Mardi Gras Madness

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Mardi Gras Madness Page 27

by Lynn Shurr


  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Angelle pulled her parents up the cracked walk to a little white frame house with a screen porch and a plaster Virgin Mary residing in the half shell of a buried porcelain bathtub painted blue on the inside decorating the yard. A cluster of bells chimed as the child pushed open the screen door to the porch and towed Laura behind her. Laura stumbled over the doorstep and her husband caught her.

  “I’m getting so clumsy,” she said.

  Robert ran his hands over her firm, bulging belly and kissed her cheek. “You don’t have to do this if you don’t want to, Laura,” he whispered.

  “No, no. It will be good for Angelle. She wants to know,” Laura replied.

  Angelle stood at the front door, calling inside, “Madame Leleux, Madame Leleux, we’ve come to have our fortunes told.”

  A small, aged woman looking like every Cajun granny Laura had ever met came from her kitchen wiping soapsuds from her hands. “Well, well, T-Angelle, a former client of mine. I heard you got good results with the powder I give you.”

  “Yes, ma’am. And now I want to know what kind of baby we’re having and lots of other things.”

  “T-Angelle, the doctor can tell you that.”

  “They want to be surprised,” the child replied in disgust. “I want a baby sister.”

  “Well, come into my special room, and we see.”

  Madame Leleux led the way to what might have been a sewing room in another house. The space was small, cluttered with tiny bottles and virtually papered with holy pictures and cards. It had the scent of home-baked cookies rather than incense. Madame seated herself on one side of a square table with most of its varnish worn off where people had placed their hands over the years.

  “You first, Mama.” She took Laura’s hand.

  Laura felt a warm surge as the old woman searched her palm. “You know, telling the future is against my religion. Been Cat’lic all my life, and the priest says only God can know what’s to come, and it’s bad to take God’s place. But if God, he tells me the future, it’s not so wrong to pass it on, I think. I got the gift, the gift from le Bon Dieu, praise the Lord.”

  “Amen,” Laura felt compelled to say.

  “Well, T-Angelle, I got some news for you, and don’t you give me no bouderie lip. You have a baby brother on the way and more to come, all boys.” Angelle’s pouty lip came out for all to see. “But you will remain the only daughter, the favorite, best-loved only daughter.”

  She took the little girl’s hand. “After the bad times, come the good. It’s all good ahead. I see you traveling and coming home. I see another man in your life, and he ain’t a brother.”

  “But I don’t like boys!” Angelle whined.

  “You’ll like this boy and your little brothers, yeah. Now go out in the kitchen and get a cold drink from the icebox.”

  Madame Leleux took Robert’s hand. “You want to know if all is well. It is. The ones you miss are in a fine place where black and white don’t matter.”

  The traiteur frowned. “One exists in the flames she started. I didn’t want the little one to hear that part. There is nothing you can do for the damned one. It is God’s will.”

  Laura shivered. Robert placed both his hands over hers.

  “And God’s will for you is to love what you have been given and not to regret what has been taken away,” concluded Madame Leleux. “Now, I never charge for my services, but you may leave whatever you see fit at the feet of the Virgin in the yard. There’s a rock off to one side you can use so it won’t blow away.”

  The little wren of a woman went spryly back to her kitchen. As Laura and Robert passed out of the house, they heard Madame urging a freshly baked chocolate chip cookie on Angelle. “Take two, take three.”

  The couple paused at the statue of the Virgin. “What do you think, twenty?” asked Robert.

  “Let’s see, she has a fifty-fifty chance of getting the sex of the baby right. The odds are greater on the theoretical brothers. Chances are Angelle will go away to college and marry. Madame probably heard the gossip about Vivien setting her mattress at the asylum on fire after they caught her and locked her away and knows she died in the flames. We were given some traditional comfort and good advice. Make it forty.”

  At that moment, Angelle joined them, clutching a paper napkin stuffed with warm chocolate chip cookies. “For the new family, Madame said.”

  Epilogue

  “I tell dem folks what come to see da church dat ain’t da real one, no. It’s just a copy for da tourists. I tell dem, me, Old Thibodeaux, da old one, she burn down. Dey called me Old Thibodeaux even den, but I’m even older now. And I can tell you a good story, me. Not so good as Tante Lu who passed on at one-hundred-two, but she gone now, and dey got only me, heh.”

  “I tell dem ’bout Miss Laura who is our librarian lotsa years now, how I saw her pulled from under da church. I tell ’bout old Miss Lilliane who usta be librarian, and how she t’rew dem books off da balcony of Chateau Camille.”

  “‘Course, dere ain’t no more Chateau Camille. Da gardens is dere, and dey can go see dem if dey want to. I tell how da police cotched crazy Miss Vivien trying to set fire to da straw in da cattle barns, but she ain’t got no matches to burn ’cept inside her head, so dey took her to a place for da criminal insane where even her rich folks from New Orleans couldn’t get her out again. Why, she hated being in dere with colored folks and such so much one day she fired her own mattress and put a end to herself. No one here cried, not wit’ what she done.”

  “I felt sorry for dat little girl, T-Angelle. Turned out to be an artist, she did. First she painted only flames, Sainte Jeanne burning up and such t’ings like dat. But da doctor says it’s okay. She workin’ t’ings out, and so she did. Went away up nort’ to study art. But she come back to see her people. Does real good, fixes up old paintings and such. Did all dose copies of da old LeBlancs dey got out in da Visitor’s Center at da gardens. Once she even done one of Pearl Segura who saved her life and won a prize wit’ it. Miss Angelle, she gave dat one away to dis black lady from New York City, a Dr. Roberta Segura, who maybe was Pearl’s cousin or somet’ing, up dere working wit’ runaway girls like.”

  “Mais, we still got LeBlancs in Chapelle. You can read about dat family in Miss Laura’s book. Tells about dem all da way back wit’ no fixin’ dem up. I tell you, me, it’s as good as one of dem paperback books, only wit’out da half-naked ladies on da cover. I got my own autograph copy. Dey sell dem out at da gardens, too.”

  “Sure, we still got LeBlancs. Dere’s T-Bob’s t’ree boys by Miss Laura. Dey named Robert Francis, Alexander and David, but dat first one called ‘Smokey’ mos’ of da time on account of his eyes. Dey gray like Miss Laura’s but got dis dark ring around da outside. Madame Leleux say it is da mark of smoke from da church burning. Dos las’ two boys, dey twins, but not alike. Dat little one, David, he calls himself a horticulturist and fools wit’ da plants. Alex, he’s a cattlemen like his daddy, but Smokey, he played pro baseball, yeah. Come home rich. Dat Smokey, he might jus’ marry old DeVille’s great-granddaughter. Times sure is changin’. I tell you, me, you got to read Miss Laura’s book.”

  A word about the author…

  Once a librarian, now a writer of romance, Lynn Shurr grew up in Pennsylvania Dutch country. She attended a state college and earned a very impractical B.A. in English Literature. Her first job out of school really was working as a cashier in a burger joint.

  Moving from one humble job to another, she traveled to North Carolina, then Germany, then California, where she buckled down and studied for an M.A. in Librarianship. New degree in hand, she found her first reference job in the Heart of Cajun Country, Lafayette, Louisiana. For her, the old saying, “Once you’ve tasted bayou water, you will always stay here” came true. She raised three children not far from the Bayou Teche and lives there still with her astronomer husband.

  When not writing, Lynn likes to paint, cheer for the New Orleans Saints and LSU Tige
rs, and take long road trips nearly anywhere. Her love of the bayou country, its history and customs, often shows in the background for her books. She is the author of the Sinners sports romance series: Goals for a Sinner, Wish for a Sinner, and Kicks for a Sinner; the Roses Series; and the single title, A Trashy Affair.

  You may contact Lynn at www.lynnshurr.com or visit her blog—lynnshurr.blogspot.com.

  Thank you for purchasing

  this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

 

 

 


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