Witch in the White City: A Dark Historical Fantasy/Mystery (Neva Freeman Book 1) Nick Wisseman (best management books of all time txt) đ
- Author: Nick Wisseman
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âPleased to meet you,â she said, matching the formal cordiality of Derekâs tone.
Lecta didnât bother. âBring her here to âswell your ranks,â did you?â
Whitby glanced at the woman, his eyebrows crinkling. âWhat does that mean?â he asked in what seemed to be an attempt at a whisper, butâpossibly due to drink; he looked a bit soddenâwas almost a shout.
âIt means,â Lecta said indignantly, âthat our Derek here, he of the weekly âlet in the coloredsâ rants, is thinking with a head other than the scruffy thing atop his neck.â
Whitby gave her another glance. âYou mean his peter?â
She glared at him. Neva stifled a laugh.
Derek sighed. âYouâre wrong in more ways than you know. But unless you have something of substance to discuss, weâll leave you to whatever you came in here to doâwithout your spouses.â
The tired woman stiffened at this, but Whitby grinned. He seemed more than just a bit drunk now.
âEnjoy the day,â Derek said, tipping his hat as he strode past the pair.
Neva pantomimed a curtsy before following. âWell, that was pleasant,â she said once they were outside.
âHardship brings out the worst in us all. Come onâletâs go visit the White City again.â
THEY MADE A DETOUR first.
Brin had insisted on staying in Pullman Town, but sheâd offered to cover Derekâs rail fare (heâd said âlendâ; sheâd said âJust have it,â and given him extra). Then he and Neva had overshot the Fair at her direction, traveling up to 25th and State. The neighborhood was home primarily to Negro residents.
âThis wonât take long,â Neva explained as she led Derek to one of the smallest houses on the block and knocked on the door. âBut you need to see it first.â
Hatty answered a moment later, wearing a faded yellow dress that had been mended too many times to count. âNevaâand Derek! Come in, come in.â She embraced Neva, and after Derek tried to shake hands, embraced him too.
Inside, Hatty indicated they should sit on the two available surfaces: a rickety-looking chair and an even ricketier-looking bed. Yet despite the roomâs closeness, everything was well-kept. The bed was trimly made, and there wasnât a speck of dust to be seen. Neva would have been shocked to find Hattyâs house in any other condition.
âPlease,â Derek said, gesturing for the old woman to take the chair.
She refused at first, but eventually compromised by sitting on the bed next to Neva while he took the chair. âSo what brings you here, children?â
âTo see you,â Neva said. âAnd to ask you about this again.â She withdrew the cowry shell necklace from her pocket.
Derek sat up straighter. âYou still have it.â
âI do. And Hattyâs seen one like it.â
âBefore the War,â she agreed. âA woman in the fields used to wear one. I donât know anything more about it now, though, child.â
âThatâs fine. I was hoping you could tell Derek what you told me. Youâll say it better than I can.â
Hatty shrugged. âIf youâd like.â She leaned in to get a better look at the necklace. âYes,â she said, as if speaking to herself for a moment. âItâs the same kind the woman wore. She was a saltwater girl. Couldnât speak much English at first, so instead of talking, she just fiddled with her shells.â
Derek cocked his head. âSaltwater girl?â
âIt means she was brought over the Atlantic after importing slaves was supposed to be illegal,â Neva supplied. âAfter Congress outlawed it in 1808.â
âAh.â
âOther slaves looked down on her for it,â Hatty added. âThose of us whose families had been here longer. It wasnât rightâdidnât make any senseâbut thatâs the way it was. Mostly she turned the other cheek. But I heard her snap once, after Tobias, a nasty brute of a man, knocked her down. She said ...â
Neva put her hand on Hattyâs arm. âWhat did she say?â
âSomething that sounded like a curse. Said it calmly. Held up her shells and pressed them together, two on either side, and told Tobiasâand these are my words, you understand; I donât recollect quite how she put it, and she was quite eloquent by thenâshe told him the shells were fashioned after a charm so powerful the family that made it killed each other trying to possess it. And that even her sad little imitation could cause a man to lose his teeth, his hair, his sight ... and his balls.â Hatty chuckled. âNonsense, of course. But Tobias never bothered her again.â
âWhere was she from?â asked Derek. âBefore, I meanâin Africa.â
âDahomey, I think.â
âAnd my mother?â asked Neva. âYou said she was Fon too?â
âHer family was. That I know for sure. Natâs was from Togo.â
Neva let this last bit goânow wasnât the time to bring up the subject of her true father. âThank you.â She turned to Derek, raising one eyebrow significantly.
âI see,â he said eventually.
She nodded. Hattyâs anecdote was as close to a confirmation as they were likely to get: that the cowry shells had a connection to Dahomey and âmagicââand maybe to their family. âI wish we could stay longer. But we need to be going.â
Hattyâs face fell. âSo soon?â
âIâm sorry. Iâll come by again when I can. Maybe next week?â
âAny time, child, any time. Iâve lots of it these days.â
Derek winced. âYouâre not at the DeBellâs?â
âNo, child,â the old woman said sorrowfully as she stood to distribute another round of hugs. âBeen laid off these past three months.â
DEREK INSISTED ON GIVING Hatty everything he could spare from the money Brin had insisted on giving himâhe held back only enough to pay for rail fare to the Fair and then Pullman Town. Neva didnât try to dissuade him. She remembered how kind Hatty had been to him when they were children, while all the DeBells (except their father) treated him like a mangy dog.
But that wasnât the family history Neva wanted to discuss on the way back to the rail station. Her focus remained on the cowries.
âIâm still not sure what to think about that Fon womanâs claims
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