In the wake of terror along the gulf coast espeically in New Orleans I had to write. What better way to recall my past in New Orleans, and wish I was there now, out on Bourbon, than to write about it. A great city full of haunted tales and beautiful old buildings and historical sites, I just had to write.
For those not lucky enough to have been to NO I write now, in despair I might add, about the city I love. I have always been especially interested in the Voodoo religion, and always had this story in the back of my head. You might not follow since it's very short, but it still flows out of me like it has been, then maybe just maybe I'll keept writing to expand on this new yet old plot of mine.!!!
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Professor Jonathan Walker leaned up against a rusty pole at the corner of Bourbon and St. Anne Street. Out of his gray suit pocket, he used his white hanky to wipe his forehead and cheeks of what looked like fresh tomatoes after being sprayed with misty water in the produce department. The slight sound of a C soprano sax belted out in deep blue tones it’s a wonderful world; Ah, the sights and sounds of old New Orleans. It sure was good being back.
He pulled his top hat down a notch and saved up his hanky. As he continued his walk down Bourbon, he threw a few coins to the young boys tap dancing on the sidewalk with coke bottle caps pressed underneath the soles of their shoes. He nodded to the tourists who were pointing their index fingers at the balconies of old buildings and taking pictures of men wearing masks holding cans of Budweiser yelling, “Show me your tits and I’ll throw you a bead.” Even thought Mardi Gras wouldn’t be around for months, visitors, and citizens alike, keep the tradition of show me your tits and you’ll get a bead going year round. He laughed to himself and remembered his first Mardi Gras in New Orleans. It was cleaner back then. Cops would actually make arrests for such crude behavior, but having seen what he’d seen over the past twenty years in New York, Professor Walker had finally, though he never thought it would happen, became immune to this behavior, and now actually thought it quite funny.
The crowds were winding down. Groups of partygoers carried friends, who were to drunk to walk, back to their hotel rooms. Shops and bars were putting lights out, and the police presence dwindled to practically none. Homeless families disappeared behind shields of darkness inside littered alleyways. Some stood up and stretched, emptied their pockets, put their will work for food or money signs away, and counted their earnings for the night. Nighttime on Bourbon Street was like no other. If never experienced one would never know. It felt almost too good to be back home; Professor Walker’s wrinkled face carried a perpetual smile.
Turning left at the corner of Bourbon and St. Philip a woman dressed in a black robe ran straight into him. The weight of his large frame knocked her from her feet.
“Sorry, excuse me ma’am.” He held out his hand for her to grab and helped her up to her feet. When her eyes met his, they bulged out of her bony face, and her dark pupils changed their shape from round to that of bones, from black to white. Startled, he blinked and took his hand back from the woman’s with the changing eyes, and ran for a block up St. Philip’s without stopping or looking back. When he reached Dauphine Street, he slumped over holding his upper body with his hands against his knees. Out of breath and tired from the long flight, he thought about not even finishing his walk to Louis Armstrong Park and returning to his hotel room. But I have to go there tonight, I have to, he thought.
Before he could stand straight up again, his arms flared out from his side, he rocked back onto the heels of his feet, trying to balance himself so as not to fall. But the pain from the middle of his back near his spine was too intense. After trying to hold his large frame up for nearly seconds, he fell backwards on the pavement. He tried yelling for help, but the words wouldn’t come out. There she stood dressed in white this time, smiling.
“Rest in peace professor man, and may Bondye be with you.”
For those not lucky enough to have been to NO I write now, in despair I might add, about the city I love. I have always been especially interested in the Voodoo religion, and always had this story in the back of my head. You might not follow since it's very short, but it still flows out of me like it has been, then maybe just maybe I'll keept writing to expand on this new yet old plot of mine.!!!
*********************************
Professor Jonathan Walker leaned up against a rusty pole at the corner of Bourbon and St. Anne Street. Out of his gray suit pocket, he used his white hanky to wipe his forehead and cheeks of what looked like fresh tomatoes after being sprayed with misty water in the produce department. The slight sound of a C soprano sax belted out in deep blue tones it’s a wonderful world; Ah, the sights and sounds of old New Orleans. It sure was good being back.
He pulled his top hat down a notch and saved up his hanky. As he continued his walk down Bourbon, he threw a few coins to the young boys tap dancing on the sidewalk with coke bottle caps pressed underneath the soles of their shoes. He nodded to the tourists who were pointing their index fingers at the balconies of old buildings and taking pictures of men wearing masks holding cans of Budweiser yelling, “Show me your tits and I’ll throw you a bead.” Even thought Mardi Gras wouldn’t be around for months, visitors, and citizens alike, keep the tradition of show me your tits and you’ll get a bead going year round. He laughed to himself and remembered his first Mardi Gras in New Orleans. It was cleaner back then. Cops would actually make arrests for such crude behavior, but having seen what he’d seen over the past twenty years in New York, Professor Walker had finally, though he never thought it would happen, became immune to this behavior, and now actually thought it quite funny.
The crowds were winding down. Groups of partygoers carried friends, who were to drunk to walk, back to their hotel rooms. Shops and bars were putting lights out, and the police presence dwindled to practically none. Homeless families disappeared behind shields of darkness inside littered alleyways. Some stood up and stretched, emptied their pockets, put their will work for food or money signs away, and counted their earnings for the night. Nighttime on Bourbon Street was like no other. If never experienced one would never know. It felt almost too good to be back home; Professor Walker’s wrinkled face carried a perpetual smile.
Turning left at the corner of Bourbon and St. Philip a woman dressed in a black robe ran straight into him. The weight of his large frame knocked her from her feet.
“Sorry, excuse me ma’am.” He held out his hand for her to grab and helped her up to her feet. When her eyes met his, they bulged out of her bony face, and her dark pupils changed their shape from round to that of bones, from black to white. Startled, he blinked and took his hand back from the woman’s with the changing eyes, and ran for a block up St. Philip’s without stopping or looking back. When he reached Dauphine Street, he slumped over holding his upper body with his hands against his knees. Out of breath and tired from the long flight, he thought about not even finishing his walk to Louis Armstrong Park and returning to his hotel room. But I have to go there tonight, I have to, he thought.
Before he could stand straight up again, his arms flared out from his side, he rocked back onto the heels of his feet, trying to balance himself so as not to fall. But the pain from the middle of his back near his spine was too intense. After trying to hold his large frame up for nearly seconds, he fell backwards on the pavement. He tried yelling for help, but the words wouldn’t come out. There she stood dressed in white this time, smiling.
“Rest in peace professor man, and may Bondye be with you.”