Выбрать главу

"Do you remember the Americans? Sean and Seliah Gravas?"

"She was beautiful like a goddess."

"They liked Father Joe."

"They ate and hiked and got drunk together."

"Did you talk to Sean and Seliah?"

"Mr. Gravas liked Pepino very much. He offered me twenty dollars for him but of course I refused. Mrs. Gravas was amused by Pepino's expressions and she told her husband that he needed a monkey of his own. Those two people had love. You could tell. When Mr. Gravas was drunk he became very emotional about his work. He never said what he was. What was he, Detective Hood?"

"A businessman. He buys and sells guns."

In the near darkness Hood could see Eduardo give him a long look. "That makes sense. Because he seemed convinced that he was not doing good in the world. Yes. That does make sense."

"Seliah told me that one morning at your resort, Sean woke up and felt good about his work. He had a new, positive attitude."

"I didn't know that."

"Seliah believes that Father Joe had somehow swayed Sean into this new way of thinking."

"But that's something my father would say. Superstition."

"Well, certainly a strong-willed person can influence another person."

"Yes."

"But then, a few weeks after they got home to California, Sean began feeling bad. His body hurt and his mind wouldn't slow down and he couldn't sleep. He began doing strange things. Then foolish things."

"Such as what?"

"He had his dog baptized."

"That is blasphemy, but it is funny, too."

"Seliah told me that one night when Sean was sleeping, Father Joe sat at the foot of the bed and spoke to him in his sleep. And touched his bare toes."

"Why would he do that?"

"I don't know. Were you around that night? Did you see anything like that?"

"No. I go to bed at nine o'clock during the summer."

"Did he ever do anything like that to you?"

"No, never."

"Father Joe told Seliah he was not touching Sean's toes at all. He said he was keeping away the biting flies. The same kind that bit you and infected your toe. Seliah found blood on Sean's toe that night after Father Joe had spoken to him and touched him-or didn't touch him-in his sleep."

"Detective, it is scientific to keep away those flies. This is something that Father Joe would do. Mrs. Gravas must not have reasoned accurately. If she saw blood on his toe, isn't this evidence of the biting fly?"

Hood looked at Eduardo in the early dark. The boy's eyes were chips of light and so were the monkey's eyes but lower and closer together.

"What do you think happened down here between Sean and Seliah and Joe Leftwich?"

"I think they became friends."

"Did Joe ever talk to you about the night that he shooed the fly from Mr. Gravas?"

"I knew nothing about it until now."

"Did he ever talk to you about Sean and Seliah?"

Eduardo thought for a moment. "He told me he thought they were people who might do important acts."

"Acts."

"That was the word he used."

"What do you think?"

"I have no way of seeing such things."

"And if you did, would it be science or superstition?"

Eduardo thought again. "I think one can turn into the other. Father Joe said this."

"What did Father Joe say about you?"

Eduardo laughed softly. "He said I was the future of the world."

"He's right."

They stood in silence for a moment. "I want to talk to Itixa."

"She will talk to you. Believe me." Eduardo told Hood the best time and place to find the woman.

"Thanks for bringing me up here," said Hood. "I've got a light to help us get home."

"Keep it on the path in front of us. Some of the snakes are nocturnal and they like the streams. Snakes shine at night. Even more than wet branches. Watch for what shines." Before dinner Hood sat on his observation deck and watched the volcano. The night had cleared and he could see it clearly in the distance. The lava moved down from the mouth in red fingers, and a cloud of steam wafted up. Arenal rumbled every few minutes and twice Hood saw large molten boulders rocket into the sky, then slam down to the earth where they showered sparks and rolled down the mountain in loudly cracking crisscross patterns until coming to rest in bursts of rising embers. The happy-hour crowd in the Volcano View bar sent up a cheer.

At dinner the bar and restaurant were raucous. The Germans saw two quetzal and documented them thoroughly. The French had had a terrific butterfly day and the California frog and toad hunters had done well with five species of tree frogs, two with deadly poison in their skin and glands.

Hood watched Itixa come down a torch-lit pathway toward the rear door of the kitchen. She came out a few minutes later through the same door with a plate of food covered in tin foil. Hood waited below the oil torch and when she saw him he spoke in Spanish.

– Good evening, Itixa. My name is Charlie Hood.

She stopped and looked at him. "English. Quakers teach me."

"I apologize for interrupting your dinner. But I want to talk to you about Father Joe Leftwich and the Gravas couple-Sean and Seliah."

"Why?"

"Some bad things have happened to Mr. and Mrs. Gravas. And they all seemed to begin here at this lodge with Father Joe."

She was short and stout and had a belly. Her black-gray hair was pulled back in a tight ponytail and she wore a loose maroon dress with birds and butterflies embroidered around the neck. Her cheekbones were high and her chin narrow and her face an etched lattice. She searched his eyes matter-of-factly.

"Come, I tell you."

Hood followed her up the dirt pathway. It bore rake tracks and either side was bordered by tropical plants and flowers. Her casita sat behind a small grass clearing with a blue table and three blue chairs. She set her plate on the table and tapped the back of a chair, then disappeared into her home.

Hood sat and smelled the food. Tonight's entree was roast beef with garlic and baby onions and he was hungry again. He saw a bat flicker at the edge of the torchlight, then wheel back into the darkness. He looked out to Arenal and the trickle of hot red lava lacing its way down the cone and thought of the saliva swaying on Seliah's chin and he wondered if she had spent another night in the hospital.

Itixa came back with two open beers and she handed one to Hood, then sat. From a pocket of her dress she produced flatware wrapped in a white paper napkin.

"I eat. Tell me of bad things of Mr. and Mrs. Gravas."

Hood told her what he could about their strange ailments and erratic behavior. He told her that Sean had left his job and his home and left Seliah, too. As he spoke he watched her expression become worried, then calculating, then touched with fear.

"A man when he lies have a look," she said. "Hard to see. Father Joe have the look. I stay away him and he stay away me. Mr. Gravas have look. Mrs. Gravas no look."

"What lie did Joe tell?"

"He was the lie."

She ate and Hood sipped the beer.

"Asema," she said quietly.

"Joe was an asema?"

She studied him, chewing. "In the day, a man or a woman. At night, the asema take off his skin and become a ball of light. Blue light. Drink blood of people. If they like the blood, they drink until the person die. Asema hate garlic and some herbs. You find the asema skin and put many salt and pepper and skin will shrink. Asema cannot get skin back on so it dies. Sun kill asema also."

"What does this have to do with Father Joe?"

"Listen. Eduardo goes to the library they build. Eduardo think Father Joe is good. Always talk and laugh. Eduardo tell me Father Joe want to see the bats. Bats are evil, this I know. I follow because I fear for Eduardo. They see the bats fly. They are the blood-drinking bats, the bats of damnation. The bite of this bat will create asema. I see Father Joe push Eduardo into the cave. It was in my dream. When they leave the cave I run fast but they see me. Later I tell Eduardo I don't care you see me! I protect you! I tell your father everything I see! He calls me superstitious witch."