The Saga Of Cajun Johnny-With Johnny
Thibodaux In Mind
By Seth Garth
Cajun Johnny was a piece of work, a
genuine last of the Mohicans as the gang around Zack James’ old Riverdale
neighborhood, the Acre, used to say about some of the local mad monk wild boy
characters who enflamed their fervent imaginations. If Cajun Johnny had been
born and raised in the Acre no question that he would have fit in, maybe been a
leader of the corner boy pack that hung around Owen Wilson’s bowling alleys on
Thornton Street almost every Friday and Saturday, every Friday and Saturday
night they were either date-less or dough-less, or both, which was fairly often
so they knew each other’s dreams, desires, and cons inside out. See though
Cajun Johnny was not born there, not born and raised in Riverdale in high holy
liberal Massachusetts, the home of Presidents and other scoundrels. Johnny was
born and raised as his moniker implied down in Southwest Louisiana, down in the
bayous, down in Cajun country. Down in Liberty, a small town just outside of
Lake Charles, the biggest town nearby.
Hell the Cajun could trace his ancestry
all the way back to east of Eden, to the forced expulsion of his people, French
people who had come to America back in the day, back in the 1700s from Arcadia
up in Nova Scotia when the British had beaten the French in one of their
interminable wars. You know the story, the sad tale the guy with three names,
the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, who wrote Evangeline about one aspect of the trail of tears to the
swamplands. Yeah, Johnny could trace his people back to the first Thibodaux,
old Pierre, who had been run out of Rouen for pig-stealing or something like
that just ahead of the hangman. So maybe the Cajun’s wildness was in the blood,
in his DNA.
Funny that Zack and the Cajun would
have a long, weird relationship with each other since although both men had
come up in utter poverty in their respective hometowns Zack had gone to
college, had been the first in his family to do so back in the 1960s when that
meant something around the Acre where most people including many of his corner
boys had barely finished high school, if that. Zack had turned his love of
writing into a career by joining that love with an ear for music and had for
almost forty years been able to eke out a free-lance livelihood writing reviews
for too many publications to mention here.
The Cajun on the other hand had barely
finished tenth grade, had run away from home several times, the last time after
rifling his father’s strongbox to grab some United States Savings Bonds that
Johnny’s father had purchased after a settlement in a youthful car accident in
a supermarket had left the Cajun injured. The father, Jean to give him a name,
had expected to give the bonds to Johnny when he turned eighteen to do with as
he liked. Johnny had cut that idea short and had run away to go west to
California and see what that was all about. He had gotten as far as Kansas when
the money ran out and he was being held in Topeka for vagrancy when Jean got
the call to send money. The old man had refused and Johnny spent fifteen days
in the pokey, his first serious brush with the inside of a jail-although not
the last. After all that whirlwind experience the Cajun had figured that high
school had nothing left to offer him so he just quit. Figured he would earn his
way in the world by his smarts, his street smarts.
The Cajun and Zack had met one night in
1988 in Lucky Pierre’s the famous nightclub off of Bourbon Street in New
Orleans now gone thanks to Katrina where they had a “Cajun Night” every
Thursday night to bring in the Cajun workers who had migrated to jobs around
the town from the going nowhere fast Cajun country. At the time the Cajun was
working on an oil rig out in the Gulf to earn his cache for a big undertaking
he was planning (in the end that plan busted up and Johnny went belly-up since
he was working a variation on the old pyramid scheme but had stayed with it too
long and somebody, somebody big in size if not in brains had caught up with him
and broken a couple of his fingers for him). Zack was down in New Orleans
working on a free-lance project for Rolling
Stone after the success of the movie The
Big Easy had sparked a revived interest in Cajun music. An editor had
commissioned him to go down and get a feel for the music and the people who
created the music to while away their Saturday nights, or some nights. Zack had
been told before he left for New Orleans on the assignment by a gal who had
gone to school there at Tulane that Lucky Pierre’s on a Thursday night would
give him an idea of what the music was all about. Perhaps an entree into Cajun
country if he could meet somebody who could help him with that problem, since
she, and others, had warned him not to go deep into Cajun country without some
references, without somebody to vouch for him. Not if he expected to get the
story he wanted since although a generous and vocal people they did not open up
to strangers just because they thought the Cajun music stuff was “cute.”
Armed with that advice one Thursday
night in March of that year Zack found himself sitting at the bar drinking a
scotch, his favorite drink of late then, listening to The Lake Charles Boys, an
up and coming Cajun band whose roots were from around Lafayette deep in Cajun
country. While he was sitting there, notebook and pencil in hand writing a few
notes this long, tall, slender good-looking guy with brown hair and browner
eyes with a shit-eating grin on his face came up to him and asked him if he
wanted to roll the dice for a drink. For whiskey. Zack figured what the hell
maybe this would get him the entree he needed to do his article up right. So yes,
bet. Bet and lost until five drinks later he called it quits. Told the Cajun
that his luck seemed to be running the wrong way that night (he would not know
until one night several years later when the Cajun was drunk as a skunk that
those dice were loaded, the whole thing had been just another one of his low-level
cons).
Still he wanted to talk to the Cajun, sensed
that they were at some level kindred despite the Cajun’s rough talk and shifty
eyes that would not look at him directly when he was speaking to Zack. (Zack
had had his own problems with his own shifting eyes while growing up especially
when his overbearing, over-weaning mother was on the warpath about something
erratic he had done, Zack’s kinder term for the experience, and he would not
look her straight in the face since she was usually right about the incident in
question. It had taken him a long time to get over that but he did get over it
so he had some sympathy for the Cajun on that score and that trait was not by
any means a deal-breaker.) Something about Johnny, about his whole persona, the
obvious swagger, the classic bull-shitter-in-residence reminded Zack of his old
corner boy Frankie Riley, old map of Ireland Frankie, who was always on the
con, was always hustling something, or trying to hustle someone including Zack
until they became friends and then it turned into dragging him into some
nefarious caper which would not end up well and Zack would wind up shifty-eyed
facing his mother on the carpet.
Frankie had in the extreme that
“wanting habits” curse that all the corner boys who hung around those long ago
bowling alleys in Riverdale, including Zack who took a long time to get over that
feeling that the world owned him a living, that because he was born on the
wrong side of the tracks somebody, everybody should feel sorry for him, should
pay up one way or another to make it right in this wicked old world. But like
with the shifting eyes he got over that as well, although it was a close thing,
a very close thing. Those wanting habits that gnawed away at utterly poor
working class boys like him, Frankie, Jack Callahan, Timmy Riley and a bunch of
those who roamed in the midnight shift who saw what the world had to offer and
no way to get at it. That was the look Zack saw in the Cajun’s lying bastard
eyes.
Maybe too it was the way that Johnny
had conned him, a con Zack should have seen coming a mile away and would have
in the old corner boy days after he got wise to such stuff hanging around with
Frankie. He sighed when he realized that he had gotten “soft” once he got some
dough and respect in his pocket. Had had to laugh later that night after the
bar closed and he was heading back to his hotel room about Johnny’s con. Made
him think of the small ideas guys went through hoops to get dough for, usually
some bet that would bring in loot, small change stuff just like the night that
Frankie Riley, bless his soul in hell, had conned Zack into betting on how high
Tonio the pizza-maker at Salducci’s Pizza Parlor over on Thornton Street could
throw the pizza dough in the air. Of course that was before Zack and Frankie
were buddies and Frankie had seen Zack as an easy mark. Zack had lost four
dollars that night, a lot of money then if not now especially for a
working-class kid who had saved the loot for a date with a girl at the high
school who Frankie sued his ill-gotten four dollars to take on adding insult to
injury. He would not find out until later when Frankie pulled the gag on some
other sucker that he had already put the “fix” in with Tonio to go low. Jesus.
So Johnny and Zack talked until closing
about this and that. That night, after hours of talking and getting the Cajun’s
take on his people, his people’s music which he was exceptionally knowledgeable
about since his older brother Lucien had played for the famous old time Cajun
Swingers out of Baton Rouge for many years, he decided to “hire” the Cajun to
take him down to Lafayette, the latest hot spot for Cajun music. (By the way as
an example of what even a classic small change con man can charm himself into Lucien,
whom Zack would meet and stay friend with for many years and who provided more
information about Cajun music than Johnny could ever dream of, would also provide
more than his fair share of bail money to get Johnny out of some latest scrape
once old Jean stopped doing so after about the tenth offense, mostly petty
larceny and unarmed robberies, conning, kiting checks, stuff like that.) Johnny
agreed, they discussed terms, and they were to meet the next day in front of
the big black statute of Andrew Jackson, the hero of the battle of New Orleans
in the war of 1812 for those interested, in Jackson Square. He gave Johnny his
telephone number at the Hotel Paris where he was staying (also long gone
curtesy of Katrina) in case he needed to get in touch with him the next day in
order to make additional arrangements.
About four in the morning Zack, having
just dozed off to sleep after working over his notes once he got to his room, got
the first of what would be many calls from the Cajun. This one from the police
station down in the 9th District where he was being held for
car-napping, stealing a car (and “joy-riding,’ a charge later dropped, although
at first thought why a forty-something man would engage in such a kid’s stuff
prank was beyond Zack’s comprehension except that this was a prime example
of “pure” Cajun as he would find out
later when he told Zack he had meant to use the stolen car for an unarmed
robbery of an all-night gas station but he got caught doing seventy-five in a
thirty mile an hour zone. He would get six months, suspended on that one.)
Could Zack bring some bail money down so that they could go the next day down
to Lafayette. Zack thought about it for about two minutes and decided to cast
his fate to the winds.
So Zack James big-time free-lance
reporter for Rolling Stone when that
meant something began a whirlwind relationship with one John Thibodaux. They
did go to Lafayette, although not until a few days later when Johnny got out of
the can due to some other offense problems on his sheet. There Zack met first
the very helpful Lucien and a whole host of Cajun musicians, working and
retired (some of those “retired” would like the black country blues singers,
Mississippi John Hurt, Son House, Skip James, and the like from over in the
Delta who were “discovered” during the folk revival of the early 1960s and
brought up to the Newport Folk Festival to wow the young crowds there would
also be “discovered” and brought north to eager crowds). Johnny introduced him
to the night life (and a very “hot” Cajun woman whom Zack would live with for a
while since he was in between wives, he had had three altogether before he gave
up marriage and just lived his with his flames). Introduced him to the culture,
to the ways of the Cajun, the poor bedraggled Cajuns whose poverty-stricken
lives seemed very much like that up in the Acre, except for the intense humidity
when the heat came. He could see why he gravitated toward the Cajun even as
knew in his gut that this guy would be trouble, big trouble around his
neck.
Zack would go on to get his story, got
paid well for the article, had it up for some award but he would not, could not
shake Cajun Johnny despite the constant drain on his wallet and his heart.
Wouldn’t that is until last month when they laid the bastard in his grave down
in Liberty after he had been shot-up in a back alley by some young punk who
took offense when the Cajun tried to con him for drinks with that crooked dice
routine he still played when he was down on his luck. Yeah, that Cajun Johnny
was a piece of work. RIP, brother, RIP.
No comments:
Post a Comment