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    Fat Tuesday

    Page 36
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      was completely destroyed." She looked at him meaningfully."They never

      caught the arsonist, but I never applied for another job, either."

      No longer eating, he sat with his elbows on the table, clasped hands

      covering his mouth, staring at her over the ridge of his knuckles.

      There was a sprinkling of freckles across his cheekbones, too, she

      noticed.

      His eyes weren't brown, as she'd previously thought, but green, so

      deeply green they appeared brown unless one looked very closely.

      "Would you like some more?"

      At first he seemed not to understand the question, then he glanced down

      at his empty bowl."Uh, please."

      He ate his second portion in silence.

      When he was finished, she began clearing the table. He offered to wash

      the dishes and she let him. She dried.

      "I've never met anyone like you," he said."This morning you practically

      begged me to return you to your husband, when it sounds to me like

      Duvall defines emotional abuse. You're like a prisoner in your own home.

      You make none of the decisions. Your opinion doesn't count even where

      your own future is concerned. You're nothing except Duvall's possession,

      something he shows off."

      "Like his orchids."

      "Orchids?"

      "He spends hours in his greenhouse cultivating orchids."

      "You're kidding."

      "No. But that's irrelevant. Please, finish your thought."

      "My thought? I guess it doesn't bother you to be no more than a

      possession when you think of all you get in return. Fancy clothes

      Jewelry. A limousine and driver. Like mother, like daughter. You just

      charge more than Angel."

      If he had slapped her, it couldn't have stung more. Throwing down the

      dish towel, she turned away, but one of his wet hands shot out and

      caught her by the wrist."Let go of me."

      "You sold yourself body and soul to Pinkie Duvall, and you feel that

      because your mother was a drug-addicted whore your decision was

      justified. Well, it doesn't wash, Mrs. Duvall. Kids can't choose their

      parents or the circumstances of their upbringing, but as adults, we have

      choices."

      "Do we?"

      "You disagree?"

      "Maybe your choices were more clear-cut than mine, Mr. Basile."

      "Oh, I think your choice was very easy. If I was a beautiful and

      desirable young woman, I might peddle myself to the highest bidder, too.

      "

      "Do you think so?"

      "I might."

      "No, I mean do you think I'm beautiful and desirable?"

      Looking like he'd taken a clip on the chin, he released her wrist. But

      even though they were no longer touching, he held her with his stare.

      After a time, he said, "Yeah, I do. Furthermore, you know I do. You use

      your sexuality like currency, and every man you meet wants to cash in,

      from a crusty old curmudgeon like Dredd to that stammering guy in the

      French Market who sold you the oranges."

      Her lips parted in wordless surprise.

      "That was me in the baseball cap, running after you with a goddamn sack

      of oranges," he said, sounding angry."I was spying on you then, and I

      was spying the night you had your little tryst with Bardo in the

      gazebo."

      "I did not have a tryst with Bardo. Not that night or any other time.

      He makes my skin crawl."

      "That's not what it looked like to me."

      "You're so self-righteous and quick to judge, which I find surprising

      since you of all people should know that things aren't always what they

      appear. You should know how extenuating circumstances can shade a

      situation."

      He advanced on her a step."The hell you talking about?"

      "You killed your partner. You fired the gun that caused his death.

      Technically that's what happened. But judgments based on that fact alone

      would be unfair to you. Because there were contributing factors.

      When taken into account, those factors exonerate you."

      "Okay. So?"

      "So, until you know all the circumstances of my life, how dare you

      preach to me about choices."

      "Mrs. Duvall?" he said calmly.

      "What?"

      "Have you ever yelled at your husband like this?" The unexpected

      question, and the calm manner in which he posed it, took her off guard.

      His eyebrows went up."No? Well, maybe you should. Maybe he'd stop

      burning down buildings if you ever said How dare you' to him and

      threatened to leave."

      "Leave?" she exclaimed on a bitter laugh."What a brilliant idea, Mr.

      Basile! Why didn't I think of that? Why didn't I "

      "Shh!" He stepped up to her, placed one arm around her waist and the

      other hand over her mouth. She tried to wiggle free, but he increased

      the pressure of his arm, squeezing her waist tighter."Shh!"

      Then she heard the noise that he had picked up seconds earlier. It

      sounded like a trolling motor.

      "Since you don't know who it is," he said in a low voice, "I advise you

      to keep quiet."

      Remembering the men who had chased them from the Crossroads, she nodded

      in understanding. He released her."Get the candle." She blew it out as

      he reached for the lantern, turning it down to barely a glow."Stay out

      of sight."

      Placing his hand on the top of her head, as he had done in the boat when

      the helicopter flew over, he pushed her down and motioned her under the

      table. She crawled beneath it.

      As nimble as a shadow, he moved to the cabinet and she watched him take

      the pistol from behind the top shelf. That was about the only place she

      hadn't searched for the gun today while he was busy with the boat.

      He tucked the pistol into the waistband of his jeans at the small of his

      back, then went to stand on the pier just outside the door.

      The sound of the motor grew louder. Soon a light appeared, flickering

      through the moss-draped branches and casting a faint apron of light on

      the rippling surface of the water in advance of the approaching boat.

      She could see enough to discern that it was approximately the size of

      the craft Basile had repaired that day.

      A man called out to him in Cajun French. He responded with a laconic

      "Evening, y'all."

      Remy felt the vibration when the boat pulled up alongside the pier and

      bumped into one of the rubber-tire buffers on the piles. On hands and

      knees she crawled from beneath the table and across the room to the

      window that afforded her a better view. She raised her head only far

      enough for her eyes to clear the windowsill. There were three men

      huddled in the boat.

      She didn't know whether to reveal herself and alert them that she was a

      captive, or to remain hidden. She desperately needed to return to New

      Orleans, but would these men provide her safe passage? Or was she safer

      with Basile?

      While debating what to do, Basile asked them if the fish were biting.

      So they weren't lawmen. Or was Basile tricking her into thinking they

      weren't?

      She took another clandestine peek. The men were barely distinguishable

      in the pale light, but there was nothing in their rough appearance to

      distinguish them as law enforcement officers, nor were th
    ere any

      official insignias on their boat.

      In English, the spokesman of the group told Burke that they weren't on a

      fishing expedition."We're looking for someone. A priest."

      "Just any ol' priest or one in particular?" Basile kept his tone light,

      but Remy knew the friendliness was counterfeit.

      "This priest, Father Gregory, we think maybe he was in trouble.

      Who knows?" She detected the Gallic shrug behind the Cajun's words.

      "If he has enemies, we don't want any trouble from them."

      "What made you think he might have enemies?"

      Basile listened to the man's tale without comment. When he finished,

      Basile said, "Lost in the swamp? Poor fool. In any event, nobody's been

      by this way since I got here several days ago."

      The three men in the boat held a whispered consultation, then the

      spokesman thanked Burke, bade him good night, and they pushed off.

      Turning the boat around, they started back the way they'd come.

      Remy considered charging through the door and calling out to them but

      decided against it. What about them had frightened Father Gregory more

      than the perils of the swamp? He must have had a compelling reason not

      to trust them.

      Or had he feared only that they would turn him over to the authorities?

      She stood up and ran toward the door, but Basile was there to block

      her."You can scream and they'll come back," he said in a low, urgent

      voice, "but you have no guarantee that they won't hurt you."

      "What guarantee do I have that you won't?"

      "Have I so far?"

      She couldn't see his eyes, but she felt their intensity, and she knew he

      was right. Her safety was reduced to choosing the devil she knew.

      Sensing her decision, he crossed the room and extinguished the lantern,

      plunging the shack into total darkness."Just in case they're around the

      bend watching," he said.

      "What do you think happened to Father Gregory after he sneaked away from

      the wedding?" she whispered.

      "God knows. But at least I know he made it that far."

      Gregory had resigned himself to dying soon.

      He wouldn't receive the death penalty for the role he'd played in the

      kidnapping, but he wouldn't last long in prison. Guys like him were

      prey, and they were outnumbered by predators. In a cell block, his life

      span might be a couple of months. But after even that amount of time,

      death would be a welcome release.

      He cowered in the backseat of the unmarked police car, his heart

      tripping crazily. But, surprisingly, they weren't heading toward the

      Vieux Carre station."Are you taking me uptown?" The arresting officers

      ignored him and continued their conversation about their upcoming Mardi

      Gras party plans.

      When they passed police headquarters without even slowing down,

      Gregory's terror went into overdrive."Where are you taking me?"

      The man in the passenger seat turned to him."Will you shut up?

      We're trying to talk here."

      "Are you guys feds?" They laughed and the driver said, "Yeah, that's us.

      Feds."

      Disliking the sound of their snickers, Gregory began to whimper.

      "I was forced to be an accomplice. Basile, he's meaner than hell. He

      threatened to kill me if I didn't help him. I didn't even know what he

      was going to do. I ... I didn't know anything about the kidnapping

      until it was a done deal."

      Since his avowals of innocence didn't seem to faze them, he took another

      tack."My daddy's rich. If you take me to his house, he'll pay you a lot

      of money, no questions asked. Just tell him what you want, and you'll

      get it. He's wealthy, I swear."

      "We know all about you, Gregory," said the one in the passenger seat

      "Now shut the fuck up, or I'm liable to get mad."

      Gregory swallowed his next earnest entreaty and began to cry qui

      officers, and all doubt of that was removed when they drove into the

      underground parking garage of an office building. At this time of night,

      the garage was empty save for only a few other cars.

      A parking garage had been the setting for countless movie murders, and

      those grisly scenes kaleidoscoped through his mind. He figured that this

      was where they would have him face the concrete wall and shoot him in

      the back of the head. His faceless body would be discovered tomorrow

      morning by an office clerk arriving early for work.

      "Please," he blubbered, recoiling against the seat when they opened the

      car's rear doors."Please don't."

      But the man he'd mistaken for a cop reached into the backseat, grabbed

      him by the front of his shirt and hauled him out. He sank to his knees

      and began to beg for his life, but they pulled him to his feet and

      prodded him toward the elevator.

      Okay, so they weren't going to shoot him in the parking garage.

      Probably didn't want to get blood on their clothes. They were going to

      take him up to the roof of the building and throw him off, making his

      execution look like a suicide. For being an accomplice in a kid napping,

      Gregory James had gone over the edge. Literally.

      However, before reaching the roof, the elevator stopped on another

      floor. When he was dragged from the cubicle, Gregory was surprised to

      find himself in a carpeted corridor, lined on either side by mahogany

      doors. At the end of the austere hallway was a set of double doors

      bearing an engraved plaque.

      When he read the name etched into the brass, Gregory's knees buckled,

      and he collapsed to the floor.

      "Get up," one of his escorts said.

      "Come on, don't be an asshole."

      Gregory assumed the fetal position and whimpered miserably.

      The double doors opened, and he heard a voice thundering down the

      hallway."What's going on?"

      "He won't get up. What do you want us to do with him, Mr. Duvall?"

      Hearing the name spoken aloud was worse than reading it on the brass

      nameplate. Gregory covered his ears. But he watched a pair of shiny

      reptile loafers coming nearer, making size-eleven impressions in the

      plush forest green carpet. When the shoes were within a few inches of

      his head, they came to a stop.

      From above him, Pinkie Duvall said, "It's not what we're going to do

      with him, gentlemen. From this point, Mr. James's fate is entirely up to

      him."

      Duvall? Sir, pardon the interruption. It's Miss Flarra on the telephone.

      She's in a state."

      "Thank you, Roman. I'll take the call." As soon as the butler withdrew

      from his study at home, Duvall picked up the extension.

      "Flarra?

      How are you, sweetheart?"

      "I'm worried sick is how I am! What's going on? I had to beg Roman to

      let me speak to you. He said he'd been instructed to hold all calls.

      Where's Remy? Why hasn't she come to see me? I haven't heard a word from

      her in days. Something terrible has happened, I know it."

      "Calm down. Nothing terrible has happened."

      "Then what's going on? Remy hasn't been here all week, and she never

      misses. Every time I call the house, I'm given the runaround."

      "Your sister's had a bout with strep throat." Evidently alarmed, she

      said, "Is she okay?"

      "A
    few days more rest and she'll be fine."

      "Why wasn't I told?"

      "Remy didn't want you to worry unnecessarily, so she asked the staff not

      to mention it to you. She's on antibiotics and is doing much better,

      although her throat is still very sore. It's hard for her to talk.

      I've been distracted by a case that is demanding all my time. I

      apologize for not calling. It's unforgivable of me."

      Pinkie listened to the silence coming from the other end as Flarra

      assimilated his lie. If he had told her the truth, he would have a

      hysterical woman on his hands, and that would only compound his problem

      Flarra was impulsive and unpredictable, he didn't need the additional

      worry of how she might react to her sister's abduction Soon he would be

      faced with informing her of Remy's demise, but he'd cross that bridge

      when he came to it.

      '"Can I come see her tomorrow?" she asked.

     


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