that should buy us an additional sixty to ninety days.”
“And then what?” How could they prove Beau Trahan pulled such an underhanded scam on her grandfather?
“What we discover will determine how we’ll proceed.”
“Mr. Williams,” Grandmere interrupted, “your words are all good, but what’s this gonna cost us?”
He smiled, his white teeth flashing in contrast to his smooth, black skin. “If you’re interested in me representing you in this matter, how about a one-hundred-dollar retainer and a balance of nine-hundred dollars?”
CoCo grabbed her purse. “That sounds fine. Should I pay that retainer now?” A thousand dollars to make this whole thing go away sounded a lot cheaper than the fee she’d imagined on the drive over. Thank You for Your provision, Lord.
“You can pay my secretary on your way out.” Dwayne smiled again. “I’ll need to get some more information from you before I can proceed.”
Luc ran a caressing touch over his saxophone as he placed it back in its case. Playing the horn always brought him inner peace. Not as much as his daily prayer, but for midafternoon it held its own. Now that he’d finished the big consulting job he’d been working on for the past month, he had two weeks free. Felicia’s wheelchair bumped against the sitting-room doorframe. He swiveled to stare at her.
“He didn’t mean it.” She maneuvered her chair across the gleaming wood floor.
“I think he did.” He straightened, lifting his sax case.
“He’ll calm down. You’ll see.”
How he wished he could believe her. “I need to find him, talk to him. Try to make him understand how I feel.”
“Luc, when has he ever cared about what any of us feel?” Big tears welled in her crystal blue eyes, and she ducked her head.
“Hey.” He set the case on the floor and crossed the room to squat before her. “What’d he say to you?” He patted her bare knees.
“Nothing.” She sniffed and wiped away her tears.
“Then why are you crying? Come on, Boo, when have you ever not been able to tell me everything?” He crossed his eyes and stuck out his tongue, a trick he’d used to cheer her up since they were children.
She let out a small giggle. “I talked to Frank this morning.”
“And?” He waggled his eyebrows.
“It seems Grandfather paid him a little visit yesterday.” She hiccupped. “He told Frank to s-s-stay away from me if he didn’t want to end up in f-f-financial ruin.” Fresh tears pooled in her eyes.
Luc let out a low whistle. “He sure was a busy man yesterday.” He held his sister’s hands. “What’d Frank say?”
The smile she flashed sparkled and brightened the entire room, even more so than the floor-to-ceiling windows along one wall. “Frank said he told Grandfather that he could drop dead.”
“Good for him.” Frank Thibodeaux seemed to be good for his sister. He’d never seen her look happier.
“Luc, you know how Grandfather is. He’ll set out to ruin Frank if I keep seeing him.”
“He can’t hold us under his thumb forever.” Luc straightened, staring out the large windows overlooking the bayou. The afternoon sun reflected off the water, casting prisms of light and color across the marshland.
He turned back to stare at his sister. The large room appeared to swallow her small form. The white paint on every wall in the house screamed purity, always reminding him of Felicia. “You just keep seeing Frank if he makes you happy. I’ll figure something out.”
“Frank’s so mad, it scares me.”
Luc glanced at his sister, laying a hand on her shoulder. “Scares you how?”
“He’s so angry over the way Grandfather treats me. He says Grandfather isn’t allowing me to get new and inventive treatments that could maybe help me. He says there’s a surgery that could let me walk.”
His sister shook her head. “I don’t know what to think. All my doctors are ‘Grandfather selected.’ I’ve never questioned it before because he’s paid all the medical bills. If what Frank suggests is true…”
Luc ground his teeth. “We can look into it.”
“How? Grandfather controls everything we do, who’s in our lives, how we live.”
“And it’s going to stop now.”
She stared up at him with such hope and trust in her eyes it almost physically hurt him. “How? What can we do?” She lowered her head. “Maybe Mom’s right. We should be grateful for all he does for us.” Her voice cracked on a sob.
“Stop that. It isn’t true and you know it.”
“I think Grandfather’s threats have pushed Frank into making a decision.”
“What kind of decision?”
Felicia stared back up at him. This time, her smile twinkled in her eyes. “I think he’s going to propose soon.”
“That’s great, Boo.” Happiness filled Luc’s chest, but a bitter sting of remorse fell like lead to his gut. At one time, he, too, had been thinking of marriage, had even presented a ring. A life with CoCo. The knife in his heart twisted at the thought of what he’d had…and what he’d thrown away. If only he’d been able to forgive….
“I’m scared if he asks me and I accept, Grandfather will retaliate.”
“That settles it. I’m going to find him and talk reason to him right now.” Luc lifted his case.
Felicia’s hand stopped him. “What are you going to do if he won’t listen to you?”
“Then I’ll think of something else. If I have to, I can move away and get a more permanent job, buy a house for you and Mom. With this last job, my reputation is solid enough now that any accounting agency would be thrilled to hire me on full time.”
“Don’t be silly. I know you prefer consulting. If Frank proposes, then you don’t have to worry about me. I don’t want to be a burden anymore.”
“You’re not a burden. You’re my sister, and I love you.”
“I love you, too.” Her hand moved to squeeze his. “You shouldn’t have to fight my battles as well as your own.”
“It’s high time someone stood up to him.”
“And you think that person is you?”
He squeezed her hand back. “Who better?” With God’s guidance.
The purple hue of the setting sun nearly stole CoCo’s breath. She jerked her gaze from the window and laced her boots with haste. Only a few minutes of daylight remained, and she still needed to track two of the gators on her list. If she could prove they were multiplying at a less-than-normal rate, she could get more grant money for research from the Wetlands Preservation Center. And if her theory was correct, it could reduce the limits during hunting season. If only the cooyon from the State Wildlife and Fisheries would listen to her explanation.
Hunters…just the thought of them made her spine turn to grits. They weren’t supposed to hunt any of the yellow-tagged gators, yet four were still unaccounted for since a month ago. Tracking these reptiles was her life’s work—why she’d gone to college and graduated with a degree in environmental protection. She’d loved the bayous and swamps she called home and felt compelled to do her part to save them. She still did.
CoCo shut her bedroom door and whisked down the hall. Her fingers itched to fire up her airboat and get on the water. She made the turn at the top of the stairs, gripped the banister and then took the first