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Syl
Chapter 1
Family and Friends
A short slim man built a shanty in a squatter settlement near the fishing village in Greenwich Farm. He lived there with his girlfriend and his two little daughters. His name was Sylvester, and everybody called him Syl for short. He also had an illegitimate son who lived with his mother in the country. Syl was a street vender. He had an old wooden stall on a sidewalk downtown, and he sold a variety of items.
Fishing was Syl’s main hobby. He had two close friend Ronny and Arnold who used to go fishing with him. Ronny and Arnold were biological brothers. They often went to sea together on a raft made of Styrofoam. After some time had passed, Arnold built a small fishing boat, and he named it The Challenger.
Syl was a hot-tempered person. Consequently, he often found himself in unfortunate situations. Even though he was small in structure, he was not afraid of anybody. Whenever he met Ronny or Arnold, he usually had a dramatic or hilarious story about his latest experience to tell him.
Chapter 2
Bicycle Trouble
Part 1
On a windy afternoon in June, Arnold went to the fishing village in Greenwich Farm to fish, and he saw Syl. He was sitting on his bicycle at the edge of the pier. They started a conversation, and while they were talking and laughing, a strong puff of wind blew Syl and the bicycle into the water. He and the bicycle sank to the bottom of sea.
Arnold knew that his friend could swim well, but Syl was taking a longer time to surface than he had expected. When Syl finally swam to the surface, he was out of breath. “What happened, man?” Arnold asked. “The foot of my trousers was caught in the bicycle chain, and I had trouble freeing myself,” he replied.
“How will we get the bicycle out of the sea?” Syl asked. “Don’t worry, I have an idea,” Arnold said. Arnold used a strong fishing line with a big fishhook to pull the bicycle from the bottom of the sea. When the bicycle got to the surface, Syl leaned over the edge of the pier and took it out of the water.
Part 2
Syl got a job as a security guard at a theatre in Half Way Tree. He worked on the night shift, and this afforded him the opportunity to see his merchandise in the daytime. Furthermore, Syl was a poor man from the ghetto, so he used to ride a ten-speed bicycle to work to save money on transportation.
One night Syl was riding his bicycle on Maxfield Avenue at around 9:00 p.m., and when he reached the intersection of Barnes Avenue and Maxfield Avenue, a man walked out into the road, and he deliberately collided with the bicycle. The impact made Syl fall from the bicycle. When he got up, the man asked, “Why do you ride so recklessly, short man?” Immediately after that he said, “You should look where you’re going, man.” Syl was so puzzled; he did not know that the man was a robber. “You deliberately walked in the path of the bicycle,” he responded.
While they were speaking, another man jumped over a fence and grabbed Syl from behind, and he struggled with him. The man held him tightly while his accomplice rode away with the bicycle. When Syl saw the man stealing his bicycle, he said, “My bi ....” He was so frightened; he could not say the complete word.
The robber released him and ran in the opposite direction when his friend turned off the road. Syl ran after the one who stole his bicycle, but he did not catch him. He lost his bicycle to robbers, so he had to walk the rest of the journey to Half Way Tree. A few days later, he bought a second-hand bicycle from a young man.
Part 3
One morning Syl was riding his new bicycle on Marcus Garvey Drive, he held onto the back of a truck with one hand, and the truck pulled him along the road. When he reached a certain point, the bicycle ran into a pothole, and he fell to the ground right in front of a bus stop full of students and working-class people. The commuters all pointed at him and laughed.
Syl had sustained injuries, but he pretended to be okay. He quickly sprang to his feet like an expert in kung fu, brushed himself off, and rode away. One of the excited onlookers said, “He’s agile and vigorous, though.” Another person remarked, “He’s lucky that a vehicle wasn’t coming up behind him; he could’ve been killed.”
When Sil got far enough away from the crowd, he stopped and examined himself to see how badly he was hurt. He had cuts and bruises on his knees, hands, and shoulders, and he was bleeding. So he when straight home and dressed his wounds.
Part 4
Arnold arranged with Syl to go fishing in a small oar boat that was docked at the fishing village in Greenwich Farm. Syl rode his bicycle to the location. He wanted to put it in the boat, but Arnold disagreed. “You know that we don’t have enough room in the boat to hold the bicycle, so why did you ride instead of walking?” he said. “No problem, I’ll hide it in the bush,” Syl replied. “It’s too risky to leave it there, someone might steal it,” Arnold said. Syl went and hid the bicycle in the bush despite having the knowledge that thieves frequented the shore.
The fishermen put their fishing gears in the boat and rowed out to sea. They anchored the boat near the third buoy and began to fish with fishing lines. Approximately half an hour later, Syl looked towards the shore and saw someone in the bush stealing his bicycle. “Look! A boy is stealing my bicycle!” he shouted. “We must go back to the shore now to stop him,” he added. “That doesn’t make sense; we won’t get there in time to catch him.” Arnold said. “I’ll swim to shore and recover my bicycle from him,” Syl said. “If you go, I can’t row the boat back to shore alone,” Arnold said. Syl insisted to go, so he dived into the water and swam back to the shore.
The thief had left with the bicycle long before he reached the shore. Syl ran to the main road, and he saw a security guard standing in front of a business place. He approached the security guard and said, “Sir, did you see a man pass here with a bicycle? He stole my Bicycle, and I have to get it back.” The security guard replied, “Yes, I saw two guys pass here with a bicycle, but they are probably a mile away by now.” Syl said, “I didn’t know that it was two of them, I saw only one man.” The security guard said, “You won’t catch them because they passed here about 15 minutes ago. Furthermore, those guys come from Majestic Gardens, and if you go there, they will shoot you.”
Syl slowly walked back to the shore. Arnold saw him coming in the distance without his bicycle. He went into the water and swam toward the boat. When he got into the boat, Arnold asked him, “What happened out there?” He replied, “I saw no sign of him.” Arnold said, “I told you that you wouldn’t get there in time to catch him, but you didn’t listen.” Arnold and Syl continued fishing until evening came despite the setback.
Chapter 3
The Fights
Part 1
In the early morning, a bus was loading at the terminus downtown. Syl boarded the bus and sat down in an empty seat. He sat by the window and left the other end of the seat vacant. Not many people were on the bus when Syl boarded it, so most of the seats were empty. A ruffian boarded the bus, and he walked past the empty seats and sat down beside Syl.
Other passengers also boarded the bus. While they were going in and selecting seats, the ruffian said to Syl in a low voice, “Get up from beside me and go and find another seat.” Syl did not respond because he could not believe that the man was talking to him. The ruffian told Syl again in a low voice to get up and move to another seat, but he still did not respond. Things were about to turn nasty. This time the ruffian elbowed Syl and said in a low voice, “I say get up and find another seat, man.” At that moment, he was certain that the ruffian was talking to him.
Syl got up slowly and asked the ruffian to excuse him. The ruffian thought Syl decided to get up because he was afraid of him, so he moved his feet out of the way and allowed him to pass. Syl turned around and held onto the handrail then he swung on it and landed a forceful kick into the face of the ruffian. The kick caught him by surprise, and it sent him crashing into the window. At that moment, the other passengers saw what was going on. The ruffian quickly rose, brandished a ratchet knife, and swung it at him. Syl retaliated by pulling a knife on him to defend himself, and they escalated the fighting.
The passengers began to shout and scream. “Conductor, take them off the bus!” someone said. “The short man started the fight,” another person said. The people felt that Syl started the fight because they did not know that the ruffian had provoked and elbowed him. When the driver of the bus realised what was happening, he tried to stop the fight. The ruffian ran out of the bus. Syl ran after him, and they continued fighting outside until the ruffian lost and ran away.
Part 2
A young woman of fair complexion was living in a house beside Syl’s shanty. Both buildings were in the same yard. She had a lovely baby girl who was about seven months old. The woman was slim and attractive, and Syl was lusting after her. She realised his intention towards her, and she told him that things would not work between them. The rejection hurt Syl’s ego, and as a result, he resented the woman. Sadly, the friendliness turned to hostility, and they could not get along with each other anymore.
Every day Syl and the woman would have an argument, and it would escalate into a quarrel. Syl’s girlfriend did not know the cause of the problem until the woman revealed it to her one day. When Syl’s girlfriend approached him about it, he denied everything, and he went and cursed the woman. Furthermore, he threatened to harm her on several occasions.
One evening while Syl was washing some dishes at the outdoor sink, the woman went to the sink to catch water, and she accidentally brushed him. He thought she did it on purpose, so he shoved her, and she lost her balance and almost fell. She retaliated violently, and a fight developed between them. Syl hit the woman on the hand with a stick. He did not know that she had been planning to disfigure him.
The woman quickly ran into her house, and she came out with a bottle containing a liquid substance. Syl had no idea what it was, so he attacked her. The woman threw the substance on him, and when he felt the burning, he realised it was acid. Syl was in agony. “The wicked gal threw acid on me,” he said. “I’m going to kill her,” he added.
The woman immediately ran away leaving her baby in the house. A man who was in the yard called the police, and they took Syl to the hospital. Furthermore, they searched for the woman, but they did not find her. Someone said that the woman was from East Kingston, so she probably went back there.
The police took the baby to a place of safety, and the woman’s mother later went there to claim the child. Syl had not seen the woman since the incident occurred. His face, hands, and other parts of his body were scared for life.
Part 3
At around midday Syl was standing in front of a shop on East Avenue that sells wholesale, and he saw a man who resembled someone that he knew standing close by. He looked at the man a few times to make out his face. The man realised that Syl was looking at him, and he said, “Why are you looking at me, Short boy?” Syl replied, “You look like someone whom I know from somewhere.” The stupid man said, “I don’t want any bombo claat man to stare at me because I’m not a homosexual, and I don’t love men.”
The man’s response made Syl angry, so he asked, “Are you calling me a homosexual?” Syl went on to say, “You’re fucking feisty!” The man said, “I don’t want any homosexual to say anything to me.” Syl said, “It seems that you slept with your mother last night, that’s why you’re arguing with me.” The man angrily said, “Hey bombo claat boy, don’t talk about my mother in that way.” Syl said, “Yeah man, you fucked your mother last night, that’s why you’re so bombo claat impudent.”
The man cursed and threatened Syl. “I’m going kill you, bombo claat boy,” he said. Syl fearlessly replied, “I’m not afraid of you, dirty rass claat boy.” The heated quarrel quickly turned into a fight. Syl reached for his ratchet knife, the man drew a long knife from the waist of his trousers, and they attacked each other. Both men repeatedly attempted to stab each other, but they were so skilful that none of them was injured in the fight. They fought for a short time. The man could not overpower Syl, so he ran up the road. Syl did not pursue him.
Chapter 4
The Fat Girl
Syl told Arnold about a fat girl who had recently moved into the yard that he lived. He said that she was good-looking and sexy. Furthermore, he liked her, and he wanted to have a fling with her despite living with his girlfriend. Arnold said, “I’d like to see that girl.” Syl said to him, “The next time you visit my home, I’ll show you the girl.”
When Arnold met the girl, he felt differently about her appearance because he did not find fat women sexually attractive. He told Syl in privacy that he did not like the girl. “That girl is big and fat like a sow,” he said. “How could you like her?” he asked. “She’s not a sow,” Syl responded. “I don’t know what you see in that ugly black girl,” Arnold remarked.
Syl tried to woo the fat girl many times, but she showed no romantic interest in him. When he was certain that she did not love him, he stopped making advances to her. Furthermore, Syl could not deal with such rejection, so he cursed the fat girl bitterly, and he felt animosity towards her.
Two months had passed before Syl mentioned the fat girl to Arnold again. They were at sea fishing when Syl said, “Arnold, do you remember the fat girl that I told you about?” Arnold replied, “Yes.” Syl said, “You were right, she’s a sow.” Arnold laughed and said, “Oh, so now you’re calling her a sow because you didn’t get her.”
Chapter 5
The Court
During the passage of hurricane Gilbert, Syl and a group of men including a Rastafarian and an Indian were looting a warehouse in Greenwich Farm. The owner of the business place was a Chinese man. The Indian carried things out of the wholesale and stood outside. When the other looters were inside the building, the police arrived on the scene and caught them in the act. They told them to lie face down on the wet ground.
Strong winds were blowing, and the rain was falling heavily. The police took the stolen goods from the looters and arrested them, but they kept most of the items for themselves. Minutes after that, a police car drove up towards the men and stopped. The policemen loaded the stolen goods into the car and drove away, and then the arresting officer put the looters in a truck and took them to jail.
The looters had spent two weeks in jail before they case were brought to trial. All the looters were present in the court on the day of the hearing. The judge listened to the conflicting statements of the looters and the arresting officer, and then he asked the looters, “Do you expect me to believe that the policeman is lying?” The Rastafarian man replied, “Yes, your honour, he’s a liar.”
After that, the judge asked, “Do any of you have anything to say to the officer?” The Indian replied, “Yes, your honour.” The judge said, “Go ahead.” Since the Indian knew that he was not in the warehouse when the police arrived there, he asked the policeman, “Did you see me in the building, sir.” The policeman replied, “Yes, I saw you in the warehouse.” The Indian said, “I put it to you that you’re telling a lie on me, sir.”
The judge asked the policeman, “Where are the exhibits?” He presented to the court a few items that he and his colleagues had seized from the looters. The defendants knew that the police had tampered with the evidence, so Syl said, “Your honour, that’s not all they took from us, they stole the rest of the things.” The judge said, “So you are confessing to the court that you stole more things.” Syl replied, “Yes, your honour.” The policeman denied the allegation, but the other defendants supported Syl’s arguments.
The judge sensed that something was wrong because the men confessed that they had stolen more items than the ones that the policeman presented to the court. Since the men had been locked up for two weeks, the judge decided to throw out the case and release them. Syl and the other men left the courtroom happily.
The End
Family and Friends
A short slim man built a shanty in a squatter settlement near the fishing village in Greenwich Farm. He lived there with his girlfriend and his two little daughters. His name was Sylvester, and everybody called him Syl for short. He also had an illegitimate son who lived with his mother in the country. Syl was a street vender. He had an old wooden stall on a sidewalk downtown, and he sold a variety of items.
Fishing was Syl’s main hobby. He had two close friend Ronny and Arnold who used to go fishing with him. Ronny and Arnold were biological brothers. They often went to sea together on a raft made of Styrofoam. After some time had passed, Arnold built a small fishing boat, and he named it The Challenger.
Syl was a hot-tempered person. Consequently, he often found himself in unfortunate situations. Even though he was small in structure, he was not afraid of anybody. Whenever he met Ronny or Arnold, he usually had a dramatic or hilarious story about his latest experience to tell him.
Chapter 2
Bicycle Trouble
Part 1
On a windy afternoon in June, Arnold went to the fishing village in Greenwich Farm to fish, and he saw Syl. He was sitting on his bicycle at the edge of the pier. They started a conversation, and while they were talking and laughing, a strong puff of wind blew Syl and the bicycle into the water. He and the bicycle sank to the bottom of sea.
Arnold knew that his friend could swim well, but Syl was taking a longer time to surface than he had expected. When Syl finally swam to the surface, he was out of breath. “What happened, man?” Arnold asked. “The foot of my trousers was caught in the bicycle chain, and I had trouble freeing myself,” he replied.
“How will we get the bicycle out of the sea?” Syl asked. “Don’t worry, I have an idea,” Arnold said. Arnold used a strong fishing line with a big fishhook to pull the bicycle from the bottom of the sea. When the bicycle got to the surface, Syl leaned over the edge of the pier and took it out of the water.
Part 2
Syl got a job as a security guard at a theatre in Half Way Tree. He worked on the night shift, and this afforded him the opportunity to see his merchandise in the daytime. Furthermore, Syl was a poor man from the ghetto, so he used to ride a ten-speed bicycle to work to save money on transportation.
One night Syl was riding his bicycle on Maxfield Avenue at around 9:00 p.m., and when he reached the intersection of Barnes Avenue and Maxfield Avenue, a man walked out into the road, and he deliberately collided with the bicycle. The impact made Syl fall from the bicycle. When he got up, the man asked, “Why do you ride so recklessly, short man?” Immediately after that he said, “You should look where you’re going, man.” Syl was so puzzled; he did not know that the man was a robber. “You deliberately walked in the path of the bicycle,” he responded.
While they were speaking, another man jumped over a fence and grabbed Syl from behind, and he struggled with him. The man held him tightly while his accomplice rode away with the bicycle. When Syl saw the man stealing his bicycle, he said, “My bi ....” He was so frightened; he could not say the complete word.
The robber released him and ran in the opposite direction when his friend turned off the road. Syl ran after the one who stole his bicycle, but he did not catch him. He lost his bicycle to robbers, so he had to walk the rest of the journey to Half Way Tree. A few days later, he bought a second-hand bicycle from a young man.
Part 3
One morning Syl was riding his new bicycle on Marcus Garvey Drive, he held onto the back of a truck with one hand, and the truck pulled him along the road. When he reached a certain point, the bicycle ran into a pothole, and he fell to the ground right in front of a bus stop full of students and working-class people. The commuters all pointed at him and laughed.
Syl had sustained injuries, but he pretended to be okay. He quickly sprang to his feet like an expert in kung fu, brushed himself off, and rode away. One of the excited onlookers said, “He’s agile and vigorous, though.” Another person remarked, “He’s lucky that a vehicle wasn’t coming up behind him; he could’ve been killed.”
When Sil got far enough away from the crowd, he stopped and examined himself to see how badly he was hurt. He had cuts and bruises on his knees, hands, and shoulders, and he was bleeding. So he when straight home and dressed his wounds.
Part 4
Arnold arranged with Syl to go fishing in a small oar boat that was docked at the fishing village in Greenwich Farm. Syl rode his bicycle to the location. He wanted to put it in the boat, but Arnold disagreed. “You know that we don’t have enough room in the boat to hold the bicycle, so why did you ride instead of walking?” he said. “No problem, I’ll hide it in the bush,” Syl replied. “It’s too risky to leave it there, someone might steal it,” Arnold said. Syl went and hid the bicycle in the bush despite having the knowledge that thieves frequented the shore.
The fishermen put their fishing gears in the boat and rowed out to sea. They anchored the boat near the third buoy and began to fish with fishing lines. Approximately half an hour later, Syl looked towards the shore and saw someone in the bush stealing his bicycle. “Look! A boy is stealing my bicycle!” he shouted. “We must go back to the shore now to stop him,” he added. “That doesn’t make sense; we won’t get there in time to catch him.” Arnold said. “I’ll swim to shore and recover my bicycle from him,” Syl said. “If you go, I can’t row the boat back to shore alone,” Arnold said. Syl insisted to go, so he dived into the water and swam back to the shore.
The thief had left with the bicycle long before he reached the shore. Syl ran to the main road, and he saw a security guard standing in front of a business place. He approached the security guard and said, “Sir, did you see a man pass here with a bicycle? He stole my Bicycle, and I have to get it back.” The security guard replied, “Yes, I saw two guys pass here with a bicycle, but they are probably a mile away by now.” Syl said, “I didn’t know that it was two of them, I saw only one man.” The security guard said, “You won’t catch them because they passed here about 15 minutes ago. Furthermore, those guys come from Majestic Gardens, and if you go there, they will shoot you.”
Syl slowly walked back to the shore. Arnold saw him coming in the distance without his bicycle. He went into the water and swam toward the boat. When he got into the boat, Arnold asked him, “What happened out there?” He replied, “I saw no sign of him.” Arnold said, “I told you that you wouldn’t get there in time to catch him, but you didn’t listen.” Arnold and Syl continued fishing until evening came despite the setback.
Chapter 3
The Fights
Part 1
In the early morning, a bus was loading at the terminus downtown. Syl boarded the bus and sat down in an empty seat. He sat by the window and left the other end of the seat vacant. Not many people were on the bus when Syl boarded it, so most of the seats were empty. A ruffian boarded the bus, and he walked past the empty seats and sat down beside Syl.
Other passengers also boarded the bus. While they were going in and selecting seats, the ruffian said to Syl in a low voice, “Get up from beside me and go and find another seat.” Syl did not respond because he could not believe that the man was talking to him. The ruffian told Syl again in a low voice to get up and move to another seat, but he still did not respond. Things were about to turn nasty. This time the ruffian elbowed Syl and said in a low voice, “I say get up and find another seat, man.” At that moment, he was certain that the ruffian was talking to him.
Syl got up slowly and asked the ruffian to excuse him. The ruffian thought Syl decided to get up because he was afraid of him, so he moved his feet out of the way and allowed him to pass. Syl turned around and held onto the handrail then he swung on it and landed a forceful kick into the face of the ruffian. The kick caught him by surprise, and it sent him crashing into the window. At that moment, the other passengers saw what was going on. The ruffian quickly rose, brandished a ratchet knife, and swung it at him. Syl retaliated by pulling a knife on him to defend himself, and they escalated the fighting.
The passengers began to shout and scream. “Conductor, take them off the bus!” someone said. “The short man started the fight,” another person said. The people felt that Syl started the fight because they did not know that the ruffian had provoked and elbowed him. When the driver of the bus realised what was happening, he tried to stop the fight. The ruffian ran out of the bus. Syl ran after him, and they continued fighting outside until the ruffian lost and ran away.
Part 2
A young woman of fair complexion was living in a house beside Syl’s shanty. Both buildings were in the same yard. She had a lovely baby girl who was about seven months old. The woman was slim and attractive, and Syl was lusting after her. She realised his intention towards her, and she told him that things would not work between them. The rejection hurt Syl’s ego, and as a result, he resented the woman. Sadly, the friendliness turned to hostility, and they could not get along with each other anymore.
Every day Syl and the woman would have an argument, and it would escalate into a quarrel. Syl’s girlfriend did not know the cause of the problem until the woman revealed it to her one day. When Syl’s girlfriend approached him about it, he denied everything, and he went and cursed the woman. Furthermore, he threatened to harm her on several occasions.
One evening while Syl was washing some dishes at the outdoor sink, the woman went to the sink to catch water, and she accidentally brushed him. He thought she did it on purpose, so he shoved her, and she lost her balance and almost fell. She retaliated violently, and a fight developed between them. Syl hit the woman on the hand with a stick. He did not know that she had been planning to disfigure him.
The woman quickly ran into her house, and she came out with a bottle containing a liquid substance. Syl had no idea what it was, so he attacked her. The woman threw the substance on him, and when he felt the burning, he realised it was acid. Syl was in agony. “The wicked gal threw acid on me,” he said. “I’m going to kill her,” he added.
The woman immediately ran away leaving her baby in the house. A man who was in the yard called the police, and they took Syl to the hospital. Furthermore, they searched for the woman, but they did not find her. Someone said that the woman was from East Kingston, so she probably went back there.
The police took the baby to a place of safety, and the woman’s mother later went there to claim the child. Syl had not seen the woman since the incident occurred. His face, hands, and other parts of his body were scared for life.
Part 3
At around midday Syl was standing in front of a shop on East Avenue that sells wholesale, and he saw a man who resembled someone that he knew standing close by. He looked at the man a few times to make out his face. The man realised that Syl was looking at him, and he said, “Why are you looking at me, Short boy?” Syl replied, “You look like someone whom I know from somewhere.” The stupid man said, “I don’t want any bombo claat man to stare at me because I’m not a homosexual, and I don’t love men.”
The man’s response made Syl angry, so he asked, “Are you calling me a homosexual?” Syl went on to say, “You’re fucking feisty!” The man said, “I don’t want any homosexual to say anything to me.” Syl said, “It seems that you slept with your mother last night, that’s why you’re arguing with me.” The man angrily said, “Hey bombo claat boy, don’t talk about my mother in that way.” Syl said, “Yeah man, you fucked your mother last night, that’s why you’re so bombo claat impudent.”
The man cursed and threatened Syl. “I’m going kill you, bombo claat boy,” he said. Syl fearlessly replied, “I’m not afraid of you, dirty rass claat boy.” The heated quarrel quickly turned into a fight. Syl reached for his ratchet knife, the man drew a long knife from the waist of his trousers, and they attacked each other. Both men repeatedly attempted to stab each other, but they were so skilful that none of them was injured in the fight. They fought for a short time. The man could not overpower Syl, so he ran up the road. Syl did not pursue him.
Chapter 4
The Fat Girl
Syl told Arnold about a fat girl who had recently moved into the yard that he lived. He said that she was good-looking and sexy. Furthermore, he liked her, and he wanted to have a fling with her despite living with his girlfriend. Arnold said, “I’d like to see that girl.” Syl said to him, “The next time you visit my home, I’ll show you the girl.”
When Arnold met the girl, he felt differently about her appearance because he did not find fat women sexually attractive. He told Syl in privacy that he did not like the girl. “That girl is big and fat like a sow,” he said. “How could you like her?” he asked. “She’s not a sow,” Syl responded. “I don’t know what you see in that ugly black girl,” Arnold remarked.
Syl tried to woo the fat girl many times, but she showed no romantic interest in him. When he was certain that she did not love him, he stopped making advances to her. Furthermore, Syl could not deal with such rejection, so he cursed the fat girl bitterly, and he felt animosity towards her.
Two months had passed before Syl mentioned the fat girl to Arnold again. They were at sea fishing when Syl said, “Arnold, do you remember the fat girl that I told you about?” Arnold replied, “Yes.” Syl said, “You were right, she’s a sow.” Arnold laughed and said, “Oh, so now you’re calling her a sow because you didn’t get her.”
Chapter 5
The Court
During the passage of hurricane Gilbert, Syl and a group of men including a Rastafarian and an Indian were looting a warehouse in Greenwich Farm. The owner of the business place was a Chinese man. The Indian carried things out of the wholesale and stood outside. When the other looters were inside the building, the police arrived on the scene and caught them in the act. They told them to lie face down on the wet ground.
Strong winds were blowing, and the rain was falling heavily. The police took the stolen goods from the looters and arrested them, but they kept most of the items for themselves. Minutes after that, a police car drove up towards the men and stopped. The policemen loaded the stolen goods into the car and drove away, and then the arresting officer put the looters in a truck and took them to jail.
The looters had spent two weeks in jail before they case were brought to trial. All the looters were present in the court on the day of the hearing. The judge listened to the conflicting statements of the looters and the arresting officer, and then he asked the looters, “Do you expect me to believe that the policeman is lying?” The Rastafarian man replied, “Yes, your honour, he’s a liar.”
After that, the judge asked, “Do any of you have anything to say to the officer?” The Indian replied, “Yes, your honour.” The judge said, “Go ahead.” Since the Indian knew that he was not in the warehouse when the police arrived there, he asked the policeman, “Did you see me in the building, sir.” The policeman replied, “Yes, I saw you in the warehouse.” The Indian said, “I put it to you that you’re telling a lie on me, sir.”
The judge asked the policeman, “Where are the exhibits?” He presented to the court a few items that he and his colleagues had seized from the looters. The defendants knew that the police had tampered with the evidence, so Syl said, “Your honour, that’s not all they took from us, they stole the rest of the things.” The judge said, “So you are confessing to the court that you stole more things.” Syl replied, “Yes, your honour.” The policeman denied the allegation, but the other defendants supported Syl’s arguments.
The judge sensed that something was wrong because the men confessed that they had stolen more items than the ones that the policeman presented to the court. Since the men had been locked up for two weeks, the judge decided to throw out the case and release them. Syl and the other men left the courtroom happily.
The End
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