Authors: Leo Sullivan
olution. Her eyes softened, maybe she saw potential in me. I damn
sure did, enough to want to sell bricks and buy a villa in Manila,
smoke trees while getting my dick sucked by one of them exotic-
looking bitches under a palm tree.
“
Life, there’s a book titled,
The Destruction of Black
Civilization
, written by a man named Chancellor Williams and
another book,
Miseducation of the Negro
.”
I could have won an award for best actor the way I feigned
interest. She went on to talk about some cat name Marcus Garvey.
Her faced beamed, like she really enjoyed the topic. Boring. I was
trying to remember how far the Black section of town was that we
passed. I knew it was called Frenchtown. I heard talk about it
while I was in the joint. I needed to know what size their dime
rocks were. I was making plans, like a general, about to mount an
attack, to take over them Tallahassee niggas tur f.
“
Life! Life! Boy, you ain’t heard a word I’ve said.” She got into
the car.
“
I heard ya.” I made a face, my best impression of don’t go.
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She reached in and placed each one of the bags that I bought
for her on the curb. “I’m sorry, but I cannot accept these. Call me
at the station tonight, we’ll make arrangements to pay for the car.”
As she pulled out, I shouted, “Bring the books when you come
back tomorrow.”
“
Come back?” she mouthed the words, looking at me strange-
ly. I thought to myself,
you’ll be back as soon as you find Jesus under
your front seat
.
I went to my room. It was nice and comfortable with a scenic
view and a king-sized bed. It even had a kitchen with a stove and
fridge. I counted out my cash, a little over eight grand. I cut a hole
in the mattress and stashed it there for safe keeping. I placed my
jewelr y under the pillow and changed clothes, a simple pair of
jeans and a large white T-shirt. I was about to make my first foray
into the Black section of town. There was a risk involved. I need-
ed to look as inconspicuous as possible. I easily concealed the .380
in my pocket and only took eighteen dollars and some loose
change with me.
I walked a mile or so taking in the sights. This city was alive.
The Florida State campus was huge. White broads walking
around, scantily clad, teaming with other vibrant ethnicities. I
blended right in, and even though it was hot as hell, I enjoyed the
sights and sounds. To me it was like being in a foreign land. I
passed a car lot, across the street was a Popeye’s Chicken, and
down the street from that was Nether world, better known as
Frenchtown. I’ve often wondered how the Black section of town
was always placed in the middle of white folks’ areas so that they
can conveniently drive by with their expensive cars, windows up,
doors locked and scorned expression on their faces at the shock of
the plight of Black life.
I was definitely approaching the Black section. I could tell
because the value of the land looked dilapidated. I strained my
eyes to the glare of the sun. I saw it up the street. To the casual eye
it would not have been detected. I spotted what looked like a
lookout man or woman. Any trap that is making any money has
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one. The best lookout in the world is a dope fiend. They stay para-
noid, on perpetual alert. That is, if they’re not getting high.
As I continued to scan the streets, I walked gingerly as I passed
a drugstore. Little kids were inside buying candy. Then a barber-
shop. On the corner where I stood was a soul food restaurant. My
pace slowed. Across the street was a pool hall, a sleazy tavern and
a liquor store all right next to each other. People were gathered out
front. It felt like a thousand pair of eyes stared at me as I waited
for the light to change. One thing was for sure, whenever you
make an excursion into someone else’s hood, they know that you
are not from there and that’s where the problem starts. Like walk-
ing into a lion’s den. I crossed the street. In the abandoned lot
there was a big commotion. A tall goofy-looking white boy was
walking backward, palms in the air. His eyes darted back and forth
and he wasn’t wearing a shir t. He kept wiping the dirty blond hair
from his face. His glasses were so thick that I wondered if he could
be legally blind without them. About ten teenagers had him sur-
rounded. They had baseball bats, two-by-fours and iron pipes.
“
Give me dat money, cracka,” one of them shouted. I watched
as all hell broke loose.
POW! CRACK!
They tore off into his ass
like he was responsible for slavery. One thing I can say about that
white boy, he never fell to the ground, nor did he give up that
money. He made the crucial mistake of coming to buy a rock
without the aid of a Black person he knew, a mistake that has
caused many a white man his life, trying to buy dope in a Black
neighborhood. Someone hit him in the back and the sound
exploded like a cannon. That white boy found a small crack of
daylight and took off like a racehorse. As he attempted to pass me
I stuck my foot out and tripped him. He fell flat on his face and
slid across the worn out concrete. His glasses went one way while
he went the other. I ain’t never liked a cracka. Never! Ever since
my stepmother told me the sad story about how they stole my
granddaddy’s land and killed him. That was one of the reasons
why my father lost most of his mind.
The crowd of youngsters moved on him again. This was pure
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recreation for them. Black boys have so much pent up energy, for
them this was almost a daily occurrence, and it wasn’t just white
boys asses they whipped either. They didn’t discriminate. I know
just as sure that if they knew I was from out of town they would
have rat packed my ass too.
They continued to kick his ass. This was all done in broad
daylight. White people passed in their cars with the look of hor-
ror on their pink faces. Talk about the natives being restless, this
was turning into some kind of sport. One thing was for sure, it
was going to draw a lot of heat.
Whoever’s trip this is, they’re not
doing a good job of managing it
, I thought.
I watched as this woman ran into the melee, arms flailing,
screaming and pushing, shoving people off the white boy.
“
Ya’ll leave ‘em alone! Leave ‘em alone!” she screamed. For
some reason they obeyed her. She helped the white boy up and
brushed off his pants. Someone threw a bottle that whistled past
his head. Punched, drunk and bleeding, he staggered around like
he just went a round with Mike Tyson and miraculously survived.
The woman found his glasses and gave them to him. They had
been stomped on and were badly cracked. Staggering, he placed
them on upside down. He went into his mouth and took out a wet
and bloody twenty dollar bill. “Here, Nina Brown, all I wanted
was a rock,” he whined. Crackheads never cease to amaze me. This
white man risked his life just for a rock, and now he acted like it
was just another day in the death defying life of a rock star. The
lady dug into her bosom, retrieving a matchbox, and gave him a
small rock. His tongue moved around his cheek like it was search-
ing for something, then he spit out a tooth, smiled gleefully
through swollen lips and took off into a trot, only the trot resem-
bled a hobble like he had just been hit by an eighteen wheeler.
I recognized the woman they called Nina Brown. The other
cats were checking me out now, especially them youngsters. I
played it off and called Nina Brown’s name like I knew her all my
life. “Yo Nina! I got eighteen dollars.” I patted my pockets.
“
Where can I get a dime bag of weed at?” Actually, I was letting
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niggas know, I ain’t got no money. As Nina entered the store she
shot me a look like she was trying to figure out where she knew
me from. The air conditioning in the old run down place felt cool
on my face. My shirt was sticking to my back. The tile floor
cracked under my feet. I noticed a nice looking pecan woman
with breasts so large they made me smile. She was older than me.
Something about her hair reminded me of a straightening comb,
it shined like the little girls’ hair that I used to see when I was in
grade school. I requested a quart of beer, Olde English 800 and a
pack of Newport cigarettes.
Nina Brown counted her money and watched me. She had a
Bulls cap on her head cocked to the side. Her skin was dark. I
guessed her age to be anywhere between twenty-nine and forty-
nine. As hot as it was, she had on a black jacket with what looked
like a hundred zippers on it. She walked right up to me, smelling
like a small mountain goat. From the look of her weary, blood
cracked eyes, she had been up for days, possibly weeks. She craned
her neck at me, popped her lips, a prologue to speak. For some
strange reason almost all rock stars do this.
“
Whoisyou?” she asked, frowning at me. I took a step back
and tried not to smile. Rock stars have this thing they do with
their necks. It’s sort of like a curious rooster.
“
They call me L,” I said as I smirked at her.
“
How did you know my name?” she asked, placing some
crumbled bills in her worn out jeans.
“
Hi, Nina Brown,” the cashier said, passing me my change.
“
Hi, Ms. Atkins,” Nina Brown responded politely.
The bell above the door chimed, as a runt of a woman walked
in. She looked to be about 22 years old or so. She wore a hair
weave that looked like she had cut it off of some poor poodle dog,
and red lipstick that would have shamed a clown. The woman
looked like a misfit, which is something ver y hard to do in the
ghetto.
She walked right up to Nina and star ted whispering in con-
spiratorial tones. I eavesdropped.
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The girl’s name was Shannon. She was known in the hood as
what is called a Regulator. They are hustlers that can skillfully
break down a cocaine rock to its lowest form if need be, to make
a profit. They hang around junkies religiously, like a vulture that
waits on its dying prey. No matter how much dope you give them
they’ll find a way to go bad. Get them in the back of a police car,
and somebody is going to jail, and it won’t be them.
“
Ain’t nobody got none,” Shannon was saying, panic stricken,
like she was going to cry. Nina thought for a minute at whatever