Now Celestine was gone, and Mars was the only believer left.
“For what?” Mars asked.
All Cat opened its mouth wide—wider than any earthly jaw—and from its throat came not a roar, but a duet. Lily Labeau’s honeyed alto and Rion King’s gravelly tenor, woven together like vines. The music lifted Mars off the pirogue, spun her once, and set her down on a streetcar track in 1997, where a woman in a sequined dress and a man with gold-ringed fingers sat holding hands, laughing at nothing. Searching for- lily labeau rion king in-All Cat...
The trail led her through the alleys of the French Quarter, past tarot readers who shuddered when she showed the photo, and into a basement juke joint called “The Drowned Piano.” The air smelled of chicory coffee and regret. Behind the bar stood a one-eyed man named Gutter, who scratched a patchy beard and squinted at the picture. Now Celestine was gone, and Mars was the only believer left
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