Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Mystery & Detective,
Private Investigators,
Mystery Fiction,
Hard-Boiled,
Louisiana,
Private Investigators - Louisiana - New Iberia,
Robicheaux,
Dave (Fictitious Character),
Photojournalists,
News Photographers
answering machine.”
“Megan Flynn and Clete Purcel?”
I WOKE AT SUNRISE the next morning and drove through the leafy shadows on East Main and then five miles up the old highway to Spanish Lake. I was troubled not only by Bootsie’s words but also by my own misgivings about the Flynns. Why was Megan so interested in the plight of Cool Breeze Broussard? There was enough injustice in the world without coming back to New Iberia to find it. And why would her brother Cisco front points for an obvious psychopath like Swede Boxleiter?
I parked my truck on a side road and poured a cup of coffee from my thermos. Through the pines I could see the sun glimmering on the water and the tips of the flooded grass waving in the shallows. The area around the lake had been the site of a failed Spanish colony in the 1790s. In 1836 two Irish immigrants who had survived the Goliad Massacre during the Texas Revolution, Devon Flynn and William Burke, cleared and drained the acreage along the lake and built farmhouses out of cypress trees that were rooted in the water like boulders. Later the train stop there became known as Burke’s Station.
Megan and Cisco’s ancestor had been one of those Texas soldiers who had surrendered to the Mexican army with the expectation of boarding a prison ship bound for New Orleans, and instead had been marched down a road on Palm Sunday and told by their Mexican captors to kneel in front of the firing squads that were forming into position from two directions. Over 350 men and boys were shot, bayoneted, and clubbed to death. Many of the survivors owed their lives to a prostitute who ran from one Mexican officer to the next, begging for the lives of the Texans. Her name and fate were lost to history, but those who escaped into the woods that day called her the Angel of Goliad.
I wondered if Cisco ever thought about his ancestor’s story as material for a film.
The old Flynn house still stood by the lake, but it was covered by a white-brick veneer now and the old gallery had been replaced by a circular stone porch with white pillars. But probably most important to Megan and Cisco was the simple fact that it and its terraced gardens and gnarled live oaks and lakeside gazebo and boathouse all belonged to someone else.
Their father was bombed by the Luftwaffe and shot at by the Japanese on Guadalcanal and murdered in Louisiana. Were they bitter, did they bear us a level of resentment we could only guess at? Did they bring their success back here like a beast on a chain? I didn’t want to answer my own question.
The wind ruffled the lake and the longleaf pine boughs above my truck. I glanced in the rearview mirror and saw the sheriff’s cruiser pull in behind me. He opened my passenger door and got inside.
“How’d you know I was out here?” I asked.
“A state trooper saw you and wondered what you were doing.”
“I got up a little early today.”
“That’s the old Flynn place, isn’t it?”
“We used to dig for Confederate artifacts here. Camp Pratt was right back in those trees.”
“The Flynns bother me, too, Dave. I don’t like Cisco bringing this Boxleiter character into our midst. Why don’t both of them stay in Colorado?”
“That’s what we did to Megan and Cisco the first time. Let a friend of their dad dump them in Colorado.”
“You’d better define your feelings about that pair. I got Boxleiter’s sheet. What kind of person would bring a man like that into his community?”
“We did some serious damage to those kids, Sheriff.”
” We ? You know what your problem is, Dave? You’re just like Jack Flynn.”
“Excuse me?”
“You don’t like rich people. You think we’re in a class war. Not everybody with money is a sonofabitch.”
He blew out his breath, then the heat went out of his face. He took his pipe from his shirt pocket and clicked it on the window jamb.
“Helen said you think Boxleiter might be a pedophile,” he said.
“Yeah, if I had to bet,