CW:
Racism
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I can only claim jet lag as an excuse for not acting sooner.
I had flown in on a flight from Dallas to London that morning. Well, morning London time; my body thought it was already well into the afternoon. I knew the way to deal with jetlag was to just stay up through it and let my internal clock get adjusted. But I hadn't slept well the night before the trip due to excitement, so I was doubly tired.
Once at my hotel, I learned that my room wouldn't be ready until two, so any chance of a quick nap was down the drain. Probably for the best. I left my bags with the concierge and, lacking anything else to do, figured I'd go see the sights. I had done a little research before the trip, so I headed down into the Underground with my first destination in mind: Tower Hill station, the closest to the Tower of London.
The state of mass transit in the States, outside of a few major cities, is pretty abysmal. Part of that is politics, part is money, part is the car-centric culture, and part is the realities of scale in a nation with so much empty space. But what I found under the streets of London was really impressive for a guy who had really only seen Dallas's DART and San Francisco's BART: a well oiled-machine of crisscrossing underground tunnels, massive stations, and well-kept schedules. I boarded the first train, then switched to another a few minutes later.
I was sitting on the tube, mind drifting due to tiredness and excitement. This was London, once the center of the western world, filled with sights to see, places to go, and things to do. I had a few days before I needed to get started with my work, and I was going to take full advantage of them. Lost in my reverie, I missed the sudden tension in the air when a new rider came aboard at one of the stops. Missed the voice until it became a shout.
"Fucking Paki, why the fuck you in my country, eh? Get the fuck out!"
I looked down the aisle and saw a teenager in the stereotypical skinhead uniform: shaved head, Harrington jacket, tight jeans and steeltoed boots with white laces. He was sitting next to an older brown skinned woman, leaning into her, hurling slurs and veiled threats. Enough that the cops might do something if they saw, but not enough to make most random strangers just trying to get from point A to point B intervene.
I started to sit up, unrolling myself from the usual hunched position I sit in; bad for my back, I know, but good for not being noticed when you're a young nerd trying to not be a target for bullies. Old habits die hard. I was about to open my mouth to say something when the skin saw me and smiled, then tilted his head at the woman, as if to say, 'You want to have a go at her?'
I have buzzed, very light blonde hair; not for fashion reasons, but because every man on my mom's side of the family is prematurely bald, and that particular hereditary curse is starting to come for me as well. I decided to just lose gracefully on that one. Combined with my typical casual wear of a black t-shirt, jeans, and Docs, I could see why someone as thoroughly stupid as this guy might think I was a compatriot. I would need to disabuse him of that notion.
I fully uncurled from the hunched position that had been concealing the muscle I'd spent so much time building in the college gym, time I had in abundance as I had no social calendar to speak of. Then, standing at my full upright height of just over six-two, I cracked my knuckles while glaring at the racist shitstain. In my father's East Texas drawl, I growled, "Boy, if you say another got-damned word, you're going home in a body bag."
Skinheads are cowards. I'd had to deal with them enough in my clubbing days. Unless they have the weight of numbers or an easy target to pick on, they're cruel and stupid, but mostly harmless. Cowards trying to convince themselves of their nonexistent superiority. Confronted with a real threat, or at least what they perceive as one, they'll slink away like jackals looking for easier meat. This one's jaw hung open for a moment, then he made his way to stand near the entrance to the car, well away from both me and the woman he had been harassing. When we reached the next stop, he disembarked rapidly, glaring back in my direction, finally brave when there were no consequences to be had.
I let myself relax. That could have been bad. I'm big, but I hadn't been in a fight since grade school. And I'd lost those.
"Ma'am, are you okay?" The older woman nodded, grateful, but still scared. Maybe even a little of me; I'd just threatened a guy with a pummeling, after all. She gave a small, shy smile, then returned to the pastime of every other person on the tube: minding her own business. I decided to do the same.
Tower Hill was the next stop. Once there, I got off and started to head for the stairs, when I suddenly heard a woman's voice. It had a "Received English" accent, the kind the presenters on the BBC have, tinged slightly with something else I couldn't place. "Hey, cowboy. Hold up."
I turned and saw a beautiful, petite Black woman. She was probably in her mid-20s like me, and dressed in a floral sundress, white lace choker, and Mary Janes. Her hair was done in a short set of dreads, and they hung just slightly off kilter as she tilted her head to the side. The broad smile on her pretty face was one of the best sights I'd see in London.
"Thanks for what you did back there. Not a lot of folks would've."
I shook my head. "I wish I'd done something sooner. I was jetlagged. Not paying attention."
Her tone was teasing then, just a touch. "Ah, a tourist in our fair city. Off to see the Tower?"
I chuckled. "Yeah. Yeah, just got here. Figured I'd take in the sights before I get to work next week."
She looked up at the ceiling for a moment, pensive, then came to a decision. That lovely smile was back as her eyes focused on me again. "Well, I'll tell you what. I'm at loose ends right now. Was supposed to have brunch with friends and hang out, but they flaked on me. I am aaabsolutely famished; why don't you join me for that brunch, and then I'll be your tour guide for today. Sound good?"
Yes. Yes, it definitely, totally, 100% sounded good.
She could see that I was going to say yes, because I'd be completely stupid not to. She stuck out her hand. "Emma."
I took her delicate, manicured hand in mine. "Jay."
We stood there for a long moment, looking into each other's eyes. Then she said, "I'm going to need that back, cowboy."