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  • A Bat for Bobbie

    A BAT FOR BOBBIE

     

    By James McNamara Richmond

    “How’s Bobbie?,” I replied to Eric Zillner when he asked to Friend me on Facebook the other day, surprised, thinking brother Bobbie was probably in prison or dead from a gang shooting.

    I started working after school at age 13, taking three buses from all-boys De La Salle Academy to the Kansas City bottoms, where I worked for a wholesale frozen food company, three hours an evening and all-day Saturday.

    Only about 5’1” and chubby, I was used to being mildly harassed and intimidated by other kids.

    But Bobbie Zillner was our neighborhood bully, a terminator.

    “Bobbie, he’s now farming a plot down by Cape Girardeau, “Eric said about his older brother.

    Pauli.Tony.Sopranoes.jpgBobbie, at 15 about 1957, drove around the neighborhood with abandon-in a beat-up black Model A Ford, dressed in loud suspenders, jeans, boots and smoking a cigar.

    Trolling slowly for younger kids he could rob of their lunch money or after school newspaper carrier pay.

    (Reader: see where this is going? 

    The last bus I took in the evening stopped in front of Bobbie’s house.

    I couldn’t force myself to get off at an earlier or later stop.

    Foolish pride before the fall.

    “Oh, he won’t be out there tonight,” I tried to convince myself, and most evenings he wasn’t.

    Bobbie seemed to have radar, and he often tracked me down walking home after serving morning Mass on Sunday.

    I never carried more than a buck or two on me, but that was big pocket money for a young kid in the 50s.

    After about six months of this harassment, I decided to confront Bobbie one night at the bus stop.

    He beat the hell out of me.

    Both of my eyes were almost swollen shut, and a big purple lump on the side of my face.

    “What happened to you?” my mom pleaded that evening.

    “Got in a fight at noon, on the playground,” l lied.

    Snitches get stitches, and I had to live in the neighborhood.

    “Hey Eric, can you give me Bobbie’s address on the farm?” I wrote back on Facebook. “I might swing south to visit him — one of these trips I drive from Michigan to Kansas City to visit relatives.

         Bobbie would be 75 to my 73.

    “Your brother and I have a lot to chat about,” I laughed ...
    Responding to Eric on Facebook, before deleting his Friend request.

    Do I have that old souvenir team baseball bat from grade school in the basement?bobbie.jpg

    I might stop and give Bobbie a present.

    For old times’ sake.

     

    (Voice to text, while walking at 6 am.)