Part 25 (1/2)

”d.a.m.n! I don't know why they trippin' on me like this. Talkin' 'bout a mistake. That's bulls.h.i.+t!”

”Scott, you 'bout ready?” said the pig, who had returned and was standing in front of my cage. He'd been gone for forty seconds.

I didn't say a thing, just backed up to the bars so he could chain me up for the escort across the hall to Deep Segregation. The pig tried to make small talk, but I didn't respond. How could he make conversation, and expect a response, with a man he was putting in a Hole inside a Hole?

I was marched through so many gates and doors that I felt like Maxwell Smart. It was depressing. When we finally got to the small cage-and I couldn't believe how small-I was made to strip and go through the degrading motions. One last stab at my humanity. I was locked behind a series of bars, then a door with a heavy plate of steel that, when closed, could isolate me from any light whatsoever. There was no light in the cell. There was an opening in the upper left corner, and from the back of the cell an outside floodlight stuck through, protected by wire mesh. The bed was a hard, concrete slab no wider than a child's little red wagon. The sink and toilet were attached together and both reeked with atrocious fumes of bile, defecation, urine, and G.o.d knows what else.

Before he left I asked the pig if I could have some cleaning material for the cell, and he replied that I wouldn't be able to see anything no way and that I'd get used to the smell in a few days. And with that he closed the big door and let down the heavy metal covering over my window, leaving me in total darkness.

”Hey,” I hollered, reaching for the bars in front of me. ”Hey, turn on the lights. Hey! I know you hear me!”

But I got no response.

I felt my way over to the bed and sat down. I thought long and hard about what Muhammad had called repression, about what Elimu had taught me about resistance, and what Ballard had said about the white folks' fear of us. I thought that I hadn't even resisted yet, but still I was being treated like this. Little did I know that I had been resisting all my life. By not being a good black American I was resisting. But my resistance was r.e.t.a.r.ded because it had no political objective. I was an unconscious resister.

Repression is funny. It can breed resistance, though it doesn't mean that the resistance will be political, positive, or revolutionary.

So I sat there in total darkness, in total silence, repressed to the max. I had nothing to feed on that could explain this level of action to me. There was no mattress on the concrete, so I lay back on the hard slab and went over the words in my head that, while unconnected, didn't have any meaning to me whatsoever. As I lay there I remembered my mother coming to Y.T.S. to see me, crying and shaking her head.

”Baby, I got something to tell you. Something you are old enough to know now.”

”What is it, Mom?”

”Scott is not your father. Baby, your last name isn't supposed to be Scott. Oh, Kody, I . . . listen, do you remember seeing this book?”

In her hands she was holding a blue-and-white book with a football player in uniform on the cover.

”Yeah, I've seen that book around the house.”

”Well, this is your father, baby. His name is d.i.c.k Ba.s.s. He played football for the Rams.”

”Wait a minute, Mom, I'm confused here. Who is Scott, then? I mean whose father is he?”

”He's Shaun, Kerwin, and Kendis's father. Kevin and Kim have the same father, but he's not Scott.”

”But . . .”

”Wait, let me explain. When I was pregnant with you, Scott and I were not getting along. d.i.c.k and I had met through your G.o.dparents, Ray and Della.”

My G.o.dfather was Ray Charles, the famous musician.

”d.i.c.k was there when I needed him,” she went on. ”Scott knew you were not his child and asked me to get an abortion, but I refused. I wanted you, Kody. This is why he and I would fight all the time. He hated you, baby.”

”That's why he never took me anywhere like he did Kerwin and Shaun?”

”Yes, baby.”

”So, where is . . . d.i.c.k?”

”I don't know. He . . .”

”Mom, I'm not even gonna worry about it 'cause I'm a man now. I don't need no daddy. For what?”

”Kody, I have tried my hardest to raise you guys up right. But I had to work hard every day just to feed you by myself. You know Scott and I got a divorce in 1969 and there has not been a man in your lives since. I wonder if that's how I lost you and Shaun to the streets. You guys have turned from my darling little ones into savage little animals and I just don't know what to do no more. I really don't.”

”But Mom, it's not your fault, it's not your fault,” I said over and over.

As I lay on that slab I now said it over and over to myself. ”It's not your fault.” And I hated that m.u.t.h.af.u.c.ka Scott and d.i.c.k Ba.s.s. What could Mom do? She could only be our father for so long. I do remember not being taken on any trips like the others and being treated differently by Scott. When the others were on trips, I would be alone and sad. Sometimes Della would come and take me to different places, or I'd spend the weekend at Ray and Della's house. My only consolation for not being treated like the others was that Ray Charles was my G.o.dfather, so I'd always have new toys, new bicycles, and Hot Wheels.

Mom would pretend that the reason I couldn't go on the trips was that she wanted me with her because I was her favorite. She tried very hard to keep my spirits up, even when hers were down. Scott would take the others to Houston to visit his mother, their grandmother. But I was an illegitimate child and he was ashamed of me, hated me, Mom said. I never met my grandmother.

I fell into a rough sleep and don't know how long I'd been out when someone started beating on the steel covering over the window in my door.

”Get up,” said the voice, distinctively American. ”Get up!”

Irritated by being awakened, and generally mad, I shouted back. ”What, m.u.t.h.af.u.c.ka, what?”

”Hey, I got some paperwork for you to sign, Scott.”

”I ain't signin' s.h.i.+t, and my name ain't no f.u.c.kin' Scott!”

”Are you refusing to sign?”

Not only did I refuse to sign, I refused to talk anymore. Why? What else could they do to me if I didn't? I stretched my sheets out as best I could and tried to go back to sleep, but I couldn't. My eyes had adjusted to the darkness and I could at least see my hand in front of my face, though barely. As I lay there I could hear rats scurrying across the cell floor. It sounded like there were a lot of them. I cursed the pigs under my breath.

The next night I was given a mattress. When the lights came on, ten rats darted for cover. The only reason I knew a whole day had pa.s.sed when they brought the mattress was that they'd brought me three meals before that. The pigs expected me to beg or snivel about the conditions, but when they opened the door, I walked to the bars to receive the paper plate of food they slid under the door and took it without saying a word. Can't stop, won't stop.

I fed myself on the strength of the C-Nation, on seeing and knowing of the existence of a unified, organized Crip Nation. I tried to feed on what Muhammad had taught me, but it was too complicated. The words were too political, so I went with what I knew best and had seen for most of my life. And I endured.

I was kept in that cell, in the dark-except when they brought meals-for a week. One morning an American pig came to feed me and when he turned the light on I gave an involuntary moan.

Since I was always in the dark, the bright light hurt my eyes. It hurt so much that I couldn't open them to get my meals. After three days of ice-pick pain through my brain from the stabbing light, I'd decided it was better not to try to adjust to it. I knew that to stand straight up, turn ninety degrees to my left, and take three steps would put me at the bars. I'd feel my way down the bars until I'd find the paper plate, and then I'd retrace my steps to the bed. Most of the time they'd turn the light off immediately after they'd closed the door. I'd eat with my eyes closed till they doused it. They wouldn't say anything to me and I wouldn't say anything to them.

But on this day, I had been caught with my eyes open, and the light blasted my brain into little pieces. The pain was overwhelming, and I moaned in response to it.

”Hey, Scott, you all right? How long you been back here?”

I didn't say anything. I just walked blindly to the bars, retrieved my paper plate, and ate with my eyes tightly closed. He stood there and watched me. I knew he was there, I felt him in my s.p.a.ce, looking, thinking. But there was no room in my s.p.a.ce for him. He was an intruder, a violator. He had to be expelled.

”What you lookin' at, man?”

Startled, he stammered and said, ”How'd you know I was here if your eyes were closed?”

”I feel you. Will you leave now?”

”I'm gonna get you outta here, Scott.”

I gave no reply and waited for him to leave before I continued to eat.

I finished my meal and took my morning walk-three steps to the front, turn, four steps to the back. I'd repeat this for a few hundred steps, then sit back down for an hour or so and listen to the rats eat the remains of my food. We had come to an overstanding, the rats and I. When I was on the floor the rats yielded. Like in Congress: the rats yield the floor and recognize Monster Kody from the Crips. And when I got on my red-wagon slab bed, I recognized the rats from Deep Seg. I like it like that-mutual respect.