*** This story was awarded
Best Erotic Horror Story
in the
2020 Reader's Choice Awards
, as well as being awarded
Third Place
in the
2020 Halloween Contest
. Thank you to all my regular readers and my new friends who gave me a try and voted for me. ***
For regular readers of mine, this story is
nothing
like anything I've published here before. If you've come looking for a shiny, happy lesbian love story with a Happily-Ever-After, as is my usual fare, you might want to give this story a miss as you'll find none of that in this tale. (I'm trying to stretch myself a bit. Maybe more than a bit. Maybe a lot.) Also, this is a slow burn, so if you're in it for a quickie, also probably not for you. Should you decide to give it a read, I'd appreciate your vote and all comments.
Before you get started, let me give a content warning: this story contains violence, violence against women and themes of racism, and parts may be ugly and disturbing to some. Also, surprising as this may be to my regulars, this story is not lesbian themed; the erotic scenes are M/F. You've been warned.
Finally, extra-special thanks to editor-supremo,
AwkwardMD
, who's services I have come to absolutely depend on, and to my beta-reader for this story,
AvidReader223
who helped me immeasurably in checking my unconscious biases as well as providing invaluable help with my characterizations.
Note: this story exists separate from the Hard Landing universe.
Spooky Halloween, y'all.
~~ New Orleans, Louisiana - Sunday November 1st, 1959 ~~
"What a mess," Detective Etienne Cheval muttered, surveying the gruesome tableau in front of him. In twelve years on the job, he'd never seen a crime scene like this.
"How many body bags you want, Detective?" asked the medical examiner.
"You tell me, Sam. Think this is all one person?"
"Looks like. I mean, as far as I can tell."
Etienne chuckled with the graveyard humor only cops could appreciate. "We sure this is human?"
Sam snorted and nodded his head at the nearby workbench. "Yeah, we know that much."
Etienne looked around the scene and tried not to think about the smell as his stomach roiled. "Well, get started as soon as Tony's done."
As if the mention of his name had summoned him, Tony Weaver, the department's lead crime scene technician, took a photo, briefly lighting the warehouse as his flash bulb gave off its distinctive
POP-CLINK,
followed by a tiny puff of smoke. He rose from where he had been crouched to get a good angle of a particular body part. "Gonna be a bit, Detective," Tony said, as he used his handkerchief to remove the now useless flash bulb from the camera and drop it in his bag. "I need more film and bulbs."
"Okay, let us know when you're finished."
"You got it," Tony replied, and headed out to his truck to reload his camera.
"Detective Cheval!"
Etienne turned to see the captain of the Eighth Precinct standing in the door to the old waterfront warehouse, the muddy Mississippi River flowing past him in the background.
"One second, Captain," he replied, then turned back to the M.E. "Just... bag everything however you think's best."
"Another one?" Captain Landry said, quietly, as Etienne walked over to him.
"No..." Cheval breathed. "This one is nothing like the others."
"Is she colored?" his Captain asked.
"No, the vic's white. Also, it's a male."
"Really?" Landry looked around at the carnage. "How can you tell?"
"We found his, ah, equipment displayed over there." He pointed to the nearby workbench where there was a recognizable lump of meat neatly laid out in the center of the tabletop.
"Jesus," Landry breathed, his face turning a few shade paler. "Well, thanks for taking charge of the scene. You were the first detective to respond."
"No problem Cap, I--"
"
Detective!"
one of the beat cops helping to search the warehouse yelled from the far side of the building.
"What is it?" Etienne called back.
"I think I got an ID over here."
"Well, let's go see who this unlucky bastard was," Landry said. He and Etienne headed deeper into the gloom of the warehouse, stepping cautiously to avoid disturbing any possible evidence.
They found a uniformed officer near the far wall, squatting next to a pile of metal scraps.
"Whatcha got?" Etienne asked, as he crouched down next to the young man.
The officer wordlessly shone his flashlight on a black leather wallet lying in a spatter of blood, then reached out with a pen to lift the fold of the wallet to reveal the contents.
"Motherfucker!" Landry exclaimed.
Etienne stood, turning away from his captain and the young officer to hide the grim, satisfied smile that came over his face.
~~ Three Weeks Earlier, Sunday October 11th ~~
"This makes three in the last month, doesn't it?" Etienne said. He was standing in a gloomy alley in the French Quarter, a few blocks off of Bourbon Street, looking down at the body of a young black woman. Her head was bent at an obviously unnatural angle.
"She one of yours?" Detective Sam Ronaldo asked. He'd called Etienne in an attempt to identify the body.
"Yeah. Sally, I think her name is. Was. She's been busted once that I know of."
"Well, that'll make my job easier," Ronaldo said.
"What do you mean?"
"Ain't no one from City Hall going to be asking me for updates because a whore got herself killed."
"Jesus Christ, Sam, she was murdered. She might have a family, she--"
"Cheval, take it easy," Ronaldo said. "You know I have the highest case clearance in homicide. I'll do my job. I'm just saying, the brass ain't gonna be breathing down my neck. Especially seeing as she's a colored girl."
"That's not--"
"I called you to help me ID the vic, not to run my case, Etienne. You're Vice, not Homicide."
Etienne gave Ronaldo a hard look, which was returned for a moment. Then Ronaldo's face softened and he slapped Etienne on the shoulder. "Cheval, you're a good detective. You'll get promoted outta Vice soon enough."
Etienne glared at him. "Who says I want out of Vice?" They held each other's eyes for a moment, then Etienne gave Ronaldo a rueful grin, who laughed at him. Vice was the first posting any new detective got, and there wasn't a Vice detective who didn't want to get promoted out quickly.
"Anyway, thanks for coming out so early on a Sunday. Hope you weren't out too late last night.
Etienne stifled a yawn. "I was at Tujague's listening to that horn player they hired last month. The boy can play."
"I'll have to check him out." Ronaldo looked up as the medical examiner pulled up in his meat wagon at the entrance to the alley. "Well, I got to get to it. Tell Flo to save me some grits."
"Good luck with the case," Etienne said, before heading out onto the street. He glanced up at the sun coming up over the city skyline, then headed south.
Fifteen minutes later he eased onto a stool at The Clover Diner, the favorite twenty-four-hour greasy spoon of the men of the Eighth Precinct, located on the border between the French Quarter and the Port of New Orleans. He took off his fedora and set it on the counter next to him.
"Hey, Etienne," said Flo, the waitress behind the counter, as she poured him his usual cup of coffee with chicory. "Early morning or long night?" She was an indeterminate age, somewhere between a hard-ridden thirty, a half-decade younger than himself, and a well-preserved forty-five. Her reddish hair was up in a beehive and she wore the same grey and white waitress uniform that, as far as Etienne could testify to, was the only item of clothing she owned.
Etienne looked down at himself, then pinched the lapels of his tan-colored suit and held them out as if for inspection. "Do I look like I've been up all night?"
"Honey, you're cute, but your style is best described as 'rumpled'."
"There's honest, then there's cruel, Flo," he said, with a laugh.
She smiled. "You need to find you a wife to iron for you, honey. I'd volunteer but you're too high society for me."
"Shoot, I doubt I'd be able to keep up with a high-class lady such as yo'self," he said, as he pulled a pack of Camels and his Zippo from his jacket pocket.
Flo didn't blush. Etienne had been a regular since his days as a beat cop. Their banter was old hat by now. She turned and yelled through the service window to the kitchen, "