Читать книгу Bayou Justice - Robin Caroll - Страница 10

FIVE

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Sleep deprived and nervous, CoCo paced the sidewalk outside the Vermilion parish sheriff’s office. She glanced at her watch, then peered down the asphalt road. What could be keeping Dwayne Williams? First thing this morning, she’d called his office and left a message. He’d returned her call before eight-thirty, assuring her he would meet her at nine-thirty for her to give her statement. According to Mickey on her wrist, nine minutes had passed since their scheduled meeting time.

Lord, I need a little help down here. I know I’m innocent, but am not so sure about Grandmere and Tara.

Wait! Did she just admit that her grandmother or sister could be involved in a murder? No way, no how. Practicing gris-gris and cunjas didn’t make one guilty of murder, did it? No, course not. Beau had been shot, not poisoned. Voodoo couldn’t pull a gun out of thin air, could it? She shook her head. She was being as illogical as Tara about superstitions.

An old Lincoln pulled into the parking lot, its tires crunching the loose gravel. Dwayne slipped from behind the wheel and marched toward her. “Sorry I’m a little late. Had to stop by the office and pick up some papers.”

She glanced at her watch. Wonderful, now they were fifteen minutes behind. What would Bubba Theriot think? She forced a smile. “That’s okay.”

He clutched a briefcase in his hand, and now that she studied him, he looked like a high-dollar attorney in his fitted suit and tie. Her smile shifted to genuine.

“This is standard and nothing to fret over.” He indicated the door with his briefcase. “Come on, allons. Might as well get it over with.”

Taking in a deep breath, she grasped the handle and jerked the glass door open. The aroma of burnt coffee reeked across the foyer of the police station, mixing with cheap aftershave. It turned her stomach. Good thing she hadn’t had breakfast.

Phones rang and people shouted, raising the noise level to a ten on the Richter scale. She fought back the instinct to clap her hands over her ears. Her soul ached for the quiet tranquility of the bayou. However, the memory that it hadn’t been so tranquil last night tapped her on the shoulder.

“Keep going, Sheriff Theriot is waving us over,” Dwayne said, his deep baritone pervading the noise around her.

She followed her attorney as he wove through the throng of police officers in the tiny station, keeping her attention focused on the floor. The cracked tile needed a good mopping. She studied the ground so intently that she nearly ran smack into Dwayne’s back when he stopped. CoCo jerked her head up.

Sheriff Bubba Theriot shook hands with Dwayne, then her. She pulled away from his sweaty, beefy clasp. She forced herself not to shudder. She certainly didn’t need to offend the lawman.

“Let’s head to the conference room,” the sheriff said. Without waiting for a reply, he herded them into a plain room, barren of any furniture save a table with four chairs, two on either side, and a single tape recorder.

She dropped into the chair Dwayne held out for her, then he sat beside her. Sheriff Theriot took a seat across the table. She glanced around the room, noticing the large mirror on one wall. CoCo gave herself a mental shake. That wasn’t an ordinary mirror—there were officers on the other side, watching her. Even though Grandmere didn’t own a television set, CoCo had seen enough movies to know.

“This is just a formality, CoCo,” the sheriff said as he reached for the tape recorder. “I’ll be recording your statement to make sure we get it right.”

Yeah, right. He just wanted to trip her up. Nerves bunched in the pit of her stomach. She’d be so embarrassed if she got sick right here in front of the sheriff. Would he automatically assume her guilty if she did?

“Ready?”

CoCo gave her recorded statement, waited for it to be typed and then signed where the sheriff indicated.

“We’ll call if we have any more questions,” the sheriff said as he showed them out.

“You can contact me directly if you have anything further to ask Ms. LeBlanc.” Dwayne passed one of his business cards to Sheriff Theriot.

CoCo and Dwayne escaped the stale air and chaotic noise of the station. Dwayne escorted her to the Jeep. “Would you like to go to the diner over there?” He nodded to the building across the street. “We can discuss what will happen now in regard to the eviction case, and you can ask me any questions you might have about the murder investigation.”

Now that her interview and statement were over, hunger pangs gripped her stomach. “That’d be nice. Merci.”

“I’ll meet you there.”

The drive across the street took but a few minutes, yet the time gave her an opportunity to compose herself and get her head on straight. She glanced at herself in the rearview mirror. Using her fingers, she combed her wavy bangs and then pulled at the bags under her eyes. A nap would definitely make it on her to do list for this afternoon.

Dwayne waited in the entry of the diner, smiling as she approached. A middle-aged waitress with a sagging mouth sat them in a booth off to the side. While casting them a curious look, she took their orders for coffee, handed them menus, then sashayed back to the counter.

“You did fine, by the way,” Dwayne said while perusing the diner’s offerings after the waitress had left.

“Merci.” She scanned the items listed on the grease-spotted bill of fare. Eggs and bacon with toast sounded mouthwatering right now. She closed the menu and studied her attorney. He had to be close to her age, twenty-nine, or just a few years older. Her gaze slid lower. No wedding band adorned his left hand. How did an African-American lawyer end up in Lagniappe?

“Is something wrong?”

She jerked her gaze to his eyes. “Pardon?”

“You’re staring at me. Is something wrong?”

Heat shot up her neck and into her cheeks. “I’m sorry. I was thinking.”

“About?”

“Beau Trahan. Who killed him?”

The waitress chose that moment to return. She filled their coffee mugs, took their orders and then hurried to another table of customers.

CoCo caught the stares from some of the people at the other tables, understanding that many wondered why a white woman sat with a black man. Even now, decades upon decades after the Civil War, some of the Cajuns in the area still held racist beliefs. Small-minded thinking drove her insane.

“You know—” Dwayne pulled her attention back to her question “—I’ve found Beau had a lot of enemies. During his time as a representative, he burned a lot of bridges. And he didn’t earn any hero worship during his stint as casino manager.”

“True, he never was a really likeable man.” She avoided the glare from the man across the way. Hillbilly redneck in Cajun country, just shoot me now. She stilled at her uncharitable train of thought. Shoot… “Have you heard what caliber weapon yet?”

He took a sip of his coffee. “While you were reading and signing your statement, I talked to one of the deputies. The autopsy will be later this morning. I’ll find out more this afternoon.”

“Do they think he was shot in the bayou?”

Setting down his mug, he shrugged. “What’re you thinking?”

“If he was killed in the bayou, it would have been farther away from where I found his body. If he’d been shot around Grisson Landing, I’d have heard the blast.”

Dwayne leaned over the table and lowered his voice. “Are you saying someone killed him elsewhere and moved him to the bayou, to that particular location? Why?”

She ran her finger along the rim of the cup. “Either to implicate my family or to hurt the Trahans.”

“Hurt them? I’m not following.”

“Two years ago, Beau Trahan’s son died in an accident.”

“I just moved here last year. What happened?”

“Caleb, Beau’s son, was out in his pirogue and hit a submerged stump. The boat capsized and somehow, Caleb broke his arm.”

“How horrible. Did he drown?”

“No.” Images of Caleb’s body threatened to choke her. Lord, make them go away. She gulped coffee, scalding her tongue, but it dulled the horror in her mind. “Best the police can guess is he started swimming toward the bank, but his broken arm slowed him down.” Another sip. “An alligator got him.”

“That’s atrocious. Did they find his body?”

She nodded, closing her eyes briefly against the memory. It didn’t block out the visuals in her head. “My grandmother heard his scream and called the police. She called me on my radio. I rushed over, arriving right before the police showed up.” She shuddered. “A gator had him in a death roll. I managed to get the gator off him, but it was too late.”

They fell silent as the waitress returned with their plates and refilled their coffee before bustling away.

“So, another family member found dead in the bayou would hurt the Trahans?”

“Not just anywhere, but Grisson Landing. Both Caleb and Beau were found there.”

Standing outside the sheriff’s office, Luc ducked under the cloth awning, gaining relief from the blistering sun. Not even noon, but the heat already danced in the red of the thermometer. Humidity had to be in the high eighty-percent range. Miserable, that’s the only way he could think to describe the weather.

He let out a long breath. The sheriff hadn’t been in the office, having gone to the coroner’s for the autopsy. The thought twisted Luc’s stomach. He’d stayed up nearly half the night battling the image of his grandfather being shot. His prayers brought him little peace. Truth be told, guilt had followed his conversation with God. Guilt that he’d accused CoCo and her family of being involved with Beau’s murder. No matter what, Luc couldn’t picture her, her grandmother or her sister shooting his grandfather. After a long grappling with the Holy Spirit, Luc knew he needed to talk to CoCo.

He should head out to her house, apologize and get back to hear what the sheriff learned from the autopsy. That’s what he should do, but his heart screamed at him to say he was sorry for more than accusations. Even if she never accepted his words. He didn’t know if he could look into her emotion-riddled eyes and not apologize for leaving her, for ending what could have been their happily ever after. Did that scenario exist?

Staring out across the street, he spied CoCo’s Jeep. How ironic. No, that wasn’t it. He glanced heavenward. Guess I’m not gonna get out of this one, huh, God?

No, the conviction sitting on his shoulders wouldn’t let him avoid what needed to be done. He walked across the street, heading toward her vehicle. Maybe he could leave a note and prevent having to see the pain in her eyes.

The door to the local diner swung open and out waltzed CoCo with a tall black man. So much for avoiding. He took a step toward her. “CoCo…”

Her eyes lit on him, not filled with pain or remorse as he’d imagined, but with anger and resentment. The urge to step away nearly strangled him.

“What’re you doing here? Following me?”

“Of course not. I just wanted to talk to you for a second.” His heart skittered like a young schoolboy’s.

She held his gaze for a moment, before turning to the man beside her. “Dwayne Williams, this is Luc Trahan. Beau Trahan’s grandson.” She jerked her stare back to Luc. “This is Dwayne Williams, my attorney.”

Luc shook the man’s hand, his mind reeling. Attorney. She’d followed through with her threat to hire one. That shouldn’t really surprise him. He turned his attention back to CoCo. “I only need a minute of your time.”

“What do you want?” She sounded tired, run down. He’d never really thought about how draining the situation—finding the body—had to be for her.

“I wanted to say I’m sorry.”

She tilted her head to the side, her eyes twinkling from the glint of the sun. “For what?”

Oh, she wasn’t about to make this any easier for him. “For accusing you and your family of being involved in my grandfather’s murder.” There, he’d said it, done what he’d been convicted to do. God, can I leave now?

“So, you believe me?”

He rolled a rock with the toe of his hiking boot. “Yeah.” He chanced looking into her eyes. Big mistake. Distrust flashed with the green. What was he doing? “I never really believed you could be involved.”

Bayou Justice

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