Tuesday, December 24, 2019

The Night Before Christmas - NDN Style




I don't know who wrote this (unknown) but a very good friend of mine, Cindy Mae Lopez, sent it to me and I love it! Hope you do too because it's too good not to share. Merry Christmas to you all!



The Night Before Christmas - NDN Style

Twas da night before Christmas and all through da hogan

not an eyelid was shut cuz no one was sleepy

The Wal Mart bags were hung by da fire so neat

Hopin' soon Hosteen Nick would fill em up w/ Shasta colas

Da chillren were nestled all snug on their sheepskin beds

While visions of frybread men danced in their heads

With Masani’ in her kerchief and my hair braided so tight

We turned up da scanner to entertain us tonight


Then all of a sudden a very loud crash we did hear

Da rez dogs started barking but that juss da norm round here

Da moon on da breast of da new fallin snow

Gave da luster of mid-day to my rez runner car below

When what do my NDN brown eyes should appear?

But an NDN sleigh and eight tiny reindeer!!

With a little Rez driver so stoic and quick

I knew in a frybread moment it must be Hosteen Nick!!


More rapid than a Rez baller da reindeer they came

And he pointed with his lips and called dem by name!

"On Fancy Dancer! On Roast Mutton! On Thomaaas and Victor!

On James! On Ernie! On Jacob and Edward!" (Shish)…

Shhhh. Land beside da hogan quiet for good reason

We have to be careful it's deer hunting season...


Da stickers on his sleigh read "I love mutton"

Another on his ride said "My other ride is a ford pickup"

Dah one in the middle said in big red letters "NDN Power"

There was duct tape and bailin wire holdin it all together

When da hogan door flap opened I just hung my head

For I just finished off his mutton stew and frybread

He was dressed in full jury from his head to his red mocs

He was fully decked out right down to his bell covered mocs!!!


His huckleberry eyes twinkled and his bun waz like WOW!

You have to see it for yourself he was jus.... SOMEHOW!

Da stump of his peace pipe he held tight in his teeth

And smoke signals circled his head like a keshmish wreath

His forehead was kinda greasy and he was "NDN" size

He had a commod bod only a Skin could recognize.


He spoke not a word just flashed his tribal census ID

He left a block of a cheese and a box of cornflakes under da tree

He left sum pinons an blankets and rezbandz CDs

A bag of beans and da new Aces Wild CD! (hoka!!)

Then he pointed with his lips and gave a big hardy AAAYE!!

And he danced out da door and jumped on his sleigh..


I heard him exclaim as he flew outta sight

"Round Dance hard my red chillren and Round Dance tonight!!!

AAAAye!!!


###



Born near Black Bayou in the little Louisiana town of Vivian, Eric Wilder grew up listening to his grandmother’s tales of politics, corruption, and ghosts that haunt the night. He now lives in Oklahoma where he continues to pen mysteries and short stories with a southern accent. He is the author of the French Quarter Mystery Series set in New Orleans and the Paranormal Cowboy Series. Please check it out on his Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Kobo and iBook author pages. You might also like to check out his website.

Saturday, December 21, 2019

New Orleans Dangerous - a video

New Orleans Dangerous




Born near Black Bayou in the little Louisiana town of Vivian, Eric Wilder grew up listening to his grandmother’s tales of politics, corruption, and ghosts that haunt the night. He now lives in Oklahoma where he continues to pen mysteries and short stories with a southern accent. He is the author of the French Quarter Mystery Series set in New Orleans and the Paranormal Cowboy Series. Please check it out on his AmazonBarnes and NobleKobo and iBook author pages. You might also like to check out his website.

Monday, December 2, 2019

Amarillo - a short story



I can't remember when I wrote this short story but I know why I wrote it. I grew up with a mean, red-headed older brother, and a father that had returned from the Second World War with an anger problem he never resolved until the day he developed Alzheimer's. It all came to me when I heard the Bob Dylan song Brownsville Girl that resonated all the way to my soul. Like so many of Dylan's songs, it told a story. I chopped out this short story about brotherly love and fatherly control. It's crude and unapologetic. Hope you love it.


Amarillo


We crossed the Panhandle at sundown, heading south toward Amarillo. Jim hadn't moved in over an hour. He just stared out the window at crimson light bleeding up from the horizon. Finally, he fidgeted in his seat and folded his arms.
He just stared out the window at crimson light bleeding up from the horizon. Finally, he fidgeted in his seat and folded his arms.
"You know, little brother, this reminds me of a movie I seen once."
 Hoping to free him of the blue funk weighing on him since we left Wichita, I said, "Tell me about it."
Jim leaned back against the seat, closed his eyes, and took a long, dreamy breath.
"Don't remember much. A kid trying to make a name for his self shot an old gunfighter in the back. Left him for dead on the edge of the town."
"What happened?” I asked.
 "Sheriff waylaid the kid and beat him senseless. By then folks from town had gathered, wanting to string the boy up on the spot. The dying gunfighter wouldn't have none of it. Turn him loose, he said. Let him feel what it's like to live life in the sight of a gun."
"What's it mean?"
 Jim offered no answer. His eyes had closed and stayed that way until I braked the Ford on the outskirts of town. Not knowing where to go from there, I nudged him, waiting until he shook away his bad dream.
 "Teddy Jackson's place. Down the road a ways," he mumbled. "Next to a used car lot."
 We passed miles of used cars, cattle pens, and wrecking yards, finally finding Teddy Jackson's trailer house behind a twelve-foot fence topped with concertina. The sign on the gate said Teddy's Junk House. When I stopped the old Ford Jim reached across the seat, leaning on the horn until a woman with a thatch of thick red hair came out of the trailer and shined a flashlight through the windshield.
"Closed up. What the hell you want this time of night?"
 "Here to see Teddy," Jim said.
 "Well, he ain't here. Come back tomorrow."
 "I'm Jim Droon and this is my brother. Teddy's expecting us."
 The red-haired woman must have known we were coming because the muscles in her face relaxed, and she said, "We won't see Teddy till the bars close down."
 Swinging back the gate, she let us drive into the lot, smiling when Jim winked at her. Flushing visibly red even beneath dim fluorescent light flooding the junk lot, she straightened her yellow hair bow.
 Darla was her name. She took to Jim right off and him to her. The trailer was a mess, Teddy's junk occupying every inch of floor space. It did not bother Jim. Without asking permission, he sprawled out on a faded sofa older than both of us were. Darla didn't seem to mind and before long they were sharing tequila straight from a bottle. I passed when they offered me a swig. We had not eaten all day and I didn't think hard liquor would help the dull ache in the pit of my gut.
 Darla and Jim were in a world of their own so I walked down the hall to the bathroom. When I finished my business, I rummaged through the kitchen, looking for something to eat. All I found was a single can of Lone Star, its top already popped. With nothing better to eat or drink, I sipped flat beer till it got too hot.
 "How do you like our little corner of the world?” Darla asked when I returned to the couch.
 "It's so -"               
 "God forsaken?"
 "You got it." Jim grinned when I said, "But it reminds me of Kansas, all big and open. We had a tree once, you know?"
 Darla rubbed a dark bruise, shaped like a buffalo's head, on her calf. "Only one tree?"
 "Yeah and it didn't last long. When Mama was working and Daddy off playing pool, Jim siphoned gas from the tractor, poured it on that tree and set it on fire. Said it bugged him the way wind caused it to brush against the screen door."
 Leaning forward on the couch, Darla said, "Hey, Jim, what did your Daddy do when he found out?"
 By now, Jim was all grins. "Let little brother tell you. He's better at it than me."
 Glancing away from Darla's expectant eyes, I said, "Jim didn't want a whipping so he sneaked off to town, but not until he left the half-empty gas can beside my bed. Daddy come home all sotted up. Found the burned-up tree and can of gas. I didn't know what hit me when he yanked me out of bed by the hair, beating me with the buckle of his belt till I begged him to stop."
 "You survived," Jim said. "Besides, that's why you're the little brother, little brother."
 Just before midnight, Darla said, "Amarillo's a hell hole. Ain't enough life here worth embalming. Been thinking of hitchhiking back to Dallas. Where you boys headed?"
 "South," Jim said.
 "How far south?"
 "Till the wheels burn off that ol' Galaxie."
 "San Antone," I said. "Jim says it's like paradise. Jobs for everybody. Beautiful weather."
 I did not miss the glance Darla shot Jim. "Well, don't take everything you hear too seriously, kid. San Antone's okay, but for my money the place to be is Dallas, any time."
 Shaking my head, I said, "We're going there for sure. Jim says they pave the streets with gold."
 Darla laughed and she and Jim kept right on drinking till the bottle was empty. About two-thirty we heard brakes screeching outside the fence and I sensed it was Teddy, coming home from an all-day drunk. We watched him stagger out of his dented blue Biscayne. When he saw Jim, recognition flooded his ratty eyes.
 "Jimmy," he said, latching his arms around Jim's neck. When he kissed him on the mouth Jim didn't flinch, but I saw a strange look flicker and die in Darla's green eyes.
 "Get in this house," Teddy said, steering Jim back toward the trailer door. "Who's this you brung with you?"
 "Little brother," Jim said.
 "Looks bigger than you," Teddy said. "Darla, I'm starved. What's to eat in this place?"
 Darla stalked off to the kitchen, returning with a bowl of stale rice soaked in red sauce I had somehow missed. She didn't bother heating it up and Teddy didn't seem to mind, eating it straight from the bowl without offering any to me or Jim.
 "Jim and me spent time in McAlester," Teddy said. "Hard time. Jim kicked the shit out of a guard." A wicked grin spread over his skinny face. "What a man your brother is. What a man."
 "Shit, Teddy. You're the one," Jim said. "You always had a plan. The rest of us were just doing time."
 "A plan is what I got right now," Teddy said, edging closer on the sofa.
 Teddy had finished the red rice. Now he filled a shot glass with tequila. Darla had passed out on the couch and Teddy sipped his drink, staring at Jim. "There's a bank in town, ready for the breaking. You boys interested?"
 Jim said, "Maybe. At least in hearing what you got to say about it."
 "End of the month payroll," Teddy said. "Probably forty thousand dollars, or so. Twenty each."
 Teddy paused as Jim reflected on the amount he had mentioned. Leaning closer, he said, "I drive. You walk in, hand them the note, collect the money and walk out. I'll pick you up on the corner. Nothing to it."
 Not believing what I was hearing, I waited for Jim to laugh, or at least change the subject. He did neither.
 Instead, he said, "How many guards?"
 "Just one," Teddy said. "That's the beauty. They got all the money in the world and no security. We'll waltz right in, take what they got and hit the road without a hitch."
 I tried to catch Jim's eye but he glanced away. Considering Teddy's scheme, I guessed.
 "When?” Jim finally said.
 "Tomorrow. Right after they open up."
 "Won't give us much time to case the place."
 "That I already done," Teddy said.
 "You think about it," he said, patting Jim's cheek before sauntering off to bed in the next room. Darla rubbed her eyes, blinked herself awake, and followed him. Jim kicked me off the sofa, wrapped his hands behind his head, and grinned.
 "You wouldn't rob another bank, would you Jim?" I asked.
 "Not me, little brother, us."
 "If Teddy wants to rob a bank, let him do it alone. He don't need you."
 "Teddy's just a driver. He can't pull this job alone. Besides, Teddy and me shared a cell in McAlester. He's smart and knows how to make things work. If he says this is a good bank to rob, then I believe him."
 "If he's so smart, why did he wind up in McAlester in the first place?"
 Jim ignored my question and said, "We need Teddy to drive and I need you to back me up."
 "But what about San Antone?"
 Jim stared at the ceiling, smiling his crazy smile, and said, "This is San Antone."
 "No way. You promised Mama and you promised me. I won't let you screw your life up again."
 Jim's eyes had closed but I knew he was listening because of that grin on his face I had seen all my life.
  Quit your belly-aching, little brother," he finally said. "Neither of us is going to rob anything. I was just kidding."
 "You sure?"
 Jim passed out on the couch, the only answer to my question a coyote, somewhere down the road, howling at the moon. Propping my shoulders against a wall, I closed my eyes but mental meandering prevented sleep until almost dawn when Jim nudged me awake with his foot.
 "Get up, little brother. We're going into town and get something to eat."
 My gut ached. So did my head, but during the long night, I had somehow convinced myself it was all a joke. When my stomach growled I remembered my hunger and the bacon and eggs Jim was promising.
 Teddy, Darla, and Jim were not quite ready to go so I chewed on a piece of cardboard until they killed the last of the tequila. Temperatures had dropped below freezing during the night and we had to push the Ford to start it. The ride to town seemed endless and we found the streets deserted when we got there - like winter on Mars.
 Jim and I sat in the back seat of the Galaxie, Darla riding shotgun, as Teddy circled the block. They both looked strung out and it worried me. Maybe it was just last night's Lone Star but the atmosphere in the car made my gut feel like slag lead. Finally, Teddy stopped and let us out.
 "I'll park this heap around the corner," he said. "Just come running."
 Darla reached through the window, giving Jim a hug and frantic kiss and waving as Teddy pulled away. Drawing me like a magnet, Jim drew a deep breath, patted his chest and started down the street,
 "Why aren't they coming with us?"
 "Cause Teddy's lazy and looking for a closer place to park. Cafe's just down the street and I ain't waiting."
 When we rounded the corner, I looked in both directions for the pancake house but did not see it. Instead, a bank door beckoned and I realized Jim had suckered me. Grabbing the front of my pea-jacket, he shoved a big revolver under my belt and pushed me through the front door.
 "Don't do this," I said.
 Jim grabbed my shoulder, cupped my ear and whispered into it. "All you have to do is stand right here and wait on me. I'll do the dirty work and no one will even know you're involved."
 "I'd follow you to hell. But robbing a bank -"
 "You never robbed a bank before?"
 "Jim, you know I ain't"
 Jim's eyes began to glaze. "It's pure sex, kid. Pure sex."
 Now my knees were shaking, my heart thumping against my ribs. Across the room, one fat guard propped up the wall, drinking coffee from a plastic cup. Jim strolled past him, straight to the nearest cashier where he pulled out his pistol and stuck it in the woman's chest. Outside the bank, I had felt like I was about to puke. Now, time began passing like a slow-motion Technicolor pan across the room. As if I weren't really there, but knew I was.
 "You're too young to die, beautiful," Jim said to the scared woman. "Put your money in this sack and signal your boss over here, now."
 The young woman's body stiffened like a chopped stump. Color drained from her face and saliva drooled from the corner of her mouth. Looking at her, it made me wonder if she would piss her pants before I did.
Don't shoot me," she said. "Please!"
"Put the money in the sack," Jim said, his words growing progressively louder. "Then call your boss over here."
 The woman's voice was also growing louder and had become noticeably shaky when she called to a well-dressed man beside the open vault.
 "Jeremy, over here."
 With a glance of disapproval, the young banker in a blue suit approached the booth. He had no chance to comment on the cashier's disrespect before Jim stuck the pistol in his face and eased the two of them down the row. Jim followed Jeremy and the woman into the vault.
 I glanced at the big clock on the wall and waited. Although it seemed like forever, less than five minutes passed before Jim strolled out of the vault. He was alone. Slung over his shoulder was a heavy-looking bag and I thought we were home free. Instead, fate suddenly dealt us aces and eights.
 Jeremy or the cashier must have tripped an alarm from inside the vault. A siren began wailing and people started screaming and throwing themselves to the floor. The fat guard pulled his pistol and dropped to his knees, fanning the bank. Jim was almost to the front door when the man yelled for him to halt. Without waiting for a response, he began shooting. His pistol erupted, my heart counting three explosions.
 The first bullet caught Jim in the shoulder, spinning him around. The second took off a chunk of his right ear and the third struck him square in the belly. I watched helplessly as he staggered back against the wall, pluming blood painting a crushed rose across the front of his jacket.
 It was not over. The fat guard rushed forward, jamming his pistol in Jim's face. Amid screams of the people in the bank and sirens wailing outside, he prepared to pull the trigger. I had already started for the door, but I could not leave, knowing I had to save Jim. Use the gun he give me. Yanking it from my belt, I pointed it, closed my eyes and pulled the trigger.
 All my luck had ebbed sometime the day before. Catching sight of the weapon in my hand, the fat guard squeezed off a round from his pistol at the exact instant. His bullet burned a hole through my leg, igniting sharp pain just below my right knee. My bullet lifted him off his feet, crushed him against the wall, robbing his breath until no life remained in his eyes. He was dead and it was me that had killed him.
  Somehow, reality fazed me less than intense pain surging through my leg. Steadyng Jim before he collapsed to the floor, I fought back my nausea, wondering what weird anomaly of life caused blood to gurgle from my brother's mouth while letting his eyes remain clear as Amarillo's cold December sky.
 "Get us out of here, little brother."
 Trembling bodies lay sprawled on the floor, blocking our path to the door. I stepped over, through and between them, hauling Jim to the front door, the bank's alarm still screaming bloody murder, distant sirens blaring as we stepped outside.
 Down the street, Teddy and Darla waited in Jim's Galaxie. Teddy saw us first, slamming the car into reverse, burning rubber all the way down the road until he reached us. Amid all the confusion a crow cawed, somewhere overhead. For a moment, I thought we was back home in Kansas.
 "Teddy, Jim's shot. Help us."
 The front door opened and Darla bolted out, rushing toward us like an excited chicken, wrenching the moneybag off Jim's shoulder instead of helping me with him. The car door slammed behind her, old tires screaming as they burned rubber around the corner and disappeared.
 "Bastard," Jim said, weak from loss of blood. "Get me out of here. I swear I ain't doing no more hard time."
 The crowd gathered on the sidewalk scurried out of our way as I moved us along with no idea where to go. Then it appeared before us - a cross topping a church steeple and red brick fencing a churchyard. I dragged Jim through the gates.
 "Inside," I said. "The priest will give us asylum."
 "Dumb shit," Jim said. "We're bank robbers. There's no asylum for us."
 I pulled him forward anyway. By now, my right leg was numb from the knee down and my head felt as if I had taken two dozen fast circuits on a broken tilt-a-whirl. Fighting the urge to throw up, I pushed through the heavy oak doors, into the main chapel of the church. We made it to the third pew before I collapsed.
"They're coming," I said.
 Jim's laugh surprised me. When he spoke, I had to lean closer to hear him.
 "You know, little brother, last night I dreamed about that movie again - the one where the kid shot the old gunfighter."
 Blood had soaked my jeans and I felt faint and sick but Jim's throaty voice swam inside my head like a trapped goldfish. In response to his question, I could only nod.
 "The gunfighter just lay there in the dirt," he said. "Half dead, but staring at me as if I was a cockroach he wanted to stomp. So were the sheriff and all the town folk."
 "Just stay quiet and the priest will get you a doctor. You'll be fine."
 Ignoring me, he said, "It was me, the dirty bastard who shot the gunfighter in the back." He laughed and coughed up blood that foamed down his chin and neck. "This morning when I woke up, I could still feel the noose around my neck."
 Jim slowly massaged his neck as more blood gurgled from his lips and a cold glaze crept over his blue eyes.
 "Hang on. They're coming for us now."
 "Too late. I'm gutshot, little brother. Maybe I'll see you back in Kansas sometime, and maybe that old gunfighter again, somewhere along the way. Gotta go now. Daddy's coming. Take care of him for me, will you?"
 Jim's body went slack in my arms as the church's heavy oak doors swung open and I gazed up helplessly at the dozen men pointing angry pistols and rifles at me, and through the portal, I could see hazy clouds dulling the pink winter sky.
 A chill breeze, leaving a pall in my heart, gusted down the aisle. It whistled like Daddy's belt, causing me to remember the sting of its buckle. Hard and cold as it flailed long red whelps across my back.

###





Born near Black Bayou in the little Louisiana town of Vivian, Eric Wilder grew up listening to his grandmother’s tales of politics, corruption, and ghosts that haunt the night. He now lives in Oklahoma, where he continues to pen mysteries and short stories with a southern accent. He authored the French Quarter Mystery Series set in New Orleans, the Paranormal Cowboy Series, and the Oyster Bay Mystery Series. Please check it out on his Amazon author page. You might also like checking out his Facebook page.

Thursday, October 24, 2019

Cycles of the Moon - chapters

Absinthe is a liquor once banned worldwide because it was thought to be poisonous and hallucinogenic. Emile Zola, Oscar Wilde, and Earnest Hemingway were fans of the drink and claimed the green fairy that appeared when they drank it was the muse for their writing and paintings. Absinthe was a New Orleans favorite before becoming banned in the United States. The liquor is no longer forbidden. When French Quarter detective Wyatt Thomas is caught up in a web of intrigue, he visits an absinthe bar for answers. What he discovers almost costs him his life.

Cycles
of the
Moon

Chapter 1

Aura Hartel couldn’t believe her luck. Though she’d participated in digs in South America, Southeast Asia, and even the Sahara Desert, none had been as physically uncomfortable as the one where she now found herself. August is hot in most of the United States. In New Orleans, it’s both warm and almost unbearably humid. Though she’d been in New Orleans for only a few days, she already hated the weather and the first assignment with her new job.

Both an archeologist and anthropologist, Aura loved the study of ancient cultures. While over three hundred years old, New Orleans was young even by European standards. Seth Daniels, Aura’s boss and the head scientist on the dig, didn’t seem happier.

“What the hell, Seth! We should be working in Egypt. Does anyone give a damn what we find here?”

“If someone didn’t care, then we would be in Egypt,” Seth said.

Seth was forty-something, though his longish hair helped maintain his boyish looks. Bouncy brown waves failed to produce his desired look, and he usually wore a broad-brimmed hat to compensate for it. Seth had never married, the career that often took him from continent to continent, precluding any long-term relationship. He made up for it in other ways.

Seth was the head of the UNO archaeology department, and Aura found herself in New Orleans because of him. After meeting at a national convention, the two had enjoyed a wild albeit brief affair. Aura thought that was all there was to it until a job in the department had opened, and Seth called her to fill it. Though she still felt for the attractive older man, she quickly learned the sentiment wasn’t mutual.

Aura had tied her brown hair in a bun, an Army-green Boonie hat like the ones worn by jungle soldiers covering her head. The cap was soft. She used it in the heat of New Orleans to wipe the sweat dripping down her face.

Though not startlingly beautiful, the young woman had expressive green eyes and sparkling teeth. Aura had never been in a serious relationship and wasn’t over the short fling she’d had with Seth Daniels.

Aura and Seth only supervised four grad students doing the digging and heavy lifting. None of them looked particularly happy. Seth pointed to the nearby Creole townhouse that had partially collapsed because of the weight of time.

“Most of the property in the French Quarter is privately owned. When an owner allows you to dig, you take the opportunity,” he said.

“Seems a bit random to me,” Aura said.

“At least we have a wall around us and don’t have to contend with gawking tourists staring over our shoulders,” Seth said.

Aura glanced at the eight-foot-high masonry wall enclosing the courtyard where they were digging. Spanish moss-draped to the ground from the live oaks, and a large butterfly was flitting in a hedge draped with blooming honeysuckle. Bushes and flowering vines that had gone untrimmed for decades had all but overgrown the open space.

Aura’s tone was sarcastic when she said, “Thank God for small favors.”

“Get over it,” Seth said. “We won’t be here long. The water table is only five feet deep, and that’s as far as we can dig.”

“What was this place?” Aura asked.

“The New Orleans home of some rich sugar planter who probably had a plantation on River Road. Overseers and slaves did most of the work. Plantation owners spent much time socializing and leading the good life in New Orleans.”

The grad students had staked out two eight-foot by eight-foot excavation sites using shovels and sifters. Work came to a halt when a young grad student named Amanda squealed. Seth sprang off his portable chair and hurried to the hole.

“What is it?” he said. “A snake?”

Amanda was from Australia, petite, with honey-blond hair and a killer body. Everyone participating in the dig, including Aura, knew she was sleeping with Seth.

“Found something, Professor Daniels,” she said.

The other three grad students called the two supervisors by their first names. Seth loved the young woman’s Aussie accent and her loving attention and was oblivious to the talk behind their backs. Grabbing Amanda’s hand, he helped her out of the hole. Aura joined them.

“An old coin,” Amanda said. “It’s heavy.”

Seth took the coin, practically unrecognizable from its coating of encrusted dirt, to a work table erected beneath an open canopy. Aura and Amanda watched as he used a microscope to view the coin and a descaling tool to remove the grime.

“We got this,” Aura said. Catching Aura’s tone, Amanda gave her an angry look before returning to her excavation site. “What is it?”

“An 1811 gold Napoleon. Now we know what timeframe we’re dealing with,” Seth said.

“That’s eight years after the Louisiana Purchase,” Aura said. “What’s a French coin doing here?”

“Gold,” Seth said. “You can buy anything with gold no matter which country issued it.”

Seth dropped the coin when a grad student called out. “I’ve found something.”

Seth and Aura stood at the edge of the excavation. The hole was almost five feet deep, groundwater seeping over the grad student’s boots. Water, turning the loamy soil into mud, continued to rise.

“What is it, Beau?” Seth asked.

Beau and a red-headed Irish exchange student, Sean, had doffed their sweaty shirts. Beau was from France and was also an exchange student. His dark hair, eyes, and deep tan seemed the antitheses of Sean’s pale and blue eyes. Both he and Sean spoke with accents.

“Don’t know yet,” Beau said.

 Sean’s shovel struck something with a thud.

“What is it?” Seth asked.

“A skeleton,” Sean said.

The excavation site had become a mud hole, and another grad student named Joey jumped in to help. Joey was a local African-American. Like Sean and Beau, globs of mud coated his chest, pants, and boots. When they finally broke the suction, the three filthy grad students began pulling parts of a skeleton out of the hole, laying it beside the canopy.

Joey returned to where he worked as Beau, and Sean began assembling the skeleton. Mud coated the bones, an arm poking through the mire. Amanda was taking pictures.

“Wash the mud away, and let’s see what we have,” Seth said.

Joey called from the other hole before they could begin the task. “I’ve hit the water,” he said. “What now?”

“Found anything?” Seth asked.

“An old bottle and another skeleton,” Joey said.

The four grad students, though unpaid, were receiving extra college credit for their work in the dig. Seth would be bestowing grades, the reason the other students weren’t happy with Amanda. Seth turned to Aura.

“This little project just got bigger,” he said. “Hope our workers don’t mutiny on us.”

“No one was expecting to find human remains,” Aura said. “Should we contact the authorities?”

“This is private property; the new owner planning to put in a boutique hotel with a pool. The skeletons need to be moved and reinterred elsewhere. Meanwhile, we can classify the bones and determine who and what we are dealing with.”

“Why weren’t the remains buried in a cemetery?” Aura asked.

“Don’t know,” Seth said. “There were aboveground cemeteries in New Orleans in 1811. Maybe we’ll get a handle on it before we finish the dig.”

Seth’s answer failed to satisfy Amanda’s curiosity, and she commented in her Aussie accent.

“Perhaps it was a slave.”

“Everyone in New Orleans, even the slaves, was Catholic and received proper Catholic burials. There must have been a reason someone buried these skeletons below ground.”

“What reason?” Amanda asked.

“We may never know.”

Seth glanced at Aura when she said, “Maybe the deceased wasn’t from New Orleans.”

Joey interrupted their thoughts. “Seth, you better come see this,” he said.

The students had washed all the mud off the two skeletons. They were staring at the jumble of bones as Seth and Aura arrived to take a look.

“What you got?” Seth asked.

Joey gestured with the palm of his hand. “Two skeletons. This one’s an adult African-American male,” he said. “There’s no skull or hands.”

“That’s not all,” Beau said.

Seth gave the two men an assessing glance. “What?”

“The hands and skull aren’t just missing,” Joey said. “Looks like someone lopped them off.”

“Maybe with an ax,” Sean said.

Seth got on his hands and knees to get a better look.

“You’re right,” he said.

“What’s it mean, Professor Daniels?” Amanda asked.

“Don’t know,” he said. “What about the other one?”

“The skeleton of an older African-American male. Look at the skull.”

Seth gazed at the skull as he held it in his hand. “Jesus! Looks like this poor bastard took a bullet to the head at point-blank range.” He blinked and rubbed his forehead. “Ninety degrees in the shade, and this is a problem I didn’t need.”

Seepage of water into the holes had effectively ended the digging. Mud coated Sean and Beau as they helped each other out of the growing mudhole.

 “I’ve got one more for you,” Joey called from one of the holes.

“Another skeleton?”

“A body,” Joey said.

“What the hell!” Seth said.

Aura, Seth, and the grad students watched as Joey handed the nude body of a small woman to Beau. After helping Joey out of the hole, they brought the body to Seth. Beau laid the human remains on the ground and waited for directions.

Seth was frowning when Joey joined them. “You found it in the hole?” he asked. “It’s barely muddy.”

“Where else would it have come from?” Joey asked.

Their attention returned to the woman with long dark hair, light green skin, and an almost inner glow. The woman’s eyes were closed, her arms folded across her chest. She was perhaps in her mid-twenties, quite beautiful, and completely naked. Despite being beneath five feet of dirt for over two hundred years, the body showed no decomposition signs.

“Good God!” Sean said.

Seth touched the woman’s neck. “The body is warm, though I don’t feel a pulse.”

“Impossible,” Joey said.

One of the woman’s hands was clenching something. Seth began working her fingers, trying to loosen the grip.

“What is it?” Aura asked.

“Her hand is frozen, and I can’t get it open. It’ll have to wait for now.”

“How can she still be so perfectly preserved?” Amanda asked.

“Voodoo,” Joey said.

“Why do you say that?” Seth asked.

“I’m a homeboy, born and raised here in New Orleans,” Joey said. “I know.”

“We need to get her to a hospital,” Aura said.

Seth gave Aura a glance. “She’s been buried for more than two hundred years. She can’t be alive.”

“How can you be so sure?” Aura said. “We need to get her someplace where they can check her out.”

“No,” Seth said. “Whatever’s going on here is important. It’s our discovery. I’m not turning her over to the whims of the City of New Orleans.”

“Then what do you intend to do?” Aura asked.

“We have a refrigerated room for storing bodies at the university. Call and have them bring a van. The skeleton also needs to go.”

Though Aura wasn’t smiling, she began punching in a number on her cell phone. Late afternoon shadows covered the courtyard when the van arrived from UNO to pick up the skeletons and the bodies.

The grad students had erected a makeshift shower attached to a branch of a towering live oak. Sean, Beau, and Joey had stripped down their boxer shorts and washed away the mud beneath the slow spray.

Not to be outdone, Amanda stripped to her red thong panties and joined them. Aura turned away when she noticed the look of jealousy on Seth’s face as he watched the grad students showering together. Joey was drying his hair when he approached Seth and Aura.

“I’m taking Beau and Sean club hopping. We’d love to have you join us.”

“Thanks,” Seth said. “Other plans.”

“Aura?”

“Not tonight,” she said. “I have notes I need to edit.”

“Suit yourself,” Joey said.

The three male grad assistants waved as they exited the gated compound. Seth’s broad smile spoke volumes about how he felt when Amanda appeared in a leather miniskirt and low-cut blouse, dramatically emphasizing her ample cleavage.

“Amanda and I are having dinner at Antoine’s,” Seth said. “There’s a quaint old bar on Chartres Street called Bertram’s. After dinner, we’re heading there for drinks. Will you meet us?”

“Are you sure?” Aura said.

Seth gave her a wink and a peck on the cheek.

“Of course, I’m sure.”

Seth didn’t wait for an answer. Aura agonized over the invitation as she spent time working on her notes. The sun was low, shadows creeping over the courtyard when she stripped off her clothes and stood beneath the makeshift shower, washing away the day’s grime.

The once beautifully manicured French Quarter courtyard had become overgrown with native weeds and vegetation. The lily pond, which had played host to golden koi, was cracked and devoid of water. None of the fountains worked, and the branches of the live oaks extended to the brick masonry. Aura jumped when something peeked around the corner of the abandoned Creole townhouse.

The creature had the snout of a dog, although its teeth were longer and crooked. Brown was the color of its hairless body with the look of old leather. A fin extended down its back to its bony tail. It was standing on its hind legs. When Aura screamed, the beast ran behind the house. She didn’t know what to think as she hurriedly pulled on a fresh set of khaki shorts.

“What in holy hell was that?” she said. 

Chapter 2

 Sometime during the night, a gust of wind blew open the door to my French Quarter balcony overlooking Chartres Street. I was lying in bed, awake, or else dreaming I was awake. It seemed like the latter because I wasn’t surprised when a wispy cloud floated through the door.

Aglow with ephemeral radiance, the cloud wafted to the foot of my bed, the translucent image coming into focus of a person I knew. A voodoo woman so old, she transcended time. I somehow found my voice.

“Is that you, Madam Aja?”

“Who else would it be?”

The image continued to flash in and out of clarity.

“Are you real?” I asked. “You look like a ghost.”

“Because I am a ghost,” Madam Aja said.

“Then, this is just a dream, right?”

“Sometimes, life is nothing more than a dream,” she said. “Or a nightmare. This is one of those times.”

“What are you doing here?”

“I have left this world. Before I move on, I need your help.”

“To do what?”

The ghostly figure of the ancient woman Madam Aja extended her hand toward me.

“You’re a Traveler, a special and privileged person. With privilege comes duty, and sometimes that duty is deadly serious.”

Still groggy from having just awoken, I rubbed my eyes to assure myself Madam Aja was at the foot of my bed.

“You’re confusing me,” I said.

“There has been a discovery in the Quarter that has exposed the city’s dark past. If I were still alive, I could help. I am not, and I have no place to turn except to you.”

“I’m happy to help,” I said. “Tell me what you want me to do.”

Madam Aja had something in her hand, a glow emanating from her closed palm as she extended it toward me. “Take this,” she said.

Madam Aja’s touch was cold when she dropped a gold pendant into my palm. Several milky crystals dangling from the chain reflected a prism of color emanating from the flashing neon outside my open patio door.

“What is it?” I asked.

“A moonstone pendant that was once magical.”

“Once?” I said.

“One of the moonstones is missing. It caused the pendant to lose its power.”

“What happened to it?” I asked.

“Someone who wanted to prevent the pendant’s magic took it,” Madam Aja said.

“Can you tell me who that person is?”

“They are no longer alive. The moonstone was removed centuries ago.”

“And you want me to return and find it?”

“Yes, restore it with the pendant and return it to its rightful owner.”

“Is there more you can tell me?” I said.

“I wish I could help you more than I am, but I’ve told you all I can. You’ll have to figure it out for yourself.”

The glimmering image of Madam Aja flickered and died as I passed my hand through an icy mist. My fingers were still cold when the cell phone on the nightstand beside the bed rang and woke me.

A cool breeze was blowing through the white linen curtains of my balcony door. It was daylight, a mule snorting as the carriage was pulling past on the street below. Mama Mulate spoke when I answered the phone.

“Wyatt,” she said. “Madam Aja died last night.”

***

With all its heat and humidity, August had arrived in the Big Easy. Three in the afternoon, the temperature was almost intolerable. I felt every bit of it as Mama Mulate and I waited on a Basin Street curb for a jazz funeral to begin.

Mama Mulate, my sometimes business partner, was a tall, attractive African-American woman. She had a Ph.D. from the University of South Carolina and taught English literature at Tulane University. She was also a practicing voodoo mambo.

I’m a private investigator. Years before, when a client had hired me to help him lift a voodoo spell he thought his wife had placed on him, I’d formed a partnership with Mama that had proven lucrative. We’d created a loose association to assist people with questions concerning the paranormal, a subject not uncommon in the Big Easy. Since then, I’d developed a close friendship with the intelligent and eccentric woman.

One of the people I’d met through my friendship with Mama Mulate was an ageless voodoo woman named Madam Aja. We were attending Madam Aja’s funeral on the side of the street with hundreds of well-wishers waiting to celebrate the woman’s long and illustrious life.

Mama wore a bright yellow African tribal dress with a flowing necklace of pink coral. A traditional Creole tignon covered her long, Afro-style tresses out of respect for her departed friend and mentor. Like almost everyone else at the funeral, I was dressed casually in khakis, a bright Hawaiian shirt, and sandals with no socks. We were there to celebrate Madam Aja’s life and not to mourn her death.

Because of our close friendship with Madam Aja, Mama and I were part of the procession’s first line of family and friends. A small band of old black men dressed in matching caps, white shirts, and dark pants waited to lead the procession to the cemetery. Soon, the little drummer removed his hat, raking a bony hand through his snowy hair before tapping his drumsticks on the edge of his snare drum six times. Another band member began playing a slow dirge on his trumpet. Trombone and tuba joined in.

I was one of the many honorary pallbearers charged with carrying Madam Aja’s wooden casket on the short distance to St. Louis Cemetery Number 1. In deference to Madam Aja’s funeral, vehicle traffic had ceased as we paraded down the middle of Basin Street.

Elaborate crypts were visible over the masonry fence surrounding the graveyard. Though I’d visited the oldest cemetery in New Orleans on many occasions, I’d never been quite so aware of the finality I now felt. The front gate was open, and we carried the coffin to a honeycomb vault where an empty rectangular space awaited Madam Aja.

Inclusion in the task was an honor, and there were at least a dozen pallbearers. Everyone wanted to help ease Madam Aja’s coffin into its spot some seven feet above the ground. Once the box was securely in place, gentle rain that seemed to evaporate before getting you wet began to fall.

The temperature dropped, and clouds covered the sky as a fiery preacher said a few final words about Madam Aja’s life and her family. Like the rain, the sermon didn’t last long. Smiles had suddenly replaced the tears and solemn expressions as the band struck up a Mardi Gras marching song and started toward the entrance.

Mama Mulate, accompanied by a woman I knew well, joined me. It was Senora, Madam Aja’s daughter. Senora was as tall as Mama. Though only forty-something, her hair had gone prematurely gray. No one knew Madam Aja’s age. From the looks of her when she was alive, she must have been well over a hundred. It seemed more likely that Senora was her granddaughter or maybe even her great-granddaughter. I’d never asked her.

Senora’s dress was red and equally as festive as Mama Mulate’s. She lived in a small house in Faubourg Marigny. While Madam Aja performed voodoo spells for the locals, Senora provided herbs, tribal medicines, and secret potions that Mama Mulate and other voodoo practitioners used to assist in employing their craft. Together with the hundreds of well-wishers, we marched out of the cemetery and proceeded up Basin Street.

As we started through the French Quarter, the noise and number of participants marching in the second line had grown. More musicians playing horns and keeping time with drums joined us. The street was crowded with locals and tourists as the procession continued up one road and down the other. Hours had passed when we paraded by Senora’s house in Faubourg Marigny.

Mama, Senora, and I broke away from the march. The Creole cottage had a front porch facing the street. Mama sat in the swing, and I sprawled on the porch, draping my legs over the edge.

“Come inside, and I’ll get us something to drink,” Senora said.

“This swing feels good,” Mama said. “I’m so tired I can hardly move.”

“Then wait on the porch,” Senora said. “I’ll get the drinks.”

Senora’s smile had disappeared when she returned with a glass of iced tea, a bottle of whiskey, and two empty glasses. I grabbed the tray as Mama arose from the swing to give Senora a comforting hug.

“It’s okay,” Mama said.

“This is going to be so hard,” Senora said. “I’ve never lived alone. I don’t know what I’m going to do.”

“Get a man or a pet,” Mama said. “Either one will work.”

Mama’s suggestion returned the smile to Senora’s face. “I’m going to miss the old woman.”

“I know you will,” Mama said.

I set my tea on the porch and poured whiskey into their glasses. A smile transformed Senora’s gloom as Mama held the pungent liquid to her lips and let her taste a sip.

“Old Crow, Madam Aja’s favorite alcoholic beverage,” Senora said.

Mama made a face. “Horrid!” she said. “Don’t know how she drank this swill, much less liked it.”

“I know,” Senora said. “There’s only a bit left in the bottle. It seemed like a good idea to toast Madam Aja with her favorite drink.”

“You got it, sister,” Mama said. “Wyatt? You can at least take a sip.”

I obliged with a taste from Mama’s glass. “Damn!” I said. “If Old Crow was all there was to drink in New Orleans, I’d have never become an alcoholic.”

Senora felt better, her smile turning to laughter as she joined Mama on the swing. We were soon recounting tales about the old lady as the sounds of the jazz funeral disappeared in the distance.

The bottle of Old Crow was finally empty; the sky was growing dark. Senora’s tears had returned, and Mama used her yellow tignon to wipe them away. Both Mama and Senora had a tolerance for alcohol, and neither of them showed the most minor signs of inebriation.

“Do you mind sharing with us how Madam Aja passed?” Mama asked.

Senora pointed to a rocking chair, Madam Aja’s favorite orange shawl draped over it.

“Madam Aja was an early riser. Sometimes, she never went to bed. The sun was coming up, and she was sitting in her chair when I came out to the porch.”

 “She loved that rocker,” Mama said.

Senora folded her arms. “Yes, she did. She didn’t answer when I asked if she wanted coffee.”

Mama hugged Senora when she started crying again. “It’s all right, baby.”

“When I realized she wasn’t breathing,” Senora said, “I ran next door to get help. The neighbors called 9-1-1. Paramedics arrived, but they couldn’t revive her.”

There was a sip of whiskey left, and Senora drank it straight from the bottle. Mama took it from her and set it on the porch.

“I need something else to drink besides Madam Aja’s Old Crow,” Mama said. “Let’s go to Bertram’s and have him make us some of his famous martinis.”

“I’d better stay here,” Senora said. “It’s been exhausting since Madam Aja passed. I’ve been so depressed that I slept the entire day away yesterday. A sip of whiskey was rising.”

“You need to be with warm-blooded humans, not ghosts,” Mama said. “You are coming with us. I’m not taking no for an answer.”

“I’m sorry,” Senora said. “I can’t get my head around Madam Aja’s passing. I never thought she’d die and leave me alone.”

 “You know she isn’t gone,” Mama said. “Madam Aja’s a Traveler.

“While it’s true she’s still out there someplace, it doesn’t matter because I’m going to be so lonely in that house all by myself,” Senora said.

“Then get out of the house and socialize. Maybe meet that man I mentioned,” Mama said.

“Oh, Mama, I just don’t know,” Senora said.

“Nonsense,” Mama said. “There’s a club in Bywater where I go every Wednesday night. They have wonderful local talent, and occasionally, big performers stop in to jam with the regulars. You’ll love it.”

“Maybe,” Senora said. “I’ll have to see how I feel about it.”

“Good,” Mama said. “Let’s go to Bertram’s. You can stay the night at my house, and I’ll bring you home tomorrow.”

Senora shook her head as she hugged Mama.

“I’m going to be alone from now on. I’ll get used to it, and I’m starting tonight,” Senora said.

“Then I’ll call you tomorrow,” Mama said.

“I look forward to it,” Senora said.

We left Senora sitting on her front porch swing.

“What now?” I asked.

“With or without Senora,” Mama said. “I need one of Bertram’s martinis.”

Mama’s vintage Bugeye Sprite was parked down the street. I held the door handle as she raced toward Jackson Square.

  

Chapter 3

Not far from Jackson Square is Bertram Picou’s Bar. The rain had lowered the temperature but left lung-popping humidity in its wake. As a result, foot traffic on the sidewalk was almost nonexistent. We found Bertram’s almost empty as the weather had caused a similar effect.

Probably the most eclectic watering hole in the French Quarter, Bertram’s was also one of the oldest. The building measured its age in centuries and not decades. Crisp air and Bertram’s booming Cajun-inflected voice greeted us when we entered the double doors.

“Look what the cat done drug in,” he said. Bertram crawled through the opening in the bar and gave Mama a big hug. “Where the hell have you been?”

“Rafael got me a gig working a voodoo cruise on a riverboat sailing from here to St. Louis. I’ve never had so much fun in my whole life,” she said. “I can’t wait to do it again.”

“So sorry to hear about Madam Aja,” he said. “I had lots of customers after the parade honoring her. This damn Nawlins’ heat wave sent them all home early.”

“Some things never change. August in the French Quarter is one of those things,” Mama said.

 “Me and Miss Lady are shutting down this place next August and going somewhere cooler,” Bertram said.

Mama laughed. “You’ve never been farther north than Mississippi, and it’s just as hot there in August.”

“I might fool you. Me and Lady could spend the summer fishing in Alaska and surprise you.”

“That would surprise me,” Mama said.

“If you go, take me with you,” I said.

 Bertram flashed his Cajun grin. “Grab some stools at the bar. I’ll fix us some drinks.”

Lady was Bertram’s beautiful collie. She remained behind the bar, her tail drumming the hardwood floor when she heard her name.

Except for the lissome brunette with a sullen expression sitting beside me, the bar was empty. Her little-bit-of-nothing black dress and stylish heels drew my attention to her long legs. Though I knew I wasn’t the person she intended to impress, I was wishing I was. She was sipping a soft drink through a straw, her tanned shoulders and big green eyes the only things keeping me from staring at her legs. For a moment, I had a problem suppressing a wolf whistle.

When I smiled and nodded, the young woman gave me a dirty look and moved over a stool. Only some people in New Orleans wish to be as friendly as the locals. I returned my attention to other things when Bertram arrived with our drinks.

Mama was enjoying her martini and talking to Senora on her cell phone. I made do with lemonade as Bertram gave the brunette an assessing glance.

“Can I mix you something stronger than that soda pop you’re drinking?” he asked.

“No, thanks,” she said.

“You ain’t from around here, are you?” Bertram asked.

“What difference does it make?”

“If you’re sightseeing, you can party tonight and sleep in tomorrow,” he said.

“I’m not sightseeing.”

“Then what are you here for?” Bertram asked.

“You’re a nosy one,” she said.

“I’m a bartender. Being nosy is part of my job description.”

Bertram’s blunt reply and Cajun-inflected accent brought the hint of a smile to the young woman’s pretty face.

“I’m working in town,” she said.

“Okay, then,” Bertram said. “If you just moved here, your next drink is on the house,”

“I arrived in town last night,” she said. “I can’t afford to lose my job on the first day at work.”

“You won’t, Bertram said. “Everyone in New Orleans drinks. Well, except for Cowboy here. Where are you working?”

“I’m an associate professor of archaeology at UNO.”

“If you’re gonna live in Nawlins, you gotta loosen up. You’ll get the hang of it. I’ll whip you up one of my lime mojitos, and it’s still on the house.”

“I’ll try it,” she said.

Bertram had no other customers and was working hard to keep the ones he had. He hurried away to mix the mojito before the young woman could refuse his hospitality or request her tab.

“Don’t drink that thing too fast,” he said when he returned with the colorful drink. “The rum will go straight to your head.”

“And I have to be at work at five tomorrow morning.”

 “I’m Bertram. What’s your name, pretty lady?”

“Your comment is sexist,” she said.

“I’m Cajun,” he said. “My mama didn’t raise no priest.”

“Aura,” she said.

“This is the Big Easy,” Bertram said. “It’s okay to party all night, put in a full day’s work the next day, and then do it all again tomorrow night. Where are you working that you have to be there at five?”

Though Bertram was nosy, he had a way about him that kept people from becoming offended by it. Still, the woman hesitated before answering. When she did, she drew Mama’s attention, pivoting on her stool to listen.

“I’m helping supervise a dig in the courtyard of an old Creole townhouse here in the quarter.”

“The Old François Place?” Mama asked.

“You know about it?” Aura asked.

“I know it’s haunted,” Mama said.

“I don’t believe in ghosts,” Aura said. She pushed the mojito toward Bertram. “Though your drink is lovely, I’d better pay my tab.”

“May as well drink it,” he said. “You ain’t digging tomorrow.”

“How do you know that?” Aura asked.

“Raining outside. It's going to rain all night and all day tomorrow. Your dig’ll be one muddy mess,” Bertram said.

Before Aura could react to Bertram’s announcement, her cell phone rang. It was Seth.

“Plan to sleep in tomorrow,” he said. “I just watched the weather report. It’s going to rain all day. I’ll meet you at the department around one.”

“Damn!” she said as she sat the cell phone on the bar. “I was hoping to finish the dig this weekend so I could concentrate on finding a place to live.” The tropical storm had intensified. The wind whistled down the street and blew open the door. “How often does it rain like this?”

“Sometimes every day,” Bertram said, pushing the mojito toward her. “At least take a sip. I guarantee it’ll relieve what ails you.”

Mama and I were still listening as Aura sipped the mojito.

“This is good,” she said.

Bertram held up a palm. “Like I said, not too fast. I put an extra pour of 151-proof rum in it. It’ll knock you on your ass if you ain’t careful.”

Ignoring his warning, Aura downed the drink. “Bring me another.”

“You sure?” Bertram asked.

“I can hold my liquor,” she said.

“You the boss, pretty Miss Aura,” Bertram said as he began mixing another mojito.

Uninterested in our company, Aura turned away from Mama and me as she began working on her second mojito. Mama turned her knees toward mine as if remembering I was also at the bar.

“Sorry about the long phone call,” she said. “I’m worried about Senora.”

“She’ll be fine,” I said. “She’s a strong woman.”

“You’ve been amazingly quiet,” Mama said. “Is there something you want to tell me?”

“Your perception never ceases to amaze me,” I said.

“I’m listening,” Mama said.

I leaned against the back of the stool and sipped my lemonade.

“Madam Aja visited me the night she died.”

Bertram stopped what he was doing and leaned on the bar.

“What the hell do you mean by that?” he asked.

“Maybe you better bring us another round,” I said.

“Your tab?” he asked.

“Isn’t it always?” I said.

Mama was tapping her long fingernails on the bar, glaring at me as Bertram mixed a fresh martini.

“This better be good,” she said.

“Don’t know how good it is, but you asked. Madam Aja appeared to me in a dream the night she died,” I said. “At least I thought it was a dream until I woke up the next morning with this in my hand.”

Mama and Aura watched as I placed the pendant on the bar. Bertram was also gaping.

“What is it?” he asked.

“A gold necklace with a moonstone pendant attached,” I said. “One of the moonstones is missing.”

Aura grew suddenly animated. “Where did you get that?”

“It was in my hand when I awoke. Why do you ask?”

Aura was facing me, her arms clasped around her chest and her legs tightly crossed. Her face was pale, her neck glowing with a crimson blush. She didn’t answer my question. Mama took the necklace.

“I’m calling the police,” Aura said. “You stole the necklace from the Old François Place.”

“Now, wait just a minute,” Bertram said. “Cowboy’s lots of things. Thief ain’t one of them.”

“I saw a picture of that same necklace at the dig,” Aura said.

Bertram glanced up at one of the slowly rotating fans.

“A picture?” he said.

“An old portrait in the upstairs hallway.”

“Moonstone necklaces have always been popular,” Mama said. “Perhaps the necklace you saw simply looks like the one in the portrait.”

“It’s the same necklace,” Aura said.

“Wyatt’s been with me since early this morning,” Mama said. “Are you saying your crew dug up that necklace, and someone stole it?”

Feeling the warm effect of Bertram’s mojito, the young woman’s face was flushed.

“That’s not what I said.”

“Then what did you say?”

“I saw that necklace in a portrait at the Old François Place. It belonged to the woman in the portrait. I have a trained eye for art. That pendant is one-of-a-kind and likely very valuable. Where did you find it if not at the Old François Place?”

“The necklace Wyatt has isn’t the same as the one you think you saw,” Mama said. “Madam Aja gave it to him the night she died. Bertram’s alcohol is affecting your perception.”

Aura uncrossed her arms long enough to sip the mojito. “Maybe.”

I glanced at her. “What did you find at the Old François Place?”

“A naked woman buried in the courtyard.”

“I don’t think you better be calling the police,” Bertram said. “If you tell them what you told us, they’ll probably lock you up in the insane asylum.”

Mama grinned. “There are no insane asylums any longer.”

“Well, you know what I mean,” he said.

Aura also seemed to understand. “Please, bring me another mojito,” she said.

“You already had two,” Bertram said. “I done told you they were strong.”

“I’m not driving, and my hotel is only a few blocks from here,” Aura said.

Bertram was already pouring her next mojito. “You got it, pretty Miss Aura.”

“How do you explain finding a perfectly preserved body that had been buried for two hundred years?” I asked.

“Joey, the grad assistant who found the body, blamed it on voodoo.”

“I doubt it,” Mama said.

She smiled when Aura asked, “How in hell would you know?”

“She’s a voodoo mambo,” Bertram said. “She knows.”

“Then what’s the answer?”

“If you dug her body out of the mud after two hundred years and it wasn’t decomposed, I’d say she’s supernatural,” Mama said.

“No one is supernatural.” Aura looked at Mama and asked, “What are you laughing at?”

“Your disbelief,” Mama said.

“I don’t believe in myths,” Aura said.

“Do you believe your own eyes?” Mama asked.

Aura gave Mama a pointed glance. “What do you mean?”

“How do you explain digging a warm body buried two hundred years out of the mud?”

“I’m sure there’s a scientific explanation,” Aura said.

Mama snickered. “You need to wake the hell up. There is no scientific explanation for what you just told us.”

“I believe in science and not the supernatural,” Aura said.

“Doesn’t matter what you believe,” Mama said. “The world is what it is.”

“Bullshit!” Aura said. “There’s a scientific explanation for everything.”

Mama shook her head. “No, there isn’t. People see what they want and believe what they want to see. Everything else they disregard.”

Aura raised a finger, motioning Bertram to hurry with her drink. The rum had begun affecting her brain, and she rocked unsteadily on her stool.

“Maybe you’re right,” she said. “Before leaving the dig tonight, I saw something that scared the holy hell out of me.”

“Like what?” I asked.

“A creature. It looked a little like a big dog, but its skin was leathery and furless. Its teeth were long, jagged, and crooked. An appendage that looked like a fin extended down its spine. There was something else about seeing the creature.”

“Like what?” I asked.

“I had the strange sensation that not only had the creature recognized me, but I couldn’t stop thinking I’d seen it somewhere before. Maybe in a dream.”

Two men walking in the door had caught Aura’s description of the beast.

“What you saw was a Chupacabra,” the first man said. “Perhaps tomorrow, you can take us to the place where you saw it.”


###



Born near Black Bayou in the little Louisiana town of Vivian, Eric Wilder grew up listening to his grandmother’s tales of politics, corruption, and ghosts that haunt the night. He now lives in Oklahoma, where he continues to pen mysteries and short stories with a southern accent. He authored the French Quarter Mystery Series set in New Orleans, the Paranormal Cowboy Series, and the Oyster Bay Mystery Series. Please check it out on his Amazon author page. You might also like checking out his Facebook page.






Alcoholic Hazes - a short story

Hurricane Katrina decimated New Orleans in August 2005. My Louisiana parents were living with my wife Marilyn and me in Oklahoma. My mom had...