Sam and Del -2- I'm in so much trouble...

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Sam's long hair and his refusal to cut it has caused him problems. His smart mouth hasn't helped. Attacked in the locker room by Leon, Sam defended himself and through luck or happenstance, left Leon out cold and bleeding on the floor...

SamAndDel03.jpg
Sam and Del
by Erin Halfelven

2. I'm in so much trouble...

Some of my friends found me during the commotion. Walter Adkins, Skip Gordon and I had been friends since grade school, probably because we were all outsiders of sorts. Plus we rode the same bus. Walter was a light-skinned, freckled, red-haired, black kid. With glasses. Yeah. Even less of an athlete than me, if possible. Skip had recently hit a growth spurt and towered over Wally and me. He had sprouted a face full of acne, too, and still wore the braces he claimed to have inherited from his older brothers.

Also, there were cops. They made me sit on the concrete, just under the overhang outside the gym doors, far enough to the side to be out of the way. I'd answered a million questions and sometime during that, Skip and Wally had shown up and sat down nearby.

It must have been lunch time but I wasn't hungry. I was worried sick about Leon, truth to tell. The paramedics had come and taken him away, so I guessed he was still alive. I felt terrible about what had happened and the cops kept having to ask me more questions because I kept bawling while trying to answer them.

Mostly a lady cop questioned me. Her name badge said she was Officer Williston but she told me to call her Sarah. "Your name is Sam?" she asked.

"Uh, huh," I whimpered.

"Is that short for Samantha?" she asked, writing on her tablet.

I stared at her. "No, it's short for Samson." I might have put the teensiest bit of snark in my voice.

She nodded but didn't write anything down. "What were you doing in the boys' locker room, Sam?"

"I was trying to comb my hair in front of the mirror there," I said, pointing, since the big double doors were open and we could all see the place where it happened. And the bloodstain. I sniffled.

"Were you waiting for someone?"

"No, I was just--just combing my hair."

"Then what happened?"

"Leon came up and shoved me, and I fell down and broke my comb." I took the pieces out and showed them to her. It was a big yellow comb with wide teeth that were really friendly to long hair like mine.

"Did you know Leon?"

"Yes. He's in the same class as me."

"Had you had a disagreement with him before?"

"I guess you could say that. He accused me of being gay, and I called him fat."

"Are you gay?" She looked at me as if this were a really important question.

"No. I'm not gay!"

She nodded. "And Leon isn't your boyfriend?"

"No! I said--"

The other officer, Sergeant Corbin interrupted then by asking Skip and Wally what they were doing there. To which they both babbled incoherently. The Sergeant waved them to silence, then asked Sarah if she had all she needed.

"I think so," she said. Then she smiled at me, "We're done, honey, but I think someone from the school needs you to wait here."

She and the Sergeant wandered off while I sat nervously playing with the pieces of my comb.

"Are you going to jail?" Skip asked, his eyes big.

I shook my head.

"Good," said Wally, "cause anyone who looks like you would be way too popular in jail."

"Huh?" I said. Skip and Wally thought that was hilarious but I still didn't get it.

Ms. Burton, one of the girls' coaches called me. "Sam Tucker?"

"Yes'm?" I said.

She came over and offered a hand to help me up. "You okay, Sam? The cops said I should take you to see the school nurse."

"Huh? I'm fine," I said.

"You're white as clean laundry in a detergent commercial," she said. "Let's go."

I followed her, turning to wave goodbye to my friends. They waved back as if they were never going to see me again. Wally's eyes were big and round and I swear I saw Skip's chin tremble.

Ms. Burton took me down some pretty empty hallways and across to the Admin building where the school nurse had an office in the basement. "Dolores? Uh--Mrs. Packard?" she called as we entered. "Got a kid here looking shocky after an accident in gym."

She explained in more detail but I kind of tuned her out. I'd never been to the nurse's office before and it smelled funny. Ms. Burton finally left, saying, "I got to see to my other girls, make sure they aren't setting any fires."

The nurse, amazingly, had heard nothing whatsoever about the incident. "If something serious happens," she complained, "I'm always out of the loop." But she did offer me a cup of tea and a packet of crackers.

"I have napkins and tampons, too, dear, if you need them," she said.

I didn't need a napkin and I sure didn't need a tampon (I wasn't real sure what the heck that was, anyway), so I just shook my head.

"Well, you just lie here, honey, and I'll make some phone calls." She proceeded to do that, calling the principal's office first.

*

Well, despite the nurse thinking she was out of the loop, she's the one who finally gave me the news that Leon wasn't dead. He had a concussion and a scalp wound, not a cracked skull. They had taken him in an ambulance to the hospital where they ended up keeping him for three days.

And I finally got called to the principal's office. Mr. Kant, the vice principal, (the kid's called him Kan't-Hardly), said, "Fighting again?"

Ouch. Until that moment I had totally forgotten about a similar incident back in the fall when someone had pulled my ponytail, causing me to spill my lunch, and I had socked him in the groin. He'd gone down, too, right in the middle of the creamed corn and mystery meat. Some upperclassman, I didn't even remember his name. Del-something.

Mr. Kant sighed. "Unfortunately, I can't just give you detention this time. Miss-ter Tucker." He'd done the same thing with my name the last time, too. "Not like the old days where I could just strap some sense into you."

Like I wasn't already in a bad mood but I didn't say anything. I didn't quite know what he meant by that last part, anyway. I was picturing him using duck tape on my head.

"Mandatory three-day suspension for fighting with serious injury, and three more days for it being a second offense in the same school year." He handed me some papers. "Your parents have to sign those for you to be readmitted to school, Miss-ter Tucker."

By this time it was already after three, so I wasn't surprised when he said, "I've called your parents to have someone come get you. You can't use school transportation, either, until those papers are signed." I could have walked home, it was less than two miles and I had done it before when I missed the bus, but the weather had finally made up its mind and rain came down in a steady drool.

He stared at me for a moment and then asked the big question. "Why don't you get your hair cut and avoid these kinds of problems?"

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Comments

Sam's outlook

erin's picture

Is Sam in denial about why he keeps his hair long? Hmm. :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

The styel you have written it

The styleyou have written it shows he is not in deny of it. He defend even him self as Person wich is very respectable. Also the Principal shoould not take only one side. ;)

Teh other has to be at leaat 3 days out too. Begin a fight and if he is TG it's way more grave to him.

nice begin btw.

No one asked so far

erin's picture

No one has pinned Sam down so far as to his inner identity. Perhaps someone will? :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Why should he?

If there is no district rule forbidding guys from having long hair then why should he make the school administrators' lives easier by cutting his hair. He should be able to get the school to act against his bullies instead of them harassing him.

It's legally assault & battery. The bullies should be expelled for attacking him on school property and turned over to the DA for prosecution. Certify them as adults and give them a fair trial in the adult legal system.

It doesn't matter that he has long hair, it isn't illegal. He doesn't need to be trans to defend his right to have long hair. He is being attacked and only then does he fight to defend himself.

This mutual combat rule is stupid. It tacitly allows attackers cart blanche to continue their illegal attacks. US law recognizes the right to defend yourself from attack. State law can't override federal law. Federal law and court rulings have made that clear.


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

Been there, had the conversation

erin's picture

Sam's story is believable but if no one else saw it, it's just one version of what happened. Leon hasn't spoken up yet. I think I'm being realistic on how the school might react. They've got one unconscious kid bleeding on the cement and another who says that they did it. Combine with zero-tolerance rules for fighting on campus and yeah, the defender gets punished. Happens way too frequently. It is just and fair? I didn't say that....

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Zero tolerance

The Oakland, California high school my daughter attended would suspend both parties to a fight, even if one was acting in self defense. Apparently you are supposed to allow yourself to be beaten until an adult intervenes, if that ever happens. It sure saves them the trouble of actually investigating to find out what happened.

Yup

erin's picture

And someday, they will lose a court case brought under the 14th Amendment. Just because you're a minor does not mean you lose your civil rights.

But this is fiction. :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Thought that myself

As you can tell, I'm a firm believer in rights and true justice. This is so realistic I forget that as fiction anything you want to happen can.

Regarding your earlier point, from what I've read suggests that this a**wipe has a history of bullying Sam, whereas Sam likely has no history of starting fights. Those two facts should be part of their consideration, even though there were no witnesses to this latest incident.

Does the school not have security cameras in the halls? Thats pretty common these days, and not horribly expensive. There is no expection of privacy, so the school can't use that to justify refusing to share the tapes in question. Example: If you are in your house with the doors closed and the blinds drawn, you have a reasonable expectation of privacy. However, if the blinds are open and you are standing in front of the window your expectation of privacy just took a dive. A hallway in a school is a quasi-public area, you have no right to privacy. So the federal courts and the Supreme Court have ruled. That's a simplistic example but good enough for our purposes.


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

It was a locker room

erin's picture

Probably you do have an expectation of privacy in a locker room, even near the doorway. Any cameras would likely have been outside.

I did think of that. :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Oops, I missed that!I

I saw "locker" and thought of the lockers we had in the hallways at my schools. I'll have to pay more attention!


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

Zero Intelligence Policies

Zero tolerance policies are really zero intelligence policies. No need to find out what actually happened or put any though into the cause of the situation.

If they had to look into the problem they might discover a lack of supervision or some other failure on the school administration's part.

Michelle B

Yup

erin's picture

Nearly all zero-tolerance policies are some authority's effort to avoid responsible active decision-making by having a one-size-fits-none rule.

Sigh.

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

about the Principal use "miss

about the Principal use "miss-ter2 before the name can be also seen as harresment, and why does he not done anything to protect sam if he knew that things like that happend.

it seems he does support it. even if he does not like Fights in school. The question about the hair is in my eyes just for "protect" himself.

Success

erin's picture

Looks like I succeeded in making the vice-principal disliked. :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

bad part is people like him

bad part is people like him exist in real, i wonder how they keep their jobs. ;)

Besides the cut scalp, what'd Leon get?

Jamie Lee's picture

Why is it the kid who defends himself seems to always get the shaft, instead of the ass who started it in the first place?

What was Sam supposed to do, sit there and let Leon take as many tries as he wanted to kick Sam in the face?

And where was the biased coach? Why wasn't he out there where he could have prevented Leon from pushing Sam then trying to kick him?

Mr. Vice Principal should be careful how he talks to a student. Because one might take exception to his references and find himself in court.

Others have feelings too.