About the Author
James Lee Burke was born in Houston, Texas, in 1936 and grew up on the Texas-Louisiana Gulf Coast. He is the author of thirty novels, including eighteen featuring the Cajun detective Dave Robicheaux, and two collections of short fiction. Many of Burke’s book have been New York Times bestsellers and he has twice been awarded an Edgar for Best Crime Novel of the Year. In 2009 the Mystery Writers of America named him a Grand Master. He has also been the recipient of Bread Loaf and Guggenheim fellowships and an NEA grant. Three of his novels—Heaven’s Prisoners, Two for Texas, and In the Electric Mist with the Confederate Dead—have been made into motion pictures. Burke lives with his wife, Pearl, in Missoula, Montana.
Look for the next Dave Robicheaux novel,
A Morning for Flamingos
Following is an excerpt from the novel’s opening pages.
We parked the car in front of the parish jail and listened to the rain beat on the roof. The sky was black, the windows fogged with humidity, and white veins of lightning pulsated in the bank of thunderheads out on the Gulf.
“Tante Lemon’s going to be waiting for you,” Lester Benoit, the driver, said. He was, like me, a plainclothes detective with the sheriff’s department. He wore sideburns and a mustache, and had his hair curled and styled in Lafayette. Each year he arranged to take his vacation during the winter in Miami Beach so that he would have a year-round tan, and each year he bought whatever clothes people were wearing there. Even though he had spent his whole life in New Iberia, except for time in the service, he always looked as if he had just stepped off a plane from somewhere else.
“You don’t want to see her, do you?” he said, and grinned.
“Nope.”
“We can go in the side door and bring them down the back elevator. She won’t even know we’ve been there.”
“It’s all right,” I said.
“It’s not me that’s got the problem. If you don’t feel good about it, you should have asked off the assignment. What’s the big deal, anyway?”
“It’s not a big deal.”
“Then blow her off. She’s an old nigger.”
“She says Tee Beau didn’t do it. She says he was at her house, helping her shell crawfish, the night that guy got killed.”
“Come on, Dave. You think she’s not going to lie to save her grandson?”
“Maybe.”
“You damn straight, maybe.” Then he looked off in the direction of the park on Bayou Teche. “It’s too bad the fireworks got rained on. My ex was taking the kids to it. Happens every year. I got to get out of this place.” His face looked wan in the glow of the streetlight through the rain-streaked window. His window was cracked at the top to let out his cigarette smoke.
“Let’s do it,” I said.
“Give it a minute. I don’t want to drive in wet clothes all the way up there.”
“It’s not going to let up.”
“I’ll finish my cigarette and we’ll see. I don’t like being wet. Hey, tell me on the square, Dave, is it delivering Tee Beau that bothers you, or do we have some other kind of concerns here?” The streetlight made shadows like rivulets of rain on his face.
“Have you ever been to one?” I asked.
“I never had to.”
“Would you go?”
“I figure the guy sitting in that chair knew the rules.”
“Would you go?”
“Yeah, I would.” He turned his head and looked boldly at my face.
“It can be an expensive experience.”
“But they all knew the rules. Right? You snuff somebody in the state of Louisiana, you get treated to some serious electroshock therapy.”