Mama's shop was nestled in the heart of the French Quarter in New Orleans, right on the corner of Tulane street and Spelman avenue.
"Dumont House of Voodoo." It was popular—more popular than when I was a kid running around the counters on a slow day. I mentioned this to Mama, how suddenly the newer generation was garnering an appreciation for voodoo.
"It's hoodoo they think they're coming to get," she answered over the phone; I heard her cutting something, but I didn't want to know what it was. "They think I'm a root doctor or a witch. That ain't true; it's always the white folks and the tourists who don't know what they're getting into."
That same phone conversation, I told Mama I'd be coming down for the summer, and she was so happy she couldn't stop screaming about it. I didn't tell her that I had thoughts of dropping out of college or that I had exhausted much of my college fund paying for classes that catered to my ever-changing major—civil engineering, then psychology, then goddam fashion merchandising. Who the hell am I to market clothing when I can't even match my pants to my shirt half of the time?
Anyway, she was happy at the news I was coming down, so I took it as an opportunity to construct my case about me finally taking up the writing field and asking her to help me with it. I went over my entire request the journey down home from Houston.
"I've always wanted to be a writer," I mumbled, situating myself in a cheap motel in Shreveport before I hit the road again the next day. "And along with being a writer, I've always wanted to learn more about voodoo, especially from the most popular Voodoo Queen in New Orleans."
I had intentions on kissing ass, mainly because voodoo was a sensitive topic for Mama; I was never allowed to even bring it up much, even though she often prayed to the Loa around me, sometimes with her fellow priestesses (I was definitely Mambo Nene's favorite little girl in the whole French Quarter. Priestess Qadira didn't care much for me, and Missus Taima—never leave out the 'missus'—forgot my name half of the time). I grew up around voodoo, but never between or in the midst of it. Mama made that an intention, but I was determined to swing it into a fortune on my end, as if the twelve or so half-finished manuscripts on my laptop weren't indication enough of the amount of initiative I possessed.
Early afternoon the next day is when I arrived at Mama's shop, on the eighteenth day of May. I turned off my car and waited a bit inside of it, wiping the beads of sweat from my forehead to look somewhat presentable. But how could anyone look presentable in Louisiana heat? I wish someone would have given me a tip on how because I would have loved to know. My kinky-frizzy hair tied up in a god-forsaken bun and my sweat-stained tank-top would have loved to know. Hell, even my glasses, lopsided from the sweat on my nose would have loved to know, too.
I tapped my fingers against the steering wheel, nervous but excited to see Mama. I hadn't seen her going on three years; I couldn't bear to come back only for her to know how college was going for me. But it was the sixth year for me, meaning that hiding my failures was no longer any use.
"Lisa!"
My head turned to a voice outside my window. Mama was there, smiling widely and pulling on the locked car door like I had no sense to have it locked in the first place. I smiled back at her and opened the door to a strong, oil-and-lavender-scented embrace waiting for me. I could barely breathe in her arms, but I didn't mind—I missed her hugs.
"Sweetheart!" she hummed into my shoulder.
"Hi, Mama!" I laughed. "You're choking me. And crushing my glasses."
She let go, refusing to apologize for her outburst of affection. Her eyes, blue as a clear noon sky, narrowed at my armpits. "Damn, you have the heater on in your car?"
"It's over ninety degrees, Mama. And humid." I couldn't understand how Mama wore a thick kente headwrap with a dark blue jumpsuit and still managed only a light sheen of perspiration on her face. It made me conflicted—I acquired everything from her except her hypnotic eyes and her inability to sweat.
After we spent a few minutes sharing our honeyed words, we finally got to getting my things out of the car. Mama didn't carry much—she had her novitiate, Imani, come get the rest of my luggage. Imani was an old soul who shared my age, with skin such a rich chocolate shade that it made people on the street stare in awe. I even stared in awe at her, long enough for me to bump into a lamp post on the way to the shop door. Mama chuckled, but Imani didn't. Maybe she didn't realize why or for who I almost broke my two front teeth; maybe she thought I was just stupid.
The shop was busy when we walked inside. People strolled past the display cases that were filled with ancient charms and voodoo dolls "from a time back when," asking the associates about voodoo, most likely leading up to how they could get their hands on a love spell or something of that sort. Mama only helped those who were a) serious, and b) worthy of being helped. She had an eye for evil souls begging for a way out or a shortcut through a blessing or a ritual by Legba or Erzulia or another merciful god; her eyes scanned the room at her customers like she was determining which ones were even worthy of her time if they asked for it. Which they would ask—they always did.
"Imani, go on and take Lisa's things up to her room."
Imani nodded to Mama, taking the one laptop bag from her heavily-accessorized grip. "Yes, Madam Dumont."
"I'll be up there in a minute, baby," Mama told me. I just closed-mouth smiled through the hoard of people closing in on her, like she was an angel sent to share a voodoo prophecy; the tourists were basically throwing money in Mama's face without a question based solely on her name and her reputation.
I attempted to make small talk with Imani as we struggled up the staircases (as I struggled since she was clearly in better shape than I was). Imani returned the gesture, but it was apparent that she wasn't confident enough in her English, broken as it was, to engage in much small talk anyway. I ended up finding out that she was born in Haiti, moved to Baton Rouge when she was seven and became Mama's novitiate about three years ago--the last time I came to visit. After that answer, it became quiet between us; the moths were louder than us.
After the second staircase, Imani proceeded to explain to me what room I'd be staying in and exactly where it was in the shop, forgetting that said room of residence was actually my old bedroom; I grew up in that Voodoo shop, confined to the two top floors whenever we got busy days such as that one on the eighteenth day of May. But I just thanked her for guiding me through the narrow creaking hallways and up the steel staircases.
"Madam Dumont has not changed much in this room," she told me.
"She doesn't change much of my stuff," I said. "Every other time I came down, I found my stuffed animals and Beyoncé posters exactly where I had left them."
It was supposed to be funny, what I said. But Imani just smirked uncomfortably and opened my bedroom door. As per expected, nothing was different--the poster-covered walls, dream catchers and charms Mama placed all over the place, and my trusted teddy bear, Edmond, were all left untouched. It was weird seeing it that way. It was like I was just coming home from a normal day at school again.
"Where would you like your belongings placed?" Imani asked me.
"Just by the closet is fine."
Not only did Imani set my things down, but she opened my luggage and attempted to unpack my things. And I mean all of it. I just about died when she sorted out my thongs and found my goddamn vibrator. I screamed; she jumped. Not because of what she found, but because my screaming scared her. Her finding my vibrator or touching my underwear didn't even faze her.
"You don't have to do that!"
"You don't want me to?"
Bless that woman's heart. "No, it's okay. I'll unpack it. Thank you, really."
Mama would have killed me, had she seen that vibrator herself. But Imani, I knew, would keep her mouth shut about it.
"I will tell Madam Dumont that you are getting situated."
I was still so embarrassed I couldn't even look at her. "Thank you."
**
Mama told me to go up into her study once she was finished in the shop. Her study, off limits to me when I was younger, was open to me then for the first time. She kept the study dark, even during the day; the only light came from the candles throughout the room, some aromatic, others spiritual. I remember that the glass-painted ones of the Loa that Mama Hepzibah gave Mama used to scare the shit out of me when I was little, back when Mama kept them in her room instead of in her study.It was pleasing to the eye, her study—shelves stacked with ancient books, antiques all over the walls, and chimes that seemed to ding here and ting there every second without a breeze. A portrait of Marie Catherine Laveau hung right above Mama's chair. It was a well-preserved painting that Mama and the rest of the Coterie—the eight other Voodoo Priestess that reigned upon New Orleans—cherished, especially since my Mama was the only one in possession of such a painting of the notorious voodoo priestess. Her desk was the barest part of the room, though. I believed from that day on that it was always bare when she knew I or someone else "unfamiliar" would be coming in.
"Have a seat, baby," she told me after I walked in. "I have a gift for you."
I sat down in the plush chair across from her desk. Mama opened her desk drawer and pulled out a small suede box with gold accents on the sides.
She handed it to me. "Open it."
"What is it?"
"You gotta open it to find out," she replied with sarcastic annoyance. And so, I opened it. Inside was a necklace charmed with a small pendant the size of a quarter that glowed bright sapphire, circled with what looked to be obsidian. I recognized the veve on the middle of the pendant—it belonged to Papa Legba, the Vodou god of crossroads.
"It don't look like it, but it's a gris-gris," Mama said to me. "I put it inside that pendant so it'd be more 'wearable' for you."
"It's beautiful, Mama." And that wasn't a lie—it was stunning. I had on a necklace that was gifted to me from the Coterie when I was eight but it was outdated, to say the least.
Mama watched as I took off my old necklace and replaced it with the new one.
"It will protect you and give you luck," Mama explained with a satisfied smile. "Qadira helped me make it, so you best thank her."
"I will. Thank you."
I didn't tell Mama about how I felt the necklace's energy when I first put it on. It was a weight on my chest that subsided, then overcame me again. It wasn't a bad feeling, but foreign; alien. I never felt that amount of energy with my old necklace. It baffled me—Mama, being so adamant about keeping me out from voodoo, gave me a sign that she wanted me in it; a specially made pendant with Papa Legba's own veve on it had to mean something.
"Why are you giving me this?" I asked her. Her face fell immediately at my question.
"I just thought that it was time for a new one. Why? You don't like it?"
"I love it. I'm just...this is Legba's veve."
"Yes, it is."
"Was my last necklace a gris-gris like this?"
I was mushing questions together because I wanted answers all at once. Mama sighed without answering my last question.
"Is this about that book you wanted to talk to me about, Lisa?"
My mouth fell open wide enough to invite a family of flies inside. I had no idea how she could have known about the book I wanted to write. In truth, there was no logical way of her knowing because I never told anyone. It strengthened my case on how my mama was clairvoyant or psychic. She probably knew about my vibrator, too. My heart beat quickened at the thought of her knowing about it but not telling me. That's probably why she side-eyed me every time I told her I'd be going to bed early when I visited before.
"How did you...how did you know about that?"
Her eyes darkened a bit before she replied. "What business do you got writing a book on voodoo?"
I wondered if questioning her further about her apparent clairvoyance was smart.
I decided it wasn't. "I just...I've always been interested in Voodoo—"
"Hoodoo," she then said. "You're interested in hoodoo. You're into the magic, the spells, the tarot readings and all that sparkly, fancy shit that has absolutely nothing to do with voodoo."
"That's not true."
"They ain't synonymous," Mama continued. She stood up and paced around her desk. "I don't do nothing involving dark magic, Lisa."
"I know. I know they're not the same. I just want to learn more about voodoo from you. Voodoo. That's it."
"And this is all for your little book that you want to write?"
She said the words 'little book' in a patronizing tone. In that tone, in that short sentence, she laid out my past educational faux pas and gave reason to why my future would have the same outcome.
That's how strong and hurtful that tone was.
"It isn't some 'little book.' I want to get it published someday, and I want everything in it to be accurate. You're the most realistic source for accuracy in this case."
"And what's this book going to be about?"
I went on and explained the plot—voodoo queen falls in love with a spirit of the same religion. Immediately, Mama denounced it as ridiculous and ultimately blasphemous. And after her rant about how stupid my idea was and how inaccurate everything was in this idea, I grew misty-eyed. That was enough to shut her up. Whenever Mama would say something that got to me (which was a lot since I was an emotional little thing), she'd feel bad and try to swing it around as a life lesson.
"Look, Lisa. Voodoo isn't something to be fooling around with," she explained to me. "It's a religion and a way of life that we take seriously. I dedicated my whole damn life to voodoo."
"How would me writing about it negate its seriousness?"
"Because your idea is...it doesn't make sense. And I don't want no wrong or evil to come about on you for writing something like this."
There was a lot, and I mean a lot that Mama wasn't telling me. There were reasons most likely beyond my comprehension as to why she didn't want my involvement with voodoo to be more than just being the daughter of a priestess. To me, it was just writing a book—a piece of fiction about some voodoo queens with some romance sprinkled in there to satiate that void inside of me that the stress of school and ultimate loneliness created. And wrapping my head around the fact that that was the reason why Mama wasn't going to help me was a hard thing to do; Mama didn't want to participate in the bastardization of her practice and the potentiality of me being sucked into it, too.
"I'm just trying to protect you," she finally said after the stretch of awkward silence that afflicted the room. "That's all I'm trying to do."
And then her hand graced my face, like how she would hold my face in her hands when I was little.
"You are the most important thing in my life, Alisande. You are everything to me."
I held back a laugh, "I thought voodoo was everything to you?"
She rolled her eyes, "I guess you're a close second, then." Her hand moved down to mine. "Go on and get freshened up. "SoBou" ain't too busy around this hour, and I'm starving."
**
I woke up the next morning with sweat sticking and dripping in places I wish it hadn't. Mama's laughter—her loud, cackling, deflating balloon laughter—could be heard across the hallway in our kitchen. I assumed it was Mambo Nene she was laughing with, since Mambo Nene had the best sense of humor out of the entire Coterie and always made Mama laugh. I got out of bed and walked out into the dark hallway until I made it into the sunlit kitchen. My suspicions were right about Mambo Nene being in there. Priestess Qadira was there, too, but she was preoccupied with a transcript she was reading. "I told that ole white cat that he'd have to find a root doctor to get rid of an itch likethat," I heard Mambo Nene say right when I walked in. "And guess what this fool
** It was a horrible time to think of it, but I thought of it anyway: I thought of how normal my day was supposed to be. Going to the mall, buying some clothes, getting something to eat, then returning home to spend time with Mama and work on one of my many manuscripts before falling asleep. That's what my day was supposed to be. It turned into delving deep into the dark, damp forests with my mama's novitiate to save Tia Valeria's ass; we didn't know who or what we were saving her from. We didn't even know if we could save her. But I had too much courage and too much confidence. It was dark, to say the least. Very dark. The "hold my hand so I don't fall" type of dark. I envied the bugs and the lizards for their eyes; I envied the crickets and the owls, singing and talking freely
** I ran faster when I realized what they were, pumping my arms and lunging my legs with a speed I had never achieved before. The trees were blurs; Imani's figure was merely a blur of blue and black running by my side. I sprinted until I could feel my lungs and limbs burning. "This way!" Imani shouted at me. I followed her without losing momentum; I dropped my bat halfway through. When we saw the road and the small spec of gray that was my car, we ran faster until we collapsed on the goddamn vehicle. Then we were inside; the memories are patchy and blacked out from that night. Fear made me act sometimes unconsciously and out of instinct and the need to survive. It was like I was out of my body and inside it again, the cycle repeating. The world was spinning and I was sinking
** I thought the sounds of Tia's House screaming before their death was the most heart-shattering noise I had ever heard, but I was proven wrong once the sound of my mama's scream echoed in my head. I got up, surrounded by darkness with the occasional twinkle of the charms on the walls. My heart was thumping faster than Thumper's foot, and there was no if's, and's or but's about it. I slipped on some sneakers, put on my spectacles and ran my black ass out into the pitch-black hallway until I was stumbling down the staircases. And down in the shop, I saw one of the novitiates sleeping on the couch, completely unnerved. I was praying that it was just my mind playing tricks on me; trauma messing with my head and such. But conveniently, the screaming started up again, and the novitiate on the couch jolted awake immediately. That's whe
** The last thing anyone would want is to wake up in a place they don't recognize. Especially when that said place is certainly the home of bloodthirsty monsters. My eyes were heavier that weights when I tried to open them. Little by little, my lids revealed a dark room covered wall-to-wall with French provincial décor that was shadowed by the candles hanging upon the corners. Immediately I sat up, the world spinning around me. My glasses were on the bedside table by a lantern. Quickly, I put them back on and all of my senses started to click at once—I smelled what I thought was cocoa and raspberry. I saw the scenery out the window of deep-rooted trees with a marsh about a mile away, haunting in the night. I felt my skin chilled in the cold air but damp with sweat, and tasted a hint of blood in my mouth. But what scared me most wa
** "The Shack" was a rundown piece of shit that made me miss the vampire-mansion-lair-dungeon-of-doom. It was in the middle of nowhere. Literally, it was in the middle ofnowhere. The only neighbors were some gators in the bayou and maybe some birds and lizards. Oh! And don't forget those crickets! The shack was nestled deep in a bayou that was probably on no map in existence. Abraham told Hezekiah to make sure that we weren't followed—that was a pretty easy task to fulfill. Hezekiah hauled me through the front door and set me on the floor with absolutely no courtesy or gentleness in his grip. My neck was still aching and my body was weak, so him throwing me around like a rag doll was counter-intuitive.
Hezekiah made me undress in front of him into the clothes he had brought me. "You lost the privilege of privacy when you tried to kill me," he said when I asked why I couldn't get a minute to myself to change. Knowing there was absolutely no use in arguing with him after the 'entanglement' he put us in moments before, I turned my back and began to undress. Even though I couldn't see him, I knew he was drinking me up like a goblet filled with blood the moment I slipped off the straps of my nightgown. I pulled out the dress that was in the bag Hezekiah brought in. It was long (thankfully), violet, and thin against my fingertips. The accents gathered at the bottom but feathered out once they reached the top. I appreciated that it was sleeveless, but that's about it. The dress was hideous to me besides that factor. Regardless of its desig
I didn't know that "fat vampires" were such a thing. That's what Mr. Boone was—a big fat man that could barely keep the buttons of his suit together. His office was downstairs in the basement of the Jubilee, but you know what else was also downstairs? Mr. Boone's training grounds for the Rejects. Some of them controlled themselves around me (most likely due to Hezekiah's presence), while others became rabid at my scent. Those rabid ones were behind cold steel bars, fortunately. It's clear which newbies needed a little more training in the art of self-control. Mr. Boone's office was hot enough to the point where I felt like I was suffocating. There were no fans (like he'd need one) and no windows; I was sweating like a slave. It was dark, too. Like the rooms in Abraham's house, Mr. Boone's office was lit by weak lanterns.
** When the day was over, I sat on my bed in my room, staring at the blank walls and listening to the insects make music outside in the night. I couldn't help but smile, and I was eager for the next day I would spend with Sajida. The entire day consisted of working on my meditative skills and reading spell books, but it made me want more. I needed more. When I was around Sajida, I saw a future for myself that I could never see when I was around the Coterie. And despite Sajida's claim that her cooking wouldn't be a daily occurrence, we ended up having gumbo for dinner; she admitted that she had begun prepping for it that morning before I woke up. I looked down at my hands as I sat on the bed. There was nothing interesting about them; they were normal hands. They were not Sajida's
** I waited in the living room of Sajida's treehouse. Sasi One had directed me to a chair once I had come up the ladder; Sajida wasn't present. "Mere will be down shortly," she said to me, her skin even more sickly looking than before and her teeth seemingly moments away from falling out due to rot and decay. "Would you like a beverage? Perhaps a cup of tea? Water?" I nodded, "Water would be nice." Sasi One smiled even wider. "Be right back!" she said, pivoting and sashaying down a hallway to the kitchen. I sat alone with my backpack on my lap, looking around at my surroundings. The treehouse wasn't as frightening to me as it was before, and neither was the bayou. The journey here felt like a normality. Maybe it was because th
I wanted to remember what it was like to be possessed by my djab, but it was an event that would not come back to me. But everyone else around me had seen what I became during my body's surrender to Marie Laveau, and they could not see me the same because of it. All of the priests and priestesses that attended the Council's party the night before were hounding the Coterie with questions about what happened to me. Word had spread that I was possessed by Marie Laveau's spirit, while other rumors consisted of me being a demon, a witch, an incarnate of a voodoo god. Regardless of the validity of these rumors, there was no denying that what everyone witnessed was an anomaly of sorts; Marie Laveau had been quiet since her death, so to now harness my body as her vessel raised a lot of questions about me. I was no longer just Madam Dumont's only daughter. People knew my name. And they w
** When I awoke, the sun had already risen. It poured into my room, filling it with warmth. I sat up but very slowly; my head was throbbing to the point of it being hard to concentrate on where I was. It took me a few moments to realize that I was in my bedroom, lying in my bed, in my mama's house. The last thing I remembered from the night prior was Abraham threatening to kill Miss Aza. With this memory, I jumped out of bed in a panic, wondering if he had succeeded and oblivious to the events that preceded his threat. I ran out of the room, through the quiet hall and downstairs, yelling her name. The longer the silence carried, the larger my fears grew, I imagined that everyone was at a service for Aza or burying her body in
I have tried with every fiber of my being to remember the rest of that night from my own account. I have gone through multiplelave tets, have spoken to my ancestors and to the loa, have channeled my djab, have convened with other mambos in an attempt to remember the events that preceded Abraham ordering Hezekiah to give Aza the Gift of Darkness, but it doesn't come to me. Some have told me it's common to black out after possession, so I have settled at that conclusion. I only remember the moment right before Marie Laveau possessed me and the moments after she abandoned my body. Everything between was told to me by others, so this account is stitched together by other witnesses; it is not my own, though I hope it will be one day. **
** For some reason, I felt like I had been waiting for this meeting with Abraham my entire life. Walking towards the balcony after the meeting was over, this feeling of forbiddance deep within me as I had snuck off while the Coterie was not looking, I felt like I was reaching the end of the race and near claiming my prize. But what prize was there to claim from him? Knowledge? Deceit? I was unsure. I wouldn't find out until I opened the balcony door in front of me. The balcony had to be reached by entering the master bedroom, which was, of course, unused and completely empty, save for a bed and a dresser, both covered with a white sheet. The room was completely dark, and the only source of light came from the moon outside shining through the balcony doors.
** Abraham's hand was cold and lifeless, like the gradual shift of the air in the room. My hand looked small in his—puny. His fingers completely enveloped mine. The music, which was still playing, was a slow and almost melancholy piano number, however, Abraham wanted to dance to it, so we did. My left hand rested on his shoulder (which wasn't an easy feat; I had to stretch a bit) and his right hand rested directly underneath my arm. We started off slow; I followed his lead. My body was stiff out of extreme nervousness. I couldn't look at him; I looked at his bowtie, which was nearly eyelevel. He knew that I was overtaken with nerves; he could sense it. Smell it. We moved slowly in our little space, the entire world, it seemed, watching.
** There were eyes on me from every corner of the room. All from different factions, and all for different reasons. Never would I think I would be at a level of such importance at a function such as this one—with vampires and witches and voodoo priestesses, all high and low in rank, but still more significant than me. However, I was more influential than I thought; I was more significant than I thought. And I was coming to terms with this newfound jump in rank. Yet it wasn't the time to bask in this new knowledge. I was here to find a different type of knowledge—from Abraham. It would be nearly impossible to find a good time to speak to Abraham and ask him what I wanted to know; there were people everywhere, and most of these people were infected with the disease that not only g
** I had locked myself in the guest bedroom with the black box as my only form of company that night. No one came to me; I was left alone, which heightened my suspicions about the truth I had brought to them. I sat on the floor, still dressed in white and covered in dirt and dried sweat. The ball gown lied on the bed, staring back at me. I thought about trying it on; I didn't need to know how it fit, since Jeffrey assured me that the dress was correct to my measurements. But I wanted to see myself in this dress. Is this how Russell Van Doren remembered me one hundred and fifty years in the past—wearing this gown when it was common attire at the time? I expected Hezekiah to knock on the window and let himself in the room, trying to explain himself and his actions; his reasoning f