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Bayou Moon - Andrews, Ilona [101]

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room.

“You shouldn’t have taken that.” Erian raised his head. “It’s done now.”

Kaldar sighed. “You’re a good man, William. Stupid but good.”

William had just about enough. “You talk too much.”

“I’ve been telling him that for years,” Erian said.

A door swung open the second time and one of Urow’s kids came in. Gaston, William remembered. The kid was about sixteen or so, judging by the face, still leaner than Urow but already a couple of inches taller and on the way to his father’s massive build. Same temper, too, judging by the shallow scars on his muscular forearms. Fighting with his brothers probably. William scrutinized his face: hard jaw, flat cheekbones, deep-set eyes, startling pale gray under black bushy eyebrows. The kid could pass for human, if the light was bad enough. Bruises marked his jaw and neck. Somebody had pummeled him.

William pointed to the chair across the table. “Sit.”

The kid sat, his shoulders hunched, as if expecting to block a punch. His left hand was missing a claw. The wound had barely had time to scab over.

“Hungry?”

The kid eyed the food and shook his head.

William got another plate, loaded it, and passed it to him. “Don’t lie to me, I’ll know.”

The kid dug into the food. William let him eat for a couple of minutes. Slowly the kid’s posture relaxed.

“How old are you?”

“Fifteen.”

Three years older than George, Rose’s brother.

“What’s your name?”

“Gaston.”

William touched the amulet. “What did you do?”

Gaston froze with his fork halfway to his mouth.

William said nothing.

The kid swallowed. “You left. Dad was sleeping. Ry and Mart went to herd rolpies into the shelter, because Mom was worried that if the Sheeriles showed up, they’d kill the rolpies first. I was supposed to watch the house. We have a hand crank siren up in the tree. If anything went wrong, I was supposed to crank the siren so Mart and Ry would run home. Mom was cooking carp.” Gaston stared at his plate. “Dad hates carp. Says it tastes like waterweeds. I had lines set up in a creek. I went to check my lines.”

Gaston looked at his plate. “I abandoned my family.”

“Who came to the house while you were gone?” William asked.

Gaston slid into a toneless monotone. “A man. He attacked Mom. He . . . cut off her leg. Ignata says that there is nothing she can do. My mom will be a cripple now. Because of me.”

The kid was dumping buckets of self-loathing on himself. The fault wasn’t his. Clara should have left when Cerise told her about Ruh. Gaston wasn’t pushed out of his family because he’d left his post. He was a child and likely not properly trained. Gaston was pushed out because Urow loved Clara, and now every time he looked at his youngest son, he would be reminded of her injury. Urow had injected himself into the situation, his wife failed to evacuate, and now they loaded all of their guilt and their mistakes onto their child and removed him from the family. A clean sweep.

The wild scraped at his insides. That was fine. The kid was his now.

“What did the man look like?”

“I only saw him for a second, when he jumped out of the window. Tall. Blond hair.”

“What else?”

“He offered Clara limes for her soup,” Kaldar said quietly.

Spider. William hid a growl. Only Spider could walk into a house of a woman to interrogate her and start the conversation by offering her fruit.

William leaned forward. “The man dove into the water and didn’t come up for air.”

Gaston blinked. “Yes. Dad and the guys didn’t believe me, but he didn’t come up.”

“He has gills that feed air into his lungs. What did he want from your mother?”

“He was asking about you and Cerise.”

William expected as much. Clara didn’t tell Spider what he wanted to know, but there had to be more to it than that. Something made him forget why he’d come there and lose himself to blinding rage. “What did she do to him?”

Gaston stared at him.

“He lost it. Otherwise, he wouldn’t have attacked her. He’s very good at inflicting pain to get people to talk. Hacking off someone’s leg just makes them bleed to death. The target goes into shock and becomes useless for

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