Root lay back in the chair, her eyes closed, the bristles on her chin aimed at the ceiling.
“Never saw one so big.” Dashay held the bag by its top edge. “Never had to work so hard to get one out.”
“Get it out of here,” Mãe said.
While Dashay disposed of the sasa outside, Mãe and I looked at each other. We felt exhausted.
I pointed at Root. “What are we going to do with her?”
My mother took a deep breath. “We’re going to wait until she opens her eyes. Then, we’re going to hypnotize her.”
Her demon gone, Root wasn’t hard to put under. The lingering effects of the sedative helped.
Dashay returned, after washing her hands for five minutes. She sat next to me, and we watched Mãe interrogate Root.
“Why did you do it?” Her voice was low and even. “Why did you try to kill Raphael?”
“I never tried to kill him.” Root’s eyes were open wide now, but they had a dazed expression. For a moment I thought of Old Joe, and I wondered where he might be now.
Mãe consulted the list of questions we’d written out moments before. “Did you ask Dennis to start the fire at Xanadu?”
“Xanadu.” She sighed. “Dennis set the canister in the wrong place. I told him where to put it. He set the fire in the kitchen instead. Stupid.”
“Where was he supposed to put it?”
“In the doorway of the child’s room.” She said it without any emotion.
Dashay reached for my hand.
“So the fire was meant to kill Ariella?” My mother’s voice sounded strained, as if she were struggling to keep it calm.
“Of course. You can’t think it was meant for Raphael?” Root’s face seemed to lose shape, suddenly; it spread into sadness. “I didn’t aim to hurt Raphael. I was after his attention. It was high time! All those years I worked with him, and he considered me like a—like an appliance. Something he used to produce the results he wanted.”
Mãe glanced back at us, shook her head, then turned to Root again.
“So you made Dennis start a fire to get Raphael’s attention?” she asked.
“And to kill the child. A half-breed shouldn’t have survived a fire like that, and she wouldn’t have, if it had been set properly. I should have done it myself.” Root nodded vigorously. “I should have known better than to count on Dennis. All he cared about was becoming a vampire. He never paid attention to details.”
“That was the deal?” Mãe sounded authoritative again. “Dennis would become a vampire?”
“I said I’d make him a vampire.”
So she was one of us, I thought.
“But he botched it. I told him that, once we left the unit. ‘All deals are off,’ I told him, and you should have seen him then!” She grinned. Without question, she was the ugliest person I’d ever seen.
“As for Raphael, I gave him just enough quinine to make him realize he needed new tonic, that he needed me around to make it. I hadn’t seen him in months. No one told me how ill he was. I kept asking. Finally, Dashay told me he was here.”
Dashay was thinking that she should have kept her mouth shut. But I disagreed. If she had, we’d likely never have found out about Root’s sasa and her obsession with my father. Were they linked?
“So I drove up yesterday. And he didn’t seem too bad. He talked, and he looked as if he were on the mend.” Her eyes moved slowly from side to side as she talked, as if she were watching a metronome or a Ping-Pong match.
“Yes, he did look better.” Mãe’s voice was so low I could barely hear it. “Mary Ellis, did you do something to him?”
“I gave him a shot.”
We all stared at her.
“You gave him an injection?” Mãe’s voice sounded hoarse. “What was in the shot?”
“A little quinine,” Root said. “Not enough to do him real harm. Just enough to keep him still, enough to make him realize how much he needs me. In a few days I’ll bring him back again. I’ll save his life.” She nodded, sure of her plan.
Mãe turned to us. “Dashay,” she whispered. “Call Dr. Cho. Tell her we need her now.”
When Dashay had left the room, Mãe said to me, “Anything else?”
“Ask about the V drug,” I whispered.
She looked down at her list. “Mary Ellis, Ariella gave you a pill to analyze, a pill called Vallanium. What’s in the pill?”
“Vallanium is an addictive depressant, a semisynthetic opiate.” Her voice was crisp, as if she were reciting from memory. “It has the potential to permanently alter brain structure. Two capsules daily create a mild euphoria, but over time the drug disrupts normal brain activities. It renders users incapable of reading or logical analysis. Cessation of use causes severe withdrawal symptoms.”
I thought of Walker, and I shivered.
“You seem to know a lot about it,” Mãe said.
“I should.” Root looked pleased. “I helped develop that drug. We sold the patent to a group in Miami.”
“Ask her about Amrita,” I whispered.
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