said.
After five o’clock, I drove into St. Mary Parish and resumed my own investigation into the fate of Ida Durbin.
To say the Chalons family lived in an antebellum home on Bayou Teche does not go anywhere near an accurate description of the singularity that characterized their home and their way of life. The house was enormous, two and a half stories tall, and had been built in the 1850s inside oak trees that were already mature. Now the trees were centuries old and kept the house in perpetual shade. But rather than restore the home to its original grandeur, as the Chalons’s wealth would have allowed them to do, they seemed to treat modernity as an enemy to be kept in abeyance.
According to the legend, the builder had mixed milk and hog’s blood in the paint, and it had dried on the cypress and oak planks as hard as iron. I suspected the truth was otherwise. The hardened texture and grayish-green color of the paint was probably due to the smoke from cane stubble fires and the mold and dampness caused by lack of sunlight inside the trees.
Or maybe I just didn’t like the romantic legends that seemed to attach themselves to the Chalons family.
Valentine’s father was named Raphael. He had become a widower twice and was notorious for his illegitimate children., erotic excursions to the Islands, and his affairs with married women in New Orleans. I wondered sometimes if his home did not mirror his soul. He hired no gardeners and let his grounds run riot. But the result was a rough kind of subtropical Edenic beauty, threaded with snakes and thorned plants that had no names. Even more incongruently, his magnolia trees grew to a huge size, dripping with flowers, his grapefruit trees bursting with golden orbs, without sunlight ever directly touching the leaves.
Formosa termites had eaten through the outbuildings, the old slave quarters, and part of the house’s walls and lower veranda, robbing them of any sense of historical severity they might have once contained, as though their edges had been molded by the gentle forces of time and foliage rather than parasitical insects. Raphael had finally relented and allowed chemical treatment of his property, but the accumulative effect of his organized neglect was a tangle of air vines, wild persimmons, palmettos, pecan trees, blooming flowers, and desiccated wood that no film company could replicate.
I stopped my pickup in front of the heavy iron gate that closed off the driveway and prevented tourists from entering the property and photographing it. But before I could get out of the truck, a black man emerged from the shadows and scraped back the gate for me. He was a heavyset, pie-faced man, with big, half-moon eyebrows and a cranium like an inverted pot. What was his name? Andrew? No, Andre. Andre Bergeron. He ran errands and did chores for the Chalons family and used to sell iced-down oysters off the tailgate of a pickup by the drawbridge near Burke Street.
“Thank you,” I said.
“Yes, suh,” he replied. “You here to see Mr. Val?”
“How’d you know?” I said.
” ‘Cause you a po-liceman in New Iberia. ‘Cause you probably working on a crime and you here to see Mr. Val ‘cause he’s a TV newsman and he got a lot of information on them kind of t’ings.”
“You got it pretty well figured out,” I said.
“Yes, suh. I do.”
I drove into the grounds, through toweringoak trees that creaked with the wind. The rain had stopped and the sky was marbled with purple and gold clouds, and through the trees I could see the sunlight winking on the bayou.
Val opened the front door. He was expansive, jocular, a bourbon and crushed ice in his hand, his sister Honoria seated at the piano in the middle of the living room, a solitary lamp burning behind her. The woodwork was dark, the furniture heavy, the air musky-smelling. “How you doing, old buddy?” Val said.
“Hope you’ll forgive me for not calling first,” I said.
“Oh no, no, no, not a