02 Fever Season bj-2

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02 Fever Season bj-2 Page 13

by Barbara Hambly


  "I can understand her sentiments."

  Hannibal coughed, a brief line of pain appearing between his dark brows, and he fished in his pocket for the opium tincture that suppressed both coughing and pain. He took a tiny, judicious swig. "I suspect he's even more unpleasant on close contact. God knows how his wife... well. In any case, the brother's children, instead of sharing some of the proceeds with Uncle Alphonse, as he probably hoped they would, turned the real estate by an Act of Procuration over to their mother-who, as you recall, is Madame L's cousin, Creole society being stiff with McCartys. The Act of Procuration was handled by the Louisiana State Bank Jean Blanque's old outfit-and since Madame is widely known to keep all her business affairs in her own hands rather than let Nicolas Lalaurie lay a finger on them, Montreuil assumed that she was behind the plot."

  "Was she?" January got to his feet to light a pair of candles, for with the thunder of rain overhead the afternoon had gone pitchy dark.

  "Who knows? Most of the McCartys go to her for business advice, or for money to float investments.

  She bankrolled this school, I know that. I don't know whether she advised Cousin Manette or not. But Montreuil's never forgiven her." Hannibal picked up his violin again, sketching threads and bones and shadows of airs while he spoke, as another man might have drawn boxes and diamonds on the margin of a paper while speaking, or made knots in string. "Then when the Ursuline Sisters put their land along Rue de l'Hopital up for sale, Montreuil wanted to buy the lot next to his house, except he didn't have the cash-videlicet Act of Procuration, above. Madame bought the lot-and the unfinished house-out from under him.

  "Since that time he's been telling everyone who'll listen that she's a monster. His wife claims she saw her chase a little Negro girl off the roof with a cowhide whip-though how she could have seen that I can't imagine, since the Montreuil house is a full story shorter than the Lalaurie-and reported her to the police for it. The girl had actually died of a fall, and Madame was fined, so it isn't really surprising that Madame is pretty careful these days to keep her servants behind walls and away from anyone who might talk to any of Montreuil's people. You grew up in this town. You know the kind of things that get printed in the papers, and talked around the markets, and believed."

  January was silent for a time, listening to the rain and remembering the fury in Mademoiselle Vitrac's voice, the bitterness in her gray eyes. "I take it Mademoiselle Vitrac knows Madame Lalaurie? If Madame helped finance the school?"

  "Rose knew the wife of one of Madame's McCarty cousins she'd gone to school with her in New York. The banks were less than eager to lend Rose money once they found out there was no Monsieur Vitrac. I gather someone made the mistake of remarking to Madame Lalaurie how one couldn't really expect a mere woman to manage a business-some people have no sense of self-preservation." The violin shaped a phrase of notes, as clear and mocking as the ironic lift of an eyebrow: were it not for consumption, and pain, and the twin nepenthes of alcohol and opium into which that pain had driven him, Hannibal would have been the greatest at his art. He was still one of the finest violinists January had encountered, in New Orleans or in Paris. As he played, his eyelids had a crumpled look, lined and discolored, but the dark eyes themselves were dreamy, lost in the music and the rain. Every penny I own is tied up in this building... January thought of his sister, and of the child she had just borne. Of Agnes Pellicot, and of his mother. Men routinely gifted their pla??es with money or property as a congi when they put them aside; it was, he knew, one reason why many women of color crossed over the line of respectability and allowed white protectors to take them. With even a little money, it was possible to start a business, to buy a boardinghouse or rental property, to invest in steamship stocks or sugar futures. Men would start a pla??e's son in business, but rarely her daughter. "What do you think of Cora?" he asked. "You met her. Do you think she'd have done murder?" Hannibal considered for a time, tatting his bits of Rossini and Vivaldi into a glittering lacework in the dimness. "I think she could have," he said at last. "She's hard-but then most women are harder than one thinks. Even our Athene." He nodded toward the house below them, where Rose Vitrac would be lying, sleeping, January hoped. Alone as she had always been alone. "Whether she would have is another question. The problem could have been solved fairly simply by her running away-if she hadn't decided to take the money and the pearls with her-and of course as a house servant she'd have known where to find them. Myself, I wouldn't have taken the whole five thousand dollars, let alone the pearls, because the theft would be a guarantee of pursuit. But it may be she wasn't thinking very clearly." Beside him, the girl Genevi?ve turned in her sleep, and whispered something, despairing. Hannibal leaned close, but the girl fell silent again. The sound of the rain seemed very loud.

  "I know Cora did tell Rose not to seek out or try to speak to Madame Lalaurie for her, not that Rose has more than a bowing acquaintance with Madame. It's hard to tell how people will react to things, and Cora didn't want to jeopardize her friend's position. Which doesn't mean she didn't dose Otis Redfern's souffle for him: a woman can treat those she cares for with kindness and still be an ogre to her enemies, the same way a man can manumit a loved and loyal slave on the same day he whales the living tar out of another slave for putting too much sugar in his tea. People have surprisingly hermetic minds." "Do you think Emily Redfern poisoned her husband? If the mistress was gone beforehand, the wife would have no cause to do it; if it was before Cora left, would she have done herself out of six or seven hundred dollars by poisoning her?"

  "Don't ask me." Hannibal wrapped his fiddle in its holed and faded silk scarves, and stowed it carefully in its case. "It's hard to believe La Redfern would pass up a chance at the money, but one can't tell. Maybe not even the servants in the household could tell. In Dublin when I was growing up there was a woman who kept her two nieces chained in a cellar for five years so she could go on lending their inheritance money out at four and a half percent. One's always hearing about domestic tyrants who beat or mistreat their wives and children, and no one in the family dares speak of it because they know it'll do them no good. There may have been things going on in that household we'll never know about-which may be one reason why our Emily is trying so hard to retrieve her runaway property."

  The rain was lightening. Pale daylight leaking through the cracks in the shutters struggled against the candle glow, then slowly bested it. Hannibal gathered up his fiddle case to go.

  "One thing I do know, though," he added, pausing in the door. "And I think you know this, too, if you talked to her even for a short time. Cora isn't one to give up. I don't think she'd have left New Orleans without Gervase. And given her circumstances, I don't think she'd walk out either on that money, or on Rose."

  Nine

  January was careful, upon approaching the Lalaurie house later that afternoon, to stay on the downstream side of Rue de l'H?pital, crossing over only when directly opposite the gate rather than risk another encounter with Monsieur Montreuil. The rust-colored town house seemed shabby and sordid to him, and he imagined, as he studied it through the thin-falling rain, that the curtains in the upper-floor windows were half-parted, to afford a view of whoever might be passing in the street. The Montreuil house and the Lalaurie shared a parry wall. There was no way that he could perceive for anyone in the Montreuil house to see if Madame Lalaurie hurled a dozen slaves from her own roof.

  The bony servant entered with the inevitable glass of lemonade for Mademoiselle Blanque in the stifling heat, and vanished in well-trained silence. If nothing else, thought January, Jean Blanque's widow would have far too accurate a knowledge of what men and women cost to indulge in that kind of waste. When the lesson was over he asked one of the market-women selling berries in the street outside if she had seen or heard of anyone leaving the Lalaurie house the previous Friday night, but the woman only crossed herself quickly, and hurried on her way. January put up his oiled-silk umbrella and made his way riverward to the cafes that sh
eltered under the market's tileroofed arcade.

  Most of the market-women were gone, and the shadowy bays empty to the coming twilight. The air smelled thick of sewage, coffee, tobacco, and rain. A few crews still worked in the downpour, unloading cargoes from the steamboats at the levee. Others sheltered on the benches under the arcades, black and white and colored, joking among themselves and laughing. At the little tables set up on the brick flooring, brokers and pilots and supercargoes sipped coffee and dickered over the prices of flour and firewood, corn and pipes of wine. At other tables, upriver flatboatmen or the crews of the keelboats that still plied the river's jungly shores muttered in their barely comprehensible English; and under the arches on the river side a stocky, curly haired man in a somber black coat argued prices with the broker Dutillet over a little coflie of slaves standing, manacled, in the rain.

  As he passed them January heard Dutillet say in English, "Nine-fifty is as high as I'll go; take it or leave it, sir." And the man protested, "Nine-fifty! Why, a good field hand's going for over eleven hundred in the Missouri Territory!"

  January paused, recognizing the melodic organ-bass of the voice.

  "Then take 'em up to Missouri and sell 'em there, by all means, Reverend," retorted the broker. "And considering what you paid that poor widow for 'em, you ought to take shame to yourself."

  January realized the man in the black coat, whose face was vaguely familiar to him, was the Reverend Micajah Dunk, in whose honor Emily Redfern had gone to battle with the entire Creole community over the matter of musicians.

  He passed on, shaking his head. A market-woman pointed out the man he sought, sitting alone at a table with a cup of coffee and beignets before him. January approached him, held out his hand: "Natchez Jim?"

  "I was last time I looked." The boatman smiled, and clasped January's fingers in a grip like articulated oak logs. "You're the musician, Mamzelle Snakebones's brother."

  "Last time I looked," replied January, and Natchez Jim gestured him to the other chair. The boatman was bearded, his hair a mass of braids like a pickaninny's, done up in string. His clothing had all started out different colors shortly after Noah's flood but had weathered to the hue of the river on a bleak day. He smelled of pipe tobacco and badly cured fur, but his French, except for an occasional Creole pronunciation, was the flawless French of Paris. "My sister told me you'd be willing to take someone upriver to Ohio."

  "She told you that, did she?" Jim gestured, asking if January wanted some coffee, and January shook his head. He propped the dripping umbrella against the side of his chair; rain still thundered on the tiles overhead and veiled the cathedral, away across the Place d'Armes, in opaline curtains of moving gray. "It might so be. I owe her many favors, your sister."

  He fished from the front of his shirt a grimy ribbon that had once been red, with a flannel juju bag on the end of it. "This has saved my life, not once but time and again. He's an angry man, the river. Sometimes all you can do is stay close in to the bank, that he see you not. Yes, I told her I'd take a passenger. Four days, five days it must have been. She spoke then as if it would be soon. Is your friend ready to travel?"

  January shook his head. "She's disappeared. We can'tfind her. I sought you out to see if you had taken her already, Friday night."

  "Not me." The boatman replaced his juju bag in his breast. "Have you checked the fever hospitals? The cholera wards? It takes one fast, the cholera."

  "I work at Charity," said January. "I haven't seen her there, or at the Ursulines."

  "There's a place that's opened near the turning basin, up in the Swamp where the keelboatmen stay: St.

  Gertrude's, I think. If she's a runaway she may be there."

  "I'll check," said January. "But if this girl tried to leave the city another way-on a steamboat, perhaps-how carefully are they looking at people's papers?"

  "People like us?" A glint of anger appeared in the boatman's eye. "People of color? Very closely indeed.

  People who might not have papers to prove they're truly peo ple in the eyes of the law? A runaway is money out of someone's pocket. And maybe money in someone else's as well."

  He sipped his coffee. His dark eyes moved to Dunk, deep in conversation now with stout Mr. Granville of the Bank of Louisiana, and to the men and women standing nearby, chained and dripping in the shelter of the eaves. "There's not much by way of law up there," Jim continued. "I've been taken twice, up in Missouri, with not a sheriff or a lawman who'll even ask if I was or wasn't free in the eyes of the law.

  What's the use of having records here in Louisiana that you're a free man, if you're chained on some farm out in the territories? The second man who kidnapped me was the local magistrate. I was a week hiding in the bushes and the streams like an animal, until I reached the river again."

  Natchez Jim shook his head. "I don't go up there anymore," he said softly. "Even here where there's law, they don't let many slip past."

  No, thought January, looking back at the tall black masts of the steamboats, spewing slow rivers of smoke into the nigrous sky. They don't let many slip past.

  From a woman selling bright-colored kerchiefs-and wearing one so brilliant and so elaborately tied as to put all of her stock to shame-he found out the direction of the place he wanted next to seek. "He's still abed, I hear, poor man," she told him. "For shame, those doctors turning him out of their clinic before his cure was done, because now, of course, he's more crooked than ever. You'd think if they'd started they'd have finished, and made him straight, wouldn't you?"

  "They'd never have made him straight," said January, startled at this reading of the event.

  "Silly! Of course they would," retorted the marketwoman. "Rich people go to them all the time, they must know what they're doing. Here." She stepped over to her neighbor, who was just clearing up the last of her okra, her grapes, and her aubergines from her table. "Philom?ne, have you got something our friend here can take to poor H?lier? And what do you think? This fellow says Dr. Soublet doesn't cure people after all with those machines of his."

  "That a fact? But I hear he fixed this lady's clubfoot so she can dance just like a little girl. It was in the newspaper..."

  Carrying the basket of vegetables, January made his way down Gallatin Street, an unspeakable waterfront alley leading from the markets whose every rough wooden shack and grimy cottage seemed to house either a taproom or a bordello, though they all smelled like privies. Rain splashed in gutters that brimmed with raw sewage, and glimmered like fire in the dull orange bars of light issuing from shuttered windows and open doors. A dark-haired woman in a dress that had to have been bought from a fever victim-overly fashionable and too new to have been sold from a servant's ragbag-called out to him from a doorway, but he walked on.

  Just why he was doing this, he could not have said. He would be late to the Hospital, and with almost no sleep, he had risen earlier than his habit, to walk to Mademoi selle Vitrac's school to see how her girls did and to tell her what he had found. Though he would never have mentioned it to Mademoiselle Vitrac, he still considered it a very real possibility that Cora Chouteau had poisoned Otis Redfern. He had encountered nothing yet that proved she hadn't.

  Because of his father, he thought. Because of a halfrecalled dream of hounds baying in the swamp.

  Because of the little boy sitting on the gallery, waiting for someone to come who cared for him, who would tell him that he wasn't alone.

  Maybe because he knew that Rose Vitrac would be doing what he was doing, did she not have the girls who were her charge. Because she had once been alone and desperate, and Cora had stood by her.

  Amid the darkness and the fever-heat and the stinks of death, everyone needed friends.

  Even if those friends still called you "Monsieur Janvier."

  H?lier Lapatie lived in a bare little one-room shed in the rear yard behind what was officially termed a "grocery" but was in fact a groghouse, owned by a man who'd been manumitted years ago by one of the Lafr?nni?re family
. The place was a sort of gathering-place or clubhouse-illegal, of course-for the free colored stevedores of the levee and the slaves who "slept out." The crowd in the groghouse whistled and called out comments when January came in, for he still wore the black long-tailed coat and sober waistcoat of a music teacher and carried an umbrella, but the owner behind his plank bar asked good-naturedly, "Get you somethin', sir?" and directed him out the back to H?lier's little shack.

  As he went through the door January thought he recognized by lantern-light the woman Nani?, sitting on a flour-barrel talking earnestly with another woman and a man-light-skinned, so he could not have been the Virgil whom she'd sought through the fever wards. But in the flickering gloom he could not be sure.

  Had Nani? found her man or was this his replacement?

  He found H?lier out of bed, stubbornly dragging himself back and forth across the dirty boards of the shed's floor with the aid of two sticks. The water seller turned his head sharply as January came up the few plank steps: "Is that you?" he called out in English.

  "It's me," replied January in French. "Benjamin January." He wanted to add, the big black nigger, but didn't, knowing the man had been under opium when he'd said it. Long dealings with Hannibal Sefton had taught him to let what was said under the influence of the drug slide like water off his back.

  "Ah." H?lier dragged himself to the door of the shed. The young man's face was bathed in sweat, his blue eyes sunk in new webs of pain. "The surgeon no one will hire. I'm sorry," he added quickly, stepping back to let January into the shack. "It's the pain-and the opium, a little." He was very much more bent than he had been before, the spinal muscles that had been stretched and torn contracting, hunching him further, the damaged ligaments restricting the movement of his right shoulder and leg.

 

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