Each Monday, I go to a local elementary school to be a reading buddy for a second-grader named Patrick.
Patrick’s school is in the part of town I don’t drive through without locking my doors. It anchors blocks populated with old, wounded cars parked half onto the sidewalks in front of old, weary houses.
Girls who look too young to wear makeup walk around broken pavement with babies on their hips.
There are no shops or grocery stores on this side of the freeway, which slices the neighborhood off from a prosperous urban center like a cleaver through spareribs.
This morning in the media center, I selected four books about farm animals. Most city kids think milk comes from the refrigerated shelf in the grocery store, that chocolate milk comes from black cows, and that McDonald’s whips up chicken in the back room.
We talked about pigs and cows, chickens and eggs, roosters and hens. When I couldn’t recall what the thick red hangy-down thing is under a rooster’s neck, I looked it up on my phone.
I actually Googled “hangy-down thing on a chicken” and it came up “wattle.” Of course. Patrick laughed delightedly and repeated “wattle.”
Chickens on the farm live in a coop, our little book said. Pictures showed a coop on wheels inside a fence. It said the farmer moved the coop daily to give the birds access to fresh grass and more bugs.
What the book didn’t say was the coop gets moved so that chicken droppings continually fertilize new areas. Hey, I grew up around farming.
The little book introduced hens and roosters and eggs and chicks. And then, it introduced a full-page, bright-colored rooster with a bright red wattle, screaming its lungs out at a fox, lurking on the edge of the fence.
“Why is the rooster so upset?” I asked Patrick.
“Because the fox eats meat, and chickens are meat.”
And, because we read about dinosaurs last week, he reminded me that people are meat too. Like meals on wheels for dinosaurs.
Then Patrick made a simple observation that caused me to pause and cringe. The rooster screaming “cock a doodle doo” to the others in the coop “was like lockdown at school,” he said. Matter of factly. Like saying, “I got a drink from the bubbler.”
His principal was like the rooster, shouting a warning and getting everyone into a safe position.
Who knows whom the fox represents. Someone hungry for meat. Someone anxious to see chickens flying and flopping around, feathers torn and floating through the air. Someone thrilled by the pierce of screams, who licks his lips on the taste of terror.
It was the simple directness of his statement that struck me. “Like lockdown.”
As the rooster is alert to an encroaching fox, the principal is alert to the possibility of a shooter in her elementary school. Alert to a fox. In the henhouse.
And Patrick, who comes to school with all his friends to learn reading and writing and math, so he can grow into an independent, self-sufficient adult, is forced to learn also that foxes lurk outside his coop.
And they are hungry.
Norman Jameson is a writer and fundraising consultant in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, where he is a member of Ardmore Baptist Church. A version of this article first appeared on his blog, Words and Deeds, and is used with permission.
Norman Jameson is a writer and fundraising consultant in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, where he is a member of Ardmore Baptist Church.