It felt as though the humidity itself carried a hint of liquor as we walked out into the night, wanting only to escape our lives for a little. Deep down in Vieux Carre twisted brass clashed with a piano running half step from the crowded clubs on Frenchman Street. We filled our lungs with the city and found her to be like certain kinds of dangerous doses-- intoxicating.
It was our second night and the more we drank the more I began to see glimpses of the specters spoken of by locals. They linger in my peripheral, watching me with their sunken eyes. You could faintly hear them moan, only in defeated tones and their collective scowl danced in the heavy air of summer as though it were a part from all that jazz.
In the stranger hours of morn I was approached by a ghost a few blocks off Bourbon. He offered up nothing but his ***** palms in hopes of some false salvation. I wrestled a dollar from my pocket and passed it on to him, only to watch him fruitlessly grasp at it before it slide through his ghostly hands to the floor below. He looked down at the dollar all helpless-like and he said "It’s been slipping through my fingers like dat for years now and ain't nobody help’n me."
I walked from him, realizing then why I had needed this trip, I needed to remember all the love in my life because the only difference between me and the ghosts of N'awlins was someone cared about me, and I cared enough about them not to destroy myself.