Crimson in the Crescent (Bourbon Street Shadows #3) Read Online Heidi McLaughlin

Categories Genre: Alpha Male Tags Authors: Series: Bourbon Street Shadows Series by Heidi McLaughlin
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Total pages in book: 134
Estimated words: 124479 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 622(@200wpm)___ 498(@250wpm)___ 415(@300wpm)
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“Escalation in the signature,” Bastien said.

“Escalation in the message.” She looked up from her notebook. “Whoever is doing this has shifted from stating to insisting. The symbol has not changed, but the delivery has. This is not the same level of communication as the earlier killings.”

Baptiste moved to the doorway connecting the front room to the next. He had positioned himself where he could observe the scene and the street at once, his body angled to cover both sightlines. “The contact said the door was open. Not forced. Unlatched and swung wide.”

“Display,” Bastien said.

“The previous bodies turned up in contained spaces. Basements. Sealed rooms. Locations that required effort to access. The killer placed this one behind an open door on a residential street at a time when foot traffic would guarantee discovery.”

Delphine closed her notebook and stood. She crossed to the body and crouched beside the head, studying the face. The vampire’s expression held the frozen recognition Bastien had documented at every scene, that instant of understanding that preceded the final moment.

“He knew the killer,” she said. “The expression matches the others.”

“They all knew the killer.”

“Which means the killer moves within the same circles as the victims. Has access to vampires across multiple bloodlines and multiple status levels. And has now decided that concealment is no longer necessary.” She stood and faced Bastien across the body. “The escalation follows a logic. Deeper carvings, repeated symbols, increasing visibility. Each killing builds on the one before it.”

The curse flared.

The spike hit without warning, driving through his arm and outward into the rest of his extremities. His vision contracted. The room narrowed to a point centered on the concentric symbols carved into the chest of Louis-Charles Garnier, and the symbols pulled at his awareness with a gravitational force that had no physical origin.

Dizziness arrived behind the surge. The floor tilted beneath his feet, and his weight shifted, and he caught himself against the doorframe with his left hand. The wood groaned under his grip. His right hand went to the mark, and the mark burned through his shirt in a language his body received but his mind could not translate.

The room spun. The concentric symbols blurred and separated and recombined. His breathing shortened to pulls that did not fill his lungs. The pressure behind his eyes built toward a threshold the curse had not reached before.

“Bastien.” Delphine’s voice reached him from his right. He could not turn toward it. The curse held his attention locked on the symbols, and the symbols pulsed in his vision at the same rate as the signal in his forearm.

Her hand found his arm. The contact cut through the dizziness, giving him a fixed point within its rotation. Her grip tightened. She had learned, across months of watching him fight the mark’s effects, exactly how much pressure to apply and exactly where.

“Breathe.” She said it the way she said his name when she meant to hold him in place.

He breathed. Blood and burned herbs filled his throat on the inhale. Shea butter and black tea cut through on the second breath.

The dizziness crested. Held. Broke.

His vision cleared in stages, the room reassembling itself around Delphine’s hand on his arm. The symbols on the dead vampire’s chest resolved into their carved reality. The floor steadied.

Baptiste watched from the connecting doorway. He had not moved toward Bastien during the episode. He had not needed to. He had seen the curse reactions before, and he had seen Delphine intervene before. He stood with his hands still and let her work.

“The symbol on this body,” Bastien said. His voice came out steadier than his hands, which trembled against the doorframe. “The repetition. Whatever I carry reacted to it.”

“Reacted how?” Delphine’s hand remained on his arm.

“Recognition. My arm recognized the pattern.”

The room held its copper scent and its wrongness and the morning light that fell through the open front door and across the body of Louis-Charles Garnier, who had repaired things on Claiborne Avenue for forty years and had died facing a door the killer left open for the city to see.

Delphine released his arm. She opened her notebook to the pages where she had sketched the concentric symbols and held them beside her sketches from prior scenes. Her pen moved between the pages, drawing lines that connected the progression.

“The depth increases follow a ratio,” she said. “Outer ring to middle ring: doubled. Middle to inner: tripled. If the next body follows this progression, the carving will reach bone.”

“If the next body follows the progression, the message will be complete,” Bastien said.

She looked at him. The morning’s warmth had left her face. Her jaw held tight, and her eyes narrowed.

“Complete how?”

He did not answer. The curse pulsed against his arm, pushing its signal into the September air, through the walls of the abandoned shotgun, out into a city that held the killer’s next word in its streets and its bloodlines and its dead.


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