man . . . tell me how you got everybody on your side.â
George left his clothes and straddled a chair backward, resting his arms across the top. âLet me get this straight, you want me to show you how to get along with white people?â
âAnd still be myself, yeah.â
George winked. âYou canât. I told you that already. Around here, you have to be somebody else. More than one person, really.â He held up one of his hands. âFive things,â he said, and lowered a digit as he counted each one. âFirst and foremost, donât ever hit anybody, no matter how much they piss you off. I donât need to tell you why because you already know. Second, smile instead of scowling all the time, like youâre mad at the world. The minute these people start feeling unsafe, brothers start getting sent home.â
âHas that happened before?â
âMore than you think. To tell the truth, Iâm surprised youâre still around.â
âMe, too,â Anthony said. âSomebody must be looking after me.â
âThatâs good. Without Coach Rockwell watching my back, I would have been gone a long time ago.â He stopped and looked somewhere far off. Then he blinked a couple of times.
âThird,â George continued, âhit those books, son, and hit âem hard. Thereâs nothing more powerful in this world than a black man who uses his brain. And fourth, get to know these people. Learn their hobbies, where they come from, and what their parents do for a living. You never know when it all might come in handy.â George stopped talking and arched his eyebrows, leaving his rigid middle finger still standing all alone.
âWhatâs the last one? You said five things, right?â
George waved the finger back and forth. âYouâre right,â he said. âThis last one is the most important: No matter how much time you spend with them and how hard they try to do it, most of the kids here will never really know you.â He put the finger down.
Anthony frowned. âWhy not? Because I shouldnât let them?â
âBecause they canât,â George said sadly. âTo them, youâre not just Tony, youâre that black guy, Tony, or their black friend, Tony, or that crazy black guy, Tony, who went berserk at the brook. The color of our skin makes them blind, sometimes. These Belton kids canât see us because they canât get past the blackness.â He smiled at Anthony. âThink about your name, son. For real. No matter how many times you tell them, they still keep calling you what they want.â
Anthony agreed but then thought about it. Something still didnât make sense to him. âWhat about you?â Anthony said. âAlmost every time I see you, youâre hanging out with some white people, laughing and joking around. Seems like you made some friends that really know you.â
George smiled. âI did,â he said. âIt took some work, though. From both sides. I had to drop some stereotypical things associated with black folk.â
âYeah,â Anthony joked, âbut not basketball, though.â
âNot that, but other things,â George said. âThings like my music and how loud I listen to it, making sure I pull my pants up and wear a belt. And another thing I donât do is eat fried chicken up here, which is more than I can say about some people. Your girl was at dinner the other night, eating wings like they were going out of style.â
At first he wasnât sure, but then Anthony figured it out. âYou mean Gloria?â
âThe one and only. People like her are dangerous. They can set black people back a hundred years.â
âFor eating chicken in public? Come on, man,â Anthony said. âI donât know about that one.â
âHow about for being a segregationist, then? I know that she canât stand me for
Jay Lake, edited by Nick Gevers
Melanie Schuster
Joyce Meyer
Liza Street
Felicite Lilly
Juliet Rosetti
Kate Kessler
Brieanna Robertson
Ainslie Paton
Cora Harrison