Kent Conwell - Tony Boudreaux 07 - The Swamps of Bayou Teche

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Authors: Kent Conwell

Tags: #Mystery: Thriller - P.I. - Louisiana

BOOK: Kent Conwell - Tony Boudreaux 07 - The Swamps of Bayou Teche
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Kent Conwell - Tony Boudreaux 07 - The Swamps of Bayou Teche
Tony Boudreaux [7]
Kent Conwell
Thomas Mercer (2007)
Tags:
Mystery: Thriller - P.I. - Louisiana
Mystery: Thriller - P.I. - Louisianattt
Even as a child listening to the hushed, fearful stories told around dying fires of the loup garous that prowled the Louisiana prairies and ghosted through dark swamps, Tony Boudreaux always viewed them with the skepticism of an enlightened individual. Cauchemars turning living creatures, both human and animal, into supernatural beings was the fodder of middle age ignorance.
But when the body of a prominent banker is discovered in the belly of a 16-foot alligator and Tony agrees to look into the incident, death latches onto his scent like a cottonmouth water moccasin stalking a wounded swamp rabbit.
Deep in the dark bayou, surrounded by bellowing alligators, Tony learns the truth he hated to admit while trying to unravel the mystery of the banker's murder.

A Tony Boudreaux Mystery

 

Other Mysteries by Kent Conwell:

The Riddle of Mystery Inn

Westerns by Kent Conwell:

 

Kent Conwell

 

 
This title was previously published by Avalon Books; this version
has been reproduced from the Avalon book archive files.
 
To Amy, who always fusses she never gets a book
dedicated to her without my wife’s name in the
dedication also. This one is it.

I love you, Amy.

Dad

 

“C’est mon cauchemar! This is my nightmare.”

If I heard that old expression once while I was
growing up, I heard it a thousand times. An idiom in
the oral tradition of Nova Scotia, the exiled Acadians
carried it with them throughout the dispersal to
Louisiana beginning in the eighteenth century. The
word itself, cauchemar, sometimes meant nightmare;
sometimes, it meant witches, both evil and good.

Whatever it meant at the moment, the avowal was
usually uttered by superstitious old Acadians, blaming
the misery of a restless or sleepless night on the curses
of evil witches, or cauchemars.

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