***Out In The Corner Boy Night- Rock 'Em Daddy, Be My Be-Bop Daddy-But
Watch Out-Belatedly For Elvis Presley
John “Black Jack” McGee like a
million guys who came out of the post-World War II Cold war night and came out
of the no prospect projects, in his case the Clintondale Housing Project (the
Acre, okay, and hell’s little acre at that to save a lot of fancy sociological
talk stuff), looking for kicks. Kicks anyway he could get them to take the pain
away, the pain of edge city living if he was asked, by the way, politely asked
or you might get your head handed to you on a platter asked. Needless to say
Black Jack was rough stuff, rough stuff even when he was nothing but another
Acre teenage kid, with a chip, no, about seven chips, on his wide shoulders.
Needless to say, as well, there was nothing that school could teach him and he
dropped out the very day that he turned sixteen. As a sign of respect for what
little North Clintondale High taught him threw a rock through the headmaster’s
window and then just stood there. The headmaster did not made peep one about it
(he was probably hiding under his desk, he is that kind of guy) and Black Jack
just walked away laughing. Yes, Black Jack was rough stuff, rough stuff all the
way around. That story made him a legend all the way down to the Acre school,
and so much so that every boy, every red-blooded boy, in her class made his
pitch to get along with Betsy.
The problem with legends though is
unless you keep pace other legends crowd you out, or somebody does some crazy
prank and your legend gets lost in the shuffle. That’s the way the rules are,
make of them what you will. And Black Jack, wide shouldered, tall, pretty
muscular, long brown hair, and a couple of upper shoulder tattoos with two
different girls’ names on them was very meticulous about his legend. So every
once in a while you would hear a rumor about how Black Jack had “hit” this
liquor store or that mom and pop variety store, small stuff when you think
about it but enough to stir any red-blooded Acre elementary schoolboy’s already
hungry imagination.
And then all of sudden, just after a
nighttime armed gas station robbery that was never solved, Black Jack stepped
up in society, well, corner boy society anyway. This part everyone who hung around
Harry’s Variety knew about, or knew parts of the story. Black Jack had picked
up a bike (motorcycle, for the squares), and not some suburban special
Harley-Davidson chrome glitter thing either but a real bike, an Indian. The
only better bike, the Vincent Black Lightning, nobody had ever seen around,
only in motorcycle magazines. And as a result of having possession of the
“boss” bike (or maybe reflecting who they thought committed that armed robbery)
he was “asked” (if that is the proper word, rather than commissioned, elected,
or ordained) to join the Acre Low-Riders.
And the Acre Low-Riders didn’t care
if you were young or old, innocent or guilty, smart or dumb, or had about a
million other qualities, good or bad, just stay out of their way when they came
busting through town on their way to some hell-raising. The cops, the cops who
loved to tell kids, young kids, to move along when it started to get dark or
got surly when some old lady jaywalked caught the headmaster’s 'no peep' when
the Low Riders showed their colors. Even “Red” Doyle who was the max daddy king
corner boy at Harry’s Variety made a very big point that his boys, and he
himself, wanted no part of the Low-Riders, good or bad. And Red was a guy who
though nothing, nothing at all, of chain-whipping a guy mercilessly half to
death just because he was from another corner. Yes, Black Jack had certainly
stepped it up.
Here’s where the legend, or
believing in the legend, or better working on the legend full-time part comes
in. You can only notch up so many robberies, armed or otherwise, assaults, and
other forms of hell-raising before your act turns stale, nobody, nobody except
hungry imagination twelve-year old schoolboys, is paying attention. The magic
is gone. And that is what happened with Black Jack. Of course, the Low-Riders
were not the only outlaw motorcycle “club” around. And when there is more than
one of anything, or maybe on some things just one, there is bound to be a
"rumble" (a fight, for the squares) about it. Especially among guys,
guys too smart for school, guys who have either graduated from, or are working
on, their degrees from the school of hard knocks, the state pen. But enough of
that blather because the real story was that the Groversville High-Riders were
looking for one Black Jack McGee. And, of course, the Acre Low-Riders had Black
Jack’s back.
Apparently, and Betsy was a little
confused about this part because she did not know the “etiquette” of biker-dom,
brother John had stepped into High-Rider territory, a definite no-no in the
biker etiquette department without some kind of truce, or peace offering, or
whatever. But see Black Jack was “trespassing” for a reason. He had seen this
doll, this fox of a doll, this Lola heart-breaker, all blonde hair, soft
curves, turned-up nose, and tight, short-sleeved cashmere sweater down at the
Adamsville Beach one afternoon a while back and he made his bid for her. Now
Black Jack was pretty good looking, okay, although nothing special from what
anybody would tell you but this doll took to him, for some reason. What she did
not tell him, and there is a big question still being asked around Harry’s
about why not except that she was some hell-cat looking for her own strange
kicks, was that she had a boyfriend, a Groversville guy doing time up the state
pen. And what she also didn’t tell him was that the reason her boyfriend,
“Sonny” Russo, was in stir was for attempted manslaughter and about to get out
in August. And what she also did not tell him was that Sonny was a charter
member of the High-Riders.
Forget dramatic tension, forget
suspense, this situation, once Sonny found out, and he would, sooner or later,
turned into “rumble city," all banners waving, all colors showing. And so
it came to pass that on August 23, 1961, at eight o’clock in the evening the
massed armies of Acre Low-Riders and Groverville High-Riders gathered for
battle. And the rules of engagement for such transgressions, if there is such a
thing, rules of engagement that is rather than just made up, was that Sonny and
Black Jack were to fight it out in a circle, switchblades flashing, until one
guy was cut too badly to continue, or gave up, or… So they went back and forth
for a while Black Jack getting the worst of it with several cuts across his
skin-tight white tee-shirt, a couple of rips in his blue jeans, bleeding but
not enough to give up.
Meanwhile true-blue Lola is egging
Sonny on, egging him on something fierce, like some devil-woman, to cut the
love-bug John every which way. But then Black Jack drew a break. Sonny slipped
and John cut him, cuts him bad near the neck. Sonny was nothing but bleeding,
bleeding bad, real bad. Sonny called it quits. Everybody quickly got the hell
out of the field of honor, double-quick, Sonny’s comrades helping him along.
That is not the end of the story, by no means. Sonny didn't make it, and in the
cop dust-up Lola, sweet Lola, told them that none other than lover-boy Black
Jack did the deed. And now Black Jack is earning his hard knock credits up in
stir, state stir, for manslaughter (reduced from murder two).
After thinking about this story again I can also see where,
if I played my cards right, I could be sitting right beside maybe
not-so-old-flame Betsy, helping her through her brother hard times, down at the
old Adamsville beach some night talking about the pitfalls of corner boy life
while we are listening to One Night of Sin by Elvis Presley on the old
car radio. What do you think?
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