: Part 1 – Chapter 13
The Hate U Give
Mr. Lewisâs left eye is swollen shut and blood drips onto his shirt from a slash on his cheek, but he refuses to go to the hospital.
Daddyâs office has become an examining room, and Momma tends to Mr. Lewis with Daddyâs help. I lean against the doorway and watch. DeVante stands even farther back in the store.
âIt took five of âem to take me down,â Mr. Lewis says. âFive of âem! Against one liâl olâ man. Ainât that something?â
âItâs really something that youâre alive,â I say. Snitches get stitches doesnât apply to King Lords. More like snitches get graves.
Momma tilts Mr. Lewisâs head to look at the cut on his cheek. âSheâs right. Youâre real lucky, Mr. Lewis. Donât even need stitches.â
âKing himself gave me that one,â he says. âHe ainât come in till them other ones got me down. Olâ punk ass, looking like a black Michelin Man.â
I snort.
âThis ainât funny,â Daddy says. âI told you they was gonâ come after you.â
âAnd I told you I ainât scared! If this the worst they could do, they ainât did nothing!â
âNah, this ainât the worst,â says Daddy. âThey couldâve killed you!â
âI ainât the one they want dead!â He stretches his fat finger my way, but he looks beyond me at DeVante. âThatâs the one you need to worry âbout! I made him hide before they came in, but King said he know you helping that boy, and he gonâ kill him if he find him.â
DeVante backs away, his eyes wide.
I swear, in like two seconds Daddy grabs DeVante by his neck and slams him against the freezer. âWhat the hell you do?â
DeVante kicks and squirms and tries to pull Daddyâs hands from his neck.
âDaddy, stop!â
âShut up!â His glare never leaves DeVante. âI brought you in my house, and you ainât been honest âbout why you hiding? King wouldnât want you dead unless you did something, so what you do?â
âMav-rick!â Momma breaks his name down real good. âLet him go. He canât explain anything with you choking him.â
Daddy releases, and DeVante bends over, gasping for air. âDonât be putting your hands on me!â he says.
âOr what?â Daddy taunts. âStart talking.â
âMan, look, it ainât a big deal. King tripping.â
Is he for real? âWhat did you do?â I ask.
DeVante slides onto the floor and tries to catch his breath. He blinks real fast for several seconds. His face scrunches up. Suddenly heâs bawling like a baby.
I donât know anything else to do, so I sit in front of him. When Khalil would cry like that because his momma was messed up, Iâd lift his head.
I lift DeVanteâs. âItâs okay,â I say.
That always worked with Khalil. It works with DeVante too. He stops crying as hard and says, âI stole âbout five Gs from King.â
âDammit!â Daddy groans. âWhat the hell, man?â
âI had to get my family outta here! I was gonna handle the dudes that killed Dalvin, and shit, all that would do was make some GDs come after me. I was a dead man walking, straight up. I didnât want my momma and my sisters caught up in that. So I got them some bus tickets and got them outta town.â
âThatâs why we canât get your momma on the phone,â Momma realizes.
Tears fall around his lips. âShe didnât want me coming anyway. Said Iâd get them killed. Put me out the house before they left.â He looks at Daddy. âBig Mav, Iâm sorry. I shouldâve told you the other day. I did change my mind âbout killing them dudes though, but now King wants me dead. Please donât take me to him. Iâll do anything. Please?â
âHe betâ not!â Mr. Lewis limps out Daddyâs office. âYou help that boy, Maverick!â
Daddy stares at the ceiling like he could cuss God out.
âDaddy,â I plead.
âAâight! Câmon, Vante.â
âBig Mav,â he whimpers, âIâm sorry, pleaseââ
âIâm not taking you to King, but we gotta get you outta here. Now.â
Forty minutes later, Momma and I pull up behind Daddy and DeVante in Uncle Carlosâs driveway.
Iâm surprised Daddy knows how to get here. He never comes out here with us. Ne-ver. Holidays, birthdays, none of that. I guess he doesnât wanna deal with Nana and her mouth.
Momma and I get out her car as Daddy and DeVante get out the truck.
âThis is where youâre bringing him?â Momma says. âMy brotherâs house?â
âYeah,â Daddy says, like itâs no big deal.
Uncle Carlos comes from the garage, wiping oil off his hands with one of Aunt Pamâs good towels. He shouldnât be home. Itâs the middle of a workday, and he never takes sick days. He stops wiping his hands, but the knuckles on one of them are still dark.
DeVante squints against the sunlight and looks around like we brought him to another planet. âDamn, Big Mav. Where we at?â
âWhere are we?â Uncle Carlos corrects, and offers his hand. âCarlos. You must be DeVante.â
DeVante stares at his hand. No manners at all. âHow you know my name?â
Uncle Carlos awkwardly lets his hand fall to his side. âMaverick told me about you. Weâve discussed getting you out here.â
âOh!â Momma says with a hollow laugh. âMaverickâs discussed getting him out here.â She narrows her eyes at Daddy. âIâm surprised you even knew how to get out here, Maverick.â
Daddyâs nostrils flare. âWeâll talk later.â
âCâmon,â Uncle Carlos says. âIâll show you your room.â
DeVante stares at the house, his eyes all big. âWhat you do to get a house like this?â
âDang, youâre nosy,â I say.
Uncle Carlos chuckles. âItâs okay, Starr. My wifeâs a surgeon, and Iâm a detective.â
DeVante stops dead. He turns on Daddy. âWhat the fuck, man? You brought me to a cop?â
âWatch your mouth,â Daddy says. âAnd I brought you to somebody who actually wanna help you.â
âA cop though? If the homies find out, they gonâ think Iâm snitching.â
âTheyâre not your homies if you gotta hide from them,â I say. âPlus Uncle Carlos wouldnât ask you to snitch.â
âSheâs right,â says Uncle Carlos. âMaverickâs really serious about getting you out of Garden Heights.â
Momma scoffs. Loudly.
âWhen he told us the situation, we wanted to help,â Uncle Carlos goes on. âAnd it sounds like you need our help.â
DeVante sighs. âMan, this ainât cool.â
âLook, Iâm on leave,â says Uncle Carlos. âYou donât have to worry about me getting information out of you.â
âLeave?â I say. That explains the sweats in the middle of the day. âWhyâd they put you on leave?â
He glances from me to Momma, and she probably doesnât know I see her shake her head real quick. âDonât worry about it, baby girl,â he says, hooking his arm around me. âI needed a vacation.â
Itâs so, so obvious. They put him on leave because of me.
Nana meets us at the front door. Knowing her, sheâs been watching through the window since we got here. She has one arm folded and takes a drag of her cigarette with the other. She blows the smoke toward the ceiling while staring at DeVante. âWho he supposed to be?â
âDeVante,â Uncle Carlos says. âHeâs staying with us.â
âWhat you mean heâs staying with us?â
âJust what I said. He got in a little trouble in Garden Heights and needs to stay here.â
She scoffs, and I know where Momma gets it from. âA liâl trouble, huh? Tell the truth, boy.â She lowers her voice and asks with suspicious, squinted eyes, âDid you kill somebody?â
âMomma!â my momma says.
âWhat? I better ask before yâall have me sleeping in the house with a murderer, waking up dead!â
What in the . . . âYou canât wake up dead,â I say.
âLiâl girl, you know what I mean!â She moves from the doorway. âIâll be waking up in Jesusâs face, trying to figure out what happened!â
âLike you going to heaven,â Daddy mumbles.
Uncle Carlos gives DeVante a tour. His room is about as big as me and Sevenâs rooms put together. It doesnât seem right that he only has a little backpack to put in it, and when we go to the kitchen Uncle Carlos makes him hand that over.
âThere are a few rules for living here,â Uncle Carlos says. âOne, follow the rules. Twoââhe pulls the Glock from DeVanteâs backpackââno weapons and no drugs.â
âI know you ainât bring that in my house, Vante,â Daddy says.
âKing probably got money on my head. You damn right I got a piece.â
âRule three.â Uncle Carlos speaks over him. âNo cursing. I have an eight-year-old and a three-year-old. They donât need to hear that.â
âCause they hear it from Nana enough. Avaâs new favorite word is âGoddammit!â
âRule four,â Uncle Carlos says, âgo to school.â
âMan,â DeVante groans. âI already told Big Mav I canât go back to Garden High.â
âWe know,â Daddy says. âOnce we get in touch with your momma, weâll get you enrolled in an online program. Lisaâs momma is a retired teacher. She can tutor you through it so you can finish the year out.â
âLike hell I can!â Nana says. I donât know where she is, but Iâm not surprised sheâs listening.
âMomma, stop being nosy!â Uncle Carlos says.
âStop volunteering me for shit!â
âStop cursing,â he says.
âTell me what to do again and see what happens.â
Uncle Carlosâs face and neck go red.
The doorbell rings.
âCarlos, get the door,â Nana says from wherever sheâs hiding.
He purses his lips and leaves to answer. As he comes back I can hear him talking to somebody. Then somebody laughs, and I know that laugh âcause it makes me laugh.
âLook who I found,â Uncle Carlos says.
Chris is behind him in his white Williamson polo and khaki shorts. He has on the red-and-black Jordan Twelves that MJ wore when he had the flu during the â97 finals. Shoot, that makes Chris finer for some reason. Or I have a Jordan fetish.
âHi.â He smiles without showing teeth.
âHi.â I smile too.
I forget that Daddy is here and that I potentially have a big-ass problem on my hands. That only lasts about ten seconds though because Daddy asks, âWho you?â
Chris extends his hand to Daddy. âChristopher, sir. Nice to meet you.â
Daddy gives him a twice-over. âYou know my daughter or something?â
âYeah.â Chris stretches it kinda long and looks at me. âWe both go to Williamson?â
I nod. Good answer.
Daddy folds his arms. âWell, do you or donât you? You sound a liâl unsure âbout that.â
Momma gives Chris a quick hug. All the while Daddy mean-mugs the hell outta him. âHow are you doing, sweetie?â she asks.
âIâm fine. I didnât mean to interrupt anything. I saw your car, and Starr wasnât at school today, so I wanted to check on her.â
âItâs fine,â says Momma. âTell your mom and dad I said hello. How are they?â
âHold up,â Daddy says. âYâall act like this dude been around a minute.â Daddy turns to me. âWhy ainât I never heard âbout him?â
Itâs gonna take a hell of a lotta boldness to put myself out there for Khalil. Like âI once told my militant black daddy about my white boyfriendâ kinda boldness. If I canât stand up to my dad about Chris, how can I stand up for Khalil?
Daddy always tells me to never bite my tongue for anyone. That includes him.
So I say it. âHeâs my boyfriend.â
âBoyfriend?â Daddy repeats.
âYeah, her boyfriend!â Nana pipes up again from wherever she is. âHey, Chris baby.â
Chris glances around, all confused. âUh, hey, Ms. Montgomery.â
Nana was the first to find out about Chris, thanks to her master snooping skills. She told me, âGo âhead, get your swirl on, baby,â then proceeded to tell me about all of her swirling adventures, which I didnât need to know.
âThe hell, Starr?â Daddy says. âYou dating a white boy?â
âMaverick!â Momma snaps.
âCalm down, Maverick,â Uncle Carlos says. âHeâs a good kid, and he treats her well. Thatâs all that matters, isnât it?â
âYou knew?â Daddy says. He looks at me, and I donât know if thatâs anger or hurt in his eyes. â
knew, and I didnât?â
This happens when you have two dads. One of themâs bound to get hurt, and youâre bound to feel like shit because of it.
âLetâs go outside,â Momma says tightly. âNow.â
Daddy glares at Chris and follows Momma to the patio.
The doors have thick glass, but I still hear her go off on him.
âCâmon, DeVante,â Uncle Carlos says. âGonna show you the basement and the laundry room.â
DeVante sizes Chris up. âBoyfriend,â he says with a slight laugh, and looks at me. âI shouldâve known have a white boy.â
He leaves with Uncle Carlos. What the hell thatâs supposed to mean?
âSorry,â I tell Chris. âMy dad shouldnât have gone off like that.â
âIt couldâve been worse. He couldâve killed me.â
True. I motion him to sit at the counter while I get us some drinks.
âWho was that guy with your uncle?â he asks.
Aunt Pam ainât got one soda up in here. Juice, water, and sparkling water. I bet Nana has a stash of Sprite and Coke in her room though. âDeVante,â I say, grabbing two apple juice boxes. âHe got caught up in some King Lord stuff, and Daddy brought him to live with Uncle Carlos.â
âWhy was he looking at me like that?â
âGet over it, Maverick. Heâs white!â Momma shouts on the patio. âWhite, white, white!â
Chris blushes. And blushes, and blushes, and blushes.
I hand him a juice box. â
why DeVante was looking at you that way. Youâre white.â
âOkay?â he asks more than says. âIs this one of those black things I wonât understand?â
âOkay, babe, real talk? If you were somebody else Iâd side-eye the shit out of you for calling it that.â
âCalling it what? A black thing?â
âYeah.â
âBut isnât that what it is?â
âNot really,â I say. âItâs not like this kinda stuff is exclusive to black people, you know? The reasoning may be different, but thatâs about it. Your parents donât have a problem with us dating?â
âI wouldnât call it a problem,â Chris says, âbut we did talk about it.â
âSo itâs not just a black thing then, huh?â
âPoint made.â
We sit at the counter, and I listen to his play-by-play of school today. Nobody walked out because the police were there, waiting for any drama.
âHailey and Maya asked about you,â he says. âI told them you were sick.â
âThey couldâve texted me and asked themselves.â
âI think they feel guilty about yesterday. Especially Hailey. White guilt.â He winks.
I crack up. My white boyfriend talking about white guilt.
Momma yells, âAnd I love how you insist on getting somebody elseâs child out of Garden Heights, but you want ours to stay in that hellhole!â
âYou want them in the suburbs with all this fake shit?â Daddy says.
âIf this is fake, baby, Iâll take it over real any day. Iâm sick of this! The kids go to school out here, I take them to church out here, their friends are out here. We can afford to move. But you wanna stay in that mess!â
ââCause at least in Garden Heights people ainât gonna treat them like shit.â
âThey already do! And wait until King canât find DeVante. Who do you think heâs gonna look at? Us!â
âI told you Iâll handle that,â Daddy says. âWe ainât moving. It ainât even up for discussion.â
âOh, really?â
âReally.â
Chris gives me a bit of a smile. âThis is awkward.â
My cheeks are hot, and Iâm glad Iâm too brown for it to show. âYeah. Awkward.â
He takes my hand and taps his fingertips against my fingertips, one at a time. He laces his fingers through mine, and we let our arms swing together in the space between us.
Daddy comes in and slams the door behind him. He zeroes straight in on our joined hands. Chris doesnât let go. Point for my boyfriend.
âWeâll talk later, Starr.â Daddy marches out.
âIf this were a rom-com,â Chris says, âyouâd be Zoe Saldana and Iâd be Ashton Kutcher.â
âHuh?â
He sips his juice. âThis old movie, . I caught it when I had the flu a few weeks ago. Zoe Saldana dated Ashton Kutcher. Her dad didnât like that she was seeing a white guy. Thatâs us.â
âExcept this isnât funny,â I say.
âIt can be.â
âNah. Whatâs funny though is that you watched a rom-com.â
âHey!â he cries. âIt was hilarious. More of a comedy than a rom-com. Bernie Mac was her dad. That guy was hilarious, one of the Kings of Comedy. I donât think it can be called a rom-com simply because he was in it.â
âOkay, you get points for knowing Bernie Mac and that he was a King of Comedyââ
â
should know that.â
âTrue, but you donât get a pass. It was still a rom-com. I wonât tell anyone though.â
I lean over to kiss his cheek, but he moves his head, giving me no choice but to kiss him on the mouth. Soon weâre making out, right there in my uncleâs kitchen.
Somebody clears their throat. Chris and I separate so fast.
I thought embarrassment was having my boyfriend hear my parents argue. Nope. Embarrassment is having my mom walk in on me and Chris making out. Again.
âDonât yâall think yâall should let each other breathe?â she says.
Chris blushes down to his Adamâs apple. âI should go.â
He leaves with a quick good-bye to Momma.
She raises her eyebrows at me. âAre you taking your birth control pills?â
âMommy!â
âAnswer my question. Are you?â
âYeeees,â I groan, putting my face on the countertop.
âWhen was your last cycle?â
Oh. My. Lord. I lift my head and flash the fakest of fake smiles. âWeâre fine. Promise.â
âYâall got some nerve. Your daddy was barely out the driveway, and yâall slobbering all over each other. You know how Maverick is.â
âAre we staying out here tonight?â
The question catches her off guard. âWhy would you think that?â
âBecause you and Daddyââ
âHad a disagreement, thatâs all.â
âA disagreement the whole neighborhood heard.â Plus one the other night.
âStarr, weâre okay. Donât worry about it. Your fatherâs being . . . your father.â
Outside, somebody honks his car horn a bunch of times.
Momma rolls her eyes. âSpeaking of your father, I guess Mr. Iâm-Gonna-Slam-Doors needs me to move my car so he can leave.â She shakes her head and heads toward the front.
I throw Chrisâs juice away and search the cabinets. Aunt Pam may be picky when it comes to drinks, but she always buys good snacks, and my stomach is talking. I get some graham crackers and slather peanut butter on them. So good.
DeVante comes in the kitchen. âCanât believe you dating a white boy.â He sits next to me and steals a graham cracker sandwich. âA wigga at that.â
âExcuse you?â I say with a mouth full of peanut butter. âHe is not a wigga.â
âPlease! Dude wearing Jâs. White boys wear Converse and Vans, not no Jâs unless they trying to be black.â
âMy bad. I didnât know shoes determined somebodyâs race.â
He canât say anything to that. Like I thought. âWhat you see in him anyway? For real? All them dudes in Garden Heights who would get with you in a second, and you looking at Justin Bieber?â
I point in his face.
âDonât call him that. And what dudes? Nobody in Garden Heights is checking for me. Hardly anybody knows my name. Hell, even you called me Big Mavâs daughter who work in the store.â
ââCause you donât come around,â he says. âI ainât never seen you at a party, nothing.â
Without thinking, I say, âYou mean parties where people get shot at?â And as soon as it leaves my mouth, I feel like shit. âOh my God, Iâm sorry. I shouldnât have said that.â
He stares at the countertop. âItâs cool. Donât worry about it.â
We quietly nibble on graham crackers.
âUm . . .â I say. The silence is brutal. âUncle Carlos and Aunt Pam are cool. I think youâll like it here.â
He bites another graham cracker.
âThey can be corny sometimes, but theyâre sweet. Theyâll look out for you. Knowing Aunt Pam, sheâll treat you like Ava and Daniel. Uncle Carlos will probably be tougher. If you follow the rules, youâll be okay.â
âKhalil talked âbout you sometimes,â DeVante says.
âHuh?â
âYou said nobody knows you, but Khalil talked âbout you. I ainât know you was Big Mavâs daughter whoâI ainât know that was you,â he says. âBut he talked âbout his friend Starr. He said you were the coolest girl he knew.â
Some peanut butter gets stuck in my throat, but itâs not the only reason I swallow. âHow did you knowâoh. Yeah. Both of yâall were King Lords.â
I swear to God whenever I think about Khalil falling into that life, itâs like watching him die all over again. Yeah, Khalil matters and not the stuff he did, but I canât lie and say it doesnât bother me or itâs not disappointing. He knew better.
DeVante says, âKhalil wasnât a King Lord, Starr.â
âBut at the funeral, King put the bandana on himââ
âTo save face,â DeVante says. âHe tried to get Khalil to join, but Khalil said nah. Then a cop killed him, so you know, all the homies riding for him now. King not âbout to admit that Khalil turned him down. So he got folks thinking that Khalil repped King Lords.â
âWait,â I say. âHow do you know he turned King down?â
âKhalil told me in the park one day. We was posted up.â
âSo yâall sold drugs together?â
âYeah. For King.â
âOh.â
âHe didnât wanna sell drugs, Starr,â DeVante says. âNobody really wanna do that shit. Khalil ainât have much of a choice though.â
âYeah, he did,â I say thickly.
âNo, he didnât. Look, his momma stole some shit from King. King wanted her dead. Khalil found out and started selling to pay the debt.â
âWhat?â
âYeah. Thatâs the only reason he started doing that shit. Trying to save her.â
I canât believe it.
Then again, I can. That was classic Khalil. No matter what his momma did, he was still her knight and he was still gonna protect her.
This is worse than denying him. I thought the worst of him. Like everybody else.
âDonât be mad at him,â DeVante says, and itâs funny because I can hear Khalil asking me not to be mad too.
âIâm notââ I sigh. âOkay, I was a little mad. I just hate how heâs being called a thug and shit when people donât know the whole story. You said it, he wasnât a gangbanger, and if everybody knew why he sold drugs, thenââ
âThey wouldnât think he was a thug like me?â
Oh, damn. âI didnât mean . . .â
âItâs cool,â he says. âI get it. I guess I am a thug, I donât know. I did what I had to do. King Lords was the closest thing me and Dalvin had to a family.â
âBut your momma,â I say, âand your sistersââ
âThey couldnât look out for us like King Lords do,â he says. âMe and Dalvin looked out for them. With King Lords, we had a whole bunch of folks who had our backs, no matter what. They bought us clothes and shit our momma couldnât afford and always made sure we ate.â He looks at the counter. âIt was just cool to have somebody take care of us for a change, instead of the other way around.â
âOh.â A shitty response, I know.
âLike I said, nobody likes selling drugs,â he says. âI hated that shit. For real. But I hated seeing my momma and my sisters go hungry, you know?â
âI donât know.â Iâve never had to know. My parents made sure of that.
âYou got it good then,â he says. âIâm sorry they talking âbout Khalil like that though. He really was a good dude. Hopefully one day they can find out the truth.â
âYeah,â I say quietly.
DeVante. Khalil. Neither one of them thought they had much of a choice. If I were them, Iâm not sure Iâd make a much better one.
Guess that makes me a thug too.
âIâm going for a walk,â I say, getting up. My headâs all over the place. âYou can have the rest of the graham crackers and peanut butter.â
I leave. I donât know where Iâm going. I donât know much of anything anymore.