"There can be no marker left on the grave of a conjure man," Strata Luna explained, her voice coming from a million miles away. "Otherwise people dig up his bones for mojoes and spells. They wouldn't leave him in peace. But some of us know where Jackson is buried. And now you know. See the hole?" She pointed. "Root doctors come and dig here."
"Goofer dust," Elise said.
"And now we must both leave something. You cannot visit the grave of a conjurer without leaving a personal item."
Strata Luna pulled off her black gloves and placed them near the indentation.
At first Elise couldn't think of anything to offer. Cell phone? Of course not. She dug through her pockets. Notebooks. ID. Gun.
Her fingers came in contact with a pen. Just a regular, everyday ink pen. Maybe he needed to do a little writing.
She placed it on one of Strata Luna's gloves.
"I have one more thing for you," the woman said.
"I can't accept anything else."
"This ain't really from me." She pulled out a small leather case and handed it to Elise.
"Go on. Open it. It's something that belonged to your father. Something you should have."
The leather was cracked and black and extremely old; the small hinges were rusty.
Elise opened it. Inside was a pair of wire-rimmed glasses with dark blue lenses.
Conjurer's glass. Blue lenses that kept out evil spirits and allowed the wearer to see things others couldn't.
"Put them on. I want to see them on you."
She seemed so sure that Jackson Sweet was her father.
"You're alike," Strata Luna stated.
"How?"
"Your father was a cop."
"Jackson Sweet? No, he wasn't." Elise would have known if Jackson Sweet had been a policeman.
"Not by your rules, but by a root doctor's. He punished bad people and rewarded the good ones. That's better than the idiots with badges we have in Savannah."
A self-proclaimed man of the law? A man who scared the shit out of people, forcing them to mend their ways or face the wrath of a white root doctor? Was that why Elise had become a cop? Was it in her blood? Because she was the daughter of Jackson Sweet?
Intrigued, she removed the glasses from the case. The wire was thin and fragile. She carefully unfolded the antique frames and slipped them on.
Shadows turned bottomless black. The sky turned gray. Sunlight that fell through branches and leaves created a dappling of crescent moons on the ground.
Dizzying.
Disorienting.
Caused by the weird, distorted lenses? Or something else?
At that moment, Elise believed what Strata Luna was telling her. She suddenly had a past, a history.
She'd been abandoned. She'd been thrown away, left to die. But if she came from a world of conjurers and spells, then her life could never have been what other people thought of as normal. Who wanted normal anyway? Instead, she'd met the world in a weird, sensational way.
He would have wanted her. Jackson Sweet had been on his deathbed when Elise was born. Otherwise he would have rescued her, kept her, raised her. She suddenly felt very sure of that.
What about Audrey? Should she tell her? What would she think? How would she react to the news that her grandfather was Jackson Sweet?
Standing in the center of the strange, colorless world was Strata Luna, beaming at her. "Look here, look here, Jackson Sweet," she said. The words were tossed to someone invisible, standing just beyond her shoulder. "You ain't never gonna believe what ol' Strata Luna brought you today."
The two women stood there in the dark, listening to the frogs. Finally Elise told Strata Luna good-bye. She removed the glasses and walked in the direction of the church and the cars.
Strata Luna watched her go, a feeling of loneliness suddenly engulfing her.
Loneliness and fear.
She thought about unwelcome evil and was reminded of another time, a time she tried not to think about-the night her youngest daughter drowned…
Strata Luna had run from the house, a sheer white nightgown billowing around her. Down the flagstone steps, past the hedges and roses and weeping magnolias, her bare feet already whispering that it was too late.
The night sky was a cobalt blue; the trees were black silhouettes standing silent and unmoving. What she saw caused her heart to stop beating for several minutes.
Something floating in the water.
Fabric.
A nightgown.
Ebony hair.
The most beautiful, shiny, ebony hair a child could possibly possess.
No! God, no!
The night sky reflected on the water, a child's hand reaching for the moon and stars. Strata Luna tumbled into the pool, the surface shattering like glass.
She grabbed the body of her daughter. The water tugged, fighting to hold the child, to keep her. Strata Luna finally pulled her free and turned her over.
Dead, dead, dead.
Some people claimed she'd killed the angel herself, with her own hands, holding her under the water until her lungs filled with water. Sometimes Strata Luna thought it was true, since she hadn't been able to foresee her death.
But evil was a part of life.
It was the shadow that followed her. The shadow she feared had returned.
Chapter 16
David Gould was scheduled for an early flight out of Savannah that would get him to Suffolk County, Virginia, in an hour. From there his lawyer would pick him up and they would drive to meet with his wife and her attorney in order to get the divorce papers signed and finalized. If all went smoothly, he would be back to Savannah by early evening.
It was still dark when he boarded the small commuter jet, carrying nothing but a briefcase with copies of the divorce papers plus some notes on the TTX case. He tried to tell himself that once the papers were signed everything would be over. He wouldn't have to think about Beth again.
Right.
The flight departed ten minutes ahead of schedule.
As David leaned his forehead against the window and watched the airport shrink below him, he tried to empty his mind, a trick he'd learned from a man who taught transcendental meditation. It didn't work this time. Come to think of it, he wasn't sure it had ever worked, because he now understood something he hadn't understood at the time: He could really fool the shit out of himself.
A guy had to be careful about creating his own reality. Because you could get lost in it, so lost that it was hard to get back to the real world.
He had two excuses for his early infatuation with Beth: youth and hormones. Those things together could slant a person's perspective more than heavy drugs.
David Gould and Beth Anderson had been high school sweethearts. That in itself should have been a warning, because at age sixteen most people aren't who they're going to become. Often, they aren't even close.
But you think you are. At sixteen, you think you know everything, and when sex is part of the equation it's hard as hell for a guy to think straight.
Now that he was an adult, David could see his relationship with Beth for what it had been-a purely physical attraction, as shallow as that was.
The shallowness was something he would never have admitted at the time. On the outside, Beth was the perfect woman, with the attributes a male looked for in a potential mate.