Page 13 of Darkfall


  Not quite sure how to handle a maudlin Mafia chieftain, Jack tried to get Carramazza off the subject of his dogs before the old man reached that pathetic and embarrassing state of mind on the edge of which he now teetered. He said, “Word on the street is that Lavelle claims to be using voodoo against you.”

  Carramazza nodded. “That’s what he says.”

  “You believe it?”

  “He seems serious.”

  “But do you think there’s anything to this voodoo business?”

  Carramazza didn’t answer. He gazed out the side window at the wind-whipped snow whirling past the parked limousine.

  Although Jack was aware that Rebecca was scowling at him in disapproval, he pressed the point: “You think there’s anything to it?”

  Carramazza turned his face away from the window. “You mean, do I think it works? A month ago, anybody asked me the same thing, I’d have laughed, but now...”

  Jack said, “Now you’re wondering if maybe ...”

  “Yeah. If maybe...”

  Jack saw that the old man’s eyes had changed. They were still hard, still cold, still watchful, but now there was something new in them. Fear. It was an emotion to which this vicious old bastard was long unaccustomed.

  “Find him,” Carramazza said.

  “We’ll try,” Jack said.

  “Because it’s our job,” Rebecca said quickly, as if to dispel any notion that they were motivated by concern for Gennaro Carramazza and his blood-thirsty family.

  “Stop him,” Carramazza said, and the tone of his voice was the closest he would ever come to saying “please” to an officer of the law.

  The Mercedes limousine pulled away from the curb and down the hotel driveway, leaving tracks in the quarter-inch skin of snow that now covered the pavement.

  For a moment, Jack and Rebecca stood on the sidewalk, watching the car.

  The wind had abated. Snow was still falling, even more heavily than before, but it was no longer wind-driven; the lazy, swirling descent of the flakes made it seem, to Jack, as if he were standing inside one of those novelty paperweights that would produce a neatly contained snowstorm anytime you shook it.

  Rebecca said, “We better get back to headquarters.”

  He took the photograph of Lavelle out of the envelope that Carramazza had given him, tucked it inside his coat.

  “What’re you doing?” Rebecca asked.

  He handed her the envelope. “I’ll be at headquarters in an hour.”

  “What are you talking about?”

  “Two o’clock at the latest.”

  “Where are you going?”

  “There’s something I want to look into.”

  “Jack, we’ve got to set up the task force, prepare a—”

  “You get it started.”

  “There’s too much work for one—”

  “I’ll be there by two, two-fifteen at the latest.”

  “Damnit, Jack—”

  “You can handle it on your own for a while.”

  “You’re going up to Harlem, aren’t you?”

  “Listen, Rebecca—”

  “Up to that damned voodoo shop.”

  He didn’t say anything.

  She said, “I knew it. You’re running up there to see Carver Hampton again. That charlatan. That fraud.”

  “He’s not a fraud. He believes in what he does. I said I’d get back to him today.”

  “This is crazy.”

  “Is it? Lavelle does exist. We have a photo now.”

  “So he exists? That doesn’t mean voodoo works!”

  “I know that.”

  “If you go up there, how am I supposed to get to the office?”

  “You can take the car. I’ll get a uniform to drive me.”

  “Jack, damnit.”

  “I have a hunch, Rebecca.”

  “Hell.”

  “I have a hunch that... somehow... the voodoo subculture—maybe not any real supernatural stuff—but at least the subculture itself is inextricably entwined with this. I have a strong hunch that’s the way to approach the case.”

  “Christ.”

  “A smart cop plays his hunches.”

  “And if you don’t get back when you promise, if I’m stuck all afternoon, handling everything myself, and then if I have to go in and face Gresham with—”

  “I’ll be back by two-fifteen, two-thirty at the latest.”

  “I’m not going to forgive you for this, Jack.”

  He met her eyes, hesitated, then said, “Maybe I could postpone seeing Carver Hampton until tomorrow if...”

  “If what?”

  “If I knew you’d take just half an hour, just fifteen minutes, to sit down with me and talk about everything that happened between us last night. Where are we going from here?”

  Her eyes slid away from his. “We don’t have time for that now.”

  “Rebecca—”

  “There’s a lot of work to do, Jack!”

  He nodded. “You’re right. You’ve got to get started on the task force details, and I’ve got to see Carver Hampton.”

  He walked away from her, toward the uniforms who were standing by the patrol cars.

  She said, “No later than two o’clock!”

  “I’ll make it as fast as I can,” he said.

  The wind suddenly picked up again. It howled.

  4

  The new snow had brightened and softened the street. The neighborhood was still seedy, grimy, litter-strewn, and mean, but it didn’t look half as bad as it had yesterday, without snow.

  Carver Hampton’s shop was near the corner. It was flanked by a liquor store with iron bars permanently fixed over the display windows and by a shabby furniture store also huddled behind bars. Hampton’s place was the only business on the block that looked prosperous, and there were no bars over its windows, either.

  The sign above the door contained only a single word: Rada. Yesterday, Jack had asked Hampton what the shop’s name signified, and he had learned that there were three great rites or spiritual divisions governing voodoo. Two of those were composed of evil gods and were called Congo and Petro. The pantheon of benevolent gods was called the Rada. Since Hampton dealt only in substances, implements, and ceremonial clothing necessary for the practice of white (good) magic, that one word above the door was all he needed to attract exactly the clientele he was looking for—those people of the Caribbean and their descendants who, having been transplanted to New York City, had brought their religion with them.

  Jack opened the door, a bell announcing his entrance, and he went inside, closing out the bitter December wind.

  The shop was small, twenty feet wide and thirty deep. In the center were tables displaying knives, staffs, bells, bowls, other implements, and articles of clothing used in various rituals. To the right, low cabinets stood along the entire wall; Jack had no idea what was in them. On the other wall, to the left of the door, there were shelves nearly all the way to the ceiling, and these were crammed full of bottles of every imaginable size and shape, blue and yellow and green and red and orange and brown and clear bottles, each carefully labeled, each filled with a particular herb or exotic root or powdered flower or other substance used in the casting of spells and charms, the brewing of magical potions.

  At the rear of the shop, in answer to the bell, Carver Hampton came out of the back room, through a green bead curtain. He looked surprised. “Detective Dawson! How nice to see you again. But I didn’t expect you’d come all the way back here, especially not in this foul weather. I thought you’d just call, see if I’d come up with anything for you.”

  Jack went to the back of the shop, and they shook hands across the sales counter.

  Carver Hampton was tall, with wide shoulders and a huge chest, about forty pounds overweight but very formidable; he looked like a pro football lineman who had been out of training for six months. He wasn’t a handsome man. There was too much bone in his slablike forehead, and his face was too round for him e
ver to appear in the pages of Gentleman’s Quarterly; besides, his nose, broken more than once, now had a distinctly squashlike appearance. But if he wasn’t particularly good looking, he was very friendly looking, a gentle giant, a perfect black Santa Claus.

  He said, “I’m so sorry you came all this way for nothing.”

  “Then you haven’t turned up anything since yesterday?” Jack asked.

  “Nothing much. I put the word out. I’m still asking here and there, poking around. So far, all I’ve been able to find out is that there actually is someone around who calls himself Baba Lavelle and says he’s a Bocor.”

  “Bocor? That’s a priest who practices witchcraft—right?”

  “Right. Evil magic. That’s all I’ve learned: that he’s real, which you weren’t sure of yesterday, so I suppose this is at least of some value to you. But if you’d telephoned—”

  “Well, actually, I came to show you something that might be of help. A photograph of Baba Lavelle himself.”

  “Truly?”

  “Yes.”

  “So you already know he’s real. Let me see it, though. It ought to help if I can describe the man I’m asking around about.”

  Jack withdrew the eight-by-ten glossy from inside his coat and handed it over.

  Hampton’s face changed the instant he saw Lavelle. If a black man could go pale, that was what Hampton did. It wasn’t that the shade of his skin changed so much as that the gloss and vitality went out of it; suddenly it didn’t seem like skin at all but like dark brown paper, dry and lifeless. His lips tightened. And his eyes were not the same as they had been a moment ago: haunted, now.

  He said, “This man!”

  “What?” Jack asked.

  The photograph quivered as Hampton quickly handed it back. He thrust it at Jack, as if desperate to be rid of it, as if he might somehow be contaminated merely by touching the photographic image of Lavelle. His big hands were shaking.

  Jack said, “What is it? What’s the matter?”

  “I know him,” Hampton said. “I’ve... seen him. I just didn’t know his name.”

  “Where have you see him?”

  “Here.”

  “Right in the shop?”

  “Yes.”

  “When?”

  “Last September.”

  “Not since then?”

  “No.”

  “What was he doing here?”

  “He came to purchase herbs, powdered flowers.”

  “But I thought you dealt only in good magic. The Rada.”

  “Many substances can be used by both the Bocor and the Houngon to obtain very different results, to work evil magic or good. These were herbs and powdered flowers that were extremely rare and that he hadn’t been able to locate elsewhere in New York.”

  “There are other shops like yours?”

  “One shop somewhat like this, although not as large. And then there are two practicing Houngons—not strong magicians, these two, little more than amateurs, neither of them powerful enough or knowledgeable enough to do well for themselves—who sell the stuff of magic out of their apartments. They have considerable lines of merchandise to offer to other practitioners. But none of those three have scruples. They will sell to either the Bocor or the Houngon. They even sell the instruments required for a blood sacrifice, the ceremonial hatchets, the razor-edged spoons used to scoop the living eye from the skull. Terrible people, peddling their wares to anyone, anyone at all, even to the most wicked and debased.”

  “So Lavelle came here when he couldn’t get everything he wanted from them.”

  “Yes. He told me that he’d found most of what he needed, but he said my shop was the only one with a complete selection of even the most seldom-used ingredients for spells and incantations. Which is, of course, true. I pride myself on my selection and on the purity of my goods. But unlike the others, I won’t sell to a Bocor—if I know what he is. Usually I can spot them. I also won’t sell to those amateurs with bad intentions, the ones who want to put a curse of death on a mother-in-law or cause sickness in some man who’s a rival for a girl or a job. I’ll have none of that. Anyway, this man, this one in the photograph—”

  “Lavelle,” Jack said.

  “But I didn’t know his name then. As I was packaging the few things he’d selected, I discovered he was a Bocor, and I refused to conclude the sale. He thought I was like all the other merchants, that I’d sell to just anyone, and he was furious when I wouldn’t let him have what he wanted. I made him leave the shop, and I thought that was the end of it.”

  “But it wasn’t?” Jack asked.

  “No.”

  “He came back?”

  “No.”

  “Then what happened?”

  Hampton came out from behind the sales counter. He went to the shelves where the hundreds upon hundreds of bottles were stored, and Jack followed him.

  Hampton’s voice was hushed, a note of fear in it: “Two days after Lavelle was here, while I was alone in the shop, sitting at the counter back there, just reading—suddenly, every bottle on those shelves was flung off, to the floor. All in an instant. Such a crash! Half of them broke, and the contents mingled together, all ruined. I rushed over to see what had happened, what had caused it, and as I approached, some of the spilled herbs and powders and ground roots began to ... well, to move ... to form together... and take on life. Out of the debris, composed of several substances, there arose... a black serpent, about eighteen inches in length. Yellow eyes. Fangs. A flickering tongue. As real as any serpent hatched from its mother’s egg.”

  Jack stared at the big man, not sure what to think of him or his story. Until this moment, he had thought that Carver Hampton was sincere in his religious beliefs and a perfectly level-headed man, no less rational because his religion was voodoo rather than Catholicism or Judaism. However, it was one thing to believe in a religious doctrine and in the possibility of magic and miracles —and quite another thing altogether to claim to have seen a miracle. Those who swore they had seen miracles were hysterics, fanatics, or liars. Weren’t they? On the other hand, if you were at all religious—and Jack was not a man without faith—then how could you believe in the possibility of miracles and the existence of the occult without also embracing the claims of at least some of those who said they had been witness to manifestations of the supernatural? Your faith could have no substance if you did not also accept the reality of its effects in this world. It was a thought that hadn’t occurred to him before, and now he stared at Carver Hampton with mixed feelings, with both doubt and cautious acceptance.

  Rebecca would say he was being excessively open-minded.

  Staring at the bottles that now stood on the shelves, Hampton said, “The serpent slithered toward me. I backed across the room. There was nowhere to go. I dropped to my knees. Recited prayers. They were the correct prayers for the situation, and they had their effect. Either that... or Lavelle didn’t actually intend for the serpent to harm me. Perhaps he only meant it as a warning not to mess with him, a slap in the face for the way I had so unceremoniously ushered him out of my shop. At any rate, the serpent eventually dissolved back into the herbs and powders and ground roots of which it was composed.”

  “How do you know it was Lavelle who did this thing?” Jack asked.

  “The phone rang a moment after the snake... decomposed. It was this man, the one I had refused to serve. He told me that it was my prerogative, whether to serve him or not, and that he didn’t hold it against me. But he said he wouldn’t permit anyone to lay a hand on him as I’d done. So he had smashed my collection of herbs and had conjured up the serpent in retaliation. That’s what he said. That’s all he said. Then he hung up.”

  “You didn’t tell me that you’d actually, physically thrown him out of the shop,” Jack said.

  “I didn’t. I merely put a hand on his arm and... shall we say... guided him out. Firmly, yes, but without any real violence, without hurting him. Nevertheless, that was enough to make him ang
ry, to make him seek revenge.”

  “This was all back in September?”

  “Yes.”

  “And he’s never returned?”

  “No.”

  “Never called?”

  “No. And it took me almost three months to rebuild my inventory of rare herbs and powders. Many of these items are so very difficult to obtain. You can’t imagine. I only recently completed restocking these shelves.”

  “So you’ve got your own reasons for wanting to see this Lavelle brought down,” Jack said.

  Hampton shook his head. “On the contrary.”

  “Huh?”

  “I want nothing more to do with this.”

  “But—”

  “I can’t help you any more, Lieutenant.”

  “I don’t understand.”

  “It should be clear enough. If I help you, Lavelle will send something after me. Something worse than the serpent. And this time it won’t be just a warning. No, this time, it’ll surely be the death of me.”

  Jack saw that Hampton was serious—and genuinely terrified. The man believed in the power of voodoo. He was trembling. Even Rebecca, seeing him now, wouldn’t be able to claim that he was a charlatan. He believed.

  Jack said, “But you ought to want him behind bars as much as I do. You ought to want to see him broken, after what he did to you.”

  “You’ll never put him in jail.”

  “Oh, yes.”

  “No matter what he does, you’ll never be able to touch him.”

  “We’ll get him, all right.”

  “He’s an extremely powerful Bocor, Lieutenant. Not an amateur. Not your average spellcaster. He has the power of darkness, the ultimate darkness of death, the darkness of Hell, the darkness of the Other Side. It is a cosmic power, beyond human comprehension. He isn’t merely in league with Satan, your Christian and Judaic king of demons. That would be bad enough. But, you see, he is a servant, as well, of all the evil gods of the African religions, which go back into antiquity; he has that great, malevolent pantheon behind him. Some of those deities are far more powerful and immeasurably more vicious than Satan has ever been portrayed. A vast legion of evil entities are at Lavelle’s beck and call, eager to let him use them because, in turn, they use him as a sort of doorway into this world. They are eager to cross over, to bring blood and pain and terror and misery to the living, for this world of ours is one into which they are usually denied passage by the power of the benevolent gods who watch over us.”