Mallory Kane

Security Breach


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you. DuChaud’s wife is back in the DuChaud house, by herself. My boss is wondering why she didn’t stay with her mother-in-law. What do you know about Tristan DuChaud?”

      The dread that had squeezed his chest the first time the man had called him seized him again. “DuChaud?” Murray stammered. “He’s dead.”

      “Is he?” the voice on the phone asked. “How do you know?”

      “Th-there was a funeral,” Murray stammered. “Please. Let me talk to Patrick.”

      “We’ll make you a deal. You get us proof that DuChaud is alive and we won’t kill your son.”

      Murray’s heart seized in terror at the man’s words. “No! Please! I’ll do anything, but don’t hurt my son.”

      The man sighed. “Come on, Cho. You think begging me is going to do any good? I’ve got orders from my boss to get this information or my ass is on the line. I picked you because you’re known around that area and nobody would think it unusual if you were seen around the dock or the DuChaud house.”

      “I—I don’t understand,” Murray stammered.

      “Look, we’re not bad people. We don’t want to hurt you or your kid, but if we don’t get this job done it’s going to hurt us—permanently. That’s another reason I picked you. Because you have a kid, you’re motivated. So get me some proof. If he’s alive, my boss wants to see proof. If he’s dead—” The man gave a little snort. “That’ll be harder to prove.”

      “Who’s your boss?”

      “Nope. Now, Cho, you should know I can’t tell you that. Just do what you’re told and don’t ask questions.”

      Murray shook his head numbly. He had no choice. His son’s life was on the line.

      “We’ll take care of your son as long as we can. You need to concentrate on what I’m saying.”

      Murray did his best to remember what the man had said the boss wanted. “Y-your boss wants proof Tristan DuChaud is alive? But he’s dead. They buried his body. I can’t prove he’s alive.”

      “You’re not helping yourself or your boy by arguing. We’re going to check with you every day and find out what you’re doing. This better not take long, Cho. And if you even think about going to the authorities, your son will suffer, and I do mean suffer.” The phone went dead. The caller had hung up.

      Murray stared at the phone’s screen until it went black while the man’s voice echoed in his ears. You get us proof...and we won’t kill your son.

      He had to do something. Had to rescue Patrick. But how? How could he prove that a dead man was alive?

      * * *

      IT WAS AT DUSK, the end of the day, when she missed Tristan the most. A thousand years ago, someone in Britain had known enough about loneliness to name this time of day the gloaming. A little later, it was called eventide. These days, most people said twilight or dusk. Pretty words, but depressing, according to Sandy DuChaud.

      Sandy preferred the sunrise. The beginning of the day. Each rising sun was a new promise, a bright beginning that called to her. She’d loved to roust Tristan out of bed, thrust a hot mug of coffee into his hand and make him watch the sunrise with her. And he in turn had delighted in making her take a walk with him at sunset. With Tristan at her side, she’d begun to get over her innate sadness at the fading of the sun’s light.

      But Tristan was gone now, and even the sunrise didn’t cheer her.

      “Do you know what today is, bean?” Sandy asked her unborn baby as she rubbed the sore spot on her baby bump where he liked to kick. “No? Little bean, you need to keep up. It’s been two months since your daddy died—” Her voice gave out and her breath caught in a sob.

      “Come on,” she said. “We need to unpack.” Yesterday afternoon, she’d walked into their house on the outskirts of Bonne Chance, Louisiana, for the first time since the day after her husband’s funeral. It had been so quiet, so empty, so lonely.

      At first, she had been overwhelmed with grief and sadness that Tristan wasn’t there and would never be there again. But as she’d stood looking out the French doors past the patio and the driveway to the graceful, drooping trees, vines and Spanish moss of Bayou Bonne Chance, she’d felt a serenity inside her like nothing she’d ever felt before.

      The faint sound of the surf and the mellow ring of the wind chimes on the patio washed over her, adding to her peace and calm.

      This was why she’d come back to Bonne Chance and their home and all the memories, good and bad. She could hear Tristan’s laughter in the organic, spiritual sounds of nature. It called to her as the sun always had.

      Forgetting about unpacking, she slid open the French doors and walked outside. The air in June seldom got cool in South Louisiana. Oh, sometimes a storm would send a chilly breeze in from the Gulf. But anyone who lived in the Deep South knew that chilly and cool were not the same thing.

      Cool was pleasant—afternoons on the front porch with the ceiling fan rotating, watermelon or iced tea and desultory conversation about nothing more important than how well the fish were biting. Chilly, on the other hand, was a damp breeze that cut through any material, even wool, and made fingers and toes stiff and cold.

      “We seem to be all about word choices today, bean,” she said. Lifting her head, she let the evening breeze blow her hair back from her face. When she opened her eyes, there was still a faint pink glow in the western sky.

      “Okay. Yes. The sunset is kind of pretty,” she admitted reluctantly. “I’ll give you that. But it will be completely dark in less than fifteen minutes. I’d planned to walk over to the dock and back this afternoon, but I let the time get away from me. It’s too close to dark now.”

      She’d walked over there late the day before. She still wasn’t sure why. Maybe hoping to feel Tristan’s presence there, where he’d spent so much time. That dock had been his second favorite place all through his childhood. Boudreau’s cabin had been his first.

      Tristan had always liked swimming in the Gulf this time of the day. He’d pointed out to her that as the sun went down, everything calmed. The breezes that normally seemed to carry sound died, the birds and animals quieted, and the waters of the Gulf became calm and slick as glass. He’d said it was as if the whole world hushed in respect for vespers.

      Sandy recalled the dark form she’d seen in the water, diving and swimming out beyond the shallows at the dock. She’d been looking into the setting sun and so all she could see was a sinuous silhouette sliding between the waves. She’d thought it was a dolphin.

      But now, thinking back, she could convince herself it looked human.

      The sky was getting darker every second. As Sandy turned back toward the house, a faint whispering stopped her. It sounded like voices.

      She went still, listening. Disturbed by her sudden anxiety, the baby kicked. Sandy patted her belly reassuringly.

      Within a few seconds, the sounds became repetitive and she realized her ears had played tricks on her. The susurrus noise wasn’t voices. It was leaves and twigs rustling as something or someone moved through the tangled jungle of the swamp. Something or someone large.

      But who—or what? And was it as close as it sounded?

      She shivered. There were a lot of wild animals in the swamp, some very large, like alligators or bears. But she’d lived here all her life. It wasn’t the prospect of meeting a wild animal that made her tremble.

      It was the memory of the dark form swimming gracefully in the Gulf. Had it been a person? Who would be swimming at dusk and then walking through the swamp, the way Tristan once had?

      No. She had to stop imagining that each breeze that lifted the curtains or each murmur of waves licking the shore could be Tristan—or his ghost.

      There had been nothing