Chapter Two
Can you imagine? No more death.
I had a hard time believing it myself. But I wanted to.
In New Orleans I’d often spouted platitudes about death being the beginning, not the end, a new plane, a different world, an adventure. Maybe it was.
I still wanted my daughter back.
I turned away from the city, moving into the room where Marcel waited. “When will I meet Mandenauer’s friend?”
“The friend will come to you, Priestess.” At my scowl Marcel corrected himself. ” Miss Cassandra.”
“When?” I repeated.
“When it is time.” On that helpful note, Marcel opened the door and disappeared.
I didn’t bother to unpack. As soon as I had a direction, I was out of here.
Exhausted, I fell asleep across my bed still wearing my travel outfit of loose j eans, a black tank top, and black tennis shoes. When I awoke, night had fallen.
The noises of Port-au-Prince seemed louder in the still, navy blue darkness. Under a new moon, the sky was as devoid of shining silver as my j ewelry box had been before I discovered werewolves.
My beringed fingers sought out the shiny crucifix around my neck, worn not for religious purposes but for protection. These days I overflowed with the stuff. I’d once thought it best to keep protective amulets hidden, but I’d learned it didn’t hurt to have them displayed, either.
I turned on my side and froze. The door to my room was open, and someone stood on the veranda.
“Hello?” Slowly I sat up. “I’m Cassandra.”
“Priestess.”
The word was a hiss, reminding me of Lazarus, the python I’d left in New Orleans. He’d been my only friend until the crescent moon curse had brought Diana Malone into my life.
A cryptozoologist sent to New Orleans to investigate tales of a wolf where one didn’t belong, she’d gotten the surprise of her life when she’d found a whole lot more than a wolf. She’d wound up in my shop investigating the voodoo curse, and we’d bonded, as women sometimes do.
The hovering shadow continued to hover, so I murmured, “Come in, please.”
As soon as the words left my mouth, the figure glided over the threshold. I flicked on the light, my eyes widening at the sight of the woman in front of me.
Tall and voluptuous, she was also gorgeous and ancient. Her skin café au lait, her eyes were as blue as mine. She was clothed in a long, flowing purple robe, and a matching turban covered her head. This was what a voodoo priestess should look like. Too bad I’d never be able to carry it off.
“I am Renee,” the woman murmured. “You wish to learn about the curse of the crescent moon?”
Her accent was French, her diction upper-class. She might be from here, but she’d learned English somewhere else.
That, combined with the shade of her skin and eyes, marked Renee as mulatto—a nonoffensive term in Haiti, referring to the descendants of the free people of color from the Colonial era. Their mixed race had afforded them great wealth, as well as the rights of French citizens.
Why I’d expected Mandenauer’s friend to be a man I wasn’t quite sure. Maybe because he was so old the idea of a lady friend kind of creeped me out. Like catching your grandparents in flagrante delicto on the kitchen floor. I wanted to stick a needle in my eye to make that image go away.
“Uh, yes. The crescent moon,” I managed. “Is it true a voodoo curse can only be removed by the one who did the cursing?”
“Yes.”
“And if that person is dead?”
“Ah, I see.” Her head tilted; the turban didn’t move one iota. Impressive. “You have come to learn of the zombie.”
I couldn’t think of any reason to be secretive about it. “I have.”
A crease appeared in Renee’s nearly perfect brow. She didn’t have many wrinkles, so why did I think she was ancient? Must be something in the eyes.
“Raising the dead is a serious and dangerous proposition,” she murmured.
“But it can be done?”
“Of course.”
I caught my breath. “Have you done it?”
“Such a thing is against the laws of both man and God.”
I didn’t worry about either one anymore. There was nothing the law could do to me that was worse than what God had already done.
You’d think that after what happened to my child I wouldn’t believe in God. And for a while I hadn’t. I’d begun to study voodoo for one reason—Sarah—but I’d been seduced by what I’d found there.
Voodoo is a complex religion—adaptable, tolerant, monotheistic. A lot of what I’d learned made sense.
For instance, there can’t be evil unless there’s good.