I say Hey Vic, Iâm glad to see you okay, which I was. As bad as that place was, I was happy to see everyone who was there, âcause I knew they were alive, at least. So I was happy to see him too.â
âDid he say where heâd been?â I asked.
Jackson thought before he answered. I liked this guy. He thought more in five minutes than most people did in a week.
âNo,â he said. âNo, he did not. At least not that I remember.â He looked at me and I thanked him and then he went on: âSo I asked him if he was okay and he said yes, and he asked if I was okay, did I need anything, and I said no, thank you, because frankly I didnât think he had anything. I mean, moneyâs no good if thereâs nothing to buy. I didnât understand people stealing TVs and things like thatâI mean, you canât eat âem. All we needed was food and water, and there wasnât any. Whole city cleaned out by thenârestaurants, stores, everything. Kids went out, kids who knew how to steal, and they broke in to the stores and restaurants and got water and whatever else they could find and brought it back for the babies and the old folks. Some of those kids didnât eat nothing themselves, not one bite. But that was all done by then. There were peopleâs houses but thatâs not something I would do. Not going in someoneâs house. Not at that particular point. Anyway. Vic asked if I was okay and I saidyes, and then he asked how I got there and I told him. He was acting real concerned, you know, like he cared. He asked where the water was coming from, what was going on and all that. I told him, as far as I knew, the water was everywhere. And he asked which levees had broke and I told him what I knew, which wasnât much. Rumors were flyinâ all over. People were saying crazy things, like people eating dogs and babies and things like that. But some of the craziest things turned out to be true, like people on the rooftops in Lakeview and down in the Ninth Ward, and just about all of Arabi and Chalmette being all wiped out. So, you know, I told Vic that. I told him everything I knew. Then we shook hands and he was off. No, actually, he gave me some money first. I told him I didnât need it. Nothing to buy. But he gave it anyway.â
âSo when you saw Vic,â I said. âYouâre sure it was Thursday?â
âI am,â Jackson said.
âHow are you so sure?â I said.
He looked a little offended. âHow you sure todayâs Tuesday?â he asked.
âTuesday?â I said. âTuesday? Are you sure? Because I thought it was Wednesday.â
âTuesday,â Jackson repeated with confidence.
I looked around. A group of chubby tourists were about ten feet away, taking pictures of the Presbytere.
âHEY,â I called out to them. âHello.â
They looked around with a little fear and located me as the source of the sound. That did not reassure them. Iâd dressed in a hurry and I wasnât at my visual best. I wore boots, jeans, two black sweaters, and a red vintage womenâs overcoat with an ermine collar that probably should have been retired. I was also suffering from an unfortunate homemade haircut/bleach job that had involved pinking shears. I could see how it didnât inspire confidence.
âWhatâs the day,â I hollered to them. They looked at each other and then turned away. You know how it is in the city.Those fancy slickers could be up to anything with their trick questions and clever tongues.
Jackson and I looked at each other and shook our heads. Tourists.
âThe day,â I yelled at them. âThatâs all Iâm asking.â
Finally one tall brave man in his fifties hollered back. âJanuary ninth,â he called.
âThanks. But I meant Tuesday or Wednesday,â I called out.
âOh,â the man said. âTuesday.â He gave me a smile full of
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