[AGL] Port Arthur #9
J. David Moriaty
moriaty at sbcglobal.net
Thu Nov 2 22:42:28 EST 2006
Last week a weather report promising four days of dry air and below
average temperatures lured me to Port Arthur for my sometimes monthly
inspection, this time made more urgent by reports of a 4-hour
thirteen-inch rain the week before. And I wanted to find what the hell
my Starks, Louisiana real estate agent was up to, because I had heard
nothing since we'd signed the contract to sell the place on the Sabine
River.
The Saint Augustine grass glowed like green neon in the setting sun as
I pulled into the drive. Outside a gray cloud of marsh mosquitoes was
waiting for me to open the front door so they could rush inside and
plague me for the rest of the evening trying to invade my ears. Without
my reading glasses I can no longer locate them, much less take accurate
aim.
In the hall light the orange oak stair rail was a dull grey green. With
my glasses on I could see the mold eating the vestiges of the lotion my
mother's hand had deposited on the rail two years earlier when, with
her failing vision, she had mistaken the bottle for hand soap and
greased everything she touched.
The house is full of ghosts. The table Clark Santos drug in from the
upstairs porch so we could eat lunch still sits under its tablecloth in
the upstairs bedroom. Jaxon's cigerette is stubbed out in the ashtray.
Two black spots on the living room ceiling showed where the upstairs
porch and the fireplace chimney flashing had leaked in the 80
mph-wind-driven 10-inch rain of the preceding day. Although the
thermostat said 68, I turned on both the upstairs and downstairs
central units to dry the house, turned on the toilets, ran water in the
drains to fill the p-traps, then fled to The Schooner to get my gumbo
fix while the house dried out.
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1940 Puddle Ducky? with seat belt. Did you have one of these?
Port Arthur is gradually recovering from the effects of Hurricane Rita
with actually operational stoplights and few remaining blue roofs only
a year after the storm. Most of the brush piles are gone, filling both
the city dump and a new annex out the Proctor Street extension to
multi-story heights, still so water-logged as to be unburnable.
The blank-faced wandering negroes are gone, washed out of town in the
hurricane. In their place is a minor renaissance of housing repaired
with insurance largesse, most notably in the neighborhoods along the
canal, and even in the neighborhoods across from Rose Hill there are
1900's mansions newly resplendent advertised for $145,000.00, an
astounding bargain anywhere but Port Arthur.
The once rusted, moribund refinery units are all glittering with new
paint, and construction cranes are everywhere: Chevron's remaining part
of the old Gulf facility will double, as will the part newly acquired
by Valero. Shell plans to triple, (along with Fina) and even the
notorious Huntsman facility (the former Texaco) is all aluminum paint
and cranes. Obviously nonbelievers in peak oil.
On the way to the restaurant I was only challenged by a single street
racer; on the way back two had to be blown away for not understanding
the meaning of M3. This much hasn't changed.
The Schooner now offers fine wines and imported beer, but has only a
vague idea of a proper salad. However, as the cajun in the next booth
remarked, "Dat Greek sure do know how to make de gumbo".
People who grew up next to corn fields assure me that the supermarket
corn, however fresh, is not worth eating. Corn, they say, loses its
flavor within the hour of its harvest, and must be rushed from plant to
pot to plate to be properly enjoyed. I think this must be a taste
acquired in early childhood, for I can't tell the difference.
But broiled flounder, that's another story; the flounder must be rushed
from gig to plate in less than 24 hours, or it loses its sweet delicate
texture and becomes bland and rubbery with a hint of fishiness; or, at
worst, tough and bitter. It travels not at all; only the most expensive
of Austin's restaurants can offer a simulacrum, and that only by
same-day air freight from private fishing fleets. The flounder at the
Schooner is, at best, ambrosia, at worst eatable as any $100 restaurant
in Austin.
The other restaurant of note, Sartan's, came to mid-county Nederland
from fame in Sabine Pass. Flounder there is only served the day it is
caught, otherwise it is unavailable. The decor is spartan: plastic
folding tables like you get at the U-Rent, an all-you-can-eat generic
fish menu, a help-yourself salad bar that is always totally depleted,
gluey baked potatoes; but flounder fit for the gods. The house
specialty is barbecued crabs. Their other location (following a family
split) is on the Gulf Freeway between Houston and Galveston.
Back at the house I turn off the AC and retire to the glassed-in
upstairs porch to watch the boats on the canal. In the blackness the
oil rigs glitter six miles away on the Louisiana shore. Two river tows
pass, and a fuel barge, then, as the crescent moon sets, the ghost
ships: pushed by seagoing tugs: a black, unlighted hulk of a once-proud
navy cruiser heading to the mothball fleet at Orange, then another
mystery ship, its masts and booms illuminated by flood lights, hull red
and black with rust.
Last summer, just by chance, I saw the aircraft carrier Oriskany being
towed to a grave off Florida.
A Coast Guard patrol races by at 50 mph, and I retire to the front
bedroom and turn on the ancient Quasar TV, famed for its red screen
phosphors, in its place on the shelves of mildewed books. The on switch
gives me a small shock as it comes alive.
The weather man is puzzled: the Neches River is cresting at five feet
above flood stage; the Sabine is six feet below flood stage at Bon
Weir, but one foot over flood stage at Deweyville. There are no dams
between Bon Weir and Deweyville. My Louisiana property is above Starks,
just up from Deweyville.
The next day I get up early and head for Starks. At highway 12 and
Louisiana 109 the Sabine has the forest flooded for twenty miles, and
the trailer houses sit in their own lakes. Heading back highway 12 from
Deweyville to Vidor, the barr ditches are running in the direction of
the Sabine; obviously the Neches is overflowing into the Sabine and
that explains the mystery of Bon Weir being high and dry and Starks and
Deweyville under water. Just before the intersection of 12 and highway
87 I encounter the new suburbs of Vidor and Beaumont: middle management
building McMansions on 5-acre tracts of St. Augustine replacing the
forest primeval, now reflected in their lakes like moats of mediaeval
castles, waterline at the window sills.
The news that night tells me Highway 12 was closed due to high water 30
minutes after I passed.
j.dave
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