Authors: Jabari Asim
The glass was an annoying barrier, a teasing nuisance that illustrated the vast distance between her and the ground, the space she had to travel. She ran like she drove, to hell with it and devil may care, so the three flights of stairs flew by in a burst of adrenaline
as she threw herself through the doors and over the grass toward the gathering storm. But there's always someone faster, someone like Laurie Jo. She caught Charlotte in a matter of strides and wrapped her in her arms. She held tight while Charlotte kicked and screamed, a marginal player in the scene unfolding, far from the heat and glare of center stage. The spotlight, where Percy stood and gestured before the now-restless guns.
The photo that would appear two days later in the campus newspaper would provide few clues beyond the elements that everyone knew. The students, the cops. Percy in between them with his arms outstretched.
The crowd's roar dipped to complete, unbelieving silence as Percy and the policeman in charge shook hands. The roar returned, a resurgent bellow of victory, as the cops executed a crisp about-face and walked away. “Percy! Percy!” became the crowd's chant as the students mobbed their new champion. Their enthusiasm carried him to the upstairs reception area in the science building, where students had commandeered chairs, tables, and couches and transformed them into a makeshift lounge. Someone turned on a radio. Downstairs, platters of food and coolers of cold drinks found their way inside. Upstairs, Percy sat on a chair in the middle of it all. Students gathered around to await his word.
“What did you say to them?” the chairman asked, admiration glowing on his eyes.
“I recited some poetry,” Percy replied.
“What?” The chairman's disbelief went through the crowd like a wave, sparking murmurs and exclamations in its wake.
“That's right. Music isn't the only art with charms to soothe the savage beast.”
Percy stood on his chair and spread his arms as he had done on the quad.
             Â
Ah, love, let us be true
             Â
To one another! for the world, which seems
             Â
To lie before us like a land of dreams,
             Â
So various, so beautiful, so new,
             Â
Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light,
             Â
Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain;
             Â
And we are here as on a darkling plain
             Â
Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,
             Â
Where ignorant armies clash by night.
“That's what you said?”
“That's it exactly,” Percy said, warming to his audience. He was nervous, shiny, electric. “And the sergeant said, âI like that. That was beautiful. Did you write that?' I said no, that was Matthew Arnold. âDover Beach.' I told him our forefathers shed blood over important things like land and freedom. I said to him, do we really want to shed blood over barbecued ribs? He said âNo, son, I guess not.' Then he told his men to stand down.”
The chairman shook his head. It was just crazy enough to be true. “You're shittin' me,” he said.
“No, Brother,” Percy said, “I shit thee not.”
The students erupted in laughter and applause. In the span of a few taut minutes, Percy had gone from the smartest (and perhaps the craziest) man on campus to the bravest.
“Percy,” the chairman said above the clamor, “you should be our minister of defense. Our Huey.”
“Yeah,” Percy agreed. “Because I'm a regular Ralph Bunche, baby. Now that's what I call a mixed metaphor.”
In the background, the radio hummed. Downstairs, a pair of frat boys, although exhausted by the day's excitement, were dancing energetically with a couple of cheerleaders when a third brother strutted in. He had been as far from the policemen as humanly possible, but in the story he was already composing for future generations he had moved to the front of the line, close enough to spit on a pig's polished badge.
His brothers shouted in greeting, exchanging knowing nods over the heads of their dance partners. They had gotten into something harder than Pepsi or 7UP.
Upstairs, Charlotte recalled Percy belittling the chairman earlier in the year for equating jazz with revolution. Too simplistic, Percy said. “It's a cliché, self-parody even, to pretend to dig jazz and scream about black consciousness at the same time. To argue
that jazz alone is the people's music is like saying that suffering is the only âreal' black experience. If anybody contains multitudes, it's us.”
The chairman had glowered at Percy while he ranted. Now, in the radiance of Percy's eccentric genius, he gazed at him like a love-struck fan. Percy blew Charlotte a kiss and she beamed, lightheaded and a little ashamed of herself for being so fretful. This was Percy, wasn't it? At his best, couldn't he do anything? Charlotte caught glimpses of his future in his golden glow: he'd get his PhD (with honors, of course), return to River Valley, and build a world-class philosophy department. In time he'd take over the College of Arts and Letters before ascending to the presidency. After a long and exemplary career and annual recognition as one of
Ebony
magazine's 100 Most Influential Blacks, he'd retire to a life of pastoral splendor. On campus, a statue would go up in his honor, right next to the Soldiers.
Though she adored every syllable that Percy spat (damn that Tish), she knew the events of the day would eventually wear him down. Soon he'd be parched and hoarse. She wanted to be the one to quench his thirst.
She headed downstairs in search of a soda.
“The cops are gone,” the frat boys needled their pal. “Good of you to come out from your hiding place.”
“Too bad,” the newcomer said. “I had something for them.”
Charlotte reached the first floor. She turned, looking for the coolers she'd seen lined up earlier. When she found them she marched directly to them, barely noticing the frolicking frat boys and their giggly dates.
One of the dancing men howled like a wolf. “Nigger,” he said, “where were you when the shit was going down?”
“I was getting this piece, fool. Not like I carry it around on me. Lock and load, like brother Huey says.” The newcomer pulled a pistol from his waistband. The others had seen it before.
“Brother Huey, my ass.”
“He means Huey the duck. Dewey and Louie's brother.”
“Fuck y'all.”
“I think he was hiding under his bed, calling for his mama.”
“I think he was on the toilet scared shitless.”
Undeterred, the frat boy spun it on his finger, like the hero in a cowboy drama on TV.
Gunsmoke. The Wild, Wild West
.
Charlotte heard their banter like white noise, the static between stations. She ignored the sideshow, eager to return to manic, magic Percy in the center ring. To jazz, Ralph Bunche, and “Dover Beach.”
The first cooler was empty. Nothing inside but dissolving ice chips and brittle water.
“Bet you can't do that twice.”
“Ha! That's what his girlfriend said.”
The frat fool went at it again. The second spin was wobblier than the first. He grabbed at the gun with his other hand.
The second cooler held one can. It was on the bottom, leaning against the far corner. Charlotte bent over and pushed her hand into the icy melt. She plunged her face in after, and for a second she was a diver, leaving the world of heat and hubbub for a cool descent into the welcoming azure. She registered the sound of a shot as a distant underwater event, muffled, mysterious.
She raised her head, the chill lingering on her face like a cold hand against her cheek. She shivered, laughing at her impulse until she turned and saw two of the frat boys staring wonderingly above their heads. She stood and approached them. The one holding the smoking pistol swayed fitfully. The other steadied himself with his hands on his hips. Next to them, the third frat brother stood openmouthed, an arm around each cheerleader.
Charlotte followed their gaze to the small hole in the ceiling. To the red drop forming as it hung suspended before falling precipitously to the floor. Another drop followed, then a thin, steady stream. In the room above them, somebody screamed.
She hurled herself toward the sound. Upstairs, she split the crowd like an arrow, not stopping until she reached Percy, sprawled on his back in front of his chair. She knelt beside him and took his hand. Although he was motionless, a nervous energy still surrounded him. He looked shiny, electric, unafraid. His eyes were aimed at the ceiling. But he knew it was Charlotte beside
him. In the swirling background, she heard crying, prayers, calls for an ambulance.
“Here comes trouble,” he said. His words gurgled, like a clogged drain.
“Shh, don't talk.”
“You were right,” he said. “There's no point in thinking about it all the time.”
After the memorial service on campus and the burial in his hometown, Charlotte returned to Gateway City. She tucked her braid under her shirt, pulled her hat down. She took long walks and even longer drives. She swung from adolescent whimsy to downhearted blues, with long silences in between that left Artinces concerned and confused. She turned her collar against the intrusions of horny boys and curious neighbors. She carried books by W.E.B. Du Bois and Alain Locke and stared at the pages in isolated corners of coffee shops and diners. Though the words often wiggled and darted on the page, she kept at it, intent upon doing anything but remembering.
Forget
became the closest thing to a prayer that she ever uttered. Forget. Until she could no longer hear Percy's voice, his laughter. Until she couldn't see his skin the color of lightly toasted bread. Until she was no longer drawn to the water. Until she no longer dreamed of boats. All summer long she had been telling herself she could do it. She'd forgotten worse things.
No, that was a lie. Nothing had been as bad as this.
One of the babies began to stir. Charlotte leaned forward and peered through the glass. It was a girl, clad in the hospital's customary pink. Charlotte was tempted to hold her, to whisper in her ear. “His name was Percy Conway,” she wanted to say. “And he wasn't a male type. He was a
man
.” She stopped herself. It would be unfair to curse an innocent baby as she had been cursed, to send her down a difficult path without ever knowing why she was burdened, without knowing that someone else's sadness was dogging her steps.
She had to tell someone. Why not Dr. N.? The
whole
story. Tell her that her tale about being at the library during the shooting was
only partly true. Tell her she needed a break from school before she broke into pieces. Tell her that walking around pretending to be normal was the hardestâonlyâwork she could do.
She headed for the exit. As she left, she passed a man signing in. He wore a custom tailored suit and a hat rakishly tilted to one side.
“My name's Ananias Goode,” he said to the nurse. “I'm on the list.”
Despite declaring war against memories, Charlotte felt helplessly drawn to the site of the old church when she pulled up to a stop sign next to its ruins. Little was left of the building except the steps; like the rest of the block, the former Good Samaritan had been reduced to rubble as part of a corporate development campaign. Where there had once stood a church sign welcoming worshippers to Christ, there now stood a placard announcing the imminent construction of Killark Light and Power Co. Only a single streetlamp stood near the sign, conceding everything beyond the steps to the darkness of night. The street, formerly a hub of commerce, was now a one-way road to somewhere better, bordered on one side by cyclone fencing and on the other by the crumbling skeletons of abandoned buildings. Charlotte knew that the stone steps, cracked but still sturdy, had been important to the lives of many other babies besides her.
Charlotte was still looking at the steps when a car smacked violently into her Malibu's rear end. The impact threw her against the steering wheel, forcing air from her lungs. She opened her door and stumbled out to assess the damage. Before she could take two steps, her rear window shattered.
“That's her,” someone shouted. “That's the bitch!”
“I said, would you like to hold a baby?”
Goode blinked furiously. He had the foggy aspect of a man emerging from a dream. The nurse waited patiently.
Goode smiled at her. “That's okay, I'll just look at them. It's my first time.”
“You sure? Well, why don't you scrub in, just in case.”
He grunted in protest but the nurse behaved as if she hadn't heard him. Before he knew it, she had removed his hat and replaced it with a surgical cap. She helped him slip a gown over his suit, turned him toward the sink, and showed him how to scrub. Goode felt like he was an infant himself, the way she guided him with confident, practiced gestures.