Curse in the Quarter (Bourbon Street Shadows #1) Read Online Heidi McLaughlin

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Paranormal Tags Authors: Series: Bourbon Street Shadows Series by Heidi McLaughlin
Advertisement

Total pages in book: 115
Estimated words: 105939 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 530(@200wpm)___ 424(@250wpm)___ 353(@300wpm)
<<<<203038394041425060>115
Advertisement


Through the shop windows, dawn was beginning to paint the Quarter in shades of gold and possibility. But beneath familiar beauty, currents of change were building toward culmination that could reshape everything about how supernatural beings related to authority.

“How much time do we have?”

“I don’t know yet. Every moment that artifact remains active, it broadcasts recognition signals revealing her location and development level to anyone with the knowledge to interpret them.” Maman gathered the protective items into a cloth bag. “You need to reach her before someone else does.”

“Someone else?”

“Collectors.”

The name made his chest tighten with recognition. He'd encountered such beings during his expulsion from grace—enforcers whose authority operated beyond physical law, whose solutions tended toward permanent elimination of problems.

“What do they want with her?”

“Same thing they wanted with Charlotte two centuries ago. Prevent consciousness evolution that threatens established order.” Maman's expression darkened. “Only this time, they've had centuries to prepare countermeasures.”

The Lacroix estate's rose garden on Charlotte's twentieth birthday in 1762, where she moved between blooms that seemed to lean toward her presence. She wore pale yellow silk, her hair loose around her shoulders, looking more like a forest spirit than French aristocracy. In her hands, she carried a leather journal filled with theories that would either preserve their love or destroy them both.

“I've been thinking about time,” she said, settling on a marble bench beside the fountain where water spelled poetry in languages older than Latin. “About how it moves forward for mortals but differently for beings like you.”

“What about it?”

“When you fell from grace, did you lose your connection to eternity? Or did you simply gain a different relationship with temporal existence?” She opened the journal, revealing pages covered in mystical diagrams. “Because if consciousness can exist independent of linear time . . .”

“Charlotte, what are you planning?”

“To love you across every lifetime I'm granted, in every form I'm given, until the universe itself runs out of new configurations for souls to inhabit.” Her dark eyes blazed with vision that could reshape cosmic law. “And to make sure you recognize me each time, no matter how many centuries pass between us.”

The absolute conviction in her voice, the love that would engineer its own immortality—determination that would either bind them across eternity or scatter their souls beyond any hope of reunion.

“I need you to carry something for me,” she said, withdrawing from her reticule a locket whose silver surface reflected not their surroundings but possibilities existing in parallel dimensions. The engravings hurt to look at directly—symbols encoding concepts beyond mortal comprehension.

“Promise me that when this awakens, when it calls across whatever distances separate us, you'll help me remember what love means.”

“Why wouldn't you remember?”

“Because transformation of this magnitude requires sacrificing aspects of self that make us recognizably human.” Her fingers traced the artifact's surface with reverent care. “I'll be fire or wind or flesh, but I might not be someone capable of love as we understand it.”

“Then I'll teach you again.”

“Promise?”

“I promise.”

The memory shattered as the locket exploded into movement on Maman's reading table. Not random vibration—purposeful motion, sliding across the wood toward the shop's front door as if pulled by invisible force.

“She's calling it home,” Maman said, watching the artifact trace geometric patterns in the wooden surface. “Direct summoning. That girl has accessed more of Charlotte's knowledge than either of us anticipated.”

“I have to get to her.”

“Yes, but carefully. The network activation is drawing attention from entities that won't hesitate to eliminate anyone who threatens their authority.” She pressed the bag of protective items into his hands. “These won't stop the threats, but they might provide interference long enough for you to reach her.”

Bastien pocketed the protective materials and reached for the locket, surprised when the metal had cooled slightly—not because the recognition was fading, but because distance was increasing between artifact and source.

Delphine was moving. And she was moving fast.

“Where would she go?”

“Somewhere with power. Somewhere Charlotte would have prepared for exactly this scenario.” Maman moved to her window again, studying the Quarter's awakening streets. “The old families built their most important magical infrastructure in places that would survive across centuries. Sacred ground that couldn't be destroyed by changing politics or architectural development.”

“The cathedral?”

“Too public, too protected by forces that wouldn't approve of Charlotte's work.” Her expression shifted to alarm. “But there's another possibility. St. Louis Cemetery No. 1. Marie Laveau's tomb specifically.”

“Why there?”

“Because Charlotte's family contributed to its construction. Because certain graves there contain more than human remains. And because if you wanted to complete soul-binding work that required connection to spiritual energy . . .” Maman's voice trailed off as understanding struck her. “Lord preserve us. She's not just activating the network. She's planning to anchor it to the most powerful mystical site in New Orleans.”

The locket pulled toward the shop's exit with force nearly dragging it from Bastien's grip. Whatever Delphine was attempting, whatever working she was preparing to complete, the artifact recognized proximity to its ultimate purpose.


Advertisement

<<<<203038394041425060>115

Advertisement