The Curious Ghost

the-curious-ghost

As you all know, Jason the zombie kind of lost his charm when I ran into those hooligan zombies and discovered how fun it was to blow them up. So instead of keeping an eye on him, I have been hanging around and watching all the changes around town.

La Coquette, corner of Rue de Woodget and Shotgun Row
La Coquette, corner of Rue de Woodget and Shotgun Row

I am now residing at La Coquette near the French Market. It is close to Bob’s Cafe du Jour, where I get my daily dose of French chanson.
Bob's Cafe du Jour, French Market
Bob’s Cafe du Jour, French Market

In just a short time, we got lots of new little shops everywhere. The new bakery, the grocery that delivers to my door, the spooky spirit in a box telling today’s fortune at the Jellyfish, the lovely secondhand store, and a hoodoo shop where you get help to understand that part of our city’s culture.

Add to this a new tavern and two detective bureaus, possibly because of the killer in town—Tunnel Man. Plus we now have a gambling hall that makes our citizens go berserk with the cheeky ghost in its roulette wheel. Anyway, I’m pretty sure there is a spirit inside that roulette wheel. It adds a sparkle to the game for sure, even if it makes people crazy sometimes.

Mr. Palmer Blake, of Carricre Street Grocery, making deliveries
Mr. Palmer Blake, of Carricre Street Grocery, making deliveries

It is never boring here.

Mamma Leth's Hoodoo, Bob's Cafe du Jour, and the Severed Head tavern, French Market
Mamma Leth’s Hoodoo, Bob’s Cafe du Jour, and the Severed Head tavern, French Market
Look What the Cat Dragged In, a secondhand store at Carricre and Woodget
Look What the Cat Dragged In, a secondhand store at Carricre and Woodget
Le Petit Gateau, on Bayou Street near Laveau Square
Le Petit Gateau, on Bayou Street near Laveau Square
The Blind Pig gambling hall and the New Toulouse land office
The Blind Pig gambling hall and the New Toulouse land office

What I ponder most, though, is the effect the beautiful Spiegel Hall has had on our city. It has changed the skyline for sure. I always think of it as the mayor’s grand city hall, and it is a beautiful thought that culture is the main agenda of our city. I am looking forward to the parties and events we can have in its festive upper part.

Carricre Street Grocery at Carricre and Rossignol, with Spiegel Hall behind
Carricre Street Grocery at Carricre and Rossignol, with Spiegel Hall behind


The Ghost of Liza Veliz fell in love with New Toulouse at first sight and established an existence in an old voodoo shack in the bayou. She publishes books, some of which can be found at her reading cafe at the French Market.