The Black Witch of Mexico (14 page)

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Authors: Colin Falconer

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Suspense, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Mysteries & Thrillers

BOOK: The Black Witch of Mexico
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“Fifteen years.”

“When did you stop crying?”

“What makes you think I have?”

They were silent for a while. Bernard scooped the cold clear water in his palm and scooped it over his shoulders.

“Sometimes I think life would have been easier if I had not loved her so much. Am I fortunate that I found her, or would it have been better to have found a life companion who didn’t make me feel like half of myself had been cut away when she died? Some men remarry and do quite well. I know that I never could. I am a disciple of de Barca, I suppose. I know exactly what he meant.”

He got out and went to sit in the shade of a Judas tree. Adam went to join him. It was so hot he could scarcely breathe, and in a few minutes he was sweating again.

“What happened with my daughter?” Bernard asked, so casually he might have been enquiring about the weather.

“I don’t know what you mean,” he said.

“Oh, I saw the way she looked at you. You’re a good-looking man so I shouldn’t be surprised at anything. Just remember she’s going through a very painful time. Handle with care, young man.”

“Nothing happened.”

“Oh, I think we both know that’s not true.”

“She’s very...prickly.”

He laughed at that. “Well, she’s never been easy, got fire in her veins like her mother. But it’s been a hard on her this last year, everything that husband of hers put her through. So she’s vulnerable right now. Don’t play with her, if you get my meaning. I don’t want to see her hurt again.”

Cattle and burros had wandered down to feed by the river’s edge. He shielded his eyes from the sun to watch them, saw someone watching them from high on the bluff. “Who’s that?” hesaid.

Bernard looked up at the ridge and when he saw who it was he made the sign of the cross. “That’s the Crow. He lives up there somewhere.”

“Jamie said that name. Who is he?”

“He’s the witch.”

Adam laughed.

“Nothing to laugh about, Adam. The man’s a menace. People go to him when they should be coming to the clinic. The things he tells them turn people away from each other and away from God. I curse the day he ever came here.”

“Has he set himself up as some sort of healer or something? Like the
curanderos
?”

“The
curanderos
are bound by the laws of nature never to harm anyone. These
brujos
deal in curses and black magic.”

“You sound like you’re afraid of him.”

“I’ve known people spend a day and a night on a bus to come here and see him. He has something of a reputation.”

“For doing what?”

“casting spells. Removing them.”

“Spells?”

“Some poor farmer goes to see a
brujo
, and he says, ‘oh you have bad energy around you, you need a cleansing. Someone has put a spell on you.” And they make up some mysterious ceremony with lots of chanting and nonsense to remove it. For a fee, of course.”

“But don’t these people here belong to your church?”

“They see nothing wrong with coming to church on Sunday morning and then going to see a witch for a cleansing in the afternoon. They are hedging their bets, I suppose.”

“Do they make a lot of money from this witchcraft then?”

“Most of their business comes from broken hearts, something the
curanderos
- or you, Adam - cannot mend. And love is always lucrative.”

“Broken hearts?”

“A doctor can mend a broken leg, but who else but a
brujo
can mend a broken heart? That’s what they say to people. It’s broken hearts that make them all the money.”

“How?”

“Suppose I’m a young guy and I like this girl, but I’m too shy to approach her and a
brujo
sells me a special amulet, he tells me it will make me irresistible. So when I next see the girl I put on the amulet and suddenly I feel powerful. I have instant confidence. Women like men with confidence. So in a way, it works. It’s a lot cheaper than going to the psychiatrist.”

“So it’s harmless then?”

“Sometimes.” He stood up. “come on, let’s go. He’s ruined the afternoon.”

They made their way back to the village. When Adam turned around to look back at the ridge the Crow was still there, watching them.

 

 

 

Chapter 32

 

He started attending Bernard’s tiny church every Sunday to listen to his sermon. He did it partly because he was bored and partly because he liked Bernard. It was in Spanish and he didn’t understand much of it, but he found Bernard’s voice somehow reassuring. The man had a gift; he could have been an actor.

He sat in one of the back pews, drowsy in the breathless heat, and wondered what the old man would make of this place. Adam Prescott II was a regular churchgoer, on the board of their local Protestant church, and made regular donations to the church fund. He had a good baritone and always sung loudest among the congregation during the Sunday service. He considered himself a good Christian.

He must have supposed his path to heaven was assured.

When he fell ill he did what many doctors do and self-diagnosed. He decided on his own prognosis months before he finally revealed to his family that he had pancreatic cancer.

The last few days in the hospital had been rough. His mother left it too late to relent and agree to visit him and by then the palliative drugs had turned his head and he didn’t even recognize her.

He and Lynne took turns holding his hand and watched as their once proud father turned into skin and bone, a bald, wizened old man with an oxygen mask clamped across his face. He still remembered his last words; he had to remove the oxygen mask to hear them.

“Adam, don’t let me die.”

All those years of churchgoing and all those promises of heaven and he was afraid that nothing he believed in was actually true. His real faith lay in his other credo, the one he had taught his children and that he recited with calm certainty every other day of the week but Sunday:
if you can’t see it, it isn’t there.

What had bothered Adam most about that last utterance was his father’s implicit conviction that his son’s training in emergency medicine could somehow forestall his end. His father had charged him at the last with saving him from something he couldn’t see.

As an emergency specialist he knew he might sometimes hold back the night.

But he could not fathom the dark.

 

* * *

 

Adam watched the villagers file out after the service. Two women stayed behind to kneel in front of the statue of the Virgin. They passed burning sage over themselves to cleanse their spirits and then hung pendants and photographs on the statue, asking her for favour. They left fruits and candles as offerings. When they had finished, the plinth reminded him of the shrine Jamie had created for her mother for the Day of the Dead.

Bernard saw him and smiled. “Adam, you’re here again. We’ll make a believer of you yet.”

Adam pointed out the two women praying before the Madonna.

“Religion here is not quite the same as it is in Massachusetts.”

“It doesn’t bother you?” Adam asked him.

“The people here are Mayans. Did you know that? Among themselves they speak a language called
Tzotzil
. The
conquistadores
liked to think that they brought these people religion, but these people had a deep and abiding faith thousands of years before Cortes and his pirates got here.”

“But it doesn’t leave you feeling...conflicted?”

“There is a church in San Juan de Chamula, you would have passed through it on the way here. It has a church, much bigger than this one, but it has had no priest, there has been no Christian service held inside for more than fifty years. But if you go there, you will feel God there, Doctor Prescott. I will take you there one day and you will see what I mean. Perhaps it is because I was married to a very unconventional Mexican woman, but I see no contradiction in what I do. I am here to help these people, not tell them how and where they should find God.”

“I always thought that a Church had certain rules.”

He smiled. “That’s why you’re an agnostic.”

“Point taken.”

“The Mayans live a very spiritual life. Perhaps they have taught me more than I’ve ever taught them.”

“But the Mayans are pagans.”

“That’s just a word that people use to denigrate other religions. They have very strong beliefs. For them, everything consists of energy: the trees, the animals, the rocks, energy is at play everywhere, constantly moving. They knew about quantum physics long before we did.”

The two old women bowed in front of the crucifix on the altar and scuttled away.

“And Jesus?”

“Mexican religion is like a salsa. They could not resist the Spanish, so they grafted the Catholic religion onto theirs. And in fact it was not that hard, because they already venerated the cross. To them it was a symbol of the earth, the sun, the God and the people. And Jesus was very much like their sun god. So you see religion is not that much different the world over, we just have different names for things.”

Adam shook his head. “I’ve never heard anything like that before. You’re remarkable man, Bernard.”

“Well I’ve always thought so. I’d like to get invited onto Oprah or Doctor Phil. I could show them a thing or two. But you didn’t come here to discuss theology with me.”

“Perhaps I did, in a way.”

“Oh?”

“I have a problem. This witch you were talking about, the Crow. You told me I should not try to interfere with the shamans, but can we not at least do something about him?”

“What has he done now?”

“There was another woman at to the clinic today convinced she had a toad inside her and that he had put it there. She’s stopped eating and she’s getting sicker and sicker every day.”

“What would you have me do?”

“There must be something.”

“We don’t make the laws here, Doctor Prescott; we’re guests in another country. We just have to do the best we can.”

“What about the police?”

He chuckled at that. “You want him arrested? For being a witch? You want to start your own Inquisition now, is that it?”

“He’s a menace.”

“I agree, but there’s no law against
brujerla
in Mexico. Who do you think the police go to when they get sick?”

“She’s the third this month.”

“You’ve never removed amphibians from the digestive systems of your patients in Boston?”

“It isn’t a joke, Bernard.”

“I’m not laughing. You’ll have to become a little creative. We all have to in these situations, even men of God.”

Creative? At the time Adam had no idea what he meant; it would soon become clearer. He had already been in Santa Marta almost three months, and finally it was time for the devil to make his much anticipated appearance.

 

 

 

Chapter 33

 

He was woken by an inhuman howl.

Fuck, what was
that?

There it was again. He felt his flesh crawl. He fumbled for his flashlight and threw on a shirt and shorts. He stumbled to the door, heard footsteps on the veranda and another flashlight swung towards him.

“Doctor Adam? It’s all right.” It was Luis.

“What is that?”

There were lights burning in one of the adobe houses down the street. He headed towards it. Luis tried to stop him.

“P
or favor
, it’s okay, Father Bernard is there.
No te moleste
, he will take care of it.

“It sounds like someone’s getting murdered,” he said. He shrugged free and ran towards the sound of the screaming.

Luis ran after him.
Please, it’s okay, there is nothing to worry about.
He grabbed at his arm a second time.

He shook him off and went inside the house.

There was a young girl thrashing on a cot. Bernard stood over her, holding a Bible and what Adam took to be holy water. She growled and tried to knock it out of his hands. The girl’s father struggled to hold her still.

The girl’s mother and her sisters backed against the wall, sobbing. Their shadows danced crazily on the ceiling.

Bernard’s glasses were askew. He was chanting in Latin as he held a crucifix towards the girl. She struggled even harder, and there were flecks of foam on her lips.

“N
omine patris, nomine fils...”

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