"Dammit, Callahan—"
"Jus' making a little observation." He
ducked away before she could push him out of the car. He was standing on the
sidewalk, seemingly oblivious to the driver who was leaning on his horn behind
them, urging Regan to move on so he could claim the spot. He reached back into
the car, handing her the sunglasses and a white leather book he'd taken from
his jacket pocket.
"What's this?"
"Linda Dale's journal. I thought you might like
to read it. The details are a little sketchy—she wasn't a real regular
writer—but it does mention her baby. And her sister, Karen Hart. I put my phone
number on a piece of paper inside the front cover, just in case you want to
call and compare notes once you're finished reading." He turned and walked
away into the terminal.
The horn behind her sounded again, a long, strident
demand. A uniformed cop standing on the curb blew his whistle and began heading
toward her.
"All right, dammit." Resisting the urge to
ticket the other driver for disturbing the peace—unfortunately, Nate Callahan
had already succeeded in doing that—Regan shifted the car into gear and pulled
out into traffic.
Chapter Seven
So," Jack asked, "how did it go?"
After arriving in Blue Bayou, Nate had driven out to
Beau Soleil, the antebellum home Jack was in the process of restoring. Nate was
the contractor, and so far the work had been going on close to two years; he
figured it could easily take a lifetime to restore it to its former glory, but
fortunately neither Jack nor Dani—whose family had owned the plantation house
for generations before Jack had bought it—seemed to mind living in a
construction zone. Somehow his brother's wife had created a warm and cozy
atmosphere out of what could have easily been chaos.
The kids were upstairs doing homework, and Dani was
sitting over in the corner of the former library, knitting. Or, as she'd
explained to Nate, attempting to learn to knit, which wasn't nearly as easy as
it had appeared in that big yellow Knitting for Dummies book she'd brought home
from Blue Bayou's library.
"Not as bad as it could have." He bent over
the custom-made green-felt-topped pool table, broke the balls, sunk two in a
corner pocket, and called for stripes. "Not as good as it might have."
Jack leaned against the wall, paneled in a gleaming
burled bird's-eye maple, and chalked his cue. "What's she like?"
"Smart." The ten ball disappeared into a
side pocket. "And real pretty, though outwardly tough as nails, which I
suppose a cop's gotta be." He banked a red-striped ball against the side
and sent it spinning into the far corner. "She reminded me a lot of Finn.
Before he fell for Julia."
"That grim, huh?"
"Not grim, exactly." He thought about that
as he moved around the table. "She's like our big brother in that she
obviously believes in truth, justice, and the American way. And she's
definitely not like any of our bayou belles."
Jack laughed at that. "What's the matter, baby
brother? Did the old Nate Callahan charm finally fail you?"
"I got her to hear me out." Memories of the
unwilling flash of emotion he'd seen in her gaze when he'd touched that
shadowed skin beneath her eyes had him, not for the first time, imagining
touching her all over. Momentarily distracted, he missed the shot. "She
also took the envelope we found in the evidence room."
"What did she have to say about the autopsy
report?"
"Nothing, 'cause at the last minute I decided not
to give it to her. She'd had a rough day in court, and I was already dumping
enough on her, so I figured that could wait until she called."
"She might not be real happy with you, holding
back that way."
"Then I'll just have to smooth things over."
"If she's as much like Finn as you say, I'm goin'
to enjoy watching that."
Having spent a lot more years of his youth in bars and
pool halls than Nate had, jack went to work, sending three balls in quick
succession thumping into holes.
Across the room, Danielle Dupree Callahan cussed as
she dropped another stitch. She'd told Nate that the buttery yellow yarn was
going to end up a baby sweater. But he sure hadn't been able to picture it from
what she'd managed to knit so far.
"Think she'll actually call?" Jack asked.
The solid three ball clicked off Nate's fourteen and sent the seven into the
far corner pocket
"Yeah." Balls were disappearing from the
table like crawfish at an all-you-can-eat buffet. "She's a detective, she.
She'll be curious enough to call." He watched as Jack used the ball he'd
missed to sink the eight ball. "You know, it gets old, having my hustler
brother all the time beating the pants off me."
Jack's smile flashed. "Jus' one of the benefits
of a misspent youth." He held out his hand. "You owe me twenty bucks,
cher."
As he dug into his pocket for the money, Nate glanced
up at the wall clock, calculated that it'd be about eight o'clock in Los
Angeles, and wondered if Regan had gotten through the journal yet.
* * *
She had. As Nate Callahan had said, the journal
entries were sporadic, occurring weeks, months, sometimes even years apart.
After leaving home at seventeen to become the girl singer in a country band,
Linda Dale had bounced from town to town, singing gig to singing gig, man to
man, for seven years. She hadn't seemed to mind the nomadic life. Most of the
men she'd gotten involved with were musicians, and while she appeared to set
limits—bailing on relationships the moment they turned abusive—Regan began to
detect a pattern. It appeared the woman was part free spirit, intent on
enjoying life to the fullest, and part nurturer, needing to rescue lost souls
(even those who might not want to be rescued) and take care of everyone around
her.
The entries, Regan noticed as she ate her way through
a pint of Ben and Jerry's Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough ice cream, seemed to come
at the beginnings and ends of her romances, which gave the impression that when
she was actually in a relationship, she was too busy living life to comment on
it.
None of the men had been the prince in shining armor
Dale professed to dream of; quite a few had been toads. But she'd remained
upbeat, positive that somewhere out there in the world her true soul mate was
waiting for her.
After a gap of nearly two years, an infant girl she
named Regan came into the picture. And then things became really personal.
Regan put her head back against her headboard, closed her eyes, and took a long
deep breath.
The woman in her sympathized with the single mother
trying to balance a singing career and a young daughter. The detective needed
more. She turned to the next page and began to read again.
January 1. J surprised me by slipping away from the
gala. The champagne he brought with him to toast a new year in my dressing room
was ridiculously expensive. It tasted like sunshine, all bright and sparkly,
but didn't go to my head nearly as much as his promise: that this year we'd
finally be able to live together openly. Our love-making, while necessarily
quick and silent, was still every bit as thrilling as it had been that first
time in New Orleans after he'd walked into the Camellia Club and changed my
life. January 15. I think Regan has picked up on my
excitement. Sometimes I wonder if I made the wrong decision, choosing to raise
her alone, to risk her growing up without the stabilizing influence of both a
father and mother. Of course Karen, for whom Regan has always been a sore
subject, scoffed at me when I suggested that on the phone the other day and
said something I couldn't quite understand about women needing men like fish
needed a bicycle, which I took to mean that I was foolish to enjoy having a man
in my life. In Regan's life. Then again, Karen has always been the most
independent person I've ever known. My legal eagle sister makes the Rock of
Gibraltar look like a tower of sand by comparison. It was such a delight watching Regan spin around the
room like a small dervish. She's such a sunny child. I like to think she's
inherited my talent, but she already has so much more confidence than I did at
her age. Sometimes more than I do now, 1 think. And while 1 know all mothers
think their children beautiful and talented, I truly believe she could be a
star someday. When I told her that soon she'll be dancing at our wedding with
her new daddy, she giggled, flung her arms around me, and gave me a huge smack
of a kiss. 1 can't remember being happier. February 14. Valentine's Day. J and I managed to slip
away to be together at lunch. We went out to our secret place and made love,
and afterward he surprised me with a stunning heart-shaped ruby pendant. He
said I'd had his heart from the day we met. As he's had mine. And always will.
He fretted when I wept, but I assured him that they were tears of joy, not
sorrow. February 25. It's the waiting that's so hard. I
understand, as I always have, that J's position is not an easy one, and 1 must
remain patient. He came into the lounge with friends tonight, and just seeing
him without being able to touch him—-and be touched—is so impossibly hard.
Soon, he tells me. Soon. March 4. Regan's second birthday. ] showed up this
evening with a stuffed elephant. It's a silly, fanciful thing, covered with
green, purple , and gold polka dots and wearing a Mardi Gras crown and beads.
Regan loves it.
"No." Regan snapped out a quick, harsh
denial. She pressed the heels of her hands against her eyes, hard enough to see
swirling stars. Emotions she couldn't begin to sort out crashed down on her as
the disbelief she'd been trying to hang on to shattered.
Her heart was pounding hard and fast as she forced
herself to continue reading, her eyes racing over the page.
He seemed a bit distracted, which isn't surprising,
since tomorrow's the day he'll finally tell his wife that he's leaving Blue
Bayou. Regan and I will be leaving with him. Anticipation has me as giddy as if
I've been drinking champagne from a glass slipper. I won't sleep a wink
tonight.
That was the final entry. Regan closed both the
journal and her eyes as waves of emotion crested over her. She lifted a hand
that felt as heavy as stone and dragged it through her hair.
She'd felt this way twice before: during those weeks
she'd spent in the hospital, drugged to the gills, and again three years ago,
when her mother had died suddenly and unexpectedly from a brain embolism. Karen
Hart, L.A.'s own Wonder Woman, had finally run. across something she couldn't
control.
The thing to focus on, Regan told herself, was that
she'd survived both. She'd surprised all the medical experts with the speed of
her recovery, and she'd gone back to work despite the constant need for more
surgery, just as she'd overcome the shock and pain of loss to take care of the
funeral arrangements for her mother.
She dragged herself out of bed on legs that felt as
shaky as they had during her early months of physical therapy, and opened the
cedar trunk.
Fighting for breath, she took the elephant, which for
some reason she'd named Gabriel, from the trunk. He was tattered and worn, as
any child's favorite old toy would be. And while technically in a court of law
he might be considered circumstantial evidence, since he couldn't be the only
such toy in the world, Regan knew, without a shadow of doubt, that she was
holding proof of Nate Callahan's claim.
The gilt crown had long since disappeared, and she
remembered breaking the beads during a playground tug-of-war with six-year-old
Johnny Jacobs. She'd ended up with the elephant, and he had gone home with a
black eye that had caused her to be deprived of television for an entire week
after the crybaby had gone home bawling to his mother.
Regan hadn't minded being banished to her bedroom;
justice was more important than watching Starsky and Hutch. Her father would
have understood, she'd insisted at the time.
Her father. The thought struck like a sledgehammer to
the head. If Karen Hart wasn't her mother, then John Hart was probably not her
father, either. Unless, of course, he was the J in the journal?
Could he have been having an affair with his
sister-in-law? The distance between Louisiana and California would have made it
difficult, but then, there was no indication that Linda Dale had been living in
Louisiana when she'd gotten pregnant.
And would a woman actually take the child her husband
had fathered with another woman into her home, raising her as her own?
Especially if that other woman was her own twin sister?
Regan didn't think many women would, but Karen Hart
could well have been the exception. She might not have taken the child out of
any sense of family or love, but she'd had a steely sense of responsibility. It
also might have explained why Regan could not recall a single warm maternal
moment spent with the woman she'd always believed to be her mother.
"Damn." A predawn light cast the room in a
soft lavender glow. Regan pressed the stuffed toy against her breast, bowing
her head against a sudden onslaught of pain. Had her entire life been built on
a foundation of lies? And if not, what parts had been true, what parts false?
She picked up the piece of hotel stationery with Nate
Callahan's telephone number and stared at it for a long time, trying to decide
what to do next. Part of her wanted to call him, to ask the myriad questions
bombarding her brain.
She removed the receiver from the cradle, dialed the
985 area code, then slammed it down again. She needed time. Time to absorb the
shock. Time to decide her next move.
She had to get out of here. Had to clear her mind,
start thinking like a cop, and not a woman who'd just had her world pulled out
from under her.
Still numb, she changed into her running clothes,
though a cold winter drizzle was falling and fog was blowing in from the
beaches. As she began running through the still dark streets, Regan remained
oblivious to the weather. The very strong possibility that the woman who'd fed
and clothed her, put a roof over her head, and raised her, if not
affectionately, at least dutifully, had also created a sham of a life, left
Regan with a bitter, metallic taste in her mouth.
And so, beneath the thick gray clouds blowing in from
the steely, white-capped Pacific, Regan ran. And ran. And ran.
Chapter Eight
A breakout of gang wars kept Regan working nearly
around the clock, which, while exhausting, at least occasionally took her mind
off her own problem.
She kept her secret to herself for nearly a month,
viewing it on some distant level like a cold case she'd get to as soon as the
hot ones were solved. Finally, after several marches by residents of the
communities that were being torn apart garnered the attention of the press,
politicians loosened the purse strings long enough to pay for more cops on the
beat, which resulted in a string of high-profile arrests.
Once things seemed to have calmed down, Regan tracked
down Finn, whose advice echoed what she'd been telling herself ever since Nate
Callahan's visit. There was no way she was even going to begin to get a handle
on her past if she didn't visit Blue Bayou—and the scene of Linda Dale's death—herself.
Regan made the travel arrangements. Then, after
another long, early morning run on the beach, she called her partner. "Did
I wake you?"
"Of course not." Van's groggy tone said
otherwise. A male voice said something in the background. Regan could hear her
telling Rhasheed who was calling. "So, what's up?"
"I'm going to be taking some leave time."
"Good idea. You've been working killer hours for
too long. A break will do you good."
"I hadn't realized there was anything wrong with
me." Terrific. Could you sound any more defensive?
"You haven't taken any real time for over
eighteen months."
Nineteen. But who was counting?
"Where are you going?"
"Louisiana."
"Oh, lucky girl! New Orleans's got great food,
great jazz, and lots going on, especially now with Mardi Gras coming up."
"I'm not going to New Orleans. I'm going to Blue
Bayou. It's a little town closer to the Gulf," she said, anticipating
Van's next question.
"I've never heard of it."
"I doubt if many people have. It's pretty
small."
"How did you find out about the place?"
"I did an Internet search." The half lie
caused a little pang of guilt. She had looked up the town's website, which had
revealed what Finn had already confirmed; that Nate Callahan was, indeed, the
mayor.
"How long will you be gone?"
"I don't know."
There was a longer pause. Regan could practically hear
the gears turning in her partner's head. "This sudden trip wouldn't have
anything to do with a man, would it?"
"In a way."
They'd known each other too long for Van not to realize
something wasn't quite right. "Would you care to share what you're holding
back on your partner and best friend?"
There was no point in trying to pretend everything was
all right. "I can't. Not yet."
The curiosity in Van's voice changed to concern.
"Anything I can do to help?"
Regan wasn't quite prepared to share details she
didn't even know herself. "Thanks anyway, but I'll be fine. It's just some
little misunderstanding I have to clear up. In case anything urgent comes up,
I'm staying at the Plantation Inn."
"Sounds nice."
"I guess so." It was the only hotel in town.
She recited the number she'd called to book her reservation, then, after
reassuring Van that she really was fine, Regan began packing.
* * *
Fourteen-year-old Josh Duggan had never expected Louisiana
to be so frigging cold. It had been snowing when he'd left Tampa, and he'd
figured it'd stay warmer if he stuck to the southern states, but he'd been
wrong. If someone didn't come along soon, he'd turn into a Popsicle.
He knew it was dangerous to be hitchhiking, "but
it wasn't like he had a whole lot of choices. After seeing the cop talking to
the cook in the restaurant next to the bus station in Jackson, he'd been afraid
to get back on the bus and had decided to take his chances with his thumb on
the back roads, which was proving not to be the most brilliant idea he'd ever
had.
So far only one car had passed on this narrow, lonely
stretch of road. When he'd recognized the black-and-white as a trooper's
cruiser, he'd dived into a ditch until it had passed. Now his clothes were wet
and sticking to his skin, and he could feet the blood from the rock he'd hit
his face on oozing down his cheek.
His stomach growled. He'd been promising it something
to eat for the last twelve hours. Since he was down to about thirty-five cents,
he was going to have to boost dinner. It wouldn't be the first time.
But first he was going to have to get to an effing
town.
His spirits perked up just a little when something
came looming out of the swirling gray mist. The roar of the diesel engine was
unmistakable. But at the speed it was going, would it even see him in time?
Josh was desperate enough to consider leaping in front of the cab when the
eighteen-wheeler's air brakes squealed.
The semi came to a grinding stop about fifteen feet
beyond him. He must have hurt his leg when he'd jumped into the ditch, because
it hurt like hell to run on it, but afraid the driver would take off, he
ignored the pain and sprinted on a limp past the two trailers to the cab. The
big door opened. A man Josh would not want to meet in a dark alley was looking
down at him. His eyes were black as midnight; a red scar started high on his
cheekbone and slashed through a scrabbly thatch of dark beard. "What the
hell are you doin' out here, kid?"
"Car broke down," Josh lied without a qualm.
Everyone lied. "I was walking into town to try and find a mechanic."
Dark eyes narrowed. "Didn't see no car on the
highway."
"I left it on a side road."
"Sure you did. You don't look old enough to
drive."
Josh thrust out his jaw and met the openly skeptical
gaze head-on. "I'm small for my age."
"That so?" The driver studied him for
another long moment that seemed like a lifetime. "It's against regulations
to take on passengers."
He jabbed a thumb at the sign in the window. "But
hell, my old lady would kick my ass six ways to Sunday if she found out I left
some skinny kid out in a frog-strangler like this-" He shrugged. "Get
on in."
Not waiting for a second invitation, Josh scrambled
into the passenger seat. The rush of heat from the dashboard, mingling with the
mouthwatering aroma that could only be doughnuts, made his head spin.
"Thanks. I'd pay you for the ride, but—"
"Hell, I'm not interested in your money, kid.
What I'd like is for you to tell me the truth, so I know whether or not I can
expect the law to be comin' after you." He glanced up into the rearview
mirror as if expecting to see flashing lights behind them.
Blue and red artwork snaked around huge arms the girth
of tree trunks. Josh wondered if he'd gotten any of those tattoos in prison,
then decided he didn't really want to know.
"I'm not some juvenile delinquent runaway, if
that's what you're worried about," he lied.
If the driver picked up that cell phone fastened to
the dash and called the cops, he'd be busted. Not that it'd do any good. They
could drag his ass back to Florida, but he'd just run again. And again.
The driver didn't answer right away. Every nerve
ending in Josh's body jangled as he plucked an empty Coke can from the cup
holder on the dash and spat a huge stream of brown tobacco juice into it.
"Don't much like the law," he said finally. He reached behind him and
pulled a waxed Krispy Kreme bag from the sleeper. "You like
doughnuts?"
"Who doesn't?"
The taste of the sugar-glazed fried dough nearly made
Josh burst out bawling. Exhausted, he leaned his head against the window and
watched the wipers sweeping the rain from the windshield. As the lonely sound
of a train whistle wailed somewhere out in the heavy fog, he almost allowed
himself to relax.
* * *
Nate was up on a ladder, ripping away some
water-stained dry wall, when she entered the sheriff's office. His built-in
female radar detector had never failed him, and it didn't this evening. He
glanced back over his shoulder at Regan Hart standing in the doorway of the
former storage room.
Raindrops sparkled like diamonds in her sleek hair.
She was wearing black jeans, sneakers, and a black Lakers jacket.
"I didn't expect to see you here," she said.
No hello, nice to see you again, what a lovely little town you have.
"I was doin' a little work on the place."
"I came to see the sheriff. There wasn't anyone
in the outer office." Her tone suggested she didn't approve.
"We're still looking for a sheriff. Mrs.
Bernhard, she's the dispatcher, doesn't work after five. Her husband likes his
supper on the table right on the dot, so he can eat it along with WATC's
six-o'clock news." As he looked down into thickly fringed whiskey-colored
eyes, Nate felt a familiar, enjoyable pull. "I never have figured that
out, since it seems watching all that war, politics, and crime'd ruin anyone's
appetite, but that's the way Emil likes it. And after fifty years of marriage,
Ruby says it's too hard to teach her old man new tricks."
"The town doesn't have a night dispatcher?"
"Nope." She clearly did not approve. Nate
shoved the claw hammer back into the loop on his tool belt, wondering how she
could remind him so much of his big brother and still have him wanting to nip
at that stubborn chin.
"What happens when a crime happens at
night?"
"It rings into Henri Petrie's house. He's the
senior ranking deputy. Mostly the only after-hours trouble happens at the No
Name—that's a bar outside of town—or the Mud Dog, another local watering hole
about a mile away from the No Name. Since Henri spends most every evenin' but
Sunday at the Mud Dog playing bouree—that's a card game sorta between poker and
bridge—he's usually already on the scene if trouble does break out."
He climbed down the ladder and noted her slight step
back. Not only was she into control, she liked to be the one setting
boundaries. Which wickedly made him want to press hers a little more.
"Though he's been complaining that being on call
all the time is cuttin' down on his socializing, being as how he can't get
drunk anymore, just in case something does come up."
"He wouldn't be the first cop to drink on
duty."
"Probably true. But so long as I'm mayor, I'd
just as soon he not." He saw the flash of skepticism in her eyes.
"You're surprised."
"I suppose, if I'd given it any thought, I
would've expected you to be a bit more laid-back when it came to law-and-order
issues."
"Stick around a while, Detective Chиre, and
you'll discover I'm just full of surprises."
He could smell the rain on her hair. Accustomed to
women who seemed to bathe in heady perfumes custom-blended in New Orleans, he'd
never realized he could find the fragrance of rain and Ivory soap so appealing.
Underlying the clean aroma was her own scent, which reminded him of those
citrus candles his maman used to like, blended with freshly cut spring grass.
"It's real nice if you can have a job you enjoy,
but that doesn't mean that everyone should go mixin' work and play. Especially
when their job involves guns," he said with a slow smile that more than
one woman had told him was irresistible.
Apparently they'd been wrong. Or, more likely, she was
just a harder case than the average woman.
"But you do," she guessed with what appeared
to be yet more disapproval. "Mix work and play."
Christ, the woman could be a hardass. Though, he
thought, remembering how she'd looked marching away from him in that L.A.
parking garage, as asses went, it was still a pretty fine one.
"Like I said, it's nice to have a job you enjoy.
As for the drinking-on-duty rule, it's hard enough for the parish to make its liability
insurance payments now. The last thing we need is a lawsuit from some city
slicker who came down here to let off a little steam and got himself thrown
into jail on a drunk and disorderly by a cop with whiskey on his breath."
"And you people prefer to handle things yourselves
and leave outsiders ... well, outside."
"That's pretty much the way it's always been down
here," he said agreeably. If he didn't suspect that the weeks since he'd
dropped his bombshell had been pretty damn tough on her, he might have let her
know flat-out that he wasn't real thrilled with the way she seemed to be
looking down not just on him, but on Blue Bayou as well. "How much do you
know about the Cajuns?"
"1 know who Paul Prudhomme is. And that I like
Cajun food, and they have a reputation for partying."
"Laissez le bon temps rouler. That's the name of
a song: 'Let the Good Times Roll.' " If her attitude so far had been any
indication, he suspected it'd been one helluva long time since she'd roulered
any bon temps. "It's pretty much a motto down here."
Nate wondered what it would take to get that cool,
faintly sarcastic mouth to soften. He'd never kissed a cop before. The closest
he'd come had been Jenna Jermain, a reporter who worked the police beat up in
Ascension Parish. They'd passed a few good times before she'd landed herself a
job on the Houston Chronicle.
"I read the journal," she said.
"I was hoping you would." He took another
two steps forward; she held her ground. "So, you've come to Blue Bayou to
track down some loose ends." Forward.
She didn't budge. The challenge was swirling in the
air between them. "That's very perceptive."
"It's what Finn'd do." Forward. He felt a
little tinge of victory when she finally retreated half a step.
"It's undoubtedly also what your father would
have done, if he'd had the opportunity."
"Yeah." Her long legs, which seemed to go
all the way up to her neck, were now pressed against the desk. Don't like bein'
boxed in, do you, sugar? "He was a good man, my father. And a damn good
cop."
"I suppose, never having met him, I'll have to
take your word for that."
The little dig managed to get under Nate's skin and
remind him that she hadn't come here to give a pleasant boost to his libido.
Now that he'd gotten her attention, things could only get complicated, and he'd
never liked complications. Which was why he still couldn't quite explain why
the hell he'd put himself into the middle of this long-ago story and tracked
down Linda Dale's daughter.
"Dad didn't believe the autopsy report," he
revealed.
Although her expression didn't change, Nate thought
she went a little pale.
"You have the autopsy report?" She sounded
more pissed than shaken.
"Yeah." The look she shot him was way too
familiar. Finn, who'd taken on the role of man of the house after their father
had been blown away, hadn't let either of his brothers get away with much, and
Nate had been on the receiving end of it too many times to count.
"And you didn't think that was important enough
to share with me?"
"I wasn't even one hundred percent positive that
you were the right woman." This time he was the one who took a step back.
"Yet you were sure enough to give me some of the
papers."
He swore inwardly. "Not the ones that'd be real
rough to read."
"And you felt it your job to protect my so-called
delicate female sensibilities why?"
"It wasn' that way." Not exactly. "The
autopsy report was an official crime document. The journal was a different
matter. Jack and I figured that if our maman had died without us ever knowin'
about her, and she'd left something like that behind, we'd want to read
it."
"Did you?"
"Did 1 what?"
"Read it?"
"Hell, no. It wasn't any of my business."
Her eyes narrowed, studying him like he was some
murder suspect in a lineup. "But you read the autopsy report."
"It was an official document. I'm a city
official, so I figured I was entitled. The journal's personal."
"Yet your father obviously kept it for a
reason."
"He didn't know where Linda Dale's sister took
off to. And knowin' him, he probably wanted to keep it as evidence."
"In the event he reopened the case."
"Yeah. His notes, by the way, say he tried."
"As a rule, small-town police forces aren't
equipped to handle a homicide."
"I 'magine that's the case. But Pop wasn't just
some small-town, gut-over-his-shirt hack sheriff. He'd been a homicide cop up
in Chicago and had a drawer full of awards."
"Most cops hang them on the wall."
"Dad never believed in skatin' on past
accomplishments. He probably wouldn't have even kept the commendations and
stuff if they hadn't meant a lot to maman. She'd always show them off to any of
her relatives who'd bad-mouth her Yankee husband. After a while, they just shut
up."
"Why, if he'd been working for a big force like
Chicago, would he want to give it all up and come live in this . . ."
"Backwater hick town?" he supplied.
"It seems it would be a step down.
Careerwise."
"Jake Callahan loved bein' a cop. Used to say he
was born to the job. But his family was the most important thing in his life.
Maman was homesick, and he figured Blue Bayou would be a nice safe place to
raise his children. But I don' think it could have been easy on him in the
beginning. From the stories he used to tell, he'd liked being a big-city cop,
and I think the jury stayed out for a long time among the people here as to
whether he was really going to try to fit in."
"Did he?"
"Mais yeah. He taught us boys that man was put on
earth to help out his fellow man and to be part of a community, and that bein'
a cop meant taking care of a community, and how organizing a youth baseball
league, or taking an elderly widow a hot meal, or changing a tire on a pregnant
young mother's car could all be, in their own way, just as helpful as rounding
up stone-cold killers."
"Your father sounds like a good man."
"My father was a great man."
Her gaze shifted from his face, out the window to
where the cobblestone streets wore a satiny sheen from an earlier rain and the
sunset looked like red-and-purple smoke against the western sky. "What was
the cause of death cited on the autopsy report?"
"Same as the death certificate," he hedged,
even though he knew she was about to find out the answer herself. "Carbon
monoxide poisoning."
She returned her gaze to him. "Was it listed as a
natural death?"
Nate could tell that she had a lot more invested emotionally
into the answer than she was letting on. He supposed cops, especially homicide
detectives, grew used to death, but he also knew firsthand that the death of a
parent was an entirely different thing. It was more personal. Even, he
suspected, if you were talking about a mother or father you'd never known.
Maybe Jack had been right; maybe he just should have left well enough alone and
tossed the damn file into the trash.
"Non. It wasn't natural."
"That leaves either suicide or murder."
Jesus, did the woman have ice water in her veins? The
only outward sign that he'd managed to score a direct hit was a quick blink of
the eye. A train whistle sounded at the crossing just outside town. "The
coroner opted for suicide."
Wishing that either of his brothers were around to
handle this, Nate reached into the top desk drawer where he'd stashed the file,
suspecting that, if nothing else, her cop curiosity would eventually make her
want to read it.
"Your father's not alone. Because I don't believe
it, either. I'm going to want to see the house where she died."
"Now, there's going to be a little problem with
that."
"Oh?"
"It got blown to pieces in a hurricane back in
the nineties, and the land where it used to sit is now water."
"It figures." She shook her head and frowned
as she read the top page with absolute concentration.
Nate was idly wondering if she'd give the same
attention to sex when a sound like a bomb going off shook the building.
Chapter Nine
What the hell?" He jerked his gaze from
those tempting, unpainted lips to the window. "That sounded too close to
be a rig explosion."
The oil rigs out in the Gulf had always been a hazard;
his maternal grandfather had died on one before any of the three Callahan boys
had been born. A cloud of smoke billowed over the top of the courthouse.
"Christ. It's coming from the tracks."
He turned back toward Regan. "You remember any
first aid from your patrol days?"
"I passed a disaster response test six weeks
ago."
"Good. Because we're gonna be needin' all the
help we can get." He opened a desk drawer and threw her a badge.
"I don't need that," she said, even as she
snagged the shiny sheriff's badge out of the air.
"Stuff like this tends to brings out the
lookie-loos and Good Samaritans. There are going to be a lot of people getting
in the way out there. This'll give you the authority to get rid of folks who
don't belong or can't be of any real help."
Again proving that he could move damn fast when the
occasion called for it, he was out the door like a shot, Regan right on his
heels. Without waiting to be invited, she jumped into the passenger seat of the
black SUV parked outside and pinned on the badge. It took them less than three
minutes to drive to the redbrick fire station where Blue Bayou's fire and
rescue department garaged its only pumper truck.
"There's not gonna be room for you in the
truck." He was yanking on a pair of tobacco brown fireproof pants that had
been folded down with tall rubber boots already inside them, so all he had to
do was step
into the boots and pull the pants up. "The keys
are in the SUV." He grabbed a heavy coat and helmet. "I'll meet you
out at the crossing."
Unlike the other narrow towns she'd driven past, which
she'd supposed had sprung up in long narrow strips to save valuable waterfront
land for crops, Blue Bayou had been laid out in grids. Sweeps of
sunshine-bright yellow daffodils brightened squares fenced in fancifully curved
wrought-iron fences, and trees lined the clean brick sidewalks. It appeared, as
Nate Callahan had described it, a peaceful town.
There was nothing peaceful about the scene at the rail
crossing. At least a dozen freight cars left a zigzagging trail along the muddy
banks of the bayou. Broken railroad ties were scattered along the track, the
metal rails shredded. On the far side of the track, a trailer from an
eighteen-wheeler was on its side; farther down the other trailer was crushed
and mangled, mute evidence that the semi had been hit trying to cross the
track. The cab was upside down, the roof resting inches from the edge of the
water; the glass lying on the ground had once been a windshield. It could have
been worse. A lot worse.
"Thank God it was a freight," Nate said.
Regan nodded in agreement, not even wanting to think
about the number of deaths and injuries there could have been if the railroad
cars had been carrying passengers.
"I thought my furnace had blowed up," she
heard one onlooker, who appeared to be at least in his eighties, say to another
man. "I heard a bunch of grinding and then boom," he said. "Ol'
Duke jumped clean off the gallerie and started barking." He pointed toward
an old hound dog who was sniffing the air.
One of the train cars had knocked a utility pole down;
its lines were tangled in a tall, moss-draped oak and sagged about ten feet
above the top of the truck's cab. Sparks were flying, and as tree limbs burned,
the lines drooped lower toward the cab.
"The driver's still in the truck," someone
shouted. "There's an arm hangin' out the window."
"Can you tell if he's alive?" a fireman,
whose helmet designated him as the fire chief, asked.
"He's not movin'."
"Christ," another fireman said.
"There's no way to get the poor sucker out."
"We can't just stand by and let him die,"
Nate said.
"Can't run onto an accident scene with downed
power lines, either," the chief said. "That's one of the first things
they teach you in fire school."
A pair of state troopers arrived, sirens blaring,
adding to the din. Walkie-talkies squawked. A crowd began to gather, as if to
watch a Hollywood crew film a disaster-of-the-week movie.
"He's gotta have family," Nate argued
doggedly, once again reminding Regan of his brother. Finn hadn't been one to
back down from an argument, either; not when there was a matter of principal
involved. "Mother, maybe. Wife. Kids." He pulled on his gloves.
"I'm going in."
"You realize, of course, that truck could catch
on fire any time," Regan said. Okay, so it was a pretty impressive
gesture; it was also foolhardy as hell.
"One more reason to get the guy out. But I've
probably got some time, since diesel fuel isn't as flammable as gasoline."
She knew that, but the knowledge didn't stop her from
holding her breath as he cautiously ducked beneath the sagging wires. An odd
hush came over the rescue workers as he dropped down on his belly and crawled
the last eight feet.
"Hey," a voice called out from inside the
cab. "We're trapped in here!"
Regan sucked in a sharp breath at the child's voice.
Watching carefully, she actually saw Nate's shoulders tense beneath the heavy
jacket.
"It's gonna be all right, cher," he said matter-of-factly,
as if train-truck collisions were an everyday occurrence in Blue Bayou. Metal
screeched as the dented truck cab shifted, tilting precariously closer to the
water.
"Shit, we're gonna drown!" the boy shouted.
"Don' you worry," Nate said again, his voice
as calm as it'd been when she'd first met him in the station. "We'll be
gettin' you out soon enough, you."
He yanked on the door. Nothing. "Shit, it's
stuck."
"Can't use the Hurst," the captain pointed
out. The Hurst, more commonly known as the Jaws of Life, could chew up metal
like taffy. "You try takin' that roof off, you'll hit those wires for
sure."
"How about goin' up from the floor?" another
asked.
Nate shook his head. "We're sittin' on marsh,
here. Even if we set it on blocks, they'd just sink into water. Then there's
the little matter of starting up the gas unit while diesel's leaking from the
tank."
He yanked again. Cursed again.
Nearby, another tree limb burst into flame as the
power surged. The wires drooped even lower, nearing the upturned wheels.
"Anyone got a tow strap?" Nate called.
"I got a cable I use for towing breakdowns in the
trunk of the cruiser," a trooper responded.
"That'll do. Go get it and bring it as close as
you can." Once again Regan heard him talking in a low, soothing voice to
the child inside the truck. "And Henri, why don't you back the ladder
truck as near as you can get without hittin' those wires?" Which were
currently lighting up the gathering twilight like Fourth of July sparklers.
"And can someone toss me—very carefully—a blanket?"
Without giving it a moment's thought, Regan grabbed an
army green blanket from a newly arrived ambulance and moved slowly, step by
step, toward the cab.
"That's far enough, chиre," he warned.
"If I throw it to you, it could hit the
wires."
"If you get any closer, those wires could turn
you into a crispy critter."
"Don't you watch TV? We cops get off on taking
risks."
Though her voice was as calm as if she were writing
out a speeding ticket, her nerves were jangling with adrenaline-
"That a fact?" Amazingly, his tone was as
conversational as hers.
"Absolutely." The overhead wires crackled
and sagged. Ignoring his warning, Regan bent lower until she was nearly
doubled, and continued inching toward the truck. "Why, a day without
danger is like a day without chocolate." Despite the chill, sweat was
beating up on her forehead and between her breasts.
"I never heard it put quite that way
before."
"Believe me, it's true." She shoved the
blanket toward him. "It's in our blood."
"Thanks." He carefully pushed the blanket
through the rectangular hole where the windshield used to be. "Hey,
kid."
"Yeah?" The boy's tone sounded remarkably
defiant, but Regan knew some people responded to fear with aggression.
"Put this over the driver as well as you can,
okay? Then hunker down beneath it, because we're gonna have some flying glass
in a minute."
Nate waited a moment for the boy to do as instructed.
Then he
shoved his gloved fingers through a hole in the
driver's side window and tore the glass away. By now the trooper had arrived
with the cable; the two men wrapped one end of it around the windshield post
and the other around the bumper of the fire truck, which began slowly moving
forward.
There was an ominous sound of groaning metal, and the
cab tilted a bit, as if it might pull right side up. Just when Regan thought
for sure they'd land in the water, the door broke off its hinges.
"Hey," Nate said, again to someone in the
truck. "Good to have you back with us. Is anything broken?" There was
a pause, then a mumbled response in a voice far deeper than the boy's.
"Bien. Now, here's what we're gonna do. You take
my arm and climb out of here, real careful like, so you don't rock the cab. And
I'll grab the kid."
A huge bearded man with the look of a renegade biker
appeared in the open door and half jumped, half fell from the cab. Regan
flinched inwardly when she heard the crack of a kneecap breaking, but the
driver didn't have any time to indulge his pain.
The wires let loose, draping over the cab like Spanish
moss just as Nate reached inside, grabbed the boy's denim jacket, and jerked
him from the truck. They'd no sooner rolled aside when the cab burst into
flames.
A collective cheer went up.
"Thanks, man," the grizzled driver groaned
as a paramedic slipped a C-collar around his neck and strapped him onto a
rolling half-backboard to protect his spine. "Weren't for you, my old
lady'd be puttin' plastic flowers on my grave."
"Jus' doin' my job, cher," Nate said
agreeably. "Wouldn't want you to get a bad impression of our little
town." He put the boy onto his feet. "We'll be taking you into the
hospital, too. just to make sure."
Freckles were standing out like copper coins all over
the kid's pale, thin face, but his brown eyes, as he folded his arms, were
resolute. "Fuck that. I'm fine."
"Sure you are," Nate said in that mild,
deceptively laid-back tone. "Problem is, I've heard of folks saying the
same thing at accidents, then passing out without any warning. Wouldn't want to
take a chance on you falling into the water and becoming gator bait."
"I'm not scared of any damn gators."
Regan wasn't sure if he was exaggerating or not. But
having watched a special on alligators on the Nature Channel, she was uneasy
about putting it to the test. Gangbangers she could handle, drug dealers she
knew. But there weren't a lot of man-eating reptiles in the normally dry Los
Angeles River.
"This your kid?" a paramedic asked the truck
driver.
"I just picked him up." He looked decidedly
defensive. Regan hoped it was only because he was worried about having violated
the No Riders sign. "No law against giving people a ride. 'Specially when
it's cold enough to freeze a well digger's ass and getting dark, besides."
"You have to wonder why a grown man was traveling
with a child who isn't his own," Regan murmured,
"I was already there." Nate's serious
expression revealed he shared her concern. He might not be a cop, and Blue
Bayou might look like Louisiana's version of Mayberry, but obviously he'd
picked up some sense of the dark side of the world from his brothers' work.
"If I were you, I'd have one of my deputies
question him."
"Great minds think alike. Fortunately, I've got
an officer capable of doing a bang-up job." He put his hand on her back in
a possessive, masculine way that annoyed her. "Since the fog's really
startin' to roll in and you don't know the way to the hospital, I'll drive you
there."
She shook off the light touch. "Me?"
"You're the most qualified member of the
force."
"Force? What force? This isn't my
jurisdiction."
"Sure it is. I deputized you."
"Dammit, Callahan, this isn't the Wild West. You
can't just put badges on people and make them part of your posse."
"I can, and I did." His expression sobered.
"This needs to be done right. There's no way I'm going to put Dwayne on it.
As for Henri, he's always tried real hard and done a good enough job, but Blue
Bayou doesn't present a lot of opportunities to use real police skills, so even
if he ever possessed any, they'd be real rusty about now."
"I didn't come to Louisiana to apply for a job. 1
already have one back in L.A."
"Where I'll bet you take protectin' kids real
seriously." His gaze moved to the young teenager being loaded into the
back of the ambulance.
Regan counted to ten. Reminded herself that she'd
sworn to protect and to serve. Her professional duty might stop once she went
outside her precinct boundaries, but her moral responsibility was an entirely
different thing.
"Dammit." She folded her arms even as she
felt herself caving. "That's not fair."
"Life's not always fair, detective."
"Tell me something I don't know." She had
proof of that every day, even before she hit the streets looking for the bad
guys. All she had to do was get out of the shower and stand naked in front of a
full-length mirror.
"How about I make you a deal?"
"What kind of deal?"
"You help me out with this one little thing, and
I'll do all I can to help you find out the facts about Linda Dale's
death."
"A thirty-one-year-old case is about as cold as
they get. What makes you think you can find anything out when your father
couldn't?"
"He'd probably have had better luck if your aunt
hadn't disappeared." Your aunt. Even after she had read the journal over
and over again, those words still rang so false. The ambulance pulled away from
the scene, lights flashing, siren wailing.
"Besides, I've lived here all my life, me,"
he said, his Cajun syntax backing up his words. "I know everyone in the
parish, which'll come in handy, since folks around here aren't real eager to
answer questions from strangers."
"Small-town paranoia," she muttered.
"There you go, jumpin' to conclusions again. We
tend to think of it as mindin' our own business. Now, I can understand why you
won't do it for me, or even because, being an independent woman, you don't want
any help digging up the truth 'bout your maman's death. But I'm having a real
hard time believing that cop who just risked her life for a kid won't want to
do whatever she can to find out why that kid isn't sitting at home playing
video games like he should be."
It was emotional blackmail, pure and simple. It also
worked. "You really are shameless."
"You're not the first person to tell me that,
sugar. But that's not the point here. That boy's puttin' on a good enough show,
but beneath the surface, he reminds me of a whupped pup. I'd put hard money on
the fact that he had a pretty good reason for running away."
"Hell. All right." She blew out a breath.
"I'll do it."
"Merci bien."
They drove together through the night, the headlights
bouncing back against a dense wall of fog that surrounded the SUV, cutting them
off from the outside world. Regan was grateful he was driving; she wasn't sure
she could have told road from water.
"I suppose, having grown up here, you know your
way around." She certainly hoped he did. She was in no mood for a
moonlight swim.
"Mais yeah, though it's always changing." He
leaned forward and punched on the radio, which was tuned to a station playing
what seemed to be a sad song in French. "What was water yesterday could be
land today. And vice versa."
"Then how do you know for certain where you're
going?"
"Never gave it any thought." He seemed to
now. "Guess it's just instinct. Like a homing pigeon returning to his
loft. Once the bayou gets in your blood, I don't think you could ever get it
out. Even if you wanted to."
"Which you don't."
"Non. Roots sink deep here. Sometimes I think
'bout taking off and exploring the world, but the truth is, mostly I'm pretty
satisfied doing what I'm doin', where I'm doin' it."
Regan wondered how it would feel to be so at ease with
yourself. So comfortable with your world and your place in it. As long as she
could remember, she'd always pushed herself harder and harder, trying to please
a mother who'd always been incapable of being pleased.
The police shrink she'd gone to, a bearded guy who
seemed to be doing his best to look like Freud's twin—which made her wonder
about his own identity problems—had suggested that it wasn't the ambush or the
resultant injuries and lengthy recovery that had left her feeling constantly
edgy and unable to sleep.
She was, he'd diagnosed, suffering from the impossible
need to prove her worth not only to her remote, perfectionist mother, but also
to the larger-than-life father she'd never known. The man who'd died a hero's
death in a jungle halfway around the world.
"Which is, of course," the Freud wannabe had
added, "impossible."
Perhaps. On one level, Regan understood that. She had,
after all, minored in psychology in college. But on a deeper, more
intrinsically personal level, she couldn't stop trying.
"That was a remarkable thing you did," she
murmured. "Going in under those high-voltage wires."
"I wasn't alone. You were right there with
me."
"Like 1 said, it's my job. Cops get paid to do
stuff like that. I wouldn't think risking your life came under the job
description of mayor."
He shrugged. "I wouldn't be able to live with
myself if I hadn't tried to get him out of there. I lost my dad when I was
twelve. The trucker's kids are going to have theirs. That's all that
counts."
"It was still a brave thing to do."
The grin he flashed her was quick and devastating. And
dangerous. His eyes, surrounded by soot and dirt, gleamed in the glow from the
dashboard like the blue lights atop a police cruiser. "Don' tell me you
just found something about me you can approve of?"
"Don't let it go to your head."
"I wouldn't think of it." They'd driven in
silence for about five more minutes when he said, "You're probably used to
all that."
"Guys with big heads?"
"No. Well, maybe you run into them from time to
time, bein' how you live in L.A. But I was talking about wrecks, flashing
lights, sirens. Injuries. Death."
"Detectives don't, as a rule, handle car wrecks
unless there's evidence of a homicide." She'd thought about death, though.
A lot. Her first week on the job, she'd spent hours on the phone after a shift
trying to find a shelter and counseling for a woman who'd called 911 for a
domestic abuse, then refused, despite two black eyes and a missing tooth, to
press charges against her husband. A veteran cop had warned her against
becoming too emotionally involved.
"Gotta hold back, Hart," he'd growled around
a Reuben sandwich dripping sauerkraut. "The taxpayers of L.A. aren't
paying you to hold people's hands and play counselor. If you want to be a
social worker, then turn in your sidearm and go for it, because you're not
going to be able to keep a cool head and maintain the judgment needed to do
this job if you're too damn sensitive."
Easy for him to say. One of the reasons she'd gone
into homicide was because she'd figured that if she switched to dealing with
bodies, she'd be able to distance herself emotionally from her work. She'd been
wrong. The dead often spoke a lot louder than the living. And they didn't stop
just because she'd gone to sleep.
"I don't think anyone ever gets used to
death." She wouldn't want to.
"Yeah." He pulled up in front of a redbrick
building. "I read that in Jack's last book."
"That happens to be a yellow line you're parking
by."
"I know." He cut the engine, pocketed the
keys, took a placard reading "On Duty" from the center console, and
tossed it onto the dash. She'd done it herself numerous times. Still . . .
"And the sign says it's reserved for police
vehicles." At least he hadn't parked in the red ambulance zone.
"Then we're in luck, bein' how we're the
police," he said reasonably. "At least one half of us is. The other
half's fire, so I'd guess we have a right to park just 'bout anywhere we
like."
"So how many tickets did you get before you were
elected and able to award yourself the privilege of political office?" she
asked as she climbed out of the SUV.
"I still get 'em. Blue Bayou runs on too tight a
budget to let parking infractions slide." He opened the center console to
reveal stacks of yellow slips of paper. "I save 'em up and pay 'em every
month or so."
"Wouldn't it be simpler—and cheaper—to just park
legally?"
"I suppose it would be. But just think of all the
revenue the town'd be missing."
He'd placed his hand on her back again, in that casual
way that suggested he was a toucher. Yet another way he was different from his
brother; Finn had kept a privacy zone the size of Jupiter around himself. Regan
suspected his new bride must really be something to have gotten past that man's
emotional barricades.
"Besides, writing out tickets gives Dwayne
something constructive to do during the slow times. He's one of our two
deputies. Graduated from LSU last summer with a degree in criminal justice, and
I think we're coming as a big disappointment. Sometimes I feel like I oughta
pay some kids to go out and bash in mailboxes just so he'll have a crime to
investigate."
If it were anyone else, Regan might have taken his
words as a joke. Since she hadn't yet been able to get a handle on Nate
Callahan, she wasn't at all certain he was kidding.
Chapter Ten
The door whooshed open automatically. The smell of
disinfectant, blood, and stress sweat was like a fist in the stomach.
Regan hated hospitals. After her accident, when she'd
been extricated from the crumbled mass of metal that had once been her police
cruiser, she'd spent two weeks in ICU, another month on the surgical recovery
floor, and weeks and weeks over the next two years undergoing reconstructive
surgery and rehabilitation.
"You okay, chиre?"
She hadn't realized she'd stopped walking until he'd
turned around. "Of course." She had to remain calm. To think like a
cop, instead of a victim. "Why wouldn't I be?"
"Now see, that's what I don' know." He laced
their fingers together and skimmed his thumb against her palm. "Your
hand's like ice."
"Because I'm freezing." She tugged her hand
free. "1 thought Louisiana was supposed to be warm."
"We have ourselves some cold spells in winter.
It's the moisture that makes it seem colder than it really is; it seeps down
deep into your bones." He brushed the back of his fingers up her cheek.
"That's good."
"What?" She hated to keep backing away from
him, but holding her ground would mean staying in too close proximity.
"Your color's comin' back. You were pale as
Lafitte's ghost a minute ago."
"I was not," she lied. She'd felt the blood
going out of her face as she'd gone light-headed. "I'd really like it if
you'd keep your hands to yourself, Callahan."
"That's not gonna be easy, but I'll try my
best."
"You do that." She resumed walking.
"Who's Lafitte?"
"One of our more colorful citizens. A pirate.
I'll tell you about him later, over supper."
"I ate at the airport." She hadn't wanted to
waste precious time; the fast-food burger she'd eaten in the terminal sat like
a rock in her stomach.
"It's a good story. You'll enjoy it."
The little exchange had given her time to adjust to
being back in an ER. Her legs were much steadier as she walked toward a counter
where a woman sporting an enormous orange beehive was chewing on the end of a
pencil.
"Hey, handsome," the receptionist greeted Nate
as they approached, "what's an eleven-letter word for 'having
magnetism'?"
"Callahan," he answered without missing a
beat.
She counted on fingers tipped in metallic purple.
"Not that I'm arguing your point, cher. But that's only eight
letters."
"Charismatic," Regan said.
The woman filled in the crossword puzzle squares.
"That's sure enough it. Bien merci."
"1 see the ambulance arrived," Nate said.
"It did. Truck driver's down the hall in X-ray. I
figured somebody'd be wanting to talk with him, so I told the tech to take her
time, so he wouldn't be able to take off for a while. Not that I imagine he'd
make it far, with his truck wrecked and his leg broken the way it is. The
bone's sticking clear through the skin. Must hurt like the devil."
It did, Regan thought, but did not say. A hideous
memory of hearing the snap of bone flashed through her mind. "How about
the boy?"
"He's in treatment room A. Lucky thing Tiny
Dupree was mopping the floors when the ambulance showed up. He practically had
to sit on the kid to keep him from leaving."
"Tiny's the Cajun Days crawfish-eating
champion," Nate told Regan. "Probably weighs three-eighty soaking
wet. So, the kid's okay?"
"He got himself some bruising across his ribs
from the seat belt yanking tight, and a cut on his head, but that's all that
showed up when he first came in. That's new, anyway."
"He has old wounds?" Regan asked sharply.
"Mais oui. He's got some old white scars that
look real suspicious, if you ask me. Dr. Ancelet should be finishing up a more
thorough examination any time now."
Regan wasn't surprised by any suspicious scars. Happy,
well-cared-for children did not run away from home.
"We'd like to talk with Eve when she's done
checking him over," Nate said.
"Sure 'nough." Her interested gaze settled
on the badge Regan was still wearing. "So, cher," she said,
addressing her words to Nate, "I see you've finally hired us a new
sheriff."
"I'm. not the new sheriff." Try as she
might, it was difficult not to stare at the woman's blinking red crawfish
earrings.
"You're wearing a badge."
"That's just temporary, so I could help out at
the train wreck."
"Terrible thing, that. If God hadn't had them in
his hands ..." The beehive bobbled a bit as she shook her head. "One
thing medicine's taught me is that sometimes you're blessed with a
miracle."
"Orиlia's husband was Blue Bayou's doctor just
about forever," Nate explained, then introduced them fully.
The woman looked at her more closely through the
rose-tinted lenses of the cat-eyed rhinestone-framed glasses. "1 seem to
recall my husband treating a little girl named Regan. It was a long time
ago."
"Was he the only doctor in town?" She
wondered if he'd signed Linda Dale's death certificate.
"Non. There was a new doctor, came here to work
off his medical school bills through some sort of government program. He was a
Yankee, from New York City, I think. Mebee Boston. Or Philadelphia. One of
those northern cities. He just stayed a couple years." She nodded to
herself. "He worked here at the hospital and picked up some extra money
working as the parish medical examiner."
Which meant, Regan thought, that he would have been
the one who wrote that death certificate.
"My Leon passed on two years ago," the woman
continued, "leaving me to rattle around in our big old house where he used
to have his office. For a while it wasn't too bad, what with Dani and her son
Matt living with me."
"Dani's married to Jack," Nate filled in.
"And about time they finally got together,
too," she said. "Well, like I was saying, Dani and Matt lived with me
a while when they first came back to town, then when she moved out to live
above the library for a time before marryin' Jack, her papa moved in so I could
sort of keep an eye on him, bein' as how he has himself a heart condition. But
he's back to work three days a week, which left me with too much time on my
hands. I was going crazy, me, until Nate saved my life by fixing me up with
this volunteer job."
"Orиlia exaggerates," Nate said.
"And the boy's too humble."
Regan couldn't help snorting at that.
"So, what do you do when you're not rescuing
children from train wrecks?"
"I'm a detective, in LA."
"Are you, now? Isn't that interesting?" Her
appraising gaze shifted from Regan to a woman wearing dark glasses, who'd just
come out of the swinging doors from the treatment rooms. "If this fille really isn't going to be the new sheriff, you need to send Dwayne down to the
No Name and pick up Mike Chauvet," Orиlia told Nate.
"Does it have something to do with Shannon bein'
here ?"
"She says she ran into a door." It was Orиlia's
turn to snort. "But this is the second time in the past ten days she's
shown up in the ER. The first time she had a cracked rib. Claimed she fell off
her horse, and bein' as how she was sticking to the story and the injury
matched the excuse, Eve Ancelet couldn't do much for her, 'cepting give her a
referral card to the free counseling clinic."
"Do you know if she went?"
"She did. Which didn't go over real well with
Mike when he found out she was talking about their so-called private family
stuff."
"Shit. Mike always was a goddamn hothead." A
temper Regan wouldn't have thought him possible of possessing licked at the
edges of Nate's voice.
"And as useless as tits on a bull," Orиlia
said. "Lord knows what Shannon was thinkin' when she married him. She can
sure do a lot better than that, she."
"Would you mind jus' waiting here a minute?"
Nate asked Regan. "While I take care of something?"
"Sure."
Regan watched as he went over to the woman and said
something she couldn't hear. He pulled off her sunglasses, the same way he'd
done to Regan at the airport, and shook his head at the ugly dark bruise
surrounding an eye red-rimmed from crying.
Regan had seen it all too often as a beat cop: a
battered wife seeks medical care, maybe goes so far as to kick her abuser out
of the house.
Occasionally she'd get brave enough to call the cops.
But more times than she cared to count, the woman would inevitably end up
taking the guy back. And the cycle of pain would begin all over again,
inevitably spiraling downward, until in the worst cases, Regan would end up at
the house investigating a homicide.
Obviously something Nate said struck a chord. The
woman slapped him. Hard. Then, wrapping her arms around herself, she turned
away.
"Anybody can talk her into escapin' a dangerous
marriage, it's that boy," Oretia, who was also watching the little drama,
said. "Not many people can resist Nate Callahan once he gets an idea into
his head."
"I've noticed. They seem close."
"They went together for a while in college. Back
when Nate was playin' ball for Tulane. They were Blue Bayou's golden couple:
the local boy headed toward a pro baseball career and the pretty, sweet prom
queen who'd always wanted to be a first-grade teacher."
"Nate Callahan played professional
baseball?" Not that she cared, but it did explain the easy, fluid way he
moved. She was not the least bit surprised to learn he'd dated a prom queen.
She suspected there were a great many cheerleaders and beauty contestants in
the man's past.
"Played all the sports, he, but the big thing was
his baseball scholarship. College recruiters were buzzin' around this place
like bees to a honeycomb his senior year of high school. Like to drive his
maman crazy. A lot of people who know a lot more than me about sports said he was
a phenom—that's like a natural, but better, so they tell me— but then he ended
up havin' to come home his freshman year."
Huh—he'd undoubtedly flunked out after too many frat
parties.
Nate took the former prom queen in his arms; she threw
her arms around his neck and clung. He held her tight for a long, silent
minute, then curved his hands over her shoulders and put her a little away from
him. His expression was warm and caring, but determined.
Shannon Chauvet blinked against the tears that had
begun streaming down her face. Bit her lip. Then nodded.
Regan saw not a hint of seduction in his smile as he
skimmed a knuckle up one of her badly bruised cheekbones, then dropped a quick
kiss on her lips.
"Call Jack," he said to Orиlia when he
returned to the counter. "Ask him to come get Shannon so she and Ben can
stay at Beau Soleil for a while. Then call the state police and ask for Trooper
Benoit. Tell him you're calling for me, explain the situation, and tell him
that I'm claiming that favor he owes me."
"Good idea." She reached for the phone.
"Harboring abused wives can be dangerous,"
Regan said. Violent husbands were often at their most volatile when the women
finally got up the nerve to leave. "Shouldn't you have asked your brother
if he wanted to take her in?"
"Jack won't mind. He and Shannon had a little bit
of a thing back when they were kids, before Jack fell heart over heels for
Dani. They stayed friends."
Both brothers had dated her? "Definitely a
friendly town you have here," she said dryly.
"I told you it was," he reminded her,
ignoring the dash of sarcasm.
"Jack may not mind, but what about his wife?
Surely she won't feel comfortable with one of his ex-girlfriends sleeping in
her house."
"Dani's got a heart as big as all outdoors,"
Orиlia offered.
"The important thing is to get her somewhere safe
before she gets seriously hurt, or Ben, her fifteen-year-old son, gets hurt
trying to protect her. Besides, Jack's thing for Shannon ended long before he
and Dani hooked up," Nate said. "Since he gave his heart to Dani,
he's become a born-again monogamist. She doesn't have anything to worry
about."
"It looks as if you and Shannon stayed real good
friends after your thing, too."
His eyes filled with humor. "Aren't you supposed
to read me my rights about anything I say being used against me before you ask
a leading question like that, detective?"
"Skip it." Disgusted with herself for
asking, Regan gave him a withering look. "It's not germane to the
situation."
"Germane." He chuckled and rocked back on
his heels. "Damned if you aren't reminding me more and more of Finn, which
tends to get a little distracting, since you sure smell a whole lot
better."
He skimmed a finger down her nose.
"I believe we were talking about your brother
Jack." That treacherous finger was now trailing around the line of her
jaw. She batted at his hand. "And would you please stop touching me."
"Sorry. You had a little smudge of dirt on your
face." He dipped his hands into the back pockets of his jeans. "And
touchin' is jus' one of those natural things I do without thinking. Most women
don't seem to mind."
"Maybe they just don't tell you they don't like
it."
"Maybe." He considered that possibility.
"But I don't think so. Women down here might have a reputation north of
the Mason-Dixon line for being too accommodating, and I suppose, on occasion,
some might be. But I've never met one yet who won't let a man know when she's
not happy. We southern men are very well trained."
"What a sterling testimony to southern womanhood.
Scarlett O'Hara would be so pleased."
"You've got a sassy mouth on you, Detective
Delectable. Good thing I always preferred Scarlett over Melanie. As for Jack,
the trick is going to be keeping him from cleaning Mike's clock for laying
hands on Shannon. Which is why I'm having a state cop come make the
arrest."
"That sounds like a sensible decision."
"Why, thank you, darlin'. I do have my
moments."
The doors to the ER swung open again, and a slender
woman wearing a white lab coat came out. She greeted Nate warmly, then drew
back and looked at Regan. "I'm Dr. Eve Ancelet. I hear we have you and
Nate to thank for saving that little boy's life."
"It's good to meet you. I'm Regan Hart, and I'm
just glad I was able to help out."
"As am I." Friendly, intelligent eyes
drifted to the badge. "Looks as if Nate's found the perfect person to be
our new sheriff."
"I'm not the new sheriff."
"Detective Hart keeps telltn' me that she's going
back to L.A. after she gets some personal business taken care of," Nate
said. "I'm hoping to change her mind."
"Blue Bayou would be quite a change from Los
Angeles." The doctor's gaze turned professional, and Regan knew her expert
eye was taking in the faint tracing of scars.
"I suppose it would be," Regan replied
equably.
"How's the kid doin'?" Nate asked.
"Fairly well, considering what he's been through.
He's a little underweight, but I have no way of knowing whether or not that's a
longtime problem, or something that's occurred recently during his time on the
road."
"Did he tell you how long that's been?" Nate
asked.
"He's claiming he doesn't remember anything prior
to the accident, which could be valid, since retrograde amnesia certainly isn't
unheard of after a blow to the head or even some traumatic incidents. But it's
my guess he's attempting to avoid getting sent back home."
"Did the exam show any sign of abuse?" Regan
asked.
"Several, actually."
Every muscle in Regan's body tensed. "What
kind?"
"Small white circular scars over his back and
chest."
Unfortunately, Regan had seen those before.
"Cigarette burns."
The doctor nodded.
"Christ," Nate breathed, "that's out
and out torture. What kind of person would do anything like that to a
kid?"
"A monster," Regan said grimly. "What
else?" she asked the doctor.
"Some longer, narrower scars across his buttocks.
I'd say they'd been made with a belt or some sort of strap."
Nate looked as sick as Regan felt. All these years on
the job but she'd never get used to the idea of anyone purposefully harming a
child.
"What about sexual abuse?"
"There were no physical signs."
"Well, that's good news," Nate said.
"Not all abuse leaves evidence," Regan
pointed out. Personally, she didn't have a very optimistic view in this case.
"True," Doctor Ancelet agreed. "And
he's so closemouthed, it's hard to tell what he's running from. But he claimed
all the truck driver did was give him a ride. I spoke with the driver, who
didn't appear to fit any profile."
"Do you have experience with abuse
profiling?"
"Actually, I do. Before I went into family
practice, I was in a residency program specializing in the treatment of both
abused children and their abusers, who, with the exception of sexual abuse, are
often merely people who never learned parenting skills."
"Even if the driver's not a pedophile, he's still
guilty of breaking regulations against taking on passengers," Regan
insisted. "He could also possibly be charged with criminal recklessness at
the crossing."
"The troopers are handling that, since the
accident was on a state highway," Nate said. "The state cops will
probably also question him about the kid. But meanwhile, we don't even know the
accident was his fault. It was awfully foggy."
"I heard the whistle from your office. He should
have heard it from the tracks."
"Maybe he made a major mistake. But you've got to
give the guy credit for being a Good Samaritan by picking up the kid. What was
he supposed to do, leave the boy alone out there and freezing?"
"He had to know he was a runaway," Regan
argued doggedly. "He should have called the cops." She turned back to
Eve. "1 don't suppose the kid told you where he's from, either."
"No." The doctor shook her head. "I'm
afraid his so-called amnesia struck again. I have a call in to the Department
of Social Services. Hopefully once they get him temporarily settled somewhere,
he might begin to open up."
When they entered the treatment room, the teen was
sitting atop the metal examining table, clad in threadbare jeans and an OutKast
rapper T-shirt. A huge man wearing navy blue coveralls and a custodian's name
tag stood at the doorway, arms like tree trunks folded across his mighty chest.
His speckled face, which appeared perpetually sunburned, was set in a
forbidding scowl. Regan doubted many people would want to test him.
"How are you doing?" Regan asked the
teenager after Nate had introduced her to the misnamed Tiny Dupree.
"Fine. Or I will be when I get the hell out of
here."
"Hospitals aren't the most fun places," she
agreed. "Just tell us where you're from, and we'll call and have someone
come get you. You can be back home by morning."
His face and eyes hardened. "I already told the
doc I don't remember."
"Well, I'm sure we'll be able to help you with
that," she reassured him in her best Good Cop voice. "Have you ever
heard of NOMEC?"
Those hard young eyes narrowed suspiciously.
"No."
"It stands for the National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children. It lists every child reported missing in America. I'm
sure it won't take any time at all to find out who you are."
He met her mild look with a level one of his own.
She'd seen that expression on the faces of kids who'd grown up in dangerous,
violent homes. He wasn't the least hit afraid of the badge she'd pinned to her
shirt. In fact, he seemed to be daring her to do her best.
"Cool 'Cause it's a real bitch not knowing who I
am."
"Well now," Nate entered the conversation.
"I've got myself an idea. How 'bout you and me go get a bite of supper? I
haven't eaten since noon, and after all that happened out at the crash site,
I've got a powerful hunger."
"May I speak with you out in the hall,
mayor?" Regan asked on a frosty tone.
"Sure." He squeezed the kid's too-thin
shoulder. "We'll be right back."
"Like I care."
Regan turned on Nate the moment they left the room.
"You dragged me into this, Callahan. So would you care to explain why you
felt the need to interrupt my questioning?"
"I thought he might find it easier to talk to
me."
"Because you're a man? I'm not surprised you'd
take a chauvinistic view of the problem."
"1 wasn't thinking about the man/woman
thing." When his finger skimmed over the badge she'd yet to take off,
Regan could have sworn the metal heated. "Given his situation, he might
not feel all that comfortable with a police officer."
They were wasting time. As relieved as she was that
they'd been able to get the driver and kid out of the truck, she hadn't come
here to take part in any rescue operation. She certainly hadn't wanted to get
involved with an uncooperative runaway. What she wanted, dammit, was to find
out some facts about the woman who could very well be her birth mother.
Unfortunately, until this situation was taken care of,
she wasn't going to have Nate Callahan's help. Only a few hours ago she
wouldn't have thought she'd needed it, but having watched him in action, she
realized that he could be an asset. Not only did he seem to know everyone in
town, he also possessed some sort of aura, as if he was sending out
brain-altering vibes that made everyone do exactly what he wanted.
No wonder he'd been elected mayor. Regan was just
grateful he'd chosen to use that personality trait for politics, because if
he'd decided to be a con man, he probably would have been a crackerjack one.
"Well?" Nate asked.
"You’ve got a point," she allowed. "But
if he starts saying anything that could implicate anyone in a crime—"
"I promise I'll shut my mouth and save any
further questioning for you so I don't mess up a court case."
It wasn't a bad solution. And right now it was the
best they had. "Okay. Then let's get this show on the road."
She still didn't quite trust Nate Callahan, but didn't
see that she had much choice. The thought of Dwayne the parking-ticket-writer
tackling such sensitive questioning wasn't at all appealing.
Chapter Eleven
The cafeteria was small and designed to cater more to
staff than to family members of patients. Since it was past visiting hours,
most of the Formica tables were empty. Someone was making French fries. The
smell made Josh's mouth water.
The guy who'd dragged him out of the truck handed him
a tray, then picked one up for himself. "You ever have crawfish иtouffиe?"
"Hell, no. Crawfish look like bugs. Who'd want to
eat a bug?"
"They may not be real pretty. And you're right
about them looking kinda buglike, which I guess is how they got the name mud
bugs. But they sure taste good."
"I'd rather have a burger." His stomach
growled at the thought of a huge hunk of ground beef dripping with mayo.
"One burger, coming up," the woman wearing a
hair net and white apron standing behind the open pans of food said. "What
you want on that, cher?"
"Everything."
"You know," Nate said, "I think I'll have
a burger, too. But hold the onions." He shot Josh a grin. "Never know
when you might have the chance to kiss a pretty girl."
"Like that cop?"
"Detective Hart?"
"Yeah. You got something going with the bitch?
Like are you shacked up together or something?"
"Contrary to what you may hear on the radio these
days, life's not a rap song," Nate said mildly. "Why don't you try
calling her a lady?"
"What kinda lady packs heat?"
"An interesting one. And we're not shacked up
together or anything. What gave you the idea that we were?"
"Don't know." He shrugged, wishing he hadn't
brought it up. "She's kind of okay looking. For a cop."
"She's real pretty, cop or not. And she smells
good, too."
She did. But not like she'd bathed in some too-sweet
stink oil, like Josh's mother's old hooker pals. He looked around. This place
wasn't exactly Mickey D's, but it was sure a lot better than some of the places
he'd been eating in lately. Hell, back home if you turned your back on a
bologna sandwich long enough to get a can of Dr Pepper out of the refrigerator,
the roaches would carry it away.
"That sure was some wreck," Nate said
conversationally. "Lucky thing nobody got hurt too bad."
"Yeah." Although he couldn't admit it, he
was grateful to the guy for having saved him. Not that he was sure he deserved
saving.
When he'd been younger and a lot smaller, his mother
had gotten arrested for drug dealing and he'd been sent to live with his
grandmother, who had never let alcoholism get in the way of her old-time
fire-and-brimstone religion. She used to beat him with a leather strap, trying
to knock the devil out of him, and although Josh didn't really believe in God
or the devil or heaven and hell, deep down inside, he wondered if maybe the
reason no one had ever wanted him was because he'd been born bad.
He tried to think of one person he knew who'd risk his
life for strangers and was coming up with a big fat zero when the woman slapped
a white plate onto the tray. The burger had been piled high with lettuce,
tomato slices, and onion.
"Fixin's are on the table," she said.
"You want fries with that, cher?"
"Sure he does," Nate answered for him.
"And dessert."
"We got rice custard or molasses pecan pie."
"Got any vanilla ice cream for the pie?"
Nate asked.
Her gaze flicked over Josh in a measuring way he'd
come to recognize. "I suppose I can round some up. You gonna want whipped
cream on the custard?"
"Darlin', you read my mind. We'll take both for
the jeune homme, here, and I'll take the custard and some coffee."
"I don't want any of that rice crap," Josh
said.
"Is that any way for a risk taker to talk?"
Nate asked. "Joe, the cook, isn't quite up to my maman's standard—she made
a riz au lait that could make the angels sing—but his comes pretty damn
close. Antoine's, up in N'Awlins, tried to hire him away last year, hut his
wife is a nurse up in ICU and neither of them was all that eager to leave Blue
Bayou, after havin' lived their whole lives here, so we were lucky to keep
him."
"They've always lived in one place?"
"Sure. Mos' folks around here were born on the
bayou."
Josh figured that counting the foster homes and two
residential treatment homes, he'd probably moved twenty times in his fourteen
years. Everytime those envelopes with the flourescent red Overdue stickers
would start coming in, his mother would pack up their stuff and they'd take off
in the middle of the night. The last time his backpack had gotten left behind,
along with class records from three previous schools, which always made it
tough to enroll in a new one.
Not that his mother had cared if he showed up in
class, but he did. Not only was school an escape, so long as he could survive
the inevitable challenges from the bullies; the classroom was the only place
he'd ever felt safe. And in charge of his own life.
"Okay," he said when he realized they were
both looking at him, waiting for an answer. "What the fuck. I'll try
it."
"Good choice," the woman said with a nod.
"Maybe I should get you some soap, too. So you can wash out that potty
mouth."
"She's got a point," Nate said as she
retrieved their desserts.
"Excuse me, your Heinass."
"Cute." They carried their trays to a round
table in the far corner of the room. The better, Josh figured, to conduct the
interrogation.
Nate picked up a small bottle of red sauce and doused
his fries and burger. "Want some peppers?"
"On French fries?" Josh reached for the
catsup.
"Pepper juice goes on jus' about anything. You
haven't tasted fried eggs till you've had them with Tabasco. We grow the
peppers right outside Blue Bayou. Most kids grow up eating it as soon as they
graduate off their maman's milk. Guess you're not used to that."
"No."
"So that'd mean you're not from around
here."
The burger was halfway to his mouth. Although it was
one of the hardest things he'd ever done, nearly as hard as spending the past month
on the run, Josh lowered it to the plate. "Did you bring me down here to
feed me? Or pump me for that effing cop?"
"A little of both. But since you're on to me, how
about we skip the questions till after supper?"
They ate in silence, the boy wolfing the food down as
if he'd been starving for days. Which, Nate figured, could well be the case.
"You know," he suggested after a while,
"Detective Hart is only trying to help."
"She's a cop."
"So?"
"So all she cares about is making busts and
taking bribes."
"That's quite a negative viewpoint you've got
goin' there. Did you pick it up on the streets? Or from someone you know? Like,
maybe, your dad?"
"I never had a dad."
His face grew hard, once again reminding Nate of his
brother. Jack had prided himself on being the hellion of Blue Bayou. The truth
was, he'd just been hurting so bad, he hadn't known any other way to deal with
his anger. Nate had been mad, too, but at twelve he'd been a lot more afraid of
Finn than Jack was.
Besides, although no one would have ever said it out
loud, as the baby of the family, Nate had been their maman's favorite. Which
was why it'd fallen to him to try to ease her hurt after that terrible day that
was scorched into his memory.
"That must be tough. I lost my dad when I was
twelve. About your age."
"He take off?"
The kid didn't agree about the age thing, nor did he
correct him. So much for that ploy. "No. He passed on. But at least I got
to know him for a little while."
"Yeah, some guys get all the luck." Ignoring
the big red-and-white No Smoking sign just a few feet away, the teen reached
into a pocket and took out a book of matches. "You got a cigarette?"
"No. Besides, this is a nonsmoking building, and
you're too young to smoke."
"Am not. I'm just small for my age."
"Won't get a whole lot bigger if you smoke,"
Nate said. "And die of lung cancer by the time you're in your
forties."
"Everyone's going to die of something."
"True enough. But me, I'd rather drop dead after
makin' love to a jolie fille rather than go bald from chemo and hacking my
lungs out."
"Is that how your dad died?"
"No. He was shot and killed by some crazy,
mad-as-a-hornet swamp dweller tryin' to murder a judge." Nate sighed at
the memory. "He was as big and strong as ever at breakfast, when he lit
into me for getting caught up in a ball game and forgettin' to mow the lawn the
day before. By lunch he was lying on the courthouse floor, bleeding to
death."
"That sucks."
"Yeah."
A silence settled over them.
"Did it make you mad?"
"Mais yeah. I used to lie in bed at night and
imagine going down to the jail with his service revolver—he was sheriff of Blue
Bayou— and blowing the guy away. But my maman was real torn up about losing
him, so I didn't want to make things worse for her by getting myself sent away
to prison. 'Sides, like we say in bouree, you gotta play the cards you're
dealt."
"What if you're playing against a stacked
deck?"
Nate suspected the kid had been born with the cards
stacked against him. "I don't know," he said honestly.
"You damn bet you don't. Like I said, some guys
get all the luck." This time the silence lengthened. Grew deeper. "I
don't even know who my dad was."
"That's gotta be tough."
"Nah." He drew in on a paper straw, making a
loud sucking sound in the bottom of the milkshake cup. "I figured if she
didn't know, I didn't want to. I never would have wanted any of those scumbags
she brought home to be my dad, anyway."
"Brought? As in the past?"
"She died." She'd died of a drug overdose,
but that wasn't any of this guy's business.
"I'm sorry, cher."
"Well, that makes one of us." The chair legs
scraped on the vinyl tile as he pushed away from the table. As they returned
upstairs, Nate figured it was a good thing he hadn't followed Big Jake Callahan
into law enforcement, because he couldn't even get a confession out of a
half-starved kid.
After leaving the teenager in the more than capable
hands of Tiny Dupree, Regan and Nate went to Eve Ancelet's office, where Judi
Welch of the parish Department of Social Services was waiting.
"Hey, Judi," Nate greeted her with a hug.
"Aren't you lookin' as pretty as a speckled pup?"
"Flatterer." She punched him lightly on the
shoulder. "But actually, you're close. I've been sick as a dog all week
with morning sickness. Which, in my case, is inaccurately named, since it
pretty much lasts all day."
"Sorry to hear that, chиre. But Matt must be real
happy about the news."
"He is. Especially since he got a promotion last
week," she said proudly. "He's now assistant bank manager. It pays
enough to add another bedroom onto the house."
"Good for him." Given the choice between
being thrown into a pool of piranhas in a feeding frenzy or spending his days
wearing a suit and tie and sitting behind a desk counting other people's money,
he'd go with the man-eating fish any old day. "How're the girls?"
She had three. When the third one, Angelique, had been
born and he'd shown up at the hospital with flowers, Matt had jokingly said
that he'd always wanted his own basketball team, but had gotten a harem
instead. Since Judi had always been Blue Bayou's most outspoken, card-carrying
feminist, Nate had been stunned when, instead of lighting into her husband,
she'd laughed as if Matt had been doin' standup on Letterman.
Love, he'd figured, obviously scrambles your brain. Which
was why he'd decided a long time ago to stay clear of it.
Regan watched their easy banter, noticing how the
social worker didn't even back away when he brushed a curl off her temple.
She'd bet her last pay raise they'd slept together. Reminding herself that it
was none of her business if Nate Callahan had affairs with all his
constituents, Regan yanked her mind back to business.
"Mrs. Welch is here to interview the boy,"
she told Nate.
"I figured as much. Not going to be easy,"
he said. "The kid's wearing pretty tough armor. I did manage to find out
that his mom's dead. And he doesn't know who his father is."
"If he's telling the truth," Regan said.
"Well, since we've no idea who he is, DSS is
going to have to take charge of him and find temporary placement," Judi
said.
"He can come home with me," Nate said.
"You?" Judi appeared as surprised by the
offer as Regan was.
"What's wrong with me?"
"You're not married," Judi pointed out.
"So? You never heard of single fathers?"
"Sure. I just never thought of you as being
one." She tapped the tip of her ballpoint pen on her clipboard. "Are
you actually volunteering to become a foster parent? Or to adopt the boy if it
turns out he's available?"
"You said you needed a temporary home. I've got
an extra room. And I think we understand each other well enough that we could
get through the next few days without him burning down my house."
"Don't be so sure of that," Regan said. "He's
at a ripe age for pyromania."
Nate thought of those matches the kid had taken out of
his pocket. "We'll be okay." He hoped.
Judi frowned. "You haven't been
prequalified."
"Got anyone else in town who is?"
"No. Well, there are the Duprees over on Heron,
but they've already got three kids staying at their house along with their own
two. And since the Camerons are currently between kids, they decided to take
that vacation in California they've always dreamed of. The McDaniels just took
a newborn last week, so she's pretty swamped."
"See," he said as if the matter had already
been settled, "I'm the logical solution."
"That's very sweet of you to offer, Nate, but
you're not in the system. I don't have the authority to just let you take him
home like he's some stray puppy you picked up off the street."
"We've kinda bonded." Okay, so it was a
stretch.
"He belongs in an official juvenile care
facility."
"You mean a kid jail." Regan was surprised
by the way his jaw tightened and his eyes turned hard. "Dammit, Judi, you
know what happened to Jack when he landed in one of those."
"From what I've heard, it was difficult. But he
survived and became a better person for it."
"He survived because he was a lot tougher than
this kid, and because he'd come from a family who cared about him with a mother
who never failed to show up on visiting day the entire year he was there."
"That was a boot camp for repeat offenders. I'm
talking about a residential care center."
"Center, boot camp, they're still no place for a
messed-up kid." He folded his arms, which, while not nearly the size of
the gargantuan custodian's, were admittedly impressive. Regan suspected those
rock-hard biceps and well-defined muscles came from swinging a hammer, not reps
on some spa weight machine. "I may not be the perfect solution, but I'm a
helluva lot better than one of those places."
"You'd have to get judicial approval."
"No sweat. Since Judge Dupree got himself
reappointed to the bench, he can vouch for me."
Judi rubbed her forehead with her fingers. Sighed.
Then gave him a warning look. "You know, this isn't going to be a walk in
the park."
"I realize we're not talking about the Beav here.
The kid might try to come off like Eminem, but deep down he's just a kid."
He winked at Regan. "And if he gives me any real trouble, I'll have the
detective shoot him."
Judi shook her head. "Lucky thing 1 know you well
enough to know that you're joking. Some DSS workers might just find that
statement worrisome."
"See? Who better to vouch for me than the lady in
charge of placement, who knows me so well?" he said with one of those
devastating smiles.
She studied him again. "Peter Pan and the lost
boy," she murmured.
Peter Pan again? Obviously she'd been talking to
Charlene. Nate had forgotten the two women had been on the high school prom
court together. Terrific.
"All right. We'll give it a try," she said
finally. "But I can't cut corners just because it's you, Nate. Since
jurisdiction crosses parish and perhaps even state lines, depending on where
the kid ran from, I'm going to have to make sure all the t's are dotted and the
t's crossed."
"The judge is staying with Orиlia during the week
to save himself the drive into town from Beau Soleil, so we can stop on the way
to checkin' Detective Hart into the inn."
Regan held up a hand. "I don't need—"
"Of course you don't need me to drive you, chиre,"
he cut her off. "But I figured you'd want to get down to working on that
project of yours, which I promised to help with," he reminded her.
"You can come along with me, and I'll have Dwayne drive your car over to
the inn first thing in the morning."
"I'm not here for a vacation. I want to get an
early start."
"The car'll be there before you get up," he
promised. "Besides, you'll get a lot better break on the rate if I'm with
you when you check in."
"Oh?" She arched a brow. "I suppose the
night clerk is an old friend?"
The sarcasm slid right off him. "Well now, you
know, she is. But that's not the reason 1 can get you a discount rate. The
reason is that I'm part owner."
"You own a hotel?"
"Only about a third." He glanced at his
watch. "But it's gettin' late, and I hate botherin' the judge at home,
since it wasn't that long ago he had heart surgery. How about we just save the
explanation for after we check you in?"
Chapter Twelve
Nate called the judge to let him know they were
coming. Ten minutes later, they were stopping in front of a white two-story
house on the corner of a tree-flanked cobblestone street.
"I'll wait in the car," the kid said.
"Sorry, cher," Nate said. "But you're
coming in with us."
"1 didn't hear anyone reading me my rights,"
he grumbled.
"And I didn't hear anyone putting you under
arrest," Regan said mildly. "So why don't you make it easier on all
of us and come along? Unless you'd rather the mayor call for a trooper to take
you to the nearest residential facility."
Apparently deciding he was outnumbered and better off with
them than in some juvenile detention center, he gave in.
"You didn't lock the door," Regan reminded
Nate as they began walking up the front sidewalk.
"No need. This is—"
"A peaceful town."
"Got it on the first try."
"This house would cost a small fortune in
L.A.," Regan said as they climbed the steps to the front door. "The
porch is nearly as wide as my apartment living room."
"It was designed for steeping outside during the
summer," Nate said. "Back before air conditioning." He rang a
doorbell that played the opening bars of "Dixie." "It's also
good for sitting out, watching your neighbors, and chatting with folks that
walk by."
"People still actually do that?"
"Not as much as they used to," he allowed.
"But probably more than in the city."
"Sounds boring," the kid said.
Sounds nice, Regan thought. Unfortunately, if the
citizens of her precinct were to try it, they could be hit by a stray bullet.
The judge might be old enough to be her grandfather
and a bit frail looking, but his voice had the deep, sonorous tones made for
projecting throughout a courtroom.
"Heard you're a detective," he said after
Nate had introduced them.
"Yes, sir. I work homicide in L.A."
"So what brings you to town?"
"I was overdue for some R&R, and I've always
enjoyed Louisiana." It wasn't exactly the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth, but this wasn't a courtroom, and she hadn't sworn an
oath.
"Most people go to New Orleans."
"I'm not most people, Your Honor."
He gave her a razor-sharp look she suspected he used
to keep order in his courtroom. Then he turned to Nate. "So you need a
temporary custody order."
"Yessir."
"You have any idea what you're getting
into?"
"No, sir. Not exactly. But it just seems like the
thing to do."
The judge shrugged. "You always were the soft one
in the family. Just like your maman." His stern expression softened for
the first time since he'd opened the front door. "She was a good
woman."
"The best," Nate agreed. "Maman was the
judge's housekeeper," he told Regan. "After my father was killed."
"I would have liked her to be more than a
housekeeper. But Jake turned out to be too tough an act to follow."
Regan noticed Nate looked surprised by that
revelation. "My parents had something special."
"That's what she said when she rejected me."
"I hadn't known you proposed."
"No need for you boys to know, since she turned
my proposal down. Of course, she was real nice about it. No one in the parish
sweeter than your mother." Appearing embarrassed by the glimpse into his
personal life, the judge squared his shoulders, cleared his throat, signed the
temporary custody papers with a flourish, then handed them back to Nate.
"This is just temporary," he warned the
teenager. "You give Mr. Callahan any trouble, and I'll rescind the order
so fast your head will spin." He snapped his fingers to underscore the
warning.
"Well, that scares the shit out of me," the
boy muttered beneath his breath.
"What did you say?" The judge's voice
cracked like a whip.
"I said, okay."
Eyes locked, and challenge swirled between the youngest
and oldest males in the book-lined room. Regan let out a breath when the judge
decided not to wield his authority to just ship the kid off right now.
"You've definitely got your hands full," he
warned Nate.
"We'll get along fine."
"If he doesn't steal you blind," the judge
muttered, as if the teenager wasn't standing right there in the room.
"Always were too good-natured for your own good. Just like your
mother."
"I'm proud to be compared to maman."
"Blue Bayou might be a small town," Regan
said as they drove away from the house, "but the judge could hold his own
on any bench in LA." The teen was in the backseat, nodding along with
whatever was blasting out of his Walkman earphones.
"You should have seen him in the old days. He's
softened a lot the past few months."
"Seems he had at least one soft spot for a long
time. You didn't know about his feelings for your mother, did you?"
"No fooling a cop," he said with a
casualness she suspected he wasn't quite feeling. "That was a surprise.
Though I suppose it does explain a lot of things. Like why he was always
bailing Jack out of trouble and trying to straighten him out, like he was his
own son. Looking back on it, I guess you could say he was giving him tough
love. At least he didn't ignore him, the way he did Danielle."
"Jack's wife?"
"Yeah. I guess I didn't mention that part. She's
the judge's daughter."
"Is everyone in this town connected?"
"Pretty much so, I guess. It's a small place, and
people tend not to move away, or move in. So while there are some distinct
circles, they all pretty much overlap."
"Which means that most of the people, of a
certain age, anyway, would have known Linda Dale."
"Yeah. I'd suspect so." He glanced up at the
rearvtew mirror, then over at her. "Which should make your cold case
not as cold as it might be in the big city."
"True. It also suggests that if she didn't commit
suicide, whoever murdered her may still be living in Blue Bayou, which makes it
personal." For both of them, if Dale did turn out to be her mother.
"Yeah."
Having come to the conclusion that things really were
different in the South, Regan didn't bother to argue when Nate insisted on
seeing her up to her room. Which meant, of course, that they had to take the
teenager with them so they wouldn't risk him rabbiting the minute he was alone.
"Shit, you two are paranoid," he muttered as
he slumped across a lobby boasting huge bouquets of hothouse flowers, lots of
rich wood, exquisite antique furniture, and leafy plants.
"Not really." Nate stuck the coded card in
the slot and pressed the button for the third floor. "You just remind me
of someone 1 used to know, so I just think about what he would have done in a
similar circumstance."
The elevator doors opened onto a luxurious suite that
would not have been out of place in the Beverly Wilshire.
"I need some time alone with the detective,"
Nate told the kid. "We need to talk."
"Yeah, right. That's what everyone does in a
hotel room."
Nate heaved an exaggerated sigh. "You know, you
really can be one pain in the ass." He opened the mini-bar and pulled out
a Coke, a can of peanuts, and a Snickers bar. "This doesn't concern you,
so why don't you go into one of the bedrooms and play some video games on the
TV?"
Mumbling beneath his breath, he snatched the snack
food out of Nate's hands, disappeared into the adjoining room, and shut the
door behind him.
"He's going to have junk-food overload," she
warned.
"Probably won't be the worst thing that happened
to him."
She couldn't argue with that. She skimmed a finger
over the glossy top of a Queen Anne desk. "You didn't have to upgrade my
room to this suite."
"It wasn't any big deal." Nate was bent
down, perusing the contents of the mini-bar. "It was jus' sitting here
vacant."
"So, how did you end up owning a third of a
hotel?"
"The hotel was built in the 1800s but burned down
last year. When the owners rebuilt, they figured they'd get more tourist
business if it was redone to look more like Tara, so they hired me to do the
job, but they couldn't afford what it was going to cost to do it right, So I
took some draws to cover the subcontractor and material bills, then agreed to
take a piece of the place as my cut."
"Blue Bayou doesn't exactly seem like a tourist
mecca. Won't it take an awfully long time to get your money back?"
"Probably. But I've always had this perverse
feeling that it was more important to be happy than rich."
She could identify with that. "And restoring this
hotel made you happy."
"As a crawfish in mud."
"You did a very good job." She studied the
crown molding, surprised that such an outwardly easygoing man would pay such
strict attention to detail.
"Thanks."
"Though, to be perfectly honest, it reminds me
more of Twelve Oaks than Tara."
"Sounds like you've got a nodding acquaintance
with a certain movie."
"I've seen it a few times." She didn't feel
any need to mention that a few translated to a dozen. Her mother once accused
her of having hidden southern blood, to be so taken by a mere movie. Regan
sighed. She'd never realized at the time how true that might be.
"How about a little Bailey's nightcap?"
"At mini-bar prices?" The TV came on in the
other room, the low bass sound of the video game thrumming through the wall.
"Who's buying?"
"It's on the house. Besides, even if it wasn't,
you're a rich lady now. You can afford to indulge yourself."
"We still don't know, for sure, that I am
actually Linda Dale's daughter."
"You wouldn't have come all this way if you
didn't think there was a damn good chance." He took down two glasses from
the overhead rack, poured the Irish Cream, and handed her one.
"Thanks." She took a sip and felt the liquid
warmth begin to flow through her veins. "And no, I wouldn't have come here
if I hadn't thought there was a possibility."
Regan wasn't yet prepared to share the story of the
Mardi Gras elephant. She sank down on the couch, tilted her head back, and
looked out at the flickering gas lights of the town's main street. The Irish
Cream was going straight to her head, conspiring with a lack of sleep last
night and the long flight, followed by the adrenaline rush of the rescue
wearing off.
"I really hate to admit this, hut I think I'm
afraid to discover the truth."
"You're a detective," he reminded her.
"Digging out the truth is your job."
"Yeah, it seems I've done a bang-up job of
that." Her head had begun to feel light, but she took another sip anyway.
"If the woman who died in that garage is my mother, I've been lied to my
entire life and never had a clue."
If there was one thing Nate had always had a handle
on, it was knowing precisely what to say in the getting-to-know-you stage of an
affair. He let out a deep breath and wondered why he couldn't think of a single
word to make this right.
"She probably had a good reason for not telling
you the truth."
"Sure she did. Being honest would have brought up
a lot of questions she probably didn't want to answer." Regan's strangled
laugh held not a hint of humor. "I don't know why I should be surprised.
Everyone lies."
She'd told him that the first day. She'd also told him
to get lost, but there'd already been too much passed between them to walk away
now.
"You'll figure it out, chиre." He sat down
next to her. "Put all the pieces together."
"Yeah." She jerked a shoulder. "You're
damn right I will." Nate found the renewed spark of pride encouraging. It
was good that she was beginning to convince herself. "There was this
detective I worked with when I first got promoted into homicide, who'd drive
everyone crazy because he was so slow and methodical." She ran her finger
around the edge of the glass. Nate was finding it disconcerting to imagine
those smooth lady hands holding a gun, those long slender fingers tipped with
their tidy, unlacquered nails pulling a trigger. Especially when he was
experiencing this low, thrumming need to have them on him.
"Watching him work a crime scene was like
watching a glacier
flow," she continued, unaware of the hot,
uncensored direction of his thoughts. "Whenever anyone'd rag him about it,
or a new partner would complain, he'd just shrug and say that he'd solve no
crime before its time."
"It's been thirty-one years. Seems about time, to
me."
"Cold cases are the hardest."
"Which is why you should be gettin' some
rest." As he'd done at the airport, he skimmed a finger beneath her eyes.
"I'll get the kid, take him home and get him settled, and be back in the
morning."
"Don't you have to work?" Video game
explosions were coming from the bedroom; his outwardly casual touch had ignited
other ones inside her.
"Nothin' that can't be put off."
"What about the boy?"
"That's the nice thing about having family. I'll
drop him off at Jack's."
"What makes you think your brother can handle a
delinquent, runaway teenager?"
"After our dad was killed, Jack became a wannabe
delinquent. This kid reminds me a lot of him back then. He's angry and a whole
lot lost. 'Sides, I figure any guy who can hold his own with Colombian drug
lords should be able to take care of one teenage kid for a few hours."
He went over to the table, where a ballpoint pen
inscribed with the inn's name and a notepad were sitting, scrawled some lines
onto the paper, and handed it to her. His handwriting was as illegible as hers
was neat.
"Is there a codebook that goes with this?"
she asked
Regan knew she was in trouble when his deep laugh
pulled sexual chords. What she'd told Van was true: all her parts definitely
were in working order.
"It's how to get to the library. Not that you
wouldn't have found it yourself—this town's pretty easy to get around, bein'
that it's all laid out in squares like Savannah, but this might save you some
time. The local paper's the Cajun Chronicle. Dani—she's Blue Bayou's librarian—can
help you dig into the archives."
"How did you know I was going to go digging in
the archives?" She'd already tried to do that online, but the
thirty-year-old newspaper issues she'd needed hadn't been uploaded to the
Internet.
"That's what Jack or Finn'd do."
He had her there. "I'm also going to pay a call
on Mrs. Melancon."
"The old one, or the young?"
"Old. Since she was running the company back
then, she might know something about how Linda Dale got those stock
certificates."
"I doubt that visiting the old lady will do much
good, bein' how she's turned pretty reclusive and rumors have her mind going
south, but. . . Jesus," he said on an exasperated breath when she shot him
a sharp, suspicious look. "You really don't trust anyone, do you?"
"Would you, if you were in my situation?"
"I don't know. Maybe. Maybe not."
His smile turned a little distant as he gave her a
considering look.
"What?" she asked, growing uneasy when he
didn't look away for a very long time.
He slowly shook his head. "Damned if I
know," he said, more to himself than to her. Vivid blue eyes, fringed by
lashes most women would kill for, blinked slowly. The air between them grew
thick and far too steamy.
Just when Regan's nerves were feeling stretched to the
breaking point, he broke the silence. "Guess I'd better interrupt the
inter-galactic wars."
He retrieved the teenager, who, not surprisingly,
wasn't all that wild about leaving the video game. "Two more levels, and I
would've been emperor of the universe," he complained.
"Next time," Nate said easily. He paused in
the open doorway and skimmed a finger down Regan's nose. "See you
tomorrow, chиre."
After they left the suite, she listened to the
footfalls on the hallway carpeting, the ding of the elevator, the whoosh as it
opened, then closed.
Regan leaned back against the door, closed her eyes,
and let out a long breath. "Detective chиre to you, Callahan."
The two-year-old girt lay in her trundle bed, huddled
beneath, her sheets, hiding from the full moon that her baby-sitter, Enola, had
told her would make her eyes go crossed. She heard her mother's high heels
tapping on the wood floor. The voices grew harsher. Louder. Angrier. A sound
like a glass breaking had her peeking out from beneath the sheet; the moonlight
streaming in through the window cast a silver light over the bedroom, but the
corners were draped in deep shadows. Regan shivered, fearful that the loud voices would
wake the cauchemar. Whenever her mama went out and Enola stayed with her, the
sitter would sprinkle holy water from a little bottle over Regan's pillow to
protect her from the witch who crept around in the dark, looking for little
girls to eat. They were shouting now. Regan had never heard her
mother shout and wondered if she was fighting with the cauchemar just on the
other side of the door. She tried to climb out of bed, but her legs wouldn't
move. She tried to call for her mama, but the witch had wrapped its bony
crawfish claws around her throat, so no sound came from her lips. Huddling
beneath the sheets at the bottom of the bed, she hid from those shining red
eyes Enola had told her could set children on fire. She heard a scream; then a crash, then silence.
Regan jerked awake, bathed in sweat, her mouth open in
a silent scream she'd never been able to make heard, her heart beating
triphammer hard, triphammer fast.
"It was just a dream," she told herself with
a mental shake as she retrieved the pillow that had fallen onto the floor. The
nightmare was an old one, going back as far as she could remember.
She took a deep breath, looked over at the clock
radio, and saw it was not even three A.M. yet. Groaning, she climbed out of bed
and retrieved the journal from her carry-on bag. There'd be no more sleep
tonight.
Chapter Thirteen
The kid had slept like the dead, revealing that it had
been a long time since he'd had any real rest. He also had the appetite of a
horse. A Clydesdale. He was single-handedly burning through breakfast as if he
hadn't eaten for weeks. Which, Nate considered, just might be the case, seeing
as how he was mostly skin and bones.
"What's this stuff?" he asked, poking at the
milk-drenched hot cereal Nate had gone to the trouble of fixing.
"Couche-couche."
"That doesn't tell me a frigging thing."
"It's cornmeal, salt, baking powder, milk, and
oil." A lot of oil. "My maman used to make it just about every
morning for my brothers and me when we were kids. But she used to serve it with
sucre brule, which is kind of a syrup." Thinking back on the ultrasweet,
golden brown syrup made by cooking water and sugar together, Nate was surprised
any of them had any teeth left.
Food had always been an intrinsic part of the Acadian
culture; his mother had turned it into a celebration.
"It's not bad." The kid pushed aside the
empty bowl. "But I like these better," he said, biting into a
sugar-powdered Cajun doughnut.
"They're beignets." Nate wasn't that good a
cook—never had to learn since, on the occasions when there wasn't a woman
willing to feed him, there was always takeout from Cajun Cal's Country Cafe.
But any idiot could fry up a bunch of dough in a skillet of hot oil. "I
don't suppose that, having slept on it, you remember where home is?"
"Nope." He used his third piece of raisin
toast to wipe up some yolk from the fried eggs.
"You do realize that DSS will probably end up
putting you in some sort of facility if they don't get an answer soon."
His faced closed up. "I thought I was staying
here with you."
"Temporarily. Talking Ms. Welch into letting you
come home with me for a couple days was one thing, since we're old friends from
our school days. But I don't exactly fit a foster family profile. 'Sides, they
don't have any way of knowing that you're not a regular Jesse James, running
from robbin' a bank or something."
"I didn't rob any bank. And the damn social
services assholes can put me anywhere they want, but that doesn't mean I'm
gonna stay there."
Nate sighed. The kid reminded him a bit of Turnip, the
raggedy old stray yellow dog that had shown up at Beau Soleil last spring. The
difference was that the dog had deftly insinuated herself into Jack's life with
her unrelentingly cheerful personality. But thinking about Turnip gave him an
idea.
"You like dogs?"
"They're okay, I guess. I had me a puppy when I was
a kid."
"What kind?"
"I don't know. Some kinda black-and-brown mutt.
Someone dumped it in a field by our house. I brought it home and kept it hidden
in my room, but the guy my mother was livin' with drowned it."
"Damn." This picture the boy was painting
was getting worse and worse. "He still around?" he asked casually.
"I guess." He shrugged and wiped the white
powdered sugar off his mouth with the back of his hand. "He'd moved into
the apartment, anyway."
"Which is why you're not there?"
"I guess you could say that."
"You realize, don't you, that if you'd be a
little bit more open and come clean about your situation, there's a very good
chance I might be able to help."
The kid rolled his eyes.
"I guess that's a no." Nate stood up.
"Come on."
"Where?"
The unrelenting suspicion was beginning to drive him
nuts. "My brother's house."
"Why?"
"Because it's a cool place. With a dog who's
always happy to meet new folks who'll throw her a Frisbee to catch."
"You gonna stick around?"
"Well, now, that's the thing. I promised the
detective—"
"Yeah, yeah. I get it. Why spend time with a kid
when you can be doin' a hot chick?"
"Okay, dammit, that's it." Nate turned on
him, the flare of temper catching them both off guard. "I've been trying
my best to give you the benefit of the doubt, since you look like you've been
rope-drug from the tailgate of a pickup down a long patch of bad road. And if
you're not lyin' about that drowned puppy—"
"I'm not."
"—then I've gotta figure that whatever you're
running from has got to be a helluva lot worse than what you've gone through on
the road, which sure doesn't look like it's been a picnic."
"It hasn't," he mumbled.
"Shut the hell up." It worked. The kid
dropped his eyes to the heart-of-pine floor. "Like I said, I'm willing to
cut you some slack, but if you don't stop talking such trash—"
"Yeah, yeah, you'll dump me back with the
cops."
Nate saw the fear beneath the tough veneer and, though
it wasn't easy, held firm. "If you'd quit finishing my sentences when you
don't know what the hell you're talking about, you'd discover that you're not
the only one with problems."
"Cops don't have problems. They make
problems."
"Like when the detective crawled under that
electrical wire to save your life ?"
"I don't remember asking her to do that."
Damn, what he wouldn't give to have Jack or Finn here
right now. Or both of them. They could double-team the kid, who probably
wouldn't hold up two minutes when being played by experts.
Nate dragged a hand down his face, wondering what the
hell he'd done in a previous life to deserve all this crap dumped on him at one
time. Peter Pan was sounding real good about now. Flying off to the island of
lost boys had to be a lot more fun than dealing with this runaway kid. If that
wasn't bad enough, thanks to him, Detective Delectable's entire life, as she'd
known it for thirty-three years, had just come crumbling down around her. How
the hell was he supposed to make up for that?
"Like I said, the detective's got some private,
personal problems. And I promised to help her solve them."
"What are you, a priest or something?"
Nate laughed at that and put his arm around the kid's
shoulder. When he felt the sudden rigidity he lightened up a bit, but did not
take his arm away. "Son, I am about as far away from a priest as you can
get."
They were on their way to Beau Soleil, the Porchdogs
singing "Hello Josephine" on the SUV's CD player, when Nate turned
toward his passenger.
"You know, it'd be a helluva lot easier to carry
on a conversation if I at least knew your first name. 'Hey, kid' is a little
limiting."
He could see the wheels turning behind those pale blue
eyes, then the kid blew out a long breath of surrender, "Josh."
It wasn't much. But it was a start.
* * *
Regan had to say this about Nate Callahan. He was true
to his word. The rental car was waiting for her at the front of the inn when
she returned from her early morning run. It had even been washed, she noticed
immediately. Since according to Nate's scrawled directions the library was only
two blocks away, Regan decided to walk.
The rain had moved on; the day had dawned bright and
sunny and as warm as she'd been expecting when she'd left L.A. The library was
located on Magnolia Avenue, next door to the Acadian Butcher Shop, which
boasted displays of plump chickens and sausages beneath green-and-white-striped
awnings, and across the street from a small park ablaze with naturalized
daffodils. The interior of the building was brightly lit, and dust covers of
upcoming releases were displayed on a wall covered in green, purple, and gold
burlap (which she'd read in the hotel's visitor guide were Mardi Gras colors).
The windows sparkled like crystal, and old-fashioned oak catalog cases gleamed
with lemon oil, which added a fresh scent to the air.
"Good morning." The blond woman's smile,
which was echoed in her eyes, was as warm and welcoming as her library.
"You must be Regan." She held out a hand. "I'm Dani Callahan,
Jack's wife. Nate called this morning and told me you'd be coming."
"It's good to meet you." Regan was
momentarily put off by Dani's outgoing attitude; cops weren't accustomed to
people being happy to see them.
"Oh, it's wonderful to meet you." Moss green
eyes moved from Regan's face to her wrists. "Though I am a bit
disappointed you're not wearing your bracelets."
"Bracelets?"
"Wonder Woman's magic bracelets. You and Nate
ended up on the front page of the paper." She held up a copy of the Cajun
Chronicle. In color, above the fold, was a photo of her ducking beneath the
wires to hand Nate the blanket. There was another of Nate pulling the boy from
the truck.
"That was a brave thing he did, for a
civilian." Or idiotic.
"I doubt if, in his mind, he had much of a
choice," Dani said. "Though the fact that there was a child in the
truck undoubtedly added to the urgency. Nate's terrific with kids."
"Probably because his emotional growth stopped
about twelve himself," Regan murmured.
"You may have a point, since that's how old he
was when his father was killed. He told me that he'd told you about that,"
she said. "It's not something he talks about often, so it's interesting
that he chose to share it with you."
"It was just part of the general conversation. He
insisted on helping me into my coat because, as he put it, his daddy taught him
to, and I suggested his father might want to join the twenty-first
century." She still felt a twinge of guilt about that. "He seems all
right with it."
"Yes, he does, doesn't he?" Dani braced her
elbows onto the glossy surface of her desk, linked her fingers together, and
rested her chin atop her hands. "You know, that was a dreadful time, but
looking back and seeing all three Callahans from an adult perspective, I think
it ended up being hardest on Nate."
"Why?"
"Jack and Finn were older, so they latched onto
their roles right away. Finn became the man of the family, something he did
very well."
"I'm not surprised."
"No, I expect you're not, having worked with
him."
"Seems Nate's been talking about me."
"He's like my brother. We share everything."
Her eyes momentarily sparkled. "Well, almost everything. Anyway, Finn just
got more adult and serious, and Jack became Blue Bayou's James Dean. He calls
it his rebel-without-a-clue period.
"Nate was closest of the three to his mother,
which I suppose isn't surprising for the youngest child in a family. They lived
out at Beau Soleil, the house I grew up in, so I had a front-row seat after the
tragedy. I don't think he left her side from the time she got the terrible news
to days after the funeral. Wherever she was, he was, holding her hand, talking
her into eating something, telling her jokes."
A small, reminiscent smile teased at the corners of
her mouth. "I remember him making her laugh at some silly story the night
of the viewing. Mrs. Cassidy, from the market, was scandalized a woman could
laugh when her husband was lying in a casket in the same room. I was the same
age, and watched him all during that time and wished, just a little, that I
could fall in love with him."
"You don't seem to be alone, there."
"Women like Nate," Dani agreed mildly.
"I figured that out for myself."
"You don't have to be a detective to see
it." Dani's expression turned a little serious. "He's certainly sexy
enough, and charming, but what attracts women is that he's one of those special
men who genuinely admires all aspects of us. Which is why most of us like him
right back."
"I'll admit he's difficult to dislike."
Regan wasn't quite ready to make the leap into Nate Callahan's female fan club.
"I can't think of anyone who's ever had a reason
to. As I said, there were a lot of times when I thought how much easier it
would be if I'd just fall in love with Nate. Or Finn."
"But you didn't."
"No." She twisted a gold ring as her eyes
warmed with private thoughts. "My heart's always belonged to Jack."
Regan wanted to get on with her reason for coming to
the library, but there was one thought that had been running through her mind
since she'd been jerked from a restless sleep by that nightmare. "I met
this woman volunteer at the hospital—"
"Orиlia." Dani nodded. "She's
definitely one'of-a-kind, isn't she? My father lives with her during the
week."
"So Nate said. He seems like a nice man. Your
father, that is."
"He's a good man." Regan, who was used to
listening for what peo' pie didn't say, caught the qualification in that
statement. "It's no secret that we've had some rough patches, but
fortunately we had a chance to straighten them out before we lost the
opportunity." She shut her eyes
briefly as she realized what she'd said. "I'm
sorry. I didn't mean—"
"I know." Regan sighed. "I guess Nate told
you everything."
"He filled me in on what he knows of your
situation. If it's any consolation, he was unusually reticent. Except for a
brief synopsis of your possible family situation, all he'd tell us was that you
reminded him of Finn, were very pretty, and smelled good."
Regan wasn't at all pleased to hear he'd compared her
to Finn. Okay, maybe they were both cops, but surely she didn't come off as
remote, cool, and rigid as the eldest Callahan. She shook off the momentary
pique.
"It's not easy to have to consider that the woman
I always thought of as my mother may be my aunt," she allowed. "Orиlia
mentioned something about Nate's mother dying, as well." She was not
trying to pump Danielle Callahan, but she couldn't help but be curious.
"Oh, that was a terribly sad time. She was
diagnosed with breast cancer when Nate was a freshman at Tulane. She tried to
keep him in school—he was planning to become an architect—"
"I thought he was going to be a baseball
player."
"Oh, I think he could have been a very good one.
All the Callahan men are naturally athletic, but Nate enjoyed the game-playing
aspect of sports more than the other two. But he was smart enough to realize
that even if he did make it to the majors, he wouldn't be playing all his life,
so he decided it'd be good to have a backup occupation."
"That's more planning than I would have
expected."
Dani smiled at that. "Every once in a while, just
when you think you've got Nate figured out, he surprises you. I think he
probably has more layers than either of his brothers."
"Finn certainly always seemed
straightforward."
"With Finn, what you see is pretty much what you
get," Dani agreed. "Though I have to admit that it was fun watching
Julia Summers pull the rug out from beneath his tidy, orderly world."
Regan definitely could identify with that feeling.
"Nate's always loved construction. When they were
kids playing cowboys and Indians, while Jack and Finn were practicing their
fast draws, Nate was dragging home boards he'd find in the swamp to build the
jail."
Regan laughed at the idea of Finn Callahan in a cowboy
hat, having cap pistol shootouts. "So Nate's an architect?" Her
admittedly sketchy investigation of him hadn't revealed that.
"No. He dropped out of school the day he heard
the news of his mother's cancer and came home to be with her. I've always
thought that he was somehow convinced he could single-handedly save her with
love and determination. I firmly believe he's the reason she lived two years
longer than the doctors predicted. It was a difficult three years, but he was
always there for her.
"Jack was working for the DEA somewhere in
Central America when she died, but Finn and Nate were with her at the end. Finn
said she died smiling at a joke Nate had told her."
"That's nice." Regan didn't run into all
that many people who died smiling in her line of work.
"There was a time when I don't know what I would
have done without him to talk to. He was the only person during some hard times
who could make me forget my troubles for a little while. And if part of him is
still twelve years old, well, perhaps that's what makes him able to slough off
his own problems while taking on everyone else's."
Regan didn't want to consider that possibility. It was
easier to believe that Nate Callahan was just some immature, hormone-driven
southern charmer.
"That's all very interesting," she said, her
smile a bit forced. "Could you tell me where you keep your newspaper
archives?"
"The newer ones have been scanned into the
computer. The ones you're looking for are still on microfiche. I've pulled up
the reels for you." She gestured toward a chair and a reader across the
room. "If there's anything else you need—"
"No, thanks. That'll do it."
"Great. Do you know how long you'll be
staying?"
"I suppose it all depends on what I find and how
soon I find it."
"Hopefully you'll be here for the Fat Tuesday
party out at Beau Soleil."
Regan hadn't come to Blue Bayou to party. "That's
very nice of you, but—"
"Please come, Regan. How else can we live up to
our reputation for southern hospitality? Nate and Jack have done wonders with
Beau Soleil, and I do so love to show it off. Have you ever visited a
plantation house?"
"No."
"Beau Soleil was the model for Tara," Dani
said, sweetening the pot. "Margaret Mitchell was a visitor before she
wrote the book."
"That's quite an endorsement."
"It's really worth the trip to see what Nate's
done with the house. He's more than just a contractor, he's a master craftsman.
His mill-work is phenomenal. There was a time when I felt sorry for him,
dropping out of school and all, but it's obvious that he never belonged
building skyscrapers; he's really found his niche."
"That's important."
Regan had once been certain she'd found hers. She was
no longer quite so sure. It's not burnout, she assured herself. You just need a
break. Like a month in Tahiti. Or maybe in bed. Sleeping.
"If I'm in town, I'll try to come by."
"I'm so pleased. Jack will be, too." Dani's
smile suggested she hadn't expected any other outcome, making Regan wonder if
all southerners had velvet-bulldozer personalities. Had Linda Dale? "Jack
lived in Los Angeles for several years, so you'll be able to share
stories."
Regan liked Dani Callahan. If Dani lived in Los
Angeles, the two of them might have been friends. Other than Van, whose life these
days revolved around Rhasheed and her unborn son, Regan didn't have many women
friends. Her job didn't allow time for socializing. If she did take time from
work, she was likely to be found sharing a pitcher of beer with a group of cops
at the Code Ten.
She realized Dani had asked her a question. "I'm
sorry. What did you say?"
"Nate told me he'd asked you to take the
sheriff's job?" Her voice went up a little on the end of the sentence,
turning it into a question.
"He did. And I turned him down."
"Having met you, I'm doubly sorry you didn't
accept." Her slight frown turned into a smile. "Well, perhaps you'll
change your mind. My brother-in-law can be very persuasive."
That was an understatement. But Regan had no interest
in leaving L.A. for such a small, isolated town. Pigs would be spouting
gossamer wings and flying over Blue Bayou before she pinned on that badge
again.
As if to prove how different the town was from Los
Angeles, the story of Linda Dale's death, which would have been buried in the
back pages of the local section in the Los Angeles Times, had captured nearly
the entire front page. There was also a picture of Dale captioned "In
Happier Days"—the New Orleans Mardi Gras photograph.
Inside were more photographs, including the red car in
which her body had been discovered by her employer. Another picture showed a
woman carrying a toddler out of a tidy, narrow white frame house. Regan
recognized her as the woman she'd always thought was her mother, and a chill
skimmed up her spine as she realized she was, indeed, that toddler.
* * *
Josh was trying his best not to be impressed, which
was frigging hard when the house Nate pulled up in front of reminded him a lot
of the White House.
"Your brother lives here?"
"Yeah. Jack."
"He must be rich."
"I think he probably does okay for himself. He
writes books."
"Yeah?" Josh liked to read; books had often
proven an escape from his life. But he'd never actually given any thought to
people writing them. "What kind of books?"
"Thrillers, I guess they're called."
The name clicked. "Your brother is Jack
Callahan?"
"Yeah, I guess you heard of him."
"Heard of him? Shit, I just finished reading The
Death Dealer! It's in my backpack." He'd swiped it from a CVS in
Tallahassee, along with a can of Vienna sausages and a Milky Way bar. "He
rocks."
"He sure does. And I'd say that even if he wasn't
my brother. But there's a lot of sex, drugs, and violence in those
stories."
"Like there's not a lot of sex, drugs, and
violence in life."
"Not in everyone's life." A cold, lethal
anger uncurled in Nate's gut. It wasn't often he understood the passion that
drove people to do murder. This was one of those rare times. "Look, let's
get something straight, right now, okay?"
"What?"
"The folks at DSS are eventually going to find
out who you are. But when that happens, you're not going back."
"You're damn right I'm not."
"That's not what I mean. You've got to promise me
you won't take off again."
"What kind of chump do you think I am?" Josh
sneered.
"I don't think you're a chump. I think you're a
kid who got dealt a lousy hand. But you're not going back to an abusive
home."
"Says you."
"Yeah." Nate tamped his rare but formidable
temper. He was murderously furious at anyone who'd hurt a child.
"What are you going to do to stop them?"
Murder, while surprisingly appealing, wasn't the
answer. "I don't know." Nate figured after all he'd been through,
josh deserved the truth. "But I will. Scout's honor."
"It figures," Josh muttered.
"What?"
"That you'd be a friggin' Boy Scout."
Nate threw back his head and laughed at that. Even
Josh's lips quirked into a hint of a smile.
"Come on, cher," he said as a huge yellow
ball of fur the size of a compact car came barreling out the front door of Beau
Soleil. "You can meet the family, and Jack can autograph your book for
you."
The dog, which Jack claimed to be a Great Dane-yellow
Lab-Buick mix, leaped up, put her huge paws on Josh's shoulders, and began
licking his scrunched-up face in long, welcoming slurps. When the kid fell to
the ground and began wrestling with Turnip, he looked like any normal teenage
boy. Which, Nate figured, somewhere, deep down inside, past all that hurt and
teenage bravado, he was.
"Uncle Nate!" The nine-year-old wearing a
Baltimore Orioles cap and a shirt declaring him to be a member of the Blue
Bayou Panthers, sponsored by Callahan Construction, tore out of the house
behind the dog. "Guess what?"
Nate pulled off the cap and ruffled his nephew's hair.
"You just got called up for the Orioles' spring training camp."
"I'm too young to play in the majors," he
said with a third-grader's literalness.
"Well, I already know you're gonna have a baby
brother or sister. And I can't think of anything else, so I guess you're just
gonna have to tell me."
"Mrs. Chauvet and Ben moved into the guest house
last night."
"Yeah, seems to me I heard about you havin'
company." He reached down, grasped Josh's arm, and pulled the teenager to
his feet. "Josh, this is my favorite nephew, Matt—"
"I'm your only nephew," the boy reminded
him. "At least for now."
"Well, there is that. Matt, this is Josh. He's
visiting me for a while."
"Cool." The grin was quick and revealed a
missing tooth. "Want to see my Hot Wheels collection?"
Josh shrugged in that uncaring way Nate was getting
used to. "Hot Wheels are for little kids."
"They're for collectors, too. My uncle Finn found
me a deep purple Nomad with Real Rider tires in California. It's really
cool." Matt turned and raced back toward the house, Josh with him and
Turnip happily nipping at their heels, just as Jack came ambling out.
"Does that kid walk anywhere?" Nate asked.
"Not if he can help it. So, Dani says that she
invited your new lady friend to the Fat Tuesday party, and while she didn't
exactly agree to show up, she didn't out-and-out refuse, either."
"Terrific." Nate smiled. As much as he'd
always liked having brothers, there was something handy and decidedly cool
about gaining a sister. "You realize, don't you, that marrying that woman
was the smartest thing you ever did."
"Won't get any argument from me on that
one," Jack agreed cheerfully.
* * *
Nate caught up with Regan as she left the library. She
glanced past him toward the SUV he'd parked across the street. "Where's
the boy?"
"I took him out to Beau Soleil so Jack could keep
an eye on him. And his name, by the way, is Josh."
"Josh what?"
"He wasn't willing to share that yet."
"Well, at least it's a start." As she
crossed the street with him, Regan could almost imagine the sound of horses'
hooves on the rounded gray cobblestones. "So did you take along a whip and
a chair to your brother's?"
"Hey, Jack used to hunt down international drug
dealers." He opened the passenger door, put his hand on her elbow, and
gave her a little boost up into the front seat. "I figured he could take
care of one runaway for a few hours," he said after he'd come around the
front of the SUV and joined her. "Besides, he's got himself this big
friendly mutt I thought might loosen Josh up a bit."
"Animals have a way of making a connection when
people can't. The canine corps is one of the more popular groups in the police
department, and using a mounted patrol at concerts is effective because most
people like the horses . . . And why are you looking at me that way?"
"I was just wondering about something."
"What?"
"If you taste as good as you look."
"In case you've forgotten, this is a public
place."
"The windows are tinted. 'Sides, I don't see
anyone watching."
He could tell she was tempted. Having wanted her the
first time he saw her in that prim no-nonsense gray suit that showcased a
magnificent pair of legs, he opted for giving in to temptation.
"Dammit, Callahan."
"It's Nate," he said absently, not about to
apologize for the desire he knew she was reading in his gaze. "I'd say
we've worked our way up to first names, wouldn't you, Regan?"
"We've only known each other two days."
"True. But you've got to admit that a helluva lot
has happened in those two days."
"Granted. But I definitely don't want to get
involved with you."
"I know," he said.
There was a part of him that didn't, either. With the
exception of the two women his brothers had married, Nate wasn't used to
complex women. Didn't want to get used to them. He preferred easygoing belles
who understood that shared desire was a game, a game both parties, if they kept
things simple, could win. He doubted there was a single simple thing about this
woman.
"Then my suggestion would be to stop before
things get out of hand."
"I don't think I can do that, chиre." He ran
his thumb along the tightly set seam of her lips. What was a man to do hut take
a taste when her lips were so close? So tempting?
"Tell me to take my hands off you," he said,
"and I will."
She drew in a breath.
When her golden brown eyes softened, giving him his
answer, he lowered his mouth to hers.
Chapter Fourteen
Oh, he was good! He didn't ravish, which would have
made it too easy to push him away. He beguiled. He took his time, gently, so
unbelievably gently, his mouth brushing against hers in a touch as delicate as
a dream.
No one had ever kissed her like this. Not ever. How
could such a slow, gentle kiss rock her to the bone?
Regan was unaware she was holding her breath until it
shuddered out when her lips parted. Rather than invading with his tongue, as so
many other men would have automatically done, he surprised her yet again by
scattering light kisses at the corners of her mouth, up her cheek.
Her cheek. She tensed, wishing she were perfect. Or,
at least not so imperfect.
"Nate—" It was the first time she'd said his
name. But the voice couldn't be hers. It was too low. Too ragged. Too needy.
She felt his smile at her temple. "Shhh," he
whispered. "Just a little bit more."
Her brain was shutting down. He was muddling her
thoughts, stirring up unruly needs she'd always managed to keep tightly reined
in.
His lips returned to hers, once, twice, a third time
until they finally—thank you, God!-—lingered. Even then he was patient. So
amazingly, achingly patient.
He drank slowly, savoring her as he might a fine wine.
He drank deeply, stealing her breath, along with whatever ragged bits were left
of her resolve. One of them trembled. Because she feared it was her, Regan drew
away now, while she still could.
Not that he let her completely escape. He pressed his
forehead against hers, even as his fingers continued to stroke the back of her
neck in a way that was far from comforting. "Kissing you could become a
habit, Detective Chиre."
"A bad habit."
His grin was slow and carelessly charming.
"Sometimes those are the most fun."
"You're not my type."
"Well, now, I sure wouldn't want you to take this
the wrong way, but you're not exactly mine, either." His eyes lit with
easy humor. "But sometimes that doesn't have a damn thing to do with
chemistry."
"I suppose you'd know more about that than I
would." Hell, she sounded petulant. Pouty.
"Since we don't know each other real well, I
couldn't be the judge of that. But if you'd like, I can kiss you again. See if
maybe it was a fluke."
"It was. My life's gotten dicey since you charged
into it. I suppose I shouldn't be all that surprised that I respond
inappropriately to events."
"Inappropriately," he said mildly, as if
trying out the word on his tongue. "Now, see, darlin', that's where we're
going to have to agree to disagree. Because it seems to me that when a man and
a woman have electricity together, it only makes sense to enjoy the
sparks." He bent his head again and nipped lightly at her bottom lip.
"I've been wanting to behave inappropriately with you since I watched you
testify."
"Sure you have." She could feel whatever
little control she'd managed to hang onto slipping away. Regan didn't like
losing control. She didn't know how to function without it.
"It's God's own truth." He lifted his right
hand like a man swearing an oath. "When you first got up on that stand, I
started wondering what you were wearing beneath that prim, tidy little suit,
then that thought led to another, and another, and pretty soon I was imagining
getting you out of it and making passionate love to you in that big black
leather chair the judge kept swiveling back and forth in."
"That behavior would have gotten you thrown in a
cell for public indecency."
"But I'll bet we would have had ourselves one
helluva ride. And I know it would have been worth it."
His easy arrogance irked her. All right, so he was the
most gorgeous man she'd ever seen who wasn't up on some movie screen. So he
moved with a natural, lazy grace that suggested he was immensely comfortable in
his skin. So he was really, really built. That didn't mean he had any right to
act as if he were God's gift to women.
"I should have just shot you back in LA."
"And I should have gotten that kiss over with in
L.A. Then we'd have already moved to the next step."
"And that would be?"
He rubbed his jaw. Studied her silently. Then, just
when her nerves had begun to screech like the brakes on her crappy cop car, he
shook his head. "I think I'll just let you figure that out for yourself
when we get there."
She was not going to let him get to her. She was a
cop, dammit. And not just any cop, she was the cream of the cream, the best of
the best. She ate gangbangers for breakfast and sent bad guys up the river for
life plus ten, without parole. She could handle Nate Callahan.
"We have this little thing in law
enforcement," she said. "Perhaps you've heard of it."
"What's that, cherie?"
Her smile was sweet and false. "Excessive
force."
"Well, now, I've never been one who got off on
rough play, but if you want to drag out some handcuffs, I'm willing to give it
the old college try.
"There's this stripper down on Bourbon Street in N'Awlins.
Calls herself Officer Lola Law. She starts out wearing police blues, then
eventually works her way down to a G-string, some pasties that look like
badges, and some shiny black vinyl boots with ice-pick heels that go up to
mid-thigh. I don't suppose you'd have an outfit like that?"
She wasn't about to dignify that with a response.
"Don't you take anything seriously?"
"I try not to. Life's too short for getting
bogged down in details."
"You make details sound like a bad thing."
"Didn't someone once say the devil was in the
details?"
"It's a bit hard to solve a crime without
details. And while I've never restored a building before, I'd suspect it's
probably a good idea to measure before you cut a piece of wood."
"Got me," he said easily. "But since
there's no way of knowing when you get up in the morning if you're going to be
around by nightfall, it only makes sense to enjoy the moment. Drift with the
currents."
"Drifting with the currents can land you into the
doldrums. If everyone shared that philosophy, we'd all still be living in caves,
hunting woolly mammoths and cooking our meals over a fire."
"Doesn't sound that bad to me." When he
tugged on a strand of hair, his knuckles brushed the nape of her neck again and
made her skin sizzle. "I like the idea of ravishing you in the firelight."
"How do you like the idea of getting whacked in
the groin by your woolly mammoth hunting club?"
"Ouch." He winced. "Some people might
think you were a difficult woman, chиre."
"I work at it. And some other people might think
you were a Neanderthal southern male."
"Now, see, that's where we're different. 'Cause I
don't work at it at all."
It was hard not to be charmed by his smile.
"Look, Callahan, this partnership, or whatever you want to call it, isn't
working. Unless you can get me into Mrs. Melancon's house." Regan had
called this morning and had been brusquely told that Mrs. Melancon was not
entertaining visitors. Not today, nor tomorrow, nor anytime in the near future.
"As it happens, I've been doin' some pondering on
that, and have a couple ideas. But since I haven't quite worked them out yet, I
figured you might like to take a little drive out into the country."
She arched an exaggerated brow and looked around.
"This isn't the country?"
"Cute. Who would have guessed the cop had a sense
of humor?"
"I have my moments. And where did you have in
mind?"
"The actual destination wouldn't mean anything to
you anyway, you not being all that familiar with Blue Bayou," he pointed
out. "I just thought you might like to have a little chat with the man who
owned Lafitte's Landing thirty years ago."
She remembered something from the newspaper report.
"The man who found her body?"
"That's him. He just also happens to be the guy
who hired Linda Dale. As well as the guy rumored to be having an affair with
her."
"How do you know that?"
"I stopped by Orиlia's on the way here. Between
her and the judge, there aren't any bodies buried in town they don't know
about." He inwardly flinched when he realized what he'd said. "I'm
sorry. I didn't mean that literally."
"I know." She sighed.
"Anyway, the judge proved a regular font of
information. Seems Boyce's wife was suing Dale for alienation of affection,
then for some reason changed her mind."
"He was married?" It had started to
sprinkle, the drops of rain dimpling the dark water on either side of the road.
"Yeah."
"She mentioned my father was married," Regan
murmured. "In the journal." She was looking at him again in that
hard, deep way that made him feel as if he were undergoing an interrogation.
"That's his name? Boyce?"
"It's his family name. His first name's Jarrett."
He wondered if she even realized that she'd reached
out and grabbed his arm.
"She called the man she was in love with 'J.'
What happened with the lawsuit?"
"Marybeth Boyce dropped her case."
"Maybe he killed her to keep from losing his
business in a divorce division of property."
"I suppose that's always a possibility,"
Nate acknowledged.
"There are probably more cold-blooded murders
done over money than passion. Or perhaps his wife dropped the lawsuit because she
decided to save the legal fees and take care of the problem herself."
"By dragging Dale out to the garage, stuffing her
in her car, and turning on the engine?"
"People can do a lot of things when they're angry
that they wouldn't be able to do otherwise. Women have been known to lift cars
off their children under the force of an adrenaline rush," Regan said.
"I always wondered if that's true. I've spent
most of my life carrying 'round lumber, and I'm not real sure I could lift up a
car, even if I had buckets of adrenaline pumping through my veins. Personally,
I think all those stories about women lifting cars may be urban legend."
"Do you do that on purpose?"
"What's that, chиre?"
"Take a conversation all the way around the block
before you get back to the topic."
"Oh, that." He considered it for a long
moment that had her grinding her teeth. "No," he finally decided.
"No, what?"
"No, I don't do it on purpose." He smiled at
her. "I guess it's like my charm—it just comes naturally. And since you
want to get back to the topic, murder by carbon monoxide poisoning seems an
awfully iffy way to kill someone. Why wouldn't Dale have just gotten out of the
car and opened the garage door to let in some fresh air?"
"Maybe she'd been tied up," Regan
considered.
"Dad would have put that in his report. And even
if whoever'd killed her had stuck around to untie her after she was dead, she
would have been left with rope burns. The medical examiner back then might not
have been the sharpest tack in the box, but I think even he would have spotted
them."
"The wife could have knocked her out. That would
explain the contusion on her skull."
"I'm no expert, but could a woman actually slug a
person that hard?"
"That depends upon the woman. I could."
He slanted her a look. "I'll keep that in
mind."
Regan tapped her fingers on her knee. "She could
have used a weapon."
"Sure. She could have gone in with a baseball bat
and started swinging. She could have hit her with a lamp. Or a telephone. Any
thing's possible."
"But you don't think so."
"Doesn't matter much what I think. You're the
detective."
"True. But I never in a million years could have
imagined I'd be investigating a murder in my own family." The idea was
still incomprehensible. Even more than the fact that her life had been a sham.
Which brought up another thought. "When your dad died, did people make fun
of you?"
He thought about that a minute. "No," he
decided. "But they did treat me a lot like some folks treat Homer Fouchet
when they first meet him. He's this guy who takes the classified ads down at
the paper. He lost both his legs in 'Nam and came home with really bad burns on
his face and hands. He doesn't have any facial hair or eyebrows or lashes, and
although he's a nice enough guy, there are still people who have trouble looking
at him, because he makes them uncomfortable, you know?"
"There but for the grace of God go I," she
murmured, having experienced the same behavior from some of the well-meaning
cops who'd visited her at the hospital.
"I think that's probably it," he agreed.
"Anyway, that's how they treated me. Nobody at school knew what to say,
and that made them uncomfortable, so they mostly stayed their distance. And
couldn't look me in the eye."
"At least you had your brothers."
"Yeah. Life was pretty rocky then for all of us,
but it would have been a helluva lot harder without Jack and Finn."
"Kids can be so mean."
"You won't get any argument there." He
thought some more. "There was this girl in school, Luanne Jackson, who had
an alcoholic mother and a no-good father, Jack found out later that her father
had been raping her and nearly killed the guy, but none of the kids even knew
about stuff like that back in grade school, and if any adults knew, they sure
as hell didn't tell Dad.
"Anyway, her mama used to spend a lot of time
down at the No Name whenever her husband was out shrimpin', which was most of
the time, and she'd leave with men she'd pick up there. Kids would hear their
parents talking about her at home and rag Luanne somethin' awful. She got
suspended a lot for fighting." He smiled at a memory. "If we were
anywhere in the vicinity, Jack and I tended to get into it with her. Which
usually ended up with us gettin' grounded."
"But you stood up for her."
"Mais yeah." He made it sound as if there'd
been no other choice. Which, she was beginning to suspect, there hadn't been.
"Sounds like you were close friends."
"We were. Not as close as Jack, though."
"Let me guess. Luanne and Jack had a 'thing.'
"
"Now, I wouldn't be one to spread tales, but they
were close for a while. But that was before Dani."
"Sounds as if your brother's life is divided into
two periods. Before Dani and after."
"I guess it pretty much is. I never would have
thought it possible, but she's got him downright domesticated."
"You make it sound as if he's been
neutered."
Nate laughed at that. "When you meet Jack, you'll
realize that there's not a woman on earth who could do that. But he's pretty
much settled down these days and seems real satisfied with his life."
She guessed, from his slightly incredulous tone, that
he wouldn't be satisfied to settle into domestic bliss. Which she honestly
doubted she would be, either. Having had no role model of husband-and-wife
behavior to observe while growing up, she wouldn't have the faintest idea how
to be a wife.
"Other than the accusation that Linda Dale was
having an affair with Jarrett Boyce, did the judge have any other information
about them?"
"Not much. Like I said, the case was dropped.
Shortly after that, Dale was found dead, so I guess they just sort of faded
back into a normal life that kept them out of courtrooms."
They fell silent for a time. Clouds rolled across the
sky as they drove past flooded stands of leafless trees the color of elephant
hide. Under ordinary circumstances, Regan would have enjoyed the drive. But
these were far from ordinary circumstances.
The house was small and narrow with a deep front
porch. The white paint had faded, but an explosion of orange honeysuckle
covered a white trellis at one side of the porch. A red-and-white Caddy with
fins hardening back to Detroit's I960s glory days was parked on a white
crushed-shell driveway. A brown-and-black hound dozed in a sunbeam on the porch
amid a green array of houseplants.
"It looks cozy," Regan murmured, wondering
if this was her father's house. And if so, how her life would have been
different if she'd grown up here in Blue Bayou, rather than L.A.
"It's a shotgun house," Nate said.
"There are literally thousands of them scattered all over south Louisiana.
Freed blacks brought the style here from Haiti. They're called shotgun because
all the rooms are lined up behind one another, so if you fired a gun from the
front door, it'd go right out the back door."
"Not a shotgun, unless you were shooting a slug.
When a shotgun's fired using a multiple-pellet shotshell, the pellets spread
out into a pattern that increases in diameter as the distance increases between
the pellets and the barrel. Depending on the size of the shot, the mass starts
to break up somewhere between five and ten feet."
"Anyone ever tell you that you're damn sexy when
you're talking like a cop?"
"No." She shot him a warning look that would
have had most men cowering in their boots. The problem was, Nate Callahan
wasn't most men.
"What's the matter with the men in L.A., anyway?
They an must be either blind or gay."
"Perhaps they know enough not to hit on a police
officer."
"Maybe someone who met you while you're armed and
investigating a murder might want to be a bit cautious about bein' too
forward," he allowed. "But you can't spend all your time chasing down
bad guys."
"There's where you're wrong. Being a cop isn't
just what I do. It's what I am. My life pretty much is my work, and the only
men in it tend to fit into three categories." She held up a finger.
"Suspects." A second finger. "Cops." A third. "And
lawyers."
"Maybe you need to expand your circle of
acquaintances." He brushed his thumb along her jaw.
She shoved his hand away. "What I need," she
said as she unfastened her seat belt, "is for you to back off and give me
some space."
He climbed out of the SUV and caught up with her on
the way to the porch. The rain had lightened to mist. "Okay."
"Okay, what?"
"Okay, I'll give you all the space you
need."
That stopped her. "Why don't I believe you?"
"Maybe 'cause you're a skeptic all the way to the
bone. But that's okay. It's sort of an interesting change for me. I can just
see you, a sober-eyed, serious four-year-old, sitting on St. Nick's knee in
some glitzy L.A. department store, giving him the third degree."
He made her sound grim and humorless. Worse yet was
the realization that she actually cared what he thought.
"I never sat on Santa's knee." She started
walking toward the house again. "My mother never encouraged me to buy into
the myth." Or the tooth fairy or Easter bunny, for that matter.
"Now that's about the most pitiful thing I've
ever heard."
"Then you've been blissfully sheltered."
Despite the car parked outside, no one seemed to be home. The dog obviously
hadn't been bought for his watchdog skills, since he was snoring, blithely
unaware of their presence. "Let's check around back."
They found Boyce in a small cemetery surrounded by a
low cast-iron fence. Some of the standing stones were so old the carving had
been worn down, making it impossible to know who'd been buried there. He was
planting roses into a raised bed beside a small stone angel.
When Nate called his name, he turned, then dropped the
shovel. "Hey, Nate. I figured you'd be showin' up sooner or later."
His rugged face, with its lines and furrows, suggested years of hard living.
His age could have been anywhere from fifty-five to seventy.
He pulled off a pair of canvas gardening gloves as he
studied Regan's face. "The judge was right," he said, revealing that
Judge Dupree had called ahead. "You do take after Linda some, around the
eyes." He skimmed a look over her. "I predicted her little girl was
going to be a heartbreaker when she grew up, and it looks like I was
right."
He glanced toward Nate, who'd leaned down and was
scratching the hound, who'd belatedly awakened and ambled over, behind his ear.
"It's also going 'round that you hired this little lady to take on the job
of sheriff."
"That's a misunderstanding," Regan said, one
she was getting weary of correcting. "The mayor only gave me the badge so
I could help out at an accident scene."
"Heard about that, too. Sounds like you two did a
bang-up job. Maybe you might want to stay on."
"I'm afraid that's not possible. I already have a
job in Los Angeles."
"Too bad. The town really needs a sheriff. Last
one we had was purely pitiful and a crook besides." He cocked his head and
gave her another long look. "Damned if you don't remind me of Linda when
you talk."
"She didn't have a local accent?"
"No, which wasn't real surprising, since she
wasn't a local girl."
"Do you know where she was from?"
"She didn't talk much about her past. I got the
feeling that she wasn't really happy growing up, but it seems she was from
someplace in California." He rubbed a stubbled chin. "Modesto, maybe
Fresno, somethin' like that. Not the places you usually think of, like Los
Angeles or San Francisco."
"Could it have been Bakersfield?" The woman
she'd always believed to be her mother had been born in the San Joaquin Valley
city.
His eyes brightened as if she'd just given him the
answer to the million-dollar question. "That was it. I remember because
she said the Mandrell sisters were from there, and she'd always wanted to grow
up to be rich and famous like them." The light faded from his gaze.
"She could have made it, too, if things had worked out differently. Your
mama was a real pretty woman. Talented, too."
"I haven't yet determined that Linda Dale was my
mother." Her tone was cool and professional and gave nothing away.
"Regan here's a detective," Nate volunteered.
"She likes to get all the evidence in before she makes a decision."
"A detective." His tone was gravelly from
years of smoking too many of those cigarettes she could see in his plaid shirt
pocket. "Don't that beat all. Never met a lady detective before."
A little silence fell over them.
"Roses are lookin' real nice, Jarrett," Nate
said.
The man swept the raised beds with a satisfied look.
"They're comin' along. I got some antique bushes from a plantation down in
Houma that's crumbling away. The new owner's razing the place to build some
weekend getaway, and when I went over there with the idea of buying them off
him, he just told me to take the lot."
"That sure is a lot, all right," Nate said,
looking at all the burlap-wrapped bushes. Bees were buzzing from flower to flower.
"Marybeth has always liked her roses," he
said. "This autumn damask is her new favorite. She's been hankerin' for
one 'cause it's supposed to be real good for making oil. Me, I'm sorta partial
to the color of this General Jack. You don't get many old garden roses that are
such a dark red."
"Your garden's lovely." Having found herself
in a discussion about flowers when she just wanted to solve the mystery of her
birth, Regan was beginning to understand Finn's impatience with detours.
"Marybeth's your wife?"
"Yes, ma'am. We'll have been hitched forty years
this March."
"That's a long time." And obviously not all
of it had been married bliss, according to Judge Dupree. Regan decided to take
a different tack. "How did you meet her? Linda Dale, not Marybeth."
He narrowed his eyes. "You're here about that
alienation-of-affection suit Marybeth filed against her," he guessed.
"I am interested in the circumstances behind
that, yes."
He let out a long, slow breath.
"Thought I'd put that foolishness behind me a long
time ago." He stretched, took a red-checked handkerchief from the pocket
of his overalls, and wiped his brow. "Digging holes is thirsty business.
Marybeth made a pitcher of sweet tea this morning. Let's go sit on the porch,
and I'll fetch you some."
Chapter Fifteen
We're not going to get out of here anytime soon, are
we?" Regan asked Nate as they sat on the porch in rocking chairs, while
Jarrett Boyce went inside to get the tea.
"Nope. But the truth, whatever it is, has been
waiting this long to come out. Won't hurt to sip a little sweet tea, chat a bit
about some roses. You'll find out what you need to know."
"Eventually."
"Things move a little slower down here," he
said, telling her nothing she didn't already know. "You gotta learn to go
with the flow."
She'd never gone with the flow in her life. As she
watched a hummingbird dipping its long beak into the red bloom of a potted
plant by the porch steps, Regan wasn't sure she knew how.
"Here you go." The screen door opened, and
Boyce came out carrying three canning jars filled with a dark liquid.
Nate took a long drink. "That just hits the spot,
Jarrett," he said with a flash of that smile that seemed to disarm
everyone. She watched Boyce's shoulders relax ever so slightly, and decided
that she'd love to have Nate Callahan in an interrogation room playing good
cop.
She murmured her thanks and studied the opaque liquid,
which didn't look like any iced tea she'd ever seen. It was as dark and murky
as the brown bayou water, and there were little black specks floating around in
it that she dearly hoped were tea leaves. A green sprig of mint floated on top.
She took a tentative sip. Surprise nearly had her
spitting it back out. "It's certainly sweet," she managed as she felt
her tooth enamel being eaten away.
"Lots of folks don't take the time to do it
right, these days. Marybeth boils the five cups of sugar right into the water
she brews the tea into."
"Five cups," she murmured. She could feel
Nate looking at her with amusement and refused to look back. "That
much." She imagined dentists must have a thriving practice here in the
South.
"That's why they call it sweet tea." He
leaned back in the rocker, crossed his legs, and said, "It wasn't true.
Those stories about me and Linda."
"Your wife seemed to think so," Regan said
carefully.
"Marybeth wasn't quite right in the head back
then." He frowned and stared down into the canning jar as if he were
viewing the past in the murky brown depths. "On account of what happened
to Little J."
"Your son?"
"Yeah." He reached into his pocket, pulled
out the pack of cigarettes, shook one loose, and lighted it with a kitchen
match he scraped on the bottom of his boot. "He was two when we lost
him." It still hurt—Regan could see it in his eyes, hear it in the
roughened tone of his voice. "He drowned."
"I'm sorry." She'd seen it more times than
she cared to think about when she'd been a patrol cop.
"So were we." He sighed, and suddenly looked
a hundred years old. "Marybeth was hanging laundry, right over
there." He pointed to a clothesline about ten yards away. "Little J
was playing with his toy trucks right here on the porch. She heard the phone
and went into the house to answer it. It was her mama, checking on some detail
for the church supper."
He paused. The silence lengthened.
"Mr. Boyce?" she prompted quietly.
He shook off the thought that had seemed to fixate
him. "Sorry. I jus' realized that I never knew exactly what the detail was
that was so damned important it couldn't wait for some other time." She
sensed the obviously repressed anger was directed more toward whatever fate had
caused his mother-in-law to call at exactly that moment than at either of the
two women. "Carla, that's Marybeth's mama, can talk the ears off a deaf
man. Marybeth used to be the same way." The pain in his gaze was, even
after three decades, almost too terrible to bear. "She never would talk on
the phone again after that day. In fact, she made me rip out the line the day
of the funeral '
A funeral for a toddler. Could there be anything more
tragic? "You don't have to talk about it," she said.
"You wanted to know what was goin' on between me
and your mama, you got to know the circumstances behind it." He squared
his shoulders, blinked away the moisture that had begun to sheen his gaze.
"We had a puppy back then. A blue-tick hound name of Elvis. I'd bought it
the month before, 'cause every kid needs a dog, right?"
"Right," she agreed. She'd never had one;
whenever she'd asked, her mother had said they'd shed and bring fleas and ticks
into the house.
"The sheriff—your daddy"—he said to Nate,
who nodded—"figured that Little J must've gotten bored with playing cars
and decided to play fetch with Elvis. 'Course he couldn't toss real good, and
this old tennis ball was floating on the water, so it seems that's what
happened." He squeezed his eyes shut, as if to block off the memory. Then
he swallowed the tea in long gulps, looking like a man who wished it was
something stronger.
"Marybeth just fell all to pieces. She got the
deep blues and couldn't do much but just lie in bed all day. Talking to her was
like talking to one of them stumps." Ashes fell off the burning end of the
cigarette as he gestured toward the cypress stumps out in the still, dark
water. "She wouldn't eat, wouldn't let me touch her. Never did cry. Not even
when they were lowering Little J's tiny blue casket into the grave.
"Everyone else—her ma, my ma, all the aunts,
cousins—was sobbing. Even my dad teared up some, and her daddy looked to be
about to have a heart attack. I'm not ashamed to admit that I had tears pourin'
down my face, too. But folks who say it's good to get things out must not have
ever lost themselves a baby, because crying sure didn't help me none that
day."
He exhaled another long, slow breath, then drew in on
the cigarette. "Marybeth's eyes stayed as dry as that little stone
guardian angel I'd got to mark his grave."
The small angel in the cemetery. Nate reached over and
laced his fingers with hers; Regan didn't pull her hand away.
"Marybeth didn't want the angel. I found out
later that she'd thought it was too damn late for Little J to have himself a
guardian angel, but since he'd always been afraid of the dark, the idea of him
having an angel nearby comforted me some. So I might have stood up to her about
that, if she'd even said anything at the time, which she didn't."
Like during the conversation about roses, Regan was
wishing he'd cut to the bottom line. She hadn't realized it fully until now,
but she'd just about reached her capacity for human tragedy. Understanding that
he had to tell his story his way, though, she held her tongue and looked for
signs of herself in the lined face that appeared to be a road map of his life.
"After a while, Doc Vallois decided that she
wasn't going to get better here, so he sent her up to this sanitarium in Baton
Rouge, where they knew how to treat people who were suffering depression by
sending electricity through their brains."
"Electroshock treatment." Regan exchanged a
brief look with Nate.
"That's what they called it. She was there six
months,"
Another silence settled over them like a wet gray
blanket.
"Leaving you to grieve all alone," Nate
prompted quietly.
Boyce gave him a grateful glance. "Yeah." He
took one last long drag on the cigarette, dropped it onto the porch, and
crushed it beneath his boot heel. Then he looked back at Regan. "Your mama
wasn't stuck-up like some good-looking women are. She was a lot of fun to be
around. Had a heart big as all outdoors, and when she smiled at you, it was
like the sun came out from behind a cloud. Everybody round these parts loved
her."
"That doesn't sound like a woman who'd commit
suicide."
"No, it don't," he said thoughtfully.
"Didn't know anyone who wasn't real surprised by that. I sure as hell
was." He shook his head. "But I guess you never really do know a
person, deep down inside."
"I suppose not." She certainly hadn't known
the woman she'd grown up believing to be her mother.
"Before she came to Blue Bayou, she was workin'
in N'Awlins. Even tried to break into country-and-western music in Nashville,
but the way she told it, she was playing in this little club way off Music Row
one night when this guy came in and offered her a job singing in some place he
owned in the Vieux Carrи. That's the French Quarter."
"I know. What made her leave New Orleans?"
"Well, now, she never did say, but I was sure
glad when she showed up at the Lounge lookin' for a job. Lord, that girl could
sing like a warbler. First week she was there, I brought home an extra ten
percent. After six months the profits doubled, and the place was packed every
Friday and Saturday night."
"As nice as Blue Bayou appears to be, it seems
she could have had more chance to land a record deal if she'd stayed in New
Orleans."
"That thought crossed my mind, too. A lot, but I
never asked, and like I said, she never did tell me. I always figured it had
something to do with a man. Mebee your daddy."
Regan felt every nerve in her body tense. "Did
you know him?"
"Nope. She never did talk about him, neither. But
I guess that's 'cause she didn't have real happy memories, and besides,
whenever we were alone, she was too busy trying to cheer me up. I was pretty
much of a mess in those days." Pale gray eyes narrowed as he studied her.
"I guess little girls grow up to be like their mamas even if they don't
live under the same roof. She was a fixer, too."
"A fixer?"
"One of those people who always want to help
other people out. Cheer them up, get rid of their problems for them. That's
what Linda was. Isn't it what a police officer does, too?"
"I suppose." How strange to think she might
take after her mother, rather than her father. "It sounds as if you had a
close relationship with Linda."
"Not as close as some of the old gossips around
these parts seemed to think. I never went to bed with her. Never even kissed
her. Not that I didn't think about how it'd be, from time to time," he
admitted.
"Day a man stops thinking about kissing a pretty
woman is the day he's just lost any reason to keep on livin'," Nate said.
Boyce surprised her by laughing at that. A rich, bold
laugh that gave a hint of the man who appeared to have been close friends with
her mother. Unfortunately, not close enough to know what Regan had come out
here to learn.
"Did she have any other men friends?"
"Just about every man in town. Like I said, she
was real popular." The smile Nate had tugged out of him lightened the dark
conversation. "Even with most of the women who'd show up at the Lounge.
Most nights she'd bring you along, and I never met a woman yet who didn't like
playing with a pretty baby."
"She took a baby to a nightclub?"
"Wasn't like the nightclubs you're probably used
to in California,"
Nate explained. "Lafitte's Landing was a family
sort of place, where everyone in town got together on the weekends to pass a
good time. The supper crowd would range from great-grandmиre, who didn't speak
a word of English, to mamas with their newborns, to teenagers showing up to
flirt with one another."
" 'Sides, it was a good deal for Linda,"
Boyce said. "She didn't have to pay for a sitter. And since I knew she
could be earnin' a lot more in the city, but couldn't afford to give her a
raise, I'd toss in dinner on the house. She even worked a little duet into the
routine."
"A duet?" Regan asked. Once again he'd
surprised her.
"Yeah. You couldn't string a whole sentence together,
but you sure knew all the words to 'You Are My Sunshine.' "
Regan drew in a quick, sharp breath of shock.
"It's a favorite 'round here, since it's the
state song and was written by Jimmie Davis, a sharecropper from up north in
Jackson Parish who grew up to be governor. It was a real cute act, especially
since even when you were in diapers, 'cepting for the color of your hair, you
took after Linda. It was kind of like looking at the little girl and seeing the
woman she'd grow up to be, both at the same time."
"You said the other men in town liked her."
It was her cop voice; controlled and impassive, revealing none of the emotions
churning inside her. She felt Nate looking at her again and wouldn't—
couldn't—look at him.
"Yes, ma'am, they sure did."
"So she dated a lot, did she?"
"Now, I didn't say that. I said she had a lot of
men friends. She was a friendly girl, but she wasn't fast. Whenever she went
out, she was always in a crowd of folks. Didn't seem like she had any one fella
she was sweet on. She used to read you fairy tales all the time, and I guess
she sort of bought into the stories, because she told me her prince was going
to show up on a big white horse to take you away from Blue Bayou, and the three
of you were going to live happily ever after." He shook his head.
"Guess it didn't work out that way."
"No. Apparently not."
Perhaps that's why Karen Hart hadn't encouraged Regan
to believe in myths or fairy tales. Perhaps that's why she'd stressed duty and
discipline. Perhaps, believing that her sister's freewheeling temperament had
led to Linda's death, she'd been trying to save her niece from a similar fate.
"I'd just gotten the Fleetwood then, and started
picking her up at her little house and driving her to the club," he said.
"Bein' how her own junker was so undefendable."
Regan glanced over at the red-and-white Cadillac.
"You don't see cars like that on the road much anymore."
"More's the pity," he said. "I'd bought
her off a helicopter pilot over in Port Fourchon. She'd been in an accident,
and the hood looked like an accordion. The interior was shot to hell, and the
paint was primer, but I could see the possibilities. Linda used to help me sand
the primer down on Sunday afternoons."
"It sounds as if you were very good
friends."
"We both had a lot in common, bein' alone, but
not being free to be with anyone else. Oh, we never talked about her man, and I
only told her about Marybeth once, on a really dark day when I got drunk and
broke down and bawled like a baby, but it was always there between us, and
created a bond. But it was always an innocent friendship. Despite, like I said,
what some busybodies liked to say."
"People talked."
"Sure. It's a small town," he said with a
resigned shrug of his shoulders. "There's not a lot to do, so talking about
your neighbor is sorta the local recreation."
Although Regan suspected living in such an environment
could prove stifling, there might be advantages to being a cop here—unlike
L.A., where you could arrive at a club that had broken fire regulations by
packing people in like sardines, have someone get shot in the head at
point-blank range, and not a single person in the place would have seen a damn
thing. Of course, she doubted there were all that many homicides in Blue Bayou,
which made it a moot point.
"Marybeth was a lot better when she got back from
the sanatorium, but she was still about as fragile as glass. I used to walk
around on tiptoe, not knowing what might set her off."
"Did you keep driving Linda to the club after
your wife returned home?"
"Oh, no, ma'am. Not because anything had been
going on," he stressed again. "But because I didn't want to be
responsible for sending Marybeth back to that place. Her being away was hard on
both of us, though it did seem to help with her blues, so I still think it was
probably a good thing."
"But someone shared the gossip with her."
"Oh, there were a few women who were jealous of
Linda and real eager to let Marybeth know what her husband had been doin' while
she'd been gettin' electricity shot through her head." If the sparks
glittering in his eyes were any indication, it still made him angry as hell.
"Meddling old biddies who, since they don't have any real lives of their
own, spend their time sticking their pointy noses into other people's business."
"That's when MaryBeth filed the
alienation-of-affection complaint."
"Yeah." He took off his billed cap and
dragged his hand through his still-thick white hair. "She didn't mean
nothin' by it, though. She was just hurt and went on a tear. By the time I got
over to the judge's house, he'd pretty much talked her out of the idea.
"She and I spent all that night talking, and the
next day she withdrew the complaint. I thought everything was going to be okay.
Then, when Linda didn't show up for work, I went to check on her, and found her
in the garage."
Dead. While a two-year-old child was left to fend for
herself. Regan had witnessed similar things, and while she'd always felt
terrible for the children, never had their loss and the confusion they must
have been feeling hit home as it did now.
"You said you and your wife talked all
night," she said, carefully wading into deeper conversational waters.
"Was that a figure of speech? Or were you literally with her all night
long?"
His eyes narrowed as he read the underlying meaning in
the question. "We were together all night. So, if you're here on police
business, I guess you could say I'm her alibi. And she's mine."
"I wasn't—" Hell, Regan thought, there was
no point in lying. "I didn't mean to imply that either you or your wife
had anything to do with her death, Mr. Boyce." It wasn't an out-and-out
lie. "I'm just trying to get at the truth. If you were as close friends as
you say—"
"I don't lie, ma'am." His tone had turned
from gravel to flint.
"Yessir. I understand that. And for what it's
worth, I believe you. But surely you, as a friend, would want to know what
happened to her."
"Killed herself. It said so right on the front
page of the Chronicle."
"Sometimes newspapers get it wrong,
Jarrett," Nate said.
"I read about there bein' an autopsy."
"Sometimes medical examiners get it wrong,
too," Regan said. Even knowing that it might tell Nate more about herself
than she would have wished, she took the old photograph of her
father from her billfold and held it out to Boyce. "Have you ever seen
this man before?"
He gnawed on his lower lip as he studied it for a
long, silent time. "His face doesn't ring a bell," he said finally.
"Perhaps you never met him," she suggested,
not quite willing to give up. "Could you have perhaps seen this photo at
Linda's house?"
"No, ma'am." This time his answer was quick,
decisive. "The only pictures Linda had around were ones she'd taken of
you." He began thoughtfully turning his cap around and around in his
hands. "You were the cutest little thing. There were times when I used to
hold you on my lap and wonder if things might have been different if I hadn't
met Marybeth first, and Linda wasn't hung up over some guy who sure wasn't actin'
much like a prince, if you want my opinion. I would've liked bein' your daddy.
I told your mama once that if I ever had a daughter, I would've liked her to be
like you."
He put the hat back on his head and stood up,
declaring the conversation closed. "I still would."
Regan was deeply, honestly moved. "Thank you, Mr.
Boyce. That's a lovely compliment."
"It's the truth," he said gruffly. The sound
of a car engine a ways down the road captured his attention, and he cursed
softly under his breath. "That'd be Marybeth, coming home from the
market."
Regan wondered if his wife had entirely recovered.
There were certainly drugs available to treat depression these days, but did a
mother ever truly get over the death of a child?
Not wanting to inflict another wound on the possibly
still fragile Marybeth when there was no hard evidence pointing at any guilt,
she turned to Nate. "We'd better be going."
"Thank you, ma'am." The older man's relief
was obvious. They were nearly to the SUV when he called out to her.
"Yes?" Regan asked.
"If someone did kill Linda, I sure hope you find
him. Lynchin's too good for any sumbitch who'd snuff out such a special
life."
Chapter Sixteen
They backed out of the driveway just as a late-model
Honda pulled in. "That was a nice thing to do," Nate said.
"I didn't want to waste time. After all, we got
what we needed. There was no point in questioning his wife."
"And you believed him? About not sleeping with
her?"
"I got the impression he was being truthful.
Didn't you?"
"Sure. But I'm the civilian here."
She glanced back, watching as Boyce took the groceries
out of the car. He literally towered over his wife, who appeared to be about
four-eleven and probably wouldn't weigh a hundred pounds soaking wet. "You
could have told me Marybeth is so small."
"Seems to me I mentioned my doubts about her
dragging Linda out to the car, and you mentioning adrenaline. Since I knew
you'd want to check out all the loose ends, it made more sense to let you talk
to Jarrett and make your own decision about the involvement of either
one."
"Of course, there's always the chance that he was
lying to me about their relationship," Regan mused. "Which could give
him a motive for killing Dale himself. It certainly wouldn't be the first time
the person who reported finding a body turned out to be the one responsible.
It's obvious he loves his wife, or they wouldn't have survived the loss of a
child and her depression and still be together thirty years later. If he'd
wanted to protect his marriage, he'd have a motive for wanting to stop her from
telling Marybeth the truth about an affair."
"Thus risking the chance of sending her back into
a depression, which in turn would have her returning to the hospital,"
Nate said. "Do you believe that's a possibility?"
"Anything's possible. But no, I don't believe
that's what happened."
"Then I guess we keep looking."
We. Strange, how having Nate Callahan as a partner in
this investigation didn't seem quite as impossible as it did yesterday.
"Do me a favor?" she asked.
"Sure." She didn't know anyone who'd agree
without first finding out what she was asking. "What do you need?"
"Pull over. I need to get out of this car."
He shot a concerned look. "You feelin' sick, chиre?"
"No." She took a deep breath.
"Frustrated. And when I'm frustrated, I need to walk."
"Makes sense to me."
He pulled the SUV over to the side of the road. Regan
jumped out before he could open her door and headed off down the road with no
goal but to try to clear her head and sort things through.
The energy was radiating from her like sparks from a
fire as she marched along the bank of the bayou. Leaving her to her thoughts,
Nate kept quiet and just fit his stride to hers.
"I just keep going over and over it," she
ground out after they'd gone about two hundred yards. "And I still can't
figure out why she never told me the truth."
"Maybe to protect your feelings?"
"Lies always come out."
Sister Augustine had always said the same thing. The
nun had warned her often unruly second graders, who'd technically reached what
the church considered the age of reason, that lies of omission were no
different from those spoken out loud, which meant the transgressor was required
to confess to the priest on those long Saturday-afternoon penance sessions Nate
had spent on his knees, reciting Our Fathers and Hail Marys when he'd rather be
outside playing ball.
"Maybe she kept putting it off until she thought
you were older and could handle the news better."
She spun toward him. "I was an adult when she
died. How long was she planning to wait?"
"I guess that's something you'll never
know."
"I wonder what else she didn't intend me to
know." She shook her head and began walking again, then stopped again and
looked out over the bayou. "Damn. I sound so damn pathetic."
She didn't look anything like the woman he'd first
seen as an island of calm in the midst of a chaotic police station. Nor that
intelligent, capable detective who'd testified so calmly and succinctly at that
gangbanger's murder trial, sticking to the facts no matter how often the
defense attorney had tried to draw her off-track by attacking not just the L.A.
police force in general, but her own investigation.
She looked small. Feminine. And strangely vulnerable.
"You don't sound pathetic at all, you."
Unable to watch any woman in such distress, he smoothed her too tense shoulders
with his palms. "You jus' sound like a woman who's had her world turned
upside down. Suddenly the sky's green." He ran his hands down her arms,
linked their fingers together. "The grass is blue. The sun's spinning in
that green sky, and you're figuring how to handle this new way of seein'
things." He drew her closer; not to seduce, but to soothe.
She slapped a hand against the front of his shirt.
"I realize this will come as a terrible shock, but not every woman on the
planet is panting to fall into bed with you."
"Well, now, that suits me just fine, since I'm
not interested in falling into bed with every woman on the planet."
"Dammit, Callahan, if you don't quit hitting on
me—"
"Non, chиre." He caught hold of the hand
pushing against his chest, lifted it, touched his lips to the soft, warm skin
of her palm, then folded her fingers again, holding the kiss in. "This
isn't hitting."
"People must use a different dictionary in
Louisiana. What would you call it?"
"Fixing." He moved a little closer, so they
were touching, thigh to thigh, chest to chest, her slender curves to his
angles. They fit well. He'd thought they would, back when she'd been on the
witness stand and he'd been fantasizing taking her to bed.
"Fixing?"
"That's what I do." He pressed a kiss
against her hair and drew in the scent of herbal shampoo. "I'll never make
as much money as Jack. Or be as driven as Finn. But I've always been pretty
good at fixin' things."
Having accepted early on that a person couldn't change
nature, Nate had been happy in his role as a handyman of sorts, fixing houses,
people, lives. But until now, until Detective Regan Hart, the only time he'd
tried to fix a broken heart had been that horrific day that his maman had been
widowed.
"I think you and I just might have that in
common, Detective Chиre." He felt the stiffness easing out of her as she
slipped her arms around his waist. "So why don't you let me fix you? Just
a little?"
"I suppose your method of fixing up will involve
getting naked?"
"No. Well, not right this minute," he
amended, wondering if Sister Augustine was looking down from some fluffy cloud
and admiring the deft way he'd avoided committing a sin of omission.
"Maybe later, when you get to know me a little bit better and are more
comfortable with the idea."
He was rewarded by something that sounded a bit like a
smothered laugh, then felt the moisture when she pressed her face into his
neck.
"I am not crying."
"Of course you're not." He slid a hand
through her hair, sifting the silky strands Like sand between his fingers.
"I never cry." Her voice was muffled.
"Not even when my mother died."
He felt her stiffen again as she realized the woman
she'd always thought of as her mother probably wasn't.
"Don't think about that right now." He
cupped her face between his hands. Her eyes, underscored by shadows revealing
too many sleepless nights, were dark with pain.
"That's easy for you to say."
"You know what you need?"
"What?"
"Somethin' to take your mind of all your
problems. Jus' for a little while."
Unlike that earlier kiss, when he'd slowly,
tantalizingly led her into the mists, this time he dragged her, head spinning,
heart hammering, into a storm. Thunder rumbled inside her, lightning sparked
every raw nerve ending, and she could have sworn the ground beneath her feet
quaked.
It shook Regan to the core. She'd never realized she
could feel so much. Never imagined she could want so much more.
Too soon, he drew his head back. "I want
you."
"Now there's a surprise." The surprise was
that she could actually speak when she was so close to begging. "Have you
ever met a woman you didn't want?"
"From time to time." He smiled a bit at
that, but his eyes were thoughtful. "This isn't one of those times."
"Then you're going to be disappointed. Because
I'm not into casual sex."
"I'd be disappointed if you were."
She arched a brow. "Ah, the double standard lifts
its ugly head. Why is it okay for a man to be a player, but if a woman enjoys
variety, she's a slut?"
"I have no idea, never having subscribed to that
belief, myself." He slipped a hand beneath the hem of her white T-shirt;
roughened fingers skimmed over the unreasonably sensitive skin of her abdomen.
"I'm going to touch you, Detective Darlin'. All over." The sound of
those callus-tipped fingers rasping against the lace of her bra was one of the
sexiest things she'd ever heard. "Then I'm going to taste you." He
dipped his head again and touched his lips to the nape of her neck. "Every
last inch of your delectable female body."
Who could have suspected there was a direct link from
that surprisingly sensitive spot behind her ear to her legs, which were turning
to water?
"And then, just to prove I'm no chauvinist, I'm
going to let you do the same thing to me. But not yet."
His quiet declaration took the wind right out of her
sails.
"What?"
"Although I'm surprising the hell out of myself,
I'm thinking we should step back a little. Take our time. Slow things down. Get
to know one another better. It'll be all the more satisfying in the end."
"You make it sound like a foregone
conclusion."
"Isn't it? You say you don't go in for casual
sex, which fits, since from what I've seen, you don't take anything lightly.
Including that kiss we just shared."
"It was only a kiss. No different from any
other."
"You just keep tellin' yourself that, chиre. I
promise not to rub it in too badly when you realize how wrong you were."
She blew out a frustrated breath. "I'm amazed,
given your supposed way with the opposite sex, that it's never sunk in that you
can be annoyingly, insufferably arrogant."
"You know, if you keep talking like that, you're
going to have me falling head over heart in love with you." His smile
warmed and widened. "I've always been a sucker for flattery."
They returned to the car, and after a brief drive Nate
pulled up in front of a building.
"What are we doing?"
"I thought we'd pick up some lunch to eat while
we plan our next move," he said. "You haven't eaten till you've
tasted one of Cajun Cal's po' boys."
Two seconds after they walked into the cafe,
conversation dropped off like a stone falling into a well.
"Small towns," Nate murmured.
"Doesn't it get old?" she asked, pretending
not to notice that everyone was staring at her. Since at least half the people
in the place were too young to have even known Linda Dale's name, Regan could
only assume that the news of her arrival in town had preceded her. "Not
being at all anonymous?"
He thought about that for a minute. "Not anymore.
I guess you get used to it. It was hard when I was in my teens and was trying
to get away with anything. One time Jack and I were cruisin' home from school
in his GTO, and by the time we arrived at Beau Soleil, at least a dozen folks
had already called maman to tell her we'd been speeding."
Regan couldn't help smiling at that idea.
He smiled back, then sobered. "I think it was
also worse because we were just about the only kids in school whose daddy had
died."
"The dead dad's club," she murmured.
"Yeah. Guess you and I are both charter
members."
"I guess we are."
The restaurant seemed to be made up of a connecting
series of small rooms, each of which had an inordinate number of tables crowded
into it. The tables were covered in newspaper, the chairs were a jumble of
different styles and colors, and the front counter was red Formica. Daily
specials had been printed in white chalk on a standing blackboard beside the
counter. The walls, which she supposed had once been white but had become
smoke-darkened over the decades, were covered with huge stuffed fish,
photographs that, from the outlandish costumes, she assumed had been taken
during many Mardi Gras over the decades, and old metal signs advertising
various beers—Jax seemed the most popular—soft drinks, and White Lily flour.
The smells emanating from the kitchen made Regan's
mouth water.
Cajun Cal was the oldest man Regan had ever seen who
was still alive. Nearly black eyes, as bright as a parrot's, looked out at her
from a face as dark and wrinkled as a raisin.
"So, you're Linda Dale's little girl all grown
up."
She forced a smile, as much for the audience as for
the man behind the counter. It was clearly going to be impossible to keep the
purpose of her trip from becoming common knowledge. "That's what I'm in
Blue Bayou to find out."
"Yeah. That's what I heard." The unlit
cigarette in his mouth bobbed up and down as he spooned dark coffee grounds
from a bright red bag of Community Coffee into a huge urn. "Your face
isn't exactly the same, and your hair isn't the same, but lookin' at your eyes,
it'd be my guess you are." He studied her some more. "I also heard
you're a big-city cop."
"I'm a detective, yes."
"Detective, cop, G-man, they're all the same
thing. I got my start in this business when I was still a kid and my uncle
hired me to deliver jugs of white lightnin' around the parish during
Prohibition. Best customers we had were the cops." If there was a challenge
there, and Regan suspected from his tone that there was, she refused to rise to
it.
"That's the trouble with passing a law the
majority of the people in the country don't agree with," she said mildly.
"Sure as hell is. Nobody down here paid much
attention to Prohibition. Hell, my uncle didn't even bother to hide the stuff.
Kept it right behind the counter, servin' it up by the glass to whoever wanted
a snort. He brewed the best hootch in south Louisiana."
"Well, good for him." She smiled. "But
if it's all the same to you, I'll just have a glass of iced tea. No," she
corrected, having already tasted what appeared to pass for tea down here,
"on second thought, water will be fine."
"Why don't you make that two lemonades,"
Nate suggested. "Regan got to sample sweet tea out at Jarrett's
place."
The old man cackled. "Marybeth's sweet tea does
take some gettin' used to, even if you're not a Yankee. You sing, chиre?"
Regan didn't so much as blink at the question that had
come from left field. She could also feel everyone in the restaurant who was
over fifty years old waiting for her answer.
"Not really." She decided belting out Aretha
Franklin in the shower didn't count.
"Now, that's a crying shame. Linda had a real
pretty voice. As pure a soprano as you'd ever want to hear. But I guess genes
are an iffy thing. Lord knows, I'm the best cook in the South, and my daughter
Lilah can't even boil water without burning the bottom out of the pot. As for
my son, well, I've been pulling dinner from the Gulf since God was a pup, but
he's a piss-poor fisherman."
"Maybe there's something your wife never got
around to tellin' you, Cal," offered a man the color of coal, wearing a
stained white apron and shelling shrimp. "I heat the mailman y'all had
fifty years ago couldn't fish worth beans, either."
"Hardy har har," the old man scoffed, then
turned piercing dark eyes back to Regan. "I also heard tell you're gonna
be our new sheriff."
"I'm afraid the grapevine has it wrong."
"Wouldn't be the first time," he said
equably. "We sure could use ourselves one."
"I'm sure Mayor Callahan's doing everything in
his power to find the perfect candidate."
"Seems to me any cop who'll crawl under hot wires
to save a kid is real close to perfect herself." He lifted a basket of
golden fried fish from a deep fryer and dumped it onto a platter.
"We'll have two po' boys," Nate ordered,
saving Regan from having to respond. "You want shrimp, fried fish, or
roast beef, sugar?"
Not only was there something unnerving about eating
fish with all those glass eyes looking down at her, the roast beef in the
display case was so heavily marbled she could feel her arteries clogging just
looking at it.
"I guess the shrimp."
"Good choice," Nate said. "I'll have
the same as the lady, dress 'em both, and throw in a couple cartons of slaw and
some hush puppies."
"Why is it called a po' boy?" Regan asked.
" 'Cause it used to only cost a nickel, so poor
boys could afford it."
She watched the sandwich being made and decided that a
family of six could probably eat quite well on it for a week. She also wondered
if she should just call ahead and make an appointment at the hospital for
bypass surgery rather than wait for the heart attack.
"Do you eat here often?" she asked Nate
quietly.
"Jus' about every day. Why?" '
"I was wondering why you don't weigh a thousand
pounds."
"I work it off." He paused a wicked beat.
"Want to know how?" "No." Her smile was as sweet as
Marybeth Boyce's tea. "I don't." Nate had been teasing, mostly.
Enjoying a little flirtation. Then he made the mistake of looking at her mouth
and remembered, with vivid clarity, the taste of those full, inviting lips. The
blood suddenly rushed from his head to other, more vital regions, making him
feel as dizzy as he had that day jack had swiped a case of Dixie out of a beer
truck delivering out back, and the two of them had taken the pirogue out to
their daddy's old camp and gotten drunk by the light of a summer bayou moon.
Easy, boy, he warned himself as he felt an almost
overwhelming urge to kiss her, right here in Cajun Cal's Country Cafe, in front
of just about everyone in town. He wanted to taste that delectable mouth again,
wanted to feel it roaming all over his hot, naked body. His hunger must have
shown in his expression, because her eyes suddenly widened, and he was caught
in that gleaming amber, frozen in it, which didn't make much sense, since the
air between them had turned about as sizzling hot as a steamy dog-day August
afternoon. Yet he couldn't have moved if someone shouted out a hurricane was
blowing in from the Gulf and they were standing right atop the levee.
Chapter Seventeen
Leave this be, the angel perched on Nate's shoulder
warned. She isn't like Charlene, or Suzanne. Or any other of the women he'd
tumbled happily, easily into bed with over the years since that memorable day
when he'd lost his virginity in the backseat of Jack's borrowed GTO with Misty
Montgomery. Don't listen to him, the devil on the other shoulder
said. She's a grown woman. Nate had already determined that for himself, but
what he hadn't noticed, until now, was how tight those low-slung jeans were. He
wondered if she'd had to lie on the bed at the inn to zip them.
That idea led to another, of knocking all those salt
and pepper shakers, metal napkin holders, and bottles of hot sauce off the
chipped red counter, lifting her up onto it, unzipping those jeans, and
dragging them down those smooth thighs he'd wanted to bite when she'd been up
on that witness stand back in L.A.
He imagined her wearing a pair of skimpy red panties
that barely covered the essentials, and although she'd beg him, "Please,
Nate, rip them off, please, please, darling," he'd torture them both by
taking his time, enjoying the way her eyes glazed with lust when he slipped his
fingers beneath the silk, jangling her senses, causing every nerve ending in
her body to sizzle.
And when he'd tormented them both to the point of no
return, when he had her exactly where he wanted her, hot, needy, ravenous, he'd
peel those panties down her long legs, inch by erotic inch, and as she cried
out his name, he'd—
"Hey, Nate." The voice was deep, way too
deep to be hers.
Nate slowly, painfully, dragged his mind back from the
sensual fantasy, crashing headfirst into reality when he viewed the
fifty-something man standing beside her.
"Hey, Charles," he answered on a voice
roughened with lingering lust. "How's it goin'? " Like he cared.
"Fine, just fine." Charles Melancon turned
his smile from Nate to Regan, who also appeared to be shell-shocked as she
returned from wherever the hell they'd both been. "Hello. You must be the
new sheriff I've been hearing all about."
"She ain't the sheriff," Cal said around his
unlit cigarette as he wrapped the enormous sandwiches in waxed white paper.
"Was just filling in during the accident out at the crossing 'tween that freight
and the eighteen-wheeler."
"What a terrible, terrible thing." Melancon
shook his silver head. "It was a miracle no one was seriously hurt."
"It sure could've been a lot worse," Nate
agreed. His head was beginning to clear, and he was no longer in immediate
danger of bustin' the zipper out of his jeans. "Detective, this is Charles
Melancon. Charles, Detective Regan Hart, from Los Angeles."
"It's a pleasure meeting you, detective." He
shook her hand with the robust action of a small-town politician, which he was.
Along with being CEO of Melancon Petroleum, Charles Melancon was head of
several redevelopment committees, president of the Blue Bayou Rotary Club, and
past president of the Chamber of Commerce. "I was very impressed by your
bravery. Did the mayor happen to mention we're in the market for a new
sheriff?" he asked.
"As a matter of fact, he did. But I already have
a job. I'm an LAPD homicide detective."
"Are you now?" His silver brows shot up.
"That must be exciting work."
"Actually, homicide's pretty much society's
clean-up crew. We're like the guys with the wheelbarrows who follow the
elephants in the parade and shovel up the shit."
Behind the counter, Cal gave a bark of a laugh.
"Still, it must be interesting," Melancon
said. "The closest thing to excitement here in Blue Bayou is watching
paint dry."
"Oh, I wouldn't think running an international
oil company could possibly be dull."
Interest turned to surprise. "You know about
Melancon Oil?"
"It would be hard not to, since I see the blue
sign every time I fill up my car. Though I never realized the home offices were
located in southern Louisiana."
That was, Nate knew, a lie. He suspected that after
having learned about the stock certificates, she could probably quote the
company's latest balance sheet.
"We're not the biggest fish in the pond, but we
make a right nice splash." Charles Melancon might not be the type of guy
Nate would swap stories and go fishing with, but he'd always seemed fairly
down-to-earth for someone whose father had probably owned half of southern
Louisiana at one time. "What brings you to Blue Bayou, detective?"
"Oh, this and that." Despite seeming half
the town knowing what she was up to, and the other half undoubtedly finding out
by Mardi Gras, she wasn't one to give anything away. Her smile turned as vague
as her tone. "Partly I'm here for a little R&R."
"Most folks go to N'Awlins for that."
"I've been there and done all the touristy,
French Quarter things. This trip I decided to see the real Louisiana."
"Well, you've certainly come to the right
place."
"I don't suppose you conduct tours of your
facilities?" she asked.
He frowned. "Not as a rule. Refineries can be
dangerous to those not familiar with the work, and our insurance company likes
us to keep our liability risk down."
"Well, it never hurts to ask." She sighed
heavily in a very undetective-like way. "I suppose I'll just sign up for
the alligator swamp tour instead."
"You'd pretty much be wastin' your money,"
Nate volunteered. "Seein' as how the gators are hibernating right
now."
"Oh." Her mouth turned down in a little moue
that was far more woman than cop. "Well, I'm sure I can find something to
occupy my time. I seem to recall reading that Exxon Mobile has a refinery in
Baton Rouge. Perhaps—"
"I suppose," Melancon interrupted her,
"it would be all right to show you around, just this once." His eyes
swept over her in what Nate decided was an unnecessarily intimate way for a guy
who had a wife at home. "After all, what Louisiana Liability and Trust
doesn't know won't hurt them."
"It'll be our secret." Her smile would have
done a Miss Cajun Days queen proud. "Why don't I drop by Monday
morning?"
"I'm afraid I'm going to be out of town on
Monday. A meeting in Houston."
"Oh. Well, Tuesday will be fine."
"That's Fat Tuesday," Cal volunteered.
"He's right," Charles Melancon said with
what appeared to be a bit of honest reluctance. "Which means that while a
skeleton crew will be working, I'm afraid the offices won't be open."
"How about Wednesday?" she pressed on.
"Say, about eight o'clock?"
"I'm afraid the office isn't open quite that
early."
"Especially on Ash Wednesday, when everyone in
the parish is going to be hung over," Cal said.
"Not everyone," Melancon corrected.
"Why don't we have lunch together in the company dining room at one on
Wednesday?"
Her smile could have lit up Blue Bayou for a month.
"That sounds fab."
Fab? Nate stared down at the surprising metamorphosis
from cop to belle.
"I'm staying at the Plantation Inn, in case
something opens up before then," she said.
"Good choice," he said.
Only choice, Nate thought.
"The inn's a famous historical landmark,"
Melancon continued.
"So Mr. Callahan tells me. I'll be waiting for
your call." She held out her hand like a princess to some duke she was
considering marrying. "It was lovely meeting you, Mr. Melancon."
"The pleasure was all mine, Ms. Hart." He
flashed his Chamber of Commerce meet-and-greet grin and returned to his table
across the room.
"Isn't he a charming man?" Regan said.
"An absolute gem," Nate agreed dryly.
"Order's up," Cal announced.
Nate took the brown bags. "It's on me," he
said when Regan began to take some money from her billfold. She looked inclined
to argue, then merely shrugged.
"What the hell was that all about?" Nate
asked Regan when they were back in the SUV.
"What was what all about?"
"That Scarlett O'Hara act you pulled with Charles
Melancon."
"I've no idea what you mean."
"You're not the type of woman who normally goes
around batting your eyelashes."
"Too bad you missed my days in vice, when I did
undercover prostitution stings." She pulled her seat belt across and
clicked it. "I'll have you know, some men found me very appealing."
"Of course you're appealing, dammit. But not in
that way."
"And what way is that?"
"You know." Feeling as if he'd somehow
landed in verbal quicksand, he skimmed a hand over his hair. "That
over-the-top come-and-get-me-big-boy way. You were sending off signals that you
were open for a lot more than a damn oil refinery tour."
"That's quite a comment from the man who's claimed
he wants to take me to bed, and was undressing me with his eyes when Melancon
interrupted."
"I didn't hear you complaining." He jerked
his own seat belt closed.
"We were in a public place. I didn't feel the
need to embarrass you by telling you to knock it off."
"What a bunch of bullshit." He twisted the
key in the ignition with more strength than necessary and pulled away from the
curb with an angry squeal of tires.
The heat that had sizzled between them in the
restaurant shifted into a low, seething anger. Regan was tempted to tell him to
take her back to the inn; she didn't need his help. After all, if she couldn't
handle one cold case committed in a town where everyone knew everyone else,
which meant someone had to hold the key to solving the murder, she might as
well turn in her shield and go sell Avon products door to door.
The problem was, if she stomped back to the inn, she'd
risk letting him know how affected she'd been by that suspended moment in the
restaurant, when she'd been fantasizing about Nate dragging her down to the
black-and-white-checked floor and making mad, passionate love to her.
"I wasn't flirting with him," she said into
the heavy silence. "I need to talk to him about the stock certificates.
Since I don't have any police powers down here to force the issue, and since
he's undoubtedly used to calling the shots, I figured he might be more amenable
to charm."
"You couldn't just come right out and ask?"
"With everyone in the place watching us and
listening to every word?"
"Yeah, I can see how you'd rather them think you
were coming on to a married guy twice your age than have them overhearing you
ask a basic business question."
"It's not basic when a woman got killed over
it."
He shot her a surprised look. "You think Linda
Dale was murdered for her Melancon Petroleum stock?"
"She wouldn't have been the first person to be
killed over money."
"And wouldn't be the last," he allowed.
"But if that was the motive, then why were the stocks left behind?"
"Maybe the murderer got interrupted and had to
leave before he could retrieve them. Maybe she had them hidden." Regan
shrugged. "There could be any number of answers. Which is why I want
privacy when I talk with Melancon. Not that he sounded real eager for a
meeting." She frowned. "I wonder why that was?"
"Are you suspicious of everyone? Never
mind," he said before she could answer the rhetorical question; "I
know the answer to that. But just because he's CEO of the company doesn't mean
he'll be able to tell you anything. His mother was running the place thirty
years ago."
"From what you said about Mrs. Melancon, the
chances are she wouldn't recall details. But not only would he have access to
the records, this is a small town. It seems implausible that anyone living
here—especially a nightclub singer—would own that much stock without the family
being aware of it."
"Good point."
"Thank you. That's why L.A. pays me the big
bucks." Which barely covered the rent on her closet-sized apartment in
Westwood and insurance on a five-year-old tomato red Neon. "I wonder if he
knew her?"
"Like you said, it's a small town, and it sounds
like she was a local celebrity."
"I got that impression from the newspaper even
before we talked with Jarrett Boyce." She chewed thoughtfully on a buffed
fingernail. "Do you suppose they could have been lovers?"
"That's unlikely."
"Why?"
" 'Cause I already checked it out. Charles got
married two years before Linda Dale's death."
"That doesn't mean anything. They could have been
having an affair."
"That's also unlikely. Not only does the guy
consider himself a pillar of morality, the conventional wisdom around these
parts says that he married into money to keep his family in the style to which
they'd become accustomed back when oil was king."
"You'd think being CEO of a family petroleum
company would pay very well."
"Not well enough. There was a time when his daddy
probably had more power than the governor. He'd had more than one governor and
several congressmen in his pocket. Regulation slowed the money flow, then the
bust tightened things even more. The family's richer than most around these
parts, but if it wasn't for Charles's wife's money, they'd probably have to
give up the plane, the yacht, the ski chalet in Aspen, and the villa in
Tuscany."
"I didn't find any villa when I did my search."
"The title's in his mother-in-law's name. But she
lives in one of those retirement communities in Baton Rouge and hasn't been out
of the country in a decade."
"I suppose you got that from Finn."
"He did a little digging."
"I don't even want to know," Regan muttered.
"I'm beginning to feel as if I'm dealing with the Hardy boys. Maybe
Melancon gave Linda Dale the stock to pay her off."
"To get rid of her once he tired of the
affair?"
"That's always possible."
"Sure it is. But if that was the case, then why
would he kill her?"
"Maybe she refused the offer."
"She had the certificates."
"Okay, maybe she changed her mind. Maybe she took
them, then threatened to go to his wife."
"Because she wanted more money?"
"Or because she was in love and decided that she
couldn't live without him."
"So he killed her to shut her up."'
"That's one scenario."
"You realize, of course, that if you're right,
Melancon could be your father?"
"We can't all have heroes for fathers." It
was looking more and more likely that she probably didn't. "But the name's
wrong. Dale referred to the man she was going to run off with as J," she
reminded him. Then paused. "There's something I haven't wanted to bring
up. But I don't think we can overlook it."
"What?"
"You do realize that there's someone else who
could have been involved with Dale."
"More than one someone. There are a helluva lot
of names in this parish that begin with J."
"Like Jake."
She'd expected him to swear. Maybe even rage. At least
snap back a denial. He did none of that. He threw back his sun-gilded head and
roared with laughter.
"It's not that funny."
"If you'd known my dad, you'd think it was.
There's no way he would have looked at another woman. He and maman used to
embarrass the hell out of us kids, the way they used to neck like teenagers.
They renewed their vows on their twentieth wedding anniversary, right here at
Holy Assumption.
"The very next weekend, on the night before he
was killed, they were partying at his fortieth birthday party. I remember
groaning with Jack when they were dancing to this slow Cajun song about love
goin' wrong and they kissed, right there, in front of God and everyone in Blue
Bayou. And not just a friendly little husband-and-wife public peck on the
cheek. They were really gettin' into it." His expression turned
reminiscent and understandably sad. "Everyone in the parish knew Jake
Callahan flat-out adored my mother. And she adored him back."
"I believe that." It wouldn't be that hard
to fall in love with a Callahan man, if a woman was looking to fall in love.
Which she definitely was not. "But nobody's perfect. People make mistakes.
Get themselves in messy situations they never could have imagined."
"Even if he had slipped, and I'm not saying he
did, since I don' believe it for a damn minute, if he'd gotten a woman
pregnant, he would have done right by her."
"Done right. Does that mean marry?"
"Hell, I don't know." He was no longer
laughing. In fact, he was as sober as she'd ever seen him. Even more serious
than when he was crawling beneath those electrical wires to rescue the trucker
and a runaway teenager.
He blew out a long ragged breath. "Maybe. Maybe
not. I told you, he took his marriage vows seriously, so I can't see him
signing up for a lifetime sentence if he wasn't in love."
"Sentence. Well, that certainly reveals how you
think about marriage."
"Actually, I try not to think about it. I'm also
not real wild about the way you're analyzing every damn word I use, like this
is some kind of interrogation. However, as I was about to point out, even if
Dad were to go plantin' his seed somewhere, he would have insisted on
contributing to his child's support.
"I watched him chase down men who didn't pay
their child support and toss them in jail until they decided it'd be better to
write the checks, long before it got politically popular to crack down on
dead-beat dads. Dad was big on birthdays and holidays, and just taking us boys
out to the camp for a lazy summer day of fishing, or even tossin' a ball around
the backyard before supper. He'd never desert his own flesh and blood."
His hand had curled into an unconscious fist. "He wouldn't have let your
mother live in the same town and never acknowledged you."
"I understand why you'd want to stand up for him,
I also understand why you'd find it hard to believe that he might possibly
commit adultery, since it's obvious you respect him—"
"There's not a man, woman, or child who knew Jake
Callahan who didn't respect him."
"I'm also willing to accept that. But we can't
ever really know our parents, Nate, because they try their best never to let us
see their flaws. I'm proof that an otherwise honest parent might think it's in
everyone's best interest to keep a secret from their children."
"Not my dad, dammit. Look, you've met Finn."
"Of course."
"Let me put it this way: our father would make
Finn look downright flexible."
"You're joking." She'd never met a more
rigid, black-and-white person than Finn Callahan. And living in the world of
cops, that was really saying something.
"This is not exactly a joking matter. It's also a
moot point, because Dad was working in Chicago when your mother got
pregnant."
"He was sheriff of Blue Bayou when she lived
here."
"When she died," Nate corrected. "But
you're the same age as Jack, and he and Finn were both born in Chicago. We
moved here when I was six weeks old."
"Oh. Well, I guess that does take him out of the
picture, since there's no indication Dale ever lived in Illinois."
"Not unless you want to concoct some theory about
them meeting on some plane trip and becoming members of the mile-high club over
Kansas, then going their separate ways after it landed."
The uncharacteristic sarcasm in his tone was sharp
enough to cut crystal. "I suppose I deserved that."
"No.' He sighed and shook his head. "You
didn't. I understand this is tough on you, and you're only doin' what comes
naturally. Detecting."
"I'm sure as hell not doing very well at it so
far," she muttered.
"Like you said, it's a cold case. You've only
been in town two days."
"I know. I just get impatient."
"That's not good for you. Raises your blood
pressure and all sorts of bad stuff. Move here, and you're bound to slow down.
Live longer."
"Maybe it just seems longer."
He chuckled at that.
"Do you know Melancon's wife?"
"Sure. She's on just about every charitable
committee in town. As mayor, I have a lot of dealings with her. She tends to
keep busy, and her fingers are in most of the pies around town. She does a lot
of charity work, but it's seldom the hands-on kind of stuff. She's more likely
to donate a wing to the hospital than drive around in her Jag delivering Meals
on Wheels.
"She can be so condescending your teeth hurt from
being clenched, and she's a snob, along with being Blue Bayou's self-appointed
morality czarina. But I can't see her killing anyone, if that's where you were
going. Especially if it'd involve anything that might involve chipping a
fingernail."
"There's one thing I learned early on in
homicide."
"What's that?"
"Everyone's a suspect."
"You're a hard woman, Detective Chиre."
"I'm a realist." She had to be. "I'm
going to want to meet her."
"Mrs. Melancon?"
"Yeah. The way I see it, I can do it three ways.
I can find out her daily activity pattern and just happen to run into her by
chance and get to chatting, but that's iffy, and if she's in a hurry, it
doesn't give me a real good opportunity to talk with her.
"Or I can just go to her house, knock on the
door, tell her that her husband may be a suspect in a thirty-year-old murder
case, and could we have a little chat about whether or not he used to sleep
around on her back when she was a young bride.
"Or," she said as he pulled up to a four-way
stop, "I can have you arrange things."
He braked and briefly shut his eyes. "Why did I
know you were going to say that?"
"Because you've spent all your life surrounded by
cops. Some of it's got to have rubbed off onto you."
"I use that soap with pumice in it so it doesn't
stick."
"You might not want to admit it, Callahan, but on
occasions, you, too, can think like a cop."
He frowned. "I don't know if I've been complimented
or insulted."
She laughed for the first time, and Nate was struck by
how much he enjoyed the rich, full sound. She reached over and patted his
cheek. "Why don't you think on it."
Chapter Eighteen
They stopped for a while in a peaceful spot next to
the bayou for lunch. The sandwich was the richest she'd ever tasted. She'd only
been able to finish half of it and still didn't think she'd be able to eat
again for a week. They'd parked beside a metal marker memorializing the victory
of a battle against the British.
"Isn't that the pirate you were going to tell me
about?" She remembered him mentioning that when they'd first entered the
ER.
"That's him. Jean Lafitte. Actually, there were
three of them— Alexander, Pierre, and Jean—hut Jean was the most infamous.
Alexander, who, I guess you could say was most respectable, was Napoleon's
artillery officer. Jean and Pierre were privateers who earned their living
attacking the trading ships comin' and goin' between the Gulf and the river
cities."
"I imagine there was a fairly good profit in
piracy."
"Mais yeah. Jean and Pierre had thirty-two armed
warships under their command, they, which was more than the entire American
navy at the start of the War of 1812. Both the British and the Americans
recruited them, but Andrew Jackson was the one who promised them amnesty if
they'd fight in the Battle of New Orleans."
"Which they did," she guessed.
"They did. After they won the battle and sent the
Redcoats packing, they went right back to raiding. Tales about his final
restin' place flow as freely as Voodoo beer at Mardi Gras, but folks here in
Blue Bayou prefer the one where he was buried in an unmarked grave after bein'
on the losing end of a duel with one of his lover's husbands. His ghost is real
popular, showin' up all over the bayou, sometimes at the wheel of his
warship."
"Have you ever seen him?"
"Now, I can't say that I have. But I think I did
hear him one night in Holy Assumption's cemetery, back when I was in high
school."
"What were you doing in a cemetery at night?
Never mind," she said an instant later as the answer came to her.
"I don't expect you'd believe I was studying the
stars?"
"Only if you happened to be studying them with a
girl."
He rubbed his chin. "Studying was always more fun
when you had someone to do it with. I have to admit, the sound of those chains
rattlin' nearly scared the pants off me."
"I have the feeling they wouldn't have stayed on
long anyway."
He put a hand against his chest. "You wound me,
Detective Chиre."
"I strongly doubt that's possible," she said
lightly, enjoying sparring with him. As she'd sat in the SUV and drank in the
absolute silence surrounding them, Regan had found herself beginning to relax.
It had been an odd sensation; she had actually taken a few moments to recognize
the feeling.
Unfortunately, they couldn't suspend time forever.
After driving another ten minutes, Nate turned off the main road again and
headed through a cane break.
"Where are we going, now?" she asked.
"Beau Soleil."
"Jack and Dani's plantation house?"
"Yeah. I've got some work to do there, and it'll
let me check up on the kid."
"Construction work?"
"Sorta. Blue Bayou usually has the Mardi Gras
party in the park, but this year Dani decided it'd be fun to host it at Beau
Soleil., like back in. the old days when her daddy pretty much ran the town.
The party's free, of course, but for an extra five bucks you get a tour of the
house and some autographed books Jack's donating. Between the home's history
and my brother's fame, the tickets have been sellin' like popcorn shrimp. The
money goes into the parish's community chest."
"That's nice."
"It's more of a necessity. The parish still
hasn't fully recovered from the oil bust, when a lot of folks had to leave land
that had been in their families for generations and move into the cities. Those
who stayed behind have to work harder to keep things together."
"You really do fit here, don't you?"
He didn't have to think about that for a moment.
"Yeah. I do."
"There are a lot of things I like about L.A. The
beach, my friends, my work. The fact that I may be making a difference. But
I've never actually felt as if it was home."
"Must be hard for roots to settle in concrete and
asphalt."
Part of Nate had decided long ago that perhaps not
reaching his youthful dream of playing third base for the Yankees hadn't been
such a bad thing, after all. He'd have hated to get to New York and discover
that the fantasy hadn't been anywhere near the reality. He wasn't, after all, a
hustle-bustle kind of guy.
"Maybe you never felt like you belonged in California
because Blue Bayou's your true home," he suggested.
"Even if I do turn out to be Regan Dale, I didn't
live here long enough to have a connection. I certainly haven't recognized
anything, or had any feeling of dйjа vu."
"Maybe you're tryin' too hard. Sometimes the
answer comes when you're not looking for it."
"Is that something else you've read in one of
Jack's books?"
"Nope. That's mine. From when I'll be wrestling a
set of blueprints all night, trying to make something work, and later, while
I'm having morning beignets and coffee at Cal's and arguing sports scores, the
solution will just come right out of the blue."
She'd experienced the same thing, when she'd been
working a case that seemed a dead end, and suddenly the answer would occur to
her.
"Stay around a while, and Blue Bayou will start
to grow on you," he suggested. "Maybe I will, too." He skimmed a
hand over her hair.
"Like that Spanish moss hanging from all these
trees."
He chuckled, unwounded.
Nate turned onto another unmarked road, which took
them down a narrow lane lined with oaks that appeared centuries old. When he
turned a corner and the white Greek Revival antebellum plantation house
suddenly appeared, gleaming like alabaster in the sunshine, she drew in a sharp
breath.
"It really is Tara."
"Pretty damn close," he agreed. "There
are those around here who swear Margaret Mitchell used Beau Soleil for the
model in her book."
"That's what Dani said, but I'm not sure I took
her seriously. Wow. It's stunning. It's also hard to believe that anyone—any
normal person, that is—actually lives here."
"Dani and Jack are as normal as you get,
basically. Her family first got the deed to the place in the mid-1800s. Her
ancestor, Andre Dupree, won it in a bouree game on a riverboat. Her daddy, the
judge, nearly lost it to taxes a while back when he had himself some personal
problems, but Jack came to the rescue and bailed him out."
"That was certainly a grand gesture."
"He said at the time he liked the idea of bein' a
man of property, and wanted to stop this New Orleans mob family from turning it
into a casino, but personally, I think he bought it for Dani's sake, since he
still had strong feelings for her. When they got married, it landed back in the
Dupree family again."
"Well, that's certainly convenient."
"Neither one of them married for the house. When
you see 'em together, you'll realize they could be just as happy living in a
one-bedroom trailer."
"This is certainly not a trailer." Her gaze
swept over the white-pillared facade. "I'd feel as if I were living in
some Civil War tourist attraction. Did you say you grew up here?"
"Not in the big house. We moved into one of the
smaller ones after Dad was killed." He pointed toward a small white house
on the outskirts of the compound. "After maman died, it sat vacant for a
lot of years. Dani's turned it into a guest house. It's real cozy, even bein'
haunted like it is."
"Of course. What would an old antebellum home be
without a ghost!"
"There you go, bein' skeptical again," he
said easily. "He's a Confederate officer who got lost here in the bayou
after the Battle of New Orleans. Since the Union Army had taken over Beau
Soleil, one of Dani's ancestors hid him in the little house. According to the
story, she sent her own personal maid to take care of him during the day, then
every night, she'd be real liberal when it came to pouring the port. After all
the Yankees would pass out, she'd sneak out of the house and take the night
shift trying to nurse that poor Confederate boy back to health, which was a
pretty gutsy thing to do, since harboring the enemy was a hangin' offense. Even
for a woman."
"That couldn't have been an easy decision."
Easier, perhaps, if the southern soldier had resembled the man sitting beside
her. She could see a woman taking foolish risks for Nate Callahan. "I take
it she failed?"
"Yeah. The poor guy's leg had been blown off, and
he ended up dying, probably of sepsis. When we were growing up we heard stories
about the lady, who lived to a ripe old age, tellin' folks that he used to come
visit her at night, but people figured she'd just gotten a little touched in
the head."
"But you believe the stories," Regan
guessed.
"I like the idea of them findin' happiness
together. I've never seen him, though Jack claims to have heard music in the
ballroom, where they're supposed to dance."
"I'll bet Finn never saw the ghost, either."
He rubbed his jaw. "Now, see, that's what you get
for stereotyping. Finn's the only one of the three of us who actually has seen
him."
"I don't believe that." Finn Callahan was
the last person, other than herself, she'd expect to believe in such fantasy.
"My hand to God." He lifted his right hand.
"Though I suppose, in the interest of full disclosure, I oughta add that
he was feverish with flu at the time, and once he got better he tried to back
away from his story about seeing the two of them waltzing."
"It seems as if it'd be hard to waltz with one
leg."
"Oh, I don't know," Nate argued.
"People can do a lot of things when they're in love that they might not do
otherwise. Or so I hear."
She wasn't surprised he referred to hearsay. Nate
Callahan did not strike her as a man who'd fall in love. Lust, sure. But the
forever-after kind of love? No way. Another thing they had in common
The front door opened, and a huge yellow ball of fur
came barreling toward them. "Brace yourself," Nate warned as she
tensed. Every cop who'd ever worked the rough parts of town, and a lot who were
assigned the cozier suburbs, had learned the hard way that it was best to be
wary of strange dogs. "She's not dangerous, 'less you consider gettin'
licked to death a problem."
What appeared to be a mix between a yellow lab and a
school bus came skidding to a halt in front of them. Her tail was wagging like
an out-of-control metronome. "Hey, Turnip." Nate took a Milk-Bone
from his jeans pocket and tossed it to her. The treat disappeared in a single
gulp.
The dog turned to Regan, who did usually carry dog
treats with her, partly because she liked dogs and partly to make friends with
the territorial ones. "Sorry, doggie. I'm all out." Wishing she'd
saved the other half of the sandwich from lunch, she rubbed the huge head
thrust toward her. "Her name's Turnip?"
"Yeah." He grinned as the enormous pink
tongue slurped the back of Regan's hand. " 'Cause she just turned up one
day." He glanced up as Josh appeared on the front gallerie. "She was
a stray. Just like some kid I know."
"You just missed her," Josh announced as
they approached.
"Missed who?" Nate asked.
"That social worker. Isn't that what you're doing
out here?"
"Actually, I came to do some carpentry work.
Didn't even know Judi was coming out today. So, I don't suppose your memory
happened to make a comeback?"
"Nope,"
Nate shook his head. "Terrible thing, amnesia.
Who knows, you might turn out to be a spy, just like that Matt Damon character
in The Bourne Identity. Sure would hate for Blue Bayou to be overrun with
international assassins."
"Like that's goin' to happen." He smirked.
"Never know," Nate said mildly. "You
have any talents you don't remember learning? Like maybe some martial arts or
driving a get' away car?"
"No, but if I did have any, I wouldn't have time
to notice, since the famous author's been making me sand woodwork ever since
you dumped me here."
"Well, then, we'll just have to keep thinkin' on
it and keep alert for any clues. Meanwhile, sanding is an important job. Can't
stain without getting the wood all smooth first."
"It's boring."
"I suppose it can be if you do too much of it for
too long. So, how'd you like to switch to something a little larger?"
"Like what?"
"I've got to build a stage for the band and could
always use an extra hand."
"Shit, this is turning out to be like
prison."
"The detective here might know better than me
about jailhouse fashion, but I've driven past prisoners workin' the fields up
at Angola, and can't recall ever seein' anyone wearing an OutKast shirt. They
all seem, to favor stripes. So, what do you say?"
"What's in it for me?"
"I'm not real sure. But it's always good to learn
a new skill, just in case it turns out you're not a secret agent. Plus, it
could just look good on your juvie report in case you've got some police
problem that's slipped your mind."
Nate glanced over as another teenager appeared in the
doorway. This one was a girl, tall and willowy, with pale hair down to her
waist and thickly fringed green eyes. Looking at her, Regan had a very good
idea what Dani had looked like at thirteen.
"Hi, Uncle Nate." When she went up on her
toes and gave him a peck on the cheek, Regan noticed a flash of something that
looked like old-fashioned envy in Josh's eyes. "Guess what? Ben and his
mom moved into the guest house last night."
"Good for them, Holly.
"Ben's Misty's boy," Nate explained to
Regan. He glanced over at Josh, who was staring at the girl as if she were a
gilt angel atop a Christmas tree. "Guess you and Ben'd be about the same
age,"
The only answer was a shrug.
"They both play ball, too." Holly Callahan's
revelation drew a sharp warning look from Josh, but she appeared unaware that
she'd just given away something he hadn't wanted them to know.
"Is that so?" Nate said casually. "I
played a bit in my day."
"I told him that you played third base for the
Buccaneers and went to Tulane. Josh plays shortstop."
"Must have some fast moves."
"I get by," Josh mumbled. Regan was amused
when he began rubbing the worn toe of his sneaker in the dirt like a shy
six-year-old.
"We usually end up playing a softball game while
the Mardi Gras supper's cooking. I don' suppose I could talk you into bein' on
my team," Nate said.
Josh was tempted. Regan could see it. But once again
trust didn't come easily, and she knew he was looking for the catch.
"You gonna be the cheerleader?" he asked
Holly.
"No." Her eyes flashed in a way that
suggested a bit of steel beneath that cotton-candy blond exterior. "I play
first base. When I'm not pitching, that is." Her smile was sweet and
utterly false. "If you don't want to be on Uncle Nate's team, we could
always use a mascot. Maybe you could dress up like a pirate. Or a
chicken."
The gauntlet had been thrown down.
Josh narrowed his eyes. His cheeks flushed with anger,
embarrassment, or both. "I'll play," he told Nate with all the
enthusiasm of a death-row inmate on the way to the electric chair.
"Great." Nate threw an arm around both Josh
and Holly's shoulders in that easy way he had. Regan saw the boy stiffen again,
but Nate ignored it. "Let's keep the fact that you played back home our
little secret," he suggested. "No point in helping the other team
with the point spread."
"You fixin' softball games again, cher?" a
deep voice rumbled from inside the house.
Jack Callahan emerged from the shadows, looking even
more rakish than he appeared on the back of his books. With his dark hair tied
with a leather thong at the nape of his darkly tanned neck and that gold
earring, Regan thought he could easily be a buccaneer in the flesh.
"Wouldn't be any challenge if there wasn't money
on the line," Nate said.
"With that attitude, it's a good thing you didn'
make the pros, since last I heard, gamblin' on games was illegal." Jack
turned toward Regan. "Hi. You must be the lady I've been hearing about.
Regan Hart."
"Yes." She smiled, truly appreciative he'd
used the name she'd always known. "At least that's always been my
name."
"We've got ourselves a little family experience
with long-lost kids comin' to Blue Bayou to find their roots," he said,
flashing a grin at Holly. The way she beamed back told Regan there was another
story there. "Even if you find out some stuff about your past you didn't
know, it doesn't negate all those other years."
He glanced up as a tall, lanky, dark-haired boy came
around the corner from the direction of the guest house. "Looks like the
lunch break's over," he said. "I'll drive you and Ben back to
school," he told Holly. "If you're going to be here for a
while," he said to Nate.
"Yeah. Josh's gonna help with the stage."
"Good idea." He bestowed another warm smile
on Regan and walked toward the classic cherry red GTO parked beside the house.
Regan watched Josh watching the trio get in the car.
"You just want to make sure I don't run
away," Josh said.
"You thinkin' of running, cher?"
"None of your business if I am."
"Well, now, you know that's not 'xactly true,
since I signed a paper taking responsibility for you."
"I can take care of myself."
"Maybe on a good day. But I get the impression
there haven't been many of those lately."
Josh's only answer was to spit into the dirt. Then his
gaze drifted to the departing car. He looked like a starving child staring into
a bakery window.
"Holly sure is a pretty fille," Nate
observed.
He didn't respond.
"Smart, too. Gets straight As."
Again no answer.
"She and Ben are really close friends, having as
much in common as they do."
"Big freakin'deal." Bull's-eye. "Having a friend is sure enough a big
deal. And, not that you asked, because you're probably not real interested in
pretty blond girls who smell like gardens, but they're not boyfriend and
girlfriend.
"Ben's goin' with Kendra Longworth, whose maman teaches third grade at Holy Assumption school. Holly was seein' Trey Gaffhey
for a time when she first got to town last spring, but they broke up after
Christmas, so she's pretty much available. Not that I'd be all that fond of the
idea of my favorite niece spendin' Mardi Gras with an amnesiac secret agent,"
he said.
"I'm not any damn spy."
"That's good to hear. Seems she might jus' have
somethin' in common with a ballplayer. Bern' how she's on the girls' varsity
team."
"Big deal. It's still just a girls' team."
"You keep that in mind when she strikes you out
with her slider," Nate said. "Now, why don't you go get my toolbox
out of the back of my truck and we'll get to work."
"I'm not sure your brother would be real happy
with you playing matchmaker with his daughter and a runaway juvenile
delinquent," Regan said as they watched Josh make his way in
unenthusiastic slow motion toward the SUV.
"I wasn't matchmaking; jus' suggesting a couple
kids play ball together. After all, there's nothing more American than
baseball. Besides, like I said, Jack spent some time in juvie himself. He's not
one to pass judgment."
"And Dani?"
He laughed at that. "If there's anyone who knows
both the appeal and the downside of bad boys, it's Dani. I figure she can give
her little girl the appropriate motherly advice. Besides, it's not like they're
going to be alone. The entire town'll be here chaperoning them. Meanwhile, it
gives the kid a reason to stick around at least one more day, so maybe we can
find out who he is. And what he's running away from."
Seeing how they all seemed to watch out for each other
somehow made small-town life not quite so suffocating to Regan.
* * *
The outside of Beau Soleil was gorgeous. The inside
quite literally took her breath away. She stared up at the mural that covered
the wall of the two-story entry hall, rose to the plaster ceiling medallions,
then swept up the wide curving stairway she recognized from more than one
movie.
"It's stunning- Is it original to the
house?" she asked.
"No, but it's real old. Andre Dupree had the
mural painted in memory of the Grand Derangement, when the English kicked his
people out of eastern Canada, where they'd ended up after fleeing for religious
freedom even before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock."
He was telling the story as if it'd happened
yesterday. Which, in some people's minds, probably wasn't that far off.
"The Acadians, which is what we Cajuns were
officially called, were pretty much left alone to do their own thing for the
next hundred years, but after the French and Indian War, the British weren't
really happy about these French-speaking people livin' halfway between New
England and New France. They demanded the Acadians renounce their Catholic
religion and pledge allegiance to England. Well, now, they were a pretty
stubborn people—"
"Were?" She arched a brow.
He grinned. "Things don't change much down here
in the bayou. Anyway, when they refused, they were rounded up and deported.
Some were sold as indentured servants to the American colonies, others were
sent back to France, some ended up in concentration camps in England, and a few
managed to evade deportation by hiding out in Nova Scotia.
"Things were looking pretty bleak for them when
the Spaniards entered into the situation. Since the Acadians were staunch
enemies of the British by now and Catholic to boot, the Spanish decided they'd
be dandy people to populate their Louisiana settlements. The Acadians, happy
for a chance to reunite their families—families have always been real important
in the Cajun culture—liked the beauty of the land, not to mention ail the bountiful
fresh foods, which tasted pretty good after their years in exile. So they dug
into the swamp like crawfish."
"Sounds like a happy ending." She wondered
what it would be like to grow up in a place where everyone seemed to be
related, if not by blood then by common experience.
"I guess it pretty much is. There's about a
quarter million descendants of those original Acadians living around here,
though the economy's taken a hit from time to time and caused a lot to move' to
the cities. But wherever a Cajun goes, he always takes a bit of this place away
with him. And his heart always stays here in the swamp."
"Is that why you stay?"
"I don' know." He shrugged. "When I was
a kid, I had big dreams and left for a while, but I ended up coming back and
stayed for family reasons."
"Dani told me about your mother. I'm sorry."
Another shrug. "It was a bad time I wouldn't want
to relive. But there's not much a person can do but keep on keeping on, is
there?"
"No." Regan sighed, thinking about her own
mother's death. Karen Hart's death, she amended.
"Gotta be hard, losing two mothers."
"It's not easy." She no longer doubted that
Linda Dale had been her birth mother. "Which is why I'm going to find out
the truth of what happened, and make certain that whoever was to blame for her
death pays."
"Why if the autopsy report turns out to be
true?"
"Those entries in her journal weren't written by
a woman about to commit suicide."
"Something could have happened. Maybe your father
didn't show up. Or maybe he did, and told her that he wasn't, going to leave
his wife."
"Eliminating maybes is what I do. I need to know
about her life."
"So you'll have a better handle on your
own."
Regan wasn't as surprised as she might have been even
yesterday at his understanding so well how his news had packed an emotional
punch.
"Yeah."
He led her to the huge ballroom, with high ceilings
that had been painted a pale lemon yellow and lots of tall windows designed to
bring the outdoor gardens inside. It took no imagination at all to envision
beautiful women dressed in formal satin, hoop skirts skimming along the
polished floor as they danced in the arms of their handsome, formally clad
partners. The sconces circling the room were electric, but she could easily
picture the warm glow of candlelight.
"It just keeps getting better and better,"
she said on a deep, appreciative sigh, surprised to discover a romantic lurking
inside her.
"You should have seen it back around
Thanksgiving. Since it's the biggest room in the house, we've been using it as
an indoor workshop for winter and rainy days. You couldn't go more than a
couple feet without bumping into a sawhorse. Plaster and sawdust were all over
everything, and the floor was covered with paint cans. After Dani decided to
hold the Mardi Gras festivities here, about every carpenter, painter, and
electrician in the parish has been pulling overtime."
"Well, they definitely earned it." She ran
her fingers over a chair rail that had been sanded as smooth as an infant's
bottom. "I wouldn't have expected to find such craftsmanship in such a
small, out-of-the-way place."
"Actually, towns like Blue Bayou probably hold
the last remaining old-time craftsmen. Since we're not in a real dire need for
more parking spaces, we tend to hang onto our old buildings. Which means that
people who know how to do restoration will probably always be able to find
work, even if the annual income probably isn't what they could make in the
city."
"The city's more expensive to live in,
though." She looked up at the glorious ceiling fresco someone had
painstakingly restored. "And I'd imagine this sort of work is more
artistically satisfying."
"I've always thought so." He smiled easily,
then opened his arms. "Viens ici, sugar."
"I thought we'd agreed you were taking a
moratorium on trying to seduce me."
"I am. We just finished the floor last week and I
figured we should try it out. See if it's smooth enough for dancing, in case it
rains tomorrow and we have to bring the party indoors."
Dammit, she was tempted. Too tempted. "There
isn't any music."
"No problem." When she didn't go to him, he
closed the small distance between them. "We'll make our own."
"Good try, but I think I'll pass."
He tucked her hair behind her ear. "Afraid?"
"Of you?" Her laugh was quick. "No,
Callahan, I am definitely not afraid of you."
His fingers curved around the nape of her neck. As she
watched his eyes turn from calm to stormy, she felt another one of those inner
pulls that both intrigued her and ticked her off. "Maybe you should
be." He slowly lowered his head. "Maybe we should both be."
It would be an easy thing to back away, but just as
she was about to do so, he shifted gears and dropped a quick kiss on her
forehead.
"We'd best go see what's holdin' up the kid,
before he steals all my hand tools and heads off to the nearest pawnshop."
Feeling shaky, Regan followed him outside.
"You're a strange man, Callahan. I can't get a handle on you."
"Me?" His laugh woke up Turnip, who'd been
dozing happily in the shade of a weeping willow. Brown eyes turned limpid, as
if hoping for another Milk-Bone. "I'm an open book."
"And I'm the queen of the Mardi Gras. That
good-old-boy routine may work with your hometown belles, but I'm not buying
it."
He grinned. "Maybe I'm one of a kind, me."
As irritated as she was with him for being so damn
appealing, and herself for being attracted, Regan could not dispute that.
Chapter Nineteen
While Nate and Josh worked on the stage, Regan took
her laptop into the book-lined library and began writing up her notes before
the details began to slip her mind. She'd finished with the Boyce interview and
her impression of Marybeth when she made the mistake of looking out the window,
and her mind went as clear as glass.
The sun had burned off all the morning fog, warming
the day. She watched Nate wipe his brow with the back of his hand. He said
something to Josh, who shook his head in characteristically negative response.
Nate shrugged, then pulled the black T-shirt over his head, revealing a
rock-hard chest that looked gilded in the golden afternoon light. A light sheen
of sweat glistened on tanned flesh, drawing her attention to the arrowing of
gilt hair that disappeared below the waist of his faded jeans.
He took a long drink from a canteen; when some of the
water ran down his body, he casually wiped it off his belly, then returned to
work, the long muscles in his back flexing and releasing, again and again, as
he pounded the nails with that large, wooden-handled hammer.
Determined to avoid the sensual pull of that hard
mahogany body, Regan sighed and returned to work.
After turning down dinner invitations from both Dani
and Nate— after so many sexual jolts to her system today, she didn't want to
risk being alone with him—Regan spent the evening alone in her suite, trying to
create a time-flow chart of Linda Dale's life in Louisiana.
Outside the French doors leading out onto a
cast-iron-railed balcony, the citizens of Blue Bayou began to get an early
start on Mardi Gras celebrations. Music poured from the bar downstairs, people
were
literally dancing in the street, and the sound of
firecrackers being set off all over town—sounding like random gunshots—made her
edgy. Edgy enough that she jumped when the phone rang.
She picked up the receiver.
"There's nothing for you here in Blue
Bayou." The voice was muffled, and so low she couldn't tell the gender.
"You should go back to California where you belong. Before you ruin good
people's lives."
"Who is this?" Regan reached for the phone
pad, but the dial tone revealed that her caller had hung up.
"Damn." She went over to the window and
stared down onto the street and the park beyond. Looking for . . . what? Who?
The phone rang again. This time, when she grabbed it,
she didn't immediately speak, hoping her caller would say something that would
allow her to recognize his voice.
"Chиre?"
"It's you." She let out a deep breath she'd
been unaware of holding. "What do you want?"
"It'll wait." Nate's voice was rich and deep
and concerned. It was also not the voice of whoever had called her earlier.
"What's wrong?"
Her laugh held no humor. "How about what's
right?" She dragged a hand through her hair. "Someone just called me
and warned me off the Dale case."
"You were threatened?" The sharp tone could
have been Finn's.
"Not in so many words."
"Give me thirty minutes to drop Josh with Jack,
and I'll be there."
"That's not necessary." That was also so
Finn, determined to take control of a situation. "Besides, the boy's not a
puppy. You can't just keep dumping him on your family."
"That's what family's for. Not for dumping, but
for taking care of one another."
She thought about pointing out that Josh no-last-name
wasn't family, then didn't. "Well, I'm capable of taking care of myself.
Besides, I'm exhausted, and I'm going to bed. I'll be asleep by the time you'd
get here." Actually, she was so revved up from the call, she wasn't sure
she'd get any sleep tonight.
"I'll call the state cops." The fact that he
didn't suggest spending the night in bed with her showed how seriously he was
taking the anonymous phone call.
"You will not. The only way anyone can get up
here is with a coded key, which probably makes this suite the safest place in
the state, other than the governor's mansion. I'll be fine. Besides, I have a
gun, remember?"
"It's hard to forget when a woman threatens to
shoot you." The edge to his tone was softening. "Maybe we should call
Finn. Get a tap on the phone."
"You've been watching too much television. Even
if Finn was still FBI, getting a judge to sign off on a wiretap isn't that
easy."
"I wasn't thinking about going through a
judge."
"That's illegal."
"And your point is? I don't want anything
happening to you, chиre."
"That's very sweet, but—"
"There's nothin' sweet about it. You and I have
some unfinished business, detective. I want to make sure you stay alive long
enough to experience my world-class, mind-blowing, bone-melting
lovemaking."
She snorted a laugh, her tension finally loosening.
"You really are shameless."
"You just wait and see," he promised on a
low, sexy rumble. "Dwayne's on duty tonight, to make sure people don't
start gettin' a jump on passing too good a time. I'll have him keep an eye on
the inn. Meanwhile, have yourself a nice sleep, and I'll see you in the
morning."
"What's happening in the morning?"
"There's a final meeting of the Mardi Gras dance
committee at the courthouse at eleven-thirty. I thought you might want to
attend,"
"Why would I want to do that?" She'd planned
to use the time to track down the doctor who'd signed Linda Dale's death
certificate.
"Maybe 'cause the head of that committee is Toni
Melancon?"
"Charles Melancon's wife?"
"Got it in one. She and Charles live with the old
lady up at the Melancon plantation. I figured if anything just happened to go
wrong with her Jag-"
"You're going to screw up her engine?"
"I wouldn't even know how to do such a thing,
me."
"But you're not above having someone else do
it," she guessed.
"I think I'm going to have to take the Fifth on
that one, detective. But let's just say that maybe something was to go wrong
with that tricky, hand-built British engine, it'd only be gentlemanly for me to
offer her a ride home. Havin' been brought up to be a southern lady with
manners, she's bound to feel obliged to invite me in for a refreshing beverage
after that long drive, and bein' how you just happen to be with me—"
"She'd have to invite me in, too."
His low whistle caused her lips to curl and something
in her stomach to tug. "Hot damn, you are a clever woman. I'll wonder if
that L.A. mayor knows how lucky he is to have you fighting crime in his
city."
"He hasn't mentioned it lately."
"Well, now, there's another reason for you to
think about comin' to work here. As mayor, it'd be my civic duty to make sure
you felt duly appreciated."
"Dammit, Callahan, I really am beginning to like
you."
"That's the idea," he said easily. "So,
here's the plan. I've got to enroll Josh in school tomorrow morning—"
"I don't envy you that."
"Strangely, he didn't seem down on the idea. If I
didn't know better, I'd say he was actually looking forward to it."
"He's probably scamming you. Pretending to go along
with the idea, then tomorrow morning you'll wake up to find him and all your
silver gone."
"Lucky for me I've only got stainless steel.
Though there was this woman, a while back, who tried to get me interested in
flatware. Which would you pick out if you were gettin' married? Chrysanthemum
or Buttercup?"
"It's a moot point, since I'm not getting
married. And I don't even know what you're talking about. I assume these are
sterling patterns and not flowers?"
"Yeah."
"Gee, Callahan, is this a proposal?"
There was nearly a full minute of dead air on the
phone line. "I'm sorry, chиre, if I gave you that impression." His
earlier light tone was regretful. "I thought we were just talking, fooling
around to lighten the situation up a bit."
"That's exactly what I thought. And it was going
along pretty well until you decided to get domestic."
He chuckled at that. "There are those who'd tell
you that my name doesn't belong in the same sentence as anything resembling
domesticity."
"I've not a single doubt they're right. So why
bring up that question in the first place?"
"It just sorta popped into my head. Suzanne—that
was her name— always said you could tell the kind of person a woman was by her
flatware pattern."
"You're kidding."
"That's pretty much what I said, thinking that
she was just bein' a little precious, but no, she had this book that had it all
laid out, sorta like horoscopes. Apparently Buttercup girls are always cheerful
and upbeat, and Chrysanthemum girls are more flamboyant. She liked to think of
herself as being cheerfully flamboyant."
"Apparently there was a limit to her
cheerfulness. Since you're not married, one of you obviously broke the
engagement."
"Oh, we weren't engaged. She sort of got it into
her mind that we were engaged to be engaged, but I never made her any promises
about a ring, or anything."
"Or brought up registering for silver."
"Not a word."
Regan had begun to relax again. She twined the
telephone cord around her fingers. "So does this story have a happy
ending, other than you escaping the institution of marriage? Should I feel
sorry for poor Suzanne, living alone with felt-lined drawers full of flatware
she never gets to use?"
"Oh, she got hitched to an old boyfriend she met
at an Ole Miss reunion, so it worked out well for everyone. She finally decided
on Chantilly, which hadn't even been in the early running." When she had
no response to that, he added, "I went and looked the book up in Dani's
library after I heard. Seems Chantilly girls can be a bit prissy. And though
they may seem real sweet, they were often fast in high school. Not that I'm
sayin' that about Suzanne."
"Of course not. Being a gentleman and all."
She was starting to get a handle on how this southern thing worked. A man might
roll in the hay with every female in town, but reputations stayed more or less
intact, since a southern gentleman didn't roll and tell. "I realize the
only reason you're telling me about all this is to calm me down so I can sleep.
But since you brought it, up, want to know what kind of girl I am?"
"I already know."
"Oh?"
"You're a mismatched stainless-steel person, just
like me, when you're not using the plastic fork and knife from the takeout
package."
Nailed that one, she admitted.
"But if you did ever decide to go all out, you'd
be an Acorn."
"I'm almost afraid to ask why. Is Acorn for
belles who swear and pack heat?"
"No, but you're close. Brides who choose Acorn
have a rebellious streak. They've been known to drink beer straight from the
bottle, venture north of the Mason-Dixon line to college, and some of them even
marry Yankees."
"Horrors." Regan smiled. "They sound
downright dangerous."
"That's part of their appeal. My maman had Acorn.
And the only other person I've ever met who's as out-and-out spunky as her is
you, Detective Chиre, which is how I know you'd be an Acorn."
"Well." What do you say when a man just
compares you to his mother, whom he obviously adored, during a conversation
where he's reminding you that he's not interested in any serious relationship?
"Thank you."
"C'est rien. Now it's your turn."
"My turn?"
"To pay me a compliment."
Fair was fair. "All right. You may be frustrating
and annoying at times, but you're also very sweet."
"Sweet?" She heard the wince in his voice.
"And here I was hoping for something more along the lines of the sexiest
man you've ever met, who can turn you into a puddle of hot need with just a
single dark and dangerous look."
"Your brother Jack got dark and dangerous. You
got cute and sweet."
"Hell. Well, we're jus' going to have to work on
that." He paused. "If I asked you to do something for me, would
you?"
"I suppose that would depend on what it is."
"Tell me what you're wearing. Right now."
"Is this going to be one of those dirty phone
calls, Callahan?"
"One can hope. What are you wearing, Regan?"
"Why?"
"Because I'd really like to be there, but since I
can't, I'm trying to picture you."
"Well, you're going to be disappointed if you're
looking for sexy, because I'm wearing a navy blue T-shirt that says 'Property
of the LAPD Athletic Department.' " She looked down at the oversize cot'
ton shirt that covered her from shoulders to thighs. "I suppose you would
have preferred me to lie and say I was barely wearing some skimpy lace number
from Victoria's Secret."
"Lace is nice. Skimpy's even better, most of the
time. Sometimes, though, contrast can be real intriguing. How long is it? To
your knees?"
"Not that long. And you're just going to have to
use your imagination from there, because I'm not having phone sex with
you."
"Too bad, because if you want to moan lots of
sweet nothings in my ear, I sure wouldn't object. But since I'm enjoying just
talking with you, how about I tell you a little Cajun bedtime story?"
"Could I stop you?"
"Sure. Anytime you want, you can just hang
up."
"I will."
"Bien. Now, there was this Cajun who called
himself Antoine Robicheaux, and he had himself this camp, which you'd call a
cabin, way back in the bayou, miles from civilization. He was a handsome devil,
he. Tall, real strong from swinging a hammer all day—"
"He was in construction?"
"General contractor." A vision of Nate as
he'd looked this afternoon—shirtless, tool belt slung low on his hips like a
gunfighter— flashed through her mind, bringing with it a hot, reckless, sexual
need.
"Same as you."
"Now that you mention it, I guess we both do have
that in common."
"Life's full of coincidences," Regan said
dryly.
"Isn't that the truth? Well now, one night he was
coming back from checkin' his traps when he came across this jolie blon.
She was on her knees on the bank of the bayou, tears flowing down her cheeks,
mingling with the falling rain, leaves and moss tangled in her hair. And for a
moment, seeing her in the moonlight, he thought he might have stumbled across a
wood nymph.
"But then he looked a little closer, he, and saw
she was really just a pretty fille in trouble. He didn't recognize her, and she
didn't seem able to speak, which made it harder for him to figure out how he
was going to find out where she belonged. But having been raised up by his
maman to be a gentleman, he decided she could spend the night at his place,
then he'd decide what to do with her in the morning."
"And they say chivalry is dead."
"Like I said, he was a gentleman. Though he did
have a bit of misgiving, since he'd heard tales of a witch living out in the
swamp. But since she sure didn't look like your stereotypical wicked witch,
like the one he'd seen when he was a kid in The Wizard of Oz, he helped her
into his pirogue and took her back to his camp.
"Dark clouds drifted over the moon. As the boat
wound through the darkness, lit only by the lantern at the bow, Antoine felt as
if they were being watched. Occasionally, he'd see gleaming points of yellow
amid the moss-draped trees, but he reminded himself that these waters were
filled with animals and he was being overfanciful. Bein' with a beautiful woman
tended to do that to him, 'specially after he'd been working away from
civilization for a while.
"Even though the night was warm, the earlier rain
had drenched the woman, and her cotton dress was still clinging to her like a
second skin when he got her into the little camp. Now, he was a big man, and
knew that his clothes would swim on her, but he gave her one of his shirts,
pointed her to the bathroom, and went to put on some coffee, since she still
seemed a bit in shock.
"After some time, when she still hadn't come out,
he began to worry, so he knocked on the door. Since she hadn't latched it,
there she stood, still standing there in that same wet dress, staring out the
window into the darkness. She was trembling badly, and he was afraid she might
be chilled from the rain."
Regan could see where he was going with this. Still,
she plumped up the goosedown pillows, leaned back, and prepared to enjoy the
journey. "So, Antoine, being a gentleman, decided to help her out of her
wet clothes."
"That's 'xactly what he did. But he could tell
she was a real nice girl, and shy, and he didn't want to give her the wrong
idea about his intentions—"
"Which were only honorable."
"Mais yeah. He decided the best thing to do, so
he wouldn't scare her, would be to take things real slow."
"Sort of like this story."
"Want me to fast-forward to the good parts?"
"No. It's your story; go ahead and tell it your
own way,"
"Like I said, she was a real nice girl, and even
though it was a hot and steamy evening, she'd fastened that dress all the way
up to her pretty throat. So, he began talking to her, real quietly, like you
might if you wanted to get close to a skittish fawn. When he flicked the first
button open, his knuckles brushed against that little hollow where her pulse
took a jump. But not nearly as big a jump as his own."
His voice was deep and vibrantly masculine, without
any overt sexuality. But that didn't stop her from lifting her own hand to the
base of her throat, where it seemed her own blood had begun to beat a little
faster. It had gotten warm in the room, so she threw off the comforter. Then
the sheet.
"He moved down, button by button," Nate
continued, "opening up that flowered cotton as if he was unwrapping a
precious present."
Regan's fingers unconsciously stroked her warming
flesh along a similar path.
"Her bra was a teensy bit of lace that looked
real pretty against the curve of her breasts, which were rosy pink, like the
inside of a summer rose, because she was blushing a little bit, due to the
fact, he figured, that she wasn't used to getting undressed in front of a total
stranger."
"Even if he was a gentleman." Regan could
hardly recognize her voice. It was deep, throaty, undeniably aroused.
"Even if," he agreed, his own voice sounding
more rough itself, as if her reaction might be turning him on.
"Of course the bra had to go, too, but since he
knew his way around women's underwear, he didn't have any trouble unfastening
the front hook. 'Mon Dieu,' he breathed as her lovely breasts spilled into his
hands, 'you are the most beautiful woman I've ever seen.' He wasn't lying and
found the way she blushed even deeper unbearably appealing. And erotic.
"He asked if he could kiss her breasts. Her white
teeth worried her full bottom lip as she considered the request, but he could
see the answer in her eyes before she managed a shy little nod. Her skin was
the color of pink marble, and just as smooth. But a lot softer. And warmer. As
he took one of those little ruby nipples into his mouth and drank in the warm
womanly scent of her, Antoine knew that one taste would never be enough."
Regan slid a hand down the front of the T-shirt and
began touching herself as Antoine was caressing the mystery woman: shoulders,
chest, then breasts. She rolled a taut nipple between her thumb and her index
finger and felt a corresponding tug between her legs. The soft moan escaped
from between her parted lips before she could stop it.
"Tell me what you're thinking. Right now,"
he demanded softly.
"About how Antoine's hands felt on her."
Regan licked her lips, which had gone unbearably dry. And how your hands would
feel on me. She braced the receiver against one shoulder. Both of her hands
moved beneath the shirt, caressing, squeezing, stroking breasts sensitized by
that deep seductive voice and her own erotic imagination. "What are you
thinking?"
His answering laugh was quick and rough. "That
I'm going to have to get bigger briefs."
"Maybe you should take them, off." Had she really
said that?
"I will, if you will."
She had never been a woman to play sexual games. In
bed, as in all other parts of her life, she was straightforward and to the
point. But there was something about being alone in the dark, with just that
deep voice touching her all over, that allowed her to imagine she was the naked
wood nymph in his story. "I'm already one step ahead of you."
There was a pause. Then a groan. "Wait just a
sec, sugar." A longer pause, during which time her hands stilled, waiting
for him to make the next move. And then he was back. "I wanted to make
sure the door was locked."
"You're not used to talking about sex on the
phone with a teenager in the house."
"No. But if Josh wasn't here, I wouldn't be
talking to you on the phone right now. I'd be in the truck on my way over
there, so we could be doing this in person. In the flesh, so to speak."
His flesh against hers was an arousing prospect. It
also wasn't going to happen tonight. "You were telling me about
Antoine."
"Yeah, wouldn't want to leave the poor guy
hanging out there," he said. "Well, as luscious as her breasts were,
Antoine reminded himself that the goal was to get her undressed so he could get
her into a hot shower. So he forced his mind back to the task and finished
unbuttoning the dress, then let it drop to the floor. She was wearing little
bikini panties that matched the bra, and he hooked his thumbs in the elastic
and pulled them down. Over the swell of her hips, past the lush blond curls
between her thighs, down each long, tanned leg to her ankles.
"She stepped out of them without being asked.
Crouched on the floor, looking up at her, he saw tiny beads of moisture
glistening like dewdrops in those soft blond curls, and it took all the
restraint Antoine possessed not to lick them off."
Moisture was flowing from her; Regan lifted the
T-shirt above her waist and let her legs fall open a little bit more, to allow
the breeze from the air conditioning to cool her heated flesh.
"Antoine, he stood up, put his hands on her
shoulders, turned her around, and walked her into the little tin shower, which
barely had room for one person, and turned on the water. Then he stripped off
his own clothes.
"Her eyes widened a little at the amazing size of
his erection, whether from fear or anticipation, Antoine could not tell. Wanting
to reassure her that he'd never do anythin' to hurt her, he touched his mouth
against hers in their very first kiss and felt her sigh against his lips.
"He drew her into the shower and lathered the
soap between his palms, and as the water pelted down on them and the stall
filled with fragrant steam, he smoothed the lather all over her, his slippery
hands sliding over her body from her shoulders to her feet, and everywhere in
between. When he began washing his way down one smooth firm thigh and up the
other, she closed her eyes and leaned back against the wall, her fingers linked
together.
"She was shivering, but not from the cold; it was
as hot as a sauna in the shower. But not as hot as the thoughts scorching their
way through his brain. Seems he wasn't the only one aroused by their situation.
'S'il vous plait,' she said on a soft little moan, which is French for
please. So she could talk, Antoine thought. 'I want... I need . . . Touch me .
. . There.'
"Antoine smiled. Mais yeah, he smiled at this request,
since it was just what he'd been wanting to do himself, but had been afraid of
pushing her."
"Being a gentleman and all," Regan said as
her own wandering hands fluttered down her rib cage and over her bare stomach.
Then lower still.
" 'Xactly. So he carefully, with his softest
touch, parted those slick folds. Now, you have to understand that Antoine
considered himself a bit of a connoisseur of women, and there was nothing he
found more beautiful than the female sex. It brought to mind a flower, with soft
pink petals on the outside, and a deep rosy color inside. The little nub hidden
in there was as hard and gleaming as a perfect pink pearl. She jumped a little
when he brushed his thumb over it."
Regan did the same, imagining Nate's clever, callused
fingertip.
"He stroked it again, then again, changing the
pressure, sometimes hard, sometimes light, fast, then slow. Her back was
against the stall, but her hips were thrust out at him, offering, begging for
more."
The muscles in her legs contracted. Regan was
breathing quickly now, and no longer cared if he could hear her. The world
narrowed to his voice, the story of Antoine and his mystery woman, her
tingling, burning clitoris.
"He knelt at her feet like a man worshiping a
goddess, which to him, she was, and put his mouth on her. She climaxed
instantly, cried out, and tried to jerk away, but the stall was so small there
wasn' any room to move. And besides, his hands were on the backs of her legs,
and he wasn't quite finished with her yet.
"He feasted on her like she was the sweetest,
ripest fruit, loving the way he could make her come again and again, and when
he felt her body going limp, he stood up again and lifted her onto him."
Oh, God! Regan bit her lip to keep from crying out
herself as the orgasm ripped through her.
"Well, when Antoine felt her hot body tighten
around him, it was like nothin' he'd ever felt before, like Mardi Gras
fireworks goin' off inside him. Her lips pressed against his throat while the
water streamed over them, and that's when he found out he'd been right about
her not bein' a witch.
"His blood turned hot and thick as her sharp
white teeth sank into him, and his own explosion, as he came into her, was like
nothing he'd ever felt before. As they sank to the floor, arms and legs entwined,
Antoine found himself looking forward to the idea of spending eternity with
this sexy vampire."
"I should have seen that one coming," Regan
managed to say. "Seeing how we're not that far from Anne Rice
country."
She also belatedly realized that he'd never broken
stride in the narration. "Did you . . . ?" Regan, who never blushed,
felt the blood flow into her face, making her doubly glad he couldn't see her
right now. "Never mind."
"The story was for you, chиre," he said
simply, gently. "A bedtime tale to help you get to sleep."
Amazingly, it had worked, she realized. The sexual
release had left her more relaxed than she'd been in ages. Certainly since Nate
Callahan had arrived in Los Angeles and turned her life upside down.
"It seems I keep having to thank you."
His deep chuckle rumbled in her ear. "Believe me,
sugar, it was my pleasure. Sweet dreams."
She hung up the phone, pulled the crisp sheet back
over her body, and instantly fell into a deep, nightmare--free sleep.
* * *
"I don't see why we're bothering to do
this," Josh grumbled the next morning as they drove from Nate's West
Indies-style home into town.
"It's not that complicated. You're a kid. The
state of Louisiana, in one of its rare acts of wisdom, decreed kids need to go
to school. Ergo, you're going to school."
"My name isn't Ergo. Besides, what's the point of
enrolling in school if I'm just going to be gone in a few days?"
"You still planning on leaving?"
"I may be."
"Well, I'd just as soon you didn't go taking off
without any word."
"Yeah, your life dream has always been to have a
delinquent kid around to screw up your sex life."
"Did I say you're screwing up anything?"
"No." He'd give him that. "But you
probably would have been with that cop last night if you hadn't had to stay
home and play prison guard to me."
"Should I be offended that you called my home,
which I built with my own two hands, a prison?" Nate asked mildly.
"And yeah, I might have driven over to the inn to be with Regan last
night. But not for the reason you think."
"You saying you don't want to fuck her?"
"There are a great many things I'd love to do
with Detective Delectable. But when you get older and have some experience,
you'll discover that there's a huge difference between fucking someone and
making love."
"So you're in love with her?"
"I'm not saying that. I'm jus' stating that
there's more to being with a woman than what fits where. That's just plumbing.
What two people do together should be more special than that."
"Sex is sex," josh said stubbornly. Hell,
he'd probably listened to more sex in his life than this guy, as cool as he
seemed to be, had ever experienced.
"We'll have to continue this discussion later,
when we have more time," Nate said as they pulled up in front of a
redbrick building.
Students were headed up the wide front steps in
groups, talking, laughing, seeming to have a high old time. Josh felt the
familiar new-school clench in his gut and, although he'd chain cement around
his ankles and throw himself in the bayou before admitting it, he was glad he'd
allowed himself to be convinced to take off his Dead Rap Stars T-shirt and
change into a plain old black one Nate had pulled from his own closet.
Apparently the guy wasn't lying when he said there was a no-message-shirts
dress code.
Not that he cared about fitting in. Since he wasn't
going to be staying in Blue Bayou all that long.
Chapter Twenty
Things were definitely going downhill. Not only hadn't
she been able to find a California marriage license for Karen Dale, or a
divorce decree for a Karen Hart, the death certificate was proving yet another
dead end. Regan had been working tier way through neighboring state licensing
files and had found several doctors with the same name, but calls placed to
their offices turned up a big fat zero.
The stocks were obviously the way to go. Surely either
the mother or the son knew something. Twenty-five thousand dollars might not be
a lot of money to a family who owned an oil company. But it wasn't chicken
feed, either.
She was going to solve this crime. Linda Dale deserved
to have her murder solved and the perpetrator put behind bars. Then Regan would
donate the stocks to a local charity, return to Los Angeles, and get on with
her life.
She had just gone off-line when the phone rang. She
paused for a moment, wondering if it was Nate, calling to tell her he was on
his way. Or perhaps it was fast night's first caller, wanting to make certain
she'd gotten the message. The lady or the tiger. Wishing hotel phones had
caller ID, Regan picked up the receiver.
"Hey, partner," Van said, "I was thinking
about you last night. Rhasheed and I rented The Big Easy, and I was wondering
if you'd met up with one of those sexy Cajun men."
"There are a lot of Cajun men down here. Some, I
suppose, are sexy."
"I hope you're passing yourself a helluva good
time."
"Of course." Regan forced a smile she hoped
would be echoed in her voice. She told Van about Cajun Cal and Beau Soleil, and
meeting Jack Callahan, whose books Van enjoyed as well. She did not mention
Nate or her real reason for being in Blue Bayou.
"I'd better run," Van said after about
twenty minutes. "My sister's throwing me this baby shower. Can you picture
me sitting in a room decorated with paper storks, nibbling on cookies with blue
frosting and crustless sandwiches?"
"Just keep focused on all the loot you're going
to get." Regan's contribution, which she'd sent to Van's sister before
leaving L.A., was a music-box mobile from the registry list at Babies R Us.
"Easy for you to say," Van grumbled.
"You're not the one playing name-the-baby games."
"Seems a small price to pay for a feng shui
miracle."
Van laughed. "I'll keep that in mind when I'm
huffing and puffing through delivery."
"That's what you get for being one with nature.
If I ever find myself about to give birth, I'm calling for heavy drugs at the
first contraction."
They joked a bit longer, sharing cop stories about
babies born in patrol cars, on the beach, in jail. After Van had hung up, as
happy as she was for her partner, Regan felt a little tug of regret at how much
she was going to miss their daily bantering. The problem with life, she thought
as she went downstairs to wait for Nate, was that it just kept moving on,
taking you right along with it.
* * *
Regan was vastly grateful when Nate didn't mention
last night's phone conversation, other than to ask if she'd received any other
threats. In the bright light of morning, she was uncomfortable with her
behavior. She would have been even more embarrassed if he'd had any idea of the
dream she had of him just before dawn. A dream that had involved a steamy
shower and a bar of soap.
Blue Bayou might not make much of a mark on the map,
but Regan certainly couldn't fault its architecture. The mayor's office was
housed in a majestic Italianate building with wide stone steps, gracefully
arched windows, and lacy pilasters. A red, white, and blue Acadian flag hung on
a towering brass pole below the U.S. and Louisiana flags. There was a life-size
statue of a soldier astride a prancing horse. The carving at the base of the
bronze statue identified the soldier as Captain Jackson Callahan.
"Is he an ancestor?" she asked.
"A bunch of greats grandfather."
"I thought your father moved here from
Chicago."
"He did. But his grandfather was originally from
the area. Great-grandpиre Callahan moved north looking for work during the
Depression, found it, and stayed. When Maman met Dad at a fraternity party,
they started talking and it turned into one of those 'small world' kind of
things. Dad always said that they were destined to find each other, and though
he didn't buy into a lot of the voodoo stuff that coexists with Catholicism
down here, he also believed that he and Maman had shared previous lives and
kept finding each other over and over again."
"That's sweet."
"I always kind of thought so. Even though I'm not
so sure I buy into the concept, myself."
"Now, why doesn't that surprise me ?"
He laughed at that, then sobered a bit. "I think,
along with wanting a safer place to raise his kids and knowing Maman was
homesick, he wanted to get back to his roots.
"Old Captain Jack was one of our local success
stories. He'd been orphaned on the boat coming to America from Ireland, and had
pretty much grown up wild and barefoot here in the swamp. When they started
recruiting for people to fight against the Yankees in the War between the
States, he figured this might be his chance to make something of himself. Being
Irish, he could identify with the little guy fighting against an oppressive
government, so he signed up with the Irish Sixth Volunteer Infantry, which got
the nickname the Confederate Tigers."
"Because they fought so hard?"
"Like tigers," he agreed. "Jack, he
entered the army as a private and ended up fighting in every eastern-front
battle, beginning with the Shenandoah Valley campaign in 1862 under Stonewall
Jackson. Since those battlegrounds were pretty much killing fields, the men who
managed to survive to fight another day won a lot of battlefield promotions.
When Jackson returned home as a captain, folks around here considered it pretty
much of a miracle. A lot. of people still believe that touching his horse's
nose brings good luck."
Regan was not as surprised as she might have been only
days ago at the way he spoke about hundred-year-old events as if they'd just
happened yesterday. And even though it made her feel a little as if she'd just
landed in Brigadoon, a very strong part of her admired his connection with the
past.
* * *
Antoinette Melancon had strawberry blond hair, a pink
Chanel suit, very good pearls, and an attitude.
"I understand the concept of Mardi Gras,"
she said for the umpteenth time. "After all, my husband is not only a
member of the Knights of Columbus but a deacon at Holy Assumption, and the
women in my family have belonged to the Altar Guild for decades. I understand
that it's an opportunity to party before we begin preparing during Lent for
Easter. I merely do not understand why Blue Bayou can't set the standard as a
community who celebrates with grace and style."
"It's Fat Tuesday," Emile Mercier, owner of
the Acadian Butcher Shop, pointed out. "Not Lean Tuesday. People are
supposed to have a good time."
"It's unseemly." Her pink lips,
color-matched to her suit, turned down in a disapproving frown. Regan suspected
the Puritans had probably passed a better time at their Sabbath meetings than
Charles Melancon's wife did on Fat Tuesday. "However, I suppose I should
not expect anything different from a man who makes a very good living supplying
sausage for the cookout."
He folded massive arms across his chest and glared at
her from beneath beetled gray brows. "Maybe in my next life I can come
back as an oil king," he shot back. "And make a fortune dumping
poison into the bayous and rivers."
She lifted a chin Regan suspected had been sculpted a
bit. "I take offense at that remark."
"Well, some of us take offense at ending up with
bags of three-legged, three-eyed bullfrogs when we go out gigging," a
bearded man in the back of the room growled.
"Melancon does not pollute."
"Tell that to the EPA," a woman who Regan
remembered was an assistant DA for the parish shot back.
"That complaint is in error. My husband is
working with the government to correct the misunderstanding."
"Meaning he's lining some congressman's
pockets," Cal, who'd winked a welcome to Regan when she'd first arrived,
suggested.
Nate was leaning against a wall map of the parish,
legs crossed at the ankles, watching the meeting with patient resignation. Now
he pushed away from the wall and entered into the fray.
"We're here to discuss the band situation,"
he reminded everyone in the same easygoing tone he might use to order a po' boy
from Cal's. "Now, the Dixie Darlings pulling out at the last minute put us
in a bit of a bind, but I played ball with Steve Broussard at Tulane, and since
I read he and his group have given up touring for six months to work on their
new CD, I thought, What the hell, tracked him down in Houma, and invited him to
come play for us."
"Like Broussard and his Swamp Dogs are going to
play for us," the attorney scoffed. "Their last CD went platinum
after they did the sound track for that movie."
"Said he'd be glad to," Nate said calmly.
"And the best part is that the band agreed to donate their fee to the
boys' and girls' club."
"Awright," Cal said as nearly everyone in
the room broke out in spontaneous applause. Even the ADA looked impressed. Toni
Melancon did not, but Regan had already gotten the feeling there was little
about this parish that she would find to her liking.
That the woman was a snob was obvious. That she was
probably as cold-blooded as those hibernating alligators was also apparent. All
of which had Regan wondering, yet again, if her husband might have been
sleeping with Linda Dale. Although she certainly didn't condone adultery, she
could imagine why a man married to such a woman might stray. And now that she'd
gotten an opportunity to see Toni Melancon in action, it didn't take a huge
mental leap to imagine her killing a rival. Not for love; Regan suspected she
didn't have a romantic or passionate bone in her body. But money was always a
prime motive. Granted, the name was still all wrong, but there was still an
outside chance that the murder didn't have anything to do with the mysterious J.
Which didn't, she mused, explain why, if Linda's lover
hadn't killed her, he seemingly hadn't said a word to anyone when she'd died.
The meeting drew to an end. Toni Melancon was the
first to leave, Nate and Regan the last. As they walked from the steps to the
sidewalk, Nate reached out and touched the horse's nose.
"Are we going to need luck?" Regan asked.
"A little luck never hurt, sugar."
Of course, sometimes luck just needed a little help.
Toni Melancon was standing beside her racing-green
Jaguar, the toe of her Bruno Magli pump tapping furiously on the sidewalk.
"Got a problem.?"' Nate asked.
"This stupid car won't run." She looked as
if she was considering kicking the tire. "I told Gerald we should buy
German. But no, he wanted this piece of British trash."
"It's a classic," Nate said. "When it
came out back in '68, it was called the most beautiful car in the world."
"It's classic trash." So much for grace and
style. Her petulant behavior reminded Regan of Josh, who probably had an excuse
for his bad attitude.
"Why don't I take a look at the engine, see if I
can spot anything?"
"All right." She sighed heavily, seeming
more put out than grateful for his assistance.
Regan watched as he opened the hood and began fiddling
with wires as if he knew what he was doing.
"Well, the good news is that it doesn't look like
it's going to be a real big problem to fix."
"What's the bad news?"
"I'm not going to be able to get it
running."
"Why not?" she said, seeming to take it
personally.
"See this red-and-white wire?"
She sighed again and humored him by glancing in the
direction of the engine, but she clearly wasn't willing to risk dirtying her
suit by getting too close. "What about it?"
"It leads to the solenoid on the starter motor.
It's loose, which we could fix, but if you look here"—he pointed to a spot
about three inches from the dangling end of the wire—"it's also stripped.
It'll have to be replaced."
"I knew we should have bought that BMW," she
huffed.
Regan wondered who he'd gotten to take a pocketknife
to that wire.
"No problem. I'll just call Earl on my cell
phone, have him pick it up and tow it over to Dix Automotive, and I'll drive you
out to the house."
His quick, boyish grin appeared to charm even this
gorgon. "I suppose that's the best solution."
"It'll be my pleasure," he assured her.
"You don't mind if Ms. Hart comes along, do you? I've been showin' her
around the parish."
The older woman looked at Regan as if noticing her for
the first time. "You must be the new sheriff I've been hearing
about."
"People are mistaken. I'm just visiting."
"Well, that's too bad, because we could certainly
use one. I still don't know what you were thinking of, hiring Dwayne," she
complained to Nate.
"He's a little green. But he's catching on real
fast."
"But he's—" Her lips curved downward in what
appeared to be her usual expression. "You know."
"A college graduate?" Nate asked blandly.
"Don't be cute with me, Nathaniel Callahan. You
know very well what I mean."
"I believe I do, ma'am, and the way I saw it, not
only is Dwayne qualified, having earned a degree in criminal justice, he's
overly so. We were lucky he even considered coming to work for the force. Along
with his qualifications, he's local, so he's got a real proprietary feeling
about the parish, a bonus in someone hired to keep the peace. Then there's the
little fact that we haven't had an African-American officer since Dad hired
Dwayne's uncle back in the seventies. It seemed about time. Past time."
"I realize Jake Callahan has been raised to hero
status in Blue Bayou, and I'm truly sorry about the tragic way he died, but as
I told him back then, change for change's sake is not always a good thing.
Since the subject's come up, I feel the need to say that it's important that
Blue Bayou maintain the traditions that have kept it above the decline of so
much of the rest of our state."
"Maybe some traditions deserve to die," he
said evenly as he opened the passenger door of his SUV, which was parked behind
the disabled sedan. "Like slavery. Or were you referring to
lynchings?"
"That's precisely what your father said. I made
allowances, since he was, after all, a Yankee. But I would have hoped your mother
would have taught you more about your heritage."
"Oh, Maman sure enough did do that."
Seeming not to notice the way his jaw had gone rigid
and the steely cast to his eyes, Toni Melancon allowed him to help her up with
a hand to the elbow, and settled into the seat like Queen Elizabeth settling
into her gilt coach for a ride from Buckingham Palace to Westminster. It had to
be obvious to anyone less egocentric than Gerald Melancon's wife that she'd
pushed his patience and charm to the limits.
Regan knew Nate had only held his tongue for her sake,
and when his eyes caught hers in the rearview mirror, she mouthed a silent
thank-you.
Chapter Twenty-one
The private driveway to the Melancon house was at
least three miles long, flanked by an oak alley created to build anticipation
in visitors approaching the plantation. Small one-room buildings Regan
suspected were former slave cabins were scattered across abandoned fields,
crumbling relics of another time. Untidy formal gardens that at one time must
have been magnificent were now in need of a guiding hand.
The house was large as Beau Soleil, but lacked its
grace. Unlike the soaring white pillars at Jack and Dani's house, four massive
Doric columns squatted thickly on the thick slabs of granite making up the four
front steps. Green mold tinged red brick that had faded to a dull rose over the
centuries. Although Regan had never been fanciful, St. Elmo's Plantation—named,
Nate told her, for the phosphorous green swamp gas that glowed at night—and its
surroundings seemed to give off a desolate aura, as if it was inhabited by the
Addams family's southern cousins.
Nate pulled up beneath the crumbling portico.
"Well, thank you, Nate," Toni said, as if realizing such manners were
required, if not honestly felt.
"Anytime," he said as he helped her down
from the high seat.
There was a lengthy pause.
"Well, good day," she said. So much for
inviting them in for a cool drink.
"You know," he said, "it's been a long
time since I've visited with Miz Bethany. I think I'll just pop in and say
bonjour. Wouldn't want her to hear the SUV and fret that I've come all this way
out here without payin' my respects."
Regan watched as his trademark slow, easy smile
appeared to do its magic.
"All right." Toni breathed out another of
those deep sighs suggesting she found the world so very tiresome. "But
don't expect her to recognize you. The old woman's gone absolutely batty."
"Now, that's a real shame," he said as they
walked up to the huge front door, carved with what Regan suspected was the
Melancon family crest, surrounded by an unwelcoming quartet of gargoyle faces.
"Maybe we'll get lucky, and she'll be having a good day."
They were met in the great hall by a nearly
six-foot-tall woman who could have been anywhere from sixty to a hundred. Her
black dress was relieved only by a heavy chain loaded down with various charms.
"Mrs. Melancon is not receiving visitors," she informed them in a
deep voice that rumbled like thunder.
"Now, Miz Caledonia, you know I'm not just any
ole visitor, me," Nate said, turning up the wattage on his natural charm.
"I come bearing gifts." He held out two small gilt boxes he'd
retrieved from the glove compartment of the SUV. "Brought you and Miss
Bethany some of those candies you like so well from Pauline's Pralines."
She shook her head and clucked her tongue but took the
boxes. "You shameless, Nate Callahan."
"Now, you know, Miz Caledonia," he said with
a quick wink Regan's way, "you're not the first person to tell me
that."
" 'Xpect not," she huffed, then caved.
"You can only stay jus' a minute. It's time for Miz Bethany's nap."
"I'll be in and out in a flash," he
promised, making an X across the front of his denim shirt.
She shook her head again, then turned and began
walking away.
"You probably never read Rebecca, did you?"
Regan murmured as they walked down a long hallway lined with busts of what she
suspected were former Melancons.
"No. But that fille I told you about, the
Chantilly flatware one, liked to watch the Romance Channel, so I saw the
movie."
"Caledonia makes Mrs. Danvers look like Mary
Poppins."
"She's a tough old bird," he allowed.
"But she's devoted to Mrs. Melancon. Apparently she was her nurse, then
just sort of graduated through the household ranks over the years, until she
pretty much runs the place."
"Toni didn't appear to like her overly
much." The woman had walked past the housekeeper without so much as a
word.
"It's my guess she's afraid of her, since rumor
has it that when she first married Charles, she wanted to move the old lady out
of the house so she could be queen of the manor. Caledonia threatened her with
a voodoo curse, and that was pretty much the end of that discussion."
They were led into a parlor filled with plants. Framed
photographs of yet more Melancon ancestors frowned down from water-stained,
red-silk-covered walls. The atmosphere in the room was so steamy Regan was
moderately surprised that the oriental carpet hadn't sprouted mushrooms. The
scent of all those flowers hit the minute she entered the room, giving her an
instant headache.
Almost hidden by a towering philodendron, an elderly
woman, as fragile appearing as a small bird, was swallowed up by a wheelchair.
Despite the sweltering heat, she was draped in a trio of colorful shawls.
"Bonjour, Miz Bethany," Nate greeted her.
"Aren't you looking as lovely as a spring garden today?"
Her gaze remained directed out the floor-to-ceiling
windows, where a trio of stone nymphs danced around a green algae-clogged
fountain.
"Mr. Nate brought you some of those pralines you
like so much." Caledonia's stern voice had turned surprisingly gentle. She
opened one of the boxes, selected a pecan candy, and held it in front of the
old woman's face.
A beringed, age-spotted hand, laden down with
diamonds, snatched it from the outstretched hand like a greedy toddler, and it
disappeared between lips painted a garish crimson. She thrust out the hand
again, palm up.
"After your nap," Caledonia said, putting
the box high up on an ornately carved black teak shelf. She could have been
talking to a child.
A heated string of what appeared to be French
babbling, interspersed with curses Regan was surprised any southern lady of
Mrs. Melancon's generation ever would have allowed herself to think, let alone
say, turned the air blue.
"You know you can't sleep when you've had too
much sugar," Caledonia said matter-of-factly. "The box will still be
here when you get up." She adjusted the shawls. "You gonna say good
afternoon to Mr. Nate and his friend?" She put dark fingers beneath the
sagging chin and lifted the woman's gaze.
"Miz Bethany." Nate tried again, but he'd
finally found a female impervious to that winning smile. She was looking
straight through them, her pale brown eyes unfocused. They might as well have
been ghosts. Regan's heart sank a little as she realized that her long shot
wasn't going to pay off.
"It's time for her nap," the other woman
said, announcing that the brief visit had come to an end.
"Thank you, Miz Caledonia." If Nate was
disappointed, he didn't show it. "I appreciate your hospitality."
They'd made their way down the hallway, past the
busts, across the slate floor of the great hall, and had just left the house
when Caledonia caught up with them.
"I've got something for the fille," she said.
Reaching into a skirt pocket, she pulled out a dime that had been drilled
through and strung on a narrow black cord.
Regan exchanged a glance with Nate, then took the
necklace. "Thank you."
"You make sure you wear it." Vivid turquoise
eyes burned in her burnished copper complexion. "You've stirred up the
spirits, you. This gris-gris will protect you."
The ancient woman's intensity, coupled with their
brief meeting with the old woman who could have been Norman Bates's mother,
sent a chill up Regan's spine.
"We appreciate that a bunch, Miz Caledonia,"
Nate said, jumping in to rescue her. He took the cord from Regan's nerveless
fingers and slipped it over her head. It had to be her imagination, but she
could have sworn the coin warmed her skin as it settled at the base of her
throat. He bestowed his most reassuring smile on Regan. "No one in the
bayou makes better gris-gris than Miz Caledonia. She's a descendant of the
Marie Laveaus," he said.
"He speaks the truth, he," the woman said,
taking on a queenly bearing as she rose to her full height.
"Isn't that interesting." Regan forced a
smile. "Merci." It was one of the few French words she knew.
The woman didn't answer, just shut the tall heavy door
in their faces.
"Well." Regan let out a long breath.
"That was certainly an experience."
"Caledonia is a little colorful even for southern
Louisiana," he said. "I’m sorry about Mrs. Melancon bein' so out of
it."
"You said she would be."
"I said I’d heard talk. I didn't realize she'd
gone so far downhill since the last time I'd seen her, about a month ago."
"Is it Alzheimer's?"
"That'd be my guess, since the old girl used to
be sharp as a tack. She inherited the chairman's chair at Melancon after her
husband died making love to the mistress he kept in New Orleans's Faubourg
Marigny historical district."
"Why does that not surprise me?" Regan said
dryly as she climbed into the SUV
"It was a pretty good scandal, even for down
here. Turns out that the woman and Charles senior had three kids together. The
fight for inheritance rights took three very litigious years."
"Obviously the family won."
"Mostly, but the mistress and the kids did end up
getting to keep the house and the stock he'd put in each of their names before
he died."
"There seems to be a lot of Melancon stock
floating around down here."
"That's not so unusual, since they're the biggest
employer. It'd be like living in Atlanta and ownin' Coca-Cola stock."
"Who are the Marie Laveaus?"
"Oh, now they were an interestin' pair. The first
Maria was a hairdresser to wealthy New Orleans Creoles back in the 1820s.
Technically she was a practicing Catholic, but she was also the spiritual
adviser to slaves and their masters. And, of course, the master's wives, whose
hair she fixed. She earned a reputation as a voodoo queen, but she must've had
a good heart, since she was also the first to go out and tend to sick folks
whenever the fever epidemics swept through the city.
"She still has her cult of believers who mark her
tomb with red X's and leave coins to pay for spells. Her daughter, Marie II,
took the fame thing one step further and put on elaborately staged voodoo rites
that became real popular among New Orleans society. It's been said that she
grew so influential, even some of the priests and bishops would go to her for
advice."
"And Caledonia's descended from them?"
"So they say."
"Voodoo's just a myth." Regan touched the
dime at her throat and wondered which of them she was trying to convince.
"She couldn't really know anything about me possibly being in
danger."
"Of course not." He shot her a smile
designed to lift any lingering dark mood. " 'Less you're talkin' about
falling under the spell of my expert lovemaking."
She laughed and began to relax. But there was still
the niggling problem of the stock certificates. "I'm really going to have
to talk with Melancon."
"Won't have much of a chance to do that till
after Fat Tuesday," he said. "So you may as well just plan on
enjoying Mardi Gras."
"I suppose you're right."
"Don' worry, Detective Chиre." He skimmed
his right hand over her shoulder and down her arm, took hold of her hand, and
lifted it to his lips, brushing a light kiss against her knuckles. "I'll
be makin' sure you enjoy yourself, you."
As much as he regretted the unproductiveness of the
visit to the Melancon house, Nate couldn't deny that he was grateful for
anything that kept Regan in Blue Bayou a little longer. It was strange, the way
time was beginning to blur. They'd only known each other a handful of days, but
he was beginning to forget how his life had been before she'd come into it.
It was lucky that with the exception of the ongoing
work at Beau Soleil and finishing up the sheriff's office remodel, he didn't
have any jobs demanding his attention at the moment. He wasn't sure he could
have paid enough attention to do them justice. It was as if he'd begun looking
at life through the wrong end of a telescope: nearly his entire focus—except
what the hell he was going to do about Josh—had narrowed down to Regan Hart.
He thought about her too much and too often. Hell, all
of the time. He pictured her intelligent golden brown eyes when he was brushing
his teeth in the morning, and visions of her long, lean body were the last
thing to pass through his mind before he'd finally fall asleep.
She'd pop into his mind during the day when he'd be
fiddling with a set of blueprints, and suddenly, instead of looking at a
bearing wall, he'd picture her as she'd looked out on the Santa Monica pier,
her smooth sleek hair ruffled by the sea breeze, her fresh clean scent more
enticing than the gardens of Xanadu.
During the time he'd been waiting for her to show up
in Blue Bayou, she'd filled his mind. So much so that he hadn't even noticed
that he was painting the wainscoting in Beau Soleil's dining room French
Vanilla, instead of the Swiss Coffee Dani had picked out, until she'd pointed
it out to him, Hell, he hadn't made a mistake like that since those summers
during high school, when he'd begun learning the construction trade.
It had been bad enough before she'd arrived with big
eyes, wraparound legs, and problems any sensible man would stay clear of. And he'd
always considered himself an eminently sensible man when it came to women. But
now, it was as if she'd put a voodoo love spell on him, fevering his mind and
tormenting his body.
Which was, of course, the problem, Nate told himself
as he turned onto Bienville Boulevard, two blocks away from the inn. While his
reputation for romancing the Blue Bayou belles might be a bit exaggerated, he
couldn't remember ever being this sexually frustrated. Not since he'd made the
grand discovery that women liked sex as much as men did. Once he got the
delectable detective into his bed and satiated his lust, while giving her a
damn good time, too, of course, he'd be free of what was rapidly becoming an
obsession.
"Oh, my God."
"What?" The mental image of kissing his way
down her slender torso popped like a soap bubble. She grabbed his arm so hard
they nearly ran off the road.
"You need to stop."
The stress in her voice made him immediately pull over
and cut the engine. "What's wrong?" She looked as pale as Beau
Soleil's Confederate ghost.
"It's that house." Her hand trembled in a
very un-Reganlike way as she pointed toward a bright cottage, built
Creole-style against the front sidewalk. The stucco-covered brick had been
painted in historically correct shades of putty and Egyptian blue, and a For
Sale sign was tacked to the French red door.
"What about it?"
"It's Linda Dale's."
Obviously the unsuccessful meeting with the old lady
and Caledonia's spooky voodoo shit had taken its toll on her.
"Linda Dale's house got wiped out by a hurricane,
chиre," he soothed. His palms stroked shoulders as stiff as the Melancons'
granite steps. "Remember? I already checked the real estate records before
you came to town."
"They've got to be wrong. Dammit, that's the
house." Her eyes were huge and earnest.
"I know the realtor," he said, deciding no
good would come from arguing. Best she discover she'd gotten confused on her
own. "Let me give her a call and we'll get her out here to let us
in."
He knew how serious this was when Regan didn't even make
a crack about him knowing a woman named Scarlett O'Hara.
"The key's under the mat," he said after he
ended his cell phone call to the real estate office. "She leaves it there
in case people want to take a look for themselves without a salesperson hovering
over them."
"The living room, is to the left when you walk
in," she murmured as he retrieved the key from beneath the green mat.
"The dining room to the right."
"That's pretty much the way Creole cottages are
laid out," he said carefully, not wanting to upset her any more than she
already was. "Four rooms, two back to back on either side of the
door."
"How would I know that? I tell you, this is the
house-" She walked into a back bedroom that had been painted black. Nate
figured josh would feel right at home here. "This was my bedroom. It was
yellow with a pale blue sky. The sky had white clouds painted on it."
"That's a nice memory," he allowed, still
certain she was confused.
She didn't respond. "She was killed in the living
room. My bed was there, against that wall." He was losing her; she was
looking at things he couldn't see. "It was covered with stuffed toys, but
my favorite was a purple, yellow, and green elephant I got for my
birthday."
"Mardi Gras colors."
"Yes. I still have him," she surprised him
by revealing. "Back in L.A. His name is Gabriel." Regan's brow
furrowed. "I have no idea why I named him that."
"It'd be my guess your maman helped you name him
after Longfellow's poem about the lovers separated during the Grand
Derangement."
"I've never read it."
"It's one of those typically tragic love stories.
We had to memorize it practically every year in school. Evangeline
Bellefontaine is an Acadian maiden who's torn from her beloved, Gabriel
Lajeunesse, on their wedding day. They're separated, and she finds her way here
to Louisiana with a group of exiles, only to discover that he's already been
here but has moved on. So, she keeps searching and years later, when they're
both old and gray, runs across him dying in an almshouse in Philadelphia. They
embrace, he dies in her arms, she dies of a broken heart, and they're buried
together."
"That is tragic." She sighed heavily.
Wearily. "So many love stories seem to be."
"And a lot aren't. One of these days, I'll tell
you about Jack and Dani. Dieu, they had a hard time, in some ways harder than
Evangeline and Gabriel, but look how great things worked out for them."
"That's nice," she said a little absently.
"That it worked out." She was looking back at the door to the
bedroom. "She died in the living room. I heard shouting and hid under my
sheets because I was afraid the cauchemar had come to eat me."
"That's an old Cajun folktale people used to tell
kids to get them to behave. Be good, or the cauchemar will get you."
"It had crawfish claws for hands." She shook
her head. "Do you know, as many times as I had that nightmare, it never
seemed odd to me that I'd know anything about a witch like that." It had
merely been part of her subconscious, a part of her. "There was a terrible
crash."
She'd faded away again, into the past, leaving Nate
feeling helpless. "I was too afraid to come out of my room. After a while
I did, but Mama was gone. I went from room to room. I was so hungry."
He followed her out of the bedroom to the cheery
leaf-green kitchen. "I climbed up on a chair and got some cookies out of
the cupboard. And some bread." She ran her fingertips over the door of one
of the pine cupboards. "I think I slept. I must have."
She went out the back door, stood on the loggia
beneath the gabled roof, and looked out at the small cottage that was now the
garage. "I don't know how long I waited for her to come back, but I just
kept thinking what Mama had told me about never going outside onto the street
by myself, or I'd get run over by a car. So I just stayed. For what seemed like
forever."
He no longer doubted she'd lived here. Watching her
face, he suspected she was reliving every moment. Not caring whether or not she
came up with any clues, but understanding that she probably needed to get the
memories out, Nate looped his arms around her waist as she continued to stare
toward the garage. She leaned back against him, in what he took as an
encouraging sign that she'd come to trust him.
"A nice doctor gave me a lollipop. It was cherry,
my favorite. And then another nice man with dark hair and kind eyes picked me
up and took me home with him."
"That'd be my dad." He learned that from his
father's notebook, but hadn't wanted to tell her earlier; hadn't wanted her to
think he was trying to somehow take advantage of an act of kindness that would
have been second nature for Jake Callahan.
"I'm not at all surprised by that." She
turned within his loose embrace and looked up at him, her moist eyes shining.
"Finn's not the only Callahan brother who takes after his father."
When she lifted a hand to his face, Nate was lost.
"I don't want you to take this the wrong way,
Regan." He covered her hand with his own, turned his head, and pressed his
lips against her palm. "And I'm honestly not trying to take advantage of
your emotional situation here, and I've been tryin' to do the gentlemanly thing
and give you time—but I don't know how much longer I can wait." He skimmed
his hand over her hair, down her neck, her spine, settling at the small of her
back. Then he drew her to him, letting her feel his need. "I want you to
come home with me."
Her remarkable eyes gave him her answer first. Then
her sweet-as-sugarcane lips curved, just a little. "Yes."
Chapter Twenty-two
Regan had accepted the idea that Linda Dale had been
her mother. She'd even begun to suspect that the terrifying events that had
haunted her sleep for years were more memory than nightmare. But being in the
house had triggered images long buried.
"It was pink," she said as they drove down
the two-lane road along the bayou. "The house," she explained when he
glanced over at her. "It was painted pink. Mama said it was a house just
right for two girls to live in." She pressed her fingertips against her
forehead, where a killer headache threatened. "At least I think it was
pink. I can't separate real life from the nightmares."
"Seems in your case, they'd be pretty much the
same thing, chиre. It could have been pink. Creoles tended to like their
colors, and a lot of people replicate the original look."
"If I can remember the color of the house, and the
clouds on the ceiling, you'd think I could picture who my mother was having an
affair with."
"The trick is probably not to push it."
"I suppose not." Her laugh was short and
humorless. "Boy, Callahan, what is it with you and amnesiacs?"
He was wearing sunglasses to block out the bright
midday sun, but she could sense the smile in his eyes as he glanced over at her
again. "I guess I'm just lucky."
He returned to his driving, and a strangely soothing
silence settled over them. He was a man comfortable with silence, which she
suspected was partly due to having grown up in a land as hushed as a cathedral.
They passed a cemetery, built aboveground as she remembered them in New
Orleans, to prevent the bodies from floating to the surface during floods.
Sunlight glinted off a broken angel's wing.
"This is like another world," she said as a
pair of giant herons took flight from the bayou in a flurry of blue-gray wings.
"I'll bet, before you came to Blue Bayou, if
anyone had mentioned the word swamp, you'd think of snakes, mosquitoes, and
gators."
"You'd be right."
"Tourists come down here from New Orleans and go
out on the commercial boats—which I'm not knockin', since everyone's gotta make
a living, and it's better than not seeing the swamp at all—but they watch the
guide toss some chicken to a gator from a fishing line, down some boiled
crawfish and oysters with hot sauce, hear a little canned zydeco, and think
they've been to the bayou.
"But they've got it all wrong. You can't roar
down here from the Quarter, snap a few pictures, then go racing off on a
plantation tour. It's a wandering kind of place. It takes time to soak
in."
They came around a bend onto what seemed to be a
small, secret lake. On the bank of the lake, perched on stilts, was a
single-story house with a low, overhanging roof and a wide porch that appeared
to go all the way around it.
"It looks as if it just sprang naturally to life
from the bayou."
"It's a West Indies-style planter's house. It's
designed for hot climates. The roof line and the porch allow air to flow from
open windows through all the rooms." He flashed a grin. "I can also
fish from bed, which is a plus."
She smiled at that, as he'd intended.
"Did you build it yourself? Or refurbish
it?"
"From scratch. I was hoping to keep the original,
but carpenter ants and termites had been using it for a smorgasbord, so it'd
been condemned. I mostly kept to the original footprint and tried to replicate
it as close as possible, including pegging the timbers instead of nailing
them."
"I'm impressed." But not surprised, having
seen the work he'd done at Beau Soleil.
He shrugged. "I told you, bein' mayor is pretty
much a part-time thing. Building's what pays the bills."
"You didn't choose to restore old houses for the
money," she said, remembering his saying he'd rather be happy than rich.
Though he could probably make a fortune if he moved to a wealthier area.
"It's important to you. And this house was undoubtedly a labor of
love."
"There are still a lot of things I want to do to
it. It's taken me the last five years, workin' on it part-time between other
jobs, but I figure if there's one thing I've got plenty of, it's time."
"Now I really envy you." She sighed as she
thought of her never-ending stack of murder books, then decided that she wasn't
going to dwell on them. Not here. Not now.
The inside of the house was rustic, but warm and
inviting and surprisingly neat. The wood furniture was sturdy enough for
generations of children to climb on, the upholstered pieces oversize and
overstuffed, obviously chosen more for comfort than style. The floor was wide
planks, and the open ceiling beams appeared hand-hewn.
Another of those little silences settled over them,
this one not nearly as comfortable as the last.
Regan had always thought of herself as a courageous
woman. Now that the moment they'd been leading up to since Nate Callahan had
appeared in her squad room had arrived, she was beginning to lose her nerve.
Nate was backlit by the sun, making him appear to be
cast in gleaming bronze. She remembered how he'd looked with his shirt off, his
muscled arm swinging that hammer. He'd been as close to physical perfection as
she'd ever seen. She was not.
"You're going to hate me."
"Impossible."
She dragged a hand through her hair, appalled at the
way it was trembling. She had the steadiest hands of anyone she knew; she
always made the top score in marksmanship. "This is impossible."
His lips curved slightly at that. "Nothing's
impossible, chиre."
"It can't go anywhere."
"It already has."
He didn't exactly sound any more thrilled about that
idea than she was. "You don't understand."
"Then tell me."
"I have these scars."
"No one can get through life without a few scars,
chиre. Jack has 'em, so does Finn, and even me, as perfect as I am," he
said with a slight smile that turned what could have been arrogance into humor,
"have picked up a few over the years."
"No." She pulled away. Turned away.
Unreasonably nervous, she went over to a window looking out over the water and
wrapped her arms around herself. "I mean real ones." She
closed her eyes to shut off the image of the flawed body she'd taught herself
not to study in the mirror. "Physical ones."
Nate knew that if he was going to stop this from
becoming emotionally heavy, the time to move away had come. If he wanted to prevent
himself from falling into a relationship he hadn't asked for, hadn't wanted,
all he had to do was to back off. Now,
A very strong part of him wanted to do exactly that,
to prove to himself, and to her, that he still could. He hadn't wanted the
responsibility of a woman whose life was turning out to be more complicated
than even she could have imagined. But he wanted Regan.
Whatever was happening to him—to his mind, his body,
and his heart—was beyond his power to stop. Which was why, instead of retreating
to safer emotional ground, he crossed the room. "Where?"
"All over."
He took hold of her shoulders and turned her around to
face him. "Here?" He skimmed his fingertips over the crest of her
breasts. They fit so perfectly into his hands, Nate could almost imagine she'd
been created solely for him and him alone.
With her eyes on his, she nodded.
Every other woman he'd ever been with had approached
this moment with a casual air of experience, expectancy. Regan, who was proving
to be the strongest of them all, trembled when his thumbs brushed her nipples,
which hardened beneath the light touch.
Need hammered at him, along with a previously unfelt
fear that he wouldn't be—couldn't be—gentle enough. His body urged him to
ravish; his mind counseled restraint. His heart, which was expanding in his
chest, opted for a middle ground.
"How about here?" His caressing hand moved
downward, fingers splayed over her torso.
"Yes." As if not wanting to see what he
might be thinking, she closed her eyes. Her usually clear voice was barely a
whisper.
Her stomach. "How about here?"
"Yes.' Dammit, Nate . . ."
"And here?" Down her thigh.
"Everywhere. And they're ugly."
"Now, I wouldn't want to be accusing you of
stretching the truth, sugar, but my maman used to have this saying, about
pretty is as pretty does."
"I've heard it."
"I 'magine you have. So I'm having a hard time
believing that there's anything about you that isn't downright, drop-dead
gorgeous." She didn't resist as he drew her closer. When she sighed and
rested her head against his shoulder, he brushed a kiss atop her shiny cap of
hair.
They remained that way for a long silent time. Outside
the house, clouds gathering for an afternoon rain shower moved across the sun,
casting the room in deep shadows. As he felt her trembling cease, Nate thought
how good she felt in his arms. How perfect.
"I'm afraid," she admitted.
He drew back his head. "Of me?"
"I could never be afraid of you." She
trailed a fingernail along the top of his lips. "I'm afraid of what we're
getting into."
"Don't feel like the Lone Ranger. Since this
seems to be a day for surprises and sharing secrets, want to know what I'm most
afraid of?"
"What?"
"That I'm not going to be able to make love to
you as well as a woman like you should be made love to."
She surprised—and pleased—him by laughing a little at
that. "Now, that may be the only thing in my life I'm not worried
about." She went up on her toes. Her lips brushed tantalizingly against
his, then clung. "Take me to bed, Nate," she said, her words thrumming
against his mouth.
He didn't need a second invitation. He swept her into
his arms, feeling a lot like Rhett carrying Scarlett up that staircase, but
wanting to pleasure more than ravish. Ravishment, he thought with a flare of
hot anticipation, could come later.
"Oh, it's like sinking into a cloud," she
murmured as he laid her with care atop the mattress of the roomy bed he'd made
with leftover pieces of cypress from the house. "I smell flowers."
He lay down beside her. She turned toward him, her
eyes shining like a pair of the pirate Lafitte's gold doubloons. "It's
stuffed with Spanish moss and herbs."
Her rich, throaty laugh started a thousand pulses
humming beneath his skin. "I'm never buying an innerspring mattress
again."
Nate knew he was in big trouble when he almost
suggested she stay here with him. In Blue Bayou. In his house. His bed. He
wasn't prepared to share those thoughts with her yet, not when he hadn't
figured them out for himself, but there was one thing he
wanted, needed, to get straight before they moved on.
He framed her face between his palms. "You're
different from any other woman I've ever known." He could hear a sense of
the wonder he'd tried to ignore in his tone, and suspected she could hear it,
too. "This is different."
"I know." When her gorgeous eyes grew
suspiciously bright, Nate felt something inside him move that had nothing to do
with sympathy, or lust. "It's the same for me."
Because he'd been raised to be a gentleman, Nate felt
obliged to give her one last chance. "We can still stop this. Before
things get out of hand."
"Is that what you want?"
"Hell, no."
"Me, neither."
What was the matter with him? Taking a woman to bed
had never been this complicated. This important. Frustrated with the situation,
even more frustrated with himself for giving in to these sudden self-doubts,
Nate decided if he was going to be this lost, he damn well wasn't about to take
the long fatal fall alone, and took her lips.
She tensed again when he pulled the T-shirt over her head,
and instinctively covered her breast with her hand.
"It's okay." He kissed her again, his tongue
dipping in to seduce hers into a slow, sensual dance. "I want to see you,
chиrie." He caught her lower Up between his teeth. "All of you."
Her body softened in a silent, submissive way he knew
was deceptive as he undressed her slowly, deliberately, taking time to kiss
each bit of uncovered flesh, just as Antoine had done in the erotic story he'd
told her on the phone. He smiled when he got down to her panties, which were
practical cotton woven into a barely there red bikini, just like the one he'd
imagined in his fantasy at Cal's. Contrasts, he thought, as he drew them slowly
down long legs, firm and sleek as a Thoroughbred's from daily running.
"I told you," she said, as he cupped the
weight of her breast in his hand and pressed his mouth against a long jagged
line snaking from her dusky pink nipple to the wall of her chest. What in the
hell had happened to her?
"The plastic surgeon was the best in L.A. You
can't go to a movie or watch television without seeing his work. He couldn't
exactly make me look the way I had before the accident, but he used tiny
stitches on my face, and special dressings, and hid the stitches beneath my
hair as much as possible. But with all the surgeries to put me back together
again, I just got tired of operations, so my body—"
"Is beautiful." He kissed her wounded
breast, then proceeded to move his hands, his lips, over her in a sure,
leisurely way, feeling the pleasure seep through her.
"You don't have to lie."
"I'm not. Perfection is boring." His tongue
glided lower, over her stomach, then lower still. She sucked in a quick, sharp
breath when he scraped his teeth along the pink ridge at the inside of her
thigh, then laved the flesh with his tongue. He was telling the absolute truth.
He found her wonderful. "Whatever marks you might have are merely points
of interest on a fascinating tour, mon ange."
Nate felt her going lax with pleasure, and even as he
enjoyed the absolute control he knew she did not surrender easily, he reined in
his own rampant need, keeping his caresses slow and gentle as he moved over
every graceful curve and sensual hollow. He touched her everywhere, watching
her face. Where his hands played, she burned; where his mouth warmed, she trembled
and arched in utter abandonment.
And still, even as the deep, painfully sexual ache
went all the way to the bone, he waited.
His fingers sketched slow, tantalizing circles in the
dark curls between her legs, then tugged lightly, drawing forth a moan. He did
it again, this time covering her parted lips with his, so he could feel the
ragged sound as well as hear it.
"Mon Dieu, I love you like this." Hot.
Hungry. His. He trailed his hand down the soft, silky, smooth flesh of one
inner thigh, then back up another. "Open for me, chиre," he coaxed.
"Let me see all of you."
She couldn't believe what was happening to her. She'd
known Nate Callahan would be a good lover, skilled in knowing how to please a
woman. But what he was doing to her went far beyond pleasure. Although his
caresses were achingly slow, his clever hands were everywhere as he discovered
erogenous zones she'd never known existed.
Regan had never—ever—ceded control to any man. She'd
always preferred being on top, physically and emotionally. But that was before
Nate. Lying naked on his moss-filled mattress while he was still fully dressed
was strangely erotic, and for the first time in her life she understood that
absolute surrender to the right man, a man you could trust absolutely, could be
glorious. There was nothing, she thought with a stunning sense of wonder, that
he could ask for that she would not give. When he pressed his palms against the
inside of her trembling thighs, she opened her legs, offering the most feminine
part of herself to his view. Despite the rain, there was enough daylight for
him to see her imperfections. But it didn't matter. He still wanted her. Still
found her desirable. Even beautiful.
She smiled, unable to remember when any man had called
her anything beyond pretty.
"Lovely," he murmured. She moaned as those
wickedly clever fingers skimmed over flesh heated from the blood rushing from
her heart. She was as exposed, as helpless as she'd ever been, but felt no
embarrassment as he parted the tingling flesh.
"Like petals, smooth and soft and glistening with
early morning dew."
Her senses swam. Her mind was shutting down. She
reached for him, needing to touch him as he was touching her. She wanted to
yank down that zipper on his jeans and take him into her mouth, deeper than
she'd ever taken a man; she wanted to burrow her face into the crisp male hair
around his penis, she wanted to torment him as he was tormenting her.
"Please, Nate." Another thing that was so,
so different. She'd never begged any man for anything, least of all sex.
"I want you." Need you.
"Soon, chиre." He braceleted both her wrists
in his hands. "There's no hurry."
"Easy for you to say," she complained as he
lifted her imprisoned hands above her head. Never in her life had she been so
helpless. Helpless to resist Nate. Helpless to resist her own escalating
desire.
"Easier to say than to do," he agreed in a
deep, rumbling voice roughened with sex. "But like I said, down here in
the South, we take things a little slower than in the rest of the world."
Just when she thought for certain that she'd die from
the wanting, the waiting, his free hand cupped the source of heat and sent her
soaring. She peaked instantly, sharply, and as she did, he pressed his mouth
between her legs.
He was feasting on her, as a man might devour ripe
passion fruit. Drowning in emotions, Regan writhed beneath his ruthless tongue and
hungry mouth, the line between pain and pleasure blurring as he drove her up
again. Even as this second climax shuddered through her, all Regan could think
was More.
As if possessing the ability to read her thoughts, he
left her only long enough to rip off his clothes. When he took the extra time
to protect her, something that had somehow recklessly escaped her sex-fogged
mind, she felt something powerful move inside her heart.
His long fingers splayed on her hips, lifting her to him
as he slid into her with silky ease. Had anything ever felt so glorious? So
right?
As he began to move with a deep, age-old stroke,
slowly at first, then faster, harder, deeper, driving them both into the
fragrant mattress, she scissored her legs around him and met him thrust for
thrust, matching his pace. They came together, catapulting them both into
oblivion. And into a relationship neither had planned, or been prepared to accept.
Chapter Twenty-three
Nate collapsed on her, loath to move, not sure if he
could even if he'd wanted to. He could feel her heart beating against his
chest, synchronized with the rhythm of his own as they both slowly returned to
normal. He listened to the rain tapping on the roof and knew he'd never hear
the sound again without thinking of Regan. He could cheerfully spend the rest
of his life in this bed, he decided. So long as he could keep his delectable
detective right here with him.
"Incredible." He threaded his hands through
her dampened hair, brushing it back from, her face, which was flushed from her
orgasms. Her eyes were closed, her long, thick lashes looking like dark silk
against her cheeks. "Absolutely incredible."
"Mmmm." She ran a limp hand down his
sweat-slick back. "I honestly never experienced anything like that."
"Neither did I."
That had her opening her eyes.
"It's the truth." Realizing that he was
probably crushing her, he rolled over onto his side, taking her with him. Her
lips were deep rose and swollen from kisses. Unable to resist, he nipped at
them lightly, savoring her taste. "This changes things."
What had just happened between them was no ordinary
event. They'd connected in a way that would have scared the hell out of him if
he hadn't been feeling so satisfied.
"It doesn't have to." He felt a pang of loss
as she put a bit of distance between them. "We're both adults. It was
amazing, hot, mind-blowing sex. But there's no irate father waiting in the
wings with a shotgun."
"Well now, I'll have to admit, that comes as a
relief," he drawled.
"Seeing as how the idea of gettin' peppered with
buckshot doesn't sound all that appealing." Speaking of appealing . . .
Unable to resist the lure of her silken flesh, even after what they'd just
shared, he skimmed a slow caress down her throat and over a pert breast.
"I told you," he said, when she stiffened
again, ever so slightly, "they don't matter."
"I don't want to talk about it."
"I want to know, chиre."
"You do realize that you can't always get
everything you want."
"Believe me, I'm well aware of that," he
said, thinking about the murder of his father, the agonizingly slow death of
his maman.
As if sensing his thoughts, she sighed and hitched up
a little in the bed as the post-sex languor disintegrated. "It's no big
secret. Finn could easily have found the story. Probably even Dani, since I
learned later that it not only made all the local papers but got picked up
nationally. I was even asked to sit next to the First Lady at the State of the
Union address, but I turned the offer down."
"Why?" He knew a lot of women who'd sell
their collection of tiaras for such an opportunity to be in the national
spotlight.
"Partly because I'm not a real fan of
politicians. But mostly because I don't think stupidity deserves a reward."
"You couldn't be stupid if you tried."
"Thank you. That's a very nice thing to say. But
unfortunately, it's not accurate." She breathed a resigned sigh. "It
was several years ago, back when I was still a patrol cop. I wasn't real
popular in the 'hood, because I'd been working with a community policing group
and the narcotics guys, doing a lot of drug busts. I was working the graveyard
shift and went to pull this vehicle over for expired tags, when it took off. I
took off after it."
Her lips curved in an oddly regretful smile Nate
suspected was directed inward. "I'd never taken part in a high-speed chase
before, and I have to admit, I was enjoying the hell out of it. The adrenaline
was jangling in my veins, and everything was intensified—the sound of the
siren, the squeal of the tires, and the smell of burning rubber as we kept
tearing around the corners."
He thought he could see this coming.
He was wrong.
"I must have been going eighty when we went into
the projects." Her voice, her eyes, turned flat and distant. "The car
headed down this alley, with me right on its bumper. The minute it got back
onto the street, a moving van blocked the exit. I slammed the patrol car into
the side of it."
"Christ." His blood went cold as the mental
image seared itself into his mind.
"That would have been bad enough, of
course," she continued with what he thought was amazing
matter-of-factness. "But an accident's chancy, what with airbags and seat
belts, and such. The dealers came up with a plan to shift the odds in their
favor.
"Right after I wrecked the cruiser, they pulled
out the automatic weapons and began firing away. I don't remember anything
after the windshield shattered, but I saw the pictures afterward, and the car
looked like one of those tin cans people use for target practice. There were
more holes than metal left. A lot of that metal and glass ended up in me."
She sighed and unconsciously touched her hand to her breast. "End of
story."
Rage came instantly, steamrolling over sympathy. He'd
always thought what had happened to his father had been tragic, But the
horrific thing she'd been through was nothing short of evil. "And you went
back to those streets?"
Even Jack, after being ambushed by drug dealers down
in South America, had resigned his DEA job, cashed in his pension, and returned
to Blue Bayou, where he'd spent several months trying to drink himself into
oblivion.
"Not right away. There was a lot of recovery time
and rehab." Her slender shoulders lifted and dropped on a long, exhaled
breath. "But I'm a cop. There was no way I was going to let those
gangsters scare me away from doing what I'd always wanted to do."
"Always?"
"Dani told me how you used to drag wood in from
the swamp while Jack and Finn were practicing their quick draws."
"Someone had to build the jail."
She attempted a faint smile she couldn't quite pull
off. "Well, when I was a little girl, I used to have Police Officer Barbie
arrest Ken."
For the first time in his life, Nate understand how
someone could do cold-blooded murder. A very strong part of him wanted to get
on a plane, fly to Los Angeles, find those lowlifes who'd done this to her, and
kill them with his own hands. Slowly. Painfully. Thoroughly.
"You've no idea," he said, "how much I
admire you."
"Why?"
"For surviving such a horrific thing. For being
who you are. What you are." Words usually came trippingly off his tongue.
But Nate couldn't think of any that even began to express the emotions
battering at him. "I can't even begin to tell you."
"Well, then." The light had returned to her
remarkable eyes, and her lips curved in a slow, seductive smile. "Why
don't you show me?"
Outside, the rain continued to fall.
Inside, with slow hands and warm lips, they lost
themselves in a shimmering, misty world of their own making.
Afterward Regan lay snuggled in his arms, listening to
the sound of the rain on the roof, and knew that from this day forward, every
time it rained, she'd think of Nate.
"What are you thinking?" he asked, skimming
down her side with those fingertips that had stimulated every inch of her with
a touch like the finest grade sandpaper.
"How much I used to hate the rain." She
caught his hand as it slid ever lower and lifted it to her lips. "And how
I'm never going to be able to think of it the same way again."
"Great minds." He pulled her tight against
his body. His kiss was slow, deep, and possessive. "I was thinking earlier
how nice it'd be if I could just spend the rest of my life right here in bed
with you."
That sounded wonderful. Too wonderful. If she wasn't
in such a blissful mood, she might have been unnerved by how perfect a scenario
he'd just painted.
"Unfortunately," he continued on a long deep
sigh, "we're going to have company."
"Company?" She touched her mouth to a small
scar on his knuckles.
He glanced over at the watch he'd taken off and put on
the bedside table. "I figure we've got about ten minutes before Josh gets
home from school."
"Oh, my God, how could I have forgotten about
him?" Regan leaped up and raced around the room, gathering up discarded
clothing where it had landed on the wide plank floor and furniture. Making love
with Nate had wiped her mind as clear as glass. She shot him a frustrated look.
"Would you please get out of bed?"
"You don't have to be in such a tizzy, chиre."
He unfolded himself
from tangled sheets that had slid mostly to the floor.
"There's still plenty of time."
"Don't you have any other speed but slow?"
Where the hell were her panties?
"You weren't complaining a little hit ago."
"Actually, I was." There they were. How on
earth had they gotten on top of that floor lamp across the room?
"Next time we'll try for a
slam-bam-thank-you-ma'am session," he said obligingly.
Regan suspected he'd turned her into a sex addict,
since even that sounded appealing.
"What are you doing now?"
"Opening the windows." Thank God for the
overhanging roof and wide porch that allowed her to do so while the rain poured
down. "It smells like sex in here."
"Well, I'd say we'd probably have had a pretty
disappointing time if it didn't. He won't have any reason to come in here,
Regan."
"You never know. I don't want him to know that we
were having hot, wild sex in the middle of the day." She couldn't remember
the last time she'd had afternoon sex. Years, perhaps. She'd always been
careful to arrange for dark rooms brightened only, if her partner insisted on
light, by the soft glow of a single flickering candle.
"I think he knows men and women have sex.
Sometimes even in the daytime."
"It appears he knows a great many things he
shouldn't. I don't want to set a bad example for him." She turned to see
how much progress he was making and discovered he was still as naked as the day
he was born, leaning against an old bureau, with the strangest smile on his
face. "What?"
"I don't want to scare you, chиre. But I think
there's something you should know."
"What?" she repeated impatiently.
"Now, you've got to understand, I may be wrong.
I'm not real familiar with the feeling, having never experienced it
before—-"
"Nate, you're a wonderful man—kind, caring,
talented, and a marvelous lovemaker—but time is running out here. Could you
please, this one time, just cut to the chase?"
"I think I could, just maybe, fall in love with
you."
The bra she'd retrieved from the bedpost dropped to
the floor from nerveless fingers. Stunned speechless, she could only stare at
him. A yellow school bus lumbered to a stop outside the house. Jesus, did she
need any more complications in her life? "Don't."
She scooped up her bra and disappeared into the
bathroom, slamming the door behind her.
"Well." Nate pulled on his briefs and, since
he had no idea where his shirt had landed, pulled another from the cypress
chest. "She certainly took that well."
Chapter Twenty-four
After a long, hot shower intended not only to wash off
the scent of their lovemaking but to clear her mind so she could deal with this
latest problem, Regan took the time to blow-dry her hair so she wouldn't look
like a drowned spaniel.
Before getting dressed again, she unwrapped the fluffy
white towel from her body and studied herself in the bathroom mirror, running
her fingertips over the curved raised lines that truly hadn't seemed to
distract him from his goal of making sure that she'd never be able to enjoy sex
with any other man ever again.
When she finally came out of the bedroom, she found Josh
standing at the old soapstone sink, husking corn. He glanced up.
"Hi," he said almost cheerfully. "Nate's outside. He said you're
invited to dinner, and he'll be right back in."
She wasn't at all eager to stay after Nate's
out-of-the-blue declaration, and Josh's matter-of-fact attitude about her being
there made her feel even more uncomfortable. And what had Nate done with the
foul-mouthed delinquent when he'd replaced him with this Stepford teen?
"How was school?"
"Okay." He shrugged shoulders clad in a
normal denim shirt. "I thought I might be behind, but all except for
geometry, I'm pretty much ahead of a lot of the class. The counselor's thinking
of putting me in the accelerated program. If I'm going to be staying around,
that is."
"That's terrific." Her heart tugged as she
realized that the chances of that were slim unless Judi Welch could find a
family for him to stay with here in Blue Bayou. "I always had trouble with
geometry. The teacher said if you just memorized the theorems you'd be able to
solve any of the problems. But even though I could recite them all, it never
helped me know what to do with them."
"Yeah." He pulled some pale silk off a fat
yellow ear of corn and rinsed the corn beneath the tap. "Same with me. I
hate those effing sines and cosines. I mean, why the hell do I have to learn
that stuff anyway?"
She was almost relieved to see a flash of the Josh of
two days ago. "I suppose it comes in handy for something," She
glanced up at the intricate placement of the pegged wooden beams. "I'd
think Nate would need to know it, to build houses like this."
"Yeah, that's what he said. He also said he'd
help me figure it out." His gaze scanned the homey, if decidedly masculine
room that, as wonderful as it was, could use a bit of a woman's touch.
"This is a cool place, isn't it?"
"It certainly is."
"It'd be way radical to live here."
"Yes," she heard herself saying. "It
would."
The door opened, and Nate came in, carrying a handful
of the purple-and-yellow irises she'd seen growing wild around the house when
they'd first driven up. "I figured," he said, "since Josh and I
are having a lady to dinner, I ought to get some flowers for the table."
"They're lovely." And definitely a woman's
touch. Now he was reading her mind even before she had the thoughts.
Fortunately, there was nothing in his casual manner to suggest that a mere
thirty minutes ago, he'd dropped a bombshell on her.
"Trouble is, while I'm a man of many talents, I'm
not real good at flower arranging."
"I'll do it." Their fingers brushed as she
took the irises from his hand, creating a spark that shot right down to her
toes. She looked up into his face to see if he'd felt it as well, but his
expression remained absolutely smooth.
Perhaps, she thought, as she arranged the flowers in a
hammered pewter pitcher, he'd only been speaking off the top of his head.
Perhaps he'd been carried away by great sex and mistaken it for the start of
something deeper. Or perhaps he was going to do exactly what she'd told him to
do. Not fall in love with her.
As she set the pitcher in the center of the old pine
farm table, Regan told herself she should be vastly relieved.
He might not be the cook his brothers were, but Nate
thought the dinner of spicy grilled shrimp, dirty rice, and salad turned out
pretty damn good for a guy more used to having females cook for him. The
conversation flowed surprisingly easily, considering all the undercurrents.
Josh was amazingly well behaved, watching his language for the most part. He
seemed to respond to Regan, who appeared honestly interested in his desire
about maybe being a writer when he grew up, which led to a discussion about
Jack's books, which in turn led to a discussion of drugs, which, the kid swore
he'd never done and never had any intention of doing.
"Drugs are for chumps," he'd muttered as
he'd polished off his third plate of dirty rice.
Then, as if to prove that miracles did, indeed, exist,
he offered to wash the dishes while Nate took Regan back to the inn.
They were almost down the steps when he called out to
Nate, who returned to the porch. "Thanks, man."
"For dinner? Hey, I may not be Emeril, but any
idiot can stick some shrimp on the grill."
"No. Well, that was okay, too. I liked the rice
stuff."
"Yeah, I could tell."
"I was talking about today. About letting me come
home on the bus instead of making it look like I was living with my probation
officer."
"You're not," Nate said mildly. "If you
decide to take off, there's not much I can do about it." He squeezed
Josh's shoulder. "Why don't you get started on that homework after you
finish the dishes? I'll be back in a while, and we'll tackle the
geometry."
"That's okay." He glanced over at the SUV,
where Regan was sitting in the passenger seat in the dark. "I know you've
got better things to do."
"I said I was going to help you, and I
will." Nate was proud of the firm, paternal tone that sounded a little bit
like Jake Callahan's had when he'd been dealing with his sons.
As he drove away from the house, he could see Josh
standing in the open doorway, watching the taillights until they'd turned the
corner.
"I don't know what you're putting in his
RC," Regan murmured, "but I'd never know that was-the same kid who
was mouthing off at everyone at the hospital the other night."
"He's a good kid. He just needs a little
encouragement. Besides, right now he's on his extra good behavior, trying to
find himself a home."
"I noticed that. It's a little sad. He reminded
me of a stray dog trying to infiltrate itself into whatever family feeds
him."
"Yeah. Turnip was the same way. But she's settled
in with Jack and Dani and the kids like she's been there since she was a
pup."
"There are a lot more people in the world willing
to take on a stray dog than a teenage kid with issues."
"You're probably right about that," he
agreed, thinking of how hungry the kid looked when he'd been driving away. And
not for food.
"About earlier," she said tentatively,
obviously feeling her way. "What you said."
"Don' worry about it. It was jus' something that
came off the top of my head."
She combed her hand through her silky dark hair.
"I wasn't very nice about it."
"A lot happened today. I didn't mean to make you
feel pressured or anything."
"It's just that my life is so confusing right
now."
"I know, sugar." He reached out and laced
their fingers together and rested them on his thigh. "Like I said, it was
just a random thought." He squeezed her hand. "You were right about
that mind-blowing sex. It was probably leftover hormones speaking."
"Now that I can identify with," she said in
what sounded like relief.
When they arrived at the inn he accompanied her up to
her suite but forced himself not to coax her into inviting him in, which, he
suspected from the renewed desire he felt swirling between them in the closed
confines of the elevator, wouldn't take that much effort. He kissed her good
night, a brief flare of heat that ended too soon for both of them, then walked
back to the SUV, absently whistling "You Are My Sunshine."
* * *
She was being ridiculous, Regan told herself the next
morning. It wasn't like they were going steady. She'd gotten along for
thirty-three years of her life just fine without Nate Callahan. Certainly she
could survive one morning alone without him around to stir up her hormones and
tangle her mind.
He was only out at his cabin with his brothers for a
day of fishing that she suspected was mostly a rite of male bonding, which
would involve a Lot of swearing, spitting, and belching. She wondered what Nate
was telling Jack and Finn, who'd come home for Mardi Gras, about her, if
anything. Wondered what they were telling him back.
She'd decided to spend the morning at the courthouse,
searching through old parish real estate records for the names of people who'd
been in the neighborhood when Linda Dale had been living here. So far she'd
found ten names, made ten phone calls, and come up with nine dead ends and a
man who seemed to erroneously remember Linda as a go-go dancer at the Mud Dog.
"Here's another one," Shannon Chauvet said,
bringing a third thick green leather-bound book from a back room,
Regan had immediately recognized the woman as the one
Nate had comforted at the hospital the night of the train wreck. The scrape on
her cheek was healing, and her black eye had faded to a sickly yellow-green hue
that couldn't quite be concealed by makeup. Her surprised expression when Regan
walked into the courthouse suggested she'd recognized her as well, and while
their conversation had revolved around the records, Regan decided that before
she left the office, she was somehow going to bring up the subject of Shannon's
abusive husband and assure her that she was doing the right thing by staying
away from him.
"Hey, Regan." She glanced up and saw Josh
standing in front of the table. She'd been so absorbed in her thoughts, she
hadn't even heard him enter the courthouse.
"Shouldn't you be in school?"
"The sewer line broke, and since tomorrow's Fat
Tuesday, the principal decided she might as well let us out of school
early."
She'd had a hard time believing Nate could have turned
the kid around so quickly. If he was determined to become a juvenile
delinquent, he was going to have to become a better liar.
"Well, that's a lucky thing for you. If you need
a ride to Nate's, I can drive you out there."
"Nah. It's not that far. I could've walked, or
hitched—"
"Hitching isn't safe."
"Life isn't all that safe. But I'm not
hitching," he pointed out.
She began moving her pen from one hand to the other.
"So what are you doing? Other than ditching school and risking being
thrown back to Social Services?"
A red stain filled his cheeks. "Jesus H. Christ,
a guy can't get away with anything around here."
"You might keep that in mind next time you try.
And don't cuss."
"Like you don't?"
"I'm a cop. It occasionally comes with the
territory."
He looked as skeptical as a fourteen-year-old-boy
could look. "Shit, that's a real good excuse."
"Seems to me you're the one who needs an excuse.
What are you doing here?"
"Okay. I saw your car parked outside when the bus
went by, and thought maybe you could use a little help finding out about your
mother."
She lifted a brow. "You know what I'm
doing?"
"Sure." He shrugged. "Just about
everyone at school knows. Except a few Columbine wannabes and some nerds who
haven't looked up from a computer screen since they got their first Game
Boy."
"You have a group of Trenchcoat Mafia kids at the
school?" Blue Bayou looked like a place where the Brady bunch would be out
playing the Partridge family on the softball diamond in the park.
"Nah. They just try to act that way to be cool.
The school board voted in a dress code that got rid of their stupid coats, like
that's going to turn them into human beings. It's also why I'm stuck wearing
these geek clothes of Nate's."
"I think you look very nice. Besides, white
T-shirts are classic. James Dean wore them."
"Who's James Dean?"
She sighed. Somehow, when she hadn't been looking,
she'd landed on the wrong side of a generation gap. "Just an actor who
died tragically young. Well, since you're here, why don't you sit down?"
The way he was shifting from foot to foot reminded her of a bail jumper about
to split town. "You can help me go through a few more pages, then we'll
head over to Cajun Cal's for lunch."
"Okay." He dumped the books he was carrying
onto the table and sat down.
Suspecting she hadn't heard the real reason for him
showing up here, Regan handed him one of the ledger pages and waited for the
other shoe to drop.
She did not have to wait long.
He watched Shannon Chauvet filing some papers.
"She's a nice lady," he said.
"She's certainly been very helpful."
"She invited me to spend the night at the guest
cottage with Ben and her. If Nate says yes."
"I guess you'll have to ask him for
permission." No way was she going to start interfering in disciplinary
matters.
"Yeah. . . . Her husband hit her."
"So I heard."
"He hit Ben, too."
"I didn't know that." But she wasn't
surprised.
"Yeah, he tried to get in between them last
summer, and the son of a bitch broke his arm."
"Domestic violence sucks."
"Now who's cussing?"
"That isn't cussing. But you're tight, I could
have chosen a better word."
"Nicer one, maybe. But not better. If I ever have
a kid, I'm never going to hit him."
"I'm glad to hear that." Warning sirens were
blaring in her mind. She turned the pen around and around, treading softly.
"Did someone hit you, Josh?"
He couldn't quite meet her eyes. "It's no big
deal. It's what adults do,"
"Not all adults."
"Cops can't go around arrestin' everyone who
spanks a kid."
"Flat-handed spankings are allowed in every
jurisdiction I know of." Though just because it was legal, that didn't make
it right.
"How 'bout fists?"
"I suppose again, you're talking jurisdictional
differences. But that would be unacceptable to me, and I certainly wouldn't let
it slide."
"How 'bout pimping?"
The question had been asked so matter-of-factly, and
she'd been so distracted by the way he seemed to be picking up Nate's Cajun
patois, that it didn't immediately sink in. "What did you say?"
He still wasn't looking at her. "I figure you
wouldn't let a guy pimp a kid, either."
"Shit." She dragged a hand through her hair
when he arched a sardonic brow. "Okay, you caught me. That's definitely
cussing." Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Shannon headed toward them
with another thick record book. "Come on." She pushed back from the
desk and stood up.
"Where are we going?"
"For a drive."
"You're not going to call the cops, are
you?"
"Of course I am."
"You can't."
"Dammit, Josh—is that even your name?"
"Yeah."
"Well, you've done a real good job of
stonewalling so far, but you're not going to be able to get away with it forever.
Mrs. Welch is going to find out who you are and where you're from, and she's
going to try to send you back." She put one of his icy hands between both
of hers and held his tortured gaze with a solemn, determined one of her own.
"I'm not going to let that happen. He's never going to hurt you
again." Regan would not allow this to turn out any other way.
"He can't."
"That's what I said."
"No." Josh shook his head. Bit his lip.
Tears were swimming in his eyes. "You don't get it. He can't hurt me
because I killed him."
When she heard the heavy book crash to the floor,
Regan thought Shannon must have heard Josh's heated declaration and dropped it
in her shock.
"Oh, shit," Josh muttered.
Regan followed his bleak gaze to the doorway and felt
exactly like a deer in the crosshairs. The man standing there had a fully
loaded ammo belt strapped across his chest, and a Remington deer rifle pointed
directly at them.
Chapter Twenty-five
It had been planned as a guy's day out, a chance to
get together out at the camp that had been in their family for generations,
shoot the bull, drink some beers, catch some fish, and talk about women, which
admittedly wasn't as raunchy a topic since his brothers had gotten themselves
married. Nevertheless, Nate had been looking forward to this day. He had not
planned to get ragged to death.
"You actually came right out and told her you
loved her?" Finn asked in disbelief.
"I said I thought I might, just maybe, be able to
fall in love with her," Nate responded as he dug through his tackle box
and came up with a silver and copper spinner that had worked real well for him
last week.
"That's pretty much the same thing," Jack
said. "Once you start thinking the L word, you're pretty much
hooked."
"Not like you to be so stupid." Finn was
looking at him the same way he had back when Nate was fourteen and had filched
a pack of cigarettes from the market. "You're supposed to be the Callahan
who knows his way around women. Even I would have known better than to just
blurt out something that important."
Nate cast from the porch, landing the lure precisely
where he'd wanted it. Of the three brothers, he was the only one who actually
used this camp a lot for its original purpose.
"You're a fine one to criticize, you," he
drawled. "I seem to recall, not that many months ago, you screwin' things
up so bad you went on a bender, leaving Jack and me to sober you up and send
you off to Kathmandu to grovel. After you broke my nose."
"I was going to go to Nepal, dammit,' Finn
grumbled. "I was just giving Julia time to adjust to the idea of us being
together."
"You're lucky she didn't use some of that time to
fall for another guy," Jack said.
"Wouldn't have happened." Nate gave Finn
grudging credit for that. "I was there at the beginning. From the time our
big brother met her plane in N'Awlins, she never looked at another man. And God
knows, I tried to get her to notice me," he said with a wicked grin.
He'd taken to Julia Summers the first time he'd met
her at the reception the parish council had held for the visiting TV cast of
that prime-time soap, River Road. Unsurprisingly, ratings had taken a nosedive
after she'd left the show to go to Kathmandu for her role as Bond girl Carmen
Sutra, and there were rumors the show was about to be canceled.
"It was only two weeks," Finn shot back,
ignoring Nate's fraternal dig to reply to Jack's accusation. "You took
thirteen years to get back with Danielle."
"Most of which she happened to be married,"
jack pointed out.
"She only married that politician creep because
you didn't stay around to make an honest woman of her. You're just lucky that
piano dropped on the guy's cheatin' head, or you still might be hanging around
here mooning after her like a lovesick pup."
"Goddammit." Jack shot to his feet, ready to
rumble. "How was I supposed to know she was pregnant when the judge ran me
out of town? If anyone had bothered to tell me—" He shot a blistering
accusatory look Nate's way.
"That's bygones," Nate said quickly, hoping
to defuse things before they got out of hand and he got his nose broken again. He
reeled in the line, cast once more. "Water under the bridge."
"Yesterday's ball score," Finn quoted their
father.
"Yeah." Jack blew out a long, calming
breath, sat down, leaned back in the rocker, and put his booted feet up on the
railing again. "You're right. So," he asked Nate, "what are your
plans regarding the lady?"
"If you're talking about my intentions, I don't
know."
"What a screwup," Finn muttered. "You
take her to bed, have some hot sex—-"
"World-class sex," Nate clarified.
"You have sex," Finn forged on in that
doggedly determined way that had made him such a good serial killer hunter,
"blurt out you love her—"
"Maybe. Possibly. Down the road." He wasn't
about to admit it, but Nate was beginning to agree with them. He had screwed up
by letting his mouth run away with his brain.
"Same thing," Finn echoed Jack's assertion.
"And you bring the subject up when there's no time to talk about it,
because a teenage runaway kid has just arrived home from school. You ever think
of coming up with a plan beforehand?"
"If I'd had a damn plan, I wouldn't have said
anything. I've always been up-front with women; it seemed like the thing to do
at the time." He wasn't about to admit the woman had scrambled his brains.
"Not all of us live our lives in rigid, controlled, planned-out A to Z
fashion. Some of us like to go with the flow."
"Meaning," Jack suggested as he popped the
tops on two bottles of Voodoo beer and handed one to Nate, "you don't have
any idea what you're going to do next, you."
Nate threw back his head and took a long swallow.
"Not a clue."
* * *
"It's going to be okay," Regan quietly
assured Josh as they faced the gunman.
"Oh, dear Lord, he's going to kill us,"
Shannon, who was standing beside them, whispered back.
"No, he's not." Regan certainly hoped she
could stop that from happening. "I've been in this situation before."
Her psychology degree had made her a natural for being called out during
similar situations over the years.
"You moved out on me, bitch!" the man
shouted at Shannon. His throat, his face, even the tips of his ears, were a
brilliant, furious scarlet.
Shannon's hand lifted unconsciously to her face.
"I didn't have any choice. You hit me."
"Because you wouldn't shut the hell up!"
Regan thought she heard more pain than anger in his
harsh voice. Which could be a good thing, so long as he didn't start feeling so
sorry for himself that he became suicidal, and decided to take his wife with
him.
"I was only suggesting that maybe we move to
town. Just for a little while." Shannon Chauvet's voice was little more
than a whisper.
"I'd suffocate in the city. I'd rather die right
here. Right now." Oh, shit.
"It's not exactly the city, Mike." Regan
suspected he'd heard those coaxing words before. "Breaux Bridge only has
about seven thousand people."
"That's ten times the number who live here. How
the hell am I supposed to trap there?"
It sounded like they'd had this argument many times
before. Regan decided it was time to inject herself into the conversation.
"What do you trap ?"
He looked toward her as if noticing her for the first
time, then moved massive shoulders that would not have looked out of place on a
pro linebacker. "Nutria. Gators. Crawfish."
"This must be a good place for that line of
work."
"Not this year. Hell, if the crawfish get any
scarcer, I'll have to start trapping for cockroaches."
"That's why I thought you could work for my
uncle," Shannon said.
"I already told you, goddammit," he said
through gritted teeth. "I'd rather shoot myself atop the Huey R Long
Bridge than sell used cars."
"He happens to make a very good living."
"Selling junkers on the weekly pay plan, then
repossessing them every Monday, ain't living. It's dyin'. Jus' slower than most
ways."
He'd begun cradling the rifle like a security blanket,
his fingers absently stroking the barrel. If they slid downward to the trigger,
they were in real trouble.
Regan had learned in her negotiation training that all
hostage takers had a reason for going off that went beyond just holding some
innocent person at gunpoint. It was up to the negotiator to figure out what
that reason was.
Mike Chauvet's, she suspected, was about regaining
control.
She vowed to make sure he didn't.
* * *
They'd had a good time. Hadn't caught any fish, but
then again, Nate thought as he drove back to Beau Soleil, the morning hadn't
been about fishing. They were about five miles from the house when his cell
phone rang.
He viewed the caller screen and flipped it open.
"Hey, Dwayne. What's up?" The deputy was talking so fast, Nate could
only catch about one word out of four. "Slow down. Take a deep breath. And
start again, okay?"
There was a deep gulping breath on the other end of
the line as Dwayne did as instructed.
"It's that lady, Ms. Hart."
Nate felt his blood turn to ice when he learned that
Regan was locked inside the library with Shannon, Josh, and a drunk, angry, and
armed Mike Chauvet.
Telling himself that there'd be time to be terrified
later, once she was safe, Nate punched the gas.
* * *
Regan heard the squeal of brakes outside.
"Don't move," Mike warned them. "Or you're
toast." Still aiming the lethal rifle at them, he went over to the window.
"Shit. It's the state cops."
Regan had been wondering if anyone knew they were in
there; someone must have seen Chauvet coming into the courthouse with a rifle.
So much for Blue Bayou being a peaceful little town. She'd been in town less
than a week and had already unearthed one murder and landed in a hostage
situation.
Domestic situations could be particularly volatile;
the last thing Regan needed was a SWAT team arriving on the scene like a bunch
of road warriors.
"We haven't been formally introduced," she
said. "I'm Regan Hart."
"Yeah. I heard about you. You're the cop from
California who's going to be the new sheriff."
"I'm a detective. And that's a mistaken rumor
goin' around, about me becomin' sheriff." Strange, now she was dropping
her own g's. Nerves, Regan told herself.
"What kinda detective?"
There was no way she was going to give him any ideas
he might not have already thought of himself by telling him she worked homicide.
"I've handled all sorts of cases over the years. Sometimes I've helped out
guys who have found themselves in your situation."
"I don't need any friggin' help from a
woman."
"Well, now, Mike—that is your name, right?
Mike?"
"Yeah. So what?"
"I was just asking. That's one of my favorite
names."
"Yeah. Sure." His response dripped with acid
sarcasm. "I know what you're doing. You're playing me, trying to get on my
good side."
"No fooling you, Mike," Regan said easily.
"That's pretty much what I'm trying to do, but you know, I really am on
your side."
His response was brief and vulgar.
"The thing is," she continued on an even
tone meant to calm him, "we've got ourselves a little situation here.
Right now, it's not too bad. Everyone gets frustrated from time to time, and we
all need to let off a little steam. I can understand that. But the one thing we
don't want is for things to get out of hand."
His laugh held no humor. "Just my luck there'd be
a cop in here today. Cop killing's probably a one-way ticket to death row. Do
not pass Go; do not collect your fucking two hundred dollars." His eyes
crawled over her in an asexual way that nevertheless made her flesh crawl.
"You carrying?"
"No." She certainly hadn't expected to need
her pistol when she'd left the inn this morning.
"Lift up your arms, turn around, and put your
hands on the wall so I can frisk you and make sure."
At the moment, Regan had a wide wooden table between
them. There was no way she was going to give that up. And while he might put
down the rifle to frisk her, she wasn't prepared to take the chance.
"It's got to be difficult, frisking someone with
one hand. I don't think I could do it."
"Good try, but I’m not putting this down. I got
another idea. Take off your top."
"What?"
"Are you deaf, lady? Take off the shirt!"
She opened her mouth to try to shift his thoughts to
something else when there was an earsplitting squawk from outside.
"Mike Chauvet," the voice shouted.
"Throw out your weapon and come out with your hands up."
Terrific. That's all she needed, some guy on an
electronic bullhorn entering the picture. Hostage negotiation was all about
personalizing the situation. There was nothing personal about a bullhorn.
"Take it off." He shifted the gun a few
inches. "Or the kid's gonna be one knee short."
"Go ahead, sucker," Josh sneered. "Make
my day."
Damn! That's all she needed, for Josh to recover his
stupid teen attitude.
"You don't have to do that, Mike." She'd
been taught to speak calmly and empathetically to hostage takers.
Unfortunately, the guy standing behind the white cruiser continued to shout out
orders.
Some cops, she thought darkly, watched way too much television.
* * *
Nate slammed on the brakes when he came around the
corner and saw the phalanx of state cops and cars. Tires squealed but didn't
skid on the damp cobblestones. Jack and Finn were out of the SUV before he'd
fully stopped; he caught up with them seconds later, frustrated when some giant
cop wouldn't let him pass.
"Hey, Nate." A trooper ambled up to him as
if it was just another rainy afternoon.
He looked familiar, and reading the name tag pinned to
his uniform shirt, Nate recognized him: Steve Tandau had played third base for
the South Terrebonne Gators the year the Blue Bayou Buccaneers had won the
state 4-A finals. He'd been a long ball hitter, and a helluva defensive player
who'd gone on to play for LSU, spending two years in the Atlanta farm system
before a bad knee from Little League days had caught up with him.
"What the hell's going on?" Nate demanded.
"We've got a domestic situation going on.
Remember Mike Chauvet?"
"Sure. He was arrested for domestic abuse the
other day."
"Well, he's out now."
"Shannon withdrew the charges?" He'd been so
sure he'd gotten through to her. If either Regan or Josh were hurt because he'd
been arrogant enough to think he could talk her into doing what her therapist
couldn't, he'd never forgive himself.
"Naw. The way I heard it, he's out on bail."
"Shit." He listened to the cop yelling on
the electronic bullhorn. Though he didn't have any police experience, he didn't
believe that shouting out orders like some marine drill sergeant was a good
idea.
"Have you tried just calling him?"
"Yep. Phones aren't working. It's my guess he
either tore them out of the wall or cut the wire."
"How about tear gas?"
"That's too dangerous." Finn, who knew about
such things firsthand, entered the conversation. "Tear gas doesn't work
all that well on drunks, and it'd be my guess the guy's been drinking."
"Bobby, down at the Mud Dog, said Mike's been
drinking Dixie and Johnny Walker boilermakers all morning," Dwayne Johnson
said. The deputy's expression managed to be both serious and excited all at the
same time. It was obvious this was a helluva lot more adventure than he'd been
expecting when he'd joined the force. Personally, Nate would rather have him
dealing with mailbox bashing.
"Besides," Jack said, "the stronger
stuff is pyrotechnic. You don't want to risk setting the place on fire with
Regan and Josh in there."
If Mike did one thing to harm one hair on either Regan's
or Josh's head, he'd damn well better kill himself, or Nate would do it for
him. "So, what do we do now?"
"He's not going anywhere," the former third
baseman said. "So, what we do is wait. Try to get him to listen to us.
Hope that cop inside can convince him to surrender."
If anyone could, it'd be Regan. But Nate wasn't in a
waiting mood. "And if he doesn't?"
"Then we'll just have to hope he wanders into the
kill range."
Nate followed his gaze to the roof of the building
next door and felt his heart stop when he saw the sniper rifle.
"Most often they come out, though," Tandau
assured him.
"How long do you wait?"
"As long as it takes."
Well, that told him a helluva lot. Nate glanced at
Finn.
"It all depends," Finn said with a reluctant
shrug. "I've seen guys cave after thirty minutes."
"We're already past that. What's the longest
you've ever seen?"
There was a significant pause. "Ever hear of Ruby
Ridge? Waco?"
"Screw that." Before either of his brothers
or the cops could stop him, Nate started walking toward the courthouse. He
paused to touch Jackson Callahan's horse's nose, then headed up the steps.
Chapter Twenty-six
Regan believed she was getting to dim. Chauvet may not
have put the gun down yet, but he was no longer pointing it directly at them.
She was about to suggest again that he allow his wife
to leave, when the courthouse door opened. Mike spun around, pinning the
newcomer in his sights.
"What the hell are you doing here? And how did
you get in? I locked that sumbitch door."
"I'm the mayor. This is the courthouse, where the
mayor's official office is. I may not show up in it all that often, but I do
have a key. As for what I'm doing here—"
Nate held out his arms, revealing he had nothing up
his short sleeves. "I come offering a trade. Let the women and kid go,
Mike. I'll stay. We'll talk."
"I got nothin' to say to you."
"Well, that's too bad, because I've got something
to say to you, and you better damn well listen. I like you, Mike." Okay,
so it was a lie. "I want to help you out here, but you've got to
understand that there are a lot of guys with guns outside, who won't be real
eager to cut you any slack while you've got these hostages in here."
Mike shot a nervous look out the window. Hopefully he
couldn't see the sniper, but there was no way he could have missed all those
State Police cars.
"Let 'em go, Mike. If nothing else, it'll be
easier on you, not having to worry about keeping an eye on three people. You'll
only have me to focus on."
"Why should I listen to anything you have to
say?"
"Because Brittany Callais is the presiding family
court judge."
"So?"
"So, she and I went steady back in high school,
and I dated her some when I first got back from Tulane. Now, I wouldn't want to
brag, but when we were working on the food committee for tomorrow's Fat Tuesday
festivities, I got the impression she's still sweet on me."
Mike's wide brow furrowed. He reminded Nate of a
slow-witted mastodon as he tried to process this piece of information.
"You saying you can get her to cut a deal?"
Nate didn't dare look at Regan. "That's exactly
what I'm saying."
There was more slow, rusty grinding of mental gears.
"Okay," Mike said finally. "The cop and the kid can go." He
pressed the barrel of the rifle against Nate's chest. "But you and Shannon
are stayin' put."
Nate saw Regan sit down on the table and cross those
long legs he'd spent a great deal of time fantasizing about. "I'm not
going anywhere."
Josh, damn the crazy kid, stood next to her and
crossed his arms. "Me neither."
Terrific, Just goddamn terrific.
Nate was trying to come up with an alternative game
plan when the door behind him opened.
"Shit," Mike groaned when Jack and Finn came
in, deflating like a balloon with a slow leak. "One Callahan is bad
enough. No way I need three in my life." He held the rifle out, the wooden
stock toward Regan. "I effin' give up."
* * *
"I still can't believe you did that," Regan
complained later that afternoon. They'd all gathered in the kitchen at Beau
Soleil, where Jack, who was the cook in the Callahan family, had fixed platters
of baked stuffed oysters and smothered chicken over rice.
Dani had broken out the coconut pralines she'd baked
for tomorrow's festivities. Matt, Dani and Jack's eight- year-old, was upstairs
watching The Lord of the Rings for what Dani swore was the hundredth time; and
Holly, Ben, and Josh, who seemed to be no worse off for his threatening
experience, were engaged in a noisy game of horse on the basketball court Jack
had built out back. "You had no business just walking into the courthouse
like that."
"I'm mayor. What happens in Blue Bayou is my
business."
"You could have been killed, you idiot."
He grinned and leaned over and gave her a quick kiss.
"Would you have missed me, chиre?"
"It was irresponsible," she repeated for the
umpteenth time.
"It worked," Nate repeated, as he had every
time she'd brought it up. "Besides, I had backup."
Jack and Finn returned his satisfied grin, as if what
had happened earlier was no more serious than the shootouts they used to have
when they were kids.
"At least now the mystery of where Josh came from
and why he left is solved." Considering all he'd been through, she was not
overly surprised that he appeared to have survived today's excitement with no
ill effects.
"Helluva thing, what his mother's boyfriend
did," Jack said. "Snatching the kid on his way home from
school."
Between their conversation with Josh, and calls to the
Florida State Police and the Department of Children and Families, they'd
determined that the teen had been placed in a foster home after his mother had
died of an overdose. Her boyfriend, angry at having lost the income she'd made
hooking, had decided if he didn't have the mother, he might as well make some
bucks off her kid.
"He must have been terrified all this time,"
Dani murmured, shaking her head. "Believing that he could be arrested for
having killed that monster."
"I can't say I'm not relieved, for Josh's sake,
that the guy ended up with only a concussion from being knocked out," Nate
said. "But I sure wouldn't mind if he ended up being some burly lifer's
girlfriend for the next fifty years."
"I still can't understand why no one was looking
for him," Julia said. Finn and his new wife had returned home for Mardi
Gras, and when she'd first met the actress this afternoon, Regan had been a
little intimidated by her beauty and lush, natural sensuality. But Julia had
turned out to be warm and caring, and had lightened the conversation over
dinner by entertaining them with tales of her recent adventures on location in
Kathmandu.
"Child welfare agencies across the country lose
hundreds of kids every year," Finn said. "Florida's DFC is the poster
child for what's wrong with the system. If these kids had anyone watching out
for them, they wouldn't have ended up in residential care in the first place.
Once they do, it's real easy for a kid to fall through the cracks."
"Especially when they want to disappear,"
Regan said. She'd seen it too many times to count. When she'd been on patrol,
she'd done her best to coax as many street children as possible into nonprofit
agencies who knew best how to help them, and she'd always carried phone cards
paid for out of her own pocket so the kids could call home.
"We can't let him go back," fretted Shannon,
who'd not only filed charges against her husband but also made an appointment
with an attorney to begin divorce proceedings.
"The boy won't be going back to Florida,"
the judge said, speaking with such authority not a single person in the kitchen
doubted him.
"Are you sure you should have left Josh at Beau
Soleil?" Regan asked later that evening, as Nate drove away from the
house.
"He wanted to spend the night. He seems okay, and
after all he's been through, it's probably good to be with kids his own
age."
"I suppose so." She reached over and put a
hand on his thigh.
He covered it with his own and squeezed her fingers.
"You want to go to the inn? Or my place?"
"The inn," she decided. "It's
closer."
What was it about this woman that kept putting him at
a loss for words? As they entered the suite, just the idea of taking her to bed
again had him burning from the inside out. It was as intense a feeling as when
he'd been wracked by chills at the idea of Mike Chauvet deciding to play
shooting gallery. If it wasn't love, it had to be one helluva case of flu.
"You're awfully quiet," she murmured.
"just enjoying the company." He forced a
smile he still wasn't quite feeling. "And thinking how funny life can
be."
"Yeah, today was a real barrel of laughs."
"Not that kind of funny. If I hadn't been
remodeling the office, I never would have been cleaning out those old files.
And if I hadn't been cleaning them out, I never would've found that
journal."
"And if you'd never found that journal, you
wouldn't have come to L.A., I wouldn't have come here, and we wouldn't be about
to spend the rest of the night making each other crazy."
"I'm already crazy, mon ange." His
hands settled on her waist. "Crazy about you."
She looked up at him from beneath her lashes, the way
belles seemed to know how to do from the cradle. It seemed a little out of
character, but he couldn't see a bit of guile in her warm gaze. "I'm
almost beginning to believe you, Callahan."
"You should." He pulled her closer. "
'Cause it's the truth."
He pressed her against him and kissed her. When her
tongue stroked his, it was all he could do not to throw her over his shoulder
and carry her to bed.
"I think I made a mistake," he groaned.
"What mistake is that?" She dipped her
tongue into the space between his lip and his chin he'd never realized was
directly connected to his groin.
"I shouldn't have upgraded you to this
suite."
"Why not?" She brushed her mouth against
his, retreated, then came back for seconds. "Aren't I worth a suite?"
"Sugar, you are worth the entire inn." He
skimmed a hand through her hair and splayed his fingers on the back of her head
as he kissed her again. Harder, deeper, longer. "It's just that there's
somethin' to be said for a room where the bed's closer to the door."
"Well, then, I guess we'll just have to start
here." She tugged the T-shirt from his jeans. "And work our way across
the room." Her fingers played with the hair on his chest, skimmed beneath
the waist of his jeans. "Anyone ever tell you that five buttons might be
considered overkill?"
"They're classic. Traditional."
"Granted." She flicked open the first metal
button with a skill he'd admire later. Much, much later, when his skin didn't
feel as if she'd just set a match to it. A second button opened. "They
also make it harder to seduce you."
"Is that what you're plannin' to do?"
"Absolutely." The blood that had been pounding
in his head surged straight down to his cock as she moved on to the third. And
fourth. He sucked in a quick, painful breath when she skimmed those short
fingernails over his belly. "And you are going to love it."
The final button gave way, allowing his erection to
jut out of his jeans. When she curled her fingers around it, lust tightened
into a painful knot.
"It must be hard," she murmured, moving her
hand up and down in a long stroking motion.
"I'd say that's self-evident," he managed.
Her laugh was rich and throaty and sexy as hell.
"That's what I meant." She continued to torment him with her fingers
and her nails, tracing the shape, the length, breadth, and heft of him.
"There's nothing subtle about you men." She followed a throbbing vein
from root to tip, causing his penis to jerk in her hand when she flicked a
thumb over the hood. "There's no way to hide the fact that you want a
woman."
"Women get wet."
"Well, there is that." She smiled, a slow,
breath-stealing smile. "In fact, my panties are drenched right now."
He groaned at the idea of sliding his fingers into
that hot moist flesh.
"Not yet," she murmured, backing away as he
moved to do precisely that. She undressed him as he had her, driving him to the
brink again and again, teasing, tasting, tormenting. Every time he tried to
caress her, she'd slip deftly away and find new regions to explore.
Somehow they made it to the bedroom, and as he lay on
the antique bed, watching her undress in the silvery moonlight streaming in
through the window, it crossed Nate's mind that this was the first time that he
wasn't expected to do anything but to take.
She returned to the bed, wearing nothing but a wicked
smile. "I love the way you feel." She ran her palms down his chest.
"And taste." Her tongue swirled around his nipple, dampening the
puckered flesh, nipping at it gently before moving on to plant a lingering kiss
against his navel.
Even knowing what was coming, Nate was not prepared
for the slap of lust when she took him into her mouth, her tongue and teeth
following the same scorching trail her devastatingly clever fingers had blazed
earlier. He was about to warn her that she'd pushed him to the very brink when
she went up on her knees and reached over his aching supine body.
"I have a surprise for you."
"You went shopping this morning," he guessed
as she took out the foil package.
"I did." She tore it open. "But that's
not the surprise." Took out the condom. "Watch."
How could he not, Nate thought as he watched her put
it between her luscious lips. Surely she wasn't going to . . . No, he told
himself— his detective was sexy as hell, but she was not the kind of woman
who'd—mon Dieu. She lowered her mouth to him again and without touching him
with her silky lady's hands, smoothed the thin latex all the way down.
The last thin thread of Nate's control snapped.
"That's it." He dug his fingers into her
waist, lifted her up, and thrust his hips off the mattress as he lowered her
onto him. They both froze for a moment, body and eyes locked together, Nate
buried deep inside her, looking up at her as she stared down at him.
Then they began to move. She pressed her knees against
his legs, riding him hard and fast as they both raced over that dark edge
together.
"How the hell did you learn to do that?" he
asked when he could speak again.
She was curled up against him like a kitten, but her
smile was that of a sleek, satisfied cat who'd just polished off a bowl of rich
cream. "Back when I was working vice, we raided this place that had
hookers working upstairs while the owner had a thriving porno studio on the
first floor. Part of the evidence was this so-called instruction video with an
obviously phony nurse showing women how to get men to use a condom."
"If I didn't already practice safe sex, that
little trick would certainly change my mind." He skimmed a hand down her
slick body. "I'll bet it took a lot of practice." He wasn't all that
fond of the idea of his detective tangling the sheets with a string of
California males, but since he couldn't claim to be a monk, he decided the stab
of jealousy was unfair.
"Not that much." Her quick grin pulled a
thousand unnamed chords. "Though the room service waiter did look at me a
little funny this morning, after my third fruit bowl."
"Are you saying—"
"I don't think I'll ever be able to eat another
banana again."
He chuckled and kissed her, enjoying her taste, the
feel of her in his arms. "That's quite a sacrifice. Perhaps we can come up
with some way to make it up to you."
"Well, now that you mention it." She flicked
a finger down the center of his chest. "I've always fantasized about
making love in one of those old-fashioned lion-footed tubs."
Amazed by the surge of renewed energy that shot
through him at the prospect, he scooped her from the cooling sheets. Regan
laughed with throaty pleasure as he flung her over his shoulder and carried her
into the adjoining bathroom.
Chapter Twenty-seven
Blue Bayou's Fat Tuesday festivities demonstrated yet
again that this part of southern Louisiana was a world apart. Beginning with
the fact that they left the inn just as sunlight had begun to spread
gilt-tipped fingers of lavender and shimmering pink over the bayou.
"What kind of party begins before dawn?"
Regan doubted she'd gotten more than two hours sleep. Not that she was
complaining about the way they'd spent the nonsleeping hours.
"A good party," he assured her. "I
promise you'll pass the best time you've ever had."
"I'm not sure that's possible. If I'd passed a
better time last night, I wouldn't be able to move this morning."
He laughed, leaned over, and with his eyes still on
the narrow causeway, gave her a quick hard kiss. "The courir is somethin'
special," he explained. "No one's real sure when exactly it started,
but we do know our Acadian ancestors were doing it before the War between the States.
It's fashioned after a French medieval holiday called the fкte de qué-mande.
It was the one time a year peasants were allowed to mock royalty without fear
of the consequences.
"They'd dress up in outlandish costumes and roam
the countryside, singing and begging for alms. Our coureurs do the same sort of
thing, but these days we dance and sing for une 'tite poule grasse, which is a
little fat hen, and the ingredients for tonight's gumbo pot."
"Like singing for your supper," she said.
"That's pretty much it. These days it's just part
of the tradition, but I suspect that in medieval times the people really did
need help from the farmers to get enough food together for the feast."
A crowd had already begun to gather when they arrived
at Beau Soleil. There were a great many men and women on horseback and others
in the back of pickups. Two tractors had been hooked up to flatbed trailers
outfitted with benches and festooned in traditional Mardi Gras colors of green,
purple, and gold, as well as bright yellow and red.
The mood was already festive; more than half the
people were in costumes reminiscent of the colorful scraps of cloth the
long-ago peasants might have sewn together. Many wore tall conical hats, much
the same as medieval women once favored, and several had donned animal masks
adorned with hair or feathers. Neighbors were milling around, catching up on
any gossip they might have missed, including, Regan guessed, stories of
yesterday's adventure at the courthouse. There was already singing and dancing,
and more than a few celebrants had begun drinking their breakfast.
"It's part of cuttin' loose," Nate said when
he saw Regan's slightly furrowed brow. "But it's the capitaine's job to
maintain control so things don't get out of hand."
Her gaze moved from Josh, dressed in a Harlequin
costume and laughing with Holly and Ben and some other kids she hadn't met, to
Judge Dupree, who was seated astride a gray stallion, wearing a bishop's miter
and looking very much in control of things.
"I doubt the town could have chosen better."
"He's been capitaine since before I was born,
'cept for those years he spent in Angola Prison after bein' framed by a bunch
of wise guys who were trying to get their hands on Beau Soleil to turn it into
a casino. It's good to have him back again." He waved to the judge, who
gave a regal nod in return.
"He doesn't look as if he's having that good a
time." His expression was stern as his gaze swept the crowd.
"Since it's his first courir in seven years, I'll
bet he's having a dandy time. He's just sorta like Finn." Nate waved to
his older brother, who, while not in costume, at least had arrived wearing not
his old standby FBI suit but a pair of neatly pressed jeans and a black
T-shirt. "Dancin' on the inside."
Given the choice between riding a horse and riding on
the flatbed, Regan opted for the flatbed. Although she suspected that Nate
would have preferred being out front with the others, he stayed with her,
explaining events as they unfolded.
"Capitaine, Capitaine, voyage ton flag,"
the throng sang out in unison. "Allons se mettre dessus il chemin."
"Captain, Captain, wave your flag, " Nate
translated. "Let's take to the road."
They continued to sing as they traveled through the
countryside. A great many of the songs were in French, and a few sounded as if
they might actually date back to the Middle Ages. When they broke into
"The Battle of New Orleans," Regan was able to sing along.
They reached a small wooden house set in a grove of
oak trees. "Everyone has to stay here," Nate explained as the judge
rode toward the house, carrying a white flag that symbolized the chase.
"While the capitaine asks the folks if they'll accept us."
A man and woman came out, and there was a brief
discussion, after which the judge turned back to the group and waved his flag.
"Now we have to go start earnin' the feast."
The tractor rumbled into the front yard and everyone
piled off. Musicians with fiddles and accordions began playing, while the
others danced and sang and begged for a contribution to the gumbo pot. After
receiving a bag of onions and several links of sausage, they were off again.
"Capitaine, Capitaine, voyage ton flag. Allons
allez chez l'autre voisin."
"Captain, Captain, wave your flag," Nate
translated again. "Let's go to the neighbors."
And so it continued for the next four hours, each stop
an opportunity for a party that managed to be spontaneous without losing any of
its tradition. Every so often someone would throw a live chicken into the air
for the Mardi Gras celebrants to chase, like football players trying to recover
a fumble. Often when they'd stop, several young men would climb trees.
"I don't know why," Nate said, when she
asked him about it. "I read a book once that said it's some ancient
fertility ritual, like symbolically associating with the tree of life. Or maybe
they're just fooling around. The one thing that professor never mentioned is
that Mardi Gras's supposed to be the last blowout before Lent, and it's hard to
have a bad time when you're climbing a tree."
That explanation, Regan thought as she watched Josh
and Ben scramble up an ancient oak, was as good as any. Swept up in the
timeless event, as the brightly costumed courir advanced across the drab
late-winter countryside, Regan knew if she lived to be a hundred, she'd never
forget this day.
When they finally arrived back at Beau Soleil, they
were welcomed back by those who'd chosen to get up at a more sensible time. The
food they'd gathered was dumped into huge gumbo pots cooking on open fires.
Outdoor tables groaned with more food brought by neighbors.
The sun that had been rising when Regan had dragged
herself out of bed eventually sank with a brilliant flare of red-and-purple
light into the water. Campfires had been lit to ward off the night chill;
sparks danced upward like orange fireflies; smoke billowed from the many
barbecues; dust rose from dancing feet. The mood was joyous, the food lavish,
seasoned with enough Tabasco to clear Regan's sinuses for the rest of her life.
"I am never going to eat again," she groaned
as she swayed in Nate's arms to the slow ballads that were beginning to replace
the jauntier dance tunes. Although she'd never considered herself much of a
dancer, she was able to follow him smoothly as he twirled her with fluid ease.
"That's the trouble with Cajun food." He
pressed his lips against the top of her head. "Four days after you eat it,
you're hungry again."
She laughed lightly, nuzzling against him. She'd tried
to put away thoughts of Linda Dale for this one special day, wanting it free of
any unpleasant memories. But now, as the celebration began winding down toward
its midnight conclusion, Regan couldn't help wondering how her life might have
been different if her mother hadn't been killed.
She knew from the journal that Dale and her lover were
planning to leave Blue Bayou. But would they have stayed in Louisiana?
"A dix for your thoughts," he murmured as he
nibbled on her ear-lobe.
"What's a dix? And if it's anything more to eat
or drink—"
"Non." She could feel his chuckle rumbling
in his chest. "A dix was the French currency. It's where the word Dixie
comes from."
Regan truly doubted that there was any other place in
America, with the possible exception of New England, that clung to its past the
way Blue Bayou did.
"I was just wondering, if things had turned out
differently, if we would have met earlier."
"Probably not."
Having expected him to spin a long, colorfully
creative scenario, Regan was surprised by his uncharacteristic bluntness.
"If there's one thing watchi' Jack and Finn, and
bein' with you, has taught me, it's that people can't fool around with destiny.
We were fated to meet this way, chиre. In this time." He skimmed his lips
along her cheekbone. "If I'd met you earlier, me, I might not have
appreciated you." He tilted his head back a bit. His eyes gleamed a deep,
warm blue in the glow from the campfires as he smiled down at her. "It's
been suggested that I might have been a bit shallow."
"Never." She twined her arms tighter around
his neck and fit her body closer to his. "That's just what you wanted
people to think, so it wouldn't screw up your role in your family."
"Which was?"
"The jester."
"Jester?" Hell, Nate figured, that was even
worse than Peter Pan, "You mean one of those guys with the funny hat and
hells on his curly toed shoes?"
"No. I mean the wise man of the court who was
clever enough to tell the absolute truth, no matter how unappealing, in a way
that left people smiling. When anyone else who tried to be that frank might
have had his head cut off."
He thought about that for a moment. "How do you
see Jack and Finn?"
"Oh, they're a lot easier, because what you see
is precisely what you get. Jack's the half-reformed bad boy with the heart of
gold. Finn's the rock." Her fingers were stroking his neck in a way that
made him want to make love to her. Then again, listening to her read a suspect
his Miranda rights would probably have him wanting to jump her lovely bones.
"No foolin' a woman with a psych degree," he
said easily, deciding he'd best shift his train of thought before giving the
town something else to talk about. He scanned the crowd. "Sure was a good
turnout, Even more than last year."
Although Nate obviously hadn't been real happy about
sharing her, he'd stayed typically good-natured as she'd danced with seemingly
every male in Blue Bayou, including Cal, whose moves had been surprisingly fast
for a man of his years.
"I suppose getting to see what you've done inside
Beau Soleil was a draw for everyone," she suggested.
"I imagine so. Toni cornered me while you were
inside frosting the King cake with Dani. Seems the old lady has mast of the
family money in company stock, but Toni's planning ahead for the day she's no
longer with us, and wants to talk about me givin' St. Elmo's a facelift."
"That house doesn't need a facelift. It needs a
heart transplant." Regan glanced over at the gallerie, where a
stone-faced Caledonia stood guard over her frail charge. "I'm surprised
Mrs. Melancon's here tonight."
"She's never missed a Mardi Gras that I know of.
And she seems more lucid this evening."
"I thought so, too, when I saw her singing along
to some French song a while ago. Music has a way of making connections with
people when other things can't get through." Up on the bandstand, the
Swamp Dogs had broken into a rousing rendition of "You Are My Sunshine,"
which made Regan think of her mother.
"I 'spose so." He cupped her butt in his
hands, pressing her closer. "What would you say to sneakin' off for a
while? I just remembered that I need to measure for the crown molding in one of
the guest bedrooms."
The molding had actually been installed last week, but
it was the best excuse Nate could come up with, while his body was bombarded
with sexual needs like he hadn't even experienced when he'd been thirteen and
learning all about sex by reading Finn's Playboy magazines out at the camp.
Regan laughed. "I love a man who takes his work
seriously."
He led her through the throng of people, and just
before they reached the gallerie, Charles Melancon stepped in front of them.
"May I have the honor of a dance, Ms. Hart?"
Regan instinctively glanced up at Nate and read the
resignation in his eyes as he shrugged. Stifling a sigh, she returned the older
man's friendly smile. It was, after all, only one dance. She and Nate still had
the rest of the night.
"So," he asked as he moved her through a
complex series of steps, "are you enjoying yourself?"
"I'm having a wonderful time. Sorry," she
murmured as she stepped on his toes. He was clearly a better dancer; then
again, he'd probably had a lot more practice.
"My fault. It's too crowded here to' try to
impress you with fancy moves." He slowed the pace. "A lot of people
think of Mardi Gras and they tend to think of Rio, or N'Awlins. But I've always
felt that Blue Bayou's is special."
"You won't get any argument from me about that."
She'd just returned his smile when Bethany Metancon
popped up from her wheelchair like some wild-eyed jack-in-the box, wispy hair
flying around her face.
"Putain!" she screeched, pointing her
scrawny finger at Regan. She spat, then reeled down the steps, leaping on
Regan, fists in her hair. "You have no business here. I won't allow you to
ruin my family!"
"It's okay, Miz Bethany. Nate grabbed hold of her
from behind, lifted her off the ground, and pulled her away. "You're just
a little confused right now." .
Finn and Jack cut through the crowd, putting
themselves between Regan and the old woman, who was screaming incoherently in
French. Ragged nails clawed impotently in the air. If she hadn't been concerned
about breaking her in half, Regan would have just taken her down.
"It's okay," Nate repeated soothingly.
"I'm not letting you take my son away from Blue
Bayou, Linda Dale!" Mrs. Melancon screamed, switching to English.
It took a moment for Nate to realize what he'd just
heard. He knew he wasn't alone when the quiet began to slowly extend outward
from the gallerie. A spooky hush came over the crowd as everyone turned
toward a stricken, white-faced Charles Melancon.
By unspoken consent, Mardi Gras came to an abrupt
halt. People began to leave, the low level of excited conversation echoing over
the swamp.
Eve Ancelet appeared from somewhere in the crowd.
"My bag's in my car," she said. "Try to calm her while I get a
sedative."
"Take her upstairs," Dani suggested.
"You can put her to bed in the guest room."
"I'll go with my mother," Charles said. He
did not look all that eager.
A typically stoic Caledonia took the woman from Nate's
arms. "Mo' better you stay down here, Mr. Charles," she instructed.
"You caused enough trouble as it is."
She lifted the frail woman into her arms as if she
weighed no more than a rag doll, walked into the house, and followed Dani up
the stairs.
Regan's heart was still pounding in her ears as the
rest of them gathered in the library.
"You want to explain what just happened!"
Nate asked Charles, who'd gone from ghost white to a sickly shade of gray.
"The past caught up with me." He looked a
thousand years old.
"The past, meaning me," Regan suggested.
He sighed heavily. Wearily. "You probably won't
believe this, but in a way I'm relieved the truth has finally come out."
Regan still didn't know what, exactly, the truth was.
"Perhaps if you began at the beginning," she suggested.
"I fell in love," he said slowly, painfully.
The fifty-something man was far from the congenial Rotarian she'd met at Cajun
Cal's; he looked drained and grim. He also had not looked once at his wife,
whom, Regan noted, didn't appear that surprised by the revelation. "For
the first time in my life, I was truly, deeply, in love."
"With Linda Dale," Regan said.
"Yes." He dragged both his hands down his
haggard face. "I fell in love with her the first time I ever met her at a
nightclub in New Orleans. I was entertaining clients. She wasn't a star yet,
but every man in the place wanted to be the one to take her home at the end of
her set."
"But you were the lucky one who did," Nate
said.
"Yes."
"Even though you were married," Regan, who
usually was able to keep her mouth shut during questioning, said.
"The marriage was a business arrangement I
entered into at my mothers insistence. Love had nothing to do with my
arrangement with my wife." He finally glanced over at Toni. "It still
doesn't."
"The deal was that you wouldn't embarrass me,
Charles. I believe you're doing a very good job of that tonight." Toni
Melancon rose from her chair with a lithe grace learned in finishing school.
"I'll be calling my attorney first thing in the morning."
A little silence settled over the library as she left
the room. Regan took a deep breath and dove back into the dangerous
conversational waters. "The man Linda Dale wrote about had a name
beginning with the initial J."
"My father was Charles Melancon, senior. I was
called Junior while I was growing up, and it wasn't until he'd been dead for
two decades that I began to finally put that name behind me."
Regan thought about what Nate had told her about the
elder Melancon being so influential. It must have been hard growing up in his
shadow, especially at a time when the family had begun to lose their power and
influence.
"What happened after you took Linda Dale home
from the club that night?"
"We made love. All night long." Both his
expression and his eyes softened at that long-ago memory.
Regan had figured that part out for herself. "And
afterward?"
"I explained to her about my situation. My responsibilities
to my mother and the stockholders. There was no way I'd ever be free to marry
her."
"I can't imagine she was thrilled with the idea
of being your mistress."
"To be honest, I believe the idea of not being
able to make a life with her bothered me more than it did Linda. She was an
amazingly generous person and understood responsibility, more than most. She
was willing to accept whatever life we could manage to carve out for each
other."
"Which is why she moved to Blue Bayou from New
Orleans."
"Yes. I thought it would be easier, having her
here close by, where I could see her more often. But it proved harder. Because
the more time we spent together, the more I wanted to be with her. It became
frustrating, and after a time, my regret and bitterness at my marital situation
threatened to ruin what we had together. That's when I knew I had to do
something drastic."
"So you killed her?" Nate asked, slipping a
protective arm around Regan's shoulders.
"Of course I didn't!" Charles leaped to his
feet. "I loved her, dammit. I wanted to spend the rest of my life with
her. I decided to leave Blue Bayou and start a new life with Linda. Mother did
not take to the idea."
"Because if you ran off with your mistress, your
wife would file for divorce and take her money with her."
"Yes. We argued. She told me I was no better than
my father. I'd promised Linda I'd come over after my talk with Mother, but I
was so angry, I drove to New Orleans and drank my way through the
Quarter."
Regan found it hard to feel sorry for him. He was,
after all, still alive.
"What happened to Linda?" she asked. The
fury that had twisted Bethany Melancon's face flashed in her head. "Did
your mother kill her?"
"Yes." He raked his fingers through his
pewter hair. Shook his head. "No."
"Which is it?" Regan asked, reining in her
impatience.
"Both." He huffed out a deep breath,
"My mother never drove. Never needed to. There was always a chauffeur to
take her wherever she wanted to go. But of course servants talk, and that night
she didn't want the staff to know where she'd been, so—"
"She had Caledonia drive her," Nate guessed.
"Yes. She hadn't believed me when I'd told her
that Linda loved me as much, if not more, than I loved her. She was so sure
this 'white-trash gold-digger,' as she'd called her, was only after my money.
So she took along twenty-five thousand dollars in stock certificates to buy her
off."
"But Linda didn't want the money." Regan had
learned enough about her mother to know this. She'd also dealt with enough
homicides to envision the scene. The old woman, who would have been about the
age her son was now, would have started out cold. Regal. Like a duchess talking
down to a peasant. But she was about to discover she'd met the one individual
Melancon money couldn't buy.
Frustrated, she would have argued. Probably even
started screaming, as she did tonight. Screaming, Regan thought, like the
cauchemar in her nightmare.
Her mother would have stayed calmer. After all, she
had a child asleep in the bedroom. She might have even tried to get past her to
open the door, perhaps to call Caledonia for help. There would have been
pushing. Shoving. The room was small; although Regan couldn't recall the
furnishings, there must have been tables in it.
"It was an accident," she decided,
"That's what Mother said," Charles confirmed
flatly. "Apparently Linda fell and hit her head on the corner of the
coffee table. Caledonia would lie through her teeth to protect my mother, but I
believed her story then." He sighed heavily. "I still do. Mother was
apparently distraught, and together they decided to make it look like a
suicide. Caledonia helped her carry Linda's body out to the garage. They put
her in her car, turned-on the engine, then left."
"Did it occur to either one of them that they
left a two-year-old child alone in the house to fend for herself?" Nate
asked, furious on Regan's behalf.
"That was"—Charles paused, as if searching
for the right word— "one of the worst parts of the tragedy."
Nate felt guilty he'd even brought this mess into
Regan's life. If it hadn't been for him, she'd have gone on thinking that her
father was a war hero, rather than this man who'd chosen to remain quiet and
allow his daughter to be taken from him.
Regan thrust her hand through her hair. "Let's
get one thing straight, Melancon. You don't have to worry about suddenly having
to turn paternal. I've gotten along thirty-three years without a father,
and—"
"What?" His surprise was too genuine to be
faked. "I'm not your father, Ms. Hart. You were an infant when I met
Linda."
Nate could tell Regan was as surprised as he was by
this revelation, but she managed to hang onto that inner strength he admired.
"Then she obviously had another
relationship," Regan said.
"I'm sure she had several before she met me. I
never held that against her."
"That was goddamn big of you," Nate
muttered.
Charles shot Nate a look. "I loved her," he
repeated. "I was willing to give up everything for her." He turned
back to Regan. "And you." Despite the seriousness of the
conversation, his lips curved slightly. "I'd never thought I'd have
children—Toni made it very clear from the start that she wasn't the maternal
type—but I came to care for you as if you were my own daughter."
"Do you happen to have any idea who she'd been
with before you?"
"No. But even if I did, it wouldn't tell you who
your father was."
"Why not?"
His eyes gentled, revealing a caring side of the
businessman Nate had never seen. "Because, detective, Linda Dale wasn't
your birth mother."
Chapter Twenty-eight
I don't understand." Regan felt the blood
drain from her face, and she was distantly aware of Nate tightening his hold on
her.
While she had learned to expect the unexpected during
investigations, she felt as if she'd landed in one of those Halloween haunted
houses, where goblins and ghouls kept leaping out at you as you wandered
through twisting hallways in the dark.
"It's obvious that I'm the toddler the police
discovered in the house after Mr. Boyce found her body." The image of
Linda Dale lying in the front seat of that car would stay in her mind for a very
long time, and she hated that it wasn't softened with happier memories. "I
have the elephant."
"Gabriel." He closed his eyes and exhaled a
long breath. When he opened them again, he smiled faintly. "It was from a
little store in the Quarter. You dragged it around with you everywhere. It was
the first—and last—child's toy I ever bought.
"When I first returned home from my weekend binge
and heard Linda was dead, my first thought was that Toni had killed her. She
might not have any love for me, but she definitely enjoyed being Mrs. Charles
Melancon. Her people had made their fortune in the slave trade, which even down
here was considered unseemly. Marrying into my family bought the respectability
she craved."
"And made her queen of the parish, once your mother
couldn't hold the crown," Regan guessed.
"Exactly." His look was one of respect.
"That's a very good analysis, considering you haven't been in Blue Bayou
very long."
"I'm a quick study." It helped in the murder
business. "When did you realize your mother killed Linda?"
"Decades later. She and Caledonia kept their
secret well; it was only when her mind began to go and she'd have these
flashbacks to the past that I discovered the truth."
"That must have been tough," Nate said.
"Realizing that your mother was responsible for the death of the woman you
loved."
"Yes. But it wasn't as difficult as believing
Linda had committed suicide because she thought I'd betrayed her."
"How do you know she wasn't my mother?"
Regan asked.
"Because she told me, of course. We shared
everything."
Regan's mind spun as she tried to think why on earth
an unmarried woman with a career not conducive to motherhood would take on the
responsibility of an infant. The answer, when it hit, was staggering.
"She was my aunt, wasn't she?"
He nodded. "Karen Hart was your birth mother.
She'd married your father while they were both in law school, and they had
plans to go into practice together. He drew a bad lottery number, so since it
was obvious he was going to get drafted, he enlisted in the marines. While he
was in Vietnam, he discovered he liked being military police and decided he'd
go into law enforcement when he got out, which wasn't what he and Karen had
agreed upon.
"Shortly after she'd filed for divorce, she
discovered she was pregnant. She was going to get an abortion when Linda talked
her into going through with the pregnancy and giving the baby—you—to her."
This time his faint, reminiscent smile touched his eyes. "Karen wasn't the
only tough-minded sister. In her own way, Linda could be very persuasive. And
she knew what she wanted—which was you. She was also a natural-born mother. I
don't think she was ever happier than during those years with you."
That was something, at least, Regan thought, trying to
find some silver lining.
"I called Karen to tell her what had
happened," he continued, answering a question that had been niggling at
Regan: how Karen Hart could have known about her sister's death when Nate's
father hadn't been able to locate her. "She came to get you. I asked if I
could stay in touch, since we'd gotten close and I knew you'd miss the woman
who'd been the only mother you knew. I never knew if Karen didn't believe the
story of Linda's suicide and perhaps didn't trust me, but she said she didn't
want to confuse you about who you were. She also warned me that if I ever tried
to contact you, she'd do everything she could legally to ruin not just my
reputation and my business, but my life as well. I believed her."
As did Regan.
"But the real reason I allowed her to have her way
was because I thought perhaps she was right about it being better if you never
knew about the circumstances surrounding the first two years of your
life."
He heaved out a long breath, as if relieved to finally
get the secret out in the open. "I realize this has all come as a
shock," he said, proving himself the master of the understatement.
"But I'm going to say the same thing to you I did to Karen. I'd like to
stay in touch. If you think that might be possible."
"I don't know." Regan was not going to lie.
"I have to sort things out in my own mind."
He nodded gravely. "I can understand that."
He stood up. "I'd better go retrieve Mother and take her home."
There was no statute of limitation on murder, and
while it might have been an accident, the woman lying upstairs had taken a
life. Even knowing that, Regan didn't make a move to stop him as he left the
room.
* * *
Regan was extremely grateful when Nate didn't talk on
the drive back to the inn. She felt too drained for conversation.
A little more than an hour after Bethany Melancon's
attack, they were back in the suite.
"Well," she said on a long sigh. "I was
thinking earlier that I'd never forget this day. Charles Melancon and his
mother certainly made sure of that."
"Helluva story," he said.
"No kidding."
"What are you going to do next?"
"I can't see that there is much to do. There's no
point in trying to open an investigation. Mrs. Melancon's obviously not capable
of presenting a defense, and Caledonia's an old woman who doesn't need to be
hit with an accessory murder charge."
"Linda must've been a really special
person," Nate offered. "Taking on her sister's baby that way."
"Yes." Regan sighed again, weary from the
strange emotional roller coaster. "She must have been. I suppose I have to
give my mother credit for having carried me, when she certainly didn't have
to."
"I am certainly grateful for that." Regan
seemed to be doing remarkably well with all this. Then again, his detective was
a remarkable woman. "I feel guilty about having opened this can of
worms," he said carefully, trying to find a way to say the words he'd
never thought he'd want to say to any woman.
"I'm fine."
He doubted that was precisely the case yet, but she
would be. He knew that.
"It occurred to me," he said with as much
casualness as he could muster, "sometime between when you were being held
hostage and tonight's party, that the thing to do would be to spend the rest of
my life making it up to you."
He felt her stiffen in his arms. Not a good sign.
"Oh, Nate." She dragged a hand through her
hair.
Damn. Definitely not a good sign.
"I love you, Regan."
"You can't."
That was certainly definitive. "Of course I can.
I was going to tell you earlier this evening, but then things got a little
crazy."
"That's certainly an understatement." She
shook her head and looked out over the moon-gilded bayou. "There's a full
moon."
"It's real pretty."
"It is. But everyone knows people behave
differently during full moons. I've Learned never to schedule weekends off
then, because homicides always increase, and heaven knows, when I was a patrol
cop—"
"What I'm feeling isn't related to any full
moon." Wishing she seemed a little happier about his declaration, he took
her distressed face between his hands. "I love you, Regan. And I want to
marry you." There. He'd said the M word and survived. In fact, hearing it
out loud sounded amazingly cool.
"It's too soon."
"Okay." He could live with that. "I
understand that women like long engagements so they have enough time to plan a
big blowout wedding, and while I'm really looking forward to our honeymoon-Jack
recommends Kauai, by the way, since he and Dani had such a good time there—I’m
open to anything your little heart desires—"
"Nate." It was her turn to interrupt him.
"I'm not talking about needing time to make wedding plans. It's too soon
to fall in love."
"Well, now, I would have thought the same thing
myself, once upon a time. But since meeting you, I've decided that love sort of
makes its own time. When it's right, it's right." He brushed his knuckles
up her cheek. Threaded his fingers through her hair. "And this is
right."
"It's lust."
"That, too," he allowed. "But I think
that's a plus, don't you? That I know I'll still want you when we're old and
gray, and we're watching our grandbabies—"
"Grandbabies?"
"I sorta like the idea. But if you don't want
kids, Regan, I'm okay with that." The idea of a houseful of little girls
who looked just like Regan and who'd dress up their Barbie dolls in police
blues and have them arrest Ken was surprisingly appealing, but Nate figured
he'd have plenty of time to convince her.
"It’s too soon to be talking about this,"
she insisted. "We haven't known each other long enough to even be thinking
about marriage. We both have our own lives, our own work-—"
"They don't need contractors in California?"
"What?"
"Relocating for the woman you love is kind of a
family tradition." He was winging it here, but surprisingly, he figured he
could handle Los Angeles if he had to. For Regan. "My dad moved here from
Chicago for Maman. Finn moved to California for Julia. And I'm willing to
relocate if you want to keep detectin' in L.A."
She was staring at him as if he'd just suggested they
become a modern day Bonnie and Clyde and start robbing banks for a living.
"Besides," he said, realizing that he ought to
let her know what other changes he was planning to make to his life, "Josh
might get a kick out of surfing in the Pacific Ocean."
"You're going to adopt him?"
"Yeah, I thought I would. But I'm not askin' you
to marry me to find him a mother, if that's what you're thinking."
"No." She waved away his suggestion.
"Of course I wouldn't think that." Things were definitely on a
downhill slide here. "I think you're making a good decision, where Josh is
concerned."
"Thank you," he said dryly.
"Even if it is a bit impetuous."
"That's me. Mr. Impetuosity."
He figured it sounded better than Peter Pan, and while
there were a lot of things he was willing to try to change for Regan, Nate knew
it'd be useless to attempt to change his nature. Which had him belatedly realizing
that he never should have expected her to fall into his arms and tearfully
accept his out-of-the-blue proposal. She'd already told him she wasn't a
go-with-the-flow type of person. The gods, who obviously had one helluva sense
of humor, must be laughing their heads off at having fixed things so he'd fall
in love with a female version of Finn Callahan.
"I don't even know who I am," she murmured,
looking away again.
"Of course you do. You're the same person you've
always been. Your family situation might have been a little screwed up, but if
you want an old-fashioned kind of family, you've got one waiting for you."
He held out his arms. "The Callahan clan might seem big to someone who
grew up pretty much all alone, but we've always got room for one more.
"Look, chиre." When he saw a sheen of
moisture that hadn't been in her eyes the entire time she'd been learning the
truth about her past, Nate was sorely tempted to pull her into his arms and
kiss her doubts away. "I'm glad to give you some time to make up your
mind, but there's something you need to know. When I found out you were in that
courthouse with Mike, and realized I could lose you, it dawned on me that part
of the reason I've spent my entire life dodging serious relationships is
because I lost two of the people I loved most, and I didn't want to take the
risk of getting emotionally hammered again.
"Now, I'm not going to beat myself up about that,
since I've never—ever—met a woman I wanted to spend all that much time with,
anyway. Until you. I love you, Regan. Enough to risk someday goin' through the
pain of losing you, because the alternative is not having you in my life at
all. And that flat-out isn't acceptable."
"Dammit, Callahan." A tear escaped to trail
down her cheek. He brushed it away with the pad of his thumb. "When you
said I was an Acorn kind of silverware woman, you said I was like your mother.
But that's wishful thinking. To hear Dani tell it, she was a cross between
Donna Reed and Mother Teresa. I'm nothing like either one of them."
"I think you may be a bit off the mark about
that, but I don't want Donna Reed or Mother Teresa. I want you. What you have
in common with Maman is that you're willing to take risks, that you're brave
enough to trust your instincts, even when they might go against the norm. I
can't imagine it was easy for her to go to college, back in a time when folks
around here tended to think people who went to college were lazy and just
didn't want to work, since an education wasn't going to help you on the farm or
in the sugar refinery. Or help you raise up your babies, which is pretty much
what women were expected to do.
"But she did go to college. Not only that, she
broke family tradition and ventured north across the Mason-Dixon line. Then to
top it all off, she up and married herself a Yankee, which certainly set
tongues a-buzzin'. But you know what?"
"What?"
"She didn't care. Because she trusted herself.
And she trusted my dad. And never, not once, tried to change him."
"That's just as well. Since it's impossible to really
change a person."
"True. Which is another reason why I know we
belong together. You've never once mentioned changin' me."
"Why would I?"
"I have no idea. Bein' how I'm pretty damn close
to perfect." He grinned to lighten the mood a bit. "But every woman
I've ever met starts gettin' the urge to change me."
"Which isn't going to happen." She'd never
met a man more comfortable in his own skin. "And I'd never want to change
you."
"See? We're perfect for each other. You're smart,
and strong, and brave, and honest—"
"Now you're making me sound like a Boy
Scout."
"You interrupted me before I got to the good
parts." He laced his fingers through her hair, pushing it back from her
face. "You're also gorgeous, sexy as all get-out, and I can't get within
twenty feet of you without wanting to do this."
Partly because he couldn't resist those tempting,
sweet lips another moment, partly because he wanted to leave her with something
to remember, Nate bent his head and gave her a long, deep kiss that left them
both breathless.
"I don't supposed you'd be willing to run off and
marry me right now?"
"Of course not."
He hadn't thought so, but it’d been worth a shot.
"Okay. See you around, sugar." If he didn't leave now, he never
would, and Nate knew it'd be a huge mistake to risk her someday feeling that
he'd pressured her into spending the next sixty years with him. "Give me a
call when you make a decision."
Ignoring the shock on her lovely face was the second
hardest thing he'd ever done. Getting up and walking out of the suite was the
hardest.
"Nate?"
He paused in the doorway. Closed his eyes. Braced
himself. Then slowly turned around. "Change your mind already?" he
asked pleasantly.
"I want to donate the proceeds from the petroleum
stock to charity. I thought you might be able to suggest some local ones."
Stifling a sigh, Nate reminded himself that he
shouldn't have expected an instantaneous one-hundred-and-eighty-degree
turnaround. "I'll send you a list. In LA."
"Thank you." She did not, he noted, reject
the notion of returning to California.
"C'est rien. Speaking as the mayor, I can assure
you that the town'll be real grateful."
He left without looking back. And reluctantly prepared
himself for a long, lonely wait.
* * *
Nothing was the same. Her job, which she'd already
begun to find frustrating, grew more so every day. There was nothing wrong with
her new partner, who'd transferred in from Narcotics, but he wasn't Van.
She'd always liked California, but the view of the
swimming pool from her apartment window couldn't live up to herons nesting on
the bayou, and the constant sun, which was such a part of the Los Angeles
lifestyle, now seemed too predictable.
She'd received a letter from Charles Melancon, and on
impulse called him back. She wasn't certain that she'd ever think of him as a
surrogate father, but she thought they might be able to become friends one day.
Other than a polite official letter written on Office
of the Mayor stationery, thanking her for her generous contribution to various
local charities, she hadn't heard from Nate. She might have thought he'd
written her off and moved on had she not received a pager message from Dani a
week after her return to LA., suggesting she might want to call Nate.
The cop in her instantly feared for the worst, and she
immediately called, only to get his answering machine. "Hi. Josh and I are at baseball practice. If
you're calling about a booth at the Cajun Days festival, call Jewel Breaux at
504-555-1112, and she'll be glad to take your reservation. If you're calling
about the upcoming parish council meeting, it's Monday night at seven-thirty,
Give or take a few minutes. We'll be voting on what color to repaint the
bleachers at the Buccaneer baseball park. If you want some construction work
done, leave a message and I'll get back to you as soon as possible. And if this
is Regan calling ... I still love you, chиre."
* * *
Regan's heart was thrumming a thousand miles an hour
with anticipation as the pirogue wove through mist-draped black waters.
"I really appreciate this," she told Jack.
It was a month since Mardi Gras. After having discovered a recent storm had
temporarily turned the road to Nate's house back to water, she'd been afraid
she wouldn't be able to pull off her surprise.
Jack's grin flashed white in the moon-spangled
darkness. "It's easy enough for someone who's lived their entire life in
this bayou to get lost at night. If you got lost, it could take the search-and-rescue
squad until morning to find you. Which would give you the chance to change your
mind 'bout marrying my little brother."
"I'm not going to change my mind."
"I'm real pleased to here that, chиre. Since Nate
isn't, either."
"I know." She'd been calling him every day,
choosing times she guessed he'd be working. While the answering machine message
changed every day, the closing line had remained the same. The idea still
amazed her—delighted her. She finally realized that he'd been right. She'd been
falling in love with him from the beginning—if not when he'd shown up at the
station, at least from that night they'd rescued Josh together.
Time didn't really matter at all. Except for the fact
she'd already wasted thirty long days and nights they could have been together.
It was past time to put her heart before her head.
"It's also very nice of you and Dani to take Josh
for the weekend."
"The three of you have a real good start on a
nice little family." The house came into view as they came around a
corner. Jack cut the electric engine and drifted toward the dock. "But
sometimes a man and woman just gotta have themselves some privacy."
A welcoming yellow light shone from the windows. For
the first time in her life, Regan understood the concept of coming home.
"I don't 'magine you've ever been to a Cajun
wedding?" Jack asked as he tied up the boat.
"No, I haven't." The idea of any wedding was
still more terrifying than facing down an urban riot. "I was thinking of
something quiet. Maybe just for family and a few close friends."
His rich, bold laugh startled a trio of herons nesting
in the reeds. They took to the night sky, wings silhouetted against the full
white moon. "There's no such thing as a quiet Cajun wedding. The womenfolk
have been planning the festivities for weeks."
"They were that sure I'd cave in?"
"We were all that sure the two of you belonged
together." He retrieved her spruce green canvas carry-on from the bottom
of the pirogue. "You sure you don't need me to carry that for you?"
"It's not that heavy." She smiled up at him.
"Thank you. For everything."
"It is truly my pleasure." He bent his head
and brushed a kiss against her cheek. "Welcome to the Callahan family, chиre."
She waited until he'd climbed back into the boat and
disappeared around the corner. She was definitely on her own now. There'd be no
turning back.
She took the cell phone from her purse and dialed the
number she knew by heart.
"Hi," she said when Nate's familiar deep
voice answered on the first ring. "I'm calling about the sheriff's job. If
it's still open, I've just arrived in town—well, actually, I'm here at the
dock—and I'd like to schedule a personal interview."
The door flew open. Regan thought her heart was going
to sprout wings and fly when she saw Nate standing there, illuminated in the
moonlight.
"I'm also looking for a place to live," she
continued into the phone, "so I'd appreciate any suggestions Blue Bayou's
mayor and best contractor might have."
He was coming toward her on long, purposeful strides
as she walked toward him. "Of course, since I've given away all my
inheritance and the parish budget can't afford to pay me nearly what I was
making back in L.A.,
I'm willing to take a signing bonus. I was thinking along the lines of season
tickets to the Buccaneers' home games—I hear the team has a new sophomore
player this year who's a phenom."
They were only a few feet apart.
"This is Regan calling."
She flipped the phone closed and wondered how on earth
she could she have stayed away from this man for so long. A wealth of love was
gleaming in his eyes as she went up on her toes, twined her arms around his
neck, and lifted her lips to his.
"And I'll always love you."