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Enzo was carrying Wanda up the hill. Dammit. I’d heard more than one shot. Had she panicked and shot too soon, wasted her ammunition? Damn.
Wanda was screaming and beating her small fists against Enzo’s broad back. If we were alive come morning, I would teach Wanda better things to do with her fists. She was crippled, not helpless.
Enzo carried her over the circle. Until it closed everyone could pass over it without breaking the magic. He dropped Wanda to the ground, holding her arms out behind her at a painful angle. She still struggled and screamed. I didn’t blame her.
“Get Bruno to hold her still. The death needs to be one blow,” I said.
Dominga nodded. “Yes, it does.” She motioned for Bruno to enter the circle. He hesitated, but Gaynor told him, “Do what she says.”
Bruno didn’t hesitate after that. Gaynor was his greenback god. Bruno grabbed one of Wanda’s arms. With a man on each arm, and her legs useless, she was still moving too much.
“Kneel and hold her head still,” I said.
Enzo dropped first, putting a big hand on the back of Wanda’s head. He held her steady. She started to cry. Bruno knelt, putting his free hand on her shoulders to help steady her. It was important for the death to be a single blow.
Dominga was smiling now. She handed me a small brown jar of ointment. It was white and smelled heavily of cloves. I used more rosemary in mine, but cloves were fine.
“How did you know what I needed?”
“I asked Ma
“He wouldn’t tell you shit.”
“He would if I threatened his family.” Dominga laughed. “Oh, don’t look so sad. He didn’t betray you, chica. Manuel thought I was merely curious about your powers. I am, you know.”
“You’ll see soon enough, won’t you,” I said.
She gave a sort of bow from the neck. “Place the ointment on yourself in the appointed places.”
I rubbed ointment on my face. It was cool and waxy. The cloves made it smell like candy. I smeared it on over my heart, under my shirt, both hands. Last the tombstone.
Now all we needed was the sacrifice.
Dominga told me, “Do not move.”
I stayed where I was, frozen as if by magic. Was her monster still frozen in the hallway, like I was now?
Dominga laid the machete on the grass near the edge of the circle, then she stepped out of the circle. “Raise the dead, Anita,” she said.
“Ask Gaynor one question first, please.” That please hurt, but it worked.
She looked at me curiously. “What question?”
“Is this ancestor also a voodoo priest?” I asked.
“What difference does it make?” Gaynor asked.
“You fool,” Dominga said. She whirled on him, hands in fists. “That is what went wrong the first time. You made me think it was my powers!”
“What are you babbling about?” he asked.
“When you raise a voodoo priest or an animator, sometimes the magic goes wrong,” I said.
“Why?” he asked.
“Your ancestor’s magic interfered with my magic,” Dominga said. “Are you sure this ancestor had no voodoo?”
“Not to my knowledge,” he said.
“Did you know about the first one?” I asked.
“Yes.”
“Why didn’t you tell me?” Dominga said. Her power blazed around her like a dark nimbus. Would she kill him, or did she want the money more?
“I didn’t think it was important.”
I think Dominga was grinding her teeth. I didn’t blame her. He’d cost her her reputation and a dozen lives. He saw nothing wrong with it. But Dominga didn’t strike him dead. Greed wins out.
“Get on with it,” Gaynor said. “Or don’t you want your money?”
“Do not threaten me!” Dominga said.
Peachy keen, the bad guys were going to fight among themselves.
“I am not threatening you, Seсora. I merely will not pay unless this zombie is raised.”
Dominga took a deep breath. She literally squared her shoulders and turned back to me. “Do as I ordered, raise the dead.”
I opened my mouth to think of some other excuse to delay. Dawn was coming. It had to come.
“No more delays. Raise the dead, Anita, now!” That last word had the tone of a command.
I swallowed hard and walked towards the edge of the circle. I wanted to get out, to leave, but I couldn’t. I stood there, leaning against that invisible barrier. It was like beating against a wall that I couldn’t feel. I stayed there straining until my entire body trembled. I took a deep shaking breath.
I picked up the machete.
Wanda said, “No, Anita, please, please don’t!” She struggled, but she couldn’t move. She would be an easy kill. Easier than beheading a chicken with one hand. And I did that almost every night.
I knelt in front of Wanda. Enzo’s hand on the back of her head kept her from moving. But she whimpered, a desperate sound low in her throat.
God, help me.
I placed the machete under her neck and told Enzo, “Raise her head up so I can make sure of the kill.”
He grabbed a handful of hair and bowed her neck at a painful angle. Her eyes were showing a lot of white. Even by moonlight I could see the pulse in her throat.
I placed the machete back against her neck. Her skin was solid and real under the blade. I raised it just above her flesh, not touching for an instant. I drove the machete straight up into Enzo’s throat. The point speared his throat. Blood gushed out in a black wave.
Everyone froze for an instant, but me. I jerked the machete out of Enzo and plunged it into Bruno’s gut. His hand with the gun half-drawn fell away. I leaned on the machete and drew it up towards his throat. His insides spilled out, in a warm rush.
The smell of fresh death filled the circle. Blood sprayed all over my face, chest, hands, coating me. It was the last step, and the circle closed.
I’d felt a thousand circles close, but nothing like this. The shock of it left me gasping. I couldn’t breathe over the rush of power. It was like an electric current was ru
Wanda was covered in other people’s blood. She was having hysterics in the grass. “Please, please, don’t kill me. Don’t kill me! Please!”
I didn’t have to kill Wanda. Dominga had told me to raise the dead, and I would do just that.
Killing animals never gave me this kind of rush. It felt like my skin was going to crawl off on its own. I shoved the power flowing through me into the ground. But not just into the grave in the circle. I had too much power for just one grave. Too much power for just a handful of graves. I felt the power spreading outward like ripples in a pool. Out and out, until the power was spread thick and clean over the ground. Every grave that I had walked for Dolph. Every grave but the ones with ghosts. Because that was a type of soul magic, and necromancy didn’t work around souls.
I felt each grave, each corpse. I felt them coalesce from dust and bone fragments to things that were barely dead at all.
“Arise from your graves all dead within sound of my call. Arise and serve me!” Without naming them all I shouldn’t have been able to call a single one from the grave, but the power of two human deaths was too much for the dead to resist.
They rose upward like swimmers through water. The ground rippled underfoot like a horse’s skin.
“What are you doing?” Dominga asked.
“Raising the dead,” I said. Maybe it showed in my voice. Maybe she felt it. Whatever, she started ru
Hands tore through the earth at Dominga’s feet. Dead hands grabbed her ankles and sent her sprawling into the long grass. I lost sight of her but I didn’t lose control of the zombies. I told them, “Kill her, kill her.”
The grass shuddered and surged like water. The sound of muscles pulling away from bone in wet thick pieces filled the night. Bones broke with sharp cracks. Over the sounds of tearing flesh, Dominga shrieked.
There was one last wet sound, thick and full. Dominga’s screams broke off abruptly. I felt the dead hands tearing out her throat. Her blood splattered the grass like a black sprinkler.