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The priest was charming, educated, and serene, despite the burden of suffering he dealt with on a daily basis. He told me that this place, Kiseleva Beam, had been a shrine since the 18th century, when a boy was cured of blindness by these waters and a vision of the Holy Virgin appeared among the twisted tree roots above the spring. In fact there were two springs here that flowed together, one sour and one salty, to cure afflictions of the body and mind. Holy water played an important role in the spirituality of the Orthodox Church, he explained, and thousands of people came here every year to be healed. It was a privilege to serve them, he said.

As we turned off the field track onto the main road and picked up a bit of speed, there was a sudden jolt on the rope behind us and a loud insistent beeping from Volodya. We pulled over and went to see what was happening. And before Volodya could even wind down his window with a joyful grin, we could hear that the old BMW was back in business.

‘See!’ said Volodya, keeping his foot on the gas as the priest and I uncoupled the rope. ‘It was a miracle!’

We thanked the priest from the bottom of our hearts, beeped a few more times, and then we were away.

In Luhansk, at the door of a grand but crumbling flat, we were greeted by my Aunt Oksana, whom I had never met before. I was glad we hadn’t squandered the holy water on the untrustworthy car because the frail old lady looked as though she needed every drop of it. Yet meeting her here for the first time was a different kind of miracle. I clasped her in my arms and we wept as we talked about the long separation, the travels and travails of more than
sixty years, the hardships, the people who had died whose sepia photographs still hung on the walls of that flat where my mother and her sister had once lived, where our grandmother Marina, after whom I was named, had died of pneumonia in 1952. Volodya was weeping too as he opened the door of the cabinet where the vodka and glasses were kept. He poured three generous measures, and topped each one up with a dash of holy water.

MARINA LEWYCKA
was born of Ukrainian parents in a German refugee camp after WWII and now lives in Sheffield, Yorkshire. Her first novel,
A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian
, was published in 2005 when she was 58 years old, and went on to sell a million copies in 35 languages. It was shortlisted for the 2005 Orange Prize for Fiction, longlisted for the Man Booker Prize, and won the 2005 Saga Award for Wit and the 2005 Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize for Comic Fiction. Her second novel,
Two Caravans
(published in the US as
Strawberry Fields
), was shortlisted for the George Orwell prize for political writing. She has also published
We Are All Made of Glue
and
Various Pets Alive and Dead
. Her short stories have been broadcast on BBC radio, and her articles have appeared in
The
Guardian, Independent, Sunday Telegraph
, and
Financial Times
. She is now working on her fifth novel. In her spare time she used to enjoy walking and gardening.
The Boudin Trail
NATALIE BASZILE

I
t’s two o’clock on a Thursday afternoon in early May, and the air inside the New Orleans airport smells like fried shrimp, mildew, and a hint of the Gulf. It’s a comforting smell, at least to me, and every time I fly down here from California, the first thing I do after stepping off the plane into the terminal is inhale deeply.

If I were here by myself, I’d be on the road by now, easing into the Crescent City or flying down Highway 90 towards New Iberia where my friends live. But this trip is different: I’m on a mission. I’m meeting my mother, my dad, and my sister, Jennifer, to whom I just started talking after a two-year estrangement. I’m taking them on a drive along the Boudin Trail.

We have a lot to heal on this trip.

Jennifer’s flight from Connecticut is scheduled to arrive twenty minutes after mine. We’ve agreed to meet in baggage
claim. The carousel has just lurched to life and suitcases are sliding down the black conveyor belt when I spot Jennifer at the top of the escalator. For years we both wore short afros. People assumed we were twins. Three years ago, Jen decided to grow pencil-thin dreadlocks, and now they cascade across her shoulders. I can’t help but stare. Even in jeans and a V-neck t-shirt, she looks downright regal.

It’s odd to think of my mom and my sister being here in this place I’ve laid claim to. Louisiana is mine and I’m not eager to share it. I cringe at the thought of having to show them around the city, taking them to the restaurants and shops I frequent, the out-of-the-way spots most tourists know nothing about. I’m being selfish, I know. If my Louisiana friends had been this closed-hearted with me, I’d still be a tourist, wandering down Bourbon Street with a fishbowl filled with green alcohol hanging from a cord around my neck.

My dad is the person I should really thank for introducing me to Louisiana. He was born and raised in Elton, a tiny town one hundred ninety miles to the west. And even though he hated almost everything about his life down here – hated the humidity and the grass growing up between cracks in the sidewalks; hated how every man in his family was the pastor of a storefront church; hated Louisiana so much that he left the night of his high school graduation, set out for California and never looked back – he returned every spring to take his mother on a road trip: Grand Isle, Holly Beach, Natchitoches. Any place they could get to and back from in four days – which was all the time he could stand before he started remembering why he left in the first place. When I was in college, he invited me to tag along, and even after my grandmother died, I kept coming back.

Unlike my dad, I loved the heat and the crumbling buildings
overtaken by kudzu. I loved the endless hours my aunts, uncles, and cousins spent in church. I loved Louisiana’s earthiness, her accents and her twisting bayous. I loved it all.

So while I wait for my bags, I give myself a little pep talk –
Come on, Baszile, lighten up. This will be fun
. By the time Jennifer steps off the escalator, I’m feeling generous.

‘Hey, Wench,’ I say and hug my little sister.

‘Hey, Wench,’ Jen says, hugging me back.

This is our standard hello, the way we’ve greeted each other since we were teenagers. But we haven’t used the greeting at all lately and I can tell Jen is as nervous and relieved as I am to say the words. We used to be close. Used to call each other every day, sometimes
two or three times a day
, and then suddenly, two years ago, we stopped speaking. At the time, I was struggling to write my novel, going to grad school, and raising kids. Jennifer was divorcing her husband, writing a memoir, and leaving her university job. I don’t remember the details of the argument, only that one day, neither of us picked up the phone. Days stretched into weeks. Weeks stretched into months. We didn’t speak when her book was published or when my oldest daughter delivered her middle school graduation speech. We didn’t speak when my dad’s cancer came back a second time.

It was only after my dad landed in the hospital with failing kidneys that we finally reconciled.
It would be a shame if you two reconciled over your father’s deathbed
. That’s what my husband told Jen when he called to intervene. She called me a couple of days later to say she was coming to San Francisco for a conference. She asked if we could meet. I drove to her hotel near the airport and saw her through the plate glass windows in the lobby. Before I could park, she was outside, standing beside my car.

An hour later, my mother arrives dressed in pleated pastel slacks and white patent loafers, a black quilted carry-on slung over her shoulder. She greets us with her signature beauty contestant wave and flashes a toothy smile.

‘Here they are,’ she says, standing on her toes to kiss us. ‘My two girls.’ She runs her hands through Jennifer’s dreads, fingering the tiny cowry shell dangling from one of them.

‘Where’s Dad?’ I ask.

Jennifer massages her temples. Her tone is somber. ‘I can’t believe we’re doing this.’

‘Got him right here,’ Mom says, and pats her carry-on conspiratorially.

A trip along the Boudin Trail was my idea. Three years ago, a friend sent me an article listing all the boudin – the mix of seasoned pork, beef, or crawfish and rice all stuffed into a sausage casing – in South Louisiana. The article linked to a website showing every grocery store, restaurant, gas station, and roadside stand along the two-hundred-mile strip between New Orleans and Lake Charles. If you planned right and had the stomach for it, the article said, you could hit every establishment in a single weekend, three days tops. The moment I finished the article, I called my dad.

‘How’d you like to take a trip along the Boudin Trail?’ I asked.

My dad was into slow food and ‘nose-to-tail eating’ decades before the lifestyle became fashionable and trendy.
Black folks practically invented slow food
, he liked to say. As a kid growing up in South Louisiana, he hunted raccoons, possums, and squirrels in the woods behind his house, then brought them home to his mother who cooked them in stews. Sometimes, he shot an animal
just to see how it tasted. Once, he shot and ate a crow.

‘Let’s do it,’ he said. ‘I’d like to get home one last time anyway.’ He’d just been diagnosed with Leiomyosarcoma for the second time.

Instead, he spent most of the next two and a half years cycling through hospitals and rehab centers, growing frailer every month. Until the cancer, he’d never spent a night in a hospital, never broken a bone. By the end, he couldn’t walk from the family room to the kitchen, couldn’t hold a fork.

Now, it’s just the three of us: my mother, Jen, and me. Mom transferred some of Dad’s ashes from the urn she has at home into a small wooden container no bigger than a pack of cigarettes. That container is now safely zipped in a plastic Ziploc sandwich bag. We’re going to sprinkle his ashes along the Boudin Trail.

We’ve just tossed our suitcases in the trunk when Jennifer notices my food bags – two oversized, insulated empty totes with heavy-duty zippers and straps wide as seatbelts.

‘You’ve got to be kidding,’ she says.

‘What?’ I sound defensive. ‘Someone has to do it.’

Dad always brought his food bags on our road trips so he could stock up. He bought boudin but also crawfish and the andouille sausage he used in his gumbo. We’d stop in a handful of towns on our way back to my grandmother’s house, and by the time he purchased what he needed, we could barely zip the bags, each of which – between the food and the ice packs – weighed nearly fifty pounds. Dad treated his food bags like they were his children. He requested hotel rooms closest to the ice machine, monitored the bags’ internal temperature to make sure the contents stayed cold, and carried them on the plane rather than
check them as luggage.

Jennifer looks at me skeptically. ‘Do you even know how to cook gumbo?’

‘That’s not the point.’ I fold the food bags and tuck them in among the suitcases.

We’re hurtling down I-10 when we spot Don’s Specialty Meats, our first stop along the trail. Don’s used to have a single location off Highway 49 in Carenco. Recently, they built a huge operation in Scott, just off the interstate Frontage Road. The building looks more like a casino with its enormous neon red sign and sprawling parking lot. We pull between two monster trucks.

Mom takes the Ziploc bag out of her carry-on.

How
do
you sprinkle someone’s ashes in a store without alarming the proprietors or the customers? The question hasn’t occurred to us until just now. We step inside Don’s and feel the rush of air-conditioned air against our skin. The place is packed. There’s a long line of people at the counter ordering boudin to go; another dozen shoppers plunder the deep freezers and banks of refrigerators along the wall. I see no way to do this without someone noticing. And suddenly, all I can think of are the sanitation laws we’re surely breaking. I’m about to chicken out when Mom comes up behind me gripping a plastic spoon.

‘I got this from the girl at the counter.’ She grins.

Jennifer posts herself near the front counter and keeps watch while Mom and I wander to the back corner. Mom opens the Ziploc, lifts the lid off the wooden box, and scoops out a quarter-teaspoon of what looks like tiny bits of gravel and grit. She bends low and sprinkles the cremains of my father under the last
refrigerator, back far enough that no one will notice. They look pale and gray, almost like silt, against the dirty white floor tiles.

I’ve never seen Dad’s ashes before. I think back on all the years I heard Mom scold Dad for being overweight; how he loved to walk barefoot through the garden we planted behind my house because the feel of his feet in the soil reminded him of his Louisiana childhood – and my mind can’t compute. I can’t reconcile those memories with the spoonful of dust.

Mom dips the white spoon into the bag again, then looks at me. ‘I think we should say something.’

Her suggestion catches me flat-footed. Until now, the tone of our trip has been easy and lighthearted. We’ve cracked off-color jokes and reminisced about the time Dad glided right off the treadmill and broke his arm. We shake our heads in wonder at the time he took twelve Aleve tablets in one sitting. It’s gallows humor, we know, but it’s our way of coping.
Why are we getting serious now?
I wonder. Besides, Jennifer’s the better public speaker. Three years my junior, she has always possessed a seriousness, an intensity that makes most people assume she’s older. She delivered the eulogy at Dad’s memorial that had everyone in tears.

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