King of the Mutants (10 page)

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Authors: Samantha Verant

Tags: #middle grade, #fantasy, #action and adventure, #science fiction, #mutants

BOOK: King of the Mutants
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“Yes, Freddie.”

“And you practice Hoodoo?”

“I do. And I’ve been waiting for this moment for a while, meeting the two of you. Why I even called Madame Zoltarano up myself and told her to send you boys my way. Usually it’s above a Hoodoo Queen to contact a third-rate fortune-teller. I hope you appreciate it, because that woman wouldn’t know the future from the past, even if it was written down.” Serafine winked at me and tilted her head toward Snaggletooth. “Come on, boys, follow me. By the by, you just might want to carry that dog of yours. We all know gators love fresh meat, right Maverick?”

Freddie’s confused smile turned into a scowl. I guess he still needed a little time to get over that whole me-eating-a-live-chicken thing.

Resembling a spirit in the night, Serafine’s white robes fluttered in the breeze as she walked down the dock. I picked up Snaggletooth and, like zombies under her spell, we followed her to her house. On either side of the path, weird chirping, hissing, and loud clacking and snapping noises crackled in the air. Freddie grabbed my elbow. Alligators. They were everywhere, heads turning in unison, intently watching us with their glowing red eyes.

In a trance, Freddie and I trudged down the path, following Serafine. I held Snaggletooth close to my chest, focusing on every step I took. Swear to God, the alligators were trying to sniff at my ankles. I held my breath and pushed forward.

Serafine’s home was beyond enormous, larger than any of the mansions we’d seen in New Orleans. A massive veranda wrapped around its entirety and the green, slick moss we’d seen in the bayou on the trees, well, the house was covered in it. One of those old plantations from long ago, it was as if time stood still. The same red brick dust we’d seen at Adelaide’s surrounded the place, on every step, every windowsill.

“I’ve got myself a lot of enemies,” said Serafine.

I struggled to hold Snaggletooth. Just because he was missing a leg didn’t mean he wasn’t heavy. Serafine stood in the moonlight and her hand moved to the material by her neck. Her thin fingers reached into her dress and she pulled out a large golden necklace, the chain long and braided, a fist-sized charm dangling on its end. The charm held my gaze. It glowed, seeming to have a life of its own, the colors changing from a faint green to red to gold. Was it an orb of some kind?

It winked at me.

No, it definitely wasn’t an orb.

I sucked in my breath. “Did that thing hanging around your neck just—”

“Yes,” said Serafine.

I grimaced, wondering if we should make a run for it. But neither Freddie nor I could move. Freddie nudged me in the ribs, his face pale. “Is it…Is it…Human?”

“No, my darling boy, it’s magic.” She tousled the hair on Freddie’s head. “Everybody knows the eyes are the window to the soul. Well, my eye is my lucky amulet, my juju, my crystal ball if you will.”

I took a closer look at Serafine’s “juju,” which was way more intricate than I’d initially thought. The orb was inset into a golden lid with ancient writing on it. The pupil was black, appeared to be made out of onyx, and as the light dimmed, the pupil expanded—just like a real eye. Surrounding the pupil an emerald-like jewel flickered with flecks of gold. Every time the eye blinked, the flecks would change their position and the color of the jewel would change and glow from dark green, to red, to black. It was almost like looking into a starry night, a galaxy. The future.

Wait a second. My eyes were dark greenish brown, sometimes looking black. And at night they glowed red. Just like …

“The power of my juju comes from my protector, the Santerian God Orunmila, who knows the futures for all people,” said Serafine. “Orunmila had a great affinity for crocodiles and this amulet was modeled after—”

“A crocodile eye.”

“Yes, and its magic and its powers give me my vision, my strength.” She paused and snapped back her shoulders. “Maverick, my visions told me you are destined for greatness. But it’s best y’all find out about it on your own, because my visions, if misinterpreted, could backfire. But I can tell you this.” Serafine placed her slender hand underneath Freddie’s chin. Her perfume of ginger and jasmine grew stronger, surrounding us. “You’re going to be blessed with a big family.”

A big family had always been
my
dream. I held my head down, jealous. I’d probably end up with no place to go and nobody. I wondered: what did the future have in store for me? I didn’t have much time to think about it though. Serafine turned on her heel and headed into the house. She paused in the doorway. “Now, come inside boys. We haven’t got all night.”

It didn’t matter if Freddie or me wanted to ask Serafine more about her visions. We couldn’t. We were too busy choking on our tongues. I slapped Freddie on the back and we followed Serafine into an ornate, dilapidated room.

Serafine clapped her hands and two male midgets appeared, one whiter than a marshmallow and just as squishy, the other blacker than coal. Involuntarily I flinched, expecting one of them to smack me on the back of my head, but they didn’t do a thing but smile.

“Like to introduce you two boys to Mistuh White and Mistuh Black. Been working for me as long as I can remember,” said Serafine.

I extended my hand to the black guy. “Nice to meet you, Mr. Black.”

Serafine and the white midget burst out laughing. The man I assumed to be Mr. Black raised a brow. In the deepest voice I’d heard to date he exclaimed, “I’m Mr. White, Maverick. That man over there, that’s Mr. Black.”

Freddie coughed and nudged me with his foot. My ears tingled with embarrassment.

Mr. Black’s chubby rolls jiggled and he giggled excitedly. “Ready to get your mojo on?”

“That’s what I’m talkin’ about.” Serafine smiled, her clear brown eyes twinkling mischievously in the candlelight. “It’s time for you boys to get what you came here for. You need my vision.”

“Yes!” screamed Mr. White. “A ceremony! I love ceremonies!”

The confused look Freddie and I exchanged said it all.

Serafine and the midgets led Freddie, Snaggletooth, and me into a large ballroom with a moss-covered floor and cracked tiles. It looked like it might have been a majestic place at one point in time, but not anymore. Tree roots crept into the faded, cracked walls. The ceiling arched into a dome, yet the stained-glass atrium was shattered. Shards of colorful glass twinkled on the ground in hues of green, purple, and yellow. Old, tattered furniture decorated the place.

Above us, the full moon had now turned orange. Surrounding us, of course, tons of candles. Serafine led us into the center of the room and told Freddie, Snaggletooth, and I to take a seat. Mr. White and Mr. Black spread red brick dust around us in a circle.

“We’re making you a protection circle, understand?” asked Serafine.

“No,” I said.

“What’s going on? Are you sacrificing us to your weird alligator God?” Freddie whimpered.

“No, child, the only thing being sacrificed here is the bad energy that be following you around.”

Freddie and I sat back to back, his body trembling so hard I bit my lip. He was also sitting on my tail. I nudged him with my elbow. “Step off.”

“Geez,” he mumbled. “Sorry.”

Serafine put her finger to her lips. “Sshh, we’re about to get started. Have some respect for Madame Laveau.”

“Who?” I asked, but was ignored.

Serafine struck a match and set fire to some wood in a cauldron that sat on the far side of the room. Immediately, the flames rose high, almost to the ceiling. Ghostly orange faces danced in front of me. Smoke billowed out of the window in an eerie trail. Strange shadows flickered on the walls.

Mr. White picked up a set of bongo drums and slapped them rhythmically. At first, the beat started slow, but then it got faster and faster. Mr. Black soon joined in, playing some kind of cowbell. The two men danced around us in a crazed circle, playing their instruments, while Serafine sang.

“Boomlay de boom Boogaloo.

My spell tis gonna hoodoo you.

Anything you do won’t take it back.

No mumbo-jumbo, my visions intact.”

Or something along those lines.

Sitting wide-eyed and feeling the rhythm course through my body, the hypnotic experience almost put me into a trance. That was until fifty alligators slithered in from outside, hissing and making low, barely audible growls and gurgles.

I tried to crouch up onto my knees, preparing to bolt, but, like wet noodles, my legs gave out from under me. I slumped against Freddie, my fake teeth chattering. This was just all too weird.

Freddie covered his eyes with his hands so he didn’t witness the disturbing events that followed. What he missed while the gators growled, and the midgets continued singing and dancing, was Serafine’s body convulsing. Violently. Swear to God, her eyes rolled straight to the back of her head. You could only see white, no pupils. They moved back and forth as frenetically as a ping-pong tournament.

I didn’t know what was going on. I sat on the edge of my tail, thinking my ears might explode. And then everything suddenly grew quiet. The alligators slithered away, the drums stopped beating, the bells stopped clanging, and Serafine smiled at me sweetly. A bead of perspiration crept slowly down her forehead. I could hear the blood rush in my ears.

It was more than intense.

When she was finished spazzing out, Serafine reached into the pockets of her robe and outstretched her arm, handing me a black velvet drawstring bag.

“What’s this?” I asked with bewilderment.

“The black bag is only to be used against an enemy if there’s an emergency. Just throw the contents in his or her face and say these words: ‘I curse you. Shut your mouth.’ Repeat it three times and that’s it.”

“I don’t really get what’s going on here, Serafine.”

“Child, we all need a little extra protection no matter what your beliefs, understand? Now, I’ve done what I can here. The rest is up to you. You take the special gris-gris I’ve made for you and you get. Darling will see you back to the trail you came in on.”

“But what did your visions tell you?” I asked, panicked.

Serafine clonked out. The eyelid on the amulet blinked one last time and then it closed. It was clear we weren’t going to get any answers from Serafine or her “juju.”

Serafine had said I needed to trust my instincts? Well, my tail wasn’t tingling anymore. My head throbbed with anger. Besides wasting gas and wasting our time, our little side trip was just a bunch of baloney. Freddie had been right. I should have listened to him, not my tail.

Mr. White and Mr. Black grabbed Freddie and me gently by our elbows and led us to the door. Snaggletooth followed us, his tail between his legs. In silence, the men walked us to the docks where, once again, Darling waited for us.

“How goes it?” Darling said as she helped Snaggletooth onto the raft. “Got your mojo on?”

Freddie sneered and coughed out a huff.

I stumbled onto the raft after Freddie, and the only thing I could think to say was, “Who is Lady Laveau?”

“Marie Laveau? Why she was the most famous hoodoo conjurer around these parts. It’s said Serafine is her great-great-great-granddaughter. Something like that. But I wouldn’t ask anymore on her. Her spirit might fly in from out of nowhere and slap you in the face just like the last guy.”

“Whatever,” I said, not really caring. Lost deep in thought, angry with myself for being duped, I sat transfixed with the hundreds of gators materializing to the side of our raft, swimming besides us, hissing. At least Freddie seemed a lot calmer with my reptilian relatives now, or like me, the weird ceremony stunned him so much, nothing would have bothered him.

CHAPTER TEN

 

HOW TO SURVIVE A MIDGET ATTACK

 

Confused about everything, and more than disappointed, Freddie and I said our goodbyes to Darling and trekked up the marshy path, wiping mosquitoes off our arms.

In the distance, Cherry Pie beckoned to us in the moonlight. Freddie and I ran toward her. I’d never been so happy to see an inanimate object in my life. But
,
unfortunately, the motorcycle wasn’t the only thing that waited for us on this dark night.

Burt Grumbling stepped out of the shadows and into the moonlight. “Well, well, look at what we have here,” he said with a growl. “A birth blunder that’s been making more mistakes than should be allowed and his little twit of an accomplice.”

Freddie and I stopped dead in our tracks.

I never thought I’d see the satanic ringmaster of doom ever again, yet there he stood in all his evil clown tattooed glory. Why didn’t Serafine warn us? Instead of being scared, though, I was mad at everything. Mad at the ceremony. Mad for being duped. Mad at my tail. Just plain mad. This was all so wrong.

“How did you find us?” I asked.

“You ignoramus, if you stay in the wrong part of town, you’re bound to set tongues wagging. Some guy, Billy Bob, called me up saying he’d tell me where you were headed if I paid him five thousand dollars. After what you’ve cost me, that was pennies. Bought a plane ticket this very morning while you boys were still sleeping.” Burt hocked up a loogie and spat green phlegm on the ground. “Any other questions? Or can I settle my business with you, throw you in the swamp where you belong, and get on with my life?”

Freddie crossed his arms over his chest. “Not gonna happen.”

“Who’s going to stop me? You? And what army?” Burt laughed and waved a silver handgun in a threatening manner. The moonlight glistened on the barrel. “Maverick, what you fail to comprehend right now is how much money you have cost me. Between Yorgi, Otto, and Caesar’s hospital bills, the Hummer you trashed, stealing Cherry Pie, and the cash I had to dole out to find you, well, the only way you’ll be able to pay up and put a smile on my face is with your death.” Burt edged closer to us.

Freddie shot me a sideways glance, mouthed, “We’re in this together now, so let’s go all crazy chicken on him,” and
then he
dove onto the ground, right toward Burt’s feet. I had no idea what he was up to until he chomped down onto one of Burt’s ankles. That Freddie. He was full of surprises. I popped my plastic teeth out with a click of my tongue and snapped into action. I grabbed Burt’s arm and bit down on it as hard as I could. Even Snaggletooth popped out of his hiding spot and growled.

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