: Part 1 – Chapter 9
The Hate U Give
My brothers come home with a messageâDaddyâs spending the night at the store.
He also leaves instructions for usâstay inside.
A chain-link fence surrounds our house. Seven puts the big lock on the gate, the one we use when we go out of town. I bring Brickz inside. He doesnât know how to act, walking around in circles and jumping on the furniture. Momma doesnât say anything until he gets on her good sofa in the living room.
âAy!â She snaps her fingers at him. âGet your big behind off my furniture. You crazy?â
He whimpers and scurries over to me.
The sun sets. Weâre in the middle of saying grace over pot roast and potatoes when the first gunshots ring out.
We open our eyes. Sekani flinches. Iâm used to gunshots, but these are louder, faster. One barely sounds off before anotherâs right behind it.
âMachine guns,â says Seven. More shots follow.
âTake your dinner to the den,â Momma says, getting up from the table. âAnd sit on the floor. Bullets donât know where theyâre supposed to go.â
Seven gets up too. âMa, I canââ
âSeven, den,â she says.
âButââ
âSe-ven.â She breaks his name down. âIâm turning the lights off, baby, okay? Please, go to the den.â
He gives in. âAll right.â When Daddy isnât home, Seven acts like heâs the man of the house by default. Momma always has to break his name down and put him in his place.
I grab my plate and Mommaâs and head for the den, the one room without exterior walls. Brickz is right behind me, but he always follows food. The hallway darkens as Momma turns off the lights throughout the house.
We have one of those old-school big-screen TVs in the den. Itâs Daddyâs prized possession. We crowd around it, and Seven turns on the news, lighting up the den.
There are at least a hundred people gathered on Magnolia Avenue. They chant for justice and hold signs, fists high in the air for black power.
Momma comes in, talking on the phone. âAll right, Mrs. Pearl, as long as you sure. Just remember we got enough room over here for you if you donât feel comfortable being alone. Iâll check in later.â
Mrs. Pearl is this elderly lady who lives by herself across the street. Momma checks on her all the time. She says Mrs. Pearl needs to know that somebody cares.
Momma sits next to me. Sekani rests his head in her lap. Brickz mimics him and puts his head in my lap, licking my fingers.
âAre they mad âcause Khalil died?â Sekani asks.
Momma brushes her fingers through his high-top fade. âYeah, baby. We all are.â
But theyâre mad that Khalil was unarmed. Canât be a coincidence this is happening after Ms. Ofrah announced that at his funeral.
The cops respond to the chants with tear gas that blankets the crowd in a white cloud. The news cuts to footage inside the crowd of people running and screaming.
âDamn,â Seven says.
Sekani buries his face in Mommaâs thigh. I feed Brickz a piece of my pot roast. The clenching in my stomach wonât let me eat.
Sirens wail outside. The news shows three patrol cars that have been set ablaze at the police precinct, about a five-minute drive away from us. A gas station near the freeway gets looted, and the owner, this Indian man, staggers around bloody, saying he didnât have anything to do with Khalilâs death. A line of cops guard the Walmart on the east side.
My neighborhood is a war zone.
Chris texts to see if Iâm okay, and I immediately feel like shit for avoiding him, Beyoncéâing him, and everything else. I would apologize, but texting âIâm sorryâ combined with every emoji in the world isnât the same as saying it face-to-face. I do let him know Iâm okay though.
Maya and Hailey call, asking about the store, the house, my family, me. Neither of them mention the fried chicken drama. Itâs weird talking to them about Garden Heights. We never do. Iâm always afraid one of them will call it âthe ghetto.â
I get it. Garden Heights is the ghetto, so it wouldnât be a lie, but itâs like when I was nine and Seven and I got into one of our fights. He went for a low blow and called me Shorty McShort-Short. A lame insult now when I think about it, but it tore me up back then. I knew there was a possibility I was shortâeverybody else was taller than I wasâand I could call myself short if I wanted. It became an uncomfortable truth when Seven said it.
I can call Garden Heights the ghetto all I want. Nobody else can.
Momma stays on her phone too, checking on some neighbors and getting calls from others who are checking on us. Ms. Jones down the street says that she and her four kids are holed up in their den like we are. Mr. Charles next door says that if the power goes out we can use his generator.
Uncle Carlos checks on us too. Nana takes the phone and tells Momma to bring us out there. Like weâre about to go through the shit to get out of it. Daddy calls and says the store is all right. It doesnât stop me from tensing up every time the news mentions a business thatâs been attacked.
The news does more than give Khalilâs name nowâthey show his picture too. They only call me âthe witness.â Sometimes âthe sixteen-year-old black female witness.â
The police chief appears onscreen and says what I was afraid heâd say: âWe have taken into consideration the evidence as well as the statement given by the witness, and as of now we see no reason to arrest the officer.â
Momma and Seven glance at me. They donât say anything with Sekani right here. They donât have to. All of this is my fault. The riots, gunshots, tear gas, all of it, are ultimately my fault. I forgot to tell the cops that Khalil got out with his hands up. I didnât mention that the officer pointed his gun at me. I didnât say something right, and now that copâs not getting arrested.
But while the riots are my fault, the news basically makes it sound like itâs Khalilâs fault he died.
âThere are multiple reports that a gun was found in the car,â the anchor claims. âThere is also suspicion that the victim was a drug dealer as well as a gang member. Officials have not confirmed if any of this is true.â
The gun stuff canât be true. When I asked Khalil if he had anything in the car, he said no.
He also wouldnât say if he was a drug dealer or not. And he didnât even mention the gangbanging stuff.
Does it matter though? He didnât deserve to die.
Sekani and Brickz start breathing deeply around the same time, fast asleep. Thatâs not an option for me with the helicopters, the gunshots, and the sirens. Momma and Seven stay up too. Around four in the morning, when itâs quieted down, Daddy comes in bleary-eyed and yawning.
âThey didnât hit Marigold,â he says between bites of pot roast at the kitchen table. âLooks like they keeping it mostly on the east side, near where he was killed. For now at least.â
âFor now,â Momma repeats.
Daddy runs his hand over his face. âYeah. I donât know whatâs gonâ stop them from coming this way. Shit, much as I understand it, I dread it if they do.â
âWe canât stay here, Maverick,â she says, and her voice is shaky, like sheâs been holding something in this entire time and is just now letting it out. âThis wonât get better. Itâll get worse.â
Daddy reaches for her hand. She lets him take it, and he pulls her onto his lap. Daddy wraps his arms around her and kisses the back of her head.
âWeâll be aâight.â
He sends me and Seven to bed. Somehow I fall asleep.
I jolt awake.
Seven bangs his fist against my door. He doesnât text normal, and he doesnât wake people up normal either. âWeâre leaving in ten.â
My heart beats against my chest like itâs trying to get out.
I remind myself.
âLeaving for what?â I ask him.
âBasketball at the park. Itâs the last Saturday of the month, right? Isnât this what we always do?â
âButâthe riots and stuff?â
âLike Pops said, that stuff happened on the east. Weâre good over here. Plus the news said itâs quiet this morning.â
What if somebody knows Iâm the witness? What if they know that itâs my fault that cop hasnât been arrested? What if we come across some cops and they know who I am?
âItâll be all right,â Seven says, like he read my mind. âI promise. Now get your lazy butt up so I can kill you on the court.â
If itâs possible to be a sweet asshole, thatâs Seven. I get out of bed and put on my basketball shorts, LeBron jersey, and my Thirteens like Jordan wore before he left the Bulls. I comb my hair into a ponytail. Seven waits for me at the front door, spinning the basketball between his hands.
I snatch it from him. âLike you know what to do with it.â
âWeâll see âbout that.â
I holler to let Momma and Daddy know weâll be back later and leave.
At first Garden Heights looks the same, but a couple of blocks away at least five police cars speed by. Smoke lingers in the air, making everything look hazy. It stinks too.
We make it to Rose Park. Some King Lords sit in a gray Escalade across the street, and a younger oneâs on the park merry-go-round. Long as we donât bother them, they wonât bother us.
Rose Park occupies a whole block, and a tall chain-link fence surrounds it. Iâm not sure what itâs protectingâthe graffiti on the basketball court, the rusting playground equipment, the benches that way too many babies have been made on, or the liquor bottles, cigarette butts, and trash that litter the grass.
Weâre right near the basketball courts, but the entrance to the park is on the other side of the block. I toss the ball to Seven and climb the fence. I used to jump down from the top, but one fall and a sprained ankle stopped me from doing that again.
When I get over the fence Seven tosses the ball to me and climbs. Khalil, Natasha, and I used to take a shortcut through the park after school. Weâd run up the slides, spin on the merry-go-round till we were dizzy, and try to swing higher than one another.
I try to forget all that as I check the ball to Seven. âFirst to thirty?â
âForty,â he says, knowing damn well heâll be lucky if he gets twenty points. He canât play ball just like Daddy canât play ball.
As if to prove it, Seven dribbles using the palm of his hand. Youâre supposed to use your fingertips. Then this fool shoots for a three.
The ball bounces off the rim. Of course. I grab it and look at him. âWeak! You knew that shit wasnât going in.â
âWhatever. Play the damn game.â
Five minutes in, I have ten points to his two, and I basically gave him those. I fake left, make a quick right in a smooth crossover, and go for the three. That baby goes in nicely. This girlâs got game.
Seven makes a with his hands. He pants harder than I do, and Iâm the one who used to have asthma. âTime out. Water break.â
I wipe my forehead with my arm. The sun glares on the court already. âHow about we call it?â
âHell no. I got some game in me. I gotta get my angles right.â
âAngles? This is ball, Seven. Not selfies.â
âAy, yo!â some boy calls.
We turn around, and my breath catches. âShit.â
There are two of them. They look thirteen, fourteen years old and are wearing green Celtics jerseys. Garden Disciples, no doubt. They cross the courts, coming straight for us.
The tallest one steps to Seven. âNigga, you Kinging?â
I canât even take this fool seriously. His voice squeaks. Daddy says thereâs a trick to telling OGs from Young Gs, besides their age. OGs donât start stuff, they finish it. Young Gs always start stuff.
âNah, Iâm neutral,â Seven says.
âAinât King your daddy?â the shorter one asks.
âHell, no. He just messing with my momma.â
âIt donât even matter.â The tall one flicks out a pocket knife. âHand your shit over. Sneakers, phones, everything.â
Rule of the Gardenâif it doesnât involve you, it doesnât have shit to do with you. Period. The King Lords in the Escalade see everything going down. Since we donât claim their set, we donât exist.
But the boy on the merry-go-round runs over and pushes the GDs back. He lifts up his shirt, flashing his piece. âWe got a problem?â
They back up. âYeah, we got a problem,â the shorter one says.
âYou sure? Last time I checked, Rose Park was King territory.â He looks toward the Escalade. The King Lords inside nod at us, a simple way of asking if things are cool. We nod back.
âAâight,â the tall GD says. âWe got you.â
The GDs leave the same way they came.
The younger King Lord slaps palms with Seven. âYou straight, bruh?â he asks.
âYeah. Good looking out, Vante.â
I canât lie, heâs kinda cute. Hey, just âcause I have a boyfriend doesnât mean I canât look, and as much as Chris drools over Nicki Minaj, Beyoncé, and Amber Rose, I dare him to get mad at me for looking.
On a side noteâmy boyfriend clearly has a type.
This Vante guyâs around my age, a little taller, with a big Afro puff and the faint signs of a mustache. He has some nice lips too. Real plump and soft.
Iâve looked at them too long. He licks them and smiles. âI had to make sure you and liâl momma were okay.â
And that ruins it. Donât call me by a nickname if you donât know me. âYeah, weâre fine,â I say.
âThem GDs helped you out anyway,â he tells Seven. âShe was killing you out here.â
âMan, shut up,â Seven says. âThis is my sister, Starr.â
âOh yeah,â the guy says. âYou the one who work up in Big Mavâs store, ainât you?â
Like I said, I get that all. The. Time. âYep. Thatâs me.â
âStarr, this is DeVante,â Seven says. âHeâs one of Kingâs boys.â
âDeVante?â So this is the dude Kenya fought over.
âYeah, thatâs me.â He looks at me from head to toe and licks his lips again. âYou heard âbout me or something?â
All that lip licking. Not cute. âYeah, Iâve heard about you. And you may wanna get some Chapstick if your lips that dry, since youâre licking them so much.â
âDamn, itâs like that?â
âWhat she means is thanks for helping us out,â Seven says, even though thatâs not what I meant. âWe appreciate it.â
âItâs all good. Them fools running around here âcause the riots happening on their side. Itâs too hot for them over there.â
âWhat you doing in the park this early anyway?â Seven asks.
He shoves his hands in his pockets and shrugs. âPosted up. You know how it go.â
Heâs a d-boy. Damn, Kenya really knows how to pick them. Anytime drug-dealing gangbangers are your type, youâve got some serious issues. Well, King her daddy.
âI heard about your brother,â Seven says. âIâm sorry, man. Dalvin was a cool dude.â
DeVante kicks at a pebble on the court. âThanks. Momâs taking it real hard. Thatâs why Iâm here. Had to get out the house.â
Dalvin? DeVante? I tilt my head. âYour momma named yâall after them dudes from that old group Jodeci?â I only know because my parents love them some Jodeci.
âYeah, so?â
âIt was just a question. You donât have to have an attitude.â
A white Tahoe screeches to a stop on the other side of the fence. Daddyâs Tahoe.
His window rolls down. Heâs in a wifebeater and pillow marks zigzag across his face. I pray he doesnât get out because knowing Daddy his legs are ashy and heâs wearing Nike flip-flops with socks. âWhat the hell yâall thinking, leaving the house without telling nobody?â he yells.
The King Lords across the street bust out laughing. DeVante coughs into his fist like he wants to laugh too. Seven and I look at everything but Daddy.
âOh, yâall wanna act like yâall donât hear me? Answer me when Iâm talking to you!â
The King Lords howl with laughter.
âPops, we just came to play ball,â Seven says.
âI donât care. All this shit going on, and yâall leave? Get in this truck!â
âGoddamn,â I say under my breath. âAlways gotta act a fool.â
âWhat you say?â he barks.
The King Lords howl louder. I wanna disappear.
âNothing,â I say.
âNah, it was something. Tell you what, donât climb the fence. Go round to the entrance. And I betâ not beat yâall there.â
He drives off.
Shit.
I grab my ball, and Seven and I haul ass across the park. The last time I ran this fast, Coach was making us do suicides. We get to the entrance as Daddy pulls up. I climb in the back of the truck, and Sevenâs dumb butt gets in the passenger seat.
Daddy drives off. âDone lost yâall minds,â he says. âPeople rioting, damn near calling the National Guard around here, and yâall wanna play ball.â
âWhy you have to embarrass us like that?â Seven snaps.
Iâm so glad Iâm in the backseat. Daddy turns toward Seven, not even looking at the road, and growls, âYou ainât too old.â
Seven stares ahead. Steam is just about coming off him.
Daddy looks at the road again. âGot some goddamn nerve talking to me like that âcause some King Lords were laughing at you. What, you Kinging now?â
Seven doesnât respond.
âIâm talking to you, boy!â
âNo, sir,â he bites out.
âSo why you care what they think? You wanna be a man so damn bad, but men donât care what nobody thinks.â
He pulls into our driveway. Not even halfway up the walkway I see Momma through the screen on the door in her nightgown, her arms folded and her bare foot tapping.
âGet in this house!â she shouts.
She paces the living room as we come in. The question isnât if sheâll explode but when.
Seven and I sink onto her good sofa.
âWhere were yâall?â she asks. âAnd you better not lie.â
âThe basketball court,â I mumble, staring at my Jâs.
Momma leans down close to me and puts her hand to her ear. âWhat was that? I didnât hear you good.â
âSpeak up, girl,â Daddy says.
âThe basketball court,â I repeat louder.
âThe basketball court.â Momma straightens up and laughs. âShe said the basketball court.â Her laughter stops, and her voice gets louder with each word. âIâm walking around here, worried out my mind, and yâall at the damn basketball court!â
Somebody giggles in the hallway.
âSekani, go to your room!â Momma says without looking that way. His feet thump hurriedly down the hall.
âI hollered and told yâall we were leaving,â I say.
âOh, she hollered,â Daddy mocks. âDid you hear anybody holler, baby? âCause I didnât.â
Momma sucks her teeth. âNeither did I. She can wake us up to ask for some money, but she canât wake us up to tell us sheâs going in a war zone.â
âItâs my fault,â Seven says. âI wanted to get her out the house and do something normal.â
âBaby, thereâs no such thing as normal right now!â says Momma. âYou see whatâs been happening. And yâall were crazy enough to go out there like that?â
âDumb enough is more like it,â Daddy adds.
I keep my eyes on my shoes.
âHand over your phones,â Momma says.
âWhat?â I shriek. âThatâs not fair! I hollered and told yâallââ
âStarr Amara,â she says through her teeth. Since my first name is only one syllable, she has to throw my middle name in there to break it down. âIf you donât hand me that phone, I swear to God.â
I open my mouth, but she goes, âSay something else! I dare you, say something else! Iâll take all them Jordans too!â
This is some bullshit. For real. Daddy watches us; her attack dog, waiting for us to make a wrong move. Thatâs how they work. Momma does the first round, and if itâs not successful, Daddy goes for the KO. And you never want Daddy to go for the KO.
Seven and I hand her our phones.
âI thought so,â she says, and passes them to Daddy. âSince yâall want ânormalâ so much, go get your stuff. Weâre going to Carlosâs for the day.â
âNah, not him.â Daddy motions Seven to get up. âHe going to the store with me.â
Momma looks at me and jerks her head toward the hall. âGo. I oughta make you take a shower, smelling like outside.â As Iâm leaving, she hollers, âAnd donât get any skimpy stuff to wear to Carlosâs either!â
Ooh, she gets on my nerves. See, Chris lives down the street from Uncle Carlos. I am glad she didnât say any more in front of Daddy though.
Brickz meets me at my bedroom door. He jumps up my legs and tries to lick my face. I had about forty shoe boxes stacked in a corner, and he knocked all of them over.
I scratch behind his ears. âClumsy dog.â
I would take him with us, but they donât allow pits in Uncle Carlosâs neighborhood. He settles on my bed and watches me pack. I only really need my swimsuit and some sandals, but Momma could decide to stay out there the whole weekend because of the riots. I pack a couple of outfits and get my school backpack. I throw each backpack over a shoulder. âCâmon, Brickz.â
He follows me to his spot in the backyard, and I hook him up to his chain. While I refill Brickzâs food and water bowls, Daddy crouches beside his roses and examines the petals. He waters them like heâs supposed to, but for some reason theyâre dry looking.
âCâmon, now,â he tells them. âYâall gotta do better than this.â
Momma and Sekani wait for me in her Camry. I end up in the passengerâs seat. Itâs childish, but I donât wanna sit this close to her right now. Unfortunately itâs either sit next to her or next to Sir-Farts-a-Lot Sekani. Iâm staring straight ahead, and out the corner of my eye I see her looking at me. She makes this sound like sheâs about to speak, but her words decide to come out as a sigh.
Good. I donât wanna talk to her either. Iâm being petty as hell and donât even care.
We head for the freeway, passing the Cedar Grove projects, where we used to live. We get to Magnolia Avenue, the busiest street in Garden Heights, where most of the businesses are located. Usually on Saturday mornings, guys around the neighborhood have their cars on display, cruising up and down the street and racing each other.
Today the streetâs blocked off. A crowd marches down the middle of it. Theyâre holding signs and posters of Khalilâs face and are chanting, âJustice for Khalil!â
I should be out there with them, but I canât join that march, knowing Iâm one of the reasons theyâre protesting.
âYou know none of this is your fault, right?â Momma asks.
How in the world did she do that? âI know.â
âI mean it, baby. Itâs not. You did everything right.â
âBut sometimes rightâs not good enough, huh?â
She takes my hand, and despite my annoyance I let her. Itâs the closest thing I get to an answer for a while.
Saturday morning traffic on the freeway moves smoothly compared to weekday traffic. Sekani puts his headphones on and plays with his tablet. Some nineties R&B songs play on the radio, and Momma sings along under her breath. When she really gets into it, she attempts all kinds of runs and goes, âYes, girl! Yes!â
Out of nowhere she says, âYou werenât breathing when you were born.â
My first time hearing that. âFor real?â
âUh-huh. I was eighteen when I had you. Still a baby myself, but I thought I was grown. Wouldnât admit to anybody that I was scared to death. Your nana thought there was no way in hell I could be a good parent. Not wild Lisa.
âI was determined to prove her wrong. I stopped drinking and smoking, went to all of my appointments, ate right, took my vitamins, the whole nine. Shoot, I even played Mozart on some headphones and put them on my belly. We see what good that was. You didnât finish a month of piano lessons.â
I laugh. âSorry.â
âItâs okay. Like I was saying, I did everything right. I remember being in that delivery room, and when they pulled you out, I waited for you to cry. But you didnât. Everybody ran around, and your father and I kept asking what was wrong. Finally the nurse said you werenât breathing.
âI freaked out. Your daddy couldnât calm me down. He was barely calm himself. After the longest minute of my life, you cried. I think I cried harder than you though. I knew I did something wrong. But one of the nurses took my handââMomma grabs my hand againââlooked me in the eye, and said, âSometimes you can do everything right and things will still go wrong. The key is to never stop doing right.ââ
She holds my hand the rest of the drive.
I used to think the sun shone brighter out here in Uncle Carlosâs neighborhood, but today it really doesâthereâs no smoke lingering, and the air is fresher. All the houses have two stories.
Kids play on the sidewalks and in the big yards. There are lemonade stands, garage sales, and lots of joggers. Even with all that going on, itâs real quiet.
We pass Mayaâs house, a few streets over from Uncle Carlosâs. I would text her and see if I could come over, but, you know, I donât have my phone.
âYou canât visit your liâl friend today,â Momma says, reading my mind once a-freaking-gain. âYouâre grounded.â
My mouth flies wide open.
âBut she can come over to Carlosâs and see you.â
She glances at me out the corner of her eye with a half smile. This is supposed to be the moment I hug her and thank her and tell her sheâs the best.
Not happening. I say, âCool. Whatever,â and sit back.
She busts out laughing. âYou are so stubborn!â
âNo, Iâm not!â
âYes, you are,â she says. âJust like your father.â
Soon as we pull into Uncle Carlosâs driveway, Sekani jumps out. Our cousin Daniel waves at him from down the sidewalk with some other boys, and theyâre all on their bikes.
âLater, Momma,â Sekani says. He runs past Uncle Carlos, whoâs coming out the garage, and grabs his bike. Sekani got it for Christmas, but he keeps it at Uncle Carlosâs house because Mommaâs not about to let him ride around Garden Heights. He pedals down the driveway.
Momma hops out and calls after him, âDonât go too far!â
I get out, and Uncle Carlos meets me with a perfect Uncle Carlos hugânot too tight, but so firm that it tells me how much he loves me in a few seconds.
He kisses the top of my head twice and asks, âHow are you doing, baby girl?â
âOkay.â I sniff. Smokeâs in the air. The good kind though. âYou barbecuing?â
âJust heated the grill up. Gonna throw some burgers and chicken on for lunch.â
âI hope we donât end up with food poisoning,â Momma teases.
âAh, look whoâs trying to be a comedian,â he says. âYouâll be eating your words and everything I cook, baby sis, because Iâm about to throw down. Food Network doesnât have anything on me.â And he pops his collar.
Lord. Heâs so corny sometimes.
Aunt Pam tends to the grill on the patio. My little cousin Ava sucks her thumb and hugs Aunt Pamâs leg. The second she sees me, she comes running. âStarr-Starr!â
Her ponytails fly as she runs, and she launches herself into my arms. I swing her around, getting a whole lot of giggles out of her. âHowâs my favorite three-year-old in the whole wide world doing?â
âGood!â She sticks her wrinkly, wet thumb back in her mouth. âHey, Auntie Leelee.â
âHey, baby. Youâve been good?â
Ava nods too much. No way sheâs been good.
Aunt Pam lets Uncle Carlos handle the grill and greets Momma with a hug. She has dark-brown skin and big curly hair. Nana likes her because she comes from a âgood family.â Her mom is an attorney, and her dad is the first black chief of surgery at the same hospital where Aunt Pam works as a surgeon. Real-life Huxtables, I swear.
I put Ava down, and Aunt Pam hugs me extra tight. âHow are you doing, sweetie?â
âOkay.â
She says she understands, but nobody really does.
Nana comes busting out the back door with her arms outstretched. âMy girls!â
Thatâs the first sign somethingâs up. She hugs me and Momma and kisses our cheeks. Nana never kisses us, and she never lets us kiss her. She says she doesnât know where our mouths have been. She frames my face with her hands, talking about, âThank the Lord. He spared your life. Hallelujah!â
So many alarms go off in my head. Not that she wouldnât be happy that âthe Lord spared my life,â but this isnât Nana. At all.
She takes me and Momma by our wrists and pulls us toward the poolside loungers. âYâall come over here and talk to me.â
âBut I was gonna talk to Pamââ
Nana looks at Momma and hisses through gritted teeth, âShut the hell up, sit down, and talk to me, goddammit.â
Now Nana. She sits back in a lounger and fans herself all dramatically. Sheâs a retired theater teacher, so she does everything dramatically. Momma and I share a lounger and sit on the side of it.
âWhatâs wrong?â Momma asks.
âWhenââ she begins, but plasters on a fake smile when Ava waddles over with her baby doll and a comb. Ava hands both to me and goes to play with some of her other toys.
I comb the dollâs hair. That girl has me trained. Doesnât have to say anything, and I do it.
Once Avaâs out of earshot, Nana says, âWhen yâall taking me back to my house?â
âWhat happened?â Momma asks.
âKeep your damn voice down!â Ironically, sheâs not keeping hers down. âYesterday morning, I took some catfish out for dinner. Was gonna fry it up with some hush puppies, fries, the whole nine. I left to run some errands.â
âWhat kinda errands?â I ask for the hell of it.
Nana cuts me âthe lookâ and itâs like seeing Momma in thirty years, with a few wrinkles and gray hairs she missed when coloring her hair (sheâd whoop my behind for saying that).
âIâm grown, liâl girl,â she says. âDonât ask me what I do. Anyway, I come home and that done covered my catfish in some damn cornflakes and baked it!â
âCornflakes?â I say, parting the dollâs hair.
âYes! Talking âbout, âItâs healthier that way.â If I want healthy, I eat a salad.â
Momma covers her mouth, and the edges of her lips are turned up. âI thought you and Pam got along.â
âWe did. Until she messed with my food. Now, Iâve dealt with a lotta things since Iâve been here. But thatââshe holds up a fingerââis taking it too damn far. Iâd rather live with you and that ex-con than deal with this.â
Momma stands and kisses Nanaâs forehead. âYouâll be all right.â
Nana waves her off. When Momma leaves, she looks at me. âYou okay, liâl girl? Carlos told me you were in the car with that boy when he was killed.â
âYes, maâam, Iâm okay.â
âGood. And if youâre not, you will be. Weâre strong like that.â
I nod, but I donât believe it. At least not about myself.
The doorbell rings up front. I say, âIâll get it,â put Avaâs doll down, and go inside.
Crap. Chris is on the other side of the door. I wanna apologize to him, but dammit, I need time to prepare.
Weird though. Heâs pacing. The same way he does when we study for tests or before a big game. Heâs afraid to talk to me.
I open the door and lean against the frame. âHey.â
âHey.â He smiles, and despite everything I smile too.
âI was washing one of my dadâs cars and saw you guys pull up,â he says. That explains his tank top, flip-flops, and shorts. âAre you okay? I know you said you were in your text, but I wanted to be sure.â
âIâm okay,â I say.
âYour dadâs store didnât get hit, did it?â he asks.
âNope.â
âGood.â
Staring and silence.
He sighs. âLook, if this is about the condom stuff, Iâll never buy one again.â
âNever?â
âWell, only when you want me to.â He quickly adds, âWhich doesnât have to be anytime soon. Matter of fact, you donât have to ever sleep with me. Or kiss me. Hell, if you donât want me to touch you, Iââ
âChris, Chris,â I say, my hands up to get him to slow down, and Iâm fighting a laugh. âItâs okay. I know what you mean.â
âOkay.â
âOkay.â
Another round of staring and silence.
âIâm sorry, actually,â I tell him, shifting my weight from foot to foot. âFor giving you the silent treatment. It wasnât about the condom.â
âOh . . .â His eyebrows meet. âThen what was it about?â
I sigh. âI donât feel like talking about it.â
âSo you can be mad at me, but you canât even tell me why?â
âIt has nothing to do with you.â
âYeah, it does if youâre giving the silent treatment,â he says.
âYou wouldnât understand.â
âMaybe you should let me determine that myself?â he says. âHere I am, calling you, texting you, everything, and you canât tell me why youâre ignoring me? Thatâs kinda shitty, Starr.â
I give him this look, and I have a strong feeling I look like Momma and Nana right now with their âI know you didnât just say thatâ glare.
âI told you, you wouldnât understand. So drop it.â
âNo.â He folds his arms. âI came all the way down hereââ
âAll the way? Bruh, all way? Down the street?â
Garden Heights Starr is all up in my voice right now.
âYeah, down the street,â he says. âAnd guess what? I didnât have to do that. But I did. And you canât even tell me whatâs going on!â
âYouâre white, okay?â I yell. âYouâre white!â
Silence.
âIâm white?â he says, like heâs just hearing that for the first time. âWhat the fuckâs that got to do with anything?â
âEverything! Youâre white, Iâm black. Youâre rich, Iâm not.â
âThat doesnât matter!â he says. âI donât care about that kinda stuff, Starr. I care about you.â
âThat kinda stuff is part of me!â
âOkay, and . . . ? Itâs no big deal. God, seriously? This is what youâre pissed about?
is why youâre giving me the silent treatment?â
I stare at him, and I know, I , Iâm straight up looking like Lisa Janae Carter. My mouth is slightly open like hers when I or my brothers âget smart,â as she calls it, Iâve pulled my chin back a little, and my eyebrows are raised. Shit, my handâs even on my hip.
Chris takes a small step back, just like my brothers and I do. âIt just . . . it doesnât make sense to me, okay? Thatâs all.â
âSo like I said, you donât understand. Do you?â
Bam. If I am acting like my mom, this is one of her âsee, I told youâ moments.
âNo. I guess I donât,â he says.
Another round of silence.
Chris puts his hands in his pockets. âMaybe you can help me understand? I donât know. But I do know that not having you in my life is worse than not making beats or playing basketball. And you know how much I love making beats and playing basketball, Starr.â
I smirk. âYou call that a line?â
He bites his bottom lip and shrugs. I laugh. He does too.
âBad line, huh?â he asks.
âAwful.â
We go silent again, but itâs the type of silence I donât mind. He puts his hand out for mine.
I still donât know if Iâm betraying who I am by dating Chris, but Iâve missed him so much it hurts. Momma thinks coming to Uncle Carlosâs house is normal, but Chris is the kind of normal I really want. The normal where I donât have to choose which Starr to be. The normal where nobody tells you how sorry they are or talks about âKhalil the drug dealer.â Just . . . normal.
Thatâs why I canât tell Chris Iâm the witness.
I take his hand, and everything suddenly feels right. No flinching and no flashbacks.
âCâmon,â I say. âUncle Carlos should have the burgers ready.â
We go into the backyard, hand in hand. Heâs smiling, and surprisingly I am too.