Crossfire

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Crossfire Page 1

by Dale Lucas




  Doc Voodoo:

  CROSSFIRE

  A novel by

  DALE LUCAS

  Published 2013 by Beating Windward Press LLC

  For contact information, please visit:

  http://www.BeatingWindward.com

  Text Copyright © Dale Lucas, 2013

  All Rights Reserved

  Book & Cover Design: Copyright © KP Creative, 2013

  Author Photo by J. P. Wright

  First Smashwords Edition

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Smashwords Edition, License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  For Gabriel

  TABLE OF CONTENTS

  Preface

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  About the Author

  Haitian vodou, like organized crime, is a hierarchy: a complex system of patrons and clients; bosses, captains, and soldiers. Everything works on a basic quid pro quo principle as old as time: this for that; a favor for a favor; you scratch my back, I scratch yours. Collectively, the gods of vodou are known as the lwa.

  At the top of the lwa pyramid are the Orishas: the movers and shakers; the matriarchs and patriarchs of a number of elemental clans whose powers bind all those beneath them: the cool, fluid Rada; the fierce and fiery Petro; and the Ghede, the house made up of the ancestors, the dead, and their chthonic keepers.

  Doing the work of the Orishas and running their own stables of servants and soldiers are the caporegime of the vodou realms: the Barons.

  And at the bottom of the heap—the minor spirits, dead souls, and lingering ancestors who do the grunt work of the Orishas and the Barons, along with everyday Joes like you and me: people of flesh and blood who give the Barons and Orishas offerings in exchange for blessings and curses; and who sometimes give their bodies over to possession as shuttles and mouthpieces for the lwa.

  Small wonder that when we’re saddled by the lwa, doing their dirty work, they call us horses...

  1

  The meeting was three hours old, and the Reverend Barnabus Farnes's patience was at an end.

  "The answer is plain," the Reverend Adam Clayton Brown, Jr., was saying. "Harlem needs a moral re-awakening. A renaissance of the spirit."

  Beside him, Ms. Lucille Walker cocked her head. "All well and good, but spiritual aims need practical application. We need community solidarity—and I'm not just talking about landlords and businessmen. I'm talking about trade unions, artists' cooperatives, and voter registration drives—"

  "You're still missing the point," Jebediah Debbs, his self-styled majesty, argued. "There is no place for the Negro on this side of the ocean. The only answer is a return to the land that bore us. The establishment of a Negro empire, with Negro legislators, and a Negro population. Africa for the Africans, in the words of my esteemed colleague, Mr. Garvey. This land—these United States—are someone else's dream, and we'll never be welcome to share in it."

  The Reverend Farnes sighed. "I think," he said, pinching the bridge of his nose, "this meeting is adjourned."

  Reverend Brown studied his pocket watch. "Time does fly," he said wistfully. Farnes smiled a little at that. Adam had always been a master of polite understatement and irony.

  "My honorable brothers and sister, this is a crisis. We can't adjourn with so little decided!"

  Ms. Walker studied the notepad that she'd been recording the minutes on. "I've got pages and pages of motions and resolutions here, Mr. Debbs. How on earth can you call that 'so little'?" She began to read the many motions. "A trip to the mayor's office, an apprenticeship program linked to the Chamber of Commerce, an appeal to the temperance and truancy committees, a neighborhood vigilance association—"

  "You see, that's the sort of motion I can stand behind," Debbs said. "A vigilance committee! The police are corrupt and City Hall completely indifferent—"

  "Dear lady and gentlemen," the Reverend Farnes broke in, determined to nip another one of Debbs's harangues in the bud, "I think we've done more than enough for one night. I move we adjourn."

  "Second," the Reverend Brown said.

  "Motion carried," Ms. Walker said, closing her stenographer's book.

  "This is just the sort of apathy I fight against, day after day after day," Debbs grumbled.

  "Ms. Walker," Reverend Farnes said. "Make a note that at the next meeting, the first order of business is a discussion concerning just this sort of apathy."

  "Note made, reverend."

  Debbs glared at the Reverend Farnes. "I don't appreciate humor at my expense," he said.

  The Reverend Farnes stared him down. It would take more than a two-hundred-twenty pound West Indian demagogue to bully him in his own church. "Mr. Debbs," he said, "I don't much appreciate your constant attempts to hijack these meetings and shape them to your personal agenda. But we can discuss that at the next meeting, if you like. This night's business is done. Now, if you'll excuse me," he rose, "I need to close this place up and be on my way."

  The others rose in answer to his prompt. Debbs still fumed. Reverend Farnes hated to be uncharitable, but it was late, he was tired, and he still had to walk home in a cold April rain. He hadn't eaten since lunchtime, either. His niece, Fralene, would give him what-for about that.

  As the Reverend Farnes slipped out of his pew, his colleagues slipped into their coats and hats.

  "I'll see you into a cab, Ms. Walker," the Reverend Brown said. Farnes smiled. That was Adam, ever the gentleman.

  "Unnecessary, Reverend Brown," Ms. Walker said. "I'm just up Eighth Avenue and I have a very stout umbrella. The walk will do me good."

  "Then, it's a walk," Brown answered. "But I'd be no man at all if I let a woman walk home alone on such dark and stormy night."

  "I'd accompany you myself," Mr. Debbs cut in, "if I weren't going in the opposite direction."

  "No need for apologies, Mr. Debbs," Ms. Walker said. "As always, you remain gracious, but contrary."

  Farnes, having just reached the door to the back corridors beside the choir loft, smiled in spite of himself. He was glad that Adam and Ms. Walker were just as tired of Debbs's posturing and preening as he was. Debbs, for his part, either didn't get the joke, or refused to acknowledge it. His silence in answer to Ms. Walker's jibe was a great, black cloud in the sanctuary.

  The Reverend Farnes turned and waved to them. "Safe travel, all," he said. "See you next Wednesday."

  Adam gave the Reverend Farnes a friendly wave and smile as he escorted Ms. Walker down the aisle toward the narthex. Debbs was already marching ahead of them, not even a farewell offered. Farnes
hated to admit ill will toward anyone, but he was starting to regret inviting the belligerent Mr. Debbs to join their committee.

  XX

  A steady rain fell on 137th Street, turning the gutters into roiling sluiceways and the normally bright streetlights into little more than tall and sickly kerosene lamps. Automobile traffic was thin, foot traffic almost non-existent.

  The Reverend Adam Clayton Brown and Ms. Lucille Walker shared Ms. Walker's umbrella. Jebediah Debbs, still fuming, opened his own umbrella, grumbled a farewell to them, and trudged off into the April rain. Brown, for his part, was suddenly stung by a pang of regret.

  Ms. Walker shook her head beside him. "He's so angry."

  Reverend Brown shrugged. "We are all products of our environment, Ms. Walker. Far be it from me to second-guess the many trials and tribulations that have made the Jebediah Debbses of the world as they are." He looked into her brown eyes and shrugged. "Not a one of us is perfect, are we?"

  Ms. Walker set them marching toward Eighth Avenue. "Hardly," she admitted. "Nonetheless, I have a hard time summoning much sympathy for a man like that, all puffed up like an angry ape."

  They fell in step, moving easily northwestward. The Reverend Brown knew that Ms. Walker could handle herself—she held a PhD, was a card-carrying communist party member, and often bolstered her husband in his union-building efforts when he grew disheartened. She could teach the lot of them a thing or two about courage and conviction, Brown supposed. Nonetheless, he felt it would have been a terrible impropriety if he'd let her walk the ten blocks home on such a night. He himself didn't care for the notion of walking alone in weather like this, and was glad of her company.

  Idly, Brown wondered if that made him a coward.

  "Maybe you were right," Ms. Walker said as they crossed Seventh Avenue. "Maybe this would be a night for a cab." The rain was so loud above and around them that they almost had to shout to be heard, even huddled so close together.

  "We'll get you up to Eighth," Brown said. "Certainly we can flag you a cab there?"

  Though the streets were almost deserted, there was movement in the windows and doorways of the brownstones, storefronts and homes they passed. Lamps glowed warmly behind milky curtains, attended by the moving shadows of their occupants. Brown stole glances at them all as they passed—cozy sitting rooms, welcoming cafes, warm parlors—and dreamed of his own little parsonage, his cozy kitchen, his warm bed, waiting.

  "Do you know him well?" Ms. Walker asked.

  "Who's that?" the Reverend Brown replied, drawn out of his reverie.

  "Our Mr. Debbs."

  Reverend Brown shrugged. "Not terribly well," he said. "So far as I know, he learned of our little committee via friends of the Reverend Farnes—much to the reverend's chagrin."

  "He worked with Mr. Garvey?" Ms. Walker asked.

  Brown nodded. "As I hear it, he was in Mr. Garvey's inner circle. When Mr. Garvey went to prison, that circle squabbled and tore itself apart. Mr. Debbs arose as cock of the walk."

  "They don't seem to like each other," Ms. Walker said, a mischievous little smile on her lips. "The Reverend Farnes and Mr. Debbs."

  "No, ma'am, they don't," Reverend Brown answered. "But, sometimes politics and activism make for strange bedfellows. If Mr. Debbs wants what we want, we're obliged to include him and see if we all can't contribute to the greater good, personal enmities aside. As annoyed as he may be, Barney understands that."

  Ms. Walker looked a little shocked. "Barney?" she asked.

  "The Reverend Farnes," Brown clarified. "We go way back—all the way to Seminary."

  "Barney," Ms. Walker said. "I can't imagine the Reverend Barnabus Farnes letting anyone call him Barney…"

  Brown shrugged. "Time and familiarity give me some privileges, I guess," he said, and felt a warm flush in his cheeks. He hoped Barney would make it home safe tonight as well…

  They reached the intersection of 137th Street and Eighth Avenue then. Brown was about to search up and down the avenue for an approaching cab when a dark blue Packard careened around the corner from behind them. The sedan took the turn tightly and sent up a giant, shimmering sheet of gutter-wash as it did so.

  Reverend Brown and Ms. Walker were both soaked, the water cold and shocking.

  The Packard screeched to a halt in the street just before them.

  "I never!" Ms. Walker said.

  "See here!" the Reverend Brown cried.

  The doors of the Packard opened.

  Men with guns stepped out.

  XX

  While the Reverend Brown and Ms. Walker enjoyed their shared umbrella, Jebediah Debbs marched up Lenox Avenue, most dissatisfied with his experience among the Harlem Concerned Citizens' Brigade. The Reverend Farnes was haughty, the Reverend Brown so affable as to be laughable, and Ms. Walker a foolish, naïve bourgeois housewife playing leftist crusader once or twice a week between lavish parties at her posh Sugar Hill high rise. Debbs thought that perhaps, just perhaps, he might succeed in radicalizing these old guard Talented Tenth sorts, but he had been sorely mistaken. Their innate responses to the crises all around them were passivity, docility, assimilation, submission. Debbs would have none of it. Now that Mr. Garvey was doing time in a Georgia prison, the need for action was clearer than ever. Debbs was a revolutionary, and he would remain so, even if it meant trampling on smiling, agreeable house niggers like the Reverend Barnabus Farnes and company.

  Besides, he thought, they've never given me the proper respect. They condescend to me, sport at me to my face, behind my back. But they'll see… there's a war coming. When the guns roar and the billy clubs crack and the gutters run red, their sort will look to me and mine for protection… and we'll decry them for the cowards they are and throw them to the white wolves…

  A car horn blared at him, shocking him from his fuming. The car with the blaring horn—a Willys Overland with chrome trim—made a suicidal left turn to barrel west down 140th Street. The Overland swerved as it turned, tires squealing for traction on the rain-slicked roadway, and as it passed just before Debbs, it hit the gurgling rainwater in the gutter and splashed his trousers.

  Debbs couldn't believe it. How dare that rascal leave him soaked and dripping there on the sidewalk! This was a brand new suit! And without even stopping to see if he was well before speeding on! The nerve! There and then, Jebediah Debbs was through being disrespected. Starting there and then—at that very moment—he would not countenance another insult, great or small.

  They would pay. They would all pay…

  But for now, there was no use stopping. The rain still fell and he still had several blocks to go before he reached his apartment house. Looking both ways, Debbs stepped off the sidewalk and crossed 140th Street. The rain beat down mercilessly on the cupola of his umbrella and raced in thick sheets over the deserted sidewalks. No one was out and about tonight—who would be, in such weather?—and he was glad of it. He wanted no company, no distractions. He just wanted to walk, and think, and work out his revenge for all the disrespectful, doubting fools that would be swallowed in the coming conflagration while he and his U.N.I.A. fellows stood tall and proud, strong and capable even in the midst of total, unbridled anarchy.

  Because it was coming. Everyone had to know it was coming. Hundreds of lynchings every year… thousands over the course of the decades since the turn of the century… such bloodshed could not be allowed to pass without reciprocity. Blood cried out for blood. That was the point that Debbs had been trying to make to all these uptown gum-beaters, stormbuzzards and hanky-heads ever since he started drawing crowds on street corners, doing his damnedest to spread Mr. Garvey's words.

  War was coming. They needed a plan of attack or a plan of escape. Anything less would result in their extinction. He heard the truth in Garvey's words even if others didn't. That's why he'd cleaned out the U.N.I.A. when Mr. Garvey was so unceremoniously railroaded by that kike judge and his bent jury. Anyone who didn't get the message needed to hit the road.

 
Debbs was approaching another intersection, and forced himself to look up and down all four streets as he approached, eager to avoid another close call with death this evening. What good could he do anyone if he were splattered all over Lenox Avenue, a broken rag doll in a tailored suit?

  Turning to glance back over his shoulder, to see if any cars approached from behind, he noticed that he was being followed. He hadn't heard footsteps because the rain was far too loud.

  Strange: his erstwhile shadow looked like a white man.

  Debbs made the corner of 142nd Street and prepared to cross. He noticed someone else approaching from his left.

  Another white man.

  They did not carry umbrellas. They simply trudged along in the rain, hands in their pockets, collars high, hats sluicing rainwater off onto their coat mantles.

  Immediately, Debbs felt a tingle of foreboding.

  That's when the first drew a gun from his pocket.

  XX

  After his companions had departed, the Reverend Farnes took the stairs to the basement level, where many of the offices and meeting rooms of the church lay empty and silent. He shut off the lights, made sure the side door that led up to the street was locked, then climbed the stairs again. Above, he swept through his office and checked the back door that led to the little cluster of classrooms and the cloister that appended the rear of the sanctuary. Locked up tight. Time to go.

  Farnes doubled back to the sanctuary and the choir loft. From the choir loft, he was able to turn off most of the lights in the sanctuary, save one circuit that left the big meeting hall dim and rife with shadows. Now that he was all alone, he could hear the sound of the persistent spring rain on the pitched slate roof of the sanctuary. He thought he had an umbrella near the front door—just beside the coat closet where his hat and overcoat awaited him. If not, he might have to venture all the way back to his office and call Fralene to come fetch him. At his age, it was the height of folly to walk home exposed to weather like this.

 

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