Chantale had barely said a word since they'd left Dufour's house.
"Thanks for your help today, Chantale," Max said and looked over at her. She was pale. Her face shone with a dull dew of perspiration, which pooled and crested into small droplets on her upper lip. Her neck and jaw muscles were tensed.
"Are you OK?"
"No," she croaked. "Stop the car."
Max pulled over on a bustling road. Chantale got out, took a few steps, and threw up in the gutter, prompting an exclamation of shocked disgust from a man who was pissing up against a nearby wall.
Max steadied her as she heaved a second time.
When she'd finished, he stood her up against the car and made her take deep breaths. He got the water bottle out, poured some onto his handkerchief, and wiped her face, wafting the notebook to cool her off.
"That's better," she said after she'd recovered and the color had returned to her face.
"Was that too much for you? Back there?"
"I was real nervous."
"Didn't show."
"Trust me, I was."
"You did great," Max said. "So much so I'll give you tomorrow off."
"You're going to Cité Soleil, right?"
"You got me!"
They got back in the car and she drew him a map. She told him to get some surgical masks and gloveswhich he'd find in one of the two main supermarketsand to be prepared to throw his shoes away if he planned on leaving his car and walking around. The ground was quite literally made of shitanimal and, most of it, human. Everything that breathed in the slum had a textbook's worth of diseases on it and in it and all around it.
"Be real careful out there. Take your gun. Don't stop your car unless it's absolutely necessary."
"Sounds like what they used to tell folk about Liberty City."
"Cité Soleil is no joke, Max. It's a bad bad place."
He drove her to the Banque Populaire and watched her and her ass until she'd gone through the entrance. She didn't turn around. Max wasn't sure if that still meant something now.
Chapter 25
HE CALLED ALLAIN Carver from the house and gave him a rundown of what he'd done, whom he'd talked to, and what he was planning to do next. He could tell from the way Carver listenedgrunting affirmatively to let Max know he was still on the line, but asking no questionsthat Chantale had briefed him thoroughly.
Next, he called Francesca. No answer.
* * *
Sitting out on the porch, notebook in hand, he played his interview tapes.
The questions came to him.
First up: Why had Charlie been kidnapped?
Money?
Absence of a ransom demand ruled that out as a motive.
Revenge?
A strong possibility. Rich people always had their fair share of mortal enemies. It came with the territory. The Carvers, with their history, must have had a phone book's worth.
What was wrong with Charlie?
He hadn't started talking yet. Some people start slow. Shit happens.
What about that thing with his hair?
He was a little kid. One of the few things Max remembered his dad telling him was how, when he was a baby, he used to cry every time someone laughed. Shit happens, then you grow up.
Sure, but Dufour had found something.
Did the kidnappers know what it was?
Maybe. In which case, the motive became blackmail. The Carvers hadn't mentioned anything about that, but that didn't necessarily mean it wasn't going on. If there was something really wrong with the kid, Allain and Francesca were probably keeping it from Gustav because of his fragile health.
Why hadn't Francesca told him about Charlie's condition herself?
Too painful? Or she didn't think it was relevant?
Had the kid been kidnapped for black-magic purposes?
Possibly.
He'd have to start checking up on the Carvers' enemies and then cross-reference them against involvement in black magic. But how was he going to do that? The country was upside down, running on a faint pulse. There was no police force to speak of, and he doubted there were any criminal records or files he could go through.
He'd be doing it the hard way, looking under every rock, chasing every shadow.
What about Eddie Faustin?
Eddie Faustin had been involved. He was a major player. He'd known who was behind the kidnapping. Find out who he knew.
Who was the big guy the shoemaker woman had seen?
Faustin? He was supposed to have been killed and beheaded near the car, so it may not have been him. But if he shared the same genes as his mother and brother, he wasn't a big man. Both Faustins were medium build, soft going on flab.
Of course, Vincent Paul had been on the scene.
Was Charlie alive?
He only had Dufour's word on that, and, unless Dufour was the kidnapper or was holding him captive, he dismissed the claim and continued to presume him dead.
Did Dufour know who'd kidnapped Charlie?
As before.
How serious was his hold on Francesca?
She was rich and vulnerable, ripe for exploitation. It happened all the time, phony psychics and mystics taking advantage of the lonely, the bereaved, the chronically self-obsessed, the naďve, the plain fucking dumball promised a glorious future for just $99.99 plus tax.
What if Dufour was the real deal?
Stick to what you know.
Was Dufour a suspect?
Still unresolved. Yes and no. A man that close to Papa and Baby Doc must have had the juice to pull off a simple kidnapping. He was bound to know a few unemployed Tonton Macoutes, starving for cash and pining for their glory days, who would have done it at the drop of a hat. They used to abduct people all the time. But what would be his motive? At his age, with very few more years of life left? Had Gustav Carver fucked him or his family over in the past? He doubted it. Gustav would not have messed with one of Papa Doc's favorites. Still, for now, he couldn't rule anything out.