her.
Hurbon held surgery in his lodge, but he had turned the redoubt into the sociétéâs temple, where the faithful came to bask in and add to his power. Hurbon took the responsibility easily, but then he had broad shoulders and a steady stream of young women who were only too eager to present themselves to the vodun priest.
Nathalie moved down the concrete-walled corridor, gloomy in the insufficient illumination of the candles, and stepped into the side chamber where Hurbon kept his mixing equipment. Hurbon could get it, of course, but he preferred to send others to do his bidding nowâhe had spent so long just striving to survive on his own he basked in the luxury of having a congregation once more.
Nathalie reached for the mortar and pestle, one of a dozen lined up by size along a dusty shelf that also contained aged items of jewelry and the skulls of a dozen different rodents and primates. The mortar was made from the curved bones of a monkeyâs hand, the pestle the carved bone of a human finger.
* * *
O NCE N ATHALIE HAD departed the room, Hurbon unsealed the bag of white dust and spread a little across his left hand. He sniffed it, taking in its aroma. It was redolent of obscure spices and incense, and the smell made Hurbon smile wider than before.
âThe smell oâ the dragon,â he muttered, before reaching into the bag for one of the larger shards of white. The shard was a little bigger than Hurbonâs thumbnail, and it looked porous, tiny indentations running all the way across its surface. Brushing the dust back into the open bag, Hurbon took the shard and tapped it against his teeth. It felt rock-hard, and even though he had used the lightest of pressure the feel of the tooth bit was such that it made Hurbonâs teeth sing, as though they might shatter. Then Hurbon placed the shard against his tongue and licked it,feeling its rough sides and sharp edges. He winced as the sharpest edge cut a tiny incision across his tongue, and he drew the fleck of tooth away with a start.
âHow the hell did they cut this thing?â Hurbon muttered. Neither man in the room answered him, nor were they supposed toâthey just stared vacantly into the middle distance, not reacting to anything that occurred before them.
Sucking on his tongue where it had been cut, Hurbon reached beneath the blanket that hid his missing limbs. He had a bag beneath there, an old leather pouch, its brown surface scuffed, frayed threads showing at its edges. The pouch was large enough for Hurbon to get both hands in, and it had a strap by which it could be carried, like a womanâs purse.
Hurbon slipped the shard of dragon tooth into the pouch where it could reside beside other items that he found useful. Also in the leather pouch were a fith fathâwhat the ignorant nonbelievers called a voodoo dollâa chickenâs foot and a knotted material pouch of black-and-red powder. There were other bags within the larger bag that Nathalie had brought, and as houngan of the société, it was his prerogative to take a share of any spoils that came through the doors of the redoubt-turned-temple.
His men would say nothing. They were there to guard him and he had removed from them the awkward inconvenience of independent thought.
Hurbon looked up as he heard Nathalie pad back into the djévo room. In a loose sense, the room was mirrored, each decoration reflected in an ornament of similar size and shape on the other side of the room, a femur for a knife, a crystal ball for a skull and the black mirror in place of the door. It was important to keep the djévo in balance at all times, Hurbon knew, if one was to tap the powers beyond the barriè to the spirit world.
However, it was not the voodoo deitiesâthe loa âwhom he planned to contact this day. No, Papa Hurbon planned to reach out for the other faces in the darkness, and the dragonâs teeth were the vital ingredient he required