This is the fifth and final part of this story, serious illness and family crises' have meant this story has had to take a long hiatus while things got back to normal, and I apologise for the long wait, I hope you think it was worth it!
As always, I caution you, this is just a story, set in my world, not the real one, although they do overlap occasionally, so please just read, and enjoy, hopefully as much as I did writing this.
BB1958
*****
The battered old truck slowed to a halt, suspension squeaking and bouncing over the uneven trail.
"Why we stopping, Johnny?" yawned Justine, shaken awake by the shuddering as the vehicle traversed the flattened flood debris, old and new, scattered thickly all over the trail, or half-buried in mud by recent storms and localized flooding.
"Gals've come to halt; looks like we on foot from here, Sugar-Pie; you-all feelin' like a li'l hike, Minou? Don' look me like that; y'all knew we not gonna be getting' down to where we goin' on no open roads, why you think I got you all that trail-gear? Come on, Minou, there's city-folk willin' to pay small fortune fo' hikin' trail like this, you ever stop to think that?"
Justine grinned and hefted her backpack from between her feet.
"Alright, alright, I get it, time to hit the woods, I hear you loud and clear, Daniel Boone, let's go break a trail! Just lemme get changed first, huh?"
Johnny wandered over to have a few words with Odélie and Mélette as they unloaded their packs and camp-gear from the bed of the nondescript old farm truck they'd borrowed from Lubin. Odélie flashed him a quick grin as she finished stuffing gear into her pack and shrugged on a military surplus tactical vest with a myriad of oddly-shaped pockets.
"You reckon she gon' be OK trekkin' through to the lake, Li'l Jean? I know she a spunky gal an' all, an' she smart, but it ain't easy coming up from this way, lot o' wild country to git through, she city gal, an' she prolly gon' be stretched, you reckon she up to it?"
Johnny spun his little cousin around and settled her pack square across her shoulders.
"Baby-girl, that li'l gal work hard, twelve hour nights, six, se'bm night a week, when the goin' get tough, damn' if'n she don' jes' keep right on goin'; she do that over a year, I reckon she plenty tough enough where it needed. I just wisht I was tough as her; she gon' surprise us all, I guarantee you that. There, that comfortable now?"
Mélette looked up from her packing and grinned, then gave a wolf-whistle. Johnny spun around, and smiled broadly at Justine dressed in a tight cut-off white T-shirt, with a plaid shirt over it with the sleeves rolled up and the front knotted just under her breasts, and a pair of the shortest, tightest Daisy Dukes he'd ever seen, making her long, creamy legs look even longer. Even with her trail boots and folded tube socks, she looked knock-down, drag out gorgeous, like an old-school Playboy centrefold, or what those California dudes imagined hot country girls looked like. Her long black hair, tied in sexy pigtails just added to the picture of hotly alluring young femininity.
"Will this do, kind sir?" she grinned, posing artlessly for him, making him grin even wider.
"Minou, there ain't nothin' I want to do right now 'cept mebbe sit here an' jes' look at you, but you cain't go trekkin' this country dressed like that; come dusk,
maringouin's
(mosquitoes) gon' eat you alive 'fore you gone ten feet! Them things the Louisiana state bird, they bigger'n buzzards out here, you-all surely don' want them things on you! I 'preciate the show an' all, but you better go put them Dockers on, you gon' thank me later."
Justine grinned cheekily.
"I know, Johnny-Bear, I just wanted to show you these just once before I have to put on those hot old things!"
Johnny smiled as he nodded.
"If I had the time..! We got a long way to go, honey; we pretty much retracin' our steps, Lubin and Audhémar reckoned we should be decoyin' them fellers on into the Atchafalaya, not South into Ghost Lake; up inta th' Atchafalaya the way they 'spectin' us to run, so we ain't gonna dis'point them none. We gonna pick up boat an' supplies the gals got stashed an' head up 'long the waterways, past Baton Rouge an' west into the Atchafalaya reserve, comin' in from the west, jus' north o' the Basin Bridge;."
Justine looked puzzled, so Johnny explained the change in direction.
"I reckon they gon' be watchin' fo'us up along Whiskey Bay Pilot Channel, that the quickest way river traffic get up the Atchafalaya, so we gon' go round them an' cross the river over to the north bank, that where noncle Lubin, Audhémar, an' Tante Amice's boys, few frien's waitin' for us an' loaded for b'ar; it's a long way, so move it along, sugar-pie, we got places to be!"
Justine looked concerned.
"Johnny, won't they be watching all the main routes into the Atchafalaya? Noncle Lubin said that Sheriff Broussard's going to let the Orleans Sheriff's office know where we're going, that means those people will know right away, what if...?"
Johnny shook his head reassuringly, grinning at how easily she'd slipped into calling Lubin 'noncle'.
"We gon' use the Atchfalaya river, that's true, but the river splits at Bayou Chene, we take the left branch, Bayou Chene itself, goin' west an' north, it's longer, we gon' be goin' agin the current, an' it go through some pretty wild country, you got to be local to know your way 'round there to get anywhere; ain't no city-boy gonna be doin' no trackin' through that, an' if me 'n the gals don't see them comin' out there then we deserve to get caught. The plan is: we make sure they know which way we goin', then we make sure they lose us out here, so if they smart, they go to plan b: get to where they know we goin', an' jump us there."
Johnny grinned and rubbed his hands through his increasingly shaggy hair.
"An' that when they plan B turn into my plan A, an' me an' the family an' friends we got waitin' for them idjits to show their hand gon' have us a Twist 'n' Shout like th' Isle never seen before; I reckon with what we got waitin' fer them, we make them fellers jump an' holler! They think they all that; all I c'n say is, they ain't seen cousin Jean-Noël all het-up yet!"