Ghetto Cowboy (14 page)

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Authors: G. Neri

BOOK: Ghetto Cowboy
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We sit in the dark. The blackness is starting to weigh down on us, but Smush tries to lighten the mood. “So, I guess you a outlaw now. We should give you a nickname, like the Kid or something.”

Snapper laughs. “How ’bout the Motown Mutt?”

Smush shakes his head. “Nah, we’ll just call him Motor City from now on.”

I don’t like that neither. “I don’t think so.”

Smush snaps his fingers. “I got it. We’ll call you the Train, like Coltrane, get it?”

Train.
Yeah, that seem about right. Like everybody gonna hop on board and we gonna go places!

“That’s okay,” I say, playing it down.

Smush grins. “Train it is, then. But you better call your daddy so he don’t think the Train’s derailed.”

He pops open his phone and hits speed dial, then hands it to me.

“What’ll I say?”

“Tell him you having a sleepover with your friends,” cracked Snapper.

I listen to the rings. Harper finally picks up, but he don’t sound too happy.

“Smush, you know where my boy’s at?”

I don’t say nothing.

“Smush?”

“It’s me. Cole.”

There is a long silence on the other end.

“Where are you?” he finally says.

I don’t know what to tell him, so I just start talking.

“I got Boo. And a couple others. The rest stayed —”

He don’t let me finish. “What do you mean, you got Boo? Where the hell are you?”

“We hiding in the park.”

“Fairmount Park? And who’s ‘we’? You and Smush?”

“And Snapper.”

There’s a long pause, and I can almost feel the heat from Harp’s anger coming through the phone. “So, let me get this straight. You and those corner boys gone and stole the horses from some government facility —”

“We were saving ’em! Somebody had to!”

“Yeah? Is that what you’re gonna tell the judge when he sends you off to juvie?”

“Well, at least I did something —”

“Yeah, you became another statistic — that’s what you did. Just like Smush, another black stereotype of a hoodlum —”

“It’s not like that! Smush was doing what I told him to. He was trying to help!”

“Help? How is that going to help? For years, we been working with kids to get them off the streets. But all that’s out the window now, because apparently, we’re just training hoods!”

“But —”

“Once the City gets wind of this, it’ll be over! You hear me!? What kind of son are you?”

I can’t listen no more. “I ain’t your son and you ain’t my daddy, so you can go to hell!” I say, and hang up. I’m breathing hard, staring into the darkness.

Finally Smush speaks up. “I guess he wasn’t too happy about what we done.”

Ya think?
I don’t even bother answering him.

Smush and Snapper sit down on a rock and talk in whispers. I don’t care what they saying.

“Can’t we light a fire or something?” I ask.

Smush says no. It’ll cause too much attention. So we sit in the dark and wait.

A
fter a long time passes, maybe hours, the horses start to get nervous. Then I see some light flickering through the trees.

“Looks like we got company,” says Snapper, and he scrambles up the rocks.

After a minute, he come rushing back. “Must be the mounted police. We gotta go.”

Smush and me scramble up the rock for a look. There’s four of ’em on horses with flashlights.

“Maybe if we keep quiet, they won’t come up this way,” I whisper.

Then I hear, “Coltrane!”

It’s Harper.

He in the lead, and then I recognize Jamaica Bob and Tex behind him.

“How’d they find us?” I ask.

Smush sees the fourth guy. One of his crew. “Sold out by one of my own,” he says. “This ain’t gonna be pretty.”

Harper’s light swings up and finds us. He don’t say nothing.

“Busted,” says Smush.

They come around the bend and stop. Harper’s light shines on us, then checks out the horses. Nobody says nothing. Finally, Tex climbs down.

“Heard you needed supplies,” he says, undoing a coupla bags on his horse. “Got some food, drinks, blankets.”

Harper slowly gets off his horse and passes Smush, who tries to explain. “Uncle Harp, it wasn’t his fault —”

Harp just holds up his hand, saying, “I’ll talk with you later.”

Then he comes up to me, grabs my arm. “Come with me.”

I don’t really have a choice, do I?

We walk over to the edge of the pit. I look down into the darkness, thinking he gonna throw me in. He stands there, breathing slowly, not saying nothing. Finally, I can’t take it no more.

“It was all my idea. I’m the one who talked Smush into helping. So if you gonna do it, do it now.”

He looks confused, then sees me looking into the pit.

“I’m not gonna throw you in, Coltrane, even though I should.”

He sits down on the edge, tosses a rock down into the pit. I hear a splash not too far down.

He sighs. “I been trying to figure out why this life is so hard,” he says. “Why they out to get us? Is it because we’re cowboys? Or is it just because we’re black?”

I know what he’s saying. I feel like we the Pistons from way back when. They was always the underdogs, always counted out. No one liked ’em because they didn’t play by the rules. But they kept fighting, no matter what, until they became champs. “Maybe it’s ’cause they don’t like anyone that’s different. Anyone they can’t understand or control is bad news to them.”

He looks at me and nods.

I sit down next to him. “You mad at me for getting them horses out?”

“Yeah, but not for the reason you think,” he says. “My whole life has been about them horses. It’s why your mama left, ’cause I was too stubborn to change or give ’em up. I know I cared more about them than her at the time.” He looks back at the horses, chewing on grass. “Then you came along, and I guess it seemed like too much. I couldn’t handle it. I kind of disappeared for a while. Took my horse up onto the Appalachian Trail and just headed north. By the time I got my head straight and made it back home, you and her was gone.”

We sit there, listening to the wind blowing through the trees. Harper is silent for a long time.

“You coming back here made me realize how much I hate losing something that I care about.” He clears his throat. “Even if things were finished between me and your mama, I shoulda been there for you.” He puts his hand on my knee. “I know you ain’t no gangbanging fool. And I know you didn’t drive your mama away. I’m sorry I said that before.”

I don’t know what to say to that, but it feels good to hear.

“I need to do better. I
will
do better,” he says. “Starting with us figuring out how to get out of this mess. But we’ll do it together — you and me, okay?”

Together.
Suddenly, my posse just got bigger.

He elbows me in the side, all playful. “At least you was trying to get those horses back, even if it was a boneheaded idea.” He stands up and stares into the pit. And then he asks, “So what other ideas you got in that head of yours?”

I think of how they done things in the Old West. Poor folks fighting off land barons and all a that stuff.

“If we let them bulldoze the Ritz, there might not be no more cowboys left in North Philly after that,” I say. “It’ll give ’em an excuse to say the last stables in the ’hood is just as bad, and they’ll close them down too.”

“So where does that leave us?” he asks, like he can’t think no more.

From the movies I seen, I know one thing: Clint Eastwood wouldn’ta given up in a land war. “We gotta find a way to get some attention, so people can hear
our
side of the story, not just what the news been showing. City thinks they can shut us down and nobody’ll care. But if we can get the
people
of Philly on our side . . .”

And suddenly, I can see it. A whole lot of people standing in the way of those bulldozers, the cowboys out in front, representin’. “What if we did some kind of blockade thing, with horses and everything? You know, show ’em what we stand for?”

He shrugs. “Might get us arrested.”

I nod. “Yeah, but don’t you think that would get us on TV?”

He smiles and then starts to laugh. “Looks like you a cowboy after all.”

W
e head back to the others. Tex and Jamaica Bob have put ropes and blankets on the horses to make it easier to ride.

“So, what’s the verdict?” asks Tex.

Harper puts his hand on my shoulder. “Boy says we should fight back. Says we got to stand up for what we believe in. And I tend to agree with him. Moving our horses somewhere else is what they want, but fighting to keep these stables open, that’s the right thing to do. It’s the cowboy thing to do.”

Tex lets out a cheer. “Hot damn! I’m ready to fight!”

Smush holds him back. “Take it easy, old man. You gonna give yourself a heart attack!”

I explain my idea to them, how we gonna get every last horseman from any stables left in North Philly to stand in front of them bulldozers. Smush looks uneasy about maybe getting arrested, but then he says, “You can’t stop a moving train!”

He and Jamaica Bob and Harper all get on their cell phones and start making calls. They up for hours, eating, making calls, getting organized. I try to grab a few Z’s. By the time they finish, the sky is starting to get light again.

Harper stands. “We should go, boys. We got to be in place by eight a.m., when the City shows up.”

Bob and Tex offer to ride the horses with no saddles. Smush and Snapper get on horses with saddles, but nobody’s gonna ride Boo but me. Harp understands.

We head out just as the sun’s coming up over the park. We higher up, so it seem like you can see forever, trees and grass, and behind that the city loomin’ up like a giant, waiting for us.

The streets is quiet. It feels like the world is still asleep, but as we get closer, I start hearing a noise. It sounds like something big and alive and grows louder and louder until suddenly I recognize what it sounds like — a big ol’ crowd of people.

We round the corner to Chester Avenue, and I see something I never seen before. There must be seventy or eighty cowboys on horses milling about. Old heads and a bunch of young kids too. Even some white folks is there.

Harper sees my eyes go wide and winks at me. “
That
would be the cavalry.”

Tex laughs. “Can you imagine the look on the City fellas’ faces when they see this?” He slaps his leg. “If they expect us to just roll over, they got another thing coming!”

The others all spot us and start whistling and making cowboy hoots and hollers, slapping us on the back. Even Carmelo and Big Dee is there, treating us like kings, passing us our saddles and stuff.

Big Dee says, “Brothers, this is one showdown we ain’t missing!”

Harper moves to the middle of everyone, but there’s so many people, you can’t really see him no more. Then suddenly, he standing above everyone, and I realize he standing up on Lightning’s back!

He holds up his hands till everyone hushes. “You all know me as someone who don’t back down from a fight.” There’s a lot of nodding and
Say it, brother!
going around. “But I was taken off guard this week and forgot what we’re all about.”

He searches for me until our eyes connect. “We may look like we’re in the ghetto. But we’re all working people, doing what we can to survive. We got our ways, and we got our traditions. Here on Chester Avenue, that means horses.”

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