Before I could hold seven numbers in my brain, I was told to look for a policeman (in those days, we called them all policemen) if ever I was lost and one would help me. Kind men in blue cotton shirts and pants, polished shoes, soft-soled for comfort, service cap with shiny black bill below a gold badge. These were the ones with white gloves who could direct traffic with a brightly whistled hand ballet. Most seemed skinny, lanky like my cousin Bobby, and the thick black belt’s first job was to hold up pants, not so much to house the implements of immobilization and constraint, the cuffs, gun, taser, pepper spray hiding under the bottom of a military vest, military helmet on his head, plastic face shield. All of which just jumped from the back of a tank like landing at Normandy, except it was the corner of 8th and Main right in front of Scooter’s Bar & Grille, and none of the black folks in the crowd are surprised because they never heard he might help them get home. © 2020 Deb Moore, All Rights Reserved
