Island Beneath the Sea

Island Beneath the Sea by Isabel Allende Page A

Book: Island Beneath the Sea by Isabel Allende Read Free Book Online
Authors: Isabel Allende
Tags: Fiction, General
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would return, limping, exhausted, with her herbal pouch filled. Tante Rose and Tété escaped Cambray’s authority because he believed that the healer would turn him into a zombie,and Tété was the personal slave of the mistress, indispensable in the big house. “No one watches you, marraine ,” Tété commented one day. “Why don’t you run away?” “How would I run with my bad leg? And what would become of the people who need my care? Besides, it doesn’t mean anything for me to be free and everyone else slaves,” the healer answered. Tété hadn’t thought of that, and it kept buzzing around her brain like a bottlefly. She talked about it with her godmother many times, but she was never able to accept the idea that her freedom was irreparably bound to that of the other slaves. If she could escape she would do it without a thought for those left behind, she was sure of that. After her searches, Tante Rose would call her to her cabin, and they would close the door and make the remedies that required precise preparation, proper rituals, and nature’s fresh greenery. Witchcraft, Cambray said, that’s what those two women are up to; nothing he couldn’t resolve with a good lashing. But he didn’t dare touch them.
    One day Dr. Parmentier spent the hottest hours of the afternoon sunk in the lethargy of the siesta, and then went to visit Tante Rose to find out if she had a cure for a centipede bite. As Eugenia was tranquil and watched by another slave, he asked Tété to go with him. They found the healer sitting in a wicker chair before the door of her cabin, which had been slightly damaged by recent storms, singing in some African tongue as she removed the leaves from a dried branch and placed them on a cloth, so absorbed in the task that she did not see them until they were right before her. She started to get up, but Parmentier stopped her. As he wiped the sweat from his forehead and neck with a handkerchief the healer offered him water he would find inside. Her cabin was larger than it looked from outside, very orderly, everything in a specific place, dark and cool. The furniture was splendid compared with that of other slaves: a board table, a badly chipped Dutch armoire, a rusted tin trunk, several boxes Valmorain had provided her to keep remedies in, and a collection of little clay pots for preparing her brews. A pile of dried leaves and straw covered with a checked cloth and thin coverlet, served her asbed. From the palm ceiling hung branches, bunches of herbs, dried reptiles, feathers, strings of beads, seeds, shells, and other things needed for her science. The doctor swallowed two long drinks from a gourd, waited a couple of minutes to catch his breath, and when he felt better went to take a closer look at the altar, where there were offerings for the loas : paper flowers, slices of sweet potato, a thimble of water, and tobacco. He knew that the cross was not Christian, it represented crossroads, but he had no doubt that the painted plaster statue was the Virgin Mary. Tété explained to him that she herself had given it to her godmother, it was a gift from the mistress. “But I like Erzulie best, and my Tante Rose does too,” she added. The physician started to pick up the sacred voodoo asson , a gourd painted with symbols, mounted on a stick, decorated with beads and filled with the little bones of a newborn child, but he stopped in time. No one should touch it without its owner’s permission. “This confirms what I have heard. Tante Rose is a priestess, a mambo ,” he commented. The asson is usually in the power of the houngan , but in Saint-Lazare there was no houngan , and it was Tante Rose who conducted the ceremonies. The physician drank more water and dampened his handkerchief and tied it around his neck before he stepped back out into the heat. Tante Rose did not look up from her meticulous labors, and neither

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