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Midnight Confessions
By Candice ProctorRandom House Large Print
Copyright © 2004 Candice Proctor
All right reserved.ISBN: 0375432604July 1862, Occupied New Orleans
It had been one of those hot, stifling New Orleans days when the air pressed down dense and breathless with the threat of a coming storm. Nightfall was still hours away, but already the sky hung gunmetal gray and ugly overhead, the peaked white roofs of the tombs glowing pale in the fading light of day. A jagged flash of lightning split the gloom, and Emmanuelle quickened her step, the black skirts of her widow's weeds swaying against the worn frock coat of the white-bearded old man whose arm she held as they hurried through the great, rusting black iron gates of St. Louis Cemetery.
"Perhaps we should not have come this year," Dr. Henri Santerre said as they turned down a weed-choked alley between the high peristyle tombs. About them, the hum of the locusts intensified until it was like a vibration in the thick, hot air. "Or at least we should have left the hospital sooner. There are too many soldiers on the streets tonight for my taste."
They spoke in French, as they always did, Emmanuelle's voice thick with emotion as she said, "I refuse to allow the presence of General Benjamin Butler and his vermin in blue to prevent me from visiting my parents' grave."
"Emmanuelle . . ." The old doctor touched her hand where it rested on his sleeve, his pace slowing. "Remember, my child: You can hate what a uniform stands for and what it does, without indiscriminately hating every man who wears it."
Emmanuelle pivoted to face him, the sweet scent of the jasmine sprays she carried wafting up to mingle with the odors of dampness and decay pressing in all around them. "Uniforms do not kill and maim and destroy. Men do."
"So do women, sometimes."
She gave a startled laugh and swung away from him. "Sometimes." Kneeling on the shallow granite steps leading up to the crypt beside her, she laid the flowers against the marble slab sealing the entrance to the Maret family tomb, and added more softly, "Only, not nearly as often."
He merely grunted, his gnarled, arthritic hand descending on her shoulder and gripping tightly for support as he eased himself down, his back to the tomb. He did not kneel, and she knew he would not pray, although he would sit beside her for as long as she did. Then they would visit his wife's grave, on the far side of this city of the dead.
Slipping her rosary from her pocket, Emmanuelle began, the smooth rosewood beads passing rapidly through her fingers. Normally, she would say the entire rosary, but when thunder rumbled ominously in the distance and the clouds dropped lower, stealing even more of the fading light, she felt an apprehensive shiver that seemed oddly out of place in the evening's heat. It wasn't like her, this sense of uneasiness, of lurking danger. Thunder rumbled again, closer, and after only two decades, Emmanuelle decided to stop.
"She would be proud of you if she could see you today," Dr. Santerre said quietly when she raised her head. "Your mother, I mean. They both would."
Emmanuelle looked away, her throat suddenly tight. "Would they? I don't think so."
"That's because you've always been too hard on yourself."
She stood, shaking her head. She was stiff from kneeling, and when a sudden gust of hot wind caught her full black skirts and billowed them out around her, she staggered. Her heel slipped from the smooth stone base of the tomb, and she stumbled with a small cry that brought Dr. Santerre lurching to his feet. He reached for her just as she heard the whiz of something rushing past her.
Henri jerked backward as if he had been struck, his spine slamming against the door of the tomb behind him. She watched in numb horror as bright red blood soaked the old man's vest to bloom out in a flare around a small wooden projectile protruding from high in his torso. His pale gray eyes widening, he stared down at his chest, then at Emmanuelle.
"Mon Dieu," she said in a strangled whisper, and stretched out her hand to him.
"Run," he said, blood bubbling up from his mouth as his legs slowly folded beneath him and his eyes rolled back in his head.
She felt the wrenching tear of conflicting compulsions, a scalp-tingling fear for her own life at war with a healer's instinct to help this man who had been like a father to her for so many years. But Emmanuelle knew death when she saw it. Picking up her skirts, she ran.
CHAPTER TWO
Major Zachary X. Cooper, U.S. Cavalry, leaned one shoulder against the frame of the French doors opening off the general's study and watched as the summer storm burst over the city of New Orleans. Rain poured from the darkening sky in windswept sheets that nearly obscured the faint glow of the gaslights lining the leafy street of tall mansions. There was something almost primeval about the way it could rain in this city, Zach thought as he watched the water rise in the gutters and spill in ever deepening ripples over the sidewalks; something at once elemental and decadent about the moist heat of the days and the soft velvet of the nights. It was like a dangerous woman, this city--as reckless and seductive as sin.
He could hear, behind him, the sounds of leave-taking as "Colonel" Andrew Butler wove his drunken steps toward the front of the house. Zach stayed where he was. The less he had to do with the general's opportunistic brother, the better for his career--and his temper.
"Thanks for waiting, Cooper. Here."
Zach turned to accept the crystal glass of French brandy held out to him by General Benjamin Butler, the so-called Beast of New Orleans and Zach's commanding officer. He was an almost comic-looking figure, Butler, with his short, stout body, overly big head, and squinting, crossed eyes; comic-looking, shrewd, and dangerous--as the people of New Orleans had learned.
"I've had another communication from Washington," Butler said, his movements characteristically quick and nervous as he crossed the priceless Turkey carpet to send a sheet of elegant stationery bearing a familiar letterhead skittering across the leather top of his massive mahogany desk. The desk, like the Uptown house around them and the brandy in Zach's glass, had once belonged to a Confederate general. Butler might not have shown much talent in the field, but he had a real genius for making other people's property his own. Settling into the dead Confederate general's chair, Butler templed his fingers together and squinted at Zach over their tips. "It seems the Secretary of State has been forced to apologize to the Dutch for what he calls our 'unnecessary and rude' handling of their consul."
"Huh." Zach set the brandy to rocking in his glass, the heavy golden-brown liquid gleaming in the candlelight, the heady scent of expensive liquor filling the air. "If the Dutch consul didn't want to be stripped of everything but his socks, he shouldn't have refused to hand over his keys when I asked for them. What did the Secretary of State have to say about the eight hundred thousand dollars in Confederate silver we took from the consul's vault?"
Butler leaned back in his chair, his hands dropping. "Oh, Washington has every intention of keeping that. I'm simply supposed to order my provost marshal not to forcibly relieve any more foreign nationals of their...