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Dr. Legros, chief of staff at the hospital at Gonaives, was a good-looking mulatto of middle years with
pomaded hair and a thin mustache. His three-piece suit was all sharp creases and jutting angles, like that
of a paper doll, and his handshake left Zora's palm powder dry. He poured her a belt of raw white
clairin, minus the nutmeg and peppers that would make it palatable to Guede, the prancing black-clad loa
of derision, but breathtaking nonetheless, and as they took dutiful medicinal sips his small talk was all big,
all politics: whether Mr. Roosevelt would be true to his word that the Marines would never be back;
whether Haiti's good friend Senator King of Utah had larger ambitions; whether America would support
President Vincent if the grateful Haitians were to seek to extend his second term beyond the arbitrary
date technically mandated by the Constitution. But his eyes—to Zora, who was older than she looked
and much older than she claimed—posed an entirely different set of questions. He seemed to view Zora
as a sort of plenipotentiary from Washington and only reluctantly allowed her to steer the conversation to
the delicate subject of his unusual patient.
"It is important for your countrymen and your sponsors to understand, Miss Hurston, that the beliefs of
which you speak are not the beliefs of civilized men, in Haiti or elsewhere. These are Negro beliefs,
embarrassing to the rest of us, and confined to the canaille—to the, what is the phrase, the backwater
areas, such as your American South. These beliefs belong to Haiti's past, not her future."
Zora mentally placed the good doctor waistcoat-deep in a backwater area of Eatonville, Florida, and set
gators upon him. "I understand, Dr. Legros, but I assure you I'm here for the full picture of your country,
not just the Broadway version, the tomtoms and the shouting. But in every ministry, veranda, and salon I
visit, why, even in the office of the director-general of the Health Service, what is all educated Haiti
talking about but your patient, this unfortunate woman Felicia Felix-Mentor? Would you stuff my ears,
shelter me from the topic of the day?"
He laughed, his teeth white and perfect and artificial. Zora, self-conscious of her own teeth, smiled with
her lips closed, chin down. This often passed for flirtation. Zora wondered what the bright-eyed Dr.
Legros thought of the seductive man-eater Erzulie, the most "uncivilized" loa of all. As she slowly crossed
her legs, she thought: Huh! What's Erzulie got on Zora, got on me?
"Well, you are right to be interested in the poor creature," the doctor said, pinching a fresh cigarette into
his holder while looking neither at it nor at Zora's eyes. "I plan to write a monograph on the subject
myself, when the press of duty allows me. Perhaps I should apply for my own Guggenheim, eh?
Clement!" He clapped his hands. "Clement! More clairin for our guest, if you please, and mangoes when
we return from the yard."
As the doctor led her down the central corridor of the gingerbread Victorian hospital, he steered her
around patients in creeping wicker wheelchairs, spat volleys of French at cowed black women in white,
and told her the story she already knew, raising his voice whenever passing a doorway through which
moans were unusually loud.
"In 1907, a young wife and mother in Ennery town died after a brief illness. She had a Christian burial.
Her widower and son grieved for a time, then moved on with their lives, as men must do. Empty this
basin immediately! Do you hear me, woman? This is a hospital, not a chickenhouse! My pardon.
Now we come to a month ago. The Haitian Guard received reports of a madwoman accosting travelers
near Ennery. She made her way to a farm and refused to leave, became violently agitated by all attempts
to dislodge her. The owner of this family farm was summoned. He took one look at this poor creature
and said, 'My God, it is my sister, dead and buried nearly thirty years.' Watch your step, please."