Louis Maistros - The Sound of Building Coffins

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It is 1891 in New Orleans, and young Typhus Morningstar cycles under the light of the half-moon to fulfill his calling, re-birthing aborted foetuses in the fecund waters of the Mississippi River. He cannot know that nearby, events are unfolding that will change his life forever – events that were set in motion by a Vodou curse gone wrong, forty years before he was born. In the humble home of Sicilian immigrants, a one-year-old boy has been possessed by a demon. His father dead, lynched by a mob, his distraught mother at her wits' end, this baby who yesterday could only crawl and gurgle is now walking, dancing, and talking – in a voice impossibly deep. The doctor has fled, and several men of the cloth have come and gone, including Typhus' father, warned off directly by the clear voice of his Savoir. A newspaper man, shamed by the part he played in inciting the lynch mob that cost this boy his father, appalled by what he sees, goes in search of help. Seven will be persuaded, will try to help…and all seven will be profoundly affected by what takes place in that one-room house that dark night. Not all will leave alive, and all will be irrevocably changed by this demonic struggle, and by the sound of the first notes blown of a new musical form: jazz.

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But what could he have done? What should he have done? He didn’t know the answers, but he knew there were answers. Maybe it was something yet to do and not merely would’ve, could’ve, should’ve-

Shoe dove

Doctor Jack had always liked and admired Morningstar even though the two men had agreed on very little. There was never any bad blood between them-except for the one thing.

Shoe dove

Jack closed his eyes tight, rubbed at the lids, then opened them wide. Watched the dancing pinpricks explode from within, willed the pinpricks into shoe doves. Soaring, weaving, dancing. A tiny smile formed in his soul.

This night is over for me , he quietly conceded in the dark. Time to bring on the morning .

Doctor Jack sat bolt upright with thoughts of hot chicory simmering in his head, felt for the lamp, found a box of matches. The smell of burning saltpetre was pleasantly wakeful to him. He breathed in deep with eyes closed.

Three quick raps at the door gave him a start. Nocturnal intrusions were not unusual in his line of work, but Jack’s recent sleepless premonition of bad-things-coming-soon had put him on edge. He hurriedly touched match to wick before seeing to the door.

Typhus Morningstar nodded to Jack and walked in casually, as if this were a thing he did often at four in the morning. “Sorry if I woke you,” Typhus said, clearly troubled.

“That’s all right, Typhus,” said Jack. “I was having trouble sleeping anyway.”

“Me too.”

Jack pulled up a chair for Typhus who only stared at it and remained standing. “Trouble sleeping, eh? Well, that’s a shame. But what brings you here at this unusual hour?”

“I’m sorry. Didn’t want to wake Malaria and Dropsy, and didn’t want to sit up in the dark no more all alone. Bad dream. I’m really sorry to bother you, Doctor Jack.”

“That’s all right, little pardna. Gonna take care of you just fine. Dreams can be worse than most sicknesses. There’s no shame in dreaming.”

Typhus dragged his feet to the corner farthest from the door, eased himself into a sitting position with his head leaning leftways against the wall. His eyes were sleepy but unblinking.

Jack nudged him gently: “You feel like talking about it? This dream of your’n?’

“Not sure how.”

“Well, just start at the beginning. If you remember, that is. Sometimes dreams can rush out of your head on the waking.”

“I remember.” Typhus’ eyes told Jack that not only did he remember, but that he may spend the rest of his life trying to forget. “Don’t know if I can talk about it, though. Hurts to even think about it.”

“I see,” said Jack.

“No, you don’t see, Doctor Jack. No one can see.”

“True enough, little pardna. Be plenty of time to make me see tomorrow morning. After you done got some rest. And only if you want.”

“Guess why I come is on account of how the dream made me feel. Like I’m all alone in this world.” Doctor Jack laid some sheepskins behind Typhus, who reclined against them.

“Dreams can’t make you alone, Typhus.” Jack walked over to the medicine counter to mix one of his secret sleep remedies in a small steel cup. The taste gave the so-called secret away-its alcohol content being in the neighborhood of ninety proof. He handed the concoction to Typhus.

“More alone than I ever felt since you gave me Lily.” Typhus sat up enough to take a sip and then a full-blown swallow. He lay his head back down without wincing.

“Well, I guess even Lily has her limitations, son.”

Typhus liked it when Jack called him son . “It doesn’t seem fair,” said Typhus. “I give her every bit of me, but she leave me alone at such a time. I guess that sound selfish, but I can’t help thinking it. It’s hard to talk about.”

“Try.” Jack didn’t want to press, but had a strong feeling Typhus needed to get something off his chest.

Typhus paused to arrange his thoughts, trying to decide between outright lying and half-truthing. He decided to talk straight. Lying wouldn’t make the sin any less, and he knew he could trust Jack to keep his secrets.

“Had this dream.” Typhus paused long.

“Gathered that much already. Listen, if you’d really rather not talk about it, we can just leave it for another-”

“Woke up hard-down there.” Typhus swallowed heavily, too far gone to turn back now. “In my privates.”

Jack raised an eyebrow and looked on expectantly.

“It wasn’t the kind of dream supposed to get a reaction like that. There was no pretty lady in the dream. No Lily. There was only bad stuff in the dream.”

Jack’s eyes softened, moistening imperceptibly. “What kind of bad stuff?”

“Evil bad. People dying. Burned alive. People I know. People I love.” Typhus discovered he was physically unable to recount any more detail than that-he hoped Jack wouldn’t push it. “I couldn’t make it go down. I tried and tried. Finally I got a knife…thought about cutting it…got scared…then I got on my bike and came over…”

“Well, now, boy. Ain’t no crime to have a bad dream. And sometimes a person’s lower body region can act in mysterious ways. Don’t mean you was sexually interested in the bad things you saw in the dream.”

“But I was.”

“Was what?”

“In-trested.” A pause, a glance down, a whisper: “Seck-shully.”

“I think there’s a good chance you’re confused about that, son.”

“I was,” Typhus insisted in a whisper, closing his eyes in shame.

“Well, let’s say you were,” Doctor Jack said firmly. “Still ain’t no crime. And the fact you’re so bothered about it shows you got a good conscience.”

“But there’s a part of me that ain’t ashamed. A part of me enjoyed it. A part that wanted it to happen.”

“Nonsense, boy.”

Typhus got to his feet, wondering whether he should go on talking or just let the conversation end there. More words left his lips before he was aware of his decision to speak:

“I felt this way one other time, Doctor Jack.”

“I see.” And he did see. He knew exactly what Typhus was talking about, there was no need for Typhus to go on explaining.

But the talking was a release for Typhus, so he continued:

“When I was nine. When that thing was in me. Before Daddy took it out. That bad thing I took out of the Sicilian baby-”

“Shhhh…” Jack got up to put an arm around Typhus’ shoulder. “You ain’t gotta say another word about that.”

“I gotta say one thing…”

“No you don’t.”

“It’s just that…”

“Shhhh…”

“…it ain’t all gone.”

“Of course it is.”

“No. It ain’t.”

“Don’t talk like that.”

“It’s still in me, that thing. I know it.”

“What’s in you is a memory of a bad thing. Not the bad thing itself.”

Typhus broke into sobs, wanting to believe Doctor Jack. Unable.

“Typhus, now listen,” said Jack as he rubbed Typhus’ shoulder. “That thing you went through way back when, that’ll always stick with you. But it’s a memory now, nothing more. This thing that happened tonight-well, I reckon that’d be the result of a combination of things. Bad memories mixed with natural feelings of longing. I ’spect if there’s a cure for yer troubles, it’d probably be by fixing the latter. Having all them longings done opened a big ol’ window for those bad memories to come rushing out at you.”

“Ain’t got no longings like that, Doctor Jack. Not no more. Not since you give me Lily.”

“What I gave you was a pretty piece of paper, Typhus. I thought it might be enough, but looks like it ain’t.”

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