Read Lucky's Lady Online

Authors: Tami Hoag

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary

Lucky's Lady (32 page)

“Have you gotten over me, Serena?” he asked, his voice soft and smoky.

Serena tried to turn her head away, but he caught her chin with one hand and tilted it up so she had no choice but to look at him.

“No,” she whispered, trembling inside. A lone tear teetered on the barrier of her lashes, then spilled over, washing away her last hope of keeping her pride intact. “No.”

“Then what the hell are you doin' here with another man?”

The jealousy in his tone was unmistakable. Serena's eyes widened. “David? He's just a friend. We work together.”

“You're not lovers?”

“No!” she snapped in annoyance. “Not that it's any of your business.”

Lucky took a step back from her, jamming his hands at the waist of his trousers. His scowl darkened from black to bottomless. “It damn well is my business,
chère
.”

“Oh, is that right?” Serena said sarcastically, one brow rising in mocking inquiry. “And why is that?”

“Because I love you!” Lucky roared.

The night seemed to go perfectly still. Serena stared up at him, unable to speak, unable to move a muscle. Lucky stared back, his chest heaving.

“I love you,” he said again softly, without the anger.

Slowly Serena rose from the bench, never taking her eyes off Lucky. “I'd given up hope on you,” she murmured. “I waited and waited for you to come back.” She shook her head as tears flooded her eyes and blurred her vision. “Say it again,” she whispered as she went into his arms. “Please say it again.”

“I love you.” Each word was a kiss against her temple as Lucky held her close and gloried in the feel of her against him. “
Je t'aime, ma chérie. Je t'aime
.”

He crushed her to him, finding her mouth with his and kissing her deeply, roughly, with all the hunger pent up over the long months without her. His tongue rubbed against hers, drinking in the sweet taste of her, then he pulled back a fraction of an inch and kissed the tears from her cheeks and lashes.

“Don' cry,
chère
. Don' cry,” he said. “It's all right now.”

Serena couldn't help herself. The rush of emotion was too strong, her control too fragile. She pressed her face into Lucky's broad shoulder and cried as the flood of feelings swept through her. She clung to Lucky, welcoming his strength, thanking God for the pleasure of having his arms around her again.

“Marry me, Serena,” he said, his voice tight and smoky with emotion. “I need you so. I can turn my life around a hundred eighty degrees and it still won't be worth a damn without you in it. Marry me.”

Serena lifted her head from his shoulder and managed a tremulous smile as she looked up at him. He was a hard man, stubborn, proud; life with him would never be easy or dull, but life without him hardly seemed worth the effort. She loved him beyond all reason, but then, reason had nothing to do with love. Her heart had looked beneath the surface and seen a man worth reaching out to. Now he was reaching out to her.

“Marry me, Serena,” he said again.

“Yes,” she whispered.

“Have my children.”

“Yes.” Her smile widened as she took his hand and drew it around to the slight swell of her stomach.

She didn't have to say a word. Lucky read the message in her eyes. Warmth flowed through him as he pictured her holding their child, nursing a dark-haired baby at her pretty breast. Suddenly the life he had nearly thrown away seemed worth living. He pulled Serena close and held her for a long moment as the power of the love he felt swept through him like a cleansing wind, blowing away the last traces of darkness from his heart.

When he leaned back from her, Lucky brushed the last of Serena's tears away with his thumbs. His expression was a mask of concern. “I don' know what kind of a husband I'll make for you,
chère
,” he admitted. “I've been alone a long, long time. Longer than you know.”

“It's all right,” Serena said, lifting a hand to touch the smooth, hard plane of his cheek. “You won't be alone anymore.”

“I'll have my lady with me.”

“Always.”

Author's Note

I HOPE YOU ENJOYED THE SETTING OF
LUCKY
'
S LADY
AS
much as I enjoyed painting a picture of it for you with words. South Louisiana is a unique environment with a unique history and a unique and rich mix of cultural backgrounds. I have tried to portray some of this cultural diversity to the reader through the use of local dialects—in particular, through the use of a number of Cajun French words and phrases.

Cajun French differs from standard French much as Elizabethan English differs from the English we speak today. The language evolved separately from its mother tongue and has retained many antiquated words and phrases as well as incorporating new ones from other languages. There are many subdialects because this language was passed on for generations only orally. About sixty percent of the words in the Cajun vocabulary can be found in a standard French dictionary. The rest are unique to the patois.

Only recently have any attempts been made to preserve the language by writing it down, and those attempts have been embroiled in controversy. Arguments abound over how to go about saving the language, which dialect is the most correct, and whether or not the language should be saved at all. There are those who look upon it with disdain and call it simply “bad French.” Personally, I look upon it as a unique part of a unique heritage, something that deserves to be preserved.

My sources for the Cajun words and phrases used in
Lucky's Lady
include
Conversational Cajun French
by Harry Jannise and Randall P. Whatley as well as translations of various Cajun folksongs performed by the group Beausoleil (translations by Sharon Arms Doucet, Barry Ancelet, and Ann Savoy). My thanks to these people for their work in keeping Cajun French alive.

Glossary of Words and Phrases
Used in This Book

allée

avenue, path

allons

let's go

américaine

american

baire

mosquito netting

bien, ma chère, casse
pas
mon coeur

now, my dear, don't
break my heart

bon Dieu

good God

bonsoir

good night

bourré

a Cajun card game

c'est assez

that's enough

c'est bien

that's all right

c'est ein affaire à pus
finir

it's a thing that has no end

c'est pas de ton affaire

that's none of your
business

c'est toi que j'aime

it's you I love

Chanson du Terre

song of the earth

cher/chère/chère catin/chérie

dear/darling/etc.

coonass

a generally derogatory
slang term for Cajun

Dieu

God

espèsces de tête dure

you hardheaded thing

foute ton quant d'ici

get away from here

grenier

attic

il n'a pas rien il va pas faire

there's nothing he won't do

j'aime te faire l'amour avec toi

I'd love to make love with you

je t'aime

I love you

je te blâme pas

I don't blame you

ma douce amie

my sweet love

mais non

but no

mais yeah

but yes

ma jolie fille

my pretty girl

maman

mama

ma petite

my little one

merci Dieu

thank God

mon ami

my friend

mon ange

my angel

mon coeur

my heart

mon 'tite coeur

my little heart

m'sieu

shortened form of
monsieur
, mister

non

no

oui

yes

pas de bétises

no joking

pichouette

little girl

rien

nothing

sa c'est de la couyonade

that's foolishness

vien

come

viens ici

come here

Bantam Books by TAMI HOAG

Dark Horse

Dust to Dust

Ashes to Ashes

A Thin Dark Line

Guilty as Sin

Night Sins

Dark Paradise

Cry Wolf

Still Waters

Lucky's Lady

Sarah's Sin

Magic

And coming soon in hardcover

Kill the Messenger

Praise for the bestsellers of

TAMI HOAG

DARK HORSE

“A thriller as tightly wound as its heroine . . . Hoag has created a winning central figure
in Elena. . . . Bottom line: Great ride.” —
People

“This is her best to date . . . [a] tautly told thriller.”
—MINNEAPOLIS STAR TRIBUNE

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for a fascinating look into the wealthy world of horses
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“Anyone who reads suspense novels regularly is
acquainted with Hoag's work—or certainly should be. She's one of the most consistently superior suspense and romantic suspense writers on today's bestseller lists. A word of warning to readers: don't think you know
whodunit 'til the very end.” —
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crime fans' reading lists.”

The Advocate Magazine
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“Full of intrigue, glitter, and skullduggery . . . [Hoag]
is a master of suspense.” —
Publishers Weekly

“Her best to date, an enjoyable read, and a portent of even better things to come.” —
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“A complex cerebral puzzle that will keep readers
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Detroit News & Free Press

DUST TO DUST

“Compelling and expertly told. Plot lines smolder
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“[This] wintry tale of crime and punishment
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People
(Page-turner of the week, starred review)


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breathes new life into the old good cop vs. bad cop genre. . . . A roller-coaster ride of a thriller that will leave fans awaiting the next installment.”

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Dust to Dust
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ASHES TO ASHES

“Hoag has more or less taken over the serial killer
genre all by herself.” —
Chicago Tribune

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reading. . . . Hoag does her homework and gets the
details right in this creepy story. . . . Powerful.”

Minneapolis Star Tribune

“An up-all-night read.”

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“[A] detail-packed thriller . . .
The Silence of the
Lambs
comes to mind more than once.”

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“[A] compelling . . . startling story.”

Chicago Sun-Times

“Hoag has a way of sneaking up on the reader
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(starred review)

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“Chilling . . . Patricia Cornwell wrote thrillers that
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Ashes,
we need to look over our shoulders every chapter
or so because the evil therein gathers momentum
with every move a serial killer makes.”

The Detroit News

“This is a winning psychological thriller that will
attract fans of Thomas Harris.” —
Booklist

A THIN DARK LINE


A Thin Dark Line
is chilling, it's atmospheric,
it's even romantic; but the novel's best achievement
is its making readers constantly interrogate their
ideas about justice and revenge, their own
presumptions of guilt and innocence.”

US
magazine

“This mystery defies you to put it down, and when you're done you're damn glad you didn't.”

Detroit News & Free Press

“Hoag deftly demonstrates that the search for
truth is rarely straightforward. Important clues are
cunningly buried, and the book's tension is as
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Chicago Tribune

“With a flair for dialect and regional atmosphere,
Hoag captures the essence of the Cajun family
and working relationships while injecting suspense
and heart-pounding terror into a violent tangle
of justice, innocence, treachery, and public opinion.
A thoroughly engrossing read.” —
Booklist

“Hoag has evolved into a fine thriller writer.
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Publishers Weekly

“Hoag is always a good gritty read.”

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“Hoag writes big, full stories with complex
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raw side of crime and the dark side of human nature.”

The Cincinnati Post

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