Fever Moon (15 page)

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Authors: Carolyn Haines

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #FICTION / Mystery and Detective / General, #FICTION / Mystery and Detective / Historical

BOOK: Fever Moon
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He concluded quickly. As he walked to stand beside Marguerite while the body passed, he felt Jolene’s comforting hand on his forearm.

The pallbearers hoisted the coffin and began the walk to the church cemetery. He could not go there without thinking of Rosa, denied admittance. In his mind he could see every detail of that morning. Adele had lifted Rosa from the cheap coffin, placed her in the pirogue, and paddled upstream to an unmarked grave in the swamps.

Trying to escape his own memories, he stepped quickly outside to lead the processional to the cemetery.

The last days of October had finally given a break in the heat, and the day was crisp and sunny. His robes blew against his legs as he walked behind the coffin. The best he could do was finish the burial, thankful to God that the heat of summer had broken.

Florence tied a multihued scarf around her head, dark curls fanning out on one side beneath the red cloth, gold hoop earrings dangling. She’d made a peasant blouse with elastic at the shoulders so she could pull it low. To that she’d added a bright purple skirt, cinched around her tiny waist with a gold scarf. Judging her reflection in the mirror, she decided she looked exactly like a gypsy. She’d chosen that costume because she intended to read Raymond’s future. She’d set up a table in her front yard, complete with a clear glass ball she’d ordered from Sears Roebuck, which would pass as her gazer’s crystal. The children would love it! Her house was always the most popular destination for the trick-or-treaters who walked the town, hoping for something good in their sacks, and she never disappointed them.

Darkness had just begun to fall when she heard a tap at her door. She’d told her regular customers that she wasn’t available, but it was too early for trick-or-treaters. She went to the door, surprised to see Raymond standing there in the fading daylight.

“What’s wrong?” she asked. His face looked drawn.

“Adele is gone.”

Florence drew him inside and closed the door. “Gone where?”

“Madame went into the woods to gather more herbs for her tincture and when she returned, Adele had dressed in the clothes I left for her and disappeared. Madame caught a ride into town to tell me.”

“Shit.” Florence realized the potential trouble this meant for Raymond. “Do you have any ideas where she went?”

He shook his head. “Home? Into the swamps? I don’t know. Why would she leave Madame’s? She was so weak she could hardly sit up.”

“Crazy people sometimes have tremendous strength.” Florence had heard stories from some of the older whores how men, enraged or demented, had committed impossible feats. One man, though small and most often timid, had murdered six whores in a New Orleans brothel after being shot four times by the madam. The story was that he’d kept slashing with his knife even after his heart stopped beating.

Florence touched the crescent scar on her cheek. Crazy people had surprising strength. She knew that from personal experience.

Raymond paced the small room, and she thought of offering a drink but knew he’d refuse. He was wearing his uniform and his gun, and Raymond didn’t drink on the job.

“There won’t be another full moon for weeks,” she said. “No full moon, no
loup-garou.”
Her words earned a smile.

Raymond walked to her and touched her cheek, lifting her face. “Thank you, Florence.” His voice was rough with emotion, and he bent to kiss her cheek so that she couldn’t see his features. Florence caressed his cheek. Raymond was afraid of losing control, of feeling too much. She chose to keep the conversation light.

“You’re welcome, kind sir. Would you like your future read? I have my crystal ball ready.” Florence gave him a flirtatious look.

He hesitated, and she knew him well enough to know he was thinking of time lost, of fading daylight, of a woman alone in the night, of Halloween and the pranks that came with it, and finally, of her own need for his time and attention.

“A quick reading would be much appreciated, Lady Gypsy.”

Few people would characterize Raymond Thibodeaux as gallant, but there were times she saw it. Sometimes his language revealed a man who had explored legend and story between the covers of a book. Sometimes his eyes told her that longings from his past, years dead, still haunted him. For just a moment, she’d seen something so alive in his eyes that she’d almost betrayed herself.

“Come and sit at my table.” She took matches to light the candles she’d set up, mostly to give the illusion that she was actually staring into the ball.

They both took seats, and she felt the pressure of his foot beneath the edges of the tablecloth that covered the ground and concealed their legs. She shook off her sandal and put her foot into his crotch, pleased at the expression of surprise on his face. “I see that you are a man who feels deeply,” she said, applying light pressure with her heel. “You are a sensual man who finds such delights to be a nuisance when your mind is on work.”

Raymond laughed, encouraging her to continue.

“Tonight an opportunity for resolution will present itself. You’ll find companionship and release with a dark-haired woman. A very pretty dark-haired woman with curls.” She increased the pressure of her heel, arching her foot so that her toes came into play.

“Does the Lady Gypsy see where I can find my escaped prisoner?”

Florence waved her hand in front of the ball as if clearing it. She leaned closer to it, her warm breath misting the glass slightly in the chill night air. A shadow seemed to fill the glass, shifting like fog. She was so startled she gasped.

“Very convincing,” Raymond said. His hand had found her foot and was massaging her arch. “What do you see?”

“A search,” Florence stammered, unable to shake the disquiet that touched her. “A search through the dark woods.”

Raymond eased her foot to the ground and stood quickly. “Are you okay?”

“Of course.” She tried for a laugh. “It’s a joke. The ball is empty.” She forced a glance at it. She’d seen something. Most likely the candlelight refracted in the round glass or a magnified shadow of the movement of her hands. Whatever it was, she’d lost Raymond. He walked over and kissed her on the cheek, darkness hiding the gesture from any who passed her house.

“I’ll be back once I’ve found Adele.”

“Happy hunting,” she said. Her fingers slipped down his arm, touching his hand lightly. “I’ll be waiting.”

12
 

C
HULA sat in the window of Main Street Drug Company watching the young children dressed as witches and ghosts scamper down the street as their mothers called out warnings to them. The pharmacy boasted a full soda fountain and sweetheart tables with a view of the town’s main street.

She could hear the children’s chanting. “Trick or treat, smell my feet, give me something good to eat.” Halloween had always been the best holiday of the year to her, and were it not for John LeDeux sitting across the small table from her, she would be at home, dressed as a witch, prepared to scare the children as they knocked on the door for candy.

“It’s amazing how many pagan traditions are still part of American celebrations,” John said. “Halloween may be the clearest example.”

She pulled her attention from a dancing ghost who looked to be six or seven and refocused on the man across from her. His honey-blond hair and tanned skin were better suited to a movie idol than an academic. He was handsome, no doubt, but that wasn’t what attracted her. Her intelligence was both her protection and her prison. She’d used her mind to ward off loneliness, but with the exception of Raymond, it had always held others at a distance. Now she turned to the facts she’d studied to find common ground. “Halloween stems from a Celtic ritual, right?”

“Part of Samhain, the beginning of the season of darkness when magic is strongest.” He captured the cherry on his banana split and offered it to her.

Chula closed her eyes and bit into the sweet fruit. John didn’t realize what an act of faith it took. Suddenly chilled, she pushed her unfinished ice cream away. John stood and removed his jacket to drape around her shoulders. She found the gesture attentive and welcome. “Thank you, John. I think it was your words rather than the temperature that chilled me.”

“To the Druids, the winter, or dark season, was part of the natural cycle, as were magic and the casting of spells. On November first, they would dress in the skins and heads of the animals they’d killed and dance around a bonfire. This is the one night when humans could shift into a different form. That tradition may be the genesis of the werewolf stories.”

“The pagan touch.” Chula slipped her arms into the sleeves of his coat. The scent of a spicy aftershave lingered in the wool.

“Halloween also has a bit of Roman influence.” John’s smile was self-deprecating. “I can’t seem to climb off the lecture platform.”

She laughed. Few men had the confidence to make light of themselves. “I enjoy this kind of conversation. A lot.”

His gaze touched hers and held. “The Romans worshiped Pomona, the goddess of fruits and gardens, another harvest theme.”

“And there’s a touch of Christianity from All Saints Day or Hallowmas.” She could see she’d surprised him. “I was never a student of religion, much to the sisters’ chagrin, but I remember the tidbits that interested me. I loved the idea of it because of dressing up as saints, angels, and devils. I still enjoy costumes.”

“Halloween is a mishmash of all the traditions. The children love it, don’t they?” He nodded to another group of laughing children. Two were dressed as witches, one as a clown, one a ghost, and another a fairy.

“What’s different this year are the parents trailing behind them.” She nodded at several adults hustling to keep up with the eager children. “In the past, it was safe for the young-uns to trick or treat alone. Look at that mother’s face.” The woman who passed by the window looked terrified. “People are really upset by Henri’s murder.”

She’d turned the conversation to the pivotal place where she wanted to go. “I hope you don’t stir up more fear, John.”

He picked up her hand from the table and held it lightly. “That isn’t my intention. I’m here to observe, mainly. It’s rare to have an opportunity to see how people react to folklore, to a myth that seems to have sprung to life from our own prehistory, if you buy into some theories of psychiatry. I want to ask a few questions.”

“Questions can sometimes lead people’s thoughts in a certain direction.”

He studied her. “You have little faith in your fellow man, Chula. As Jung would point out, you see the wolf in all of us.”

She couldn’t help but smile. “I never thought of it that way, but I think you’re right. People panic and they do stupid things. I see it every day. We’re fighting a war that makes no sense. Powerful men disagree, and hundreds of thousands of soldiers with no opinion are dying. It’s hard to trust an organism that finds itself in such predicaments.” She waited for his reaction. If he was offended by her sentiments, it was best to find out now.

John’s laughter was unexpectedly loud. “I’m surprised you haven’t been hung and burned in effigy around here.”

“I’m not exceptionally well liked.” She shrugged, hiding the sudden jolt of pain.

“Because you’re a woman in a man’s job, or because you’re a woman with a brain who dares to express herself?”

“Both.” She found the admission difficult for some reason. She’d begun to believe she’d accepted her social isolation, yet now it was pinching her. Why did John LeDeux’s presence make it so?

“Have you ever considered moving away from here?”

The question was gently put, but Chula felt as if she’d been physically assaulted. “It wouldn’t matter. I’d still be odd man out.” She was mortified that her eyes had begun to mist over. “My heart is here, in this land. I could leave it physically, but I would never be a part of the next place.”

He squeezed her hand and then released it. “Are you so sure, Chula?”

“My mother’s family goes back here ten generations, to the first Acadians who were taken from their homes in Nova Scotia and shoved onto ships. They were forcibly removed halfway around the world to a land that no one else wanted—the marshland and bog that make up so much of this part of Louisiana. We made this our home.”

“I feel I should take notes,” he said, teasing her gently. “This sense of place is incredible to me. I’ve followed an academic career around the lower states and I’ve lived in some interesting towns. There’s never been a place I couldn’t walk away from.”

“To a Cajun, home is everything, John.”

“Yet you left to go to college.”

“A temporary exile.” The self-pity had passed and she could laugh at herself. “I beat it home as soon as I graduated, and now I have this very good job.”

He leaned forward and whispered conspiratorially, “You probably make more money than I do.”

“Heaven forbid.” She mimed horror.

“Will you help me do some interviews?”

“Who do you want to talk with?” She wasn’t certain she wanted to be involved.

“The sheriff, his deputy, the
traiteur
, the widow, the young boy who reported the incident—the people most intimately involved.”

“What about Adele Hebert?”

“I’d give a lot to talk to her, but I don’t know if they’ll let me.”

“They say she isn’t speaking to anyone. She’s very ill.” Chula had a flashback of the young woman lying in Madame Louiselle’s front room, chest fluttering with short, shallow breaths. “She’s been in some type of coma. No one expects her to live.”

“Will you help me with the others? Your mother said you know everyone in the parish.”

She wondered at his motives. Did he see her merely as a means to the end he wanted, or did he see her as a woman? It wasn’t a question she could ask outright. “Yes, I’ll talk to the people on your list and ask them to speak with you.”

“Thank you, Chula.”

“There’s one warning, John. If you stir up trouble, I wouldn’t put it past Raymond Thibodeaux to toss you into jail. He ram-rodded the Bastion family into holding a small, private funeral mass for Henri this morning, thereby disappointing five hundred people eager for gossip.”

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