The black crayon—the one School Resources Officer Gary swore looked like a gun (“or maybe a knife…definitely something!”)—rolls out of Melvin Jenkins’s limp hand. It comes to a stop under the water fountain outside Miss Beverly’s classroom.
Blood, splashed
across white porcelain fountain, drips down. Droplets splatter against a black
vinyl tile in the elementary school’s checkerboard hallway. The black crayon—its
gray paper wrapper peeled away—blends in with the floor.
Later, as more police officers, EMTs, school
staff, and administrators filter through, someone will step on the camouflaged
crayon, grinding it against their heel, as they try to lean in and take a quick
sip from the fountain.
School Resources Officer Gary can’t put down
the gun in his hand. After all, there’s protocol to follow. With his free hand,
he wipes unanticipated tears from his cheeks.
He looks down at
Melvin. He’s so small. School Resources Officer Gary blames the shadows—the way
they fall, long and black, across the hallway at this time of day. They made
the boy look so much bigger.
And then, there was that thing in his hand. Why didn’t the boy just drop that thing in his hand?
School Resources Office Gary will take early
retirement and start a new after-hours security job at the local for-rent
storage facility lot. He’ll never know the “thing” was a crayon.
He can’t even remember the last time he
fired a gun. It’s been years since he had time for re-certification. But he
knew someone who kept pushing his paperwork through.
Melvin’s
construction paper—with the drawing he’d hoped to finish at home while his Mama
watched the local news for her Lotto numbers—rests beside the boy’s body on the
floor. The paper showcases black crayon marks and faint gray boot print scuffs.
In the days ahead, that drawing—boot prints
and all—will sit center-stage for countless hours of news coverage. Talking heads
will split time between extolling the artistic significance of Melvin’s
monochromatic palette and holding it up as indication of a third grade timebomb
ready to explode (if not for School Resources Officer Gary’s quick thinking and
even quicker trigger finger).
“I’ll be right back. Please stay in your
seats,” Miss Beverly says. She’s surprised by the calm behind her words, even
as fear pounds needles into her brain. It makes her want to scream.
The D.A. will hold a press conference to
announce he’s considering possible charges. He’ll hold another press conference
to address the protests that spread downtown once news of the shooting hits
social media. He’ll plead for peace and understanding, while also insisting
that SWAT’s presence and the curfew are necessary for community safety.
He’ll hold a final
press conference weeks later to announce that his office has found insufficient
evidence to press charges.
Melvin Jenkins dies in the school hallway.
His drawing’s never finished.
The next year, the school board will vote to
cut the elementary school’s arts budget—a necessary sacrifice, following their
decision to add two additional school resources officers.
Even still, someone will ask, “But why did the children have to use so much black?”
States, currently living (and trying not to freeze to death) in Saint Paul, Minnesota. His short fiction has been selected for publication by Not One of Us, Tales to Terrify, Boneyard Soup Magazine, Twisted Anatomy, and Shiver: A Chilling Horror Anthology, among others. For more of his work, visit patrickbarb.com.
Bravo, sir. Difficult to evoke that much emotion in flash.
ReplyDeleteIf they don't give you a Pulitzer for this one, Patrick, then we know the WHOLE SYSTEM IS RIGGED!!!
ReplyDeleteGreat work. Just about perfect with tone, description and sad meaning.
ReplyDelete