Reparations
Every day is an opportunity. This is the mantra of a survivor. What makes you a survivor? Well, it’s existence, I suppose. The problem is that every now and again, opportunity meets fate. What do I mean by that? Simply put: he had to die.
Relax. No one was murdered.
I just had to kill that version of me; the me that walked to junior high school every morning seeking reparations through quid pro quo. You see – same time, same place; every weekday – a boy named Sammy had to pay for the sins of his ancestors. He and I were good friends; not best friends but good friends. He had his life in the white part of the neighborhood, and I had my life in the black part. That’s just the way it was. Problems become logical over time. That’s what institutional racism is: a problem in existence so long that it actually makes sense to people.
Anyway, our different lives converged every morning at the corner of Westwood and Highland. That’s where Sammy and I met to walk the rest of the way to school together; all six blocks of it. Conversations always started casually – television recaps, sports, school gossip: the girl in the class who kept the note I passed asking her if we could make out by the portables. Next thing you know, we found ourselves three blocks down at Westwood and Berry.
“Hey man, you know I’m gonna have to rough you up, right?”
“Yea, I know.”
Bracing himself for blows, he contracts into his best attempt at covering both his chest and face simultaneously.
But, there’s no brace for oppression.
Jab. Jab. Hook. Jab. Hook.
Sammy lets out a few whimpers as my fist dimple his arms, chest, and stomach. I usually tried to avoid the face. I have some compassion.
Actually, I have a lot of compassion because, after I retreated the punches, we went back to our walk as if nothing happened.
“You done Alex?”
“Yea, Sammy we’re good.”
“Ok good. So, Carey really kept the note? Shit! You’re in for a….”
For my entire 6th grade year, that was reparations – a quick pause to beat the shit out of Sammy.
“He had to die. “
“Huh?….Alex, what the hell are you talking about?”
“I guess that’s my way of apologizing. I’m sorry, Sam. I shouldn’t have beat up on you like that every day. It was just wro…”
“Ahh Shit! What are ya gettin’ all sentimental on me, Alex? Fuck! Aye, bartender, get my buddy here another drink. He needs to loosen up. Run into the guy for the first time in 30 years, and he wants to get all mushy on me! Get this man a drink now goddam….”
As I said, every now and then, fate meets opportunity. Such was the case for this reunion between Sammy and I. It turned out to be a different kind of opportunity than I imagined, though. I pictured a plead for forgiveness mirroring that of the one I made to her as we lumbered through Prospect Park in the aftermath of a night gone wrong in a bar at the lobby of a haunted hotel atop the cobble-stoned roads of Meatpacking. An, “I’m sorry for the pain I caused” type of forgiveness. But, then again, that was merely a case where the sexual was more disease than healing. And, no, not intercourse, but worse – the tension bred by just the thought of such an act.
What I found instead was a “let bygones be bygones” type of forgiveness.
“You know I never got to thank you for what you did for me, Alex. You toughened me up. You taught me how to take a punch, and I needed that….I needed it cause life is full of motherfuckers waitin to punch ya in the gut! Ha ha ha! Sure as hell is I tell ya….“
He had to die.
But, mainly for selfish reasons. Because what was supposed to be reparations didn’t provide me any healing. I’m still in pain. In fact, I’m in more pain because I realized the part of him I wanted to weaken I only made stronger with vice versa for me.
He had to die.
So, I put him in a pool. I pushed him from the rails. I let him sink under water. But, this time; the lady with the slip-and-slide that she kept to the side of the pool for the kids who couldn’t swim wasn’t there to reach down and pull him out in time.
“Sammy, you mind doing me a favor?
“Sure, Alex. What do ya need, buddy?”
“I need a cab. “
JC












