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A Free Man of Color - Barbara Hambly [95]

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ritual, from his childhood at Bellefleur. The priest who’d catechized him later had taught him to trust in the Virgin and take comfort in the mysteries of the rosary. It had been years since he’d even thought of such spells.

“Here.” She held out the thong to him. “Tie this round your ankle when you go. Papa Legba and Virgin Mary, they look out for you and bring you back here safe and free. It’s not safe out there,” she went on, seeing him smile as he put the thong into his pocket. “You had that gris-gris on you for near a week, and there’s evil in it, the kind of evil that comes from petty anger and grows big, like a rat stuffin’ itself on worms in the dark. Wear it. It’s not safe beyond the river. Not for the likes of us. Maybe not ever again.”


The sun was leaning over the wide crescent of the river as January walked back along Rue Burgundy toward his mother’s house. In the tall town houses and the low-built cottages both, and in every courtyard and turning, he could sense the movement and excitement of preparations for the final night of festivities, the suppressed flurry of fantastic clothing and the freedom of masks.

He’d already made arrangements with Desdunes’s Livery for the best horse obtainable. Food, and a little spare clothing, and bait for the horse lay packed in the saddlebag under the bed in his room. It’s not safe beyond the river.

The land that he’d been born in, the land that was his home, was enemy land. American land. The land of men like Nahum Shagrue.

His heart beat hard as he walked along the bricks of the banquette. If he could get evidence, find a reason, learn something to tell Shaw about what was out at Bayou Chien Mort, he thought the man would go. And despite all the Americans could do, the testimony of a free man of color was still good in the courts of New Orleans.

But it had to be a free man’s testimony, not that of subpoenaed slaves.

A couple of Creole blades came down the banquette toward him, gesturing excitedly, recounting a duel or a card game, and January stepped down, springing over the noisome gutter and into the mud of the street to let them pass. Neither so much as glanced from their absorption.

As he crossed back on some householder’s plank to the pavement, January cursed Euphrasie Dreuze in his heart. At his mother’s house he edged down the narrow passage to the yard and thence climbed to his own room above the kitchen. At the small cypress desk he wrote a quick letter to Abishag Shaw—keeping the wording as simple as possible just to be on the safe side—then took his papers from his pocket and copied them exactly in his best notarial script. He started to fold the copy, then flattened it out again, and for good measure made a second copy on paper he’d bought last week to keep track of his students’ payments. The inaccuracy of the official signature didn’t trouble him much, given what he knew about the educational level prevalent in rural Louisiana. He placed the original in the envelope with the letter to Shaw, and closed it with a wafer of pink wax. One copy he folded and put in the desk, another in his pocket.

As a lifeline it wasn’t much, but it was all he had.

It was half a block from his mother’s house to Minou’s. The two houses were nearly identical, replicas of all the small cottages along that portion of Rue Burgundy. He edged down the narrow way between Minou’s cottage and the next and into the yard, where his sister’s cook was peeling apples for a tart at the table set up outside the kitchen door. The afternoon was a cool one, the heat that poured from the big brick kitchen welcome. Inside, January could see Thérèse ironing petticoats at a larger table near the stove.

“She inside,” said the cook, looking up at him with an encouraging smile, which also told him that Henri Viellard was not on the premises. It would not have done, of course, for his sister’s protector to be reminded that Dominique had a brother at all, much less one so dark. She had been her usual sweet, charming self when she’d told him to check whether Henri was present before approaching her

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