For her own reasons, Frances had blamed her sister for the tragedy. Or so it seemed.
For her own reasons, Malvina blamed herself as well. And so it was, in fifty-three years, not a single word had passed between the sisters. Which isn’t to say there’d been no talking.
“Shoes.”
“Maria?”
Frances talked to herself. And Malvina talked to
Frances refused to look Malvina directly in the eye, but Malvina often looked into Frances’-and in those eyes she saw the baby she’d once raised. Remembered feeding Frances warm goat’s milk, calming away tiny tears and goosing laughter from that frowning little mouth with funny sounds, impressions of swamp frogs and crickets. Remembered how that little baby would crawl up on her lap as she sat in their dead mother’s big oak rocker, would speak in the wonderful fragmented language of babies, pleading for a song. “
“Song please, Mother.”
Such sweet memories. Malvina kept these vivid in her mind and close to her heart, always, always.
And she would sing:
Which translated approximately to:
The daily penance paid by Malvina for the last half century, the penance of her sister’s eyes, had succeeded (somewhat) in soothing her own sense of guilt. But even so, what was done could never be undone, and so she’d wondered. Could she have done more to save her sister’s child? She wasn’t exactly sure. In any case, she knew Maria had not died from yellow fever as she’d led Frances to believe. The truth was something she’d protected her
“Always under foot.”
“Where my Maria?”
In 1853 Maria had been the toast of Rue Dumaine, a star attraction at Auntie Jin’s Sporting House. But she’d given her heart to a common man, a lowly cemetery worker. The gravedigger left Maria brokenhearted and heavy with child, making things easy on himself-and so Malvina had seen to it that he paid for his crimes. Among other things, it was hard to be handsome minus a nose.
The gravedigger’s son had died during childbirth and Maria fell gravely ill shortly after. Malvina had tried desperately to save her niece-had done everything she could think of. Conjured cures of the body, cures of the heart-
None of it worked. Nearly out of hope, she’d turned to otherworldly methods. A ritual of the spirit meant to mend Maria’s heart, body and mind-and something more, something special for the gravedigger.
Malvina would always remember that night. That strangest of nights. That black, black night in 1853.
“Pickin’ up other people’s shoes.”
“Where my Maria?”
Chapter seventeen. Blackest Night
As Maria lay withering in the fall of 1853, Malvina had discovered her own bruised heart lacking in its former capacity for faith. As she prepared for the night’s ritual she was unsure if she possessed the strength required to bring Maria back from death’s edge-but she was quite sure she possessed the skills and wherewithal to ruin the one who had done her harm, the lowdown good-for-nothing gravedigger known as Marcus Nobody Special. Real faith, she determined, was easier to conjure from a heart bolstered by rage than from a heart damaged by sorrow. To fortify her faith, she must focus her rage.
Discarded corpses were plentiful in the killing season of fever, so it hadn’t been hard for Malvina to locate one suitably resembling the gravedigger. The mulatto corpse now lay face-up in an open pine coffin near the foot of Malvina’s altar. The altar itself was a beautiful collage of dried flowers, fine jewelry, gold coin, keepsakes from long-dead ancestors and bones of the dead collected up from the crumbling, shallow-bricked tombs of the poor-all artfully arranged around molded statuettes of Catholic Saints. Other various and appropriate amenities for the
With all preparations in place, the big door of the tall, box-shaped coffee warehouse shut with a hollow
The guardians of the Spiritworld gladly protect their earthly children from its more destructive tenants, but these same guardians must be specifically invited and given proper respects before such protections can be enjoyed. First was the evocation of
Malvina had drawn a large