: Part 3 – Chapter 20
The Hate U Give
Three hours. Thatâs how long I was in the grand jury room. Ms. Monroe asked me all kinds of questions. What angle was Khalil at when he was shot? Where did he pull his license and registration from? How did Officer Cruise remove him from the car? Did Officer Cruise seem angry? What did he say?
She wanted every single detail. I gave her as much as I could.
Itâs been over two weeks since I talked to the grand jury, and now weâre waiting for their decision, which is similar to waiting for a meteor to hit. You know itâs coming, youâre just not exactly sure when and where itâll hit, and there ainât shit you can do in the meantime but keep living.
So weâre living.
The sun is out today, but the rain fell in sheets as soon as we pulled into the parking lot of Williamson. When it rains like that while the sunâs out, Nana says the devil is beating his wife. Plus, itâs Friday the thirteenth, a.k.a. the devilâs day, according to Nana. Sheâs probably holed up in the house like itâs doomsday.
Seven and I dash from the car into the school. The atriumâs busy as usual with people talking to their little cliques or playing around. The school yearâs almost over, so everybodyâs goof-off levels are at their highest, and white-kid goofing off is a category of its own. Iâm sorry, but it is. Yesterday a sophomore rode down the stairs in the janitorâs garbage can. His dumb ass got suspension and a concussion. Stupid.
I wiggle my toes. The one day I wear Chucks it decides to rain. Theyâre miraculously dry.
âYouâre good?â Seven asks, and I doubt itâs about the rain. Heâs been way more protective lately, ever since we got word that Kingâs still pissed I dry snitched. I heard Uncle Carlos tell Daddy it gave the cops another reason to watch King closely.
Unless King threw the brick, he hasnât done anything.
So Sevenâs always on guard, even all the way out here at Williamson.
âYeah,â I tell him. âIâm good.â
âAll right.â
He gives me dap and goes off to his locker.
I head for mine. Hailey and Maya are talking at Mayaâs locker nearby. Actually, Mayaâs doing most of the talking. Haileyâs got her arms folded and rolls her eyes a lot. She sees me down the hall and gets this smug expression.
âPerfect,â she says when I get closer. âThe liar is here.â
âExcuse me?â Itâs way too early for this bullshit.
âWhy donât you tell Maya how you flat-out lied to us?â
âWhat?â
Hailey hands me two pictures. One is Khalilâs thugshot, as Daddy calls it. One of the pictures theyâve shown on the news. Hailey printed it off the internet. Khalil wears a smirk, gripping a handful of money and throwing up a sideways peace sign.
The other picture, heâs twelve. I know because Iâm twelve in it too. Itâs my birthday party at this laser tag place downtown. Khalilâs on one side of me, shoveling strawberry cake into his mouth, and Haileyâs on my other side, grinning for the camera along with me.
âI thought he looked familiar,â Hailey says as smugly as she looks. âHe the Khalil you knew. Isnât he?â
I stare at the two Khalils. The pictures only show so much. For some people, the thugshot makes him look just like thatâa thug. But I see somebody who was happy to finally have some money in his hand, damn where it came from. And the birthday picture? I remember how Khalil ate so much cake and pizza he got sick. His grandma hadnât gotten paid yet, and food was limited in their house.
I knew the whole Khalil. Thatâs who Iâve been speaking up for. I shouldnât deny any part of him. Not even at Williamson.
I hand the pictures back to Hailey. âYeah, I knew him. So what?â
âDonât you think you owe us an explanation?â she says. âYou owe me an apology too.â
âUm, what?â
âYouâve basically picked fights with me because you were upset about what happened to him,â she says. âYou even accused me of being racist.â
âBut you have said and done some racist stuff. So . . .â Maya shrugs. âWhether Starr lied or not doesnât make it okay.â
Minority alliance activated.
âSo, since I unfollowed her Tumblr because I didnât wanna see any more pictures of that mutilated kid on my dashboardââ
âHis name was Emmett Till,â says Maya.
âWhatever. So because I didnât want to see that disgusting shit, Iâm racist?â
âNo,â Maya says. âWhat you said about it was racist. And your Thanksgiving joke was definitely racist.â
âOh my God, youâre still upset about that?â Hailey says. âThat was so long ago!â
âDoesnât make it okay,â I say. âAnd you canât even apologize for it.â
âIâm not apologizing because it was only a joke!â she shouts. âIt doesnât make me a racist. Iâm not letting you guys guilt trip me like this. Whatâs next? You want me to apologize because my ancestors were slave masters or something stupid?â
âBitchââ I take a deep breath. Way too many people are watching. I cannot go angry black girl on her. âYour joke was hurtful,â I say, as calmly as I can. âIf you give a damn about Maya, youâd apologize and at least try to see why it hurt her.â
âItâs not my fault she canât get over a from freaking year! Just like itâs not my fault you canât get over what happened to Khalil.â
âSo Iâm supposed to âget overâ the fact he was murdered?â
âYes, get over it! He was probably gonna end up dead anyway.â
âAre you serious?â Maya says.
âHe was a drug dealer and a gangbanger,â Hailey says. âSomebody was gonna kill him eventually.â
âGet over it?â I repeat.
She folds her arms and does this little neck movement. âUm, yeah? Isnât that what I said? The cop probably did everyone a favor. One less drug dealer on theââ
I move Maya out the way and slam my fist against the side of Haileyâs face. It hurts, but damn it feels good.
Hailey holds her cheek, her eyes wide and her mouth open for several seconds.
âBitch!â she shrieks. She goes straight for my hair like girls usually do, but my ponytail is real. Sheâs not pulling it out.
I hit at Hailey with my fists, and she slaps and claws me upside my head. I push her off, and she hits the floor. Her skirt goes up, and her pink drawers are out for everybody to see. Laughter erupts around us. Some people have their phones out.
Iâm no longer Williamson Starr or even Garden Heights Starr. Iâm pissed.
I kick and hit at Hailey, cuss words flying out my mouth. People gather around us, chanting âFight! Fight!â and one fool even shouts, âWorld Star!â
Shit. Iâm gonna end up on that ratchet site.
Somebody yanks my arm, and I turn, face-to-face with Remy, Haileyâs older brother.
âYou crazy biââ
Before he can finish âbitch,â a blur of dreadlocks charges at us and pushes Remy back.
âGet your hands off my sister!â Seven says.
And then theyâre fighting. Seven throws blows like nobodyâs business, knocking Remy upside his head with several good hooks and jabs. Daddy used to take both of us to the boxing gym after school.
Two security guards run over. Dr. Davis, the headmaster, marches toward us.
An hour later, Iâm in Mommaâs car. Seven trails us in his Mustang.
All four of us have been sentenced to three daysâ suspension, despite Williamsonâs zero-tolerance policy. Hailey and Remyâs dad, a Williamson board member, thought it was outrageous. He said Seven and I should be expelled because we âstarted it,â and that Seven shouldnât be allowed to graduate.
Dr. Davis told him, âGiven the circumstancesââand he looked straight at meââsuspension will suffice.â
He knows I was with Khalil.
âThis is exactly what expect you to do,â Momma says. âTwo kids from Garden Heights, acting like you ainât got any sense!â
They with a capital . Thereâs Them and then thereâs Us. Sometimes They look like Us and donât realize They are Us.
âBut she was running her mouth, saying Khalil deservedââ
âI donât care if she said she shot him herself. People are gonna say a whole lot, Starr. It doesnât mean you hit somebody. You gotta walk away sometimes.â
âYou mean walk away and get shot like Khalil did?â
She sighs. âBaby, I understandââ
âNo you donât!â I say. â
understands!
saw the bullets rip through him.
sat there in the street as he took his last breath.
had to listen to people try to make it seem like itâs okay he was murdered. As if he deserved it. But he didnât deserve to die, and I didnât do anything to deserve seeing that shit!â
WebMD calls it a stage of griefâanger. But I doubt Iâll ever get to the other stages. This one slices me into millions of pieces. Every time Iâm whole and back to normal, something happens to tear me apart, and Iâm forced to start all over again.
The rain lets up. The devil stops beating his wife, but I beat the dashboard, punching it over and over, numb to the pain of it. I wanna be numb to the pain of all of this.
âLet it out, Munch.â My mom rubs my back. âLet it out.â
I pull my polo over my mouth and scream until there arenât any screams left in me. If there are any, I donât have the energy to get them out. I cry for Khalil, for Natasha, even for Hailey, âcause damn if I didnât just lose her for good too.
When we turn on our street, Iâm snot-nosed and wet-eyed. Finally numb.
A gray pickup and a green Chrysler 300 are parked behind Daddyâs truck in the driveway. Momma and Seven have to park in front of the house.
âWhat is this man up to?â Momma says. She looks over at me. âYou feel better?â
I nod. What other choice do I have?
She leans over and kisses my temple. âWeâll get through this. I promise.â
We get out. Iâm one hundred percent sure the cars in the driveway belong to King Lords and Garden Disciples. In Garden Heights you canât drive a car thatâs gray or green unless you claim a set. I expect yelling and cussing when I get inside, but all I hear is Daddy saying, âIt donât make no sense, man. For real, it donât.â
Itâs standing-room-only in the kitchen. We canât even get in âcause some guys are in the doorway. Half of them have green somewhere in their outfits. Garden Disciples. The others have light gray on somewhere. Cedar Grove King Lords. Mr.
Reubenâs nephew, Tim, sits beside Daddy at the table. Iâve never noticed that cursive GD tattoo on his arm.
âWe donât know when the grand jury gonâ make their decision,â Daddy says. âBut if they decide not to indict, yâall gotta tell these liâl dudes not to burn this neighborhood down.â
âWhat you expect them to do then?â says a GD at the table. âFolks tired of the bullshit, Mav.â
âStraight up,â says the King Lord Goon, whoâs at the table too. His long plaits have ponytail holders on them like I used to wear way back in the day. âNothing we can do âbout it.â
âThatâs bullshit,â says Tim. âWe can do something.â
âWe can all agree the riots got outta hand, right?â says Daddy.
He gets a bunch of âyeahsâ and ârights.â
âThen we can make sure it doesnât go down like that again. Talk to these kids. Get in their heads. Yeah, they mad. We all mad, but burning down our neighborhood ainât gonâ fix it.â
âOur?â says the GD at the table. âNigga, you said you moving.â
âTo the ,â Goon mocks. âYou getting a minivan too, Mav?â
They all laugh at that.
Daddy doesnât though. âIâm moving, so what? Iâll still have a store here, and Iâll still give a damn what happens here. Who is it gonâ benefit if the whole neighborhood burns down? Damn sure wonât benefit none of us.â
âWe gotta be more organized next time,â says Tim. âFor one, make sure our brothers and sisters know they canât destroy black-owned businesses. That messes it up for all of us.â
âFor real,â says Daddy. âAnd I know, me and Tim out the game, so we canât speak on some things, but all these territory wars gotta be put aside somehow. This is bigger than some street shit. And honestly all the street shit got these cops thinking they can do whatever they want.â
âYeah, I feel you on that,â says Goon.
âYâall gotta come together somehow, man,â Daddy says. âFor the sake of the Garden. The last thing theyâd ever expect is some unity around here. Aâight?â
Daddy slaps palms with Goon and the Garden Disciple. Then Goon and the Garden Disciple slap palms with each other.
âWow,â Seven says.
Itâs huge that these two gangs are in the same room together, and for my daddy to be the one behind it? Crazy.
He notices us in the doorway. âWhat yâall doing here?â
Momma inches into the kitchen, looking around. âThe kids got suspended.â
âSuspended?â Daddy says. âFor what?â
Seven passes him his phone.
âItâs online already?â I say.
âYeah, somebody tagged me in it.â
Daddy taps the screen, and I hear Hailey running her mouth about Khalil, then a loud smack.
Some of the gang members watch over Daddyâs shoulder. âDamn, liâl momma,â one says, âyou got hands.â
âYou crazy biâ,â Remy says on the phone. A bunch of smacks and oohs follow.
âLook at my boy!â Daddy says. âLook at him!â
âI ainât know your liâl nerdy ass had it in you,â a King Lord teases.
Momma clears her throat. Daddy stops the video.
âAâight, yâall,â he says, serious all of a sudden. âI gotta handle some family business. Weâll meet back up tomorrow.â
Tim and all the gang members clear out, and cars crank up outside. Still no gunshots or arguing. They couldâve broken out into a gangsta rendition of âKumbayaâ and I wouldnât be any more shocked than I am.
âHow did you get all of them in here and keep the house in one piece?â Momma asks.
âI got it like that.â
Momma kisses him on the lips. âYou certainly do. My man, the activist.â
âUh-huh.â He kisses her back. âYour man.â
Seven clears his throat. âWeâre standing right here.â
âAy, yâall canât complain,â Daddy says. âIf you wouldnât have been fighting, you wouldnât have to see that.â He reaches over and pinches my cheek a little. âYou aâight?â
The dampness hasnât left my eyes yet, and Iâm not exactly smiling. I mutter, âYeah.â
Daddy pulls me onto his lap. He cradles me and switches between kissing my cheek and pinching it, going over and over in a real deep voice, âWhatâs wrong with you? Huh? Whatâs wrong with you?â
And Iâm giggling before I can stop myself.
Daddy gives me a sloppy, wet kiss to my cheek and lets me up. âI knew Iâd get you laughing. Now what happened?â
âYou saw the video. Hailey ran her mouth, so I popped her. Simple as that.â
âThatâs your child, Maverick,â Momma says. âGotta hit somebody because she didnât like what they said.â
âMine? Uh-uh, baby. Thatâs all you.â He looks at Seven. âWhy were you fighting?â
âDude came at my sister,â Seven says. âI wasnât gonna let him.â
As much as Seven talks about protecting Kenya and Lyric, itâs nice that he has my back too.
Daddy replays the video, starting with Hailey saying, âHe was probably gonna end up dead anyway.â
âWow,â Momma says. âThat liâl girl has a lot of nerve.â
âSpoiled ass donât know a damn thing and running her mouth,â says Daddy.
âSo, whatâs our punishment?â Seven asks.
âGo do your homework,â Momma says.
âThatâs it?â I say.
âYouâll also have to help your dad at the store while youâre suspended.â She drapes her arms over Daddy from behind. âSound okay, baby?â
He kisses her arm. âSounds good to me.â
If you canât translate Parentish, this is what they really said:
Momma: I donât condone what you did, and Iâm not saying itâs okay, but I probably wouldâve done it too. What about you, baby?
Daddy: Hell yeah, I wouldâve.
I love them for that.