Spirits of Haitian Vodou and Louisiana Voodoo.
Short play before main play in Spanish Baroque theater.
1Resuming our journey on a warm, sunny day, we entered Chiang-loa at noon.
2They feed the loa and make the best of it.
3Use it and drive the loa out of Fun Faire.
4Migrating into Haitian Voodoo he becomes a loa of thunder.
5Papa Legba in voodoo magic is the loa of crossroads.
6Partly because the loa will cause havoc looking for him.
7And all the bounty hunters screamed, as the possessing loa were forced out of them.
8Also loa of sex, known for his coarse apetites.
9All Souls' Day, Baron Samedi, loa of the dead.
10Baron Samedi, loa of the dead, stands at crossroads.
11So back we went, to face the loa again.
12Haitian Voodoo loa and African Yoruba god of power, especially power derived from ancestors and lineage.
13A god of gods, lord of the loa.
14The bounty hunters collapsed again as the loa left them, returning at last to their own world.
15Why didn't the loa come after me?
16Inevitably, Max became greedy and overstretched himself, spread his control too thin; and the loa broke loose.