Read The 'N' Word, Book 1 Online

Authors: Tiana Laveen

Tags: #Fiction

The 'N' Word, Book 1 (25 page)

BOOK: The 'N' Word, Book 1
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“Well hell, I don’t know.” His shoulders slumped in annoyance.

“You
do
know… Go back to that time frame, Aaron. Live in that moment again.”

He took a few deep breaths and thought about Melissa… used her as motivation to move the hell forward and not bail out once more.

“Sometimes it was just boxed macaroni and cheese, sometimes it was instant mashed potatoes and gravy, and other times it was more. The
more
was the best.” He couldn’t help a smile as his stomach rumbled just beneath the memory-scratched surface.

“More?”

“Yeah, more… More was a table full of crispy, golden fried chicken, still hot to the touch… heat rising from it right before my eyes. Sometimes it would be a seafood spread. She’d have baked fish that she caught herself from the river and skinned, too. She’d boil shrimp, devein them ’nd all and make her own cocktail sauce outta ketchup, onion powder and horseradish sauce. She’d fry up thick slices of potatoes and cover them in green onions, real bacon bits and rich sour cream, the works. I get where you are going with this now, besides making me hungry… I know it doesn’t really matter what it was, Dr. Owens…” His eyes moistened ever so slightly. “It was that she was
doing
it, all the work she put into it, and that it is one of my fondest memories of bein’ with her.”

The doctor nodded in agreement, and smiled back at him, too.

“Keep going.”

“It was whatever she could get her hands on, but that woman could cook her ass off. I’d never tasted food like that in my entire life and to this day, I
still
haven’t. Me, Joe-Joe and Amy and some other kids were accustomed to this sort of thing from her. Our bellies would be stuffed, and then she’d hand us ice cold cans of juice or soda, let us pile up in her small living room that smelled like lavender from the carpet powder she’d use when she vacuumed, and we’d watch all our favorite shows with a bowl of ice cream or eat whatever dessert she’d made.

Her apple cobbler and chocolate cake were my favorite. If she’d fall asleep, we’d turn to a dirty movie on HBO or Cinemax and have a good time with that.”

The recollections poured in, things he hadn’t thought about in what felt like eons. Another wave of pleasant thoughts flooded his psyche. “Patti had cable, most of the rest of us didn’t. She hadn’t paid for it; her brother rigged it some kinda way. Her house was where we’d go to sleep on something soft, listen to loud music, and fill our stomachs with something that would hold us over until the next day. After a while, I ran away to this woman’s home on a regular basis. I was barely at my own house anymore. I finally had some peace, a refuge, you know? I finally felt safe…”

The two looked at one another for a long while. The inside of his mouth grew suddenly dry, and he sat bat and rocked a bit, thinking of things, little things and big things alike…

Strange how the past kept repeating itself… just like heartburn…

“Aaron, let’s stop right there, okay?” the doctor offered. “I think this is a good spot to take a break. I’ll follow up with you regarding the call to your pen pal in the next day or two.”

Aaron nodded, still distracted and a bit discombobulated as he got to his feet. Dr. Owens buzzed the guard in, and the office door slowly swung open. He extended his wrists to be re-handcuffed and simply waited. As he approached the door with the armed man at his side, he glanced over his shoulder, catching a glimpse of the doctor reaching for his desk phone.

“Dr. Owens?” he called out.

“Yes, Aaron.” The man paused, the receiver still in his hand. “What is it?”

“I don’t feel safe anymore… I…I haven’t felt safe in years…”

And then, he turned and walked away…

Chapter Eleven

Dear Melissa,
I know that I just sent you a letter and you haven’t had a chance to write back yet, but there are some things on my mind right now. As you know, I’ve been seeing the prison psychiatrist, and now, I am starting to realize that I needed to. Do you know what they call people like me in here? Ding Wings. No, I’m not in the psychiatric unit, but sometimes I feel like I may as well be. I want to tell you something that I’ve never told anyone before. You see, in talking to the head doctor here, it brought back a bunch of memories and stuff I just didn’t want to think about anymore. I admitted to you that I had been abused as a kid, by both my parents. Myself, Joe-Joe and Amy – we all got messed with by them, it wasn’t just me, but I can only tell you things from my perspective. I told you about my father playing that cruel joke on me, leaving me in the woods, to my own defenses. He did other things like that later on, too. That was just the first time, but definitely not the last. But my mother wasn’t any better, Melissa. One day, some money had come up missing out of her purse. I didn’t take it, but I knew who had. I’d seen him do it. My father was notorious for stealing because he had a really bad gambling problem.
So the money came up missing and I swear I was her favorite out of all three of us to pick on. This ain’t no pity party type of thing; even my brother and sister say I got it the worse. They knew, trust me, they knew. I think she thought I ruined her life or something, because she got pregnant so young with me. So, she came at me hollering about me stealing her money. I hadn’t, I told her so, but it did not one bit of good. I didn’t want to rat my father out though, either. I still wanted him to like me and want to do stuff with me, so I didn’t say anything and you know what? Even if I had, she still may not have believed me or cared.
She checked me all over, didn’t find any money. She tore up the bedroom me and my brother shared, still didn’t find any money. Then she made me strip down naked. I was about ten at the time. She stripped me down, Melissa, and made me stand outside in our front yard, then had me walk a ways up the street. She had me hold a sign over my dick that said, “I’m a thief. I stole money out my mama’s purse.’ Melissa, I can’t tell you really how that made me feel. I know if I’d ever felt anything like that before then, but I don’t think I had. I believe that was the first time in my life that I got a glimpse of what hatred tasted like. My friends around the neighborhood saw me, and started pointing and giggling. And then my father saw me, and all he did was walk right on past, like nothing had happened. Like, so what?
She brought me back in after about an hour or so, put water all over my skin, then beat me up and down my body with a belt. I could barely sit or lie down. My skin was all busted open, bruised and bleeding. The sheets of my bed stuck to me that night, and a couple of the welts got infected. The next day my father came into the bedroom. I’d been in there crying all night. He came up to me and poured whiskey on the cuts… said it would help disinfect them. The shit burned and hurt so bad! Then he winked at me and thanked me for not telling my mother he’d taken that money outta her purse. And that was that…
I just wanted to tell you about that is all. I don’t cry about it or anything like that; it just popped into my mind. I know the Good Book says we’re supposed to honor our parents, Melissa, I know what it says, but I fucking hate them and I’m just fine with that. I hope you have a good night, sweetheart. I love you.
A.P.

A
RUBBERY PIECE
of mystery meat wedged itself between two molars and refused to set him free. Aaron sat on the bench, looking up every now and again at his cell bars, taking notice of a guard or two walking leisurely past. He felt like something stinking and on all fours at the damn zoo. Their eyes would narrow upon him, a veiled threat dancing in their pupils. He’d simply nod, dare the bastards to come forward, but they never did. He hated fucking cowards…

His thin mattress with old piss stains from other sons of bitches of yesteryear was fully exposed as he’d wrapped the equally thin cream-colored double sheets around his shoulders, fighting a chill in the place. The night air was falling, and he knew better than to ask for a bit of heat, something to get his blood flowing once again. No, he’d simply make do. He jammed his finger into his mouth to work the hard gristle out while the other hand held onto something precious, but possibly slipping away… Melissa’s letter…

His skull throbbed as heat surged within him. The woman had written some things that gave him pause, confused him, and captivated him, too. Deciding to go at it again like a relentless case of O.C.D., he re-read the letter for now the third time, inspecting the damn thing for checks and balances. He surmised she had not received his note detailing the horrific incident of his childhood, but it didn’t matter. She was addressing things in a timely fashion, and that was all he could ask for.

Dear Aaron…
Thank you for your letter. I believe there are some things we should discuss. I would first like to say that, once again, I do thank you for your honesty regarding the details of your crime and affiliation. I’m certain it must’ve been difficult for you to admit such things, especially since you are appealing your sentence and have to be mindful of what you share with others. Now let’s address the other matter brought to my attention. I will say this: you were correct to assume that I would not embrace the belief system you state you possess.
I believe that God created all of us equally, and it was us, as human beings, who decided to divide and assign inconsequential, inaccurate meanings to one another, as well as create a system in which we fight over the most trivial of matters, including things we cannot change, such as our race, our parents, and our cultural background.
You stated that you do not hate non-whites, yet you are a part of a group of individuals who have orchestrated and participated in countless acts of harassment, civil and non-civil disobedience and disruption, public and private acts of racially motivated ferocity, and other illegal acts driven by abhorrence and intolerance against people that are not of European ancestry. You also made it clear that you are held in high regard and apparently have a following; thus, that makes you perhaps even more steeped in such illogical beliefs. You did not elaborate enough for me to accuse you of being a braggart about such status, but I doubt that you are repentant at this time. I have let you know, in no uncertain terms, that I do not approve of the group you are affiliated with. Nevertheless, what I will say to you next may surprise you.
I am certain at this point you believe that I would wash my hands of you and tell you God bless, take care, or something of that nature. No. Instead, I will do what I do best, and that is to fight with love, not vengeance, and utilize my other super-power for the greater good – and that is, my teaching ability. That’s what I do, that is what I went to college for and received my degree and certification for, and that is what comes to me naturally. Aaron, your first lesson is a history lesson of sorts. You are a white man in a country you did not originate from.
BOOK: The 'N' Word, Book 1
4.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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