Chapter One
I got off the plane in Port-au-Prince for the second time in my life about midafternoon on a sunny Thursday in October. Not much had changed. Heat wavered above the asphalt, shimmering, dancing, making me dizzy.
Inside the airport, a man whose starched white short-sleeved shirt and khaki trousers emphasized the ebony shade of his skin hurried over. “Priestess Cassandra?”
I winced. What had been good business in New Orleans sounded pretentious in the shadow of the mountains where voodoo had first come into its own.
“Just Cassandra, please,” I murmured.
I wondered momentarily how he’d known me. Perhaps my being the only white woman who’d gotten off the plane was a pretty good clue. I’m sure my blue eyes and short dark hair weren’t all that common around here, either. But what usually made me stand out in a crowd was the slash of pure white at my temple.
The oddity, which had appeared in my hair shortly after my daughter died, had gradually lost pigment from its original gray. I probably should have covered it with dye—I was, after all, in witness protection
—but the white strip served to remind me of my daughter and my mission. As if I needed reminding.
The streak also served as my penance. I hadn’t done the one thing a mother was supposed to do— protect her child against everyone. Even her father.
The man in front of me dipped his head. “I am Marcel, Miss Cassandra.”
His accent hinted at France. A lovely lilt in English; in Creole, the language of the island, he’d sound fabulous.
I opened my mouth to tell him my last name, then realized I no longer had one. Once I’d testified against my scum-sucking, drug-dealing pig of a husband I’d become Priestess Cassandra, one name only—a la Cher, the Rock, Madonna.
WITSEC, short for witness protection folks, had been unamused when I’d refused to acknowledge the need for a last name. Of course very little amused them. They’d slapped Smith on my records, but the name wasn’t any more mine than Cassandra.
“Monsieur Mandenauer has arranged for a room at the Hotel Oloffson,” Marcel said, taking possession of the single bag I’d carried onto the plane.
I’d recently j oined a group of government operatives known as the Jäger-Suchers. That’s Hunter- Searchers if your German is as nonexistent as mine.
The Jäger-Suchers hunt monsters, and I’m not using the euphemism applied to so many human beings who belong in a cage. I mean monsters—the type whose skin sprouts fur, whose teeth become fangs —beasts that drink the blood of humans and only want more.
Edward Mandenauer was my new boss. He’d sent me to Haiti to discover the secret of raising a zombie.
I loved it when my personal and work interests collided. Almost made me give credence to that “there are no accidents” theory.
“This way, please.” Marcel awaited me at the door of the airport.
I hurried after him, leaving behind the shady, cool interior of the building and stepping into the bright, sunny bustle of Port-au-Prince.
Though Haiti is horrendously overpopulated—the newest estimates say 8.5 million souls—there is also a vast amount of uncharted, unexplored, and nearly unexplorable land in the mountains. I was certain any secrets worth uncovering lay in that direction.
I glanced at the teeming crowd of humanity that made up the capital city. Secrets certainly couldn’t be kept here.