Mississippi Mon Amour
by Jean-Gérald Charbonneau
I almost punched the bartender at the Tally
Lounge when he wouldn’t give me one more drink.
"Last call was ten minutes ago," he barked. A
vein bulged in the middle of his forehead.
I wanted to climb over the counter, but Celeste
put a hand on my arm and said, "Let’s go to your place,
Marcel. Allons."
She wasn’t beautiful, not according to the
canons, but there was something captivating about her
features. A hardness, a kind of violence. In time, I
probably would have grown tired of that face. Maybe I
even would have hated it. But in those days I couldn’t
get enough of her.
I was in Mississippi on a one-year contract,
teaching a graduate course in Francophone literature.
Celeste was a student of mine. She came from a small
Cajun town outside Baton Rouge and spoke a little
French, with the odd accent from the bayou. That was
part of the attraction.
Celeste teetered in the parking lot. We’d been
drinking—Bloody Marys for her, whiskeys for me. A few
beers, too. Her car was one of the three still there.
We were among the very few valiant drunks in town who
would stay up so late on a Wednesday night. Or so I
thought.
"Sure you can drive?" I asked.
She broke into giggles.
"All right then," I said. "Give me the keys.
Come on, let’s have them."
She reached inside her jean pocket—she wasn’t
one to carry a purse—and tossed them my way. They hit
my hand and fell to the pavement. She laughed again.
So did I. She waited for me to unlock the door of her
banged-up Plymouth, which had taken us all over the Deep
South in recent weeks—Jackson, Mobile, New Orleans. In
the car we held hands.
"How are you doing?"
"Fatiguée," Celeste said.
She did look like she was about to fall asleep.
I reached for her hair. She turned her head so my
fingers pressed against her cheek.
As soon as we’d stepped out of the bar I’d begun
to sweat, and my glasses slid down the bridge of my
nose. The late afternoon rainstorm had been no help.
"It’s usually not that hot this time of year," Celeste
had said earlier. "This is almost like summer."
The air was alien, vicious. It almost made me long for
Montreal winters. I turned on the air conditioner.
"D’you have anything to drink at your house?"
"A bottle of Jack. Maybe a bit of vodka."
She frowned. "We should stop and get some beer."
"We better hurry then."
* * *
I was taking a chance going 50 in a 30 MPH
zone. I would have flunked a Breathalyzer if a cop had
pulled us over. But I wanted to make sure Celeste got
her beer. I managed to drive straight enough.
Celeste had somehow smuggled a Bud out of the
bar. She opened the bottle using her seatbelt buckle,
had a few sips, and handed it to me.
I was parched. "You never cease to amaze me,
chère."
I said chère the way the Cajuns do, with a
slight English inflection.
She smiled.
"A Fine Romance" was playing on the radio.
"I love Billie Holiday," Celeste said.
"So do I."
Celeste turned up the volume. She lit a
cigarette and pulled out the ashtray. It was full of
butts. We listened to the music until we got to the
store. It was closed.
"Shit," Celeste said.
Some of the lights were still on, out back. I
ran to the door and knocked on the glass. An old man
came up and grimaced, displaying rotten teeth. His hair
was grimy, and tattoos smeared his forearms.
"Please, sir," I shouted through the glass. "I
just need a few beers."
"Cain’t do it. Y’all are too late."
"But it’s not quite two yet." I showed him my
watch.
He flashed his blackened teeth again and pulled
the shade down.
I slapped the door. "Hey!"
The old man pushed the shade aside and glared at
me. It occurred to me that he probably had a rifle in
there, and I went back to the car.
"No luck?"
I removed my glasses and wiped my forearm across
my brow. "Vieux sacrament."
"What happened?"
"Son of a bitch wouldn’t open the door. What do
they all have against me tonight?"
Celeste lit another cigarette. "So, what d’you
want to do?" she asked. "I’m getting a second wind."
"Everything is closed now."
She took a long drag. The swirling smoke spread
out against the windshield.
"You’re wrong, professeur," she said. "There is a place
we can go, not far from here. And you’ve never been in
a joint like this, I’m sure. Let me drive."
* * *
Outside town we took a gravel road that cut
through clusters of trailers and abandoned shotgun
houses, some of them roofless. The road turned into a
rutted dirt path, and Celeste had to slow down as the
Plymouth skidded in the mud. She kept silent,
concentrating on the corridor created by the
headlights. A weak quarter-moon was out. When a patch
of clouds hid it, I couldn’t see a thing around us
except for the white blanket on both sides of the road.
It looked like snow. I wondered if I was hallucinating,
until I realized it was cotton, blown there by the wind
from the surrounding fields.
We stopped in front of a small wooden building
that would have seemed deserted if not for the cars and
pickup trucks parked in the lot. In the faint light
over the door I could barely make out the words UNCLE
GUS’S. As we stepped from the Plymouth, something
jumped out of an overturned garbage can and scurried
off, startling me.
Celeste took my hand as if I were six years
old.
"It’s only a possum."
"Where are we anyway? I’ve never heard of this
place."
"Of course not. An old boyfriend used to take
me once in a while. A local boy."
Celeste peered at me over her shoulder while walking
toward the entrance. "Allons-y," she said.
The red mud in the parking lot sucked on our shoes.
Celeste didn’t seem to mind. She walked into the bar like she were right at home.
"Hey y’all!"
The bartender growled a few syllables. A Rebel
flag hung behind the bar, and on the walls were four
mounted black bear heads, a poster of the Sons of
Confederate Veterans, and a king-sized picture of Miss
Glamorata. Behind the bartender, amidst bottles, was a
TV set tuned to the Weather Channel. Patrons sat along
the bar and at the few tables near the entrance. In
back were two battered pool tables, the obligatory
pinball machine, and a jukebox spewing loud country
rock. Fans operating at full blast stood on opposite
ends of the room. There was no rear exit, just two
doors at the back with the words "Buck" and "Doe."
Uncle Gus was difficult to miss. He had a huge
face with inflated lips, a flat nose, and the eyes of a
lizard. His wavy hair was shoulder-length in the back,
short at the front. He sat at the far end of the
counter on a pseudo-Louis XIV armchair—King Gus
presiding over his people.
Celeste and I walked to a table toward the back,
twenty pairs of eyes glued to us. We took our seats.
The
only person behind us, apart from the pool players, was
an old man sitting with elbows on knees, his face buried
in his hands, showing a crown of tangled, gray hair.
Nobody paid any attention to him, as if he were an ugly
piece of furniture forgotten in the corner.
"Fancy establishment," I muttered.
Celeste grinned. "Thought you’d like it,
professeur."
I leaned toward Celeste and said, "I suspect the
rednecks might not be crazy about me being here."
"Just make sure you have a heavy French accent
when you speak. That way they won’t think you’re from
Boston or something."
I laughed, though I couldn’t tell whether or not
she was kidding.
Uncle Gus rose from his throne and came over.
He wiped the surface of our table, exhibiting the
diamond-studded ring jammed on his fat pinky. He wore a
pink shirt and Bermuda shorts, exposing skinny legs I
thought might snap under the weight of his gargantuan
stomach.
"Celeste. Long time." He had a lisp and a high
voice.
"Hi Gus," Celeste said. "This is my friend,
Marcel."
Uncle Gus shook my hand. "What can I get
y’all?" he said. "We got beer, but you might be
interested in our house special."
I turned to Celeste.
"Gus’s moonshine is the best in the county."
"The house special it is, then."
"Comin’ right up." Uncle Gus headed for the bar.
Around us, the patrons had resumed their
conversations and pool playing.
"How come you’ve never taken me here before?" I
said.
"I didn’t think it was your kind of hangout."
"Actually, it reminds me of a bar in Montreal I
used to go to when I was a student, a beautiful dump a
bit like this one. God, that was a long time ago."
"Uh-oh," Celeste said. "Don’t you go nostalgic
on me."
I forced a smile.
"So," she said, "you still haven’t answered my
question from earlier tonight."
I blinked. "I don’t know—"
"Are you going to stay down here after this year or not?"
"I haven’t really thought about it. Depends. I
think I know what I’m trying to get away from, but I
have no clue what I’m looking for."
Celeste gave me an annoyed stare, and I couldn’t
really blame her.
Fortunately, Uncle Gus arrived with a bottle and three
shot glasses. He poured the clear liquid and raised his
glass.
"Another one the Yankees won’t get," he said.
"Santé," I said.
I brought my hand to my throat as soon as I
swallowed. Uncle Gus and Celeste burst out laughing.
"Here." Uncle Gus plopped a beer in front of
me. "Chase it down with this."
I drank a third of the bottle.
"You thought that was funny?" I managed to say.
"Don’t take it badly," Celeste said. "You
should’ve seen your face." She laughed again.
Uncle Gus patted my shoulder and headed back to
his chair, leaving the bottle on the table. He, too,
was still laughing.
I inspected the moonshine. "What is this
anyway?"
"Pretty potent, n’est-ce-pas?"
Celeste filled our glasses again. I’d seen her
drink and smoke for hours on end and still muster the
necessary energy to keep on going in her quest for
absolute intoxication. I usually went right along, but
I’d had enough of the moonshine for now. I stuck to my
beer, not saying a word. The television set behind the
bar was showing clips of a snowstorm hitting the eastern
seaboard, from D.C. all the way up to Montreal.
"Marcel," Celeste said, "looks like you’re a
million miles away."
Then she glanced at the TV. The meteorologist was
pointing at a map of New England and Eastern Canada.
"Actually," she said, "more like two thousand."
I shrugged.
She pointed at my left hand. "You took off your
ring."
"I thought it was the right thing to do," I said.
"The right thing?"
"Well. You know—"
Celeste snickered and lit a cigarette.
I didn’t add anything. Had I opened my mouth I
would have had to say how I felt, but I always was
better at expressing what I didn’t feel, and I didn’t
want to do that right now. I took another swig of
moonshine and shook my head as the liquid burned
everything on its way down my throat.
"You want to dance with me, Marcel?" she asked.
"Come on, let’s have some fun."
I led her to the jukebox and we did a kind of
crazy tango to a Patsy Cline tune. Celeste was laughing
and everyone in the bar was staring at us and I didn’t
care. Uncle Gus’s concoction had a wonderful brain-
numbing quality.
"Merci," she said after the song ended.
In my Cajun accent I said, "C’est mon plaisir,
chère."
"Smart-ass," Celeste said and slapped my arm.
I pointed at the back of the bar. "I need to go
to the little buck’s room."
The restroom walls were covered with graffiti,
and someone had torn off the paper towel dispenser.
There was no mirror over the sink; rusty water dribbled
out of the tap. The floor was a muck of urine, spit,
vomit, mud, cigarette butts. The lone stall was without
a door. The urinal: a long aluminum cow manger filled
with ice. I positioned myself in front of it, hoping no
one would come in. Someone did as soon as I started to
relieve myself. The man was sixty or so. He wore an
elegant beige suit. He staggered over to the sink and
splashed some water on his face. Then he leaned against
the wall and watched me piss, as if I were some animal
in a zoo. I shot him a look. No reaction. He was
gangly, with deep lines in his cheeks and neck. He
slurred a few words that were lost on me. I ignored him
and zipped up. Then I heard, "Better be careful." And
he laughed a short asthmatic laugh.
When I came out, Celeste wasn’t there. My heart
skipped a beat. Then I saw her, standing by the pool
table, smiling.
"Want to play, professeur?"
"Sure."
"You won’t mind the humiliation?"
I guffawed. "I must warn you, I’m pretty good
at this."
"We’ll see."
We flipped a coin for the break, and I won. Two
stripes found their way into pockets.
"Nice," Celeste said.
I sank another one and then missed a long shot.
Celeste approached the table. "Aha, my turn."
I showed her the way with an outstretched arm.
She almost emptied the table, using every
technique in the book: plain strokes, top strokes,
screw backs, combinations. Balls clacked on the felt
and found their way into the pockets as if guided by a
laser beam. While she played she told me her dad had a
pool table in the house when she was a kid. Then she
sent the cue ball on a wild spin, and the last ball
ricocheted off the side of the pocket.
"Jésus-Marie," I said. "I didn’t know I was
playing against Louisiana Fats."
"Watch out, buddy-boy," she said. "No jokes
about my obesity."
Celeste grinned; she weighed about one hundred
and two pounds.
I took my turn again and sank the first of the
four balls I had left. As I leaned over the table to
try the next one, a loud voice called behind me, "The
fuck you think you are, boy? That’s my table."
It was the old guy who’d been sitting alone in
the back of the bar. Only he was wide awake now and
walked straight at me, armed with a cue. He brought it
down like an executioner’s ax. The stick snapped in two
as it hit my raised arm. I crouched on the floor. I
thought my arm was broken.
"The fuck you doin’ here, boy?" the man
screamed. He tried to kick me.
Some of the patrons were shouting; I wasn’t sure
whether they were urging him on or telling him to stop.
Uncle Gus rushed over. "Enough, Roy," he
yelled, and pushed the old guy away from me. Then he
turned to Celeste. "Get your buddy out of here. Now."
* * *
We didn’t say a word on the way back. The only
sound in the Plymouth was the heavy sighing of the air
conditioner. I shut my eyes. I thought I was going to
vomit, but it passed. Celeste parked in front of the
house the university had provided for me. She didn’t
turn the engine off.
"I’m sorry. About everything."
"Don’t. It’s all right."
"I never should’ve brought you there," she said.
I looked at her and had the fleeting impression
that she had taken me to Uncle Gus’s, knowing something
was going to happen. To punish me.
I shrugged and said, "You want to come in?"
"No. I have a nine o’clock class. I’ll try to
sleep a bit before."
I checked my watch; the sun would be up soon. I
thanked God I didn’t have to teach until the afternoon.
I took off my glasses and massaged my eyes. Thousands
of little guillotines were at work in my brain.
"I should be going."
Her voice startled me, though it was soft.
"You sure? I could make some coffee," I offered
feebly.
"No. I really should go."
"OK, then. A plus tard."
She smiled. Celeste’s smiles always varied—
glowing, angelic, worried. This time it was sad.
We kissed, a brush of the lips. I got out of
the car. She waved and drove off.
The area under my elbow where the cue had hit was
swollen and throbbing and taking a bluish tint.
* * *
There was a glass on the porch floor by the
rattan chair. While waiting for Celeste to pick me up
at the beginning of the evening I’d given myself a bit
of a head start with a couple of whiskeys. Now two
enormous roaches were floating in the gold-colored
liquid. At least they died happy, I thought, and
chuckled to myself. I threw the contents of the glass
away. It was pitch-black out and the air was filled
with the smell of rotting vegetation.
Vomit gushed up my throat, and I leaned over the
rail. I remained there, drenched with sweat. Then I
collapsed into the chair and used the sleeve of my shirt
to wipe my face. All around crickets screeched in an
intolerable crescendo. The fury would calm down for a
few seconds, then start all over again, each time
louder. It was as if the night were speaking in a
language I couldn’t understand.
I walked into the house and headed straight for
the bedroom. The red light of the answering machine was
blinking intently in the dark.
The messages were from my wife; I had no doubt
of that.
I sat on the edge of the bed and pressed the
heels of my hands against my eyes and said out loud,
"Mais qu’est-ce que tu fous ici?"—What the fuck are you
doing here?
I picked up the phone, but put it back in its
cradle as again I felt a rush of nausea. I ran to the
bathroom and threw up until all that came out was yellow
bile. I got undressed, turned on the shower and lay
down in the tub. The cool water crashed down on my
body. It stung my skin, but for a moment it felt
wonderful.
Jean-Gérald Charbonneau writes: "Stories of mine have been published in Stop, Liberté and
The Nashwaak Review, and I write book reviews for AGNI,
the Boston Book Review, Toronto Star, Denver Post,
Cleveland Plain Dealer, and other newspapers. Originally
from Montreal, I received an MA degree in creative
writing from Boston University in 1998 after studying
literature and writing at the University of Southern
Mississippi."
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