Eustace D?lier, being a moderately well off advocate of color, owned a snug little town house on Rue St.
Philippe, stuccoed dark rose in color and sporting shutters painted blue. The house was dark and boarded shut, when Bronze John the dead-cart man dropped January off in front of it. "Look like nobody here." In the heat, beneath the swaying oil lamp's flare, he was no more than a sheathing of gold over blackness, and the gleam of eyes.
"Somebody's here," said January. "If you listen you can hear his violin."
The music, though stronger in the rear yard, was still muted and difficult to locate, as if, like the harps of faerie, the soft sad planxty issued from beneath the ground. Janu ary listened at the shutters of first one side of the house, then the other, but the sound grew no clearer. At length he walked backward until he could see the gables in the roof. From the soft bricks of the kitchen loggia he selected a suitable chip-in Paris there were always pebbles for tossing at windows, but Louisiana was founded on silt, and if there was a pebble in the length and breadth of New Orleans it had probably been imported from New York-and threw it at the blue shutters that overlooked the yard.
The violin did not stop. To do so would be an admission that there was a trespasser in the house.
Knowing the houses on both sides of the D?liers' were vacant, he called out softly, "Hannibal!"
He tossed another chip of brick, and called the fiddler's name again. This time the shutter opened. Long dark hair hanging down over his shoulders, the fiddler's face was a pale blur in the hot blackness. "But soft-What light through yonder window breaks? Or attempts to break... Bear you the essences of immortal grape or poppy flower? Good God, Benjamin," Hannibal added in a more normal voice, "what happened at that Hospital of yours? You smell like you've just come out of a common grave."
"I have," replied January somberly. "Come down and let me in. I'm not so comfortable, standing outside in the night."
He pulled off his coat and boots on the open loggia at the house's rear, and ran water from the rain cistern to wash his hands and face and hair. While he was doing this the shutters that led from the loggia into one of the cabinets opened, and Hannibal stood there, resplendent in his usual shabby white linen shirt-he disdained calico-and dark trousers that hung on his too-thin frame like laundry over a fence.
"Mind the bath," he said, holding aloft the cheap tallow candle he carried. It was typical of the fiddler, thought January, that he would purchase candles rather than use the household stores, just as he was sleeping in the attics rather than occupying his unwitting hosts' beds. The bath of which he spoke was an enormous one, copper and expensive, established in its own alcove under the stairs, with a cupboard for towels wedged in behind. "They store the extra chairs here, too, if you'd care to carry one up. We can return it later."
"I'll sit on the floor," said January. "You're right. I came out of a shallow grave tonight, and it's made me wonder about some things that have been happening, since the fever season began."
Hannibal had brought in a cot from the slave quarters across the yard and a table. Half a loaf of bread and some cheese occupied a tin box, beside a jug of water, his violin, and the inevitable stacks of books and newspapers. A bottle of whisky and another of Black Drop-triple-strength tincture of opium-stood, both corked, on a small packing box next to the cot, near a candleholder of pink-and-blue porcelain hung with Austrian glass lusters. He'd collected all the mosquito-bars in the house and rigged them as a sort of tent over the entire bed, including the packing box. At his gesture, both he and January crawled up under the clouds of white gauze, to sit on the worn, patched sheets while the insects hummed fitfully in the darkness outside. As January had suspected, there was a packet of tallow lights inside the packing box, with a Latin copy of Metamorphosis, a stack of old copies of the Bee and the Courier, and a couple of volumes of Goethe.
"When did the Perrets leave?" he asked the fiddler. "The folk next door?"
Hannibal thought about it a moment, not at all surprised by the question, counting back days in his mind.
"Must have been the night of the twenty-sixth. Thursday night. They were packing up on Thursday and sent the carters away with the heavy baggage that afternoon. I saw lights in the house and heard voices when I went out Thursday evening, and they were gone the next morning when I came back."
"How'd you know they were gone?" Thursday night, the twenty-sixth, was the night Rose Vitrac had come to find him at the clinic, the night Zizi-Marie and Gabriel had helped the Perrets pack.
"The house was locked up," said Hannibal. "The plank was up. I'm out most nights-I can still get money playing at Davis's gambling palace on Rue Royale-but it's been still as death in the days. If they'd taken sick with the fever," he added with a wry practicality, "there would have been some sign-flies, and smell, and rats when I come in between midnight and dawn. It's one thing I worry about here-that I'll be taken sick, and present my poor hosts with a most unpleasant surprise on their return. I would feel bad about that."
January shivered, both at the thought that it could happen to the fiddler, or to himself, alone in the gar?onni?re. His mother wouldn't even inquire as to why she wasn't receiving letters from him anymore.
She never answered in any case. Olympe would check, he thought, and tried to put from his mind the memory of his own steps ascending the narrow stairs, his own hand on the handle of the door of that Paris apartment...
"Would you like to move into Bella's rooms at my mother's house?" he asked the fiddler. "My mother will be in Milneburgh until the fifteenth. At least you wouldn't be alone. Or wondering if you're going to wake up in the morning to find the D?lier servants getting the place ready for Monsieur and Madame to come back."
"There is much in what you say," agreed Hannibal gravely. "Why ask about the Perrets?"
"Because they never reached Milneburgh," answered January. "Nor have they appeared in any of the clinics-I've been asking. They're the poorest people in this street, you know, and since Jacques's brothers died last year they have no other family in town. Everyone else has just enough money to leave: the D?liers, and the Dugues on the other side; I think the Widow Kircher across the street and her daughter have gone as well, if I remember what Olympe's told me. Get some candles," he said, sliding carefully out from beneath the mosquito-bar again. "There's some things I'd like to have a look at over there."
The latch on the rear door of the Perrets' small house had been broken, and by the stains and mildew on the floor just within the doorway this had been done not quite a week ago. "Robbed right after they left," murmured Hannibal, holding aloft half a dozen beeswax candles in the D?lier's best dining-room candelabra. January had left money for the candles in the store cupboard they'd broken into, reckoning they would need the stronger light.
"Were they? I wonder." The house consisted of two rooms only. This, their bedroom, looked out onto the yard with its tiny kitchen. There were no slave quarters, no gar?onni?re over the kitchen: a young couple, the Perrets had been childless so far and certainly too poor to afford a slave. "They didn't have much to steal. Just looking at the outside of the house, any thief would know that." He touched his friend's wrist, raising the lights. They showed the white gauze of the mosquito-bar hanging down free, not tied back out of the way.
January had hunted enough mosquitoes within the tents of mosquito-bar-trying to singe them to death with a bedroom candle where they clung to the gauze without immolating the house-to know that nobody in Louisiana would leave the bar untied.
He led the way to the narrow cypress bed. Unlike those at the Delier house next door, there were sheets still on the mattress, the top sheet simply flung back.
It could mean only that Nicole Perret was an untidy housekeeper, but the spic-and-span neatness of the rest of the room put a lie to that. In the armoire that was one of the room's very few pieces of furniture he found a smock-such as a harness-and-wheel mender like Jacques Perret would wear to work-folded on a shelf, along with two calico shirts and two pairs of breeches. In the drawers were two petticoats, some stockings, a few chemises and tignons, and two corsets.
Folded up and put away upon retiring?
Two pairs of shoes, a man's and a woman's, were under the bed.
Brushes and combs still lay on the small vanity table, though the drawers of that table had clearly been opened and gone through for earrings, bracelets, whatever could be found. A cheap French Bible lay on the floor.
"No sign of violence." Hannibal pushed open the door that led through into the parlor. Shadows reeled as he put the candelabra through to look. "Though I suppose if one woke in the middle of the night with a man pointing a shotgun at one, one's impulse to violence would be limited." He came back into the bedroom, stroking at his graying mustache.
"No," said January softly. "No sign of violence. No smell of fever or sign of disease. A band of men," he said. "A band of men roving the streets, carrying clubs-proba bly carrying guns-breaking into houses where the neighbors are gone, where the inhabitants would not be missed."
"That means they were watching the place."
"Maybe," said January. "You can make a fortune in a year, in the new Indian lands, planting cotton-if you have the hands." He touched the small porcelain bowl of hairpins on the little dresser, something no woman would have gone to the lake-or anywhere else-without. "It would be worth putting a little time in, to learn who has no family to miss them and no neighbors to be able to say exactly when they vanished.
Marie Laveau isn't the only one to employ spies. And in the fever season, no one would look. Everyone would assume they simply died and were buried. By the time anyone who knew them came back to town, they couldn't even identify a body."
He shivered, the fear he had felt that night turning to anger, a deep and burning rage. Remembered the boatman's dark eyes gazing out from string-wrapped picka ninny braids: I don't go up there anymore...
"As they would have assumed of me."
Hannibal set the candles down and trimmed the wicks. What person leaving town for a few weeks wouldn't have taken the candle scissors from the corner of the dresser? What woman, who couldn't afford more than two corsets, would have left both behind?
Very softly, January went on, "Americans coming into town complain about our people sticking together.
They make jokes how everybody knows everybody's cousins and sisters and friends and business: how you need an introduction to so much as have dinner. But there's a reason for it."
He stepped back through the shutters to the yard, drew them closed behind him and worked a wedge of the splintered wood between them to hold them shut. Hanni bal blew out the candles, plunging the tiny yard from shadow to Erebean darkness.
"It's so we can prove who we are," said January. "So none of us is out there alone."
He slept the remainder of the night at the D?lier town house, unwilling to walk the streets of the French town until daylight. In the morning he and Hannibal made their way back to Gallatin Street, to the shabby groggery operated by the freedman Lafr?nni?re. Lafr?nni?re told them the woman Nani? usually could be found there around noon-"Before she starts her work," he put it and as it was already well past ten, January paid a couple of picayunes for two bowls of beans and rice, and asked if Nani? had ever found her friend.
"Who-Virgil?" Lafrenniere winked. "Nani?, she got lots of friends. Virgil, I think Bronze John must have got him."
"He wouldn't have run away?"
Two or three children peeked in through the back door, staring at the unprecedented spectacle of a white man consuming beans and rice in their father's grocery. Hannibal, who abhorred children whatever their race, ignored them.
"Run away? Why?" The barman shrugged. "Virgil had four hundred dollars saved up in the Bank of Louisiana, to buy his freedom with. He paid his wages at the cotton press over to Michie Bringier, and Michie Bringier gave his word not to sell him. And why should he, when he's bringin' in five dollars a week? Michie Bringier, he has six, seven men that sleep out-two of 'em livin' in the attic just down the street. Why'd Virgil want to run away? Where'd he go, that he'd have it this good?"
Nani?, when she came in, confirmed this. "I think it have to be fever," she said, a worried frown on her gaptoothed face. "It musta took him away from home. I keep hopin' I'll find him in one of the hospitals, but this was a week ago now that Virgil didn't come visit me like he said he would. Widow Puy, what own the shed in back of her place that he slept in, rented it out yesterday to somebody else."
"And there was no sign that he'd been taken sick at his shed?" January asked.
"No, sir." The `sir' was a tribute to his well-bred French and black coat.
January was silent, thinking. The woman was raggedly dressed, but the colors of her thirdhand gown were sufficiently bright, coupled with the overabundance of cheap glass jewelry, to indicate her trade.
She wasn't wearing a tignon, either, her pecan-colored hair wound up in elaborate ringlets and cupid knots on her head; she was stout, and shopworn, and not very clean.
At last he said, "Has this happened to anyone else you know? Someone who lived alone, and had no family, that disappeared out of where they live? Or off the street?"
She nodded immediately. "Stephan Gaulois's pal 'Poly and his wife. They didn't live alone-I mean they live with each other-but their neighbors been took with the fever, both sides, and they ain't been on St.
Louis Street long enough that anybody know 'em. Stephan say he thought the fever took them, too, so he broke in their house to find 'em, but they gone. 'Poly's wife, Lu, just got her freedom, and they took that house not seven months ago."
January said softly, "Show me."
There was not that much to see. Poly and Lu had occupied a two-room shack in the sloppy gaggle of buildings that backed the canal and the turning basin, close behind the St. Louis Cemetery. It was a neighborhood, like the Swamp and Gallatin Street, given over largely to Kaintuck keelboatmen, cheapjack gamblers, purveyors of nameless cirinkables, and bravos and whores of assorted hues and nationalities. The lot on one side was still vacant, kneedeep in hackberry and weeds, where pigs rooted among stagnant ponds. On the other side stood a house and a sort of shed. Both were boarded tight.
They entered through the back door, whose bolt had been broken off in the socket. "That was done when I got here," explained Nani?'s friend Stephan, who joined the party on the way up from Gallatin Street. He was the light-skinned man who'd been at the table with her last night.
"Was there mud on the floor here when you came in?" The man frowned, trying to think back. The mud tracked from the door to the bed. The mosquito-bar, untied, was thrown sloppily aside. Half a dozen of the insects clung like the brown grains of wild rice to the exposed inner surface of the gauze.
"I don't remember," he said, and January nodded. It was pretty clear which tracks were Stephan's. They led from the door through to the front room, the outlines of his bare feet in all places overlying the muddle of bootprints that had been there before. He was barefoot still, like most workers on the levee, and his feet even shod would have been broader and longer than any others represented by the pale ghost shapes on the bare plank floor.
"Only one pair of shoes here," remarked Hannibal, kneeling to look under the bed.
January brushed his fingers over the dried mud of the tracks. Two or three days old, at a guess. It had rained daily for weeks.
"Lu only had the one pair," provided Nani?, twisting her necklace of cheap red beads around her fingers.
"Lu only just bought her freedom, over to Mobile, and come to town; 'Poly got his papers not so many months back. They didn't have much, and that's a fact."
"What happened to them?" Stephan, who had gone to look in the front room again, now returned, his face troubled and angry. "I thought they might have been took by the fever when they was away from home, but now you show me them tracks. Who'd come in here and take 'em away? And where'd they take 'em?"
"At a guess," said Hannibal quietly, "to the Missouri Territory, to pick cotton."
January and Hannibal parted in the weedy little yard before Lu and 'Poly's humble shack, Hannibal to make his way back to Mademoiselle Vitrac's school to offer what assistance he could and perhaps to cadge a meal. January intended to return to Gallatin Street and ask H?lier what he knew about 'Poly, Lu, and Nanie's Virgil, but something else Natchez Jim had said to him came back to mind. So, instead, with a certain amount of misgivings, he made his way upstream to where the turning basin lay at the end of the brown stretch of the Carondolet Canal.
The area around the basin was known, quite descriptively, as the Swamp. Even the City Guards didn't go there often. This time of the afternoon it was getting lively, and January moved with silent circumspection among the rough-built shacks and sheds that housed the bordellos, saloons, and gambling dens that made up nine-tenths of the businesses thereabouts. Once, he was stopped by a trio of hairy and verminous keelboatmen who demanded his business-it took all the diplomacy of self-abasement he could muster to get out of the confrontation with no more than tobacco on his shirt-and as he passed the two-room plank shed owned and operated by a woman known as Kentucky Williams, that harridan and the ladies of her employ, sitting uncorseted in their shabby petticoats on the sills of their open French doors, rained him with orange-peels, cigar-butts, and some of the most scatalogical language he had ever heard in his life.
"Sure makes me proud to be 'an American," remarked Lieutenant Shaw, slouching down the single log that served as a step before an establishment called the Turkey Buzzard, then wading over to January through the ankledeep swill of the street. The gutters that surrounded every square of buildings in the French town and gave them the name of "islands" did not extend across Rue des Ramparts, nor had the municipality bothered to lay down stepping-stones across the streets in this district. And why should they? thought January dryly. No wealthy cousins of the largely Creole City Council are likely to cross these streets.
"Not your part of town, Maestro."
"Nor yours, sir," observed January, falling into step with Shaw. Out of long habit he kept to the outside, as men of color were expected to, leaving the higher, margin ally drier weeds along the buildings for his chromatic better. "If I may say so."
"You may," replied Shaw gravely. "You may indeed." Behind them Miss Williams, a strapping harpy with a long snaggle of ditchwater blond hair and a pockmarked face like the sole of somebody's boot, screamed a final insult and flung half a brick. It hit Shaw's shoulder with the force of a cannon-shot, but he caught his balance and walked on, merely rubbing the place with one bony hand. "And they say women ain't strong enough to go into the army. You know, if you're despondent and all that an' really want to die, Maestro, probably settin' out all night and lettin' the fever get you would be more comfortable than comin' down here. Not that these folks ain't dyin' like flies in every attic an' back room an' alley," he added somberly.
A corpse, puff-bellied already in the heat, lay just outside the door of the Tom and Jerry saloon on the other side of the street. January wondered whether that was Bronze John or a statement of management policy concerning winners at the gaming tables.
"I've been out all night already," he replied quietly. "And I must say it nearly worked." And he recounted to Shaw the events of last night, and what he had found in the houses of Nicole Perret, and 'Poly and Lu.
"Over the past week or ten days, people have been coming into the clinic, or coming to my sister Olympe, or to others, and asking us to look through the fever wards for people who have disappeared, but don't seem to have come down with fever. Always people of color or blacks."
The lieutenant stopped, his slantindicular glance suddenly sharp and hard.
"Always people without families, people whose neighbors have left town or been taken sick themselves,"
January continued. "Always people no one would miss for days. I don't know how long this has been going on. Longer than ten days, I think. The man who drives the dead-cart says he's seen men moving through the streets, i n the slack-end of the night. They've taken seven I know about. Maybe more.
Maybe a lot more."
Shaw scratched his head thoughtfully. "Now, it's funny you should mention that, Maestro." Sleeplessness and overwork had thinned his already narrow face; his long jaw wore stubble like a brownish mold.
January thought suddenly of all those houses standing locked and empty, and of the fear that fueled drinking, and the drinking that fueled violence in an already violent town. "We had two queries so far about runaways that don't listen right, men that worked the cotton press or the levee, men that slept out, and only went to their owners every night with what they made. Only in this case the owners was out by the lake, one in Spanish Fort and one acrost the lake in Mandeville, so the men only went and paid 'em their take once a week. Steady men, they said. In fact their owners was more inclined to think their men had took sick of the fever. `My boy wouldn't run away,' they said."
"And did each of these men," asked January, "rent a place to sleep by himself?"
"Well, as it happens," said Shaw, "they did. They was good men, but not with any particular skill. And it's the slow season on the levee. They worked here and there, so nobody really missed 'em at a job for some several days. At least so far as I can tell, since it's sort of hard to find people who'll admit to rentin' sleeping room to some other man's slaves, let alone find them that sleep out to talk about the matter theirselves. And there's dozens dyin' every day."
"There are," agreed January quietly. It had begun to rain again. The two men paused under the wooden awning before the doors of a grimy barrelhouse scarcely larger than the shed 'Poly and Lu had shared.
Steam heat rose from the marshy street. Through the open doorway a slatternly woman was visible behind a plank set on a couple of kegs, dispensing what might charitably be termed whisky to a barefoot white man in the togs and tarred pigtail of a British sailor, a keelboatman whose clothing and body could be smelled from the door, and a couple of the weariest, grubbiest whores January had ever seen in his life. Even after growing up in the city it still mildly surprised him that such places, within a stone's throw of the cemeteries with their piles of corpses, could find customers willing to pay for anything within their walls.
"That's why whoever is doing this considers himself safe."
Shaw propped one bony shoulder against the porch post, chewing ruminatively. He made no comment about the discrepancy between those six, and January's earlier count of seven, and only spit a long stream of tobacco juice onto the boards of the porch.
"You didn't happen to get the name of this dead-cart man, did you?"
January shook his head. "Just that he was almost as big as me, and as dark. Heavy in the shoulders and arms. His head was shaved."
"I'll ask around amongst 'em," said the lieutenant. "I just come down here to inquire after a little amateur surgery over a faro game. I will never in my life understand a gamblin' man."
He shook his head marvelingly. "Bank's gonna foreclose, man's gonna lose his plantation, he comes into town with a draft for eight thousand dollars in his pocket to replace a grinder that'll keep his family's home for 'em and what's he do?" He jerked his head back in the direction of the Turkey-Buzzard. "He really think he's gonna win in a place like that? You understand it, Maestro?"
"I don't understand the fever." January stepped aside from the stream of water that had begun to drip down from the awning above. "I just see men dying of it every day."
Across the street a man in a formal black coat and tall hat emerged from a ramshackle conglomeration of buildings. He walked with the careful deliberation of a drunk, rain sluicing down his hat and off the shoulders of his coat, the dozen yards to the Jolly Boatman Saloon. Other than that the street was still, though a man's voice, harsh and flat with an American accent, roared out that he was a tiproarer from Salt River and wore a hornet's nest for a hat decorated with wolves' tails.
Shaw nodded across the street at the dirty, rambling warehouses from which the man had come. "I take it you done checked the clinics? Even places like that?"
The crudely lettered sign over the door proclaimed the place to be St. Gertrude's. God knew, thought January, the Swamp needed a clinic-most of the dying in Charity were Americans-but the existence of the place surprised him.
"If these people took sick in the street, or in a strange part of town, they might have been took anywhere," Shaw went on. "I'll ask around the Exchanges, and amongst the dealers, and at the steamboat offices. I don't doubt for a minute that any black man who goes to the new cotton lands runs the risk of bein' kidnapped, no matter what kind of proof he's got of his freedom either on him or back here in town.
But in the town itself-it's different. Iff'n these folks is kidnappin' people of color, they gotta be movin' 'em out of town somehow. Even quiet as things are on the levee these days, I'd feel right conscientious, myself, tryin' to get a coflle of folks that didn't want to go acrost the wharf and onto a boat."
"You think any of those folks wants to go?"
January met Shaw's eyes, aware of the anger in his own. There was silence between them for a time.
Then Shaw said quietly, "You know what I mean, Maestro."
"I know what you mean. Sir."
It was Shaw who turned his eyes away. "We'll find 'em." He spit out into the brown lake of the rain-pocked street. "I warn you, even if we do, it'll be hard to prove. There been too many slaves smuggled in and out of this town since the African trade was outlawed for folks to want to admit somethin' like this is goin' on. But they'll slip up somewheres, and we'll be waiting for 'em when they do.
Coming?"
The rain was letting up. It was tempting to simply walk with the Lieutenant back to the relative safety of the French town. There, if he was regarded as something less than a man, he was at least not in peril of life and limb. January shook his head. "There's something I have to take care of," he replied.
"Suit yourself. Mind how you go, though." Shaw touched his hat-something not many white men would have done in the circumstances-and made his way down the sodden slop of the street in the direction of the French town and the Cabildo, shoulders hunched, like a soaked scarecrow in the rain.
January took a deep breath, glanced around him for further warning of trouble, then mucked his way across the street to the shabby walls of St. Gertrude's.