Fortune Gérard looked for a moment as though he’d insist on proper lighting and comfortable chairs as his right and his daughter’s right, then shook his head wearily. “No, thank you. Unless …” He looked inquiringly at Madame Célie, who was gratefully putting back her veil now that they were out of the public view.
She shook her head. “Papa, I’ve seen the inside of a garçonnière before this.” And a little smile lightened her face.
He sighed. “So have we all.” Biting his lip, he turned back to January. “If you might just bring a chair for my daughter.…”
January fetched two from his mother’s storeroom and handed them up to Corcet on the gallery, then climbed the stairs to join the little group. “Don’t, please,” Célie was saying as Hannibal made to rise. “Mademoiselle—Nogent”—she glanced quickly from her father to Rose—“tells me you’ve had lung-fever.”
“Good Lord, no,” added Gérard. “When I had pneumonia it was six weeks before I could walk from my bed to my desk.” He made as if to take the second chair—which was why January had brought it—then stepped back, and offered it to Rose. Only when she’d shaken her head did he sit, folding his hands on his knees. “Monsieur Janvier, I owe you an apology for—for things I have said in anger. And when your sister is freed I shall tender her one as well. I have been …”
January held up his hand. “Least said is best,” he said. “Thank you.” He seated himself again on the planks, between Rose and the rather uncomfortable Vachel Corcet. “We think we may know where Isaak spent at least part of the three days prior to his death,” he told them, and Célie’s hand went quickly to her lips, hiding her quick indrawn breath at his words. “Tell me, Madame Jumon. How well did your husband know a woman named Lucinda Coughlin? You said you saw her at Monsieur Jumon’s, but did Isaak ever speak with her?”
Madame Célie frowned, then shook her head. “Well, she thanked him for carving that little horse for Mademoiselle Abigail; the little mademoiselle thanked him very prettily, too. Uncle Mathurin introduced Isaak to her then. But, of course, beyond that they never spoke.”
“Then a message from her would not have brought him out of hiding?”
“I don’t think so.” She shifted the cloak from her shoulders and dabbed her face with a handkerchief. “Not unless she was in some terrible danger.”
“If it’s the Lucinda Coughlin I know,” said Hannibal, “she could easily have forged Mathurin Jumon’s handwriting—helped herself to his signet ring, for that matter. And the keys to the house. I don’t suppose there’s any word from Shaw about Zoë?” He glanced at Corcet.
“I asked at the Cabildo this afternoon. Of course, the woman Zoë might have been resold, for all we know, and the Lieutenant followed the trail farther than Baton Rouge. In a way,” the lawyer added, wiping the beads of sweat from his brow with a handkerchief scarcely less delicate than that held by Madame Célie, “the mere fact that Isaak was missing for five days can work in our favor. We don’t have to prove who poisoned him—only that neither Madame Corbier nor Madame Jumon could have done so. You don’t happen to know, M’sieu Gérard, anything about what M’sieu Greenaway’s case is for the State? I understand that M’sieu Vilhardouin will have had information to which I have no access.”
“Only that Greenaway had witnesses against Madame Corbier.” Gérard’s heavy face creased with anger. “Nothing to the point. Silly girls who’ll swear she sold them spells, poisons. Against rats, belike. They’ll swear she went to the voodoo dances, too, and …” He glanced at January, not wanting to deride the woman whose safety was so closely tied to that of his daughter. “And participated in them,” he finished awkwardly.
“These girls claim,” Vachel Corcet spoke carefully, producing a notebook from his pocket, “that your sister was sometimes possessed by Devils during these dances.” He licked his finger, flipped the pages, peering in the dimness. “Marie-Noël Sauvignon, marchande … Alice McLeary, laundress … a woman named Philomène Louche apparently saw your sister on St. John’s Eve itself, in the crowd at a voodoo dance on Bayou St. John.”
January’s eyes met Rose’s, understanding as none of the others did the deadly workings of rumor.
“Now, this is ridiculous on the face of it.” Corcet slapped the little leather folder shut. “We can contest this on the grounds that—”
“We may not be able to,” interposed January evenly. “It is—part of the rite. Part of the dancing.” He saw Corcet’s eyes flinch aside, as his own had for so many years, and realized that this was the first time he’d spoken of that secret, that center of the voodoo rites, to anyone. And then, he could only say, “It isn’t as it seems.”
After a long moment Hannibal said, “Unfortunately, no good Protestant or Catholic juryman is going to make a decision on how things are. Only how they seem. Monsieur Corcet, maybe you’d better ask just what exactly this Mademoiselle Louche was doing at Bayou St. John herself.”
It was close to ten when January helped Hannibal back to his bed in Bella’s room. “Nobody looks out for the curfew,” protested Gabriel, carrying the remains of the rice and beans down to the kitchen and covering it with a plate. “I go out at night lots of times, and I’ve never met the City Guards.”
“All your father needs now is for you to get in trouble.” January sighed, holding aloft his single tallow candle as his nephew led the way out of the kitchen again. Corcet and Rose stood together, lantern in hand—Rose lived near enough the wharves that no street lighting was provided; Gérard was shaking the lawyer’s hand.
Tomorrow night, thought January. A curious long shiver passed through him as he watched them depart. Tomorrow night.
He turned wearily and climbed the garçonnière stair.
The heat was such that he left the doors of his little chamber open, but even the memory of Killdevil Ned, lying dead in the hackberry thickets along the bayou, was not enough to let him sleep. Whoever had hired one assassin—rix-dollars and sovereigns, gleaming in the afternoon sunlight along the edge of a desk—could hire another. So he lay awake, listening to the roar of the cicadas, and the crickets’ cries; to Hannibal’s breathing on the other side of the wall, the whining of mosquitoes outside the veiling of the bar, and to the scratch and scurry of geckos and mice across the floor. His legs ached from two days’ tramping through the swampy ground of the ciprière, and when he did sleep he found himself there again, his heart in his throat, watching the white leprous shape of the dead thing flit from tree to tree.
He had just drifted off to sleep a third time when the soft creak of a foot on the stair brought him broad awake. His hand slid under the pillow for his pistol even as he was rolling out of bed, down under the mosquito-bar; his injured shoulders gave one great blaze of protesting pain as he half-crawled, half-slithered across the floor to the door. The outside air showed gray with the barest watering of dawn. Silently he rose to his feet, pistol in hand, waiting, and heard another stealthy creak of weight on the gallery.
This time, he thought, I’ll have a live man to ask.
A dark shape poked its head around the jamb like a terrapin emerging from its shell. “Michie Janvier?” The dark eyes, barely visible in the gloom, blinked at him from pockets of wrinkles stitched across and across with old tribal scars; a hand was extended to him like a dry bundle of sticks. “Nuthing to be afraid of, hiding there by the door like a rabbit in the brush.”
January recognized the voice as old Lucius Lacrîme’s. He lowered the pistol. “Somebody comes calling at this hour of the morning,” he said, “I’d sure rather be behind the door than in the bed.”
The old swamp dweller chuckled creakily. “You may be right at that, Compair Lapin. Cut-Arm send me. He say he want to see you, out in the ciprière.”
TWENTY - ONE
The village was smaller than the slave quarters of January’s childhood. The huts, too, were smaller, built of a species of wattle-and-daub, thatched with brush and banana-leaves, windowless for the most part and raised
on stilts above where the bayou would flood. Their gardens came right up to their walls, and extended to the green eaves of the woods; beans, squash, yams, and gourds ripened bright in the hot sun. Chickens scratched in the dooryards, the baskets where they were caged at night for fear of rats dangling from the house-corners. A sow and her litter lay in the shade of a roof overhanging their pen.
“I hear you been looking for us,” said Cut-Arm.
The voice came to January as his blindfold was taken off. Lucius Lacrîme had led him out of town as far as the stone bridge over Bayou St. John, then had turned off the shell road into the ciprière, as January himself had done yesterday in company with Mamzelle Marie. “I been told to cover your eyes,” the old man had said, producing a big faded red bandanna, and January had put it on, and tied it tight. As he did so he heard the creepers behind him rustle, and men’s hands had taken his arms, firmly but without roughness or anger, to lead him into the deeper woods.
He looked behind him now and saw little Dan Pritchard and the woman Kitta, beginning to show with child, and others, also runaways, whom he recognized from Congo Square. Then he turned back, where Cut-Arm stood before him in front of the largest hut.
“Thank you for trusting me,” January said. “I swear to you no one will learn of this place through me.”
“They always swears.” Cut-Arm had a way of standing with his weight on one hip, his whole arm folded across his chest and his big hand closed around the stump of the other. “And somehow, the white man’s Guards always finds out.”
January said nothing, because he knew what this man said was true. He knew, too, that this village was doomed, this little scrap of the free memory of Africa tucked away in the woods. On still mornings like this one they must be able to hear the groan of the steamboats on the river, and in the winter fogs, to smell the burnt-sweet sugar of grinding time. There were only a half-dozen huts here, men and women, he guessed, who had family and friends here in Orleans or Jefferson Parish, who couldn’t bring themselves to flee utterly into the West. Maybe they realized how hopeless it was to think they could completely escape.
“My nephew says bullets bounce off you,” he said. “ ‘No white man ever going to catch Cut-Arm.’ And his eyes shine.”
The maroon leader laughed, and some of the tension went out of his big shoulders. “I wish he could come out here,” he replied, “and see the way we live, apart from the towns of the whites. Your sister probably bringing him up to be a little white man.”
“My sister and her husband are bringing him up to be a man,” answered January. “Black or colored or even white, town or woodland, there’s things that don’t change.”
Cut-Arm smiled. “Maybe.” It was his voice January mostly remembered, deep as he had imagined the voice of Compair Lion to sound in tales he’d been told as a child. “Maybe. I hear you’re looking for word of this Isaak Jumon.”
“That I am.” Cut-Arm’s men had led January through the woods for what felt like hours. But, as when Antoine Jumon had taken a fiacre to see his brother, they could have spent the time going in circles. By the sun it was midmorning now, nearly noon. In any case it would be a difficult matter to get back to town by the time Olympe and Madame Célie had to appear in court. “Was he here?”
Cut-Arm nodded. “I heard tell about Isaak Jumon from Ti Jon,” he said. “That his own mama had claimed him as her slave, to get her hands on a white man’s money, and her lying like a harlot with a white man to get advice and help with these investments they put such store in—faugh! There were advertisements in the newspapers, and men in the Swamp would have known him, and taken him in. I sent him a map where to meet me, and we brought him here.”
“How long was he here?”
“Till St. John’s Eve. He went with us to Dr. Yellowjack’s. He’d heard Dr. Yellowjack knew men in the City Council, did favors for folks sometimes. Dr. Yellowjack, he knows about the law. He knows what white men got secrets that can be used. I’ll promise him some of the money, when I get it, he said. Isaak Jumon wanted to talk to the doctor about getting a lawyer himself, about getting some kind of order to get his mama off him.”
“What happened at the dancing?”
Cut-Arm grinned. “What always happens?” There was a wry malicious mockery in his eyes, like an older boy speaking double to a child. “There was gumbo and there was rum; there was Mamzelle Marie, dancing with her snake. There was the calinda and the pilé congo, and there was girls ready to make jazz in the bushes, when the fire burned down low. You been to a dancing, Music-Master. You know what happens there.”
“I thought I did,” said January. “Now I’m not so sure. Did Isaak leave with you?”
Cut-Arm shook his head. “We looked around for him, when it was time to go. He didn’t know his way back here. It’s a long piece, to Dr. Yellowjack’s house. Yellowjack, he said Isaak was going to head on back to town, to see his young wife. He asked us—Isaak asked us—to find him again at the same place where we’d met before, at the crooked tree by the head of the canal, at sunrise.”
“And did he come?”
“No. I wasn’t best pleased and neither were my boys, for it was close to sunrise already. I had a good mind to leave the boy there, givin’ us orders like we was servants. Those yellow boys, they’re all the same. Stuck-up. But we went. It might have been Isaak was drunk, when he said that to Dr. Yellowjack. We was all a little drunk. But he never came.”
Because he was dying in his uncle’s house, thought January, in his brother’s arms. Because he was poisoned.
A woman came out of one of the huts, a child on her hip. A little boy, following her, uncovered the big iron pot that hung above the coals of the fire before the door. The mother stirred, and the strong smells of stewing meat, of rice and onions and peppers, billowed on the air. The boy, still holding the pot lid, looked up at his mother with laughter in his face and January recalled that it was legal to sell a child of that age—eight or ten—away from his mother. He knew, too, that even though it wasn’t legal in Louisiana, children were sold away as young as five or six, and across the border, in Texas or in the new cotton lands of the Territories, where nobody cared anyway, and there was no such law.
“Would Isaak do that?” He pulled his gaze away. “Go see his wife, in spite of the danger?”
Cut-Arm shrugged. “Like I said, we was all drunk. You don’t give yourself to the dancing, Music-Master. Try it some time, and you’ll see. Crazy things look possible. Sometimes the loa give you the strength to do what you were afraid to do before. Isaak loved that girl.”
The memory came back to January, sudden and agonizing, of Ayasha, combing her hair in the window of the single room above her dress shop, where she’d lived when he’d met her first. Ayasha at eighteen, thin-faced and agile, her every movement like a dancer’s movement.… Would he have risked his freedom, to seek her out then?
He would risk it now, he thought, if he could. If anything but the widest and blackest of waters separated them. There had been a time when he’d even considered crossing those waters, to be with her again.
Cut-Arm went on, “It might have been he thought some god was with him. It leads you to great good or great harm, the strength of the god.”
January looked back at Cut-Arm, at the village around him. Someone at least was stealing from town, or buying from those who did. Over the other fire a coffeepot was set, and the smell of the brewing liquid was smoky and delicious in the noon heat. On the wall of one hut tools hung neatly, hafts of whittled oak and hickory, heads of new German steel, and there was a pistol in Dan Pritchard’s belt.
“Did Isaak get any messages when he was here?” he asked. “From Célie, from his uncle, from anyone?”
The white teeth glinted in a sarcastic grin. “We don’t got postal service, Music-Master. If anyone gets a message that my boys don’t bring in, it’s time to burn the huts and move on.”
All we have to do, thought January, is prove that Olympe didn’t poison Isaak
Jumon. Prove that she couldn’t have.
But that was exactly what he wasn’t able to do.
His heart beat hard at the thought that instead of clearing Olympe he had uncovered still greater peril. She was possessed by a Devil, Corcet had said. Had that woman who had seen Olympe here, seen Isaak Jumon as well? Olympe almost certainly hadn’t seen him, not to remember anyway. It was easy to miss someone, January knew, in the crowd, the torchlight, the dancing. But even had this market-woman Louche not actually seen Isaak, how easy it would be to say that she had, if someone offered her money to do so.
To put Isaak and Olympe together, at the same place, at the same time.
Times were hard. January had seen how Paul had fought, leaving his wife in peril to save the children he loved, at the lure of money and work to be had. If this Philomène Louche was a strict Catholic, how easy it would be to say, What’s it matter? She worships Devils. If she didn’t poison him she sure poisoned someone else, and my child is hungry.
A white could not hang on evidence given by a free colored. But another colored could.
I’ll speak to them, Mamzelle Marie had said, with a world of implied chicken foot in her enigmatic eyes.
Lucius Lacrîme left him near the turning basin at close to six in the evening. He reached the house on Rue Burgundy with barely time to bolt down what was left of the beans and rice Gabriel had brought last night, and change into his respectable garb of biscuit-colored trousers, linen shirt, and black coat. “Give your sister my regards,” whispered Hannibal, lying waxen as a corpse under the tent of mosquito-bar. He’d been violently sick—January could see the signs of it in the ill-cleaned slop jar—and January thought, Not the fever. Not now.
He felt his friend’s hands and face, and they were cool. But all the way through the streets to the Cabildo he remembered Ayasha, lying dead in their rooms on the Rue de l’Aube. Remembered the smell of the sickness as he climbed the stair. Remembered opening the door and seeing her.
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