It started with a text.
Hey there was just a bad earthquake in Haiti, is Mami Marie OK?
I was in the car that afternoon, waiting for my downstairs neighbor to come out of the appointment I’d driven her to. One of my initiate daughters, ti-Marie, pinged me with the text. Immediately I phoned my Vodou mother, Mambo Marie; I knew that she had returned from her trip to see the family in Port-au-Prince only a few hours before. I managed to catch her.
“I’ll call,” she said. “I’ll call you back.”
I turned on the car, and the radio news.
None of the news was good. A massive, shallow earthquake had hit near Leogane, right before dinnertime. The only thing the reporters seemed to know was that the airport was “damaged” and that there were reports that the cathedral – and the palace – The Palace? – had fallen down.
That was when the panic set in. The family lakou is in a neighborhood very close to the Palace. And if that big, fancy, well-built thing had fallen down…
My neighbor came out of the building. I drove home, went upstairs to the apartment I had two floors above hers, grabbed both my phones, and started making calls.