Crimson in the Crescent (Bourbon Street Shadows #3) Read Online Heidi McLaughlin

Categories Genre: Alpha Male Tags Authors: Series: Bourbon Street Shadows Series by Heidi McLaughlin
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Total pages in book: 134
Estimated words: 124479 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 622(@200wpm)___ 498(@250wpm)___ 415(@300wpm)
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The murders had increased their pace. The carvings had deepened their message. The curse had amplified its reception. All three accelerations pointed toward a convergence that Bastien could feel approaching without being able to name its shape or its schedule.

He released the doorframe. His hands had steadied. The dizziness had receded to a pressure behind his eyes that he could carry.

“We need to remap everything,” he said. “Every victim. Every symbol. Every timeline connection. What we built before assumed a constant rate of escalation. This body changes the math.”

Delphine nodded. She was already writing, her pen moving across the notebook with the speed of someone transcribing before the information could fade. Baptiste stepped into the room and began his documentation of the physical scene, his camera clicking in measured intervals.

Outside, the Seventh Ward continued its morning. A school bus stopped at the corner. Children’s voices carried through the open door and across the body and into the room where three people stood inside a pattern they could see but not yet complete.

Bastien pressed his palm against his forearm one final time. The sustained tone answered, and it matched the insistence of the triple symbol carved into the chest of a man who had spent four decades fixing what others had broken.

The case was not building toward resolution. It was building toward him.

NINETEEN

Bastien sent Delphine with Baptiste.

She had argued. Had stood on the porch of the North Prieur shotgun with the morning heat pressing through her blouse and the crime scene still raw behind them, her jaw set in the formation that preceded every challenge she had delivered to his judgment. He had not yielded. The corkboard at the safehouse held every document, every sigil tracing, every photograph the investigation had produced. The remapping could not wait, and Baptiste’s field notes from the Garnier scene needed cross-referencing against the prior victims before details softened in memory.

“Both of you. The safehouse. Start with the geographic spread and work inward.”

“And you?”

“I need to see the Tchoupitoulas site again. The practice space in the basement. The depth of those carvings changed between our first visit and the Garnier body. If the killer refined their method, the practice site may show the progression.”

He believed the justification as far as it went. It was not false, but it left out the pressure building in his chest, the pull that had settled northeast since the curse reacted to the concentric symbols on Garnier’s body. The beacon was receiving, and what it received carried a frequency Bastien did not want Delphine near when it resolved into a source.

She had studied him across three seconds of silence. Her chin dropped half an inch, her breath released through her nose, and she turned toward Baptiste’s car without pressing further. She would press later. He could see that in the angle of her shoulders as she walked.

Baptiste’s car pulled away from the curb with Delphine in the passenger seat. Bastien watched the taillights reach the intersection at St. Bernard and turn west toward Esplanade. The September air held its weight around him. A radio on the block played zydeco through an open window, the accordion competing with a laboring window unit.

He did not drive to Tchoupitoulas.

He walked south through the Seventh Ward, past renovated shotguns and abandoned ones and empty lots where the storms had already finished what neglect had started. The curse pulled harder with each block, its insistence sharpening as he moved. The signal had shifted while he stood on the porch and now pointed toward the river side of the French Quarter, toward the stretch of Chartres where a figure had occupied the shadows three nights ago and watched him from a distance the curse had bridged without effort.

He had believed that face finished. The impression that had torn through him on Chartres had carried recognition that preceded sight, a memory surfacing from a depth he had not accessed in decades.

He crossed Esplanade and entered the Quarter through the Tremé side, moving down Burgundy where the residential blocks gave way to the tourist corridors one street at a time. A brass trio played on the corner of St. Philip, their trumpet reaching for a high note that the humidity bent and blurred. Bastien moved through the crowd without slowing. The curse pointed northeast, and he followed it, because the alternative was to wait for whatever occupied the other end to come to him. Waiting had stopped serving him the moment the Garnier body changed the math.

He turned onto Chartres.

The block held its daytime shape. Tourists browsed the antique shops. A woman walked a pair of greyhounds past the gallery where hand-poured colonial glass sat in a window display that had not changed in twenty years. The gap between two buildings at the far end held nothing except shade and the heat the bricks had stored through the morning.


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