: Part 2 – Chapter 18
The Hate U Give
On Sunday, my parents take me and my brothers on a trip.
It seems like a normal visit to Uncle Carlosâs house until we pass his neighborhood. A little over five minutes later, a brick sign surrounded by colorful shrubs welcomes us to Brook Falls.
Single-story brick houses line freshly paved streets. Black kids, white kids, and everything in between play on the sidewalks and in yards. Open garage doors show all of the junk inside, and bikes and scooters lay abandoned in yards. Nobodyâs worried about their stuff getting stolen in the middle of the day.
It reminds me of Uncle Carlosâs neighborhood yet itâs different. For one, thereâs no gate around it, so theyâre not keeping anyone out or in, but obviously people feel safe. The houses are smaller, more homey looking. And straight up? There are more people who look like us compared to Uncle Carlosâs neighborhood.
Daddy pulls into the driveway of a brown-brick house at the end of a cul-de-sac. Bushes and small trees decorate the yard, and a cobblestone walkway leads up to the front door.
âCâmon, yâall,â Daddy says.
We hop out, stretching and yawning. Those forty-five-minute drives arenât a joke. A chubby black man waves at us from the driveway next door. We wave back and follow my parents up the walkway. Through the glass of the front door, the house appears empty.
âWhose house is this?â Seven asks.
Daddy unlocks the door. âHopefully ours.â
When we go inside, weâre standing in the living room. Thereâs a strong stench of paint and polished hardwood floors. Two halls, one on each side, lead away from the living room. The kitchen is right off from the living room with white cabinets, granite countertops, and stainless-steel appliances.
âWe wanted you guys to see it,â Momma says. âLook around.â
I canât lie, Iâm afraid to move. âThis is house?â
âLike I said, we hope so,â Daddy replies. âWeâre waiting for the mortgage to be approved.â
âCan we afford it?â Seven asks.
Momma raises an eyebrow. âYes, we can.â
âBut like down payments and stuffââ
âSeven!â I hiss. Heâs always in somebodyâs business.
âWe got everything taken care of,â Daddy says. âWeâll rent the house in the Garden out, so thatâs gonâ help with the monthly payments. Plus . . .â He looks at Momma with this sly grin thatâs kinda adorable, I gotta admit.
âI got the nurse manager job at Markham,â she says, smiling. âI start in two weeks.â
âFor real?â I say, and Seven goes, âWhoa,â while Sekani shouts, âMommaâs rich!â
âBoy, ainât nobody rich,â Daddy says. âCalm down.â
âBut this helps,â says Momma. âA lot.â
âDaddy, youâre okay with us living out here with the fake people?â Sekani asks.
âWhere you get that from, Sekani?â Momma says.
âWell, thatâs what he always says. That people out here are fake, and that Garden Heights is real.â
âYeah, he does say that,â says Seven.
I nod. âAll. The. Time.â
Momma folds her arms. âCare to explain, Maverick?â
âI donât say it muchââ
âYeah, you do,â the rest of us say.
âAâight, I say it a lot. I may not have been one hundred percent right on all of thisââ
Momma coughs, but thereâs a âHaâ hidden in it.
Daddy glares at her. âBut I realize being real ainât got anything to do with where you live. The realest thing I can do is protect my family, and that means leaving Garden Heights.â
âWhat else?â Momma questions, like heâs being grilled in front of the class.
âAnd that living in the suburbs donât make you any less black than living in the hood.â
âThank you,â she says with a satisfied smile.
âNow are yâall gonâ look around or what?â Daddy asks.
Seven hesitates to move, and since heâs hesitant, Sekani is too. But shoot, I want first dibs on a room. âWhere are the bedrooms?â
Momma points to the hall on the left. I guess Seven and Sekani realize why I asked. The three of us exchange looks.
We rush for the hall. Sekani gets there first, and itâs not my best moment, but I sling his scrawny butt back.
âMommy, she threw me!â he whines.
I beat Seven to the first room. Itâs bigger than my current room but not as big as I want. Seven reaches the second one, looks around, and I guess he doesnât like it. That leaves the third room as the biggest one, and itâs at the end of the hall.
Seven and I race for it, and itâs like Harry Potter versus Cedric Diggory trying to get to the Goblet of Fire. I grab Sevenâs shirt, stretching it until I have a good enough grip to pull him back and get ahead of him. I beat him to the room and open the door.
And itâs smaller than the first one.
âI call dibs!â Sekani shouts. He shimmies in the doorway of the first room, the biggest of the three.
Seven and I rock, paper, scissor it for the second-biggest room. Seven always goes with rock or paper, so I easily win.
Daddy leaves to get lunch, and Momma shows us the rest of the house. My brothers and I have to share a bathroom again. Sekaniâs finally learned aim etiquette and the art of flushing, so itâs fine, I guess. The master suite is on the other hallway. Thereâs a laundry room, an unfinished basement, and a two-car garage. Momma says weâll get a basketball hoop on wheels. We can keep it in the garage, roll it in front of the house, and play in the cul-de-sac sometimes. A wooden fence surrounds the backyard, and thereâs plenty of space for Daddyâs garden and Brickz.
âBrickz can come out here, right?â I ask.
âOf course. We arenât gonna leave him.â
Daddy brings burgers and fries, and we eat on the kitchen floor. Itâs super quiet out here. Dogs bark sometimes, but wall-rattling music and gunshots? Not happening.
âSo, weâre gonna close in the next few weeks or so,â Momma says, âbut since itâs the end of the school year, weâll wait until you guys are out for summer to move.â
ââCause moving ainât no joke,â Daddy adds.
âHopefully, we can get settled in before you go off to college, Seven,â Momma says. âPlus it gives you a chance to make your room yours, so you can have it for holidays and the summer.â
Sekani slurps his milk shake and says with a mouth full of froth, âSeven said heâs not going to college.â
Daddy says, âWhat?â
Seven glares at Sekani. âI didnât say I wasnât going to college. I said I wasnât going to college. Iâm going to Central Community so I can be around for Kenya and Lyric.â
âOh, hell no,â Daddy says.
âYou canât be serious,â says Momma.
Central Community is the junior college on the edge of Garden Heights. Some people call it Garden Heights High 2.0 âcause so many people from Garden High go there and take the same drama and bullshit with them.
âThey have engineering classes,â Seven argues.
âBut they donât have the same opportunities as those schools you applied to,â Momma says. âDo you realize what youâre passing up? Scholarships, internshipsââ
âThe chance for me to finally have a Seven-free life,â I add, and slurp my milk shake.
âWho asked you?â Seven says.
âYoâ momma.â
Low blow, I know, but that response comes naturally. Seven flicks a fry at me. I block it and come this close to flipping him off, but Momma says, âYou betâ not!â and I lower my finger.
âLook, you not responsible for your sisters,â Daddy says, âbut Iâm responsible for you. And I ainât letting you pass up opportunities so you can do what two grown-ass people supposed to do.â
âA dollar, Daddy,â Sekani points out.
âI love that you look out for Kenya and Lyric,â Daddy tells Seven, âbut thereâs only so much you can do. You can choose whatever college you want, and youâll be successful. But you choose because thatâs where you wanna be. Not because you trying to do somebody elseâs job. You hear me?â
âYeah,â Seven says.
Daddy hooks his arm around Sevenâs neck and pulls him closer. Daddy kisses his temple. âI love you. And I always got your back.â
After lunch we gather in the living room, join hands, and bow our heads.
âBlack Jesus, thank you for this blessing,â Daddy says. âEven when we werenât so crazy about the idea of movingââ
Momma clears her throat.
âOkay, when wasnât so crazy about the idea of moving,â Daddy corrects, âyou worked things out. Thank you for Lisaâs new job. Please help her and continue to be with her when she does extra shifts at the clinic. Help Sekani with his end-of-the-year tests. And thank you, Lord, for helping Seven do something I didnât, get a high school diploma. Guide him as he chooses a college and let him know youâre protecting Kenya and Lyric.
âNow, Lord, tomorrow is a big day for my baby girl as she goes before this grand jury. Please give her peace and courage. As much as I wanna ask you to work this case out a certain way, I know you already got a plan. I ask for some mercy, God. Thatâs all. Mercy for Garden Heights, for Khalilâs family, for Starr. Help all of us through this. In your precious nameââ
âWait,â Momma says.
I peek out with one eye. Daddy does too. Momma never, interrupts prayer.
âUh, baby,â says Daddy, âI was finishing up.â
âI have something to add. Lord, bless my mom, and thank you that she went into her retirement fund and gave us the money for the down payment. Help us turn the basement into a suite so she can stay here sometimes.â
âNo, Lord,â Daddy says.
âYes, Lord,â says Momma.
âNo, Lord.â
âYes.â
âNo, amen!â
We get home in time to catch a playoffs game.
Basketball season equals war in our house. Iâm a LeBron fan through and through. Miami, Cleveland, it doesnât matter. I ride with him. Daddy hasnât jumped off the Lakers ship yet, but he likes LeBron. Sevenâs all about the Spurs. Mommaâs an âanybody but LeBronâ hater, and Sekani is a âwhoever is winningâ fan.
Itâs Cleveland versus Chicago tonight. The battle lines are drawnâme and Daddy versus Seven and Momma. Seven jumps on that âanybody but LeBronâ bandwagon of hateration too.
I change into my LeBron jersey. Every time I donât wear it, his team loses. Seriously, Iâm not even lying. I canât wash it either. Momma washed my last jersey right before Finals, and Miami lost to the Spurs. I think she did it on purpose.
I take my lucky spot in the den in front of the sectional. Seven comes in and steps over me, putting his big bare foot near my face. I smack it away. âGet your crusty foot outta my face.â
âWeâll see whoâs joking later. Ready for a butt whooping?â
âYou mean am I ready to give one? Yep!â
Momma peeks around the doorway. âMunch, you want some ice cream?â
I gape at her. She I donât eat dairy products during games. Dairy gives me gas, and gas is bad luck.
She grins. âHow about a sundae? Sprinkles, strawberry syrup, whipped cream.â
I cover my ears. âLa-la-la-la-la, go away, LeBron hater. La-la-la-la-la.â
Like I said, basketball season equals war, and my family has the dirtiest tactics.
Momma returns with a big bowl, shoveling ice cream into her mouth. She sits on the sectional and lowers her bowl into my face. âYou sure you donât want some, Munch? Itâs your favorite too. Cake batter. So good!â
, I tell myself, but damn, that ice cream looks good. Strawberry syrup glistens on it and a big dollop of whipped cream sits pretty on top. I close my eyes. âI want a championship more.â
âWell, you arenât getting that, so you may as well enjoy some ice cream.â
âHa!â Seven goes.
âWhatâs all this smack up in here?â Daddy asks.
He takes the recliner on the sectional, his lucky spot. Sekani scurries in and sits behind me, propping his bare feet on my shoulders. I donât mind. They havenât matured and funkified yet.
âI was offering Munch some of my sundae,â Momma says. âYou want some, baby?â
âHeck, nah. You know I donât eat dairy during games.â
See? Itâs serious.
âYou and Seven may as well get ready for this butt whooping Cleveland âbout to give yâall,â says Daddy. âI mean, it ainât gonâ be a Kobe butt whooping, but itâs gonâ be a good one.â
âAmen!â I say. Except the Kobe part.
âBoy, bye,â Momma tells him. âYouâre always picking sorry teams. First the Lakersââ
âAy, a three-peat ainât a sorry team, baby. And I donât always pick sorry teams.â He grins. âI picked your team, didnât I?â
Momma rolls her eyes, but sheâs grinning too, and I hate to admit it but theyâre kinda cute right now. âYeah,â she says, âthatâs the only time you picked right.â
âUh-huh,â Daddy says. âSee, your momma played for Saint Maryâs basketball team, and they had a game against Garden High, my school.â
âAnd we whooped their butts too,â Momma says, licking ice cream off her spoon. âThem liâl girls ainât have anything on us. Iâm just saying.â
âAnyway, Iâm there to watch some of the homeboys play after the girlsâ game,â Daddy says, looking at Momma. This is so adorable, I canât stand it. âI got there early and saw the finest girl ever, and she was playing her ass off on the court.â
âTell them what you did,â says Momma, although we know.
âAy, I was trying toââ
âNah, nah, tell them what you did,â she says.
âI tried to get your attention.â
âUh-uh!â Momma says, getting up. She hands me her bowl and stands in front of the TV. âYou were like this on the sideline,â she says, and she kinda leans to the side, holding her crotch and licking her lips. We crack up. I can so see Daddy doing that too.
âDuring the middle of a game!â she says. âStanding there looking like a pervert, just watching me.â
âBut you noticed me,â Daddy says. âRight?â
ââCause you looked like a fool! Then, during halftime, Iâm on the bench, and heâs behind me, talking aboutââshe deepens her voiceâââAy! Ay, shorty. Whatâs your name? You know you looking good out there. Can I get your number?ââ
âDang, Pops, you didnât have any game,â Seven says.
âI had game!â Daddy argues.
âDid you get her number that night though?â Seven says.
âI mean, I was working on itââ
âDid you get her number?â I repeat Sevenâs question.
âNah,â he admits, and weâre hollering laughing. âMan, whatever. Hate all yâall want. I eventually did something right.â
âYeah,â Momma admits, running her fingers through my hair. âYou did.â
By the second quarter of Cleveland versus Chicago, weâre yelling and shouting at the TV. When LeBron steals the ball, I jump up, and bam! He dunks it.
âIn yoâ face!â I yell at Momma and Seven. âIn yoâ face!â
Daddy gives me a high five and claps. âThatâs what Iâm talking âbout!â
Momma and Seven roll their eyes.
I sit in my âgame timeâ positionâknees pulled in, right arm draped over my head and holding my left ear, and my left thumb in my mouth. Donât hate. It works. Clevelandâs offense and defense is on point. âLetâs go, Cavs!â
Glass shatters. Then, , Gunshots.
âGet down!â Daddy yells.
Iâm already down. Sekani comes down next to me, then Momma on top of us, and she wraps her arms around us. Daddyâs feet thud toward the front of the house and the hinges on the front door squeak as it swings open. Tires screech off.
âMothafââ Gunshots cut Daddy off.
My heart stops. For a split second, I visit a world without my dad, and it doesnât seem like much of a world at all.
But his footsteps rush back in. âYâall aâight?â
The weight on top of me lifts. Momma says sheâs okay, and Sekani says he is too. Seven echoes them.
Daddyâs holding his Glock. âI shot at them fools,â he says between heavy breaths. âI think I hit a tire. Ainât never seen that car before.â
âDid they shoot in the house?â Momma asks.
âYeah, a couple shots through the front window,â he says. âThey threw something too. Landed in the living room.â
I head for the front.
âStarr! Get back here!â Momma calls.
Iâm too curious and too hardheaded. Glass shards glisten all over Mommaâs good sofa. A brick sits in the middle of the floor.
Momma calls Uncle Carlos. He gets to our house in half an hour.
Daddy hasnât stopped pacing the den, and he hasnât put his Glock down. Seven takes Sekani to bed. Momma has her arm around me on the sectional and wonât let go.
Some of our neighbors checked in, like Mrs. Pearl and Ms. Jones. Mr. Charles from next door rushed over, holding his own piece. None of them saw who did it.
Doesnât matter who did it. It was clearly a message for me.
I have this sick feeling like I got when I ate ice cream and played in hot weather too long when I was younger. Ms. Rosalie said the heat âboiledâ my stomach and that something cool would settle it. Nothing cool can settle this.
âDid you call the police?â Uncle Carlos asks.
âHell nah!â says Daddy. âHow I know it wasnât them?â
âMaverick, you still shouldâve called,â Uncle Carlos says. âThis needs to be recorded, and they can send someone to guard the house.â
âOh, I got somebody to guard the house. Donât worry about that. It definitely ainât gonâ be no crooked pig who may have been behind this.â
âKing Lords couldâve done this!â says Uncle Carlos. âDidnât you say King made a veiled threat against Starr because of her interview?â
âIâm not going tomorrow,â I say, but I have a better chance of being heard at a Drake concert.
âIt ainât no damn coincidence that somebodyâs trying to scare us the night before she testifies to the grand jury,â Daddy says. âThatâs some shit your buddies would do.â
âYouâd be surprised at how many of us want justice in this case,â says Uncle Carlos. âBut of course, classic Maverick. Every cop is automatically a bad cop.â
âIâm not going tomorrow,â I repeat.
âI ainât say every cop is a bad cop, but I ainât gonâ stand here like a fool, thinking that some of them donât do dirty shit. Hell, they made me lay face-down on the sidewalk. And for what? âCause they could!â
âIt couldâve been either one of them,â Momma says. âTrying to figure out who did it will get us nowhere. The main thing is making sure Starr is safe tomorrowââ
âI said Iâm not going!â I shout.
They finally hear me. My stomach holds a roiling boil. âYeah, it couldâve been King Lords, but what if it was the cops?â I look at Daddy and remember that moment weeks ago in front of the store. âI thought they were gonna kill you,â I croak. âBecause of me.â
He kneels in front of me and sits the Glock beside my feet. He lifts my chin. âPoint one of the Ten-Point Program. Say it.â
My brothers and I learned to recite the Black Panthersâ Ten-Point Program the same way other kids learn the Pledge of Allegiance.
ââWe want freedom,ââ I say. ââWe want the power to determine the destiny of our black and oppressed communities.ââ
âSay it again.â
ââWe want freedom. We want the power to determine the destiny of our black and oppressed communities.ââ
âPoint seven.â
ââWe want an immediate end to police brutality,ââ I say, ââand the murder of black people, other people of color, and oppressed people.ââ
âAgain.â
ââWe want an immediate end to police brutality and the murder of black people, other people of color, and oppressed people.ââ
âAnd what did Brother Malcolm say is our objective?â
Seven and I could recite Malcolm X quotes by the time we were thirteen. Sekani hasnât gotten there yet.
ââComplete freedom, justice, and equality,ââ I say, ââby any means necessary.ââ
âAgain.â
ââComplete freedom, justice, and equality, by any means necessary.ââ
âSo why you gonâ be quiet?â Daddy asks.
Because the Ten-Point Program didnât work for the Panthers. Huey Newton died a crackhead, and the government crushed the Panthers one by one.
didnât keep Brother Malcolm from dying, possibly at the hands of his own people. Intentions always look better on paper than in reality. The reality is, I may not make it to the courthouse in the morning.
Two loud knocks at the front door startle us.
Daddy straightens up, grabs his Glock, and leaves to answer. He says whatâs up to somebody, and thereâs a sound like palms slapping. Then a male voice says, âYou know we got you, Big Mav.â
Daddy returns with some tall, wide-shouldered guys dressed in gray and black. Itâs a lighter gray than what King and his folks wear. It takes a hood-trained eye to notice it and understand. This is a different set of King Lords.
âThis is Goon.â Daddy points to the shortest one, in front with the ponytails. âHim and his boys gonâ provide security for us tonight and tomorrow.â
Uncle Carlos folds his arms and gives the King Lords a hard look. âYou asked King Lords to guard the house when King Lords may have put us in this position?â
âThey donât mess with King,â Daddy says. âThey Cedar Grove King Lords.â
Shit, they may as well be GDs then. Sets make all the difference in gangbanging, not colors. The Cedar Grove King Lords have been beefing with Kingâs set, the West Side King Lords, for a while now.
âYou need us to fall back, Big Mav?â Goon asks.
âNah, donât worry about him,â Daddy says. âYâall do what yâall came to do.â
âNothing but a thang,â Goon says, and gives Daddy dap. Him and his boys head back outside.
âAre you serious right now?â Uncle Carlos yells. âYou really think gangbangers can provide adequate security?â
âThey strapped, ainât they?â Daddy says.
âRidiculous!â Uncle Carlos looks at Momma. âLook, Iâll go with you to the courthouse tomorrow as long as they arenât coming too.â
âPunk ass,â Daddy says. âCanât even protect your niece âcause you scared of what itâll look like to your fellow cops if youâre working with gangbangers.â
âOh, you wanna go there, Maverick?â Uncle Carlos says.
âCarlos, calm down.â
âNo, Lisa. I wanna make sure I got this right. Does he mean the same niece I took care of while he was locked up? Huh? The one I took to her first day of school because he took a charge for his so-called boy? The one I held when she cried for her daddy?â
Heâs loud, and Momma stands in front of him to keep him from Daddy.
âYou can call me as many names as you want, Maverick, but donât you ever say I donât care about my niece and nephews! Yeah, thatâs right, nephews! Seven too. When you were locked upââ
âCarlos,â Momma says.
âNo, he needs to hear this. When you were locked up, I helped Lisa every time your sorry-ass baby momma dropped Seven off on her for weeks at a time. Me! I bought clothes, food, provided shelter. My Uncle Tom ass! Hell no, I donât wanna work with criminals, but donât you ever insinuate I donât care about any of those kids!â
Daddyâs mouth makes a line. Heâs silent.
Uncle Carlos snatches his keys off the coffee table, gives my forehead two pecks, and leaves. The front door slams shut.