Tami Hoag - Cry Wolf

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From Publishers Weekly
As in her last romantic mystery, Still Waters, Hoag creates a pair of lovers who are so awful that they deserve each other. But this time she factors in an offensive theme: bad boys are to be tolerated, but bad girls are to be raped, mutilated and strangled. The "bad boy" is the hero, horror writer Jack Boudreaux. With antics like crashing a Corvette and swatting a smarmy evangelist preacher with a bag of fish, Jack charms Laurel Chandler. Laurel has returned to her hometown, Bayou Breaux, La., to lick her wounds after she blew a case involving child sexual abuse, lost her public prosecutor's job and suffered a breakdown. But matters are grim on the home front, where a serial killer is haunting young women, and Savannah, Laurel's man-loving sister, is becoming increasingly unstable. Despite Laurel 's anguish over losing her child abuse case, her reaction to Savannah 's problem-also rooted in abuse by a stepfather-is, "If I'd known, I don't think I would have come back now." Eventually Savannah sniffs around the wrong man and is murdered. Then Laurel is all tears and determination to find the killer.

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She moved on to Vivian, enthroned in her wing chair, looking cool and sophisticated in a royal blue linen dress. The other wing chair was occupied by a tall, dark-haired man who sat slightly turned, so that Laurel couldn't see his face. Before she could shift positions to get a quick look at him, Vivian caught sight of her and rose from her chair, the corners of her mouth curling upward in her version of a motherly smile.

" Laurel, darlin'."

She came forward, hands extended. Dutifully, Laurel took hold of her mother's fingers and suffered through the ritual peck on the cheek as they became the focal point in the room.

"Mama."

"We missed you at services this morning."

"I'm sorry. I wasn't feeling up to it."

"Yes, well…" Vivian kept the thin smile in place. Only Laurel caught the censure in her gaze. "We know you need your rest, dear. Come meet everyone. Ross, look, Laurel is here."

Ross came forward, his smile like a banner across his face. " Laurel, darlin', aren't you looking pretty today!"

He put a hand on her shoulder, and she moved deftly away, not willing to suffer his touch for anyone's sake. "Ross," she murmured, tipping her head to avoid making eye contact with him.

The clergyman was introduced as Reverend Stipple. His handshake was as soft as a grandmother's. The couple, Don and Glory Trahern, had recently taken over the plantation of Glory's uncle, Wilson Kincaid, whom Laurel remembered vaguely as a friend of her father's. Don Trahern seemed a nice mild-mannered sort. Glory was obviously courting Vivian's favor, smiling too hard and gushing too many pleasantries. Laurel murmured the requisite greeting, then found her gaze straying to the last of the group to be introduced.

The little circle of guests opened to make way for him, everyone looking up at him as if he were the crown prince of some foreign place come to grace poor little Bayou Breaux with his presence.

"… and our guest of honor today," Vivian said. "Stephen Danjermond, our district attorney. Stephen, my daughter Laurel."

A setup. Laurel felt as though she'd been blindsided. She had expected Vivian's usual assemblage of minor local royalty. She hadn't expected her mother to play this game. She and Danjermond were the only people in the room younger than forty-five. The only two people conspicuously unattached. She felt like a fool, and she felt like leaving. But she gritted her teeth and held her hand out, tilting what she hoped was a blandly pleasant look up at the district attorney.

"It's a pleasure to meet you, Mr. Danjermond."

"The pleasure is mine," he said smoothly.

His gaze caught hers like a tractor beam and held it, steady, unblinking, calm. Flat calm, like the sea on a windless day. His eyes were a clear, odd shade of green. The color of peridot, fringed by thick, short lashes and set deep beneath a strong, straight brow. He was strikingly handsome, his face a long rectangle with a strong jaw and a slim, straight nose. His mouth was wide and mobile, curving up on the ends in a sensual, almost feline way.

He would be a formidable opponent in the courtroom. Laurel knew it instinctively, could feel the power of his personality in his gaze even while she could read nothing of his thoughts. She started to draw her hand back, but he held on to her-lightly but firmly, closing both his long, elegant hands over her much smaller one.

"I've heard so much about you," he said. "I've been looking forward to meeting you, Laurel."

There was something almost intimate in his tone. His voice was a warm, well-schooled, well-modulated baritone that vibrated with the ring of old Southern money.

"Stephen is from New Orleans," Vivian said brightly, raising her voice a fraction as thunder rumbled overhead. "I met his mother years ago-though no one will get me to confess how many years," she added coyly, lashes fluttering. "Back when I spent summers with my cousin, Tallant Jordan Hill. You remember Cousin Talli, don't you Laurel? Her father was in oil, and his brother was the one who made such a fortune in the silver market and then lost it all on the New York Stock Exchange? It was such a scandal!

" Laurel was a junior bridesmaid in Cousin Talli's second wedding," she explained. Glory Trahern hung on every word. Everyone else's eyes had begun to glaze over. "Her first husband was crushed to death, you know. Lord, it was a horrible thing! But Talli bounced back and remarried well.

"A remarkable woman, Talli. She introduced me to Stephen's mother at a soiree. A lovely woman, just a precious, lovely woman! As it turns out, we had both attended Sacred Heart, but she was several years older than I, and we ran in different circles.

"The Danjermonds have been in shipping for years," she said in conclusion, the mention of business making the men tune in once again.

"Shipping and politics," Danjermond said. To his credit, he had managed to smile all the way through Vivian's monologue. "My elder brother, Simon, went into the shipping business. That left politics for me."

The rest of the cast cooed and bobbed their heads approvingly. Laurel bristled. He still held her hand, and she couldn't pull it loose without creating a scene. She brought her chin up a notch and looked him hard in the eye.

"I've always been of the belief that a prosecuting attorney's first loyalty is the pursuit of justice, not public office."

Glory Trahern sucked in a little gasp and put a hand to the bow at her throat as if it were choking her. The rest of the party stood staring at Laurel with owl eyes, except Vivian, whose stare more resembled a she-wolf's. Only Danjermond himself seemed unoffended. His smile curled a little deeper at the corners of his mouth.

"I'd heard you were quite the champion for Lady Justice."

"That was my job," she said flatly, refusing to be charmed. "And yours."

He tipped his head, conceding the point. "So it is, and my record speaks for itself. The good people of Partout Parish can attest to that."

"We certainly can, Stephen," Vivian chirped.

Beaming a smile at him, she stepped to his side and slipped her arm through his, as if she had decided Laurel wasn't worthy of him so she was taking him back. Laurel pulled her hand free and crossed her arms, thinking she might have been amused if she hadn't been so damn angry with her mother to begin with.

"Your record is impeccable," Vivian went on, glowing proudly at him, as if she were somehow responsible for this paragon of manhood. "I declare, I don't know how we'd get along without you. While all around us crime is running rampant throughout Acadiana, Partout Parish has become a virtual haven for the law-abiding."

"I swear," Glory Trahern gushed, leaning over to touch Danjermond's arm as if he were a lucky charm. "I hardly dare to set foot across the parish line, what with all these murders going on around us."

Danjermond's green eyes glowed with amusement as he met Laurel 's skeptical stare. "You see, Laurel, the advantage of having a politically ambitious district attorney? I have to do my job well, or no one will vote for me when I run for office."

The comment drew chuckles all around. Vivian patted his sleeve, pleased with his benevolent good humor. Laurel managed a smile. Stephen Danjermond was hardly the first politician to train for the job in the district attorney's office. She was hardly up to arguing philosophy with him at any rate. She had come here to put in her required appearance, that was all. By the looks Vivian was sliding her, she figured she would do well to stick to that plan.

Be a good girl, Laurel. Don't rock the boat, Laurel. Always say the right thing, Laurel.

Olive slunk into the room, looking almost apologetic, and announced in a meek monotone that dinner was ready, flinching like a whipped dog as lightning flashed outside the tall French doors.

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