Read Welcome to Braggsville Online

Authors: T. Geronimo Johnson

Welcome to Braggsville (37 page)

When Daron was a child, this man delivered his comics and sea monkeys, drank tea with the family, sat on the porch and pushed back his hat to let breathe that red crease D'aron always took as a mark of manhood. It was D'aron who greeted him when expecting birthday cards, hurtling across the yard at full speed while the postman cheered, Run, Forrest! Run! It was this man who placed in his hand the big envelope from Berkeley, who clapped his shoulders in celebration and said, Make us proud. It was D'aron who each Christmas handed him the envelope prepared by his parents. A solemn duty it was, his father explained. Never think you're buying respect. Respect, like honor, you must earn, because both are eternal currencies. This here is only showing appreciation. Daron doesn't want to be, but he is soothed, calmed.

Counting on his fingers, the postmaster explained, There's the patriots, the sovereigns, the fools who say the sun revolves around the earth, the black separatists, nativists, the Klan, the ham-headed hammer skins—talk about standing out, might as well take a Christmas tree hunting—the True Church of Israel, and whatnot. But we're not like that. When the cuz visited you last year, he was out there as our envoy to the State of California Northern Militia Action Group. We know you've been brainwashed, we know that Berkeley's knitting with only one needle and Columbus Day was renamed Indigenous People's Day and everyone gets free parking. How can you name a day after the people that were saved? That would be like naming veteran's day Vietnam Day or France Day.

Harry was confused, he must have been. Quint had never visited Daron in California, and he said so.

Harry looked at him for a long moment while he licked the raisin off a cookie, which was terribly unsettling. You're safe here. He opened
a brochure. This is our code of conduct. Here is a list of words you'll never hear any of us use: You hear nigger, nigger this and nigger that, that ain't us calling no one nigger. Or Spic, Chink, Porch Monkey, Spade, Piss-Easter, Spear Chucker, Rice Eyes, Wetback, Beaner, Beano, Bluegum, Camel Jockey, Ching-Chong, Chinky, Coolie, Coon, Cunt Eye, Darkie Dink, Dog Zombie, Dune Coon, Eightball, Gook, Hajji, Heed, Jap, Jigger, Jungle Bunny, Kike, Nidge, Niglet [a warm chuckle], Nzumbi, Pancake Face, Pickaninny, Porch Monkey, Prairie Nigger, Raghead, Sambo, Sand Nigger, Schvartze, Sheeny, Shine, Slanteye, Slope, Slurpy Slinger, Sooty, Spade, Spearchucker, Spick, Spook, Squaw, Sucker Fish, Tar Baby, Timber Nigger, Towel Head, Uncle Tom, Wetback, Zipperhead. Hear any of that, ain't one of us, not even on a Monday. I don't mean to be a double-speak, or even double-double-speak, by listing so many. I just want you to give full considerate attentions to the multitude. There's a lot of crap floating around ain't from our asses. We didn't make it up. Hear any of that, and you know it ain't one of us.

One of us what? Daron finally asked, recalling Denver's questions and what Candice had said on the phone. And the Colonel. Hadn't Colonel Sanders said something similar?

A member of the collective.

What's the collective?

All of us here who are members of the hunting lodge.

You mean a militia?

The postmaster rubbed his face. A deputy rooting through the refrigerator at that moment laughed. Oh, no, not that word.

The postmaster cupped his hands. Let's talk about the M-word. We're not a threat, a fringe group, or crazy. We're the legacy the forefathers fought to build. We're not antigovernment, we're procitizenship. We're not antigovernment, we're anticorruption. We're not antigovernment, we're pro-self-sufficiency. We're not separatists or racists, we're constitutionalists. We judge a man by his actions, not
his skin color. The Bill of Rights tells us that all men are created equal. We know our history and we revere it. We are citizens. We are your neighbors. We represent all the county—all the surrounding town. We are your anchor in this rough sea.

Daron didn't dare ask why no one was there representing the Gully. How long?

How long what?

How long has this been here?

The postmaster laughed, the deputy joining him. How do we beat the chaos back? How did we install order in the middle of nowhere? How'd we get rid of those injuns? You may as well ask how long the Gully's been here, or the town, or the Holler. It's all there's ever been. Forever.

But how could he not have known? He had known there was a hunting lodge back here, one you couldn't join until eighteen, but he'd given up hunting long before then. How had Denver and Candice known more about his town than he did? He cursed his idiocy. I didn't know there was a militia.

Again, it ain't a militia. It's a hunting lodge and we're a collective, like those co-ops out west. We never burned no crosses or lynched no one here in Braggsville proper, least not until you came along. Let me show you something. He led Daron back to the classroom, which was, he now understood, also a recruitment office. They played him a couple of videos, handling the VCR cassettes with two hands, like relics.

Watch this.

Images of wounded U.S. soldiers and natural disasters in America, and local citizens' brigades providing support services.

Now this.

People, mostly men, training for military action and taking an oath in front of a flag. The voice-over:

From many different cultures, and every country of the earth.
Forged by only one common bond: the Constitution. The greatest enemies: domestic. Every culture, every color, one country. We do solemnly swear to the best of our abilities, to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States of America.

That's all we are, D'aron, citizens. Everybody knows that this nanny state can't last. Everybody knows that and about the
Bell Curve
and Dr. Watson, but all we're saying is be prepared. He handed Daron a photo album. In it were daguerreotypes and old photos of the town founders posing in front of the hunting lodge. Some of the photos, though, were death shots. He recognized Bragg and one of his sons and several town elders from the replicas in the funeral home foyer.

Now this one.

The next album was mostly in color, and he saw his parents staring back at him, his father posing in front of the lodge in a Confederate uniform, his mother at the Green Egg in the backyard. There were also photos of the local intramural playoffs, like the softball match between Lou Davis's Cash-n-Carry and Howard's Hide Park, the bitterest of rivals. He recalled seeing posted in local restaurants photos of youth league teams thanking the various businesses that provided support, and the hallway in the lodge was lined with them. In fact, now that he thought of it, he had seen the lodge mentioned in photos mounted elsewhere.

On each page of the album, a surprise or pleasant memory. There was Rheanne dressed as Lady Gaga. That was the Halloween he kissed Joyce Templeton on the neck. There was his first and last football game. The debate championship in Macon. The Belle Ball, where the adults get all gussied up. It was well past sundown by the time he finished the albums.

I'm glad you finally visited. Saves us the embarrassment. The postmaster looked outside. You don't want to walk home now. Everybody knows that, even Methuselah. Besides, now that you have
finally arrived, we can have our trial. The tribunal will meet tomorrow first thing, which at least one someone should be glad to hear.

Trial? I'm being—

—Whoa, boxer. Acts one-seven. It is not for you to know times or seasons that the Father has fixed by his own authority. Your arrival is not a coincidence. He has spoken. All your questions will be answered in the morning. The postmaster again looked outside. You sure don't want to walk home now. But we've dressed a bed for you.

As was often the case for youth in the South, invitation meant instruction. Daron spent the night locked in a bedroom. At least it may as well have been locked. Where could he go at midnight in the middle of the Holler? It was a small room with no window and scarcely space enough for the tube-frame twin bed. The floors were bare wood, dark from years of wear, and the walls oak faded to ash. It could have been a backdrop for an Abercrombie & Fitch ad, if it weren't for the propaganda. With no cell phone service, there was nothing to do but read. Brochures stacked neatly on the side table. A Gideon's Bible camped out in the nightstand drawer with
The Bell Curve
. The code of conduct, posted on the back of the door, where the rack rates would be:

       
1. Good citizens make no contact with media unless first cleared.

       
2. Good citizens don't proselytize or openly recruit.

       
3. Good citizens make no actions representing or claiming to represent the collective.

       
4. Good citizens do not behave in ways that could harm the collective's public image.

       
5. Good citizens don't practice foul language or behavior.

       
6. Good citizens practice gun safety at all times.

       
7. Good citizens replace what they eat.

He sat on the edge of the bed most of the night, in a fugue, feeling, when he felt anything, self-disgust. How could he not be scared or angry? Why did he feel empowered, like he had stumbled into the base of Mount Olympus and they'd thrown down a rope? He fell asleep pondering the postman's final words.

What about the Gully? Daron had finally asked.

They got their own thing.

I thought this was for everyone.

Don't be a waterlog, Little D, warned the postmaster, plucking a cookie crumb off his mustache. They get work, they don't get hassled. Don't make that turned-up face like a stranger pinched a biscuit in your toilet. Look at all we do for other countries when our own house isn't in order. What if we rebuilt and gave jobs to the Fort Runner folks two towns over when people right here in Braggsville, like your father, need jobs? That wouldn't be right, would it? If your father didn't have a job right here in our community and someone over the county line did? Someone across the river? All these special interest groups. What if we didn't look out for our own? Who would? Who will?

Chapter Thirty-5

I
n the morning, oatmeal. Alone. No cinnamon or sugar. From the kitchen, Daron heard laughter often abruptly interrupted by uncanny silence, and he was glad to have feigned belly mites, to have begged off attending the liturgy and the pancake breakfast that followed it. At sunup he was led out to the barn, where men congregated by age. Under the hayloft sat Oliver Williams, Mayor K. (the previous mayor), Robert Butch Buchanan, Jim Stark, Justin Stark, and other elders. Near them stood Mark Lance, Tony Foldercap, and others from his father's generation. Nearest the door were Josh Turner, Kevin Dole, and several of Daron's former classmates. At the back of the barn was a long table behind which were three empty chairs, and facing the table, with his back to the crowd, stood Jo-Jo. As he was positioned, Daron could not see his hand.

Jo-Jo was a hulk, always had been, man-sized since middle school, one of the few moons rugged enough to roll with the shines. Here now, all that was gone. With his hair tangled and dread-dirty, Reeboks caked with red clay, head dog down, Jo-Jo had vanished, and the man before him was someone Daron didn't know. Certainly, though, everyone knew that back in high school, Jo-Jo hung like handcuffs with not only Jean, but also Trayvon, a lethal Gull linebacker known as the Brown Bruiser. (He was originally the Black Bruiser because
the Gull team was known for a time as the Blackjacks—as in they would knock you the fuck out—but that wasn't well received at away games.) Certainly everyone knew that Bruiser and Jo-Jo had been as tight, as Jo-Jo's father liked to honk, as a Jew and his shekels. Certainly everyone knew that Jo-Jo escorted Jean's sister to the Bruiser prom, where he'd danced shamelessly according to reports, and even posed for photos, like the generous celebrity he was for that night, an eminence apparently greater even than being first string on the football team. And certainly everyone knew that he'd lost his job over that, and more. Were they still punishing him for that? He surely would not have whipped Louis.

Lou Davis entered from the back door, dressed in forest BDUs with a red patch on his shoulder and a gavel in hand. He called the hearing to order with one outstretched arm. This
collective
—he stressed the word—goes back to Bragg hisself. When the Northerners came, we fought for our country. We sent men off to every conflict big and little the U.S. has been involved in. Already receiving training here, they done us proud. We've had Rangers, Green Berets, drill sergeants, Marine Force Recon officers, plus two you-know-whos doing you-know-what. We fended off the Indian invaders and the French trappers that ventured too far north—Or south!, someone yelled—we fought off the redcoats and the Spanish, and we are still fighting for our country—this U.S. of A.—at this moment, in Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Bosnia [AND PLACES WE CANNOT MENTION]. In this hearing, it is that history and honor that guides our bearing and purpose. He dropped his arm and gaveled three times. Three judges in white robes, white hoods with veils over the eyelets, and white gloves entered through the back door and were seated behind the long table. Under the dim light, they were a ghostly snowcapped range against an angry sky.

Lou read from a printout:

John-John Kelly VI, known familiarly as Jo-Jo, is hereby charged
with violating the official code of conduct dated 1830, updated in 1863 and 1965, and also in 1912 and 1992, specifically Codes one-point-three, two, and ten-A, said codes respectively barring members from participating in outright violent behavior or even public pantomime of said behavior unless in self-defense, from publicly pronouncing racial epithets, or from undertaking any deed which could cast the collective in a bad light. You have also committed activities considered treasonous, including reckless endangerment, being loose of tongue, and possessing questionable moral dispositions. Like a railroad stake being driven to ground, Jo-Jo's head ratcheted down a notch with every accusation. The audience groaned at the fall of that final hammer, groaned worse than when Jo-Jo fumbled in that game against Vickstown.

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