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BRATTLEBORO

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Your support powers every story we tell. Please help us reach our year-end goal.

Donate Now

Your support powers every story we tell. We're committed to producing high-quality, fact-based news and information that gives you the facts in this community we call home. If our work has helped you stay informed, take action, or feel more connected to Windham County – please give now to help us reach our goal of raising $150,000 by December 31st.

Is this our town now?
Downtown Brattleboro on a dark night.
Voices

Is this our town now?

‘I make my way down the dark half-block to the entrance to the restaurant, tired, hungry, and terrified. I step inside, shaken, rattled, disgusted, infected.’

BRATTLEBORO — Scene from the night of Saturday, Oct. 28, 7 p.m.:

Location: Main block of Main Street, Brattleboro.

I have just run a free Halloween singalong event at the Brooks House Atrium, a sweet, fun community gathering open to all, attended by children and parents and elders and everyone in between. Costumes, laughs, hugs, ukuleles.

My car is parked in Harmony Lot, but as I walk to it after the event, I see five or six shady characters just standing around in the way-underlit shadows among the parked cars and against the pay-to-park machines.

I feel unsafe being here, and I decide I will move my car to Main Street, so I can go to Echo Restaurant for a drink and light dinner.

I am by myself. I find a spot on Main Street half a block uphill from the restaurant, roughly by the Bike Shop and Brattleburger.

I notice that even on Main Street, the street lights seem remarkably dim. Is this some new energy-saving bulb? If so, I hate them. The street is barely lit, and every alleyway and doorway up and down the block is a deep, dark shadow. I can barely see the sidewalk, the cracks, the curbs.

I get out of the car, pick up my musical instrument, a small purse, a laptop in a backpack - valuables I don't want to leave in the car - and lock it up.

Across the street, by Vermont Artisan Designs and People's United Bank, a group of young men are frolicking, yelling, and laughing really loudly. I am guessing by their behavior that they are very high. They see me get out of my car.

A sharp bellowing yell shoots from across the street:

Bitch! I wanna get my c-k sucked!”

The guys laugh uproariously, slap one another on the back.

Another voice: “Bitch! I wanna get my ass l-d.”

Wild-pack laughter. Stoned young men trying to outdo one another.

* * *

And on it goes as I make my way down the dark half-block to the entrance to the restaurant, tired, hungry, and terrified. I step inside, shaken, rattled, disgusted, infected.

I am greeted by friendly familiar faces of the staff - thank God - and a delicious oasis of food, drink, and comfort.

But I can't forget: I'll have to walk back up to my car when I'm done, and drive the few short blocks to my home. Will I be OK?

Main Street, 7 p.m. on a warm autumn Saturday night.

Violent verbal assault.

This is our Brattleboro now?

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