: Part 1 – Chapter 10
The Hate U Give
We spend the night at Uncle Carlosâs house because the riots started again as soon as the sun went down. Somehow the store got spared. We should go to church and thank God for that, but Momma and I are too tired to sit through less than an hour of anything. Sekani wants to spend another day at Uncle Carlosâs, so Sunday morning we return to Garden Heights without him.
Right as we get off the freeway, weâre met by a police roadblock. Only one lane of traffic isnât blocked by a patrol car, and officers talk to drivers before letting them pass through.
Suddenly itâs as if someone grabbed my heart and twisted it. âCan weââ I swallow. âCan we get around them?â
âDoubt it. They probably got these all around the neighborhood.â Momma glances over at me and frowns. âMunch? You okay?â
I grab my door handle. They can easily grab their guns and leave us like Khalil. All the blood in our bodies pooling on the street for everybody to see. Our mouths wide open. Our eyes staring at the sky, searching for God.
âHey.â Momma cups my cheek. âHey, look at me.â
I try to, but my eyes are filled with tears. Iâm so sick of being this damn weak. Khalil may have lost his life, but I lost something too, and it pisses me off.
âItâs okay,â Momma says. âWe got this, all right? Close your eyes if you have to.â
I do.
The seconds drag by like hours. The officer asks Momma for her ID and proof of insurance, and I beg Black Jesus to get us home, hoping there wonât be a gunshot as she searches through her purse.
We finally drive off. âSee, baby,â she says. âEverythingâs fine.â
Her words used to have power. If she said it was fine, it was fine. But after youâve held two people as they took their last breaths, words like that donât mean shit anymore.
I havenât let go of the car door handle when we pull into our driveway.
Daddy comes out and knocks on my window. Momma rolls it down for me. âThere go my girls.â He smiles, but it fades into a frown. âWhatâs wrong?â
âYou about to go somewhere, baby?â Momma asks, meaning theyâll talk later.
âYeah, gotta run to the warehouse and stock up.â He taps my shoulder. âAy, wanna hang out with your daddy? Iâll get you some ice cream. One of them big fat tubs thatâll last âbout a month.â
I laugh even though I donât feel like it. Daddyâs talented like that. âI donât need all that ice cream.â
âI ainât say you needed it. When we get back, we can watch that Harry Potter shit you like so much.â
âNoooooooo.â
âWhat?â he asks.
âDaddy, youâre the worst person to watch Harry Potter with. The whole time youâre talking aboutââI deepen my voiceâââWhy donât they shoot that nigga Voldemort?ââ
âAy, it donât make sense that in all them movies and books, nobody thought to shoot him.â
âIf itâs not that,â Momma says, âyouâre giving your âHarry Potter is about gangsâ theory.â
âIt is!â he says.
Okay, so it a good theory. Daddy claims the Hogwarts houses are really gangs. They have their own colors, their own hideouts, and they are always riding for each other, like gangs.
Harry, Ron, and Hermione never snitch on one another, just like gangbangers. Death Eaters even have matching tattoos. And look at Voldemort. Theyâre scared to say his name. Really, that âHe Who Must Not Be Namedâ stuff is like giving him a street name. Thatâs some gangbanging shit right there.
âYâall know that make a lot of sense,â Daddy says. âJust âcause they was in England donât mean they wasnât gangbanging.â He looks at me. âSo you down to hang out with your old man today or what?â
Iâm always down to hang out with him.
We roll through the streets, Tupac blasting through the subwoofers. Heâs rapping about keeping your head up, and Daddy glances at me as he raps along, like heâs telling me the same thing Tupac is.
âI know youâre fed up, babyââhe nudges my chinââbut keep your head up.â
He sings with the chorus about how things will get easier, and I donât know if I wanna cry âcause thatâs really speaking to me right now, or crack up âcause Daddyâs singing is so horrible.
Daddy says, âThat was a deep dude right there. Real deep. They donât make rappers like that no more.â
âYouâre showing your age, Daddy.â
âWhatever. Itâs the truth. Rappers nowadays only care âbout money, hoes, and clothes.â
âShowing your age,â I whisper.
ââPac rapped âbout that stuff too, yeah, but he also cared âbout uplifting black people,â says Daddy. âLike he took the word âniggaâ and gave it a whole new meaningâNever Ignorant Getting Goals Accomplished. And he said Thug Life meantââ
âThe Hate U Give Little Infants Fâs Everybody,â I censor myself. This is my daddy Iâm talking to, you know?
âYou know âbout that?â
âYeah. Khalil told me what he thought it means. We were listening to Tupac right before . . . you know.â
âAâight, so what do you think it means?â
âYou donât know?â I ask.
âI know. I wanna hear what think.â
Here he goes. Picking my brain. âKhalil said itâs about what society feeds us as youth and how it comes back and bites them later,â I say. âI think itâs about more than youth though. I think itâs about us, period.â
âUs who?â he asks.
âBlack people, minorities, poor people. Everybody at the bottom in society.â
âThe oppressed,â says Daddy.
âYeah. Weâre the ones who get the short end of the stick, but weâre the ones they fear the most. Thatâs why the government targeted the Black Panthers, right? Because they were scared of the Panthers?â
âUh-huh,â Daddy says. âThe Panthers educated and empowered the people. That tactic of empowering the oppressed goes even further back than the Panthers though. Name one.â
Is he serious? He always makes me think. This one takes me a second. âThe slave rebellion of 1831,â I say. âNat Turner empowered and educated other slaves, and it led to one of the biggest slave revolts in history.â
âAâight, aâight. You on it.â He gives me dap. âSo, whatâs the hate theyâre giving the âlittle infantsâ in todayâs society?â
âRacism?â
âYou gotta get a liâl more detailed than that. Think âbout Khalil and his whole situation. Before he died.â
âHe was a drug dealer.â It hurts to say that. âAnd possibly a gang member.â
âWhy was he a drug dealer? Why are so many people in our neighborhood drug dealers?â
I remember what Khalil saidâhe got tired of choosing between lights and food. âThey need money,â I say. âAnd they donât have a lot of other ways to get it.â
âRight. Lack of opportunities,â Daddy says. âCorporate America donât bring jobs to our communities, and they damn sure ainât quick to hire us. Then, shit, even if you do have a high school diploma, so many of the schools in our neighborhoods donât prepare us well enough. Thatâs why when your momma talked about sending you and your brothers to Williamson, I agreed. Our schools donât get the resources to equip you like Williamson does. Itâs easier to find some crack than it is to find a good school around here.
âNow, think âbout this,â he says. âHow did the drugs even get in our neighborhood? This is a multibillion-dollar industry we talking âbout, baby. That shit is flown into our communities, but I donât know anybody with a private jet. Do you?â
âNo.â
âExactly. Drugs come from somewhere, and theyâre destroying our community,â he says. âYou got folks like Brenda, who think they need them to survive, and then you got the Khalils, who think they need to sell them to survive. The Brendas canât get jobs unless theyâre clean, and they canât pay for rehab unless they got jobs. When the Khalils get arrested for selling drugs, they either spend most of their life in prison, another billion-dollar industry, or they have a hard time getting a real job and probably start selling drugs again. Thatâs the hate theyâre giving us, baby, a system designed against us. Thatâs Thug Life.â
âI hear you, but Khalil didnât to sell drugs,â I say. âYou stopped doing it.â
âTrue, but unless youâre in his shoes, donât judge him. Itâs easier to fall into that life than it is to stay outta it, especially in a situation like his. Now, one more question.â
âReally?â Damn, heâs messed with my head enough.
âYeah, really,â he mocks in a high voice. I donât even sound like that. âAfter everything Iâve said, how does Thug Life apply to the protests and the riots?â
I have to think about that one for a minute. âEverybodyâs pissed âcause One-Fifteen hasnât been charged,â I say, âbut also because heâs not the first one to do something like this and get away with it. Itâs been happening, and people will keep rioting until it changes. So I guess the systemâs still giving hate, and everybodyâs still getting fucked?â
Daddy laughs and gives me dap. âMy girl. Watch your mouth, but yeah, thatâs about right. And we wonât stop getting fucked till it changes. Thatâs the key. Itâs gotta change.â
A lump forms in my throat as the truth hits me. Hard. âThatâs why people are speaking out, huh? Because it wonât change if we donât say something.â
âExactly. We canât be silent.â
âSo canât be silent.â
Daddy stills. He looks at me.
I see the fight in his eyes. I matter more to him than a movement. Iâm his baby, and Iâll always be his baby, and if being silent means Iâm safe, heâs all for it.
This is bigger than me and Khalil though. This is about Us, with a capital U; everybody who looks like us, feels like us, and is experiencing this pain with us despite not knowing me or Khalil. My silence isnât helping Us.
Daddy fixes his gaze on the road again. He nods. âYeah. Canât be silent.â
The trip to the warehouse is hell.
You got all these people pushing big flatbeds around, and them things are hard to push as it is, and you gotta maneuver it while itâs stacked with stuff. By the time we leave, I feel like Black Jesus snatched me from the depths of hell. Daddy does get me ice cream though.
Buying the stuff is only the first step. We unload it at the store, put it on the shelves, and we (scratch that, ) put price stickers on all those bags of chips, cookies, and candies. I shouldâve thought about that before I agreed to hang out with Daddy. While I do the hard work, he pays bills in his office.
Iâm putting stickers on the Hot Fries when somebody knocks on the front door.
âWeâre closed,â I yell without looking. We have a sign, canât they read?
Obviously not. They knock again.
Daddy appears in the doorway of his office. âWe closed!â
Another knock.
Daddy disappears into his office and returns with his Glock. Heâs not supposed to carry it since heâs a felon, but he says that technically he doesnât carry it. He keeps it in his office.
He looks out at the person on the other side of the door. âWhat you want?â
âIâm hungry,â a guy says. âCan I buy something?â
Daddy unlocks the door and holds it open. âYou got five minutes.â
âThanks,â DeVante says as he comes in. His Afro puff has become a full-blown Afro. He has this wild look about him, and I donât mean âcause of his hair, but like in his eyes. Theyâre puffy and red and darting around. He barely gives me a nod when he passes.
Daddy waits at the cash register with his piece.
DeVante glances outside. He looks at the chips. âFritos, Cheetos, or Doriââ His voice trails off as he glances again. He notices me watching him and looks at the chips. âDoritos.â
âYour five minutes getting shorter,â Daddy says.
âDamn, man. Aâight!â DeVante grabs a bag of Fritos. âCan I get something to drink?â
âHurry up.â
DeVante goes to the refrigerators. I join Daddy at the cash register. Itâs so obvious something is up. DeVante keeps stretching his neck to look outside. His five minutes pass at least three times. It doesnât take anybody that long to choose between Coke, Pepsi, or Faygo. Iâm sorry but it doesnât.
âAâight, Vante.â Daddy motions him to the cash register. âYou trying to get the nerve to stick me up or you running from somebody?â
âHell nah, I ainât trying to stick you up.â He takes out a wad of money and sets it on the counter. âIâm paid. And Iâm a King. I donât run from no-damn-body.â
âNo, you hide in stores,â I say.
He glares at me, but Daddy tells him, âShe right. You hiding from somebody. Kings or GDs?â
âItâs not those GDs from the park, is it?â I ask.
âWhy donât you mind your business?â he snaps.
âYou came in my daddyâs business, so I am minding my business.â
âAy!â Daddy says. âBut for real, who you hiding from?â
DeVante stares at his scuffed-up Chucks that are beyond the help of my cleaning kit. âKing,â he mumbles.
âKings or King?â Daddy asks.
âKing,â DeVante repeats louder. âHe wants me to handle the dudes that killed my brother. Iâm not trying to have that on me though.â
âYeah, I heard âbout Dalvin,â Daddy says. âIâm sorry. What happened?â
âWe were at Big Dâs party, and some GDs stepped to him. They got into it, and one of them cowards shot him in the back.â
Oh, damn. That was the same party Khalil and I were at. Those were the gunshots that made us leave.
âBig Mav, howâd you get out the game?â DeVante asks.
Daddy strokes his goatee, studying DeVante. âThe hard way,â he eventually says. âMy daddy was a King Lord. Adonis Carter. A straight up OG.â
âYo!â DeVante says. âThatâs your pops? Big Don?â
âYep. Biggest drug dealer this city ever seen.â
âYo! Man, thatâs crazy.â DeVanteâs seriously fangirling right now. âI heard he had cops working for him and everything. He pulled in big money.â
I heard my granddaddy was so busy pulling in big money that he didnât have time for Daddy. There are lots of pictures of Daddy when he was younger wearing mink coats, playing with expensive toys, flashing jewelry, and Grandpa Don isnât in any of the pictures.
âProbably so,â Daddy says. âI wouldnât know too much âbout that. He went to prison when I was eight. Been there ever since. Iâm his only child, his son. Everybody expected me to pick up where he left off.
âI became a King Lord when I was twelve. Shit, that was the only way to survive. Somebody was always coming at me âcause of my pops, but if I was a King Lord I had folks to watch my back. Kinging became my life. I was down to die for it, say the word.â
He glances at me. âThen I became a daddy, and I realized that King Lord shit wasnât worth dying for. I wanted out. But you know how the game work, it ainât as easy as saying you done. King was the crown and he was my boy, but he couldnât let me out like that. I was making good money too, and it was honestly hard to consider walking away from it.â
âYeah, King says you one of the best d-boys he ever knew,â DeVante says.
Daddy shrugs. âI got it from my pops. But really I was only good âcause I never got caught. One day, me and King took a trip to do a pickup, and we got busted. Cops wanted to know who the weapons belonged to. King had two strikes, and that charge wouldâve meant life. I didnât have a record, so I took the charge and got a few years and probation. Loyal like a motha.
âThose were the hardest three years of my life. Growing up I was pissed at my daddy for going to prison and leaving me.
And there I was, in the same prison as him, missing out on my babiesâ lives.â
DeVanteâs eyebrows meet. âYou were in prison with your pops?â
Daddy nods. âAll my life, people made him sound like a real king, you know what Iâm saying? A legend. But he was a weak old man, regretting the time he missed with me. Realest thing he ever told me was, âDonât repeat my mistakes.ââ Daddy looks at me again. âAnd I was doing that. I missed first days of school, all that. Had my baby wanting to call somebody else daddy âcause I wasnât there.â
I look away. He knows how close Uncle Carlos and I became.
âI was officially done with the King Lord shit, drug shit, all of it,â Daddy says. âAnd since I took that charge, King agreed to let me out. It made those three years worth it.â
DeVanteâs eyes dim like they do when he talks about his brother. âYou had to go to prison to get out?â
âIâm the exception, not the rule,â Daddy says. âWhen people say itâs for life, itâs for life. You gotta be willing to die in it or die for it. You want out?â
âI donât wanna go to prison.â
âHe didnât ask you that,â I say. âHe asked if you wanted out.â
DeVante is quiet for a long time. He looks up at Daddy and says, âI just wanna be alive, man.â
Daddy strokes his goatee. He sighs. âAâight. Iâll help you. But I promise, you go back to slinging or banging, youâll wish King wouldâve got you when Iâm done. You go to school?â
âYeah.â
âWhat your grades look like?â Daddy asks.
He shrugs.
âWhat the hell is this?â Daddy imitates DeVanteâs shrug. âYou know what grades you get, so what kind?â
âI mean, I get As and Bs and shit,â DeVante says. âI ainât dumb.â
âAâight, good. We gonâ make sure you stay in school too.â
âMan, I canât go back to Garden High,â DeVante says. âAll them King Lords up in there. You know thatâs a death wish, right?â
âI ainât say you was going there. Weâll figure something out. In the meantime you can work here in the store. You been staying home at night?â
âNah. King got his boys watching for me over there.â
âOf course he do,â Daddy mumbles. âWeâll figure something out with that too. Starr, show him how to do the price stickers.â
âYouâre really hiring him, just like that?â I ask.
âWhose store is this, Starr?â
âYours, butââ
ââNuff said. Show him how to do the price stickers.â
DeVante snickers. I wanna punch him in his throat.
âCâmon,â I mumble.
We sit crossed-legged in the chip aisle. Daddy locks the front door and goes back in his office. I grab a jumbo bag of Hot Cheetos and slap a ninety-nine-cent sticker on them.
âYou supposed to show me how to do it,â DeVante says.
âI am showing you. Watch.â
I grab another bag. He leans real close over my shoulder. Too close. Breathing in my ear and shit. I move my head and look at him. âDo you mind?â
âWhatâs your problem with me?â he asks. âYou caught an attitude yesterday, soon as I walked up. I ainât did nothing to you.â
I put a sticker on some Doritos. âNo, but you did it to Denasia. And Kenya. And who knows how many other girls in Garden Heights.â
âHold up, I ainât do nothing to Kenya.â
âYou asked for her number, didnât you? Even though youâre with Denasia.â
âIâm not with Denasia. I just danced with her at that party,â he says. âShe the one who wanted to act like she was my girlfriend and got mad âcause I was talking to Kenya. If I wouldnât have been dealing with them, I couldâveââ He swallows. âI couldâve helped Dalvin. By the time I got to him, he was on the floor, bleeding. All I could do was hold him.â
I see myself sitting in a pool of blood too. âAnd try to tell him it would be okay, even though you knewââ
âThere was no chance in hell it would be.â
We go quiet.
I get one of those weird déjà -vu moments though. I see myself sitting cross-legged like I am now, but Iâm showing Khalil how to do the price stickers.
We couldnât help Khalil with his situation before he died. Maybe we can help DeVante.
I hand him a bag of Hot Fries. âIâm only gonna explain how to use this price gun one time, and you better pay attention.â
He grins. âMy attentionâs all yours, liâl momma.â
Later, when Iâm supposed to be asleep, my mom tells my dad in the hallway, âSo heâs hiding from King, and you think he should hide here?â
DeVante. Apparently, Daddy couldnât âfigure it outâ and decided that DeVante should stay with us. Daddy dropped the two of us off a couple of hours ago before heading back to the store to protect it from the rioters. He just got back. He said our house is the one place King wonât look for DeVante.
âI had to do something,â Daddy says.
âI understand that, and I know you think this is your do-over with Khalilââ
âIt ainât like that.â
âYeah, it is,â she says softly. âI get it, baby. I have a ton of regrets regarding Khalil myself. But this? This is dangerous for our family.â
âItâs just for now. DeVante canât stay in Garden Heights. This neighborhood ainât good for him.â
âWait. Itâs not good for him, but itâs fine for our kids?â
âCâmon, Lisa. Itâs late. Iâm not trying to hear this right now. I been at that store all night.â
âAnd Iâve been up all night, worried about you! Worried about my babies being in this neighborhood.â
âThey fine! They ainât involved in none of that banging shit.â
Momma scoffs. âYeah, so fine that I have to drive almost an hour to get them to a decent school. And God forbid Sekani wants to play outside. I gotta drive to my brotherâs house, where I donât have to worry about him getting shot like his sisterâs best friend did.â
Itâs messed up that she could mean either Khalil or Natasha.
âAâight, letâs say we move,â Daddy said. âThen what? We just like all the other sellouts who leave and turn their backs on the neighborhood. We can change stuff around here, but instead we run? Thatâs what you wanna teach our kids?â
âI want my kids to enjoy life! I get it, Maverick, you wanna help your people out. I do too. Thatâs why I bust my butt every day at that clinic. But moving out of the neighborhood wonât mean youâre not real and it wonât mean you canât help this community. You need to figure out whatâs more important, your family or Garden Heights. Iâve already made my choice.â
âWhat you saying?â
âIâm saying Iâll do what I gotta do for my babies.â
There are footsteps, then a door closes.
I stay up most of the night, wondering what that means for them. Us. Okay, yeah, theyâve talked about moving before, but they werenât arguing about it like this until after Khalil died.
If they break up, itâll be one more thing One-Fifteen takes from me.