As autumn waned,
sunlight faded earlier by the day, which mildly concerned Ken. Gazing out the
kitchen window, he hoped he would see Lydia’s blue Tesla pull into their
driveway any minute.
On her usual
‘work’ days (she and her fellow docents were
volunteers, not employees) at the State Women’s Museum in the city, she
would have arrived home by now. Making the forty-minute drive back to their
semi-rural subdivision before it got dark was important. At their ages, the
retired couple avoided driving at night whenever possible.
Tempted to call
or text her to find out where she was and when she might be home, Ken
hesitated, as he knew her phone ringing or a notification pinging irritated
Lydia while she was driving - she would just ignore it. And she was surely on
the road by this time.
This late in the
day, Ken had already whiled away the hours with his usual chores and errands,
answered emails, scanned his usual blogs, listened to a podcast for an hour, so
he was left in the unusual position of having nothing to do but sit and think
until his wife arrived home. What could be holding her up?
He had never
known the museum to stay open past six p.m. And Lydia didn’t usually stop to do
errands on the way home when darkness was imminent. Car trouble, maybe? He was
fairly certain her car had nearly a full charge when she left; if she had car
trouble, she would have called by now. It was almost completely dark.
Maybe he should
jump in the Prius and head toward Lake City. Little chance that they would miss
each other en route. Except it was now fully dark and he didn’t trust
himself to pick out her blue Tesla on the divided highway between Green Maples
and the city.
Oh, hell, get
the phone and call, he thought. She would just have to understand that these
were extraordinary circumstances.
He had just
touched her contact icon when headlight beams flooded the kitchen window and
the garage door hummed into operation. Relieved, he waited for his wife to come
through the door from the garage and fill him in on her late arrival.
‘Glad you’re
home, Sweets’, he started, ‘I was beginning to worry ─’
Based on the
stricken look on Lydia’s face, worrying was not out of the equation yet.
‘Oh, my God!’,
she almost shrieked as she rushed through the door, right past his proffered
peck-on-the-cheek. Dropping her keys and purse on the kitchen counter, she
headed for the living room and fairly collapsed onto the sofa, her face in her
hands. ‘Oh, my God, Ken! Oh, my God!’ The last exhortation became a sob, and
she was in tears.
‘Honey, what in
the world …’, Ken tried to think of some utterance that might calm and reassure
her - from what kind of trauma he did not know. ‘Can you tell me what happened?
Where were you all this time? Are you alright?’
‘No! I am not … ALRIGHT!
I AM NOT ALRIGHT! I WAS NEARLY SHOT TO DEATH! Oh, my God!’, her angry tears
continued. She shoved her husband’s embracing arms away in wild fury and
wailed.
‘What the hell …
shot to death? I’m calling the police!’ He took another worried glance at her
red eyes and frazzled hair and reached for his phone.
‘Put that down’,
she demanded as she fought for emotional control. ‘I have just spent an hour
talking with the police. Oh, my God!’
Ken hoped there
was a way to calm the situation and find out what happened and where he fit in
amid all this hysteria. ‘Let me get you a cup of herbal tea. Have you eaten?
Can I slice some baguettes for toast? We have some cold salmon in the fridge.’
Gasping, and
finally calm enough to talk, she made an effort to address her husband in
somewhat measured tones. ‘I need a glass of wine, that’s all I want. Please.
Now. The cab.’ Ken dutifully stepped over to the wine credenza, upturned two
stemmed glasses, and divided the remainder of a bottle of Kendall Jackson into
them. Handing one to his distraught wife, he took a seat next to her on the
leather sofa.
‘Ken, I have
never been so scared, so angry, so … oh, my God! They shot a couple right in
front of our museum - a bullet flew through our door and missed my head by
inches! A drive-by … they must have fired … it sounded like fifteen shots! A
white girl, she was pregnant … she’s dead; the baby daddy was still alive in
the ambulance, but who knows? Plus two innocent bystanders got hit.’
‘Oh, my God,
hon, why didn’t you call me?’
‘And have you do
WHAT? I was afraid for my life, for Christ’s sake, and the police made me
explain over and over again what I heard and saw. My heart was beating so loud
and so fast, I thought I was going to have a heart attack! Oh, my God.’ Lydia
pulled a long draught from the wine glass and shuddered.
‘Did they catch
the shooters?’, Ken asked, hoping to find out more while trying to head off
another emotional upheaval.
‘No, not by the
time they finally let me leave. I heard witnesses who were on the sidewalk tell
the cops there was a car full of them. A big black … Tahoe-something-or-other
with tinted glass. They said the car pulled up alongside the couple, windows
open, and just started shooting, spraying bullets everywhere! Thugs. Dreadlocks
and hoodies, two gunmen, the witnesses said. No one even had time to take a
video, at least not that could help the cops at all. Oh, God, that poor girl!
And her baby!’
‘Holy Jesus’,
Ken had murmured several times during the telling, while sipping his own wine.
He drew his phone from his pocket and began scrolling.
‘What on earth
are you doing, Ken?’, she demanded.
‘Want to see if
the Lake City Sentinel website has any updates. Yep, here’, He touched a link
and spread his fingers on the screen to enlarge the text, ‘Four men in custody
on suspicion.’
‘Let me guess …’,
Lydia’s shoulders sagged, ‘they’re all from the ‘hood. God, I feel like such a,
like such a … racist!’
Her husband
continued to read and scroll. ‘Yep. Bowser Street, Kroehle Ave, I guess that’s
the Five Points area alright. The suspects and the male victim of the couple
are all from there. Stolen car, too.’
‘Five Points -
you know what they call Five Points in the city? ‘Shots Fired’ is what they
call it’, Lydia exhaled deeply.
‘What do you
mean, you feel like a racist?’
Exasperation
showed all over her face. ‘I mean, it’s just, it’s … THIS every time, isn’t it?
I mean, this kind of crime, this … it’s this lawlessness! So predictable. So
sadly preDICTable! Same cast of characters, and here we sit like victims,
with our white skin ….’
‘Yeah. But our
white privilege too, remember’, he sought to clarify.
‘Our privilege? OUR
privilege? What the hell kind of privilege? That bullet that missed my face
by inches, was THAT my privilege? Because I have a home in Green Maples,
because we’ve worked and saved and invested and gone to church and volunteered
and tried to make a difference in the world, I am somehow privileged and need to be reminded of that when a bullet nearly
hits me? Please’, she snorted, ‘we’re fools if we believe that. YOU’RE a fool
if you believe that.’
‘Lyd, they are
people, just like us, except the world has taken so much from them. There is so
much rage ….’
‘Rage? No, I see
the faces, I saw the two - fifteen-year-olds!
– do you remember the two who had the stand-off with the cops at The
Confectionary across from our museum last month? They smirked! There was no
rage! What I saw in their eyes wasn’t … it was entitlement! They were going to take what they wanted from the poor
frightened kids working there. Rage, my eye! AS IF they were rising up in
righteous anger against oppression!’ Lydia had by now nearly drained her glass.
‘Lydia, they are oppressed and we know that! We have not lived in their
world. How do you expect ….’ Ken was searching desperately for a means of
turning the issue away from the tripwire of race.
‘I’m beginning
to think ‘their world’ is more a result of their bad choices, not our
privilege.’ Anger was smoldering in her eyes. ‘Please get me another wine.’
Calmer now, but there was a determined set to her jaw.
Ken rose again
to select another cabernet sauvignon and uncork it. ‘Until we’ve walked in
their shoes, we can’t judge. Until we’ve had store managers follow us around
because we’re ─’
Lydia nearly spat,
‘Wait a minute. Do you really think store managers follow your friend from
church, what’s-his-name, DeMario …?’
‘DeMarcus.
DeMarcus and Chanise Briscoe.’
‘Do you think
they follow people who dress and act like the Briscoes around in stores? In
Lake City? Please. That kind of excuse-making is getting tiresome.’ Lydia took
another swallow. ‘Store managers follow around people who look and act like the
people who shoplifted and stole from them yesterday and the day before, and the
day before, and are ruining their businesses. Poor innocent victims! Talk about
privilege! How about the privilege of breaking all the laws and still wearing
the mantle of ‘victim’!’
Ken wanted
desperately to douse the fiery rhetoric. His wife was reacting to trauma - a
bullet just missed her head! - and this kind of fury was not helpful, even if
somewhat understandable. ‘Why don’t you take a hot bath and a melatonin and get
some sleep, hon? A good night’s rest will help put this in perspective.’
‘Jesus, Ken, are
you serious? Are you trying to mollify me? Are you afraid I am going to say
something that upsets your happy worldview? I ALMOST GOT MURDERED BY THUGS
WEARING DREADS AND HOODIES!’ Lydia was now shaking, using two hands to lift the
stemmed wine glass to her lips. ‘What does ‘in perspective’ mean, anyway? Do
you think I’ll wake up tomorrow and forget the street scenes that happen more
and more often on Merchant Street, right in front of our front door? Uchanna
Ebi, who sometimes works with me, is afraid to go out the front door for her
lunch break - she says they call her awful names, it’s always ‘Hey, n____’ this
and ‘n____’ that … and she’s from Nigeria! She hates them! She is terrified of
what Lake City is becoming!’
‘Lyd, the world
is not perfect. We need to remember to judge people as individuals, not lump
them into groups’, Ken chided her, and then tried on a strained smile, hoping
to mitigate his lecturing tone.
‘And yet’, Lydia
fired back, swiping away his smile, ‘and yet ‘groups’ are all we hear about;
groups that we must accommodate and celebrate, groups about whom we must never
misspeak, groups who can slander us, harass us, ruin our businesses and get
people fired. Groups swing all the political power now. God, it’s so obvious.’
‘You’re starting
to sound like … ‘, Ken had to be careful here; this was not a comparison he
wanted to make lightly, lest his wife go ballistic (there had been a history). Instead of finishing the sentence, he
rose to pace over to the wine credenza again, even though his glass was nearly
full.
‘Like what, Ken?
Say it … like what? A racist? Yeah, no kidding; that’s exactly what I feel
like, too. A bullet flying past your skull can almost make you reason like a
racist.’ If anything, Lydia was now building steam, not decompressing. ‘Mike
always said ‘a liberal is just a conservative that hasn’t been mugged yet’, and
I’m beginning to see the sonofabitch’s point.’
Ken, trying
desperately to defuse the conversational dynamite, could not help himself. ‘You
told me that’s why you divorced him - his knee-jerk conservatism.’ Now what was
he getting himself into? Marriage kerosene splashed on a flaming race relations
argument? He had to find an offramp from this contentious dialogue in a hurry.
‘We have to
think like rational adults here, not reactionary yahoos’, he added, and
immediately regretted it.
‘Oh, okay. My ex
is a ‘reactionary yahoo’ now! Listen, I had my reasons for divorcing Mike, and
they are none of your damn business’, Lydia growled. ‘Mike was many things,
including a lying philanderer, but I will tell you what he wasn’t: A victim! Mike is not going to stand by while
thugs take what’s his because THEY feel entitled! Mike doesn’t bear a
shred of guilt about ANYthing, least of all his skin color or
‘privilege’’.
Ken regretted
bringing up her former husband in the first place, but by God, there were
principles at stake here - principles he knew in his heart that Lydia shared
with him, despite her frantic ravings of the moment. ‘He kept a gun, too,
didn’t he?’
Lydia shot Ken a
look that could have bored a hole through him. ‘Guns. Plural. Yes, he did, and
it scared the living daylights out of me. He kept one right there in that hall
stand by the front door’, she gestured. ‘One under the seat of his car. One in
the bedroom. All loaded. Mike was prepared to defend himself and his property
with deadly force. It used to make my skin crawl. But Mike never gunned down a
biracial couple on a city street, I’ll give him that.’
Feeling utterly
defeated, Ken proposed a cease-fire. ‘We can talk about this in the morning if
you want to. Look, I am so sorry this happened to you and I’m glad you’re home
safely. I am ready to hit the hay - what do you say I straighten up around here
and we turn in for tonight?’
Lydia sat
staring into her wine glass and said nothing. In a post-adrenaline letdown, her
eyes sagged, she leaned back, and she surrendered to torpor. Five minutes went
by while Ken loaded some dishes and his wine glass in the dishwasher, wrapped
up a baguette, returned some Whole Foods kikka sushi to the refrigerator and
snapped out the kitchen lights.
‘C’mon, Lydia,
let’s go to bed.’ He was pleading by this time.
She was almost
in a trance now. ‘You go ahead. There is no way I am going to sleep - not yet.’
‘Hon, I can only
imagine how this … horrible incident must make you feel. Believe me, it’s
awful; it’s mind-blowing! … but it’s OVER, and tomorrow, things will start to
make more sense’, he tried to encourage her to give up, give in, retire.
Lydia continued
to stare at nothing and spoke as if under sedation. ‘You say that. You don’t
see … you don’t want to see the hell that is rising over the land. You want to
believe in a world that’s not real, a world that makes us feel good and just
and righteous and right about everything we believe. You haven’t been mugged
yet. Yet!’
By now, Ken
could feel a giant wave of despair crashing over his soul. How could his wife -
his wife and partner! - be so
overwhelmed that she could think … that she could consider, even … discharging all her compassion for her fellow man
at the passing of a single bullet? Can human compassion be so brittle, so
ephemeral?
‘Listen, hon, I
am going to bed. Please, give your mind and your emotions a rest. Giving in to
hatred is never going to solve anything’, his tone was gentle and soothing as
he leaned in to kiss her cheek tenderly, ‘C’mon’, he whispered.
She sat and said
nothing.
Ken went down
the hall to his bathroom, and she heard him brush and floss, and close his
door. The sliver of light from beneath his bedroom door went out.
Why should she
do the same, she thought, only to lie flat on her back in her bed and replay
the entire shocking episode over and over in the dark?
One more glass
of wine would help to bring on sleep, and if sleep came to her while nestled on
the leather sofa, well, so be it. But first, she rose on wobbly legs, walked
from the front door to the kitchen/garage door to the back porch door, checking
and re-checking the locks. She tried all the windows and turned off the living
room lights before she settled once again on the sofa.
Then she rose
once more, and turned on the soft light in the foyer, before returning to her
sanctuary. Within minutes, she got up again and turned on every light in the
living room.
About the author
Doug Stoiber writes poetry and short fiction and is a member of the Mossy Creek Writers in East Tennessee. His short story, "The Friends of Daniel Cabot", appears in The Rabbit Hole Volume VII anthology, and his original short story, "Woowo" debuted at The Literary Heist on June 21, 2024.
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