Louisiana History Collection - Part 2

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Louisiana History Collection - Part 2 Page 104

by Jennifer Blake


  Where was Ravel? What was he doing? She had expected somehow to see him, or at least hear from him. It seemed so unlikely that he would leave the situation between them unsettled, unfinished. For herself, it was a constant disturbance at the back of her mind, a nagging ache that she had done her best to ignore as the day wore on.

  Not to think of it at all was impossible. She had turned the fact of the meeting she had witnessed over and over in her mind but could come to no conclusion.

  What had been the purpose of it? The possibilities were many, for clubs of various kinds, from the Freemasons and young men’s benevolent societies to the heroics of the volunteer firemen, were a favorite occupation of the men of New Orleans, who had little else to occupy their time during the winter season.

  On top of these were the political groups with a cause, such as the Democratic party members who were opposed to the notoriously corrupt Know-Nothings currently in power, and perhaps the Vigilance Committee with the same purpose. Another group might be one she scarcely believed in, that shadowy coalition of influential men whose purpose was to control the commerce of New Orleans and, by extension, the entire Mississippi Valley.

  Then there was the Mistick Krewe of Comus that had evolved into a closed social organization known as the Pickwick Club, with meetings the year round. The last had rented for themselves a large and handsome house on St. Charles Street as a male retreat and gathering place.

  That was the trouble. Of all the groups Anya could bring to mind, there was not one that did not have its accustomed location for meetings, a location that was more spacious, more convenient, and more comfortable than the house on Rampart Street. Why then had the men she had seen collected together in that house?”

  A simple answer presented itself. Rampart Street was quiet, it was discreet, and it was not unusual for strange men to come and go there.

  The glaring question then, the one that eluded an answer, was which of the possible groups might be subject to police harassment? Which of them would be most likely to contain members who would swiftly fade away at the arrival of the police Charleys?

  The answer seemed to depend on the part played by the police the night before. If they had been protecting the citizens of New Orleans, then it was likely that there had been a report of criminal activity of some kind at the quadroon’s house. If they were acting as the tool of the city government, then the meeting must have been of political nature. It was possible also, supposing that the meeting had been of neither character, that it might be highly significant that the Charleys had shown such incompetence they had failed to detain a single man who had attended that meeting.

  Ravel and Gaspard. They seemed such unlikely allies. Anya had not been aware that they knew each other, except perhaps on the most superficial level. What could they have in common, what goal did they share. She wished she knew.

  Anya’s attention was caught by a woman in the habit of a nun, who was waving to her from across the street. Anya stopped, and the woman came toward her. As she neared, the eyes behind the woman’s mask were wary and she reached up to draw her black veil closer around her face.

  “Mademoiselle Hamilton?”

  “Yes?”

  “I thought I could not mistake that hair, so shining and not quite gold or brown or red, but something in between.”

  Anya suddenly knew the voice. Clear and carefully modulated, it belonged to the actress Simone Michel, Ravel’s mistress. “Yes, and you are—”

  The woman interrupted her. “Could I speak to you on a matter of importance? You can catch up with your friends in a few moments.”

  There seemed no reasonable objection. Besides, the only likely subject of conversation between them was Ravel, and Anya could not deny a strong interest in whatever Simone Michel had to say on the subject. “I’ll be along shortly,” she said with a smile to the others.

  They moved off, glancing back over their shoulders and at each other with some curiosity. The actress watched them go. When they were out of earshot, she asked abruptly, “Have you seen Ravel today?”

  “No, I haven’t,” Anya answered just as shortly. “Have you?”

  “No. I don’t like the way he disappears lately. There have been some odd tales concerning his vanishing act last week, some that concern you, my fine lady, but I think there’s more to it than that.”

  “Such as?”

  The actress did not answer for a moment, as if judging whether to trust Anya. At last she said, “I think whatever he’s doing is dangerous. There are people who want him stopped because he’s a gambler, a man who thrives on calculated risks, a natural leader. I don’t know what you feel for Ravel, or he for you, but I think you should know what you are letting yourself in for if you get mixed up with him.”

  “Close association doesn’t seem to have harmed you,” Anya observed.

  “I wouldn’t say that. However, I remain in the background; I know my place, you see. You apparently don’t.”

  Her place. She had none, nor was it likely she would ever have any. “What is this danger? What are the risks he’s taking?”

  “I can’t say for sure. All I know is that it’s outside the law.”

  “Then who are the people who want him stopped?” Stopped. That was a nice euphemism for dead. She had known of the danger since the firing of the cotton gin, but it still seemed a thing beyond belief when spoken of here on this crowded street in the midst of noisy music and laughter.

  “I don’t know, not with any certainty. They are very careful to remain behind the scenes.”

  “But you can guess, surely, since you have said so much?”

  “Guessing could be a dangerous business also.”

  “I see,” Anya said with slow emphasis. “Then the only reason you spoke to me at all was to warn me away from Ravel Duralde. Did you really think I would frighten so easily?”

  The actress lifted her chin. “I have watched you becoming drawn into something you know nothing about. I’m warning you because — because for some peculiar reason I like you. And also because if you run into trouble I will feel better knowing my conscience is clear.”

  It could be true. There was no opportunity to test it, however, for the actress turned in a swirl of dead black skirts and walked away. Anya watched her blend with the crowd and disappear along a dim side street, and the main thing she felt was frustration. She had been close to an answer to her question, if only she had known it, if she had not lost the chance by her own defensiveness. And what had caused that defensiveness? The answer was simple. She had been jealous of the knowledge the actress had seemed to have about Ravel’s movements, jealous of the implied confidences between them.

  Jealous.

  She couldn’t be, shouldn’t be. But she was.

  Jealous.

  Also stupid. She had no claim on Ravel Duralde and wanted none. He was everything she most disliked in a man. He was a professional killer, a glory-seeking soldier, a reckless gambler, a deceitful despoiler of women. The best thing that she could do would be to forget what had happened, forget what the man was and was not. Forget what he was doing and why. Forget Ravel. But could she?

  Could she?

  So uncomfortable were her thoughts that her impulse was to escape them. She started walking along the banquette once more, searching the revelers ahead of her for Celestine and the two men. They were not to be seen. She rose on tiptoe, trying to see above the crowd. An Arab in a flowing burnous came up behind her, jostling her so that she stumbled off-balance. She moved out of his way with only a bare glance in his direction.

  The man put his hand on her arm, giving her a push toward a nearby doorway. She looked down and saw that his fingernails were dirty and broken. His mask was some kind of thick veil drawn across the bridge of his nose, leaving his eyes and forehead free. He grinned at her above it and gave her another push.

  Anya snatched her arm free and stepped smartly away from the man, placing a passing pair of men in monkey costumes between her accost
er and herself. She was more irritated than afraid. She was a woman without the protection of a male escort, a servant, or the company of female friends, and in the easy atmosphere of the holiday it was not surprising that she should meet with some annoyance.

  As she moved on, however, the man followed her. She increased her pace. He did the same. She wove in and out between what appeared to be a family group consisting of papa, mama, and nine children ranging in ages from a teenage boy taller than his mother to a baby in the arms of its nurse. The Arab, rudely pushing aside a small girl dressed as a fairy, moved after Anya. The irate papa shouted at him, but he paid no attention.

  Draping her himation more closely around her, Anya picked up her skirt and dodged across the street in the path of a dray loaded with whiskey barrels. The driver cursed and hauled on the reins, but she made it. It was a moment before she could catch her breath to look back. When she did, there were two Arabs crossing after her behind the dray.

  Where were Celestine and Murray and Emile? How had they gotten so far ahead of her? Anxiously she stared down the side streets as she passed them. There was no sign of her half-sister’s russet velvet or Emile’s plumed hat. The tale Murray had mentioned of a woman being attacked nagged at her. The men could hardly do that on the open street. In any case, she had no proof they meant her that kind of harm. More likely, they thought it a fine joke. Or else her costume was more suggestive of the hetaerae, the courtesans of ancient Greece, than even she had thought. She expected the two would grow tired of the chase, whatever its purpose, in short order.

  Three, not two. A third man in Arab costume came at her from a side street. She swerved away to cross the intersection on the diagonal. Even as she did so, she realized that she was being herded away from the more crowded streets. That would not do. She had to double back.

  Her breath was coming in short gasps. There was a pulling pain in her side. Her sandals were rubbing blisters on the sides of her feet. Her himation kept sliding down, threatening to trip her, and the tassels that banged against her shins kept getting between her legs. The maskers she passed turned their heads to look at her as if surprised at her haste, but there were no expressions on their disguises, only blank appraisal without promise of succor. If she stopped to explain, to ask for help, she might be caught, with no one to come to her aid.

  She needed a weapon, but what would avail her against three men? A pepper pot pistol designed to shoot once from each of several small barrels? A sword and the skill to use it? A cane knife and the strength to send it flailing back and forth? She had nothing, could see nothing that would be of use.

  The fourth man came from around a corner ahead of her. Once more she struck out away from them, racing across the street to reach the opposite corner, fleeing down the cross street.

  This was no ribald jest, no accident. The men in the Arab costumes were after her. Their flowing burnouses had been chosen in all likelihood because they were already present in abundant numbers. Using them, the men could converge on their quarry in good order, but without attracting undue attention.

  There was something horrifying about those faceless, shrouded figures. They seemed unreal, the silent and relentless figments from a nightmare. All she could think of was escape, to run faster and faster. She had lost track of where she was, where she was going. She could still hear the music and sound of the crowd that was congregating on Royal Street where the parade would pass, but it was growing fainter. Her heart thudded against the wall of her chest. The wind from the river was cold in her face. Her hair flew around her. Every step was agony.

  She tripped on a sagging corner of her himation and staggered, catching at an iron post that supported a gallery overhead to keep from falling. Behind her she heard a loud guffaw.

  That sound. She had heard it before on the night of the fire. The men in the Arab costumes were not sadistic wraiths bent on harrying a lone female. They were the thugs who had tried to kill her and Ravel at Beau Refuge, the men who had destroyed her property and terrorized her people in the quarters. That they dared set out in pursuit of her like coursing hounds after a rabbit brought the reviving power of rage boiling up inside her. She would not be caught. She would not be manhandled again or treated like some levee doxy.

  She heard the rattle of the cabriolet before she saw it. The vehicle turned a corner and came toward her. It was not as ancient as most, and the mare that pulled it had a look of rawboned strength. It was moving at a smart clip, but not excessively so. Flinging her himation over her shoulder, Anya made a wild dash into the street toward it. Behind her there came a yell and the thud of running feet.

  The cabriolet’s horse, startled by her sudden appearance and flying draperies, reared and whinnied. The driver sawed on the reins, rising in his seat while his hat tumbled from his head. Anya ducked under the mare’s flailing hooves and reached for the edge of the kick board as she set her foot on the step and pulled herself upward.

  “What the bloody hell—,” the driver began.

  Anya did not trouble to answer. As she landed beside him, she reached across for the whip in its socket. It was long and snaking with a tasseled end. She drew it back and sent it cracking toward the thugs, once, twice, three times. They yelled and scattered. The mare jerked forward in her harness at a run. Bouncing and sluing, the cabriolet raced down the street with the men in burnouses pounding after it. They shouted and cursed at each other as they fell slowly behind. Anya cracked the whip above the back of the mare a final time.

  “Here now, here now, you dumb bitch,” the driver hollered as he brought his mare under control.

  It was impossible to tell whether he was talking to Anya or the horse, but she didn’t care. She had escaped. Whatever the plans the thugs had had for her, she had foiled them. Reaction and exultation shuddered over her. She controlled them with a strong effort. She wasn’t safe, not yet. The men knew what she looked like and the direction she was going.

  How had they recognized her in her costume and mask? Had they too noticed the color of her hair? How could that be when, as far as she knew, they had never seen it at close quarters except at night or when it was covered by a bonnet? It was true there might have been other times, but the thought of them watching her, spying upon her, was not one she liked to consider. But perhaps they had heard when Simone Michel had called her name?

  The actress had not only spoken her name aloud, but had separated her from her escort. Had it been a coincidence, or had Simone’s show of concern been as false as the jewels that she wore on stage? It was all too possible. The things the actress had said were nothing Anya had not already known or guessed. All her reluctance to say more might have been feigned merely to make what she had said more intriguing.

  And yet if that were true, what was the purpose? Ravel had spent time with Anya, yes, but against his will. The intimacy there had been between the two of them was no threat to Simone. He had not, apparently, severed his relationship with the actress. Why then? In addition, even if the actress had pointed her out, what could the connection be between Simone and the thugs who had been at Beau Refuge? How had she known them in order to make use of them?

  It was just barely possible that the incident tonight and the burning of the gin had a common thread, but the only one that she could see led to Ravel. Someone called “the boss” had ordered their deaths that night at the plantation. What would have happened to her tonight? Would she have been attacked in an alley, or would she have disappeared into the bordellos of New Orleans like hundreds of other women? Or would she, perhaps, have been found in a day or two floating in the river? And all because she had involved herself with Ravel Duralde?

  There was no time to think of it. They were on Chartres Street, for the cabriolet had clattered past the cathedral and the Cabildo. Chartres ran parallel to Royal, the street down which the parade would come as it made its way from St. Charles and Canal Streets. At the intersections could be seen the press of people on that other thoroughfare. Somewhere in the
milling mob was Celestine and Murray and Emile. Celestine would be frantic, worrying about where she could be, why she had not caught up with them. Should she try to find them, Anya wondered, or should she return to the townhouse?

  The driver of the cabriolet settled the question for her. Whether out of curiosity to view the parade that would be coming at any moment, or because he thought he might find a passenger in the crowd, he swung his vehicle into the next cross street, making toward Royal.

  The cabriolet slowed. There were people crowding the banquettes, spilling into the street here. Along Royal itself there was a solid line jostling each other, elbowing for position as they waited to see what the Krewe of Comus had for them this year. The galleries overhead were full to overflowing. The buzzing of voices was like a giant disturbed beehive, nearly drowning out the distant sound of banjos and concertinas. People craned their necks, looking up the street, inching further and further out into it from either side until only the open gutter down the center divided them.

  The cabriolet driver pulled his mare to a halt and turned to Anya. “All right, me lady, what is it this is all about?”

  He was not young and his voice held a lilt of Ireland. In his lined face there was sympathy as well as interest. Anya said, “You saw those men. They — well, I’m more grateful than I can say for your aid.”

  “I’d say you had a mortal close call. You might think on that before you go a-wandering off by yourself again.”

  “Yes, I will,” Anya said as she gathered her draperies around her, preparing to alight. “I’m sorry if I caused you any inconvenience, and I wish that I could pay you now, but I came out without my purse. If you will present yourself at Madame Hamilton’s townhouse in the morning—”

  “Hush, now. I don’t want pay, but I would trouble you for the return of my whip.”

 

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