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“Come downstairs, and I will show you.” Her voice was mild as honey.
“No, Dominga,” Ma
“I can talk to people and things that will not talk to you, either of you. Good Christians that you are.”
“Come on, Anita, we don’t need her help.” He had started for the door. I didn’t follow him. Ma
“Anita, come on.” He touched my arm, pulling me a little towards the door.
“Tell me about the test.”
Dominga smiled triumphantly. She knew she had me. She knew I wasn’t leaving until I had her promised help. Damn.
“Let us retire to the basement. I will explain the test there.”
Ma
He was right, but...”Just stay with me, Ma
“Anita, anything she wants you to do down there will hurt. Maybe not physically, but it will hurt.”
“I have to do this, Ma
“No,” he said, “it won’t be.”
I didn’t know what to say to that, except that he was probably right. But it didn’t matter. I was going to do it. Whatever she asked, within reason, if it would stop the killings. If it would fix it so that I never had to see another half-eaten body.
Dominga smiled. “Let us go downstairs.”
“May I speak with Anita alone, Seсora, por favor,” Ma
“You will have the rest of this beautiful day to talk to her, Manuel. But I have only this short time. If she does this test for me now, I promise to aid her in any way I can to catch this killer.”
It was a powerful offer. A lot of people would talk to her just out of pure terror. The police can’t inspire that. All they can do is arrest you. It wasn’t enough of a deterrent. Having the undead crawl through your window...that was a deterrent.
Four, maybe five people were already dead. It was a bad way to die. “I’ve already said I’d do it. Let’s go.”
She walked around the table and took Ma
“I do not trust you, Dominga.”
She laughed. “But it is her choice, Manuel. I have not forced her.”
“You have blackmailed her, Dominga. Blackmailed her with the safety of others.”
She looked back over her shoulder. “Have I blackmailed you, chica?”
“Yes,” I said.
“Oh, she is your student, corazуn. She has your honesty. And your bravery.”
“She is brave, but she has not seen what lies below.”
I wanted to ask what exactly was in the basement, but I didn’t. I really didn’t want to know. I’ve had people warn me about supernatural shit before. Don’t go in that room; the monster will get you. There usually is a monster, and it usually tries to get me. But up till now I’ve been faster or luckier than the monsters. Here’s to my luck holding.
I wished that I could heed Ma
Dominga led Ma
Chapter 6
The basement stairs were steep, wooden slats. You could feel the vibrations in the stairs as we tromped down them. It was not comforting. The bright sunlight from the door spilled into absolute darkness. The sunlight faltered, seemed to fade as if it had no power in this cavelike place. I stopped on the grey edge of daylight, staring down into the night-dark of the room. I couldn’t even make out Dominga and Ma
Enzo the bodyguard waited at my back like some patient mountain. He made no move to hurry me. Was it my decision then? Could I just pack up my toys and go home?
“Ma
A voice came distantly. Too far away. Maybe it was an acoustic trick of the room. Maybe not. “I’m here, Anita.”
I strained to see where the voice was coming from, but there was nothing to see. I took two steps farther down into the inky dark and stopped like I’d hit a wall. There was the damp rock smell of most basements, but under that something stale, sour, sweet. That almost indescribable smell of corpses. It was faint here at the head of the stairs. I was betting it would get worse the farther down I went.
My grandmother had been a priestess of vaudun. Her Humfo had not smelled like corpses. The line between good and evil wasn’t as clear cut in voodoo as in Wicca or Christianity and satanism, but it was there. Dominga Salvador was on the wrong side of the line. I had known that when I came. It still bothered me.
Grandmother Flores had told me that I was a necromancer. It was more than being a voodoo priestess, and less. I had a sympathy with the dead, all dead. It was hard to be vaudun and a necromancer and not be evil. Too tempting, Grandma said. She had encouraged my being Christian. Encouraged my father to cut me off from her side of the family. Encouraged it for love of me and fear for my soul.
And here I was going down the steps into the jaws of temptation. What would Grandma Flores say to that? Probably, go home. Which was good advice. The tight feeling in my stomach was saying the same thing.
The lights came on. I blinked on the stairs. The one dim bulb at the foot of the staircase seemed as bright as a star. Dominga and Ma
Light. Why did I feel instantly better? Silly, but true. Enzo let the door swing shut behind us. The shadows were thick, but down a narrow bricked hallway more bare light bulbs dangled.
I was almost at the bottom of the stairs. That sweet, sour smell was stronger. I tried breathing through my mouth, but that only made it clog the back of my throat. The smell of rotting flesh clings to the tongue.
Dominga led the way between the narrow walls. There were regular patches in the walls. Places where it looked like cement had been put over--doors. Paint had been smoothed over the cement, but there had been doors, rooms, at regular intervals. Why wall them up? Why cover the doors in cement? What was behind them?
I rubbed fingertips across the rough cement. The surface was bumpy and cool. The paint wasn’t very old. It would have flaked in this dampness. It hadn’t. What was behind this blocked up door?
The skin just between my shoulder blades started to itch. I fought an urge to glance back at Enzo. I was betting he was behaving himself. I was betting that being shot was the least of my worries.
The air was cool and damp. A very basement of a basement. There were three doors, two to the right, one to the left that were just doors. One door had a shiny new padlock on it. As we walked past it, I heard the door sigh as if something large had leaned against it.
I stopped. “What’s in there?”
Enzo had stopped when I stopped. Dominga and Ma