American Renaissance for the Twenty-first Century | Article
Dropping Science
by Andrew Bernstein
Reggie H.A.R.D. scowled.
He practiced every day in the mirror and prided himself that
the look was threatening. Most of the homies in his Bed-Stuy
'hood believed he didn't need the practice. "No sorryass,
pantywaist, whitemanloving, booktoting, schoolboy nigger
going to dis The Posse, brown. You volume?"
Books lay scattered at the victim's feet, pages torn from
chemistry texts, pre-calculus notes and a thick volume of
Shakespeare's tragedies. Sheets of paper fluttered on the
breeze across the intersection of Marcy and Gates Avenues.
Around Reggie stood six members of the youth gang that
terrorized the section of Marcy south of Lafayette. Though
none bulged like their leader, they all hunkered over their
foe. From the waistband of several baggy jeans, thrusting
against designer sweatshirts and nylon windbreakers, jutted
the ends of hard and unseen objects. And yet, the smallish
teen-ager in front of them appeared more self-possessed than
scared.
"I hear you, Reggie," Walker S. Peabody replied calmly. "In
fact, the whole neighborhood does. But you could enunciate
with greater clarity."
One did not remonstrate with Reggie H.A.R.D., and members of
The Posse stared bug-eyed, speechless, for a moment. But
their leader had been at no loss for words since he was
fourteen months old. "What? You know what your name be,
nigger?"
"I told you. Walker S. "
"Don't bull Reggie with that sadsack Walker S. Pealittle
rap, yo. You name is Hump. That be short for Humphrey van
Weyden. You xerox, fem?"
"Hump-free van Wy-den," the brothers cackled, slapping high
fives. But Walker's eyes narrowed thoughtfully, though he
said nothing in reply.
"I tell you for last time. You be carrying words on my walk,
I nine you sorry, educated ass. That today's lesson, Hump-ster.
Next time they crate you in ice."
Without a backward glance, the members of The Posse followed
Reggie as he swaggered slowly down Gates Avenue. But Walker
didn't watch them. He didn't even notice the blood trickling
from his left nostril where Reggie had permitted one of his
minions to cuff him. He saw only the torn pages of King Lear
staring at him from the gutter.
At school the next day, Mr. Lomax, his eleventh grade
English teacher, noticed the taped bindings of his texts.
"Isn't there some other way you can get home?" he asked
gently when they were alone after class.
"The Posse controls the entire neighborhood, sir. Besides, I
live on that block."
The English teacher looked out the window at the Brooklyn
slum surrounding the school. "And they regard learning and
wisdom as utterly inappropriate to the black man." It was
not a question, but a statement. "Dear God, they're more
fully enslaved by their own racism than were our ancestors."
Walker nodded. He knew his teacher's view that education "not
athletics "was the only real ticket out of the slums; money
and fame did not extricate one from a slum mentality. He
knew also that Walter Lomax did more than talk the talk.
Never knowing his father, with a mother on welfare and
barbiturates, Lomax had grown up in Harlem with the fervent
commitment that he'd not go down with the family ship. And
that, perhaps, he might rescue one or two of his mates. He
excelled in every subject at Benjamin Franklin High School.
When the street gangs of the early sixties harassed him, he
did not confront them. Believing that violence was no
answer, he sneaked around and avoided them. He studied until
three and sometimes four in the morning. His grades got him
accepted at every college to which he applied, but he stayed
local, attending CCNY. With financial aid, he was able to
move closer to school, but he returned almost every evening
to the tenement on 128th Street. Absorbing beatings at times
from gang members, he exhorted everyone who would listen to
stay in school. He was not sure if anyone did. But thirty
years later, with decades of teaching experience and a
Masters Degree from Columbia, he knew. He was a pitiless
task-master in class, accepting no excuses for work undone.
The slackers, the users, the toughs all shunned him. But
those who wanted more gazed at him as to a lighthouse. For
them, Walter Lomax was always there. The time, the day, the
season did not matter. All day, he taught English classes,
focusing on understanding the classics of literature. In
late afternoon, he taught an elective in philosophy for
those highly motivated students who sought a deeper
understanding of man and of life. They studied Plato,
Aristotle, Descartes and Locke, preparing their minds for
life beyond the neighborhood in which they were raised.
Expounding in his 12th grade English class on the works of
Sophocles, Shakespeare, Dostoevsky, he'd answered a hostile
question in calm tones. "No, they didn't grow up in the
projects. But they were human beings and so are we. I know
that and you know that. Many white men and women know it,
too." He could deny neither the blank stares he received nor
the angry ones. But he also would not deny the few eager
ones.
"The 800 on your verbal PSAT was outstanding, son.
Congratulations."
"Thank you."
"Combined with your articles for the school paper, it will
show the colleges how serious you are about a writing
career."
Walker nodded.
"Thinking of any visits?"
Walker smiled inwardly. For two days he'd wanted to share
the news and had merely waited to be asked. "I've received
permission to visit Harvard, Mr. Lomax."
The English teacher said nothing for a long time. Then he
smiled as he had at his daughter's birth. All he said was:
"You have the money, Walker? Your grandparents can swing
it?"
"No, sir," Walker whispered. "They work six days a week just
to pay the bills. Won't let me work. Say I got to
concentrate on school."
Lomax nodded. "What weekend they invite you?"
"The 27th and 28th."
"Damn," the teacher cursed softly. "That's the one weekend
I'm not free. Got a class in Queens."
Walker said nothing. He knew that the teacher spent at least
one weekend a month putting on SAT clinics in every corner
of the city, for rich kids or poor, and that he charged only
what a family could afford "which sometimes was nothing.
"How much will it cost?"
Walker calculated. "Round trip bus fare, two nights in a
motel, meal money, it would be at least three hundred. Might
as well be three hundred thousand."
The teacher regarded him thoughtfully. "You ever been out of
New York, son?"
"Yes, sir," Walker answered proudly. "My grandparents took
me to visit family in North Carolina. Twice. Rode the bus
back once by myself."
"Yeah, I believe it. You could handle it."
The teacher thought it over for just a moment. Then he
reached for the checkbook in his briefcase and examined the
balance.
"Walker, I'll have the money for you tomorrow," he said
softly.
"Oh no, sir, I couldn't take it ""
"It's a loan. You'll pay me back in twenty years when you're
an established writer. So keep it away from Reggie G.A.N.G."
At Harvard, Walker visited the English Department and the
Comparative Literature program. He spoke with two Journalism
professors. He spent hours at the Widener Library, browsing
through a number of American classics, paying particular
attention to several of Jack London's, especially to the
character of Humphrey van Weyden in The Sea Wolf. He spoke
briefly with the Academic Dean and at length with the
Financial Aid office. He explored every nook and cranny of
the campus. He knew he could get into Harvard and he knew he
could graduate. That his father had been shot to death and
his mother had run off with the shooter did not deter him.
That nobody in his family had ever attended college did not
daunt him. Rather, the haunting memory of the Brooklyn
funeral "with the minister's pitying look at the
eight-year-old orphan, and the whispered comments that there
was now no hope for the boy "had only fueled his resolve.
He'd loved books from the day, at age four, that his
grandmother had first taught him to read. He'd scoured the
local branch of the Brooklyn Public Library at ages six
through eight, badgering the librarian with questions,
poring over every battered volume that he could heft home.
He delighted especially in stories "real or fictitious "of
individuals going places, stories of bold adventurers who
explored uncharted territory or discovered new knowledge. He
reveled in the biographies of Pasteur, Magellan and Marie
Curie; was inspired by the lives of Jackie Robinson and
Martin Luther King; and startled his second grade classmates
when, in answering his teacher's question regarding his love
of books, had solemnly stated, "There is no frigate like a
book to take us lands away." No, surviving Cambridge would
pose no difficulty. It was surviving somewhere else that was
the problem.
It was at the end of his last day, as he walked the
corridors of Emerson Hall, musing on James, Santayana and
the other great thinkers of the university's past, that the
answer struck him "not like a bolt from the sky, but as an
inevitable consequence of his reflections. Not all
first-class minds, he thought, were as open as Harvard
philosophy professors.
Reggie H.A.R.D. glowed with the contentment that comes only
from a productive week-end. On Friday night, he had shaken
down several of the local heist artists. On Saturday, the
result of several weeks of hard planning, he and The Posse
had taken down the goons of a successful loan shark, then
mugged him after a profitable day. But the piece de
resistance had come on Sunday when in an orchestrated
effort, he had masterminded assaults on four separate drug
dealers up and down Gates Avenue. The take had been ripe.
"Plunder!" he had boomed to his homies as they divvied the
swag at their cellar headquarters in the Marcy Avenue
projects. Allocating, per usual, 67 percent of the booty to
himself, staring at his posse, he achieved what some might
previously have thought to be a physical impossibility: he
glowered and smiled at the same time. "We be pillagers par
excellence!" he had roared to a roomful of blank faces.
After a full hour of outlining the activities of the
following week, he had given The Posse the next twenty-four
hours off. As a successful entrepreneur, he knew better than
to overwork his labor force. Then, alone with the night, he
had switched off the lights and gloated over the week-end's
results. It was good, he thought, to be a high achiever. He
stretched in the La-Z-Boy recliner he used for a personal
throne, a piece of merchandise donated by the local
furniture dealer in partial payment for Reggie's
professional assistance with a sextet of hoods foolish
enough to run a protection racket along Gates Avenue. His
massive frame fit snugly into the plush chair, aided by the
fact that Reggie never, under any circumstances, carried a
gun. "You got to admire a man loves to work with his hands,"
a bystander had said of Reggie's work in the school yard
early in his career, and he had adopted the phrase for his
personal motto. For that reason and that the butt of a
nine-millimeter distracted attention from the symmetry of
his physique. "Paraphernalia only de-tracts from perfection,
sly," he had replied to an admiring female who'd asked. He
kicked back now, hands behind his head, and smiled. He
remembered the countless hours spent hefting iron, chiseling
his current proportions. He laughed aloud at the
carefully-wrought legend of Reggie H.A.R.D., who had killed
two dozen men with his hands. Like many of the tales he
study behind locked doors "of Hercules, Odysseus, Lancelot "it
have no basis in fact. But the homeboys not know. No be
allowed to. Truth be bad for business. It was gratifying, he
mused, that threats from Gargantua could be so effective. He
flexed, enjoying the feel of resistance from the chair's
upholstery.
What was the story? He tried to remember. Gargantua had been
so big, his mother had carried him for eleven months? That
was it. He chuckled softly. He'd have to work that one into
his own myth. No one discover his plagiarism. The chumps be
so slow, they not read Rab-a-lay. And the smoke he blew had
all their eyes blurred. No one suspect his secret. He glowed
internally with the sense of his superiority. But then he
stiffened. In a few minutes he'd head to his crib, to his
weights and his squeeze. He have to make sure no one ever do
suspect it. His wiggles the only ones with the pro-hib-i-ted
information. They know his apartment. They know the stacks
in the spare bedroom, even though he keep the door locked.
It was why he swear them, under threat of their lives, to
tight-lipped secrecy. They not talk. They not dare. They
best not. Or there be howls of laughter up and down Gates
Avenue. Reggie set his jaw. Then a few cans of whup-ass be
opened, and a herd of toothless brothers yammer for
bridgework and drink their food with a straw. For real.
On his first day back from Cambridge, Walker sauntered
boldly down Gates Avenue. He did not sneak around like
usual, he did not leave his books at home or at school, nor
did he try to hide them. Rather, for several days he dragged
back and forth every bulky text he could carry. On the third
day, when a silver Lexus pulled up alongside him, he
stopped, his breath caught in his chest. For a moment,
nothing happened. Then the rear doors opened on either side
and two toughs stepped into the street. The window whisked
down on the front passenger side, revealing the mirthless
grin of Reggie H.A.R.D. "How you schoolboy ass groove my
ride, hole?"
Walker took a deep breath as he eyed the two Posse members
idling near the car's trunk. The hard objects outlined under
their sweatshirts were, for several seconds, all he could
see. Then he tore his gaze away.
"The name's Hump "remember?" he said quietly, and started
toward the car.
"Hump-free van Wy-den," the Posse members grinned broadly,
but did not take their eyes from Walker's slight figure as
he advanced.
"A Lexus, huh? Dealing drugs is profitable, is it, Reggie?"
Reggie H.A.R.D. laughed and swung easily out of the car,
leaving only his driver inside. Though it was November, he
wore a maroon tank top that read "Champion's Pride" in black
letters. He had on tapered basketball shorts that had been
out of style for ten years, with low-cut socks and
high-tops. Muscles bulged like ropes in his arms, chest and
legs, and Walker couldn't spot an ounce of fat on him.
"Dealing drugs is profitable, ain't it," he asked, and the
homeboys snickered, as if at an inside joke to which Walker
was not privy.
Before he could take another step forward, Reggie's
underlings seized the books from his arms and at a nod from
their leader, flung them over their heads to land
spread-eagled in the gutter.
"How I school you, puss, 'bout trucking grammar in my yard?"
Walker waited a second as his glance took in the grins on
the faces of the goons. His heart was so loud that he heard
it in his ears more than felt it in his chest. "I'm going to
Harvard, Reggie," he said softly.
"Say what, fem? You ass be going to Greenwood."
The Posse members snickered at mention of the Brooklyn
cemetery, and suddenly one of the thugs had a
nine-millimeter in his hand.
"You can't stop me from getting ""
"Snag it, flag it and bag it," Reggie said. "That mean 'shut
up.' Any last words?"
Walker took a deep breath, but it didn't help. All he could
see was the automatic. "How do I speak the last words if I
shut up?"
He could hear the trembling in his own voice, and the
rigidity of his muscles was so great that he was rooted in
this tracks as the goon reversed the gun and raked the butt
across his cheek. He felt the blood on his chin an instant
after the blinding pain.
"Any humor in this situation," Reggie said, "I the one
inter-ject it."
The pain made the muscle twitch above his jaw-line, but the
anger that followed provided the courage to carry on his
plan. "That's an affront," Walker said, his tongue thick in
his mouth. "I demand satisfaction."
The hoods laughed softly.
"Don't worry," Reggie said. "You be getting satisfaction."
"No! I get the choice of weapons."
"There be no choice of weapons, Faye. I not duel you
Sabatini-reading ass."
Walker could barely breathe, but he knew his only chance was
to bait the big man. "You read Sabatini, Reggie? What's your
favorite? Scaramouche, The Sea Hawk "The Black Swan, maybe?"
For one second, a worried look flashed through the gang
leader's eyes, then he quickly controlled himself. "Reggie
not be read "" but Walker didn't let him finish.
"Why not duel me? You're so bad, you could beat me with any
weapon I name."
"I not bad, I terrible, sly. I beat you like a year-old jury
summons."
"With any weapon?"
"With sticks, bricks or dicks, Virg. Care to try me?"
"Yes!" the word leaped from Walker's lips without the
slightest hesitation.
But neither did Reggie hesitate. With his left hand, he
seized a fistful of Walker's shirt and hoisted him three
feet off the deck, letting his legs dangle in space. "What
weapons, May? Guns, knives, fists?"
"Pens," Walker choked, and the grins on the thugs' faces
vanished.
But Reggie didn't blink. Dragging Walker's weight like an
ungainly backpack, the gang leader rummaged through Walker's
belongings until he unearthed a red ball-point, which he
uncapped and thrust in his victim's face. "I rip out the
nostrils first afore I ever get to the eyes. Save these for
last, Meg."
"No," Walker gasped with Reggie's hand still firmly
clutching his shirt. "I challenge you to an essay-writing
contest."
For a moment there was utter silence in the street. "Ess-say
writing?" For one second the homeboys looked at Walker as if
he had just landed from Jupiter. Then the automatics were
pointed at his head. "Less nine his scarecrow ass right
here."
Reggie laughed in simple pleasure. "We not require bang," he
said, and with one hand shook Walker's frame until his bones
rattled. "What you say, scrawn'? The bloods favor increased
body weight. Achieved a' course by injection of numerous
lead pro-ject-tiles. You frowning at Reggie, Flo?"
By wriggling inside his shirt, Walker managed to get an inch
of leeway for his chest. "Essays," he breathed out. "On The
Sea Wolf and Martin Eden. Specifically, on the intellectual
development of atavistic physical specimens in the novels of
Jack London."
The hoods gaped at what was, to them, another language. But,
Walker noticed, Reggie grew instantly attentive, his eyes
wary. Then a grin started to crease his face, though he
fought to hold it back. "You be dropping science on us, Liz?
Ed-u-cating our poor sorry ghetto asses?"
Before Walker could squeeze out a reply, one of the thugs
cocked his gun and ground the barrel into the victim's left
eye socket. "Less spray this oreo mother's brains."
But, gently, Reggie forced the gun away from Walker's face.
"Whoa, Wyatt, what I say? Waist the steel." He looked at the
student with unconcealed disgust. "What you know about ay-ta-vist-ics,
June?
"Not much," Walker admitted. "But I do know sufficient
biology to recognize specimens of Cro-Magnon man when I see
them."
"What he say?" the Posse members asked.
Reggie snickered. "Ay-ta-vist-ics, my man. You got no
pencil?" When the goons looked at Reggie as if he'd spoken
Japanese, the big man continued. "The reversion of
seemingly-advanced life forms to more primitive types."
Walker ignored the bug-eyed stares the gang leader received
from his followers. Momentarily, his heart leaped, though he
said nothing.
Reggie turned back to him. "Who be grading these ay-ta-vist-ic
writings, Pam?"
"Mr. Lomax. He's my ""
"We knows the sucker. He the Es-Ay-Tee man. The do-good
mother drive around the 'hood in a sorryass Volkswagen."
Even though held off the ground at arm's length, Walker
could feel his indignation rise. He's the best ""
Reggie cut him off by swinging him side-to-side, then
dumping him in a heap. "He the best thirty-a-year public
servant, Sam?" he spat. "I makes that a week. And don't
slave the white man."
Walker felt the taste in his mouth turn into vinegar. "Then
you won't ""
Reggie grinned. "'Course I will. Think Reggie get a chance
to play Tom every day? Next week we drop ay-ta-vist-ics on
you weasel ass. Tell Mr. Sir-With-Love, he not crowning you,
he be drowning you. I lets the homies pump shells on you
then." He grinned. "Might do it anyway. Go with Goddamn,
Sam."
He snapped his fingers, and he and his two minions got back
into the Lexus. Before they pulled away, one of the hoods
looked at his leader. "You ass be reading words?" Walker
heard Reggie laugh. "We find us a bookworm nigger." They
drove off, leaving Walker and his books splattered across
the gutter.
But Reggie wasn't spotted along Gates Avenue for several
days, and when acquaintances asked his latest wiggle where
he was, she said only, "In the apartment." She refused to
say doing what.
It was a mere five days after he'd issued the challenge that
Mr. Lomax showed Walker the sealed envelope that had been
overnighted to the school. It was addressed to: "Professor
Sir-With-Love Lomax."
"Well, he doesn't waste time, does he?" Walker said.
"In his line of work, he's a busy man. How's your essay
coming?"
"I'll finish it tonight, sir."
Walker had read both books involved more than once, and the
following morning at four, when he put the finishing touches
on his essay, he smiled. He knew he had the writing sample
that he would need for Harvard's Admission Department.
But three days later, when Mr. Lomax called him at home on a
Sunday afternoon, he could tell by the teacher's voice that
he was worried.
"Walker, you want to get over here right away?"
When Walker arrived, they went immediately into the
teacher's den.
"I've been grading these essays all morning."
"And?"
"And yours is excellent, son. Outstanding. Perhaps the best
piece of analytical writing I've seen from you yet. But . .
. "
"But Reggie's is better, sir?"
The teacher looked away, staring out the window, puzzled. "I
don't know who he got to write it for him. I can't imagine
who he bought."
Walker tried to look disconsolate. "Well, money talks, sir.
Teachers don't make much. Perhaps he bribed an English
professor at Brooklyn College."
Walter Lomax shook his head. "I've known thugs like him.
They could live around the corner from a college, but to
them it's another universe. They don't think like that."
Walker could feel a triumphant grin starting to crease his
face, but he quickly erased it. "Well, Mr. Lomax, I don't
know then."
"Come here, look at this." He shoved the paper into Walker's
hands. "It's where he shows that London's own conception of
Wolf Larsen as a Nietzschean 'ubermensch' is mistaken,
because of Nietzsche's utter rejection of materialism "that's
where this paper is extraordinary. That and where he argues
that the Humphrey van Weyden character, in his growing
self-assertiveness, is the true 'ubermensch' "because the
positive, life-affirming use of his intellect makes him akin
to Socrates, Michaelangelo and Goethe "here also, his
analysis is simply brilliant. And yet, there are occasions
where he makes obvious, even crude grammatical errors,
almost as if he had very little formal schooling and was
self-educated. It's strikingly anomalous, given the
understanding of Nietzsche "never mind London "this displays."
But Walker hadn't even heard his teacher's last few
sentences. "Humphrey van Weyden as the truly superior man?"
he mused aloud.
But the teacher missed his meaning. "Walker," he said
softly. "I have no hard evidence of cheating. If I'm to be
fair, Reggie's essay has to win. There's a return address on
his package. I'll get word to the bastard."
Walker nodded.
"But if Reggie wins the duel, what happens to you?"
"I'll be all right, Mr. Lomax. I think Reggie'll want to
keep me around so he can gloat."
But for days he saw no sign of Reggie. Gates Avenue and the
surrounding streets were quiet, and the silver Lexus was not
to be seen.
"Guess Reggie's got to catch up on his profit-making
activities," he said to Mr. Lomax.
But when the days became weeks, and the weeks more than a
month, Walker stopped wondering. His hours were filled with
classes, studying and editorials for the paper "and though,
from the corner of his eyes, he still watched the street as
he walked, his grim memories were slowly fading over time.
It was already January "and he was making plans to convince
his grandparents to allow him to work that summer in a
bookstore in the city "before he had any further trouble on
the street. But this time it was not on Gates Avenue, it was
around the corner from school, six blocks away.
He was hurrying home in late afternoon with an idea for a
thesis paper on Crime and Punishment in his Advanced
Placement class. The light was fading as the winter evening
came on, but there was no mistaking the two shadows that
stepped in front of him. He looked up, half in alarm, half
in expectation, but was disappointed. He didn't know them.
He tried to step around them, but one of the punks grabbed
him around the throat and jerked him back. "'S'up, cous'?"
One was tall, in green Army fatigues and boots; the other
was medium height, in denim and running shoes. Both were
gangly, with a drawn, emaciated look that smacked of
malnutrition. The light shining in their eyes was not from
love of wisdom. The tall one applied pressure, trying to
force Walker to the ground, Walker resisted.
"Don't hurt yourself now, schoolboy. You dressed so
fine "Dockers and Sebagos and all "we just here to share your
finances, is all."
Walker tried to call for help, but the hand around his
throat tightened, throttling him, and all that came out was
a wet, gurgling sound that had no force to carry. They had
him on his back when a middle-aged woman stepped out of a
bodega fifty feet down the street. Looking up, she saw the
mugging taking place in front of her. "Call the police!" she
shouted back into the store. But when one of the thugs got
up and started for her, she turned and ran.
The taller hood had Walker's wallet in his hands and riffed
through it quickly, seizing the cash. He threw the empty
wallet down when it contained only four singles. "This buy
us nothing, yo. Where you money at?"
Walker could barely breathe. Dimly, he heard the slamming of
a car door at what sounded like a distance. He shook his
head. "Got no money. That's it."
"Best have money, nigger. I cut your head off."
He pulled a hard metallic object from his pocket. The spring
of the opening blade was all Walker could hear. But as the
edge descended toward his face, he heard a familiar voice.
"Sorryass, librarian nigger. Thought I school you better."
The two hoods turned quickly, and Walker looked up. A
massive figure towered over them, dressed in only tank top
and nylon sweatpants despite the January evening.
"This don't concern you, Reggie," one of the thugs said.
"Step off, money."
Reggie H.A.R.D. laughed softly, a rich sound of genuine
amusement, as if enjoying the limited comprehension of a
child. "All oh-curr-ences in the 'hood concerns Reggie. I
the mayor, sis."
Slowly the muggers stood and warily backed off. "Don't want
no trouble with you, Reggie."
The big man swaggered forward easily, light as a gymnast on
his feet, despite his hulking frame. "Got trouble with me,
belle. How we dance?"
"We be leaving, Reggie. We gone, bro. No hard feelings."
Reggie shook his head. "Ain't the law of the sea, Jill. Big
fish eats the little fish. You the little fish." He smiled
widely, revealing a gleaming row of white teeth. "I the
shark."
"He the bait, Reggie," the knife-wielder cried desperately,
pointing at Walker. "He a 'sorry-Charlie-Tuna' mother! Eat
him."
The smile vanished from Reggie's face. "He going to
Harvard," he said softly. "You going to Graveyard. You
dropout mothers spell 'de-ceased'?"
Immediately the desperate looks of the muggers grew grim.
The shorter one stepped in and, an instant later, the
knife-wielder lunged forward. The big man ignored the first
and, twisting sideways, raised his left leg till it was
parallel to the ground and drove it with all the force of
two hundred and forty pounds into his victim's chest. The
mugger crumpled like a bank had toppled on him. His
companion turned and fled, but was quickly run down by
members of The Posse. They dragged him back to Reggie.
The big man seized a mugger in each hand and shook until
their bones rattled. When he stopped, they lay limp in his
hands. He waited until their eyes opened. "Got our eyes on
this boy," he said softly. "Reason I lets you stroll.
Spreads the word through the 'hood. Hear?"
They nodded. When he let them go, they staggered on their
feet, unable to walk.
"I catch you "or any nigger "messing my boy, you have Reggie's
boot so far up you ass we be running a three-legged race to
the hospital." He stopped, waiting for the glazed look to
pass from their eyes. "It be natural see-lec-tion, lame. You
too dumb to remain the gene pool. Reggie be passing on his
badass genes."
As the muggers limped off, Walker's breathing returned to
normal. He pulled himself to a sitting position. "That the
frothing of the yeast, Wolf?"
"Shh, don't be opening you geek-ass mouth to spread no
word."
Walker smiled. "Can't have people knowing, can we? How long
you going to stay in the closet?"
"Reggie got hisself a big-ass closet." He waved his arm
vaguely to include the entire neighborhood. "Cap-ay-cious,
Sue. Include all his activities."
Walker didn't answer, but concentrated on the difficult
effort of getting to his feet. Then a sudden thought
occurred to him. "Natural selection, Reggie? Only the smart
survive? Who's dropping science now?"
Reggie turned and motioned the gang members back to the car.
At the door to the front passenger side, he stopped and
faced Walker. "Yo, Jane, the mind be a terrible thing to
waste."
He eased into the car and gently closed the door. Slowly,
the silver Lexus disappeared into the dusk.
Andrew Bernstein is
Executive Director of the newly-founded Center for the Study
of Capitalism at Appalachian State University in North
Carolina and is the author of numerous works on philosophy
and literature. He also recently completed his first novel,
Heart of a Pagan.