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It was on the tip of Laurel 's tongue to tell Sava
Hands on her hips, she tamped down her temper, sighing slowly to release some of the steam, feeling drained from what little fury she had shown. "I don't have any intention of trying to solve a string of murders," she assured them. "Y'all know I have my hands full just managing myself these days."
"Nonsense." Caroline sniffed, tossing her head. "You're doing just fine. We want you to concentrate on getting your strength back, that's all. You're a Chandler," she said, seating herself once more on her throne, arranging her skirt just so. "You'll be fine if your stubbor
Laurel smiled. This was what she had come to Belle Rivière for-Caroline's unflagging fortitude and ferocious determination. There were those around Bayou Breaux who compared Laurel 's aunt to a pit bull-a comparison that pleased Caroline no end. Caroline Chandler was either loved or hated by everyone she knew, and she was enormously proud to inspire such strong reactions, whatever they were.
"We're going to lunch, Aunt Caroline," Sava
"Thank you, no, darlin'." Caroline sipped her tea and smiled enigmatically. "I have a luncheon appointment with a friend in Lafayette this afternoon."
Sava
"What do you think?" Sava
"I don't," Laurel said, automatically buckling her seat belt. Sava
Sava
"Of course not!"
"You're such a prude." She backed out of the driveway and onto the quiet, tree-lined street that led directly downtown. Belle Rivière was the last house before the road stretched out into farmland and wetlands. But even up the street, where houses stood side by side, the only activity seemed to be the swaying of the Spanish moss that hung from the trees like tattered ba
"Not wanting to picture my relatives engaging in sex doesn't make me a prude," Laurel grumbled.
"No," Sava
She let out the clutch and sent the Corvette flying down the street, engine screaming. Laurel fixed her eyes on the road and fought the urge to bring her hand up to her mouth so she could gnaw at her thumbnail.
Sex was the last thing she wanted to talk about. She would have preferred there were no such thing. It seemed to her the world would have been a much better place without it. It certainly would have been a better world for the children she'd fought for in Scott County, and for countless others. She tried to imagine what Sava
Those thoughts brought a host of others bubbling to the surface and set her stomach churning. She tried to turn her attention to the familiar scenes they were passing at the speed of sound-a block of small, ranch-style houses, each with a shrine to the Virgin Mary in the front yard. Shrine after shrine made from old clawfoot bathtubs that had been cut in half and planted in the ground. Flowers blooming riotously around the feet of white totems of the Holy Mother. A block of brick town houses that had been restored in recent years. Downtown, with its mix of old and tacky "modernized" storefronts.
She didn't turn to look at the courthouse as they passed it, concentrating instead on the congregation of gnarled, weathered old men who seemed to have been sitting in front of the hardware store for the past three decades, gossiping and watching diligently for strangers.
The scenes were familiar, but not comforting, not the way she wanted them to be. She felt somehow apart from all she was seeing, as if she were looking at it through a window, unable to touch, to feel the warmth of the people or the solace of long acquaintance with the place. Tears pressed at the backs of her eyes, and she shook her head a little, reflecting bitterly on the defense of her mental state she had made to Caroline and Sava
"I'm really not very hungry," she murmured, digging her fingers into the beige leather upholstery of the car seat to keep her hands from shaking as the tension built inside her, the forces of strength and weakness shifting within, pushing against one another.
Not bothering with the blinker, Sava
"I'm sorry I brought it up. The last thing I want is to upset you, Baby. I should have known better." She reached over and brushed at a lock of Laurel 's hair that had dried at a fu
Laurel tried to smile and looked up at the weathered gray building that stood on the corner of Jackson and Dumas. Madame Collette's faced the street and backed onto the bayou with a screened-in dining area that overlooked the water. The restaurant didn't look like much with its rusted tin roof and old blue screen door hanging on the front, but it had been in continuous operation long enough that only the true old-timers in Bayou Breaux remembered the original Collette Guilbeau-a tiny woman who had reportedly chewed tobacco, carried a six-gun, and dressed out alligators with a knife given to her by Teddy Roosevelt, who had once stopped for a bite while on a hunting expedition in the Atchafalaya.
Rhubarb pie at Madame Collette's. A tradition. Memories as bittersweet as the pie. Laurel thought she would have preferred sitting on the veranda at Belle Rivière in the seclusion of the courtyard, but she took a deep breath and unbuckled her seat belt.
Sava
The scents of hot spices and frying fish permeated the air. Overhead fans hung down from the embossed tin ceiling, as they had for nearly eighty years. The same red-on-chrome stools Laurel remembered from her childhood squatted in front of the same long counter with its enormous old dinosaur of a cash register and glass case for displaying pies. The same old patrons sat at the same tables on the same bentwood chairs.
Ruby Jeffcoat was stationed behind the counter, as she always had been, checking the lunch hour receipts, wearing what looked to be the same black-and-white uniform she had always worn. She was still ski
Marvella Whatley, looking a little plumper and older than Laurel remembered, was setting tables. There was a fine sprinkling of gray throughout the black frizz of her close-cropped hair. A bright grin lit her dark face as she glanced up from her task.
"Hey, Marvella," Sava
"Hey, Sava
"We've come for rhubarb pie," Sava
At the counter Ruby eyed Sava
The table Sava
Laurel drew a deep breath that was redolent with the aromas of Madame Collette's cooking and the subtler wild scent of the bottle brown water beyond the screened room, and allowed herself to relax. The day was picture perfect-hot and su
"We-ell," Sava
Laurel glanced across the room. At the far corner table sat the only other customer-a big, rugged-looking man, his blond hair disheveled in a ma