If you ever drifted slow along the misty water at sunrise, paddling quietly through curtains of Spanish moss, you might hear the swamp’s secrets—soft as a breath, or as bold as a heron’s cry echoing over jade-green water. Old cypress knees reach up through the shallow pools, and wild iris blink blue as the sky before rain. And if you’re lucky—or unlucky, depending on who tells it—you’ll sense a hush fall as you near the bend in the bayou, that turn where stories gather like driftwood.
Back on a bayou, there lives an old woman, no body know how old but as you pass an eye on her, it plain to see, her old gray hair, and her skin of her face tight over high cheek bones, the one eye she seem to pass on you, the other always just out of the light or covered by that thick long gray hair, that one Blue eye, clear, twinkling, and seems to not have another just like it. That blue eye that makes you forget all the rest of her did she really hunch a little, I don't remember but she has blue eyes!
Her house look like it grew up out of that cypress swamp where it stood, there being a short little dock, on the bayou, with Just a pirogue, on its side, a small porch with a moss draped roof, with two Naturally growing cypress, for post.
Celeste, being her name since birth, doesn’t know where or when, the truth being she had always been here and probably always will. She being the traiture, on this part of the bayou, in Cajun country. She always has a cure, or potion. Celeste knew everyone, and all the happenings, it was fun for the daring youngster to approach and ask a question trying to stump Celeste. But Celeste could always finish your thought for you with the right answer; you could not beat the magic, Of Celeste. About the only thing you could see around the place was a big old gator. It was said Celeste had hand raised the gator, and it was hers, some say they even talk, after sundown, on the bayou.
Coco “Dri” was what Celeste calls him, it rolled off easy, for a thing so small and smiley looking in the beginning, long ago; he sure got some smiling to do now, with all them teeth.
Coco & Celeste had a special bond; some say the Gris Gris of a past love.
To see Coco in the water gliding like the currant, so quiet, and then go from sight like a ripple of water, to see him emerge from that dark water of the bayou with a 200 pound wild pig in his jaws, it gives me the chills just to think.
The first time Coco came into the village that spring day, with Celeste, the whole place lit up, you couldn’t see a stray dog anywhere on that one mule street. It caused such a stir, but the next time Celeste came in, it was like she was always there, Coco just eased up the bank of the bayou and lay next to her pirouque, 4 feet longer than Celeste’s 10 foot boat, and so much wider, He must weigh 1200 lbs., just sleeping there, like you could walk up and touch him.
Early in the fall Celeste came into the village to trade her trinkets, of good luck, her healing potions, and the other goings on the locals had with her.
Jackson, who owned the local mercantile, ask her why Coco not with her because from his high porch he could see the bank of the bayou where Celeste docked her bateau. Celeste looking up into that autumn sky, then at Jackson, saying he sometime goes off by himself for a time.
Jackson thought about her then and wondered what she look like besides that blue eye peeking out from under her guard solie.