The statue stood still, as statues have done since man first learned to carve his likeness into rock, eons ago. It watched the beautiful City of Ruston, Louisiana, from the rocky hill which was its domain. Had been its domain for centuries, really. From there it could see the City lights shining through the vanishing afternoon. The men and women walking, driving, and sometimes flying about in metallic cylinders as they traveled wherever it is they went. It had seen much in its time. For the statue was old. It had been erected in this small Louisiana town around 1804. A seven-foot-tall statue of a Negro was considered an anomaly in those days. This statue, emblematic of an American Negro slave in chains, was the slave-owning Louisiana Colonists way of reminding their slaves that they were property and nothing more. The colonists who lived in that area had been deeply frightened of a massive slave revolt in America after the French colony of Saint Domingue fell to the Negroes who lived there. Somehow, they managed to beat the French army. A feat which astonished Europeans far and wide. Even more strange was the fact that the now free Negroes of Saint Domingue were supposedly forming their own country, having renamed it the Republic of Haiti. Where would the madness end? That's what inquiring minds wanted to know throughout Europe and the Americas at the time.
The statue stood there, a horrific relic of a bygone age. The State of Louisiana had come a long way since the statue was first erected. Nowadays, negroes weren't slaves anymore, they were free men and women. Citizens of the United States of America, just like the White men and White women were since the nation's foundation. And they weren't called negroes anymore except on certain outdated census forms. No, these days they called themselves Black or African-American. And God help anyone who called them otherwise. They had grown powerful since the old days. In fact, the man who led the country was one of them. In ages past he would have been called a mulatto. Today, he was technically biracial though he considered himself Black. The statue had seen much in its time. And nothing it saw had ever shocked it, or moved it. For it was stone. Ageless. Eternal. Cold. Unfeeling. Until today.
The statue watched as the two lovers fought. The tall, blond man and the short and slim, dark-skinned woman. Time after time they came here to kiss and make up, and ironically this was the spot where they fought the most. It watched them. What else could it do? absolutely nothing. So, time after time, it watched the couple make love, and also fight. It remembered the fights the most. One day, it got really mad. The day came when push turned into violent shove, and the woman fell to the ground and lay still. The man stood over her, suddenly shocked at what he'd done. He looked at his hands, and then at her. For a few agonizing moments he paced back and forth, and then finally, he took off after scanning the environs. The woman lay there bleeding, and some of her blood seeped into the rocky crevice at the statue's stony feet. The blood trickled into the crevice, and something amazing happened. The earth actually...shuddered. A cracking not like what must have been heard when continents moved echoed across the park, but none were around to hear it. The statue...moved. Cold, hard stone became flesh and bone. The magnificent relic of a bygone age became a flesh and blood human being. The seven-foot-tall Black man bent down and gently cradled the wounded young Black woman's body in his gigantic arms. Arms that looked like they could crush steel like claw held her gently. He bent over to gaze upon her beautiful face. For a moment her eyes fluttered open, then she passed out again.
Deirdre Blackstone woke up slowly and painfully. For a panicked moment, she didn't know where she was. She gasped and looked around frantically. She was in a big White room, and a tall, red-haired White lady in a white coat stood over her. The woman smiled kindly at her and asked her how she was feeling. Deirdre stared at her blankly, and said she felt awful. Her head was hurting, big-time, and she was having trouble thinking. The lady in the white coat introduced herself as Doctor Samantha Winston, and said Deirdre was lucky to be alive. Deirdre nodded, then gasped again. Her first thoughts were for Keith Rogers. Where was he? One minute they were just hanging out in the park and next...she couldn't remember anything. The doctor asked her if she remembered anything from the night's events. Deirdre shook her head. The only thing she remembered was hanging out at her favorite park with her boyfriend Keith. Hmmm....Keith. Her angel. The tall, blond-haired and blue-eyed White guy she'd loved since they met at Louisiana Tech University. One of the few decent White male athletes on the mostly African-American men's basketball team, Keith astonished his teammates by winning the heart of Deirdre Blackstone, the school's cutest cheerleader. They were a match made in heaven, though.
Black cheerleaders weren't exactly rare at colleges and universities in the South. Many historically Black colleges and universities across America had mostly Black cheerleading squads. Schools like Howard University, Tuskegee University and Lincoln University were famous for their lively and sexy Black cheerleaders. However, even in a school teeming with beautiful young Black women, Deirdre stood apart. She was truly something else. The adopted daughter of a wealthy White couple, she came from a privileged background. Old money in New England, to be exact. Even though her adoptive parents, Michael and Julia Blackstone would have preferred her to go to Harvard University or Princeton University, she chose to attend Louisiana Tech University. A small school which most people in her moneyed New England hometown of Plymouth, Massachusetts, had never heard of. Louisiana Tech University had many African-American students and Deirdre Blackstone wanted to connect with her roots. And then the shy chemical engineering student surprised everyone, including herself, by falling for a baller. A White male basketball player. Texas-born and bred NCAA basketball phenomenon Keith Rogers, her knight in shining armor. Once again she asked the doctor where Keith was, and the lady ignored her question. Dr. Samantha Winston claimed that Deirdre Blackstone might have been attacked. Apparently, a really tall Black guy came to the Northern Louisiana Medical Center emergency room, cradling her bleeding form in his arms. He handed her to a team of nurses and seemed really concerned for her well-being but didn't stick around to answer any questions. Oh, and he showed up in truly strange attire...
Dr. Samantha Winston rubbed her eyes, and looked at the young Black woman lying on the hospital bed. Deirdre Blackstone was lucky to be alive, seriously. She'd obviously been the victim of a brutal attack. Either she didn't remember, or she wasn't being honest with herself. Still, the doctor did her due diligence in recording the name of Keith Rogers. The hospital police asked her to do a rape kit on Deirdre. Upon hearing that, Deirdre flinched. The doctor explained to her that it was just procedure. Deirdre protest vehemently, claiming that she was fine. The doctor shook her head. She'd seen this more times than she cared to admit. Young women with abusive boyfriends who refused to acknowledge they'd been the victim of any foul play. Sometimes, young men who'd been abused by the females in their lives came to the hospital too. And they denied being abused by their girlfriends even more than the women with abusive boyfriends did. Domestic violence definitely swung both ways, affecting both sexes and all races, and was prevalent in all societies. Since the young lady refused to cooperate, the doctor decided to let the police do their thing. She didn't want to expose the young woman to that. She had a daughter Deirdre's age at home. However, desperate times called for desperate measures. It was for her own good, the doctor told herself.
Dr. Samantha Winston gestured to Ruston City Sheriff's Department patrol officer Luther Kingston and his deputy, Carol Anne Webber. The Sheriff was a stocky Black man in his late fifties. He carried himself like a pasha, but he was really good at his job. His deputy Carol Anne Webber was a six-foot-tall, blonde-haired and green-eyed, no-nonsense woman in her early thirties. She'd been a lawyer in the City of Baton Rouge after graduating from Louisiana State University Law School before abruptly deciding on a career in law enforcement. Carol Anne Webber was the brains of the Sheriff's Department while Luther Kingston was its stodgy heart and strong soul. The two of them looked somberly at Deirdre Blackstone. The young Black woman rolled her eyes at the two cops, and once more demanded to see her boyfriend Keith Rogers. The cops sighed. This was going to be a long night.