Mars thought of her grandmother’s voice, already fading. She thought of the future she might never hold. And then she nodded.
Mars had all three.
Mars had inherited the search from her grandmother, Celestine, who had once been Lily’s dresser. “Lily didn’t disappear, chère,” Celestine used to whisper, tapping a cigarette ash into a conch shell. “She went looking for Rion. And Rion went looking for the high note that All Cat guards under the Pontchartrain.” Searching for- lily labeau rion king in-All Cat...
And somewhere under the water, Lily Labeau and Rion King finally danced.
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. Mars thought of her grandmother’s voice, already fading
“You want Lily,” All Cat spoke—not in words, but in vibrations that landed directly in Mars’s bones. “And Rion. They are not lost. They are a single note now, folded inside me.”
“We’ve been waiting,” Lily said. Her eyes were the same as All Cat’s. Mars had all three
“You ain’t the first to come asking for Lily Labeau,” he said, sliding a shot of amber liquid toward her. “Last one was a kid with a backpack and a ukulele. He asked for ‘Rion King, the lost prince of jazz.’ I told him—Rion ain’t a prince. He’s a key. And keys need locks.”