Relic in the Rue (Bourbon Street Shadows #2) Read Online Heidi McLaughlin

Categories Genre: Alpha Male Tags Authors: Series: Bourbon Street Shadows Series by Heidi McLaughlin
Advertisement

Total pages in book: 100
Estimated words: 95475 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 477(@200wpm)___ 382(@250wpm)___ 318(@300wpm)
<<<<172735363738394757>100
Advertisement


She hummed while she worked. Barely audible over the scrape of bristles on wood.

He knew the tune. Had heard it dozens of times when she worked late, thinking herself alone. Two hundred years collapsed between hearing it then and hearing it now.

“If love leaves its mark on glass,” Charlotte said without looking up, “every mirror in this city will remember you.”

She spoke like she was stating fact. No hesitation, no speculation.

The gold caught candlelight and multiplied it. Each completed section blazed where bare wood had been. Twelve sheets of leaf beaten together would still be thinner than paper. She worked with focus that excluded everything else.

“Every reflection carries intention,” she said. “What I put in these materials outlasts the moments they preserve. This mirror will remember us. The ones who come after will see what we were.”

Bastien tried to speak. Tried to tell her the cost of what she was building—payment measured in centuries, in separation neither of them could prevent. But he had no voice here. Echo Imprint meant witness only. Displaced observer trapped in the scene she’d sealed during creation.

Charlotte set down her brush and lifted the frame, examining her work. The completed sections held depth that shouldn’t exist in flat metal. Illusion created through layering precise enough to bend light.

She smiled. Small, private curve of her mouth. “You’re watching. I feel you even when I can’t see you.”

She was right. He’d watched this moment two hundred years ago from his celestial position above her. But he was present in ways he couldn’t measure, in overlap between what he’d been and what she was.

“I’m making permanence,” she said to him, to the presence she sensed. “When I’m gone and you remain, this will last. What we were to each other. The materials won’t forget.”

She set the frame down and reached for silver wire thin enough to bend with fingertips. She wrapped it around the frame’s edges—reinforcement disguised as decoration.

“They’ll call it obsession.” Her voice dropped. “Love this deep looks dangerous to people who’ve never felt it. But I know the difference between connection and control.”

She paused. Hands still. Eyes lifting to stare at space where she knew he watched. “I love you enough to let you be what you are. Angel or fallen or whatever you become on this earth. I love all of it. I won’t accept cosmic law getting final say over how we exist together.”

Tears pooled in her eyes but didn’t fall. She didn’t wipe them away.

“So I’m making mirrors that remember. Embedding our connection in glass that outlasts us both. When I return—whatever form death permits—these mirrors guide me back.”

The workshop collapsed.

Bastien stood in the conservation room. Afternoon light through windows. Mirror fragment cooling against his palm. What Charlotte had created resonated beyond her lifetime, but this moment in time occurred before she stopped the process. He needed to find that imprint. How did she learn it would become dangerous, or rather, that it could become dangerous.

His reflection stared back from the glass surface. Not Charlotte anymore. Just him, rendered in amber lamp light. But something in his expression had changed. Something the vision had put there that he couldn’t hide.

He started to set the mirror down. His fingers wouldn’t release. The glass stayed locked in his grip.

Words rose across the surface. Faint script forming from condensation that had no source. Charlotte’s handwriting—same careful formation he’d seen on decades of documents.

Affection is obedience by another name.

The letters vanished. Immediate erasure, not gradual fading.

Charlotte hadn’t written that. The phrasing contradicted everything she’d believed. The philosophy opposed her nature.

Gideon had written it. Corruption introduced to reframe her devotion as something darker. Something dangerous; a lie.

Bastien forced his fingers open. The mirror settled onto velvet without sound.

He killed the lamp and positioned himself directly over the fragment. His face appeared in the glass—no transformation, no displacement. Just the current configuration looking back at him.

Every line the centuries had carved. Every shadow. Every alteration that love and descent had written into flesh that remembered what it used to be.

Outside the door, footsteps approached. Delphine’s pattern—quick steps, slight hesitation before doorways when her arms were full.

Ten seconds before she knocked.

He had ten seconds to compose his face, to hide what the mirror had shown him.

He took eight.

Three precise knocks. Her signal.

“Come in.”

The door opened. Delphine entered with a folder thick enough to require both hands. “Found the craftsmen’s records. The ones who did Charlotte’s gilding.” She crossed to the table, stopped when she saw his face. “What happened?”

Direct question. No hedging. That was Delphine.

“The mirror showed me something.” He measured his response. “A scene from when Charlotte created these. Her workshop. The gold leaf application process.”

“You saw that? In the glass?”

“Echo Imprint. Strong emotion near prepared mirrors seals itself in. The glass replays what Charlotte felt while she worked.”

Delphine set down her folder and moved closer, studying the fragment without touching it. “What did she feel?”


Advertisement

<<<<172735363738394757>100

Advertisement