Deirdre on the Bayou
Deirdre cast a cynical glance at
her friend Kayley. “Why should I do
something so silly?”
“It’s
not silly. You need some cheering up. I can tell how down you are.” Kayley looked at her over a sugar-coated
beignet and smiled encouragingly.
“It’s
nothing I can’t handle.” Deirdre wondered if she believed her own words. Would
she be able to handle this? Losing Lance? Losing the baby?
“Well,
come with me tonight to the bayou.” Kayley smiled broadly and took a sip of
coffee.
“What’s
happening at the bayou?” Deirdre clutched her own coffee, somehow hoping that
she could hold onto her sanity through the cup. Her knuckles were growing
white.
The
two young women sat at a coffee house in the Lower Garden District of New
Orleans. They had met while studying at
Loyola in New Orleans, and despite their different backgrounds, had become fast
friends. Kayley came from a local Creole
family who had readily embraced Deirdre with all the welcome the city could
offer. It was from Kayley’s family that
Deirdre learned about red beans and rice, Creole gumbo, and boiled crawfish.
She was invited to most family functions, and Mama Anita had taken Deirdre
under her wing upon learning that Deirdre’s mother had died when she was a
young child. To Deirdre, a product of
the very quaint area of Boston known as Beacon Hill, the family held all the
fascination of exotic birds. Her father was a self-made man, the product of
Irish immigrants, but after her mother’s death, he’d buried his grief in what
Deirdre had long believed was an import/export business. Now, even her father was out of reach, in
jail for his business activities. He
wasn’t simply importing but smuggling, and smuggling guns for the local Irish
mob. How could she have been so blind?
Still, the money had paid for her college education. She’d met Kayley’s family and then Lance,
handsome Lance. . .
“It’s
about you and Lance, isn’t it? You can tell me.” Kayley gazed at her with wide,
dark eyes. “Did the jerk break up with
you?” Her voice rose. “Does he hit you?”
Shush,
Kay!” Deirdre looked around at the other
patrons. Some customers had glanced
their way and quickly turned when noticed.
“No, of course not, but he’s just—just distant since I lost the baby.”
“What
kind of a man is he? That’s not your fault, and who is he to neglect you? He
could sure as hell lose a few pounds, and his complexion could use some
work. There you are with that red hair
and those green eyes.” Kayley shook her head, obviously mystified at the ways
of men.
This
time Deirdre almost laughed and choked on her coffee. Kayley with her café au
lait colored skin and Barbie figure epitomized perfection. Yes, Lance was a big
guy but muscular, not fat, and a dark beard hid any skin problems. How inferior most people must seem to Kayley!
“You still haven’t said what’s happening at the Bayou.”
“Summer
solstice, girl. St. John’s Day, cher!”
Kayley almost squealed. “The
voodoo priestess is going to baptize.”
Deirdre
felt a shiver snake up her spine. “I’m
Catholic, Kayley. This seems too weird.”
“Hell,
I’m Catholic, too. It’s not
anti-Catholic, my Northern friend. Marie
Laveau was a very good Catholic.” She took the last bite of beignet. “And a hairdresser by night. You can even bring
doughboy Lance with you.” Kayley gave an evil smile.
“He’s
in Houston visiting his family.” Deirdre suddenly felt lonely. When she’d met Lance her junior year, the
attraction had been instant. By senior
year, he had proposed, and with graduation, they saw no reason to avoid
pregnancy—even if it happened before the wedding. After all, they both had jobs—she working in
a marketing firm and he positioned at a law firm. They would be wed before the child came, and
what a blissful way to begin their lives together. After her mother’s death, Deirdre had loved
acting as surrogate mother to her younger brother; she’d wished God had granted
her more siblings.
“Perfect
that he’s gone. You come tonight with
me. You don’t even live far from Bayou
St. John. I’ll get you at seven. Bring
some offering for the altar.”
Deirdre
took a bite of the last beignet. Until
now, she’s resisted. Staring at Kayley,
she asked, “Like what?”
“Something
to represent Our Lady of Prompt Succor.
She’s important since Katrina. A
picture of Marie. If you want to hex Lance, a bear image.” Kayley shrugged. “Wine, too, of course, any
food. It’s a celebration.”
“You
mean a bear as in the animal?” Deirdre couldn’t help but laugh.
“That’s the one.”
“I
don’t believe in such stuff. Why am I
going?” Deirdre muttered under her breath as she and Kayley made their way from
the double shotgun she shared with Lance to the bayou. She wore a flowing white dress. Kayley had insisted upon white for the
occasion—and a white head scarf in case Deirdre chose baptism. It was after seven when they first saw the
celebrating voodoo practitioners. The
sun had begun to set, and the drumming grew louder as they approached. A picnic bench had been erected on the grass
surrounding the bayou. Candles held by the gathered congregants flickered in
the dying light. Nearly all were in white—the women in white dresses, the men
in white jeans. Some of the women wore scarves around their hair. The young man drumming was shirtless—his
brown skin and wavy black hair glistening with perspiration as he pounded conga
drums strapped around his shoulders. A
second bench rested under the shade of a live oak. Participants had spread treats onto it:
pastry cakes, fried chicken, bread, onion rings, and rice covered in red beans.
Apparently, there would be a communal feast after the ceremony. Deirdre and Kayley placed their offerings of
wine and block cheese on the table.
“Wow!
This is wild.” Deirdre squeezed Kayley’s arm and giggled. She had to admit that the atmosphere was
exciting and the people not what she had anticipated. She chided herself: Did you
think they would all look as if they came from Haiti? This crowd was a
mélange of college students, professionals, bohemians, and older people. Some merely seemed curious; they laughed
among themselves as the candles shook in their hands. Others seemed very serious—intently looking
at the far end of the bayou. They were a
multi-ethnic assortment of old, middle-aged, and young. Deirdre looked in the direction
indicated by the serious practitioners.
Suddenly, she gasped, “What the hell?”
Kayley
gave her a wry smile, lit her own candle, and then used it to light
Deirdre’s. “That raft is for the
priestess. She’s coming for the
ceremony.” She cast a sideways glance at
Deirdre and let out a laugh more like a cough.
“What did you think? That everyone here would be wearing bone earrings?”
Deirdre
put her tongue out at her friend.
“Honestly, I didn’t know what this would be like.” She scanned the crowd.
“Do these same people come all the time?”
“Some,
I guess. Hell, I don’t come all the
time, but you get your just curious people.” She indicated a tall woman with
ebony skin who swayed to the drumming.
“She’s always here. Some say
she’s praying for the soul of the baby she lost. Others say she’s praying for the destruction
of the baby’s daddy, the man who raped her.”
She pointed to a young man in a white shirt and slacks. “He’s an
anthropology professor. He’s just curious. Pisses me off, looks at us like a
bunch of animals to study.”
This
priestess was the biggest surprise of all.
Deirdre stared, wondering if her eyes had literally protruded from her
skull when she gazed at the woman. A
raft floated up the river. One muscular,
formidable Asian man who couldn’t have been more than twenty guided it to the
banks of the bayou. From there descended the priestess. Unlike her congregation, she was in purple
with elaborate gold jewelry and gold silk head scarf; however, this was no
practitioner from Haiti. Rather, this woman had skin as white as parchment and
eyes that contained gold specks in the midst of deep blue. In contrast, the few strands of hair visible
under her scarf were jet black, too black to be natural, Deirdre thought. She
was ethereal, seemingly not of this earth.
The oarsman helped her from the raft.
The crowd clapped. The
experienced practitioners began chanting in French, Kayley among them.
“What
are you saying to her?” Deirdre spoke to Kayley but observed the crowd.
“They’re
telling her to turn up the heat and feel the power.” Kayley’s gaze was fastened
on the priestess. Deirdre could tell she
was a true believer. Her eyes never left
the pale woman who descended from the raft with the help of her oarsman.
It
was then that Deirdre saw him, a young man bare to the waist wearing a skull
mask. He and some other men pushed a large cauldron beside the bench that would
serve as an altar for the night. He
helped the other men secure the cauldron and then turned his attention to the woman.
Deirdre noted how his muscles vibrated when he folded his arms and how his
jeans appeared painted on his thighs.
The vestiges of a light beard or goatee graced what little she could see
of his face. The eyes staring at her from behind the mask were blue with flecks
of brown, just like the woman. A relative? Her brother? Her son? The woman
seemed ageless. The man could be either
relative. Deirdre momentarily felt his gaze on her, but when she glanced in his
direction, his stare was on the woman in purple.
“What’s
her name?” Deirdre thought her whisper in Kayley’s ear sounded unnaturally
low.
“Dominique,
but who knows?” Kayley shrugged. “She
may want her privacy.”
Upon alighting
from the raft, the conjure woman concentrated on the bench, spreading a white
cloth over it handed to her by the handsome Asian man. Members of the assembly handed the voodoo
woman objects to be placed on the altar: tapered candles, a statue of Our Lady
of Prompt Succor, a statue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a crucifix, and then
an image of St. John. It was then that
the woman said, “Here was a man who always did right.”
The drumming had
subsided to a light tapping but rose as members of the congregation brought
offerings to the altar. Kayley removed
another bottle of wine from the satchel she carried and brought it forth. Others brought vases filled with roses or
carnations. Still others brought bread.
The voodooeine
commanded as she clapped her hands.
“Build a fire.”
The men assigned
to the task immediately lit sticks around the cauldron and then stepped
away. Again Deirdre felt the man stare
at her from behind his mask. He, with
other congregants, filled the cauldron with water. Then, with cries sounding like a combination
of keening and primal possession, others produced their more base
offerings. Someone tossed a snake into the
fire. The creature writhed as it
somersaulted through the air and into the pot.
Still another offered what looked like a dead possum. It, too, went into
the pot. The drumming intensified as participants added salt, peppers, and
other ingredients Deirdre knew from her grandmother’s kitchen.
The voodooeine began dancing, an undulating
motion as her skirts circled around her.
Deirdre felt the drum beat move through her senses. She, too, began to dance with Kayley. Suddenly, the man in the skull mask was at
her side, offering her wine. She took
it—something she would never do in any other social situation. Kayley drew her into the circle of people
surrounding the cauldron. The stars now
present in the sky lit her friend’s face, making her even more beautiful. The masked man was beside her suddenly,
holding his own wine as he circled Deirdre and Kayley. With one quick motion, he drew Deirdre to
him, his muscular arms encircling her as his hardening member caressed her
womanhood through the folds of her flowing dress.
The voodoo woman
returned to the raft. She cried out, “It’s
time for the water.”
Women removed
their scarves. Men let out war whoops
before diving in. The conjure woman slipped an arm around the first baptismal
candidate and removed the scarf covering the woman’s hair. She pushed the girl to her knees and pressed
her hair into the water. The girl then joined the voodoo woman in a dance, the
priestess moving as if in a rapture.
Deirdre
was in a rapture of her own. Death Mask
swirled around her; had she wanted to rid herself of his attention, she could
not. The transfixing eyes that stared at
her from behind the mask held her as if by magic. There was something familiar about him,
something she couldn’t quite verbalize, but he was mesmerizing. No way could
she fight his advances or the surreal feeling overwhelming her as he lifted her
off her feet and made his way to the water.
He moved slowly into the water and then released her until she was at
his side. The man with the conga drums
moved closer, circling around them as he beat a rhythm that invaded Deirdre’s
soul and every quivering fiber of her body.
His member burned near her skin as her skirts fanned over the water’s
surface. Removing the mask, he quickly
buried his face in the crescendo of her rising and falling breast before
letting his lips move to her neck, her arms, and then her lips. She barely saw his face, but somehow, her
dress was floating away, apart from her, and she could see his rising member
near her womanhood in the dark water. His tongue in her mouth was sweet. His body invading hers quickened her
pulse. She took deep breaths as waves of
pleasure cascaded through her body.
Suddenly, the scene swam—the practitioners, the rising moon, and the
swaying bodies of the dancers. Then,
only blackness.
“If you loved me
so much, you wouldn’t have been such a dick about leaving me.” Deirdre met
Lance in the same coffee shop where she and Kayley had discussed going to the
voodoo ceremony. She took a sip of coffee, trying to resist the urge to hurl it
at him.
“I only wanted to
clear my head, see my parents.” Lance stared at her over his cup.
“So you told your
little Texas mama about the baby.”
Deirdre knew her mockery irritated him and experienced a sadistic jolt
of pleasure. “Did she think I was a
disgrace and should be flogged for my sins? I’m sure, though, she’d spare
you. Men are always spared.”
“Well, she didn’t
lock me out of the house or put my clothes outside!” Lance had raised his
voice, and several other customers as well as the barista turned to stare. He lowered his voice. “What the fuck was that about? We didn’t
talk, Deirdre. You just threw me over.”
“What was I
supposed to think or do when you just left town, whimpering about needing to
think things over?” Deirdre put her cup down and crossed her arms. “You’re a piece of work, Lance.”
Lance reached
over, clutching her hand. “Look, I was
upset after the baby. I worried we were
rushing it, but a few days away helped me see that all I wanted was you.” He
turned an ingratiating smile on her.
“Let’s do it soon, get married, I mean.”
Deirdre looked
away, studying the bustling Uptown street.
A group of college students waited for a streetcar. An elderly man walked his dog. A young woman jogged on the neutral ground,
an IPod to her ear. The gorgeous oaks shaded the coffee shop where they
sat. Still, a chill ran through her
body. Swallowing, she said, “Are you
sure your mother wants to be tied to such a scarlet woman?”
“My mother likes
you. Besides, she’d love
grandchildren.” He drew her clenched
hand to his lips and kissed her palm. He
looked suddenly sad. “I hope one day we
can give our parents that.”
What should she
say? Deirdre had missed her monthly course, and such a phenomena had never
happened before. She looked down and
then met his gaze. She saw love there. “Your mother might have a chance at
grandchildren. You know I’m never late.”
Lance let out a
whoop that again made people stare, but this time, he sprang from his chair, clasped
her to him, and smothered her with a burning kiss. “We always wanted this. We were talking to
Fr. McGraw about marrying us. He’ll do
it fast now.”
Deirdre wanted to
tell him the whole truth, about the bayou, about the mysterious woman, and
about her indiscretion with the unknown man.
But why? She remembered little of that night—only waking in Kayley’s
house the next day. Had she really drunk
so much? She didn’t think so, only a glass of wine, but she did remember the
intoxicating effect of the man’s kisses on her lips. No one had ever made love
to her as he had. That she remembered
and then shedding her clothes. She’d
appreciated his advances. Lance’s rejection had stung; she needed soothing that
night.
“Besides, this
will prove them wrong.” Lance’s voice echoed from what sounded like a
tunnel.
Deirdre looked at
him. “What do you mean?”
Lance indicated
the other customers, who all seemed interested in their conversation. Two little gray-haired ladies watched with
undisguised interest. One adjusted her hearing aide. Slipping an arm
around her waist, he guided her into the street. “When I was back home, I was tested. The
doctors said the baby possibly didn’t survive because my sperm count is weak,
but here we are, having another baby.” The shade of an oak cast a shadow over
his face. “See, my sperm can’t be too weak.”
Deirdre
said nothing but kissed him. She
couldn’t tell him, no, not ever. All her
hurt vanished, and her love was ignited anew. She returned his smoldering
kisses.
One week later, Deirdre
followed the nurse into the doctor’s office. She now was experiencing definite signs of
pregnancy. Her previous doctor had
retired, and Kayley had recommended a new doctor. Deirdre stripped of her clothing and covered
herself with a white sheet. As she sat on the examining table of the pristine
office not far from Oschner Baptist, Deirdre noted a small painting on the
wall. It showed a scene very much like
the one on the bayou—a woman on a raft, floating up the bayou. Stepping down
from the table and drawing closer, she studied the face of the woman. Surely
she looked just like the conjure woman who had so fascinated Deirdre, but this
scene evoked images of a long-ago New Orleans, one similar to the time of Marie
Laveau. The door swung open; a tall
woman with jet-black hair and porcelain skin advanced toward her, holding out a
hand. “I’m Dr. Baptiste. You must be
Deirdre.”
Deirdre could do
nothing but stare. “Do I know you?”
The doctor looked
at her chart, at Deirdre, and then smiled slightly. “I don’t think so. You are a new patient, right?”
“Ye--yes, that’s
right.” Deirdre stammered slightly and looked around, confused. The woman’s eyes were the same cornflower
blue with wisps of grain that defined the as the conjure woman, but if she recognized
Deirdre, she didn’t let on. Deirdre
found her voice, forcing herself to keep her emotions in check. Well, she didn’t know what her feelings were,
anyway. Should she be afraid? Feel used?
Violated? She indicated the painting.
“That’s a really lovely painting.”
Was it lovely, she wondered?
“Some say that’s
Marie.” The doctor shrugged. “I just
liked the way it looked in the neighborhood flea market.”
Deirdre looked at
her quickly. “Do you think it’s Marie?”
“Some say she
lives on in descendents.” Then, the doctor became very business-like, ordering
her onto the table and beginning the examination.
Deirdre
emerged less than a half hour later with a prescription for neo-natal
vitamins. As she opened the door, she
almost ran into a man in a white doctor’s coat, obviously one of the doctor’s
partners. She hurriedly excused herself
and brushed past him, but something told her to look back. She briefly caught his stare. The eyes were the same blue/golden of her
lover at the bayou. No, it’s my imagination, she thought as she headed to her
car.
Eight months
later, Deirdre’s daughter was born. Dr.
Baptiste, smiling benevolently, waited for Lance to cut the cord before placing
the baby, bloody and wailing, on Deirdre’s chest. The child was tiny but perfect, and when the
child opened her eyes, they were blue with golden flecks.