Part I:
Hope and Change
While there is a lower class, I am in it, while there is a criminal element, I am of it, and while there is a soul in prison, I am not free.
-- Eugene Debs
Hope and Change
While there is a lower class, I am in it, while there is a criminal element, I am of it, and while there is a soul in prison, I am not free.
-- Eugene Debs
Harlem
Two cop cars sped down the streets with their blue lights flashing and their sirens going. They were quickly followed by another two and a SWAT van. Luke Cage walked the blue convoy from the sidewalk, his yellow hoodie up and covering his bald head. He knew exactly where the convoy was headed and what their purpose was.
Sometime today, NYPD officer Eric Alderman was going to be acquitted by a New York grand jury. Luke wasn't psychic. He couldn't see the future like a mutant. Luke just knew how the world worked. Alderman was a white police officer who killed Isiah Hamilton, a forty-four-year-old black man, because he said he feared for his life. Hamilton was resisting arrest, but he was also not armed when he was shot dead by Officer Alderman. If viewed on the surface and with all the facts, Alderman would be held responsible in some fashion even if it was manslaughter. But facts seemed to have no place in this case. Alderman killed Hamilton six months ago and the story had been national news ever since. Six months of media spin, media counter-spin, and media scrutinity had twisted the story into a muddled narrative that divided and angered.
The police were for Harlem and the expected outrage at the grand jury decision. Luke knew Harlem and he knew the people there would be pissed. And why wouldn't they? The city was a far cry from the rough and tumble days of the 70's and 80's, and that was due to sheer brute force and over saturation of police. A primarily white police force policing a primarily black neighborhood always led to conflict clash. Hamilton was Harlem born and bred while Alderman lived in far off Rockaway Beach and commuted to work every day. He was just one of thousands of cops that policed neighborhoods they had no stake in. The people of Harlem, Cage included, saw the cops as an occupying force. Another white cop getting off for killing a black man would be too much for some people to take. They'd be angry and they'd want to lash out.
Two more cop cars sped by, blue lights pulsing. Luke spat on the sidewalk and started uptown in the direction they were heading. If the shit was going to pop off, he wanted to be there. White faces with guns calling for peace and order wouldn't work the same way Luke Cage calling for peace would. The grand jury he couldn't influence, but he could at least do some good when the news broke.
-----
Marucs Garvey Community Center
Harlem
"We are scared. We are angry, and we are tired."
Thomas Drayton looked out at the crowd gathered at the rally. It wasn't much, but it was more and more ever since his mayoral campaign started two months ago. The faces in the crowd were still majority black, but more and more hispanic and asian and white people were coming to the rallies to see the man running for mayor.
"Right now, we're awaiting word from a grand jury that will tell us an outcome we already know. A sworn officer for the city of New York took an oath to uphold the laws of the city, and he broke that oath when he killed Isiah Hamilton. And what does he get for taking a human life? What does he get for robbing our community of another black man, a family of a son and a daughter of her father? This officer gets nothing but a slap on the wrist. This is the world that we live in, this is the government we have voted in. It's one that tolerates the idea of a misdemanor homicide as long as its in the properly shaded neighborhood. You think if rich white people from the Hamptons were getting killed left and right they'd care? They'd call out the National Guard for them!"
There was a wave of applause and cheers from the crowd. Drayton smiled and held his hand up to quiet them.
"This is why this election is so important. It's the start of something new, something different. It's a chance to change our institutions and show them that we are a threat, not physical but mental. There's nothing that frightens the powers that be like minorities who have brains and are registered to vote. Try as they might to disenfranchise us, we have made the choice that we will have a say in how our country is run and we will take this city back. Thank you!"
The crowd errupted as Drayton waved and started to head off stage. His small staff led him out the back exit of the building to a waiting car. Drayton and his people were at the door when the car went up in flames. An explosion ripped through the alley and knocked them inside. The fiery wreck of the car shot up into the air and crashed back down as a ball of flames.