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Bayou Moon

Bayou Moon (The Edge #2)(85)
Author: Ilona Andrews

Cerise let them rage. They had to vent enough to be reasoned with. She wished she had William with her, but he had to stay outside the room. This was a Mar affair.

"They came onto our land," Mikita’s voice boomed. "Our land! They took our people. We’re Mars. Nobody does that to us and lives. We fuck them up and we fuck them up good."

"We hit them with everything we have," Kaldar yelled out.

"Y’all are out of your minds." One of the older women, Joanna, pushed from the wall. She was Aunt Pete’s cousin. "We have kids to think about. That’s the Hand we’re talking about here."

Kaldar turned to her. "You have three daughters. How the hell am I going to marry them off? We don’t have money and we don’t have prospects. Right now, the only reason people want to marry into our family is because they know if something happens, we’ll back them up. What do you want me to do when your eldest comes to me crying, because she’s in love, but the man won’t have her and we can’t even pay for her wedding? Love fades, fear stays."

"If he really loves her, the name won’t matter," Joanna yelled. "Love’s what does it."

"Really? Speaking from experience, are you? Where the hell is your Bobby, and why isn’t he taking care of his kids?"

"You leave my kids out of it!"

"We must fight," Murid’s voice cut through the noise with raspy precision. "We have no choice."

"Aunt Murid." Cerise made an effort to say it just right, sweet but with an edge to it. "You’ve lied to us."

Instantly the room was silent.

"You, and Aunt Pete, and my parents. You’ve lied to all of us. We went down to Sene this morning. My grandparents didn’t die of the plague."

Aunt Pete glanced at Murid.

"We found the blood," Richard said. "Too much blood. And claw marks on the walls."

Murid raised her head. "There was no fever. Your grandfather lost his mind and murdered your grandmother in the bedroom."

A wave of cold rolled over Cerise. It couldn’t be. "Why?"

"We don’t know," Aunt Pete said. "He had become withdrawn over that spring and summer. He rarely visited the main house. Your mother thought he was depressed. When your father and she came down to visit your grandparents, they found your grandmother’s body. He’d ripped her apart like a straw doll. All of you loved him very much. We spared you the pain of knowing what he did."

"There were two coffins at the burial." Cerise leveled her gaze at Aunt Murid.

"Your father must’ve killed Vernard," Murid said. "That’s the most logical explanation. I never saw the bodies, and Gustave would not talk about what happened in Sene, except to say that we could never have an open-casket burial. I don’t know if it was self-defense or revenge. I only know that he came back with two coffins, with their lids nailed shut."

The memory of the wall with the claw marks rose before her. She just couldn’t shake it off. The claws. The monster in the woods. Her grandparents. Somehow it all had to fit.

Cerise searched the room for Erian. "Erian?"

"Yes?" He pushed to the front.

"Once this meeting is over, I want you to take two boys and dig up Grandfather’s grave."

A collective gasp rushed through the room.

Cerise stared them down. Just try and stop me. "I want to know how he died." She looked from face to face. "The secrets stop now. Tonight we go to fight the Hand, and I will have to kill my mother. I’d like to have everything out in the open beforehand."

"I don’t think you should go," Erian said, his face calm. "I don’t think any of us should go. The Hand is too strong. Attacking them is risky."

She stared at him. "Erian, you’re the first to run into every fight!"

He nodded, his expression oddly rational. "All the more reason to listen to me now. The Sheeriles are dead. The feud is dead. Our enemy is gone and this war is over. You would put all of us in danger and for what? Your mother is gone, and we don’t even know if Gustave is alive."

The betrayal stung. Of all people, she had expected it from Richard, not Erian. Richard was cautious, while Erian hadn’t met a fight he didn’t want to win. "What the hell is wrong with you? You have been my brother since you were ten. My parents raised you. Erian!"

He crossed his arms on his chest. "Ceri, we must do what is best for the family. Attacking the Hand is plain stupid. You’re hurting and it’s making you crazy. Think about it. If they weren’t your parents, you would agree with me."

She was losing the argument; she could see it in their faces. Cerise clenched her teeth and forced her voice to sound steady. If it was a fight he wanted, she would give it to him. "So you think we should tuck our tail in and hide in the Rathole."

"Yes." Erian’s eyes were crystal clear. "They’re freaks, Cerise. We aren’t strong enough."

"I have a better idea. Why don’t the lot of us go down to Sicktree, take our pants off in front of the courthouse, and bend over? That will announce to the entire Mire exactly where we stand." She leaned forward. "Act like you’re a Mar, Erian. Or did I miss something, and did the Sheeriles cut off your balls in that fight?"

A grimace clamped his face. "Watch yourself!"

"Think very carefully before you threaten me. I’m stronger and better than you."

Erian leaned forward.

"Stop."

Cerise turned. Clara was looking at her. She sat between her husband and her oldest son, the stump of her leg making a short bulge under her dress. She’d aged, and when their stares crossed, Cerise thought her brown eyes looked gray, as if dusted with ash.

"Clara?"

The entire room focused on Clara’s face. Urow bared his teeth, reacting to the pressure. Clara put a hand on his arm.

"Yesterday I sent Mart back to our house," Clara said. "The Hand burned it. There is nothing left. As long as the freaks live, we’ll never be safe. Not us, not our children, not even in our own homes. They won’t rest until they wipe us out. We will give you our sons, so you can kill the Hand’s freaks. Kill them all. To the last one."

WILLIAM leaned against the balcony rail. They’d asked him to wait outside. He didn’t see any need to push the issue – they were loud enough that he caught most of what was said.

They battered Cerise. They screamed and argued and carried on. He wanted to walk in there and snarl them silent.

She didn’t budge. They voted and gave in. The Mars would attack the Hand at dawn.

A part of him was happy – she won. She got the fight she wanted. The rest of him was pissed off – she got the fight she wanted, and now she would run right into that fight. She was his mate, and he could end up watching her die.

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