textbook French. He wondered how badly his hitherto perfect accent had suffered from the past month's
exposure to so many odd variations of the language.
The path became steeper, and soon he had to sheathe his machete in order to have his hand free to grab
branches and pull himself along, and for a while his heart was pounding so alarmingly that he thought it
would burst, despite the protective drogue the black man had given him—then they had got above the
level of the surrounding jungle and the sea breeze found them and he called to his companion to stop so
that he could catch his breath in the fresh air and enjoy the coolness of it in his sopping white hair and
damp shirt.
The breeze clattered and rustled in the palm branches below, and through a gap in the sparser trunks
around him he could see water—a moonlight-speckled segment of the Tongue of the Ocean, across which
the two of them had sailed from New Providence Island that afternoon. He remembered noticing the
prominence they now stood on, and wondering about it, as he'd struggled to keep the sheet trimmed to his
bad-tempered guide's satisfaction.
Andros Island it was called on the maps, but the people he'd been associating with lately generally called
it Isle de Loas Bossals, which, he'd gathered, meant Island of Untamed (or, perhaps more closely, Evil)
Ghosts (or, it sometimes seemed, Gods). Privately he thought of it as Persephone's shore, where he hoped
to find, at long last, at least a window into the house of Hades.
He heard a gurgling behind him and turned in time to see his guide recorking one of the bottles. Sharp on
the fresh air he could smell the rum. "Damn it," Hurwood snapped, "that's for the ghosts."
The bocor shrugged. "Brought too much," he explained. "Too much, too many come."
The one-armed man didn't answer, but wished once again that he knew enough—instead of just nearly
enough—to do this alone.
"Nigh there now," said the bocor, tucking the bottle back into the leather bag slung from his shoulder.
They resumed their steady pace along the damp earth path, but Hurwood sensed a difference
now—attention was being paid to them.
The black man sensed it too, and grinned back over his shoulder, exposing gums nearly as white as his
teeth. "They smell the rum," he said.
"Are you sure it's not just those poor Indians?"
The man in front answered without looking back. "They still sleep. That's the loas you feel watching us."
Though he knew there could be nothing out of the ordinary to see yet, the one-armed man glanced around,
and it occurred to him for the first time that this really wasn't so incongruous a setting—these palm trees
and this sea breeze probably didn't differ very much from what might be found in the Mediterranean, and
this Caribbean island might be very like the island where, thousands of years ago, Odysseus performed
almost exactly the same procedure they intended to perform tonight.
It was only after they reached the clearing at the top of the hill that Hurwood realized he'd all along been
dreading it. There was nothing overtly sinister about the scene—a cleared patch of flattened dirt with a
hut off to one side and, in the middle of the clearing, four poles holding up a small thatched roof over a
wooden box—but Hurwood knew that there were two drugged Arawak Indians in the hut, and an oilcloth-
lined six-foot trench on the far side of the little shelter.
The black man crossed to the sheltered box—the trone, or altar—and very carefully detached a few of the
little statues from his belt and set them on it. He bowed, backed away, then straightened and turned to the
other man, who had followed him to the center of the clearing. "You know what's next?" the black man
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