: Part 1 – Chapter 2
The Hate U Give
When I was twelve, my parents had two talks with me.
One was the usual birds and bees. Well, I didnât really get the usual version. My mom, Lisa, is a registered nurse, and she told me what went where, and what didnât need to go here, there, or any damn where till Iâm grown. Back then, I doubted anything was going anywhere anyway. While all the other girls sprouted breasts between sixth and seventh grade, my chest was as flat as my back.
The other talk was about what to do if a cop stopped me.
Momma fussed and told Daddy I was too young for that. He argued that I wasnât too young to get arrested or shot.
âStarr-Starr, you do whatever they tell you to do,â he said. âKeep your hands visible. Donât make any sudden moves. Only speak when they speak to you.â
I knew it mustâve been serious. Daddy has the biggest mouth of anybody I know, and if he said to be quiet, I needed to be quiet.
I hope somebody had the talk with Khalil.
He cusses under his breath, turns Tupac down, and maneuvers the Impala to the side of the street. Weâre on Carnation where most of the houses are abandoned and half the streetlights are busted. Nobody around but us and the cop.
Khalil turns the ignition off. âWonder what this fool wants.â
The officer parks and puts his brights on. I blink to keep from being blinded.
I remember something else Daddy said.
âK, you donât have anything in the car, do you?â I ask.
He watches the cop in his side mirror. âNah.â
The officer approaches the driverâs door and taps the window. Khalil cranks the handle to roll it down. As if we arenât blinded enough, the officer beams his flashlight in our faces.
âLicense, registration, and proof of insurance.â
Khalil breaks a ruleâhe doesnât do what the cop wants. âWhat you pull us over for?â
âLicense, registration, and proof of insurance.â
âI said what you pull us over for?â
âKhalil,â I plead. âDo what he said.â
Khalil groans and takes his wallet out. The officer follows his movements with the flashlight.
My heart pounds loudly, but Daddyâs instructions echo in my head:
With the flashlight following Khalilâs hands, I make out the numbers on the badgeâone-fifteen. Heâs white, midthirties to early forties, has a brown buzz cut and a thin scar over his top lip.
Khalil hands the officer his papers and license.
One-Fifteen looks over them. âWhere are you two coming from tonight?â
âNunya,â Khalil says, meaning none of your business. âWhat you pull me over for?â
âYour taillightâs broken.â
âSo are you gonâ give me a ticket or what?â Khalil asks.
âYou know what? Get out the car, smart guy.â
âMan, just give me my ticketââ
âGet out the car! Hands up, where I can see them.â
Khalil gets out with his hands up. One-Fifteen yanks him by his arm and pins him against the back door.
I fight to find my voice. âHe didnât meanââ
âHands on the dashboard!â the officer barks at me. âDonât move!â
I do what he tells me, but my hands are shaking too much to be still.
He pats Khalil down. âOkay, smart mouth, letâs see what we find on you today.â
âYou ainât gonâ find nothing,â Khalil says.
One-Fifteen pats him down two more times. He turns up empty.
âStay here,â he tells Khalil. âAnd you.â He looks in the window at me. âDonât move.â
I canât even nod.
The officer walks back to his patrol car.
My parents havenât raised me to fear the police, just to be smart around them. They told me itâs not smart to move while a cop has his back to you.
Khalil does. He comes to his door.
Itâs not smart to make a sudden move.
Khalil does. He opens the driverâs door.
âYou okay, Starrââ
One. Khalilâs body jerks. Blood splatters from his back. He holds on to the door to keep himself upright.
Two. Khalil gasps.
Three. Khalil looks at me, stunned.
He falls to the ground.
Iâm ten again, watching Natasha drop.
An earsplitting scream emerges from my gut, explodes in my throat, and uses every inch of me to be heard.
Instinct says donât move, but everything else says check on Khalil. I jump out the Impala and rush around to the other side. Khalil stares at the sky as if he hopes to see God. His mouth is open like he wants to scream. I scream loud enough for the both of us.
âNo, no, no,â is all I can say, like Iâm a year old and itâs the only word I know. Iâm not sure how I end up on the ground next to him. My mom once said that if someone gets shot, try to stop the bleeding, but thereâs so much blood. Too much blood.
âNo, no, no.â
Khalil doesnât move. He doesnât utter a word. He doesnât even look at me. His body stiffens, and heâs gone. I hope he sees God.
Someone else screams.
I blink through my tears. Officer One-Fifteen yells at me, pointing the same gun he killed my friend with.
I put my hands up.