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“What do you think you’re doing?” Mrs. Teller shouted from behind us. She and Niella stood with hands on hips in the middle of the side street. Niella was holding up a small flannel pouch, something I recognized as a mojo bag, a conjure amulet.

But my attention was on Mrs. Teller. A glow surrounded her entire form, faint at first, but growing brighter. “You let go of her right now!” Mrs. Teller commanded.

I took the momentary distraction to land a sharp kick between Moran’s legs and wrench free. He fell back several steps. Even immortals are tender in the stones, it seems. I ran toward Niella and Mrs.

Teller, although I wasn’t sure what magic Hat Man could muster or whether anything Mrs. Teller could do would be enough to keep all of us from getting killed, especially if Moran had anything to do with those flayed bodies showing up all over town.

Mrs. Teller’s glow was as bright as if she had a spotlight behind her. She gathered some of the light in the palm of her hand and hurled it down the shadowed alley at Moran, who vanished in the blink of an eye.

“Thank you,” I said, still jumbled from the vision and from seeing Mrs. Teller in a whole new way.

“Humph,” Mrs. Teller said, lifting her chin. “The nerve of some people. Niella and I saw him hanging around the marketplace, and when he followed you, I knew he was no good.”

“I wanted to call the police,” Niella said dryly.

Mrs. Teller shook her head. “Police ain’t going to do anything about his kind,” she said, and I knew immediately what she meant. His kind. Magic.

I had more questions, but Mrs. Teller was already heading for the place where the sidewalk was missing. The barricades had gotten knocked over, and in the middle of the red clay dirt was a clear impression of a man’s boot. Not much to tell the police there, other than his shoe size.

I was surprised when Mrs. Teller squatted down by the patch of dirt and dug in a woven cloth bag she wore on a strap across her body. She took out a small pouch and sprinkled some gray, odd-smelling dust into the shoe print.

“What’s that?” I asked, bending down to see.

“Kufwa dust,” she said without looking up.

“Folks around here call it ‘goofer’ dust,” Niella replied. I had heard of that. Part of a root worker’s tools, especially if that practitioner also ventured into what some called ‘conjure’ or ‘hoodoo.’ Mrs. Teller took a knife out of her pocket and a small glass bottle from her bag. She mixed the dust into the shoe print, then scraped some of the dirt into the glass bottle and put a stopper in it.

“Here,” she said as she rose and handed me the vial. “Up to you what you do next. Keep it in the bottle, and that man’ll get mighty sick. Bury in a graveyard, he’ll die. Throw that bottle into a crossroads, and he’ll leave town.” She gave me a pointed look. “He’s bad news.”

I closed my hand around the bottle. “Thank you,” I said, looking from Mrs. Teller to Niella. “Thank you very much.”

I was surprised when Mrs. Teller suddenly grabbed my hand. “Bad things comin’,” she said, meeting my gaze earnestly. “Watch yourself. Something’s riled the dead, and there’ll be problems ’till they’re quiet. Even your shadow friend, he best take care.”

In all the time I had known Niella and her mother, Mrs. Teller had never spoken at such length to me, and certainly not about danger and ghosts. Niella must have misinterpreted my moment of stunned silence, because she gave her mother a look of warning. “Now Mama, you’re going to scare Cassidy,”

she said.

I gave Mrs. Teller’s hand a light squeeze. “No, really, it’s okay. Thank you. I’ll be careful.”

Mrs. Teller gave a curt nod without looking up. “Best you take care. Someone’s gonna die again real soon.”

I got to Honeysuckle Café wishing I dared order an Irish coffee instead of a latte. A wee bit of whiskey would probably help my nerves, and by now, I was wide awake. With a sigh, I decided to be a good girl and stuck with the espresso double shot. I treated myself to an extra vanilla flavoring, just because.

Rick was the barista on call today, working at the bar for Trina, who owned the café. In a world of twenty-something hipster baristas, Rick was a pleasant anomaly. He was probably in his forties, and carried himself like a man who has seen a lot of living. He had deep brown eyes and a long, hound-like face which seemed to elicit instant trust from his customers. He played it up by favoring vintage jackets, old-time casual wear and fedoras, and he’d hung a sign that proclaimed ‘Rick’s Place’ over the coffee bar, making the nod to Casablanca complete.

“Hi Rick,” I said. “Got the exit papers?” It was our little joke, homage to our favorite Bogart movie.

“No, but I’m about to get carpal tunnel from pulling espressos if this keeps up. This is the quietest it’s been all morning.”

I looked around. While the Charleston City Market had been emptier than usual, I could tell from the detritus of cups, napkins and stir sticks that Trina and the bus boy were clearing that the café had been slammed. “Get hit by a tourist bus?”

He shook his head. “Nope. Cops.”

Mrs. Teller’s warning echoed in my mind. “Traffic problems?” I hoped for the best, but I had the sinking feeling that my optimism was misplaced.

Rick shook his head, expertly manipulating the huge brass espresso machine like an artist. “No such luck. They found another dead guy out by the old Navy yard.”

Crap. My good mood plummeted. “Any juicy gossip?”

Rick was the kind of guy who should have been slinging booze in a one of the dark-paneled cigar bars that poured expensive scotch and sold the finest smokes north of Havana. I had the impression that Rick had done a stint like that and moved on. Like his namesake, I suspected Rick had lived many lives.

He shrugged. “You know the boys in blue. They talk a lot when they think it’s just among themselves.”

I took his meaning right away. Most people forgot that waiters, bartenders, and baristas weren’t just part of the scenery.

“And?” I figured Rick had his secrets. We all do. And I figured he kept secrets for others. But this was likely to make the evening news, so it wasn’t exactly like hacking into the Pentagon. I left that to Teag.

Rick glanced around the café, checking to make sure we didn’t have an audience. “They’re worried,”

he said quietly. “All the murders have been men, all homeless or vagrants, and they don’t seem to have a break in the case yet.” He paused. “Bad for business if it gets out. Tourists don’t like vacationing where there are unsolved crimes.”

I nodded. Tourists are skittish. All it took was a rumor of a flu outbreak or a rash of muggings and people would cancel reservations or decide to take their daytrips elsewhere. And both alternatives were a bottom-line hit for merchants who had nothing to do with the problem and no way to fix it.

“Anything else?”

Rick frowned. “Well, there are several theories floating around. I’m not sure which is worse. Some of the cops think it might be a serial killer. The others think it could be some weird cult thing, or maybe black magic.”

Uh-oh. “What makes them think that?” I asked, hoping I sounded curious but not too interested.

Rick’s gaze darted around the room once more. “The cops all seemed to know the same stuff, so they didn’t spell it out, but I got the feeling that all the bodies were ‘done to’ pretty bad, cut up, that sort of thing.”

He gave an expressive shrug. “One cop said something about ‘the way they looked’ and the others all nodded, then started jibing each other about who threw up when they saw the bodies.”