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    Landry 01 Ruby

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      Gray, honey. Annie Gray can keep a secret better than

      a bank safe."

      I swallowed my tears and vanquished my throat

      lump so I could tell her about Grandmere Catherine,

      her death, Grandpere Jack's moving in and his quickly

      arranging for my marriage to Buster. She listened

      quietly, her eyes sympathetic until I finished. Then

      they blazed furiously.

      "That old monster," she said. "He be Papa La

      Bas," she muttered.

      "Who?"

      "The devil himself," she declared. "You got

      anything that belongs to him on you?"

      "No," I replied. "Why?"

      "Fixin'," she said angrily. "I'd cast a spell on

      him for you. My great-Grandmere, she was brought

      here a slave, but she was a mamaloa." Voodoo queen,

      and she hand me down lots of secrets," she whispered,

      her eyes wide, her face close to mine. "Ya, ye, ye Ii

      konin tou, gris-gris," she chanted. My heart began to

      pound.

      "What's that mean?"

      "Part of a voodoo prayer. If I had a snip of your

      grandpere's hair, a piece of his clothing, even an old

      sock . . . he never be bothering you again," she

      assured me, her head bobbing.

      "That's all right. I'll be fine now," I said, my

      voice no more than a whisper either.

      She stared at me a moment. The white part of

      her eyes looked brighter, almost as if there were two

      tiny fires behind each orb. Finally, she nodded again,

      patted my hand reassuringly and sat back.

      "You be all right, you just don't lose that black

      cat bone I gave you," she told me.

      "Thank you." I let out a breath. The bus

      bounced and turned on the highway. Ahead of us, the

      road became brighter as we approached more lighted

      and populated areas en route to the city that now

      loomed before me like a dream.

      "I tell you what you do when we arrive," Annie

      said. "You go right to the telephone booth and look up

      your relatives in the phone book. Besides their

      telephone number, their address will be there. What's

      their name?"

      "Dumas," I said.

      "Dumas. Oh, honey, there's a hundred Dumas

      in the book, if there's one. Know any first names?" "Pierre Dumas."

      "Probably at least a dozen or so of them," she

      said, shaking her head. "He got a middle initial?" "I don't know," I said.

      She thought a moment.

      "What else do you know about your relatives,

      honey?"

      "Just that they live in a big house, a mansion," I

      said. Her eyes brightened again.

      "Oh. Maybe the Garden District then. You don't

      know what he does for a living?"

      I shook my head. Her eyes turned suspicious as

      one of her eyebrows lifted quizzically.

      "Who's Pierre Dumas? Your cousin? Your

      uncle?"

      "No. My father," I said. Her mouth gaped open

      and her eyes widened with surprise.

      "Your father? And he never set eyes on you

      before?"

      I shook my head. I didn't want to go through the

      whole story, and thankfully, she didn't ask for details.

      She simply crossed herself and muttered something

      before nodding.

      "I'll look in the phone book with you. My

      grandmere told me, I have a mama's vision and can

      see my way through the dark and find the light. I'll

      help you," she added, patting my hand. "Only, one

      thing must be to make it work," she added.

      "What's that?"

      "You've got to give me a token, something valuable to open the doors. Oh, it ain't for me," she added quickly. "It's a gift for the saints to thank them for help in the success of your gris-giis. I'll drop it by

      the church. Whaecha got?"

      "I don't have anything valuable," I said. "You got any money on you?" she asked. "A little money I've earned selling my artwork,"

      I told her.

      "Good," she said. "You give me a ten dollar bill

      at the phone booth and that will give me the power.

      You lucky you found me, honey. Otherwise, you'd be

      wanderin' around this city all night and all day. Must

      be meant to be. Must be I be your good gris-gris." And with that she laughed again and again

      began describing how wonderful her new life in New

      Orleans was going to be once her aunt got her the

      opportunity to sing.

      When I first saw the skyline of the city, I was

      glad I had found Annie Gray. There were so many

      buildings and there were so many lights, I felt as if I

      had fallen into a star laden sky. The traffic and people,

      the maze of streets was over-whelming and

      frightening. Everywhere I looked out the bus window,

      I saw crowds of revelers marching through the streets,

      all of them dressed in bright costumes, wearing masks and hats with bright feathers and carrying colorful paper umbrellas. Instead of masks, some had their faces made up to look like clowns, even the women. People were playing trumpets and trombones, flutes and drums. The bus driver had to slow down and wait for the crowds to cross at almost every corner before finally pulling into the bus station. As soon as he did so, our bus was surrounded by partygoers and musicians greeting the arriving passengers. Some were given masks, some had ropes of plastic jewels cast over their heads and some were given paper umbrellas. It seemed if you weren't celebrating Mardi

      Gras, you weren't welcome in New Orleans. "Hurry," Annie told me as we started down the

      aisle. As soon as I stepped down, someone grabbed

      my left hand, shoved a paper umbrella into my right,

      and pulled me into the parade of brightly dressed

      people so that I was forced to march around the bus

      with them. Annie laughed and threw her hands up as

      she started to dance and swing herself in behind me.

      We marched around as the bus driver unloaded the

      luggage. When Annie saw hers, she pulled me out of

      the line and I followed her into the station. People

      were dancing everywhere, and everywhere I looked,

      there were pockets of musicians playing Dixieland

      Jazz. "There's a phone booth," she said, pointing. We

      hurried to it. Annie opened the fat telephone book. I

      had never realized how many people lived in New

      Orleans. "Dumas, Dumas," she chanted as she ran her

      finger down the page. "Okay, here be the list.

      Quickly," she said, turning back to me. "Fold the ten

      dollar bill as tightly as you can. Go on."

      I did what she asked. She opened her purse and

      kept her eyes closed.

      "Just drop it in here," she said. I did so and she

      opened her eyes slowly and then turned to the phone

      book again. She did look like someone who had fallen

      into a trance. I heard her mumble some gibberish and

      then she put her long right forefinger on the page and

      ran it down slowly. Suddenly, she stopped. Her whole

      body shuddered and she closed and then opened her

      eyes. "It's him!" she declared. She leaned closer and

      nodded. "He does live in the Garden District, big

      house, rich." She tore off a corner of the page and

      wrote the address on it. It was on St. Charles Avenue. "Are you sure?" I asked.

      "Didn't you see my finger stop on the page? I


      didn't stop it; it was stopped!" she said, eyes wide. I

      nodded.

      "Thank you," I said.

      "You welcome, honey. Okay," she said, picking

      up her suitcase. "I got to get me going. You be all

      right now. Annie Gray said so. I'll send for you when

      I start singing some-where," she said, backing away. "Annie don't forget you. Don't forget Annie!"

      she cried. Then she spun around once with her right

      hand high, the colorful bracelets clicking together.

      She threw me a wide smile as she danced her way off,

      falling in with a small group of revelers who marched

      out..the door and into the street.

      I gazed at the street address on the tiny slip of

      paper in the palm of my hand. Did she really have

      some kind of prophetic power or was this incorrect, an

      address that would get me even more lost than I

      imagined? I looked back at the opened telephone

      book, thinking maybe I should know where the

      addresses for any other Pierre Dumas were, and was

      shocked to discover, there was only one Pierre

      Dumas. What sort of magic was required for this? I

      wondered.

      I laughed to myself, realizing I had paid for my

      company and entertainment. But who knew how

      much of what Annie had told me was true and how

      much wasn't? I wasn't one to be skeptical about supernatural mysteries, not with a Traiteur for a

      grandmother.

      Slowly, I walked to the station entrance. For a

      moment, I just stood there gaping out at the city. I

      looked around and floundered, filled with trepidation.

      Part of me wanted to march right back to the bus.

      Maybe I'd be better off in Houma living with Mrs.

      Thibodeau or Mrs. Livaudis, I thought. But the

      laughter and music from another group of revelers

      coming off a different bus interrupted my thoughts.

      When they reached me, one of them, a tall man

      wearing a white and black wolf mask paused at my

      side.

      "Are you all alone?" he asked.

      I nodded. "I just arrived."

      A light sprang into his light blue eyes, the only

      part of his face not hidden by the mask. He was tall

      with wide shoulders. He had dark brown hair and a

      young voice causing me to think he was no more than

      twenty-five.

      "So did I. But this is no night to be all alone,"

      he said. "You're very pretty, but it's Mardi Gras. Don't

      you have a mask to go with that umbrella?" "No," I said. "Someone gave me this as soon as

      I got off the bus. I didn't come for the Mardi Gras. I

      came--"

      "Of course you did," he interrupted. "Here," he

      said, digging into his bag and coming up with another

      mask, a black one with plastic diamonds around its

      edges. "Put on this one and come along with us." "Thank you, but I've got to find this address," I

      said. He looked at my slip.

      "Oh, I know where this is. We won't be far

      from it. Come along. Might as well enjoy yourself on

      the way," he added. "Here, put on the mask. Everyone

      must wear a mask tonight. Go on," he insisted, resting

      his sharp gaze on me. I saw a smile form around his

      eyes and I took the mask.

      "Now you look like you belong," he said. "Do you really know this address?" I asked. "Of course, I do. Come on," he said, taking my

      hand. Perhaps Annie Gray's voodoo magic was

      working, I thought. I found a stranger who could take

      me right to my father's door. I took the stranger's hand

      and hurried out with him to catch up with the group.

      There was music all around us and people hawking

      food and costumes and other masks as well. The

      whole city had been turned into a grand fais dodo, I

      thought. There wasn't a sad face anywhere, or if there

      was, it was hidden behind a mask. Above us, people were raining down confetti from the scrolled iron balconies. Columns and columns of revelers wound around every corner. Some of the costumes the women wore were scant and very revealing. I feasted visually on everything, turning and spinning at this carnival of life: people kissing anyone who was close enough to embrace, obvious strangers hugging and clinging to each other, jugglers juggling colorful balls,

      sticks of fire, and even knives!

      As we danced down the street, the crowds

      began to swell in size. My newly found guide spun

      me around and threw his head back with laughter.

      Then he bought some sort of punch for us to drink and

      a poor boy shrimp sandwich for us to share. It was

      filled with oysters, shrimp, sliced tomatoes, shredded

      lettuce, and sauce piquante. I thought it was delicious.

      Despite my nervousness and trepidation on arriving in

      New Orleans to meet my real family, I was having a

      good time.

      "Thank you. My name's Ruby," I said. I had to

      shout even though he was next to me. That's how loud

      the laughter, the music, and the shouts of others

      around us were. He shook his head and then brought

      his lips to my ear.

      "No names. Tonight, we are all mysterious," he said in a loud whisper. He followed that with a quick kiss on my neck. The feel of his wet lips stunned me for a moment. I heard his cackle and then I stepped

      back.

      "Thank you for the drink and the sandwich, but

      I've got to find this address," I said. He nodded,

      swallowing the rest of his drink quickly.

      "Don't you want to see the parade first?" he

      asked.

      "I can't. I've got to find this address," I

      emphasized.

      "Okay. This is the way," he told me, and before

      I could object, he seized my hand again and led me

      away from the procession of frolickers. We hurried

      down one street and then another before he told me

      we had to take a shortcut.

      "We'll go right through this alley and save

      twenty minutes at least. There's a mob ahead of us." The alley looked long and dark. It had ash cans

      and discarded furniture strewn through it, and there

      was the acrid stench of garbage and urine. I didn't

      move.

      "Come on," he urged, and pulled me behind

      him, ignoring my reluctance. I held my breath, hoping

      now to get through it quickly. But less than halfway

      through the alley, he stopped and turned to me. "What's wrong?" I asked, a chill so cold in my

      stomach it was as if I had swallowed an ice cube

      whole.

      "Maybe we shouldn't hurry so. We're losing the

      best of the night. Don't you want to have fun?" he

      asked, stepping closer. He put his hand on my

      shoulder. I stepped back quickly.

      "I've got to get to my relatives and let them

      know I've arrived," I said, now feeling foolish for

      allowing myself to be pulled into a dark alley with a

      stranger who wouldn't show me his face nor tell me

      his name. How could I have been so desperate and

      trusting?

      "I'm sure they don't expect you so soon on a

      Mardi Gras night. Tonight is a magical night.

      Everything is different," he said. "You're a very pretty

      girl." He lifted the mask from his face, but I couldn't

      see him well in the shadows. Before I could flee, he

     
    embraced me and pulled me to him.

      "Please," I said, struggling. "I must go. I don't

      want to do this."

      "Sure you do. It's Mardi Gras. Let yourself

      loose, abandon yourself," he told me, and pressed his

      lips to mine, holding me so tightly, I couldn't pull away. I felt his hands move down my back and begin to scoop up my skirt. I turned and struggled, but his long arms had mine pinned against my sides. I started to scream and he squelched it by pressing his mouth into mine. When I felt his tongue jet out and rub over mine, I gasped. His hands had found my panties and he was tugging them down as he swung me about. I felt myself growing faint. How could he keep his mouth over mine so long? Finally, he pulled his head back and I gulped air. He turned me around, pressing me toward what looked like an old, discarded mattress

      on the alley floor.

      "Stop!" I cried, twisting and turning to break

      free. "Let me go!"

      "It's party time!" he cried, and laughed that dry

      cackle again. But this time, as he brought his face

      toward me, I managed to pull my right hand out from

      under his arm and claw his cheeks and nose. He

      screamed and threw me back in a rage.

      "You bitch!" he cried, wiping his face. I

      cowered in the dark as he lifted his head and released

      another sick laugh. Had I fled from Buster Trahaw

      only to put myself into a worse predicament? Where

      was Annie Gray's magical protection now? I

      wondered as the stranger started toward me, a dark, dangerous silhouette, a character who had escaped

      from my worst nightmares to invade my reality. Fortunately, just as he reached out for me, a

      group of street celebrants turned into our alley, their

      music reverberating off the walls. My attacker saw

      them coming, lowered his mask over his face, and ran

      in the opposite direction, disappearing into the

      darkness as if he had fled back to the world of dark

      dreams.

      I didn't waste a moment. I scooped up my bag

      and ran toward the revelers, who shouted and laughed,

      trying to hold me back so I would join them. "NO!" I cried and broke loose to tear through

      them and out of the alley. Once onto a street, I ran and

      ran to get myself as far away from that alley as I

      could, my feet slapping the pavement so hard, my

      soles stung. Finally, out of breath, my shoulders

      heaving, my side aching, I stopped. When I looked up

      I was happy to see a policeman on the corner. "Please," I said, approaching him. "I'm lost. I

      just arrived and I've got to find this address." "Some night to come to New Orleans and get

     


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