still sat on top whispered something down to her.
The woman nodded and flicked her tongue like a snake.
Then turned slowly and began to approach once more the man who held the knife. She was swinging her hips from side to side and flouncing her breasts as she walked. Stopping directly in front of him, she mocked the man with her body. She placed her arms around his neck and hung there provocatively. She rubbed her body against him until he slapped her to the ground. Then laughing aloud she knelt at his feet and began clawing the earth. The man struck her four blows with the side of the machete, knocking her onto her back. She tried to rise but he struck her again, even harder this time. The woman merely laughed. She went to rise again, but the man put the point of the machete to her belly and forced her back down to the ground. In a jeering manner he smeared the blade over her breasts and arms.
And that was when the clutching hand burst up out of the earth.
The second time the woman shrieked, Scarlett jerked involuntarily. The grasping fingers of the
Clods of earth began to erupt as the buried man tried to break out of his prison under the ground.
The woman's head was being yanked back and forth as a hole opened in the earth and the man with the machete carved an X across her trembling stomach.
The old crone smiled.
Then one by one, the naked women with the red cloth bags removed the masks from their faces and placed them at the feet of the Voodoo Queen. For each mask delivered the matriarch gave to her subject a small hoodoo doll. Pins stuck out of each doll, glinting in the moonlight.
The drums began again.
Then the
First the earth broke away from around him in large chunks and clods. Then his head popped up all smeared with mud, his eyeballs vacant and bulging and dull, his voice groaning out broken noises from deep down in his throat. He bit the screaming woman and tossed her to one side.
By now the old women with the red cloth bags had joined the dancers around the fire. The air was filled with booms and rattles and whistles and chants and passionate wails and whines. As their skeletal, wrinkled, empty- breasted bodies began to shiver to the drums, the old women worked the dolls with their hands, jabbing them with the pins.
John Lincoln Hardy, bone still in hand, walked to one end of the tomb. A hinge squealed as he pulled open a stone door. With his free arm he reached inside.
The
He stood in the moonlight, motionless, his arms held limply out from the sides of his body.
Gyrating abruptly on one foot, the man with the machete strode grandiosely over to the fire dancers. A few of them were now slapping their necks out of time with the drums
Still dancing, the group surrounded him — and even the woman whom the
John Lincoln Hardy walked over and cut the carcass of a goat down from one of the gibbets. To do this it appeared to Scarlett that Hardy used the end of the bone still clutched in his hand. Then a moment later he saw the attachment screwed into one knobbed end. It was a razor-sharp sickle about four inches in length. Like a silver eye, the steel winked in the moonlight.
Hardy returned to the tomb once more, and this time when he reached in, pulled out a wooden crate on rollers. From this crate he dragged another goat by the horns.
As Hardy struggled to get the animal over to the scaffold, the
Finished, the
Hardy passed the bone with the sickle attachment to the
Her eyes jerked to the gallows.
The
Even at a distance, Scarlett and Spann could see into the red maw of the cleaved belly where glossy tubular glands and bulgy membranes slid about, the entrails still palpitating. The screams of the animal were now climbing to a terrible pitch. It was like a wild cry that burst up and out until something in the tortured throat tore, and the wail trailed away to the hiss of a hoarse whisper.
The
'Damballah,' someone whispered, barely audibly.
Rick Scarlett felt light-headed. Nearby a fly buzzed, its sound a little too loud.
The goat jerked and died.
As the stretched-out dancers covered with gore now began to writhe in ecstasy, the two cops turned and looked toward the tomb.
Only then did they realize that John Lincoln Hardy had disappeared. With the bag over one shoulder, he had been swallowed into the grave of night like a stone sucked into quicksand.
Rick Scarlett tapped Katherine Spann on the shoulder.
'Let's get the fuck out of here,' he whispered into her ear.
Less than a minute later, they too were gone.
10:35 a.m.
Banks of cloud swept north from the Gulf and the tropics. When the ball of the storm finally cracked open, a white flash of wavering light filled the horizon, showing up each leaf, each twig, each bough on the trees in stark black relief. An emphatic crash of thunder followed shortly after. As the storm drew closer to Moisant Field each lightning blitz was yellower than the last, each volley of thunder succeeding it at shorter intervals. Ultimately the brilliance and the noise met in one consummate explosion right above their heads — and the rain came down. The hood of the police car rumbled like a roll of military drums. For Scarlett and Spann the downpour made them both feel right at home.
Ten minutes later the rain stopped and Ernie Hodge, head ducked, lumbered out through the Air Express door of the cargo building.
The sudden calm was deceiving, however. For no sooner had the NOPD detective opened the rear door of the car than a wind almost tore it off its hinges. High above, the trees sighed and swayed and moaned.
'Je-sus Ke-rist!' Hodge exclaimed, yanking the handle shut. 'What are we in for anyway, some sort o' typhoon?'
The rain began again.
'Why don't you fly anyway?' Luke Wentworth said. He sounded like he meant it.
'What's the situation?' Spann asked of Hodge.
'They're booked in, all right. Same flight as you guys, if the plane flies. Once you get to Seattle, they take a