Bayou Heat

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Authors: Donna Kauffman

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Bayou Heat
is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s
imagination or are used fictitiously.

A Loveswept eBook Edition

Copyright © 1996 by Donna Kauffman
Excerpt from
About Last Night
by Ruthie Knox copyright © 2012 by Ruthie Knox.
Excerpt from
Blaze of Winter
by Elisabeth Barrett copyright © 2012 by Elisabeth Barrett.
Excerpt from
Lana’s Lawman
by Karen Leabo copyright © 1997 by Karen Leabo.

All Rights Reserved.

Published in the United States by Loveswept, an imprint of The Random House Publishing
Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

L
OVESWEPT
is a registered trademark of Random House, Inc.

Bayou Heat
was originally published in paperback by Loveswept, an imprint of The Random House
Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc. in 1996.

Cover design: Derek Walls
Cover photo: © Getty Images/Carlos Emilio/ANYONE

eISBN: 978-0-345-53729-4

www.ReadLoveSwept.com

v3.1

This book is dedicated
to tne memory of my grandmother
Margaret Henderson.
From a covered wagon to a Chicago
bordello, you were New Orleans
born and the original moon-shiner.
I miss you, Gagaw.

Contents
ONE

It was a perfect night for voodoo.

Erin McClure smiled at the fanciful notion. Adventures were supposed to be fanciful.
To her they had always been magical, like exploring a previously untold fairy tale.
This particular fairy tale was her most private one. The magic that awaited her the
sort that most only whispered about.

Zombis. Conjo. Hoodoo
.

If they spoke of it at all.

If only Mac were still alive. She finally had the funding for their dream expedition,
the one death had cruelly snatched away from her father. But not from her. She had
no right to complain about anything. Mac certainly wouldn’t have.

Yet, having spent most of her formative years romping in South American jungles, Asian
swamps, African bush, and the Australian outback, she knew this trek
into the wilds of southern Louisiana would be as sweaty and bug infested as it was
exciting and magical.

She swatted at another mosquito as she climbed to the second-floor apartment she’d
rented for the next three months. Actually, it was a refurbished loft in a mostly
dilapidated row house. Still, it beat a lean-to or a tree house; she knew from personal
experience.

A very unladylike bead of sweat dripped off the end of her nose as she bent to deposit
her gear. She rubbed her face on the already wet sleeve of her Georgetown University
T-shirt. Good thing she didn’t have to be ladylike anymore, not in the classroom or
attending endless college and business functions. Teaching in the former, begging
for money at the latter. In the end, it had all been worth it. Every sip of tepid
tea with the dean’s wife, every soggy canapé eaten at another corporate we-have-money-to-burn-but-not-for-you
dinner party, every glassy-eyed student dozing in the back of her botany class was
worth it. Her dream had come true. She was jumping for joy.

On the inside.

On the outside, it was after two in the morning, she was over six hours late, and
she had an eight-o’clock meeting with several professors at the local college who
had agreed to work with her. Aside from providing a lab, computers, and access to
their collected data, they would also be supplying her with a guide into the nearby
backwaters and bayous. Without that important entrée into the notoriously closed voodoun
society, her expedition could easily take two or three times longer
than she’d planned. Longer than she had money to fund.

She dug in the back pocket of her gym shorts and extracted the apartment key that
her contact at Southeastern University, Dr. Marshall Sullivan, had thoughtfully left
with the landlord. Who had thoughtfully left it taped to his door. She smiled dryly.
Bruneaux, Louisiana, was apparently not a hotbed of sin and crime.

It was just hot.

The moment she opened the door, she decided the sound of a humming window air-conditioner
unit was the sweetest music she’d ever heard. It took less than three strides into
the room to discover that said humming unit wasn’t doing its job. The room was suffocating.

She groped for a light switch, flipped it. Nothing. “Figures.” She let the moonlight
guide her to the window, let out an uninhibited groan, and lowered her face to the
blast of cold air chugging out of the air conditioner. Only after she’d fanned her
underarms did she stop to wonder why the room was so hot.

A fluttering motion caught the corner of her eye. She turned toward what looked to
be a small bathroom. “Aha.”

The thin gauzy curtains framing the open French doors in the bathroom swayed gently
in the night breeze. Bathrooms had showers. Cold showers. She eyed the soft invitation
of the small wrought-iron day-bed positioned against the opposite wall. Cold water
won. She cranked the window unit to high and paused
long enough on her way to the bathroom to drag off her T-shirt and sports bra, then
hop out of her baggy shorts.

She stepped into the bathroom, got to the open French doors, and froze.

Something was smeared all over the bathroom tile. Blood. Even in the dim light it
looked like blood. A lot of blood.

It wasn’t until she looked down and saw the dead man—the
naked
dead man—in the tub that she screamed.

Teague Comeaux flinched and made a half-hearted attempt to swat away the annoying
sound. He wondered if the screeching banshee was heralding his welcome to hell. If
so, then hell was really … well, hell.

He tried to open his eyes, managing only one narrow slit. Unless he was delusional
as well as cursed to spend eternity roasting, that banshee looked a whole lot more
like an angel. A naked angel.

He started to smile, then thought better of it. Ti Antoine had managed to get a pretty
wicked left upper-cut to his jaw. Teague’s mind drifted from the disturbing replay
of the night’s activities—after all, if he were really dead, he didn’t have to care
anymore, did he?—back to his angel. His naked angel.

The screaming stopped. Naked Angel stepped cautiously closer. He tried to speak, but
could manage only a low groan.

Bad move, Comeaux. He flinched, moaned again,
and let his eyes slide mercifully shut as she screamed once again. It was a short
blast, but enough to make his head ring. Through the throbbing tattoo playing on his
eardrums, he could have sworn he heard her whisper “zombies.”

A second later hell went fluorescent.

Wincing, he closed his eyes tightly. He’d survived again. He doubted hell had megawatt
lighting.

Just his luck.

“You’re alive!” It was more accusation than relief. He could hardly blame her. Although
most people got to know him first before wishing him dead.

“Who are you and what are you doing bleeding all over my bathroom?”

Well, he amended, maybe
angel
was too presumptuous.

After several seconds, he managed to crack open one eyelid. At least she was still
naked. A small favor. As few and far between as they came, he made it a point not
to pass on a single one.

At least in one area, they were starting off on equal footing. He was as naked as
she.

“Hey,
mon tout nu ange
,” he managed to get out with a voice that sounded as if he’d been drinking gravel
instead of beer. “Join me?”

“You have about two seconds to explain yourself,
mon coquin voleur
,” she said in a dead-on imitation of his Cajun accent. “If I believe you,
chèr
, I’ll call an ambulance.” She dropped the accent, her voice turned hard and flat.
“If I don’t, I call the police.”

Under other circumstances, Teague would have
come up with a charm-them-out-of-their-pants smile and a toss-away line. Right now
breathing, not to mention seeing straight, was enough of a challenge. Besides, she
was already out of her pants. And he doubted his angel would fall for any line. Even
his.


Coquin voleur?
” he repeated. “I may be big,
ange
, but I’m no thief.” He watched as she took a bold step forward, stopping just short
of being able to see over the high sides of the claw-foot tub.

“And I’m no angel,” she shot back. “Time’s up.” She turned immediately for the door,
offering him another favor he didn’t pass up: the view of a sweetheart derriere.

And she was wrong about being in control.

“No police,
chèr
,” he warned softly. The very last thing he needed was Frank Bodette, Boudry Parish’s
sorry excuse for a sheriff, stumbling around in his business. He was already doing
a damn good job of screwing it up on his own.

“Too late.” She had one hand on the door.

“Now see,
ange
, that’s where you’re wrong,” he said quietly. “It’s never too late.” Not true. It
had been too late for him years ago. But the lie rolled off his tongue with the ease
of too much practice.

She turned back to him, still holding the glass doorknob. “You’re naked, bleeding,
and barely conscious. I hardly think you’re in any condition to stop me.”

Teague made the same tsking sound he’d heard all his life from his
grand-mère
Comeaux. And she thought he’d never learned anything from her. “Naked? Were you peeking,
chèr?
If I’d known, I might have thought
that
coquin
comment was a reference to something other than my … height.”

Color filled her cheeks and moved downward with the slow, sensual blush of heat. It
surprised him. Other than the initial scream of surprise, she’d been facing down a
bloody stranger, buck naked, with all the cool disdain of a debutante discovering
one of the servants dipping into the caviar.


Coquin
, in this case, meaning the same as
voleur
. ‘Thief,’ ‘crook.’ Not ‘big.’ ” She paused. “Though I imagine that derivation could
be applied to your ego.”

“Because if you had peeked,” he went on, ignoring her, “you’d have noticed I’m not
totally naked here.” He winced even as his lips slid into a wide, unrepentant grin.
“Unlike yourself.”

She glanced down, obviously startled.


Tout nu, ange
,” he repeated helpfully. “Meaning stark naked. Angel.”

It was then he realized her flush hadn’t been a brief attack of feminine modesty.
It had been anger. Even caught badly off guard by her state of undress, she barely
let it show. Relaxing, meeting his eyes once again.

Intriguing, his angel was. He’d spent his first two beers earlier that evening wishing
there was some way out of the predicament Marshall had unknowingly put him in. And
the last two wondering what in the hell an ethnobotanist would look like. The one
certainty he’d had was that whatever the answers, she meant trouble for him.

He realized now that he’d underestimated the situation on all scores.

She held out her arms and turned around—slowly—then placed her hands on her hips.
Nice hips they were too. Flared out just enough to offset her waist. Balanced by breasts
that weren’t too small, or too big. Palm sized. Teague’s fingers curled inward. She
was tall, with shoulders of a swimmer, a flat belly and long, lean, muscular legs.
Capable, strong. Graceful, but not soft. Nothing about her was soft. More Amazon than
angel.

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