A rat race to the bottom

Tag: Black Authors

Chapter: 2 Everybody must work, work hard?

Deboarding the bus our hero makes his way to work, his walk this morning endowed with a lively pace of intent in each stride, as if he was trying to get the day over with before it had begun. Dean arrived at work and quickly ran through his normal formality of “hellos” and “good mornings.” Walking into the shop floor he felt a rush of warm air across his freezing face, it was nice, soothing although he much preferred the rush of cold wind blowing in the opposite direction as he left work to journey home.

He soon got down to his routine; forking lifting crates from one area of the building to another with a gay abandonment.

“Dean, Dean!’’ A voice shouted.

Dean halted the forklift and turned his head round to face a rather disgruntled fellow employee named Ken. Ken was a white English man in his mid-fifties. He was alright but every so often he would push his luck. Ken wasn’t a manager or in a role of any authority, but he just felt he owned a God given right to tell other people, mainly of the browner skin complexion, the correct way of doing things and today was one of those days he decided to cast his views upon Dean’s fork lifting abilities.

Ken marched over towards Dean, who remained seated in the cab. 

“You’re doing it all wrong, Dean, all wrong.” Ken said in a cockney accent. “You’re going way too fast, you were going almost five miles per hour around that last corner, what if someone was coming round the bend? That would be the end of it. When I first started driving forklifts back in the eighties …….’’ Ken’s tone of voice brighten with a nostalgic glow as soon the word eighties left his lips. 

“Okay, thanks cool.’’ Dean interrupted in an attempt to silence Ken.

“Look son I don’t want to have to tell you again.” Ken continued.

It’s funny how man has evolved and built principles upon virtues, rights, laws, regulations and legislations, but what lies beneath is the primeval urged just to knock someone the fuck out, and that’s precisely how Dean felt at this present moment. He suppressed this urge and suppressed it with a smile which asked kindly of Ken, ‘what’s stopping me from kicking the shit out of you right now and right here?’ With that Ken marched off almost as quickly as he appeared, probably to tell a more submissive brown person the right way to conduct themselves.  

“Shit, I need a new job man! Am gonna end up knocking somebody out if I don’t find something soon.” It was the little things like that which pissed Dean off, having to put up with people’s little irritating personality quirks. “Everyone’s different, but why do you have to inflict your differences on me?”

“You do your shit and I do my shit and let’s just get on with it.’’ Dean belatedly shouted at a retreating Ken.

Dean arrived home that evening fed up and tired as usual, a feeling which seemed to stalk our hero from one dead-end job to another.

“Gotta complete that Prince Trust form.” He reached into his old Nike trainer box at the top of his wardrobe, trying to find his half completed application form. Unable to locate it, he looked through his bedside drawer and came across a red A4 size booklet with 2012 written in golden italics on the top left-hand corner. Opening the cover and flicking through the notepad, he saw a note from his younger self.

“Never give up Dean, you will be a success.” It read.

“I will make it.” Dean repeated this mantra to himself as he ruffled through the drawer until he found the form. Picking up the somewhat grumbled paperwork he saw underneath lay an old leather photo album, which he hadn’t seen in years. He excitedly began flicking through childhood pictures of Sarah and himself. It’s sad how the veracities of adulthood rips apart our earliest of bonds formed in innocence, pulling theses ties apart with the progression of time, eventually replacing them with individualism and greedy. He possessed many happy memories of Sarah, they swarmed around his head like fish in a pond, occasionally popping up from time to time bringing forth brief moments of sheer utter childhood bliss into his adult monotonous existence. One photograph caught Dean’s eye, one of the few he possessed of his father. It was one of those brownish, reddish looking pictures aged with time, straight out of the nineteen nineties. Dean’s parents stood by a plastic Christmas tree with Sarah and him standing in front of them, wearing green and red Christmas jumpers. Everyone looked so happy. Who knows what was really going on. It was only a few weeks after this picture being taken that Dean’s father Ben abandoned the family home. He vaguely remembered this time just before his parent’s separation. “This is just between us so don’t go running your big mouth to your friends at school.’’ His mother would warn him. Dean never understood what a divorce was and questioned: “Why would his friends be interested in one, anyway?” The first affects of the divorce was his father moving out, the second affect they only saw him on the weekends, the third affect, he no longer saw him at all. Dean would wait with Sarah for their dad to collect them from outside of their house. One Saturday morning they waited the whole day only for him to turn up drunk in the evening. Pauline was furious and certainly made Ben aware of it. Her telling off regarding Ben’s tardiness only produced the adverse reaction, as the following weekend his lateness transformed into absence. Dean noticed the change in his mother, it were as if she lost something inside her. She stopped smiling as much, she seemed so serious all of a sudden. He never appreciated as a child all the things she must have been contending with. He was more concerned about being the cool kid at school.

Dean looked at another photo,  this one was of him and his mother, taken at their local park. Him sporting his Arsenal football kit, proudly holding a football, standing next to his mum in a faded pink tracksuit, armed with an exhausted expression on her face.

‘Football’ was another factor which changed, his dad was no longer there to take him to the park and therefore Pauline was by default assigned the role of his new football coach. Going football with one’s Mum isn’t quite the same experience, which Dean soon realised on their first outing to the pitch.

“Mum you can’t play football.’’ Dean said happily, assured of his upcoming victory. “Girls can’t play football, everyone’s knows that.’’ He declared as confidently as if relaying the laws of gravity.

“You teach me the rules then, am sure someone as good as you could show me.’’ 

“Okay, I’ll see what I can do. I’ll be Arsenal, and you can be Liverpool. This is my goal, and that’s yours over there.” Dean said, pointing with his small hands to the two goals drawn in white chalk on either side of the brick walls surrounding the pitted playground.

“I’ll give you a head start because you can’t play properly Mum.’’ Dean pronounced with an supreme air of confidence.

“How much do you want Mum five or ten goals?’’

“Five should be enough, thanks.’’ Pauline replied.

“Okay, I’ll kick off.’’ Dean shouted as he got to work, passing the ball back and forth from left-to-right foot.

Dean passed the ball to himself and made his charge towards his mother’s goal. He swung his leg back then shot with all his might. Pauline comfortably batted the ball away in Dean’s direction. He shot again on the rebound, only this time his shot was way off target.

“You’re lucky mum, that was just a warning shot.’’ Dean said, chock-full of arrogance.

Pauline retrieves the ball, places it on the ground and shoots, the ball soars in the air before landing right in the centre of Dean’s goal post.

“Good shot mum lucky you.’’ Dean said, trying to hold back his shock.

They continue to play and Pauline maintained a steady lead, every so often allowing young Dean to score. Dean recognised his mother was letting him score and inwardly resented it, however accepted the goals nonetheless without protest. After not being able to obtain the quick win which he anticipated, he apprehended that his mother was not as bad as he initially suspected, and saw the outcome of the match may not be going in his favour after all. Equipped with this prediction of defeat, Dean concluded his only option to secure a victory would be to cheat. He loved cheating; the mere thought of trickery brought a gleam to his cheeky little brown eyes.

Dean waited for his chance to get the ball and struck it into his own goal, then screamed out loud in celebration. Looking at his mother in the corner of his eyes.

“Yes! What a goal I scored, Mum.”

He continued scoring own goals until he was nine or ten goals behind, or ahead according to Dean’s newly manufactured rules. Once significantly in front, Dean reverted to the normal convection of scoring in the opponent’s goal. 

“When you’re a child everything’s fun, adventure lays around every corner, you laugh with abandonment, the world is your playground. When you’re a grownup the worlds your prison, you can only go so far before your reminded that you’re trapped, whether it be; financially, racially, spiritually or whateverly.”

A teardrop seeped from his tear duct, as a flash of Dean’s phone interrupts his childhood reminisce. The name on the display screen reads Latisha. He watches the phone ring out.

“Can’t be bothered to talk to her. I hate it when chicks call me just to talk shit. Must think I got time. I don’t think I’m good at building relationships. Well, that’s not entirely true. I could get on with anyone really, talk about their interest, laugh at their dead jokes, enquire about their lives, but on the inside I just don’t give a fuck. I give less of a fuck to a lesser degree every day that passes. At work I hate the women, for one, they’re all dead, except for Janet of course. They always managed a different way to grab my attention before proceeding to bore the shit out of me with the minutiae of their lives.”

“Look on YouTube you’ll see my son John bowling backward it’s a right laugh, or my daughter told her husband that if she cooks everybody will get food poisoning.’’

Story after story of bullshit seemed to infect Dean’s brain until he couldn’t take it. He felt his mind was turning into mush. Insignificant tales about someone else’s useless life, data that was of no use to anyone. “Why do you people persist in chatting shit to me? Do you actually think anyone cares that your nieces uncle was thinking about joining the gym five months ago, but decided not to in case it brought back his back problems which started in the mid-80s, stemming from a squash injury?” Dean’s eyes rolled in his head. He went home from work the next day knowing that it would be his last. He couldn’t be asked to give in his notice, and when his employers phoned him, he ignored their calls. He reached his limit. Time to leave before he ended up doing something stupid. Now he had to contend with the Jobcentre, but by this stage anything seemed better than that chocolate factory full of shit. The only thing he would miss about that job was Janet’s booty. 

“What’s the point of waking up every fucking day and taking orders from a bunch of nobodies who have a little bit of power but think their Donald Trump.”

‘Can you do this please and when you finish, do you mind doing that, and when you get that done….. ‘Yes mate I do fucking mind.’

“I might as well sign on, I’ll be earning practically the same amount of money and all I gotta do is sit on my sweet arse all day and get up once every two weeks to get my money.” The more Dean thought about it, the more he felt like a fool for working there for so long.

Chapter 1. Monday Mornings

Monday morning it’s cold, it’s raining, it’s England. Where prehistoric man hibernates for the winter months, modern man gets up at six o’clock in the morning and goes out to work in the freezing cold. The rain hits as it only does in the United Raindom, a constant pitter patter just enough to soak you through, but not of the gale force proportions which would allow one not to go into work. The sound of the alarm pierces Dean’s ears, there’s only so long he can ignore it before he has to wake up and face the world. Right now he’s stuck in that slumber of limbo between the real world and the dream one, between the warm snugness of his bed and the cold dreariness of reality. His room smells of old socks, body odour, and last night’s round of farts. Grotesque to most however somehow comforting to Dean’s stuffy nose, it’s his mark on his territory, it’s his home.

As our hero rises he hears the rain beating down onto the rooftop below, and views outsides coldness through the nip in the blinds. The visualization of it sends him retreating back into bed, under his soft satin duvet, desperately seeking that last bit of refuge before he has to brave the cold. Its 8:00 AM and Dean knows he better start making a move, he’s already left it too late to have a shower. He’ll just have to settle for a European shower as he calls it, basically washing privates, his armpits, brushing his teeth, then haphazardly flinging on his wrinkled work uniform. For a split second he fools himself into believing its Wednesday before figuring out today was actually Monday, ‘Fucking bloody Monday’, he has the whole long week ahead of him. ‘Shit!’

Dean leaves his house, making his way to the bus stop, walking at pace however not fast enough to escape the all-encompassing chill. He looks down at his feet and oops, he’s got a morning erection, not a sexual one, just the kind that just won’t go down, it stands to attention like a Lieutenant Sergeant saluting the fellow commuters. A woman at the bus stop notices it and gives him a cutting eye, quickly pulling her daughter towards her, muttering the word ‘pervert’ underneath her breath. Dean doesn’t know where to look or what to say. He refrains from boarding the bus and waits for the next one to arrive, even furthering his already lateness. 

He broads the 365 and makes his way up the narrow spiral staircase, jolting forwards as the bus picks up momentum and sits on the front row directly above the drivers cabin. He loved sitting in this position as a child, for this was the ideal location to pretend to drive the bus. He would stir the fictitious stirring wheel from left to right, manoeuvring through the corners, stopping at each stop and collecting the invisible fares from the imaginary customers.

Sitting on the upper deck of the 365 bus, surrounded by strangers in far too close a proximity for comfort, traveling one mile per hour through rush hour traffic to a destination he didn’t even want to go. Kidnapped by the cooperate goons of free enterprise who dragged him out of bed and off to work every day for a minimum wage salary. Yet despite this gruelling ritual, he still admired his capitalist captors in a Stockholm syndrome sort of fashion. Dean looked out of the window at the grey-coloured surroundings; people wrapped up in their commute, rows of flats sitting above shops, and giant billboards advertising products he could ill afford. Head tilted against the perspex glass, he sighed and soaked it all in. 

“Sometimes I wonder if I’m ever gonna be someone, am I ever gonna make it? I sit so far away from success I couldn’t see it with a telescope, while am so close to failure it blurs in front of my retina. From one month to the next I seem to be forever chasing that elusive paycheck, wishing away the days in between and for what?” Dean forced a snigger to cheer himself up.

“When am working I trier of the routine, waking up at 8.00am after I‘ve ignored the snooze on my alarm clock which has been ringing since 7.00am. I get to work late yet again. Then I have to put on my fake persona ‘Yes Sir. No, Sir.’ When all I really wanna do is slap the shit out of you, take my money and go home.’’

The sound stemming from school children causing a ruckus on the bus briefly interrupts Dean’s chain of thought.

“Mornings, I hate mornings. I hate the kids so full of energy at this fucking time. Little do the fuckers know what they’ve got ahead of them, they won’t be so cheerful then. When I was a kid, I never knew life was going to pan out like this, wouldn’t have believed you if you told me. It’s gone past the stage of obstacles, life’s hurling bricks at me whilst I’m lying flat on my back. Ah well, I’ve always got my health, or do I? You never know what’s around the corner.” Dean’s mind processes all of his one-night stands: that girl from the nightclub, Tanya from the gym, Lola, Erin, the list goes on, making Dean contemplate the last time he had an STD test. He tries to think about something else instead but can’t now, he hates it when his mind does this to him; seizing control of his thoughts, not allowing him conjure up some form of jovial distraction. 

“Sometimes I start wondering about things, just like anyone else does, really. I wonder why we’re here and what are we doing here? Am I the result of a Big Bang which sparked off evolution, leading me to evolve from fish, to monkey to man, surfing the universe at a hundred miles per hour on a gigantic rock, or does religion hold the truth? And if so, which one? I wonder if we’re trapped in a war between demons and angels like in the bible Revelation… Armageddon or something. Is it like the First World War on a biblical scale? Evil versus Good, the Germans against the British on the Western frontier, the battle ensues between the angels and demons while we as mankind scurry along totally oblivious to the war at hand, getting indiscriminately trodden on by both sides like ants on a battlefield.”

“Fuck working in a chocolate factory, been working here almost two months now, can’t stand it! You know what I’ve learnt since I’ve started this job? I’ve learnt Oompa Loompa’s do exist however they’re not dwarfs with orange skin, in fact they come in all shapes, sizes and colours and look like normal human beings. I learnt that mice favourite chocolate is Milky Way, trust me they love the stuff, but what I’ve learnt most of all is I hate this fucking job.”

“Shit, it’s my stop.” The temperature turns from warm to freezing as Dean steps off the bus into the pouring rain, outside’s chill creeping through his worn puffer jacket causing him to shiver underneath its duress.

“I wonder if people in the tropics are happier than us over here in the cold. I wonder if I as a black man am even supposed to be out here in this climate, it’s like putting a tiger in Antarctica and telling him to ‘go on, get on with it.’ In the mornings I think mad random thoughts, I know, I know this.”

Dean worked in a factory; unit eight of an industrial estate just off the A10 near Ponders End, it was a brown brick series of complexes everyone identical to its neighbour, except for the address number branded in silver plates on the front of each unit. 

“Hi Dean, lovely weather out there.” Said a jolly looking Jim, greeting his soaked colleague.

“Jims a morning person, I despise morning people. He must sleep on a bed of nails piercing his back and just can’t wait to get up into the comparably comfy cold air, run out of his house escaping his screaming children and nagging wife. Me on the otherhand, my bed just won’t take no for an answer, it begs me to stay wrapped up in its warm embrace until I break free like a child escaping their mother’s womb, only to be smacked in the face by the cold hand of reality,” Dean thought, meanwhile replying.

“Hi Jim.’’

“Another day, another dollar.’’ Jim chuckled back.

In this moment Dean wanted to rip off Jim’s head in a Mortal Combat styling, turn him upside down and shake all the meaningless clichés out from his opened neck. Jim was like one of those insatiable teddy bears with a piece of string attached to its back, and when you pull the string, the teddy bear produces some manufactured commentary. 

“Another day, another dollar, he, he!’’

“The early bird catches the worm, he, he!’’

“I wish he would stop chatting shit. He infuriates me.” Dean thought to himself, feigning laughter in the most transparent of manners.

“Ha, Ha. Another day, another dollar.’’ Dean repeated Jim’s morning catchphrase, inwardly thinking. “I hate this man, I hate having to laugh at these dead white people’s jokes, I hate this fucking workplace, apart from Janet that is. I like Janet, I would give her one. ‘Awe may God bless that ass in the name of the Father and of the Son and the Holy Ghost Amen.’ Shit did I say that aloud? Hope not.” Dean smirked at his concocted image of Janet’s booty in a pair of French knickers.

Janet possessed one of those bums you’ll write home about. She could successfully perform ‘Gay Conversion Therapy’ just by bending over to pick up a pen. Thoughts regarding Janet arse often consumed Dean’s unoccupied mind at work. In his two months of employment he had imagined every conceivable scenario involving him and that ‘phat booty’ of hers.

“How I would love to hit it from behind. I bet that arse would ripple like skimming a pebble across a still lake.”

Dean stepped into the cab and turned on the forklift.

“Dam she hot though, she’s always smiling at me, I catch her sometimes in the corner of my eye but I can’t tell if it’s an; ‘I think your hot glance,’ or a ‘Are you stacking the shelves properly look.’ Besides, I hate it when she asks me to do stuff. I don’t mind ugly women telling me what to do at work, but it’s the sexy ones like her that bothers me. I should be telling her what to do. ‘I’ll tell her bend down and cock that booty in the air.’’ 

By this stage of thought, Dean was practically smiling from cheek to cheek, looking like a madman driving forklift. After lunch he ran out of thoughts surrounding Janet’s massive booty. Booty thoughts can only go so far, and by this point Dean had exhausted all avenues concerning his improbable interactions with Janet’s voluptuous bum.

“I need to get this business ting going. I can’t keep on working for people, can’t keep on waking up at god knows what time just to make somebody else rich. All I gotta do is finish up that business case and send off the application to the Prince’s Trust. Ain’t had no time to do shit since I’ve started this job. It drains me. I need to get back on it, stop procrastinating and make something of myself.”

Dean spent the latter half of his shift in pursuit of another one of his common pass-times, dreaming about opening a music studio, he knew how he wanted everything from the: furnishing, the location, the equipment, how he would market it.

“I know I can make a success of it, I just need some money behind me and a chance to put in that work.”

As Dean maneuvered his forklift through the narrow aisles of the chocolate factory, passed the Cadbury Milk Chocolate Eggs, sharp left at the Kit-Kats and on to the home straight towards the loading bay, with all the skill of Lewis Hamilton around the Grand prix. His mind detached from the mundaneness of his present activity, being alternatively engaged in envisioning owning his own business. ‘Broken Homez Records’ he would call it.

“No more playing ‘Yes Sir Master”, for once I would be the master of my own destiny.”

He was seated at his imagery studio, adding the final touches to his forthcoming hit. To his left was Puffy Daddy and his right Kanye West, both of whom intently bobbing their heads to the newly produced beat. Dean rises from his seat and calmly walks into the microphone booth. Puffy and Kanye glance up at him. He wipes his brow, licking his lips to moisten his mouth, then waits for the beat loop to drop before he begins his rap.

“What’s the difference between Bush and Mugabe?

What’s the true meaning of the Illuminati?

Who funds the British National Party?

Why would you give your life to the Army?”

“So many questions when I look at life,

Mugabe’s black, and Bush is white,

The media shows the surface, but I wanna look inside,

If I was getting paid to deceive you, then would I lie?”

“Something, something, something, the all-seeing crooked eye!”

Dean recited his raps line by line, perfecting them until home time arrived, and with its arrival he departed his imagery world of Broken Homez studios, to return to the real one of ‘Tresham Chocolate factory.’ Dean’s raps kept his mind occupied, providing creativity to his otherwise utilitarian existence, transporting his focus momentarily away from his high-flying career as a forklift driver and into an imagery one of rap superstardom. Driving the forklift back and forth, loading and unloading through a maze of crates would serve as a fitting metaphor of our hero’s life; simultaneously doing a lot whilst going nowhere. When working a dead-end job which doesn’t mentally stimulate you in the slightest, you have to immerse your mind with some kind of trivial pursuit to cease your brain from completely shutting down. These thoughts were the only thing separating Dean from the self-checkout machine or the forklift itself. The more interesting the chain of thought, the faster time would go. ‘Avoid looking at the clock’ that was the main key to survival in this battleground of boredom, a considerably hard task when a massive clock stood eyeing you at every direction from the highest point of the central aisle. What seemed like hours elapsed before the minute hand would move from one digit to the next. Dean would often question whether time was travelling slower for him than the rest of the populated universe. This job was idyllic for the brain dead like Jim, but soul destroying for our champion. Each day he feared his brain cells were slowly dying, maybe one day soon his mind too would be topped to the brim with meaningless clichés and inconsequential information about the weather. 

The close of day alarm sounds, Dean collects his belongings and makes his way home as he has done for what already seemed to be an entirety. “Is this what’s life’s really about?” He questioned boarding the overly crowded bus, walking up the spiralling staircase and securing the only vacant seat right by the radiator, he feels the warmth creeping up his leg. It feels nice. 

“Hmm.’’ He sighs as his body fills up with that glow of going home after a long hard days’ work, a feeling he supposed foreign to the ruling classes but all too common for commoners such as himself. Once more Dean enters back into the comfort of his thoughts on his favourite journey of them all, the one going home from work. “Nothing like being free if only it’s just until the following morning.”

“What a life. Do you live to work, or work to live?” Dean considered, taking a wide yawn then slowly dozing off. Before Dean could answer his own question, he wakes up right at his stop. He developed a knack in doing that; ‘falling asleep on the bus and getting up at precisely the right moment.’ Dean exits the bus, walks down the road, through the park, around the corner and arrives back at his house. He lives on the second floor of a two storey Edwardian terrace house, converted into flats. He’s been there nine months now, having acquired the property after living in a hostel for four years. It seemed like a palace compared to that shit hole. The hostel was teeming with refugees, drug addicts and ex-convicts. It would have been the BNP’s worst nightmare on steroids. There were more races in that one dusty building than the United Nations, and the residents were in receipt of more benefits than ‘MP’s Gone Wild Volume one, two and three.’ ‘If you can’t beat them, join them.’ Dean reflected before he quickly stopped and tried to retract that thought. “Shit, I’m turning into one of those nobodies at work with all of those bloody clichés.”.

A hungry Dean arrived at home and went straight to kitchen. He wasn’t much of a cook, ask him to prepare anything more complicated than sausages and mash and you would come up with lint. Cooking for Dean comprised; warming up something in a microwave, sprinkling salt and pepper, then pouring the favourless contents onto a plate, which was exactly what he did this evening. Opening his freezer, searching through his wide selection of TV dinners second in range only to Iceland supermarket. He grabbed a curry, warmed it up, reached for a bottle of Stella out of the fringe and seats himself down to his evening entertainment, which began with the: The One Show, EastEnders, a documentary, Family Guy, then maybe a few rounds of his latest PlayStation game.

He sat hypnotised in front off the telly bored out of his brains, watching a series of adverts, enticing him with their manufacturer rhetoric to buy, buy and buy some more.

“I need a new TV and a new phone, I need to get a car and a washing machine, I need so much shit I can’t afford. Need to try and start saving. Need a better job. I want to do something new, I need some direction in my life, I need a career or something. I did the whole Uni Scam ting, the teachers try and make you think going to university is the be all and end all, that once you get a degree, you’ll get your dream job apparently, well it didn’t work out that way for me.” He switched the television off, aggressively pressing the remote control.

Dean was six foot tall with black short skin faded hair, a dark brown caramel complexion and dark brown eyes. He was fairly good looking, possessing gentle, slim features. He viewed himself a handsome chap and considered himself to do quite well with the ladies when he wanted to. He was half English, half Nigerian. His mother Pauline was English and his father Ben, being Nigerian. England however was all he knew, having never travelled to Africa and not seeing his real father in years. 

Having nothing else to do after dinner and looking around at his over cluttered room, Dean started tidying. The logical method applied to tidying would be to tidy one room at a time, however Dean’s approach was more of a haphazard stop and starting process: starting with tidying a bit then stopping, going to the next room, tidying a bit then stopping, being distracted by the television or his phone, sitting down for a while bunning a zoot. Turning what should have been a thirty-minute task into easily a two hour’s exercise. There was only one sitting room, a bedroom, one bathroom, a storage cupboard and kitchen. Not much in the way of decorative finishes to the apartment, the walls were bear with only one exception, a photo of his sister Sarah and himself mounted on the bedroom wall which Dean presently stood unstirring absorbed in, momentarily distracted from his household chores.

The siblings used to be so close in their childhood years; he looked up to her immensely. Dean believed she could do anything. She was an unstoppable force, a force of nature. Sarah was almost five years Dean’s senior, she was to all intents and purposes his “Big Sis.”

Staring at the photograph Dean recalls when the picture was taken, he was around the age of five and Sarah took him to their local youth club. He wanted to go for what seemed to be forever, but as the days drew near, second and even third thoughts began creeping in. A young Dean wondered what was to be expected of him upon arrival. What was he to do or say, what if no one liked him? Sarah sensed these feelings brewing inside her little brother and reassured him.

“Don’t worry your gonna love it.” She said as Dean walked through the gates head down, surveying the concrete floor, his grip firmly attached to Sarah’s hand, feeling if he were to let loose he would instantly be sucked into a deep dark black-hole of uncertainties. Sarah flung open the big blue entrance doors. He wondered if Sarah was scared the first time she came, but doubted it. He couldn’t picture her ever being scared, nervous or anything else along those blurry lines. As soon as he got inside Dean was surrounded by a sea of children yelling and screaming in an excited fury.

“Are you Sarah’s brother, what’s your name, how are you?”

Master Dean relished every moment of that day. It was as if he was afforded a special privilege solely for being Sarah’s brother.

“Am not entirely sure if a God does exists, but I pray if you are there God please take care of Sarah for me. More than anything, God, please let her be okay.”

Dean found himself seated on his bed, zoot in one hand and dustpan in the other, transfixed on the photograph. Sarah in a brown school blazer, gleaming green eyes smiling confidently out of the frame. As our hero’s thoughts turned to Sarah, Dean had to stop and censored himself, blocking out the pain of missing someone you love and not knowing whether you will see them again. So he cranked the volume up on the television and flicked through the free-view channels using the remote control. “Boring, boring, boring.”

Channel 1; a glorified talent show of some sort, Channel 2; a reality television program, Channel 3; a soap opera, Channel 4; the news. Channel after channel permeated with nothing but crap. After a few failed attempts at channel hopping, he dejectedly opted in settling for the news.

The News Reporter droned on about an extreme group of Muslims who were burning bibles at Speaker’s Corner, another black on black crime covered with all the stereotypical accessories. Then there was a BNP success story in the local election, with this bit of news Dean gave up on the television and turned his PlayStation 7 on, playing ‘Call of Duty: Operation Middle East Invasion’ for a couple of hours before going to bed, house at the end of the night still not completely tidy.

Prologue

A couple of grey 1960s concrete tower blocks held their position, menacingly pointing two fingers up across the surrounding skyline. Defiant in presence, aging without dignity like an old husband and wife stuck in the yesterday’s fashions, refusing to give way to modernity. Modestly lurking in the shadows below lived a street of Victorian terrace houses, built at their time to accommodate factory workers and tradesmen, but long since occupied by an invading tribe of middle-class families, trying to get their designer shoes onto the property ladder. Towards the eastwardly entrance of the street proudly stood a red brick Victorian built primary school, slap bang in the middle of 1990s Hackney.

The school steeple pierced the horizon, accompanied by two gable ends at either side. Thousands of pupils had passed through the boys and girls headed entrance engraved onto the brown mortar, through to the large timber entrance doors and into their respective classrooms. Some pupils went on to achieve greatness, probably, I presume. The majority were fortunate to achieve some form of capitalistic mediocrity, which would in turn be inherited by their future generations. Despite the many refurbishments which the building withstood throughout the decades, no changes had been made to upgrade the livelihoods of the working-class children, whom entered and exited the turnstiles gates of the comprehensive school system. White faces replaced by brown, cockney accents replaced by West Indian, Caretakers replaced by Premises Site Managing Directors, but “the rich should never be replaced by the poor”, was the lesson successfully being taught in every classroom, in every year for the past century and a half.

In classroom F10, somewhere on the first floor at the rear left corner of the room, sat an eleven-year-old boy by the name of Dean Anoforro-Smith. Who at this present moment was peering out through the crittall window at a Robin, playfully hop, skip and jumping across the grey slated roof tops of the neighbouring houses. It was one of those classroom afternoons when the suns out blazing in rare British form, and the essence of after school fun lingers in the air, awaiting to be inhaled into the young fresh lungs of the children. Every time Dean glanced back at the white on black swatch school clock fixed to the classroom wall, he disappointed himself again with the acknowledgement that the minute hand hardly moved since his last inspection, which seemed like hours ago. Dean resumed his focus back out the window in a state of daydream. The air of emancipation drew closer with each tick of the clock, and when it arrived, he wanted to be the first to grasp it. Running outside into the playground away from Classroom F10, away from his teacher’s monotonous tone, like “Fuck you Miss see you again tomorrow bitch!”

Dean was in his last year of primary school. Thinking back, this was a real enjoyable period in his young life. As a child one can never come near the proximity as to appreciate the blissful ignorance, which disintegrates year by year verging into adulthood. Until you are left with nothing but to confront harsh realities of mundaneness.

He gazed at the high classroom ceiling, fixed on the steel white painted RJS beams. Counting the pivots across from left to right to distract himself from the task set by Ms. Anderson. The classroom atmosphere was polluted with tomfoolery. Ms. Anderson more occupied with the going ons’ of her personal life; like her boyfriend leaving her last week, rather than a bunch of stupid children who didn’t want to be taught. Dean as a mischievous kid seized this opportunity to catch some jokes with his classmates.

“Yo Daniel you remember that time we were coming back from the swimming pool in infants, and you came up to me and was like….”

Dean paused to ensure he had captured the attention of his peers, before continuing to share the punchline of his intended joke.

“You were like, ‘I pooed my pants don’t tell anyone.’ And I told you don’t come walking next to me with your pooie pants, poo boy.”

Half the class erupted into hysterics. Nothing like the words ‘poo’ combined with ‘pants’ to win over a crowd of bored eleven-year-olds. Who were already seeking for an excuse to engage in something more entertaining than the sheet of times table questions, looking up for answers on their desktops.

Daniel, embarrassed and angered at Deans retelling of this tale from his dark days in infants, hit back with the globally recognised insult.

“You’re Mum!’’

“My Mum, what?” Dean dared Daniel to elaborate further.

“Your mum has a family card for Oxfam.’’ Daniel said before the classroom hit into another fit of giggles, made even funnier because Ms. Anderson had not yet clocked what was going on. Dean paused for a second, then announced as soon as the jape rose to mind.

“Well, your mum has a V.I.P card at the sexual health clinic.’’

“Ooooohh.’’ The children hissed, then burst into a fit of laughter of such a volume it temporarily took Ms. Anderson away from her woes, and refocused her attentions back to the job at hand.

“What’s going on children, did I not give you work to complete? It better be finished in ten minutes.”

Daniel whimpered to the class. “Am gonna tell my mum on you.’’

Dean laughed it off, content he had won this afternoon’s battle of classroom banter.

The following day outside of the conventional hours of schooling our young hero stood in detention, cleaning up the classroom as punishment for an offence committed earlier that week. He was just in the middle of polishing Ms. Anderson desk, making sure she would be able to see her famed requested reflection. Leant over the worktop head down thinking solemnly about going home late yet again, as he applied pressure on scrubbing out the rounded stained remnants left from Ms. Anderson’s cups of coffee, dotted over her desk. Daniel’s mother interrupted the normality of events by busting in through the classroom doors and charging towards Dean like an angry terrier yapping at the postman.

“What did you say about me? What did you call me? Say it to my face, say it to my face.” Daniel’s mother spouted in a North London working class accent, high in pitch and even higher in aggression.

At this moment she was making Dean want to laugh, standing there snapping her jaws at the other side of the desk. Dean tried to recollect what he said the day before. It came back to him. ‘Your mum has a V.I.P card at the sexual health clinic.’ A reluctant smile broke across his eyes as he tried to suppress the imaged of her countenance, if he was to tell her, right to her ugly puffy, rounded pink face.

She pushed him backwards from across the desk, face redden with frustration that she wasn’t achieving the reaction of fear which she desired to provoke from him. Dean caught his balance on his heel. He wasn’t afraid of Daniel’s mum, he received worst beats at home from his own mother than this fat little white woman would be capable of dishing out. Dean stood almost jowl to jowl with his aggressor, looking at her bloated red cheeks and squinted little eyes with an awkward suppressed smirk expanding across his mouth as he said.

“If you touch me again Mrs. Sydney, am gonna hit you right back in your fat face, and you’re not gonna like it. So if I were you, I would stop bullying little kids and roll your fat ass down to the chip shop and go get a chip butty.” Dean said with all the attitude he could muster.

The two other children in the classroom who were also serving detention, stood there still and in shock as if they had been glanced upon by the frozen stare of Medusa. Mrs. Sydney just realised their presence from the faint sound of their gasps. She also just recognised that Dean was a good half a foot taller than her son and growing in front of her with each word which vacated his mouth. He was also much broader than she remembered from their last encounter a few years ago, and less cute too. After assessing Dean size compared to her own and coming to the swift conclusion that this eleven-year-old black thug might just knock her out, she back peddled out of the classroom screaming behind her.

“The Head-teachers’ going to know about this first thing in the morning!”

And as promised, the next day Dean was subpoenaed to the Head-teacher’s office. He made his way to her headquarters which recently was becoming a well-travelled route: straight through the lobby, left at the year six classrooms, up the stairwell to the mezzanine level and first door on the right, all the while stomping his feet, fed up with this rigmarole of being told off for something that wasn’t even his fault.

“Why me? Why are they always picking on me for?’’ He questioned as he knocked on the door. Seconds later Miss Farnsworth, the school secretary, disappointedly greeted Dean.

“Good Morning Dean, not you again.” She said.

Dean ignored her fake look of mortification and walked in, sitting himself on the chair outside of the Head-teacher’s office, waiting to be summoned. This was a mind game which Dean well understood they tried to play with naughty children, leaving them waiting, stewing in guilty, then railing them in for a quick confession.

“Come in Dean.’’ Mrs. Cole the Head-teacher beckoned.

“Good morning, Dean.”

“Good morning, Mrs. Cole.”

Mrs. Cole was in her mid-forties, a very tall woman armed with broad shoulders, a potbelly and a big strong masculine face. A combination of features which rendered her looking like a retired NBA player turned transvestite.

“Dean, Dean, Dean, what have you got yourself into now? Before I jump to conclusions, I would like to hear your account of yesterday events, although Mrs. Sydney provided me with quite an astonishing and believable statement as to what occurred.”

Dean knew whatever he said from this point onwards would fall upon deaf ears, as per usual he was guilty until proven guilty. He gave his account of yesterday’s events, interrupted by a few disbelieving “Hmmms and Awwws.”

Mrs. Cole as ever had her victim secured in her trap of hearing but not listening. Dean could rap ‘Fuck the Police’ for all the difference it would make to her already preconceived version of events. Through the course of his recount she was already deep in thought, not focused on the validity of his statement, rather her mind wondered down an all too familiar path of late, “why are black boys so much trouble?” She questioned herself. “It might not even be his fault.” “Maybe he is just a victim of his own nature?” For she often saw herself also falling casualty to her own philanthropist spirit, having to intervene and recuse children like Dean from a life of crime. He was hardly an Albert Einstein, nevertheless he was a fairly smart boy and might grow to obtain an honourable profession, such as an: electrician or a plumper, if only she could manage to get him off this path of self-destruction and in a sense civilize the boy before he ended up dead or behind bars.

“Okay, okay.” She stopped him mid-flow, fast and forceful like a seat belt fasten to crash dumpy on impact.

“Dean yet again you fail to take any responsibility for your actions, and obviously the detentions are not having any beneficial effect on you.”

She handed Dean an envelope.

“Give this letter to your mother. I would like to have a meeting with her, to discuss measures to improve your attitude and guide you on the path of being the successful young man you possess the potential of becoming.”

“Okay, Mrs.” He replied. Dean hated giving letters to his mother, if it were up to him he would have delivered that letter first-class recorded delivery straight to the dustbin on route home. Unfortunately, the school maneuverer around this old loop-hole by insisting letters were signed and dated by the addressee and returned the following day.

“Bloody hell.” Dean’s Mum said as he handed her the letter. “Not another meeting with your school. What is it this time? You know am gonna have to take time off work again.’’

“Nothing Mum.’’ He replied, this was his standard retort formulated specifically for questions such as this.

The following morning Dean and his mother made their way once more to Gainsborough Primary School.

“Good afternoon Ms. Smith, I regret having to call you in again, fully appreciating you have other commitments and since parting ways with the children’s father and all the many other many pressures which you so admirably contend, in addition to our now recent ever frequent meetings but you can guarantee I have only requested your attendance today as a matter of urgency, in order to bring forth swift resolution to Dean’s persistence poor behavioural problems.” Mrs. Cole spoke in a maze of words, each sentence leading to an eventual dead end. Pauline, thrown off by Mrs. Cole’s verbosity, looked at her son, trying to cover up her embarrassment for not understanding half of what she had just been told.

“Thank you, Miss. Cole, for taking into account our circumstances.” Pauline politely replied.

“No problem Pauline, no problem whatsoever and it is ‘Mrs.’ now, as I am recently wed however opted in keeping my own surname.” Mrs. Cole said smugly looking onwards at Dean and his mother as if to imply by retaining her maiden name, she had performed some courageous suffragette like act, worthy of praise.

“Well, since our last meeting Dean’s behaviour has failed to improve, in fact it has worsen.”

“Sorry, Mrs. Cole.’’ Dean’s mum replied in a fervent tone as if she herself was a child pupil, rather than a fully grown woman.

“So I have been considering what options we have within the system to aid improvements in Dean’s behaviour, thinking both in and outside of our conventional boxes. I believe there are four main choices at hand.”

Pauline grimaces in anticipation of the Head-teacher’s choices, only just clocking Mrs. Cole glancing down at her notes on her executive desk.

“One is that we do nothing, leave him be, let him carry on down his current path, disrupting lessons and disturbing the other children and just hope for the best. Option two we exclude him from the school and refer him to a behavioural unit, now the improvement success rates in these institutions are poor to say the least and in my experience often produced an adverse effect on the pupil, or you could always remove him from the school, find a new school or in fact home school the boy and see if you could produce better results, but with one year left until secondary school this again could prove to be a rather counterproductive exercise. Now lastly.”

Mrs. Cole finally looked up from her notebook, to see if she could gauge anything from her audience, before returning to her downward gaze.

“My preferred option is one of recent innovation, so I would not blame you for being perhaps slightly sceptical at first as the process is still fairly new to our shores, however success rates from all medical bodies are showing tremendous results from our American and European cousins and now the ground breaking treatment has recently become available on our beloved NHS. You see, Miss. Smith there’s a new drug called Ritalin, I suggest you look into it, but in most basic terms it is a central nervous system stimulant, used to treat attention deficit disorder (ADD) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).” She speeded up her spill as to brush past any information she viewed may be above Pauline’s level of intellect and secured the punchline. “Perhaps, perhaps discuss it with your GP, you will definitely have the schools backing, another child with a similar condition to that of Deans was subscribed it last year in my previous school, and I noticed a complete and utter change in him, one would not even recognise the boy how his behaviour improved to such a tremendous degree.’’

Pauline’s countenance transformed elaborately as a pantomime actor, who finally realised that there was actually a looming danger behind them. Rage instantaneously replaced her air of polite subdue. “Dean is not and will not be no guinea pig, for you or for this school. I take him to the GP and I’ll have you know there’s nothing wrong with my boy. You can take that Ritamin or whatever it’s called and stick it up your arse sooner than you will be giving it to him.” Pauline yelled at this giant of a woman as she rose to her feet.

Mrs. Cole heaved herself back against her chair as if Pauline would strike her. Face frozen in terror, fearing for her safety in the hands of this most uncouth woman, and also disappointed her concocted little experiment had fallen upon unreceptive ears, shocked with the realisation that perhaps the boy’s troublesome nature was attributed to both mother and father, rather than just the black father as she originally presumed. Before she had a chance to summon her riddle of words, Dean’s mother had already stormed out of her office, slamming the door behind her with a force that resonated in a banging echoing throughout the corridors of the school. Pauline hand in hand with a more than amused Dean marched out of the school.

“We will find you another school Dean, a better one.” She said, trying to reassure herself as much as him.

“One where they won’t treat you like some kind of lab rat.”