drained from it, he cast it aside and jumped to the centre of the circle, throwing his arms upward with a swift, violent move which brought the entire dance to halt.
After one final savage flourish, the drums fell silent.
The
The circle was completely silent. The only sound was the howl of the wind through the cane and dangling whistles.
Back behind the
Silently, a small procession of the faithful advanced and began forming a line outside the door, awaiting their own opportunities to speak with the wise
He made no move to stop her.
The healer stepped aside briefly to pick up the discarded rum bottle. She raised it toward her nostrils as if to sample its scent, but dropped it before it reached her face. Her lips curled and she grimaced in open disgust at the potent smell wafting from its uncorked end.
In a moment, the door of the
The healer woman knelt before him and, in a soft voice which Carrefour could not clearly hear, asked him some questions. The child shook his head and smiled. She leaned forward more closely and whiffed the boy’s breath. Her forehead creased with confusion. Clearly she was puzzled, for the boy did not reek in even the slightest way of the cigarettes or of the fiery rum which the whole circle had watched him consume.
A native woman now stepped to the door of the
A low murmur grew steadily among the faithful waiting for the
But no blood flowed forth.
The murmuring of the crowd rose to a tumult.
“Ghost,” one voice hoarsely whispered.
“Living dead,” another gasped.
“Zombie!” someone shouted.
The door of the
Carrefour watched the scene carefully through his dull, milky eyes. He saw the Great White Mother turn and steal a curious, lingering glance after the two departing women. Her face seemed to reflect more than mere interest. She seemed to smile with pride. Even through the blur of his dead eyes, there was no mistaking it.
It was then that he knew.
He recalled the strange song of the village troubadour, who had sung of sorrow and shame descending on the planter’s family.
He sensed strongly that the fault for their sorrow lay only partly with the planter’s rum-soaked brother, whose misplaced passions had threatened to shatter their familial bonds. The greater blame belonged to their own mother, a white woman well-schooled in Northern medicine, but who also dabbled adroitly in island
Ceremonial drums pounded vibrantly as Carrefour held the planter’s wife in his hand, closing his dry brown fingers around the soft, cool smooth silk of her gown. She was so small that only the tips of her feet and the top of her head protruded from the grasp of his surrounding fingers.
The
The drummers quickened their pace.
Carrefour turned and began to walk away. He had been assigned his mission.
Burdened with great purpose, he moved toward the faraway lights of Fort Holland.
There was a strong hint of ocean salt in the warm night breeze, and it slowed Carrefour’s pace, causing him to step awkwardly on the unpaved trails, with his footfalls dragging as if walking under seawater. At this delayed pace, he reached the planter’s home when the moon was more than halfway through its nightly arc. Bullfrogs croaked from the high grass of the surrounding marshes.
The unguarded iron gate of Fort Holland swung open silently at his touch.
Carrefour shuffled into the central courtyard, making better progress now that this flat stone surface was under his feet. Other than the scrape of his soles on the smooth stone, the only sound in here was the constant trickle of water from the fort’s fountain, over which an immense wooden figurehead loomed.
Carrefour paused briefly to stare up at the huge carving, his dull and unblinking eyes struggling to take in the sight.
He had heard tales of it, but until this moment he had never seen it. Rescued from the wreckage of the slave ship
Carrefour continued onward past the splashing fountain, shuffling up onto the covered porch at the far side of the courtyard. He knew this was where he would find the Holland family’s sleeping rooms. He could smell her now, the planter’s wife, the fair white zombie wrapped in her cool silken robes. His nostrils flared, picking up the scents of the oils and perfumes with which the healer-woman had washed her, and beneath these the reek of those stinging Northern medicines which so vainly attempted to mask the woman’s undeniable condition.