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"We can't find Mrs. LeClare," Sable choked out as he
grabbed the big man and slung him over his shoulder.

"Hold on to my jacket." Shifting Caine's deadweight, he
led the two women back toward the French doors. Cort, dressed in protective
gear, met them halfway.

Moriah stopped and tried to go back. "I can't leave
Laure!"

"We'll get her out—come on." Cort grabbed the women by
the waist and hustled them out through the doors.

J. D. followed his brother out into the garden and away from the
house. He put Gantry down on the lawn and turned to Sable, who was coughing and
covered in soot but evidently not burned. "Where was Laure?"

"In Marc's study." Moriah pointed one reddened hand at
the other end of the house, the one that was burning rapidly. Then she fell to
her knees, and Terri helped her lie down on the grass.

"We found Caine in the hallway," Sable added when she
could take a breath, "but the fire was too hot, and part of the ceiling
fell in. We just couldn't get to her."

Cort and J. D. ran back to the house and looked in the windows of
the study. The room was ablaze, and they heard the sound of wood giving way.

"Watch out!" Cort lunged at him and barely knocked him
out of the way as the upper floors suddenly collapsed. A wall of burning wood
fell on top of where they had just been standing.

J. D. looked at the mountain
of flaming rubble that
had been Marc LeClare's study, and closed his eyes.

 

At the hospital, Sable stayed with Moriah until she was taken from
emergency up to the inpatient ward.

"I'll come to see you in the morning," she told her as
she touched her arm. "You rest now, okay?"

Moriah nodded and drifted off as the pain medication they'd given
her took effect.

Sable walked out to see J. D. talking to a heavyset, frowning man
in a rumpled suit.

"Gantry is in a coma in ICU. He's got second-degree burns and
a head wound," J. D. was telling the man.
"I'd
leave a guard
on him anyway." He looked around at Sable. "Excuse me, Captain."

"Hold on, Gamble." The man held out a gun and a badge.
"They're yours, if you want them back."

J. D. smiled. "You sure you want me back?"

"No." The captain slapped his arm. "But somebody's
got to keep you out of trouble."

Terri and Cort were arguing in low, furious voices about something
in the lobby, but abruptly stopped when Sable and J. D. approached them.

"How is Moriah?" Cort asked.

"They're keeping her, but the doctor said she should make a
full recovery," Sable told him.

"We're out of here." J. D. looked at his partner.
"Can I borrow your wheels?"

"Sure." She gave Cort a sideways glance. "I'm sure
your brother will be overjoyed to give me a ride." She handed J. D. her
keys.

He was silent as they left the hospital and he negotiated his way
through the reveling Mardi Gras crowds. He kept Sable close to him, holding her
in the curve of his arm. She rested her cheek against his shoulder and tried
not to think of Marc's poor wife, who had died in the fire.

"What will they do to Caine?" she finally asked.

"He has some heavy charges to face—arson, kidnapping,
maybe
manslaughter." J. D. glanced down at her. "Did you know he was in
love with you?"

"I never knew until he told me today." She shook her
head. "I don't understand why he set the fire."

"Revenge for you and your mother, maybe." He pulled up
into the private garage to his apartment and parked Terri's car in his reserved
space. Instead of getting out, he sat and held Sable for a long time. "I
almost lost you again. I am never letting you out of my sight for as long as we
live."

"That's going to be tough to do. Good thing I'm crazy in love
with you." She recalled what his boss had said to him and met his gaze.
"But are you sure you want me back?"

"Oh, baby, I want you every way I can have you. In my arms,
in my bed, in my life. I want you to stay with me and have my kids and never
even think about leaving me again." He trailed his fingers over her
soot-stained hair. "I love you, Isabel. I always have, and I always
will."

Her heart turned over as he kissed her, and she wound her arms
around his neck, feeling as if she had come home after years of emptiness and
sorrow.

When he pulled her out of Terri's car and swung her up in his
arms, she giggled. "You don't have to carry me around like a
caveman."

"Tonight I do." And he carried her into the elevator,
and up to his apartment, and straight through to his bed.

It was a long time later that Sable woke up in J. D.'s arms, tired
and slightly sore but happier than she had ever been in her life. Her hair was
still damp—at some point they had made it into the shower—but she didn't care.
She nestled close to him, feeling cold, then went still as someone seized her
hair and jerked her head back.

A
slight figure loomed over her. "Get up, you little
slut," a harsh voice hissed.

Sable released J. D. and climbed back out of the bed, wincing as
the intruder's grip nearly tore her scalp. That didn't scare her as much as the
smell of gasoline. "What do you want?"

"Justice." The figure held out a red square can and
began splashing it on the bed.

"You won't get it this way, Laure," J. D. said softly,
and turned on the lamp next to the bed.

Sable stared, horrified, at the woman's hate-contorted face.
"Mrs. LeClare? But we thought you were—"

"Dead? Oh, no." Laure smiled. "You see, while that
crazy Cajun was setting fire to my house, I made a daring and miraculous
escape. But the trauma was too much for me on top of the horrific murder of my
poor husband, and it forced me to go into hiding, in fear for my life. In a
week or two, I'll recover enough to return and tell the press all the details
of my ordeal."

Sable took in a sharp breath. "Caine didn't start the fire.
You did."

T never liked that decrepit old place, but Marc had to have
it." She stroked her hand over Sable's hair. "Just like he had to
have his daughter. I burned the house, but I can't seem to kill you."

"How many times have you tried?" J. D. asked.

"Three. You think four's a charm with this one?" She
yanked Sable's hair. "Look at her. Not a mark on her, just like before.
You'd think she was made of asbestos." She glanced at J. D. and held out
her arm over the bed. In her fist was a lighter. "Put your hands out where
I can see them, Jean-Delano, or I'll set the bed on fire first."

J. D. placed his hands on the edge of the covers. "You
hired
Bud Gantry to do your burning for you twenty-nine years ago."

"Of course I did. This slut's mother tried to take Marc away
from me." She frowned. "All that trouble—do you know, Bud Gantry
tried to blackmail me, when it was his fault he got caught? It's much cheaper
to hire someone to kill a man in prison, though. It only cost a thousand
dollars and three cartons of cigarettes. Imagine that."

"You hired Billy Tibbideau after Marc told you about
Sable."

"He was going to give up everything for her—his campaign, his
reputation, our standing in the community; he even threatened to divorce me and
leave me penniless if I didn't agree to it. He expected me to swallow all that
humiliation because she was his beloved Ginny's little brat."

Sable met her crazy eyes. "You were at the warehouse that
morning. Billy didn't kill Marc. You did."

Laure smiled and drew out a strand of dark red hair. "I paid
Billy to bring me the pole and set the fire. Marc didn't know I was waiting
upstairs for him." She clicked on the lighter. "Unfortunately Billy
got there a little early, but he won't be a problem anymore. He has left town—
permanently."

"Laure, you need help," J. D. said softly.

"Why? I can burn her by myself. I should have done it the
very first time; then she would have never broken your heart,
Jean-Delano." Laure applied the flame to a hank of Sable's hair, and
chuckled as Sable slapped it out with her hand. "See? No trouble at
all."

Sable watched J. D. tense, readying himself to spring. "You
can't get away with murder again, not with Caine in a coma."

"Billy's the one who's been trying to kill you. They'll think
he finally succeeded." She pushed Sable to her
knees.
"A shame your mother's not here, J. D. She'd enjoy this as much I
do." She clicked on the lighter again and set Sable's hair on fire.

J. D. lunged from the bed, knocking Sable aside and throwing the
gasoline-soaked cover over Laure. She screamed as the lighter ignited it and
she was covered in a blanket of flame. She fell over, screeching and writhing.

Sable rolled on the floor, away from Laure, burning her hands as
she frantically tried to put out her hair. J. D. hauled her up under his arm
and ran into the bathroom, where he thrust her under the shower.

Water blinded her, but the heat and the sickening smell of her own
hair burning vanished.

He lifted her dripping from the tub and covered her nose and mouth
with a wet hand towel before doing the same to his face. "Hold on
tight."

J. D. led her back out to the bedroom, where almost everything was
burning now. The vague shape of a blackened body lay in the center of the fire
roaring up from the bed. The intense heat seared Sable's face; in a few moments
the entire room would be filled with flames and smoke.

Sable stumbled through the smoke with J. D. to the front room,
where he jerked two coats from a rack before he got her out into the hallway.
Fire alarms were ringing and the building's overhead sprinkler system snapped
on, and the other tenants hurried out of the apartments as smoke poured into
the hall.

As she saw the other people, Sable realized why he had grabbed the
coats—they were both still naked.

"It's okay." J. D. paused long enough to wrap her in one
coat and pull on the other, then swung her up in his arms. "We're going to
be okay now, baby. I promise." He carried her to the emergency stairs.

Epilogue

J. D. waited for Sable outside Caine Gantry's room. The big man
had emerged from his coma and was due to be released in a few days. Moriah
Navarre had already been released, and was at home resting after dealing with
her injuries and the scandal that had rocked New Orleans.

Sable came out, looking fragile but beautiful in her strapless
white silk ball gown. She gave J. D. a rueful smile as she rubbed a hand over
her short red hair. "He didn't like my new style. He said I look like Anne
Heche."

"It'll grow back, and I think you look like Audrey
Hepburn." J. D. didn't want to remember how it had felt, watching Laure
set fire to Sable's head. "You sure you feel up to going to this?"

His mother had begged them both to come to the Noiret Blanc Gala,
and surprisingly Sable had been the one to accept her invitation.

"Absolutely. Your father promised to dance with me, and he
says he can waltz way better than you." She slipped her arm through his
and admired his black tux. "You can't monopolize me all night, you know,
Mr. Bond."

He laughed and led her to the elevators. After Laure's final
murderous attack, J. D. had wanted to keep Sable away from the media, but she
had insisted
on dealing with the press and the scandal. The Gambles and the
Creole community in turn had rallied around her, and now most of Marc's friends
and associates had pledged to help her with the Cajun community project.

Sable was grateful for the support but not very impressed by the
attention. "I may have LeClare blood," she told J. D., "but I'm
not joining the social set. I'm still a Cajun, and I'll always be proud of
it."

The gala was in full swing when they reached the Gamble home, and
Elizabet herself met them at the door. "I was getting worried," she
said as she kissed J. D.'s cheek, then turned to Sable and studied her.
"Now, where did you get that dress?"

She glanced down at herself. "I bought it at a new boutique
in Metairie. I hope if s all right for tonight."

"It's perfect." Elizabet took her hands and leaned over
to add in a murmur, "Take me with you the next time you go shopping there,
and I'll show you where I get my shoes."

Sable glanced down at the other woman's elegant black heels, which
had sparkling, flirty little toe straps. "Deal."

Sable faced the room with no small amount of trepidation—there
were hundreds of men in beautiful black tie, and women in bewildering varieties
of white gowns. This time J. D. was at her side, however, and they would face
whatever came at them together.

Louie rushed over and with his usual exuberant affection hugged
and kissed them both, then hustled them in to introduce them to several family
friends. J. D.'s brows rose when he saw Terri in a feminine version of a black
tux weaving through the crowd to get to them.

"Jesus, what a crowd. I feel like a transvestite penguin. You
clean up nice, partner." She elbowed J. D. and grinned at Sable.
"Looking good, too, Red."

Cort appeared and scowled at J. D. before giving Sable a brotherly
kiss on the cheek. "I thought you'd never get here. The mayor wants
someone to make a speech, and I had to give the last one."

"Oh, no." J. D. noticed how studiously his brother and
his partner were avoiding looking at each other, and suppressed a smile.
"I've only got one speech to make tonight."

Elizabet took Sable's hand and tugged at his arm. "Now would
be the perfect time, Jean-Delano."

He let his mother lead him and Sable out to the garden, where
Elizabet called out, "Ladies and gentlemen, if you would join us out here
for a moment, my son has something that he would like to announce."

People came out through the French doors into the cool night air,
and slowly fell silent as Elizabet stepped to one side. Louie put his arm
around her and grinned broadly at his son.

J. D. looked at Sable as he took her hand in his; then he
surprised everyone by going down on one knee. "Miss Isabel Duchesne-LeClare,
I would be honored if you would consent to be my wife."

Her dark eyes shimmered with tears. "Jean-Delano Gamble, it
would be my honor to have you as my husband."

As cheers and applause erupted around them, he took out the
diamond ring he had been carrying in his jacket all night, and slipped it on
the third finger of her left hand. A sudden boom went off, and colorful
fireworks exploded overhead.

"That's the end of Mardi Gras," he said, looking up at
the dazzling display before returning his gaze to hers. "Are you sorry the
excitement's over?"

"No." She drew his face down to hers. "For you and
me, if s just beginning."

BOOK: Hall, Jessica
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