A Deputy Humiliated His Cousin at a BBQ. Then the SUV Doors Opened-olive

My cousin slammed me face-first into the picnic table in front of forty relatives, three trays of ribs, and my mother’s potato salad.

The sound was not as loud as people imagine humiliation being.

It was the small stuff that stayed with me.

Image

The scrape of my cheek against old wood.

The hiss of fat dripping from the ribs onto the grill.

The sticky smell of barbecue sauce, hot grass, and charcoal smoke hanging low over my parents’ backyard.

Then came the click of handcuffs.

That sound can change a whole room, even when the room is outside.

Deputy Travis Bell knew that.

He wanted everybody to hear it.

He pulled my wrists behind my back, snapped the cuffs tight, and said, loud enough for every aunt, uncle, cousin, neighbor, and church friend to hear, ‘Maybe now the family will finally see what you really are.’

No one moved.

My aunt Linda stood with a red plastic cup halfway to her mouth.

My sister froze near the cooler with her phone in one hand.

My father stayed beside the grill, silver tongs clenched in his fist, smoke curling around his face as if he had been waiting twelve years for somebody else to make me small.

A paper plate slid off the table beside my cheek.

Baked beans spilled into the grass.

One of the kids started crying near the porch steps.

Somebody whispered, ‘Is he really arresting him?’

Travis leaned down until his badge pressed into my shoulder blade.

‘You should’ve stayed gone, Ethan,’ he muttered. ‘You had one job. Disappear.’

I did not answer him.

I did not ask what he thought he was doing.

I did not fight.

For one second, I wanted to.

Read More