βTHE FIRST CHRISTMAS AFTER KATRINA /January 2026
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January
2026
~ Fiction ~
Roman Γ clef, cher
by Leonard Earl Johnson
of Lafayette and New Orleans, Louisiana
www.LEJ.world β
Β© 2026, Leonard Earl Johnson, All Rights Reserved
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| LEJ 2006 / Photo credit: Frank Parsley |
The water is gone, but so are most of the customers. In time the bar will fill again. But not this shirtsleeve warm night, December 17, 2005 ~ nearly four months since Hurricane Katrina took landfall, on August 29.
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| After Katrina / Coleen Perilloux Landry |
A mural behind the bar twinkles with tiny blue lights sprinkled over a snowy hillock of white deer nibbling mistletoe berries dotted among the evergreen pines. The mistletoe berries are represented by tiny red lights.
"Mistletoe is poison," my friend is telling the bartender, in his booming Chicago voice, "and its berries are white!"
A brewery representative from Saint Louis, Missouri is also behind the bar. He is wearing a sport coat that looks to be made from Anheuser-Busch labels, and he is passing out samples of Red Wolf Beer. My friend takes one and lifts it in my direction. I move down the bar and accept the brew.
"Must be a Santa after all," my friend booms to the largely empty room.
From a green felt-covered table, an elderly couple often seen here before The Storm, looks up and smiles. No one is dealing. Their cards lay face up. We tip our beer towards them. They are wearing evening clothes and his gold studs, set with diamonds, flash back at the mural. She is ash blonde, well-painted, and wearing a red sequined gown. She unzips the gentleman's tuxedo.
My friend and I both say in stage whisper that she is an expensive date.
The man laughs and asks, "How better to spend my FEMA money?" She slaps him playfully.
"Where is the vice-squad?" my friend asks in a real whisper.
The bartender sits down two more Red Wolfs and says, "In diapers with Senator Vitter, at the Canal Street Brothel?" We all snort and laugh like Americans at the sexual peccadilloes of our betters.
My friend is hanging his observations with the heavy tinsel of Chicago bluntness, "Christmas in New Orleans is not like going over the river and through the woods to grandmother's house, is it?"
"It's a good system," I say. "We, not Chicago, are 'The City That Works!'"
"Cops protecting brothel patrons," I say.
The beer rep hands us two more Red Wolfs. He wants to finish and leave. My friend asks him, "Shouldn't you call this stuff Red Riding Hood?" None of us are sure what he means by this, but we all laugh the laugh required of our station.
The beer distributor gives us two full six packs of Red Wolf and smiles, "Please take them, I need to find one of those scarce airplane seats out."
The bartender says, "Allow me to put that on ice for you."
I get up to go to the restroom as my Chicago friend yanks a hanging blue snowflake from its tether. He bellows at the bartender, "What fathead told you to hang blue snowflakes in this swamp-flooded city?" The bartender is startled and blurts back, "The fatheads in Chicago who own this bar!" Of course he does not know he is talking to fathead number one.
The Saint Louis beer man smiles weakly and moves towards the French doors. Through the glass we see a waiting limousine with rental license plates. The man in the tuxedo falls from his chair. The woman in red helps him to his feet and they stumble outside balancing themselves by holding on to articles of each other's clothing. They lunge into the limo and motion for the beer man to join them. He shrugs and climbs in.
Coming out of the restroom I drop a quarter into a slot machine. The last of my FEMA money whirls away. I do not care. It is Christmas and my friend is in Town to wine and dine us for three fat ~ if somewhat shipwrecked ~ days.
In a wastebasket beside the slot machines, I spot seven paper teddy bear tree ornaments. Each with the name across its brown belly of someone lost to Hurricane Katrina. I pick up one and read the name out loud, "Senegal Breaux." I gather them all and stuff them in my shirt pocket.
Back at the bar I sip my beer in silence. The bartender smarting from my friend's harsh words, punches up Linda Ronstadt singing Blue Bayou, on the jukebox. He pushes a remote-control button next to the cash register and a lone gray helicopter opens its bomb bay doors and sends red and green glitter drifting down into our beers.
We stand to leave, and my friend tells the bartender to keep the remaining Red Wolfs. He gives him a two-hundred dollar tip and his business card. "Tell those fatheads in Chicago to jump in Lake Michigan, New Orleans is in a swamp not a snowy wonderland!"
Outside, my friend stares at the empty curb. "Where the Hell's my driver?"
I say, "Forget it, let's walk."
We walk towards Tip's silently passing mounds of rubble. My friend accepts a paper teddy bear and holds it up to ambient Christmas light.
We start singing, "We three kings from Orient are..." Someone passing asks, "Where is your other king?" We hand them the teddy bear named Senegal Breaux, and keep on our way, "Bearing gifts we travel so far..."
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~Lagniappe du Jour~
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| Β© Leonard Earl Johnson Coming February 2026 LEJ'S MARDI GRAS GLOSSARY AND STORIES β― β β― When Veronica played her harmonica π π₯πͺ π π π |
If you wish to read any month's column go to www.LEJ.world anytime. They are posted on the first of each month and polished for the next few years.~ ~ ~ LEJ's Louisiana, Yours Truly in a Swamp is a monthly e-column @ www.LEJ.world, Hosted by GOOGLE BLOGGER, and historically at Les Amis de Marigny, New Orleans publication of the It is written by Leonard Earl Johnson of Lafayette and New Orleans, Louisiana Β© 2025, Leonard Earl Johnson, All Rights Reserved |









