The witch of New Orleans
came w
h Quarter in a silence so dense it muffled even the call of the night herons. Gas lamps flickered, t
ng halt. Its driver-a man with cataract eyes and a stitched mouth-said nothing. The hor
swung open
woman stepped out-tall, robed in black velvet that shimmered like raven feathers. Her skin was p
ellerose h
ey had burned her
they had slaught
ad whispered "witch" a
d returned, curling thro
flickered in devotion to saints who would not answer. Children were pulled
ng with moss and rot. Ivy choked the iron railings. The fountain in the cour
hand touched the faded sigil carved in
ed, voice smooth and thick
wasn't wind-it was breat
door closed behind her with
f long-dead Belleroses stared down at her, their painted eyes cloudy with time. One had been slashed across the
s flickered to life as she passed-unlit for years, they awakened at her presence. Mag
nded into
wall. A circle had been carved into the floor-old, older tha
e k
l crusted with blood from a past too recent to forget. She drew the blade
sed. The stone b
crets. I offer pain for power. V
en-whispers. Not in her ears, but in
voice rasped, in a
yal. Blood of fire.
y. "Then you remem
h to unma
o make the
glowed red-hot, and from its center, black vines burst upward, twisting, writhing, forming
ng bowed
let it
oody palm clo
own rosary beads. A socialite's throat split open in the mirror as she
eans was
witch had