Iโm luring Brickz inside when it passes out front.
I watch it crawl down the street for the longest time till I get the sense to alert somebody. โDaddy!โ
He looks up from pulling weeds around his bell peppers. โAre they for real with that?โ
The tank resembles the ones they show on the news when talking about war in the Middle East. Itโs the size of two Hummers. The blue- and-white lights on the front make the street almost as bright as it is in daytime. An officer is positioned on top, wearing a vest and a helmet. He points his rifle ahead.
A voice booms from the armored vehicle, โAll persons found violating the curfew will be subject to arrest.โ
Daddy pulls more weeds. โSome bullshit.โ
Brickz follows the piece of bologna I dangle in front of him all the way to his spot in the kitchen. He sits there all content, chomping on it and the rest of his food. Brickz wonโt act crazy as long as Daddyโs home. All of us are kinda like Brickz, really. Daddy being home means Momma wonโt sit up all night, Sekani wonโt flinch all the time, and
Seven wonโt have to be the man of the house. Iโll sleep better too.
Daddy comes in, dusting caked dirt off his hands. โThem roses dying. Brickz, you been pissing on my roses?โ
Brickzโs head perks up. He locks his eyes with Daddyโs but eventually lowers his head.
โI betโ not catch you doing it,โ Daddy says. โOr we gonโ have a problem.โ
Brickz lowers his eyes too.
I grab a paper towel and a slice of pizza from the box on the counter. This is like my fourth slice tonight. Momma bought two huge pies from Salโs on the other side of the freeway. Italians own it, so the pizza is thin, herby (is that a word?), and good.
โYou finished your homework?โ Daddy asks.
โYep.โ A lie.
He washes his hands at the kitchen sink. โGot any tests this week?โ โTrig on Friday.โ
โYou studied for it?โ โYep.โ Another lie.
โGood.โ He gets the grapes out the refrigerator. โYou still got that old laptop? The one you had before we bought you that expensive-ass fruit one?โ
I laugh. โItโs an Apple MacBook, Daddy.โ
โIt damn sure wasnโt the price of an apple. Anyway, you got the old one?โ
โYeah.โ
โGood. Give it to Seven. Tell him to look over it and make sure itโs aโight. I want DeVante to have it.โ
โWhy?โ
โYou pay bills?โ โNo.โ
โThen I ainโt gotta answer that.โ
Thatโs how he gets out of almost every argument with me. I should buy one of those cheap magazine subscriptions and say, โYeah, I pay a bill, and what?โ It wonโt matter though.
I head to my room after I finish my pizza. Daddyโs already gone to his and Mommaโs room. Their TVโs on, and theyโre both lying on their stomachs on the bed, one of her legs on his as she types on her laptop. Itโs oddly adorable. Sometimes I watch them to get an idea of what I want one day.
โYou still mad at me โbout DeVante?โ Daddy asks her. She doesnโt answer, keeping her eyes on her laptop. He scrunches up his nose and gets all in her face. โYou still mad at me? Huh? You still mad at me?โ
She laughs and playfully pushes at him. โMove, boy. No, Iโm not mad at you. Now give me a grape.โ
He grins and feeds her a grape, and I just canโt. The cuteness is too much. Yeah, theyโre my parents, but theyโre my OTP. Seriously.
Daddy watches whatever sheโs doing on the computer, feeding her a grape every time he eats one. Sheโs probably uploading the latest family snapshots on Facebook for our out-of-town relatives. With everything thatโs going on, what can she say? โSekani saw cops harass his daddy, but heโs doing so well in school. #ProudMom.โ Or, โStarr saw her best friend die, keep her in your prayers, but my baby made the honor roll
again. #Blessed.โ Or even, โTanks are rolling by outside, but Sevenโs been accepted into six colleges so far. #HeIsGoingPlaces.โ
I go to my room. Both my old and new laptops are on my desk, which is a mess. Thereโs a huge pair of Daddyโs Jordans next to my old laptop. The yellowed bottoms of the sneakers face the lamp, and a layer of Saran Wrap protects my concoction of detergent and toothpaste thatโll eventually clean them. Watching yellowed soles turn icy again is as satisfying as squeezing a blackhead and getting all the gunk out. Ah- maz-ing.
According to the lie I told Daddy, my homework is supposed to be done, but Iโve been on a โTumblr break,โ a.k.a. I havenโt started my homework and have spent the last two hours on Tumblr. I started a new blogโThe Khalil I Know. It doesnโt have my name on it, just pictures of Khalil. In the first one heโs thirteen with an Afro. Uncle Carlos took us to a ranch so we could โget a taste of country life,โ and Khalilโs looking side-eyed at a horse thatโs beside him. I remember him saying, โIf this thing makes a wrong move, Iโm running!โ
On Tumblr, I captioned the picture: โThe Khalil I know was afraid of animals.โ I tagged it with his name. One person liked it and reblogged it. Then another and another.
That made me post more pictures, like one of us in a bathtub when we were four. You canโt see our private parts because of all the suds, and Iโm looking away from the camera. Ms. Rosalieโs sitting on the side of the tub, beaming at us, and Khalilโs beaming right back at her. I wrote, โThe Khalil I know loved bubble baths almost as much as he loved his grandma.โ
In just two hours, hundreds of people have liked and reblogged the pictures. I know itโs not the same as getting on the news like Kenya said, but I hope it helps. Itโs helping me at least.
Other people posted about Khalil, uploaded artwork of him, posted pictures of him that they show on the news. I think Iโve reblogged every single one.
Funny though: somebody posted a video clip of Tupac from back in the day. Okay, so every video clip of Tupac is from back in the day. Heโs got a little kid on his lap and is wearing a backwards snapback that would be fly now. He explains Thug Life like Khalil said he didโThe Hate U Give Little Infants Fucks Everybody. โPac spells out โFucksโ because that kid is looking dead in his face. When Khalil told me what it meant I kinda understood it. I really understand it now.
I grab my old laptop when my phone buzzes on my desk. Momma returned it earlierโhallelujah, thank you, Black Jesus. She said itโs only in case thereโs another situation at school. I got it back though, donโt really care why. Iโm hoping itโs a text from Kenya. I sent her the link to my new Tumblr earlier. Thought sheโd like to see it since she kinda pushed me to do it.
But itโs Chris. He took note from Seven with his all-caps texts:
OMG!
THISย FRESH PRINCEย EPISODE
MILLโS DAD DIDNโT TAKE HIM MITH HIM
THE ASSHOLE CAME BACK AND LEFT HIM AGAIN NOM HEโS HAVING A BREAKDOMN MITH UNCLE PHIL MY EYES ARE SMEATING
Understandable. Thatโs seriously the saddest episode ever. I text Chris back:
Sorry :(. And your eyes arenโt sweating. Youโre crying, babe.
He replies:
LIES!
I say:
You ainโt gotta lie, Craig. You ainโt gotta lie.
He responds:
DID YOU REALLY USE A LINE FROM FRIDAY ON ME???
So watching nineties movies is kinda our thing too. I text back:
Yep ๐
He replies:
BYE, FELICIA!
I take the laptop to Sevenโs room, phone in hand in case Chris has anotherย Fresh Princeย breakdown. Some reggae chants meet me in the hall, followed by Kendrick Lamar rapping about being a hypocrite. Seven sits on the side of the lower bunk, an open computer tower at his feet. With his head down, his dreads hang loosely and make a curtain in front of his face. DeVante sits cross-legged on the floor. His Afro bobs to the song.
A zombie version of Steve Jobs watches them from a poster on the wall along with all these superheroes andย Star Warsย characters. Thereโs a Slytherin comforter on the bottom bunk that I swear Iโll steal one day. Seven and I are reverse HP fansโwe liked the movies first, then the books. I got Khalil and Natasha hooked on them too. Momma found the first movie for a dollar at a thrift store back when we lived in the Cedar Grove projects. Seven and I said we were Slytherins since almost all
Slytherins were rich. When youโre a kid in a one-bedroom in the projects, rich is the best thing anybody can be.
Seven removes a silver box from the computer and examines it. โItโs not even that old.โ
โWhat are you doing?โ I ask.
โBig D asked me to fix his computer. It needs some new DVD drives. He burnt his out making all them bootlegs.โ
My brother is the unofficial Garden Heights tech guy. Old ladies, hustlers, and everybody in between pay him to fix their computers and phones. He makes good money like that too.
A black garbage bag leans against the foot of the bunk bed with some clothes sticking out the top of it. Somebody put it over the fence and left it in our front yard. Seven, Sekani, and I found it when we came home from the store. We thought it may have been DeVanteโs, but Seven looked inside and everything in it belonged to him. The stuff he had at his mommaโs house.
He called Iesha. She said she was putting him out. King told her to. โSeven, Iโm sorryโโ
โItโs okay, Starr.โ
โBut she shouldnโt haveโโ
โI said itโs okay.โ He glances up at me. โAll right? Donโt sweat it.โ โAll right,โ I say as my phone vibrates. I hand DeVante the laptop
and look. Still no response from Kenya. Instead itโs a text from Maya.
Are u mad @ us?
โWhatโs this for?โ DeVante asks, staring at the laptop.
โDaddy wants you to have it. But he said let Seven check it out first,โ I tell him as I reply to Maya.
Mhat do u think?
โWhat he want me to have it for?โ DeVante asks.
โMaybe he wants to see if you actually know how to operate one,โ I tell DeVante.
โI know how to use a computer,โ DeVante says. He hits Seven, whoโs snickering.
My phone buzzes three times. Maya has responded.
Definitely mad.
Can the 3 of us talk?
Things have been awkward lately.
Typical Maya. If Hailey and I have any kind of disagreement, she tries to fix it. She has to know this wonโt be a โKumbayaโ moment. I reply:
Okay. Mill let u know when Iโm @ my uncleโs.
Gunshots fire at rapid speed in the distance. I flinch.
โGoddamn machine guns,โ Daddy says. โFolks acting like this Iran or some shit.โ
โNo cussing, Daddy!โ Sekani says from the den. โSorry, man. Iโll add a dollar to the jar.โ
โTwo! You said the โg-dโ word.โ
โAโight, two. Starr, come to the kitchen for a second.โ
In the kitchen, Momma speaks in her โother voiceโ on the phone. โYes, maโam. We want the same thing.โ She sees me. โAnd hereโs my lovely daughter now. Could you hold, please?โ She covers the receiver. โItโs the DA. She would like to talk to you this week.โ
Definitely not what I expected. โOh . . .โ
โYeah,โ Momma says. โLook, baby, if youโre not comfortable with it
โโ
โI am.โ I glance at Daddy. He nods. โI can do it.โ
โOh,โ she says, looking from me to Daddy and back. โOkay. As long
as youโre sure. I think we should meet with Ms. Ofrah first though. Possibly take her up on her offer to represent you.โ
โDefinitely,โ Daddy says. โI donโt trust them folks at the DA office.โ โSo how about we see her tomorrow and meet with the DA later on
this week?โ Momma asks.
I grab another slice of pizza and take a bite. Itโs cold now, but cold pizza is the best pizza. โSo two days of no school?โ
โOh, youโre going to school,โ she says. โAnd did you eat any salad while youโre eating all that pizza?โ
โIโve had veggies. These little bitty peppers.โ โThey donโt count when theyโre that little.โ
โYeah, they do. If babies can count as humans when theyโre little, veggies can count as veggies when theyโre little.โ
โThat logic ainโt working with me. So, weโll meet with Ms. Ofrah tomorrow and the DA on Wednesday. Sound like a plan?โ
โYeah, except the school part.โ
Momma uncovers the phone. โSorry for the delay. We can come in on Wednesday morning.โ
โIn the meantime tell your boys the mayor and the police chief to get them fucking tanks out my neighborhood,โ Daddy says loudly. Momma swats at him, but heโs going down the hall. โClaim folks need to act peaceful, but rolling through here like we in a goddamn war.โ
โTwo dollars, Daddy,โ Sekani says.
When Momma hangs up, I say, โIt wouldnโt kill me to miss one day of school. I donโt wanna be there if they try that protest mess again.โ I wouldnโt be surprised if Remy tried to get a whole week off because of Khalil. โI need two days, thatโs all.โ Momma raises her brows. โOkay, one and a half. Please?โ
She takes a deep breath and lets it out slowly. โWeโll see. But not a word of this to your brothers, you hear me?โ
Basically, she said yes without saying yes outright. I can deal with that.
Pastor Eldridge once preached that โFaith isnโt just believing but taking steps toward that belief.โ So when my alarm goes off Tuesday morning, by faith I donโt get up, believing that Momma wonโt make me go to school.
And to quote Pastor Eldridge, hallelujah, God shows up and shows out. Momma doesnโt make me get up. I stay in bed, listening as everybody else gets ready for the day. Sekani makes it his business to tell Momma Iโm not up yet.
โDonโt worry about her,โ she says. โWorry about yourself.โ
The TV in the den blares some morning news show, and Momma hums around the house. When Khalil and One-Fifteen are mentioned, the volume lowers a whole lot and doesnโt go back up until a political story comes on.
My phone buzzes under my pillow. I take it out and look. Kenya finally texted me back about my new Tumblr. She would make me wait hours for a response, and her comment is short as hell:
Itโs aight
I roll my eyes. Thatโs about as close as Iโm gonna get to a compliment from her. I text back.
I love you tooย Her response?ย I know โบ
Sheโs so petty. Part of me wonders though if she didnโt respond last night โcause of drama at her house. Daddy said Kingโs still beating Iesha up. Sometimes he hits Kenya and Lyric too. Kenyaโs not the type to talk about it like that, so I ask:
Everything okay?
The usual, she writes back.
Short, but it says enough. There isnโt much I can do, so I just remind her:
Iโm here if you need me
Her response?ย You better beย See? Petty.
Hereโs the messed-up part about missing school: you wonder what you would be doing if you went. At eight, I figure Chris and I would just be getting to history since itโs our first class on Tuesdays. I send him a quick text.
Monโt be at school today.
Two minutes later, he replies.
Are you sick? Need me to kiss it and make it better? Mink wink
He seriously typed โwink winkโ instead of two wink emojis. Iโll admit, I smile. I write back:
Mhat if Iโm contagious?
He says:
Doesnโt matter. Iโll kiss you anywhere. Mink wink.
I reply:
Is that another line?
He responds in less than a minute.
Itโs whatever you want it to be. Love you Fresh Princess.
Pause. That โLโ word completely catches me off guard, like a player from the other team stealing the ball right as youโre about to make a layup. It takes all of your momentum and you spend a week wondering how that steal slipped up on you.
Yeah. Chris saying โlove youโ is like that, except I canโt waste a week wondering about it. By not answering, Iโm answering, if that makes sense. The shot clock is winding down, and I need to say something.
But what?
By not saying โIโ before โlove you,โ heโs making it more casual. Seriously, โlove youโ and โI love youโ are different. Same team, different players. โLove youโ isnโt as forward or aggressive as โI love you.โ โLove youโ can slip up on you, sure, but it doesnโt make an in- your-face slam dunk. More like a nice jump shot.
Two minutes pass. I need to say something.
Love you too.
Itโs as foreign as a Spanish word I havenโt learned yet, but funny enough it comes pretty easily.
I get a wink emoji in return.
Just Us for Justice occupies the old Taco Bell on Magnolia Avenue, between the car wash and the cash advance place. Daddy used to take me and Seven to that Taco Bell every Friday and get us ninety-nine-cent tacos, cinnamon twists, and a soda to share. This was right after he got out of prison, when he didnโt have a lot of money. He usually watched us eat. Sometimes he asked the manager, one of Mommaโs girlfriends, to keep an eye on us, and he went to the cash advance place next door. When I got older and discovered that presents donโt just โshow up,โ I realized Daddy always went over there around our birthdays and Christmas.
Momma rings the doorbell at Just Us, and Ms. Ofrah lets us in. โSorry about that,โ she says, locking the door. โItโs just me here
today.โ
โOh,โ Momma says. โWhere are your colleagues?โ
โSome of them are at Garden Heights High doing a roundtable discussion. Others are leading a march on Carnation where Khalil was murdered.โ
Itโs weird to hear somebody say โKhalil was murderedโ as easily as Ms. Ofrah does. She doesnโt bite her tongue or hesitate.
Short-walled cubicles take up most of the restaurant. They have almost as many posters as Seven has, but the kind Daddy would love, like Malcolm X standing next to a window holding a rifle, Huey Newton in prison with his fist up for black power, and photographs of the Black Panthers at rallies and giving breakfast to kids.
Ms. Ofrah leads us to her cubicle next to the drive-through window. Itโs kinda funny too โcause she has a Taco Bell cup on her desk. โThank you so much for coming,โ she says. โI was so happy when you called, Mrs. Carter.โ
โPlease, call me Lisa. How long have you all been in this space?โ โAlmost two years now. And if youโre wondering, yes, we do get the
occasional prankster who pulls up to the window and tells me they want a chalupa.โ
We laugh. The doorbell rings up front.
โThatโs probably my husband,โ Momma says. โHe was on his way.โ
Ms. Ofrah leaves, and soon Daddyโs voice echoes through the office as he follows her back. He grabs a third chair from another cubicle and sets it halfway in Ms. Ofrahโs office and halfway in the hall. Thatโs how small her cubicle is.
โSorry Iโm late. Had to get DeVante situated with Mr. Lewis.โ โMr. Lewis?โ I ask.
โYeah. Since Iโm here, I asked him to let DeVante help around the shop. Mr. Lewis needs somebody to look out for his dumb behind. Snitching on live TV.โ
โYouโre talking about the gentleman who did the interview about the King Lords?โ Ms. Ofrah asks.
โYeah, him,โ says Daddy. โHe owns the barbershop next to my store.โ
โOh, wow. That interview definitely has people talking. Last I checked it had almost a million views online.โ
I knew it. Mr. Lewis has become a meme.
โIt takes a lot of guts to be as upfront as he is. I meant what I said at Khalilโs funeral, Starr. It was very brave of you to talk to the police.โ
โI donโt feel brave.โ With Malcolm X watching me on her wall, I canโt lie. โIโm not running my mouth on TV like Mr. Lewis.โ
โAnd thatโs okay,โ Ms. Ofrah says. โIt seemed Mr. Lewis impulsively spoke out in anger and frustration. In a case like Khalilโs, I would much rather that you spoke out in a more deliberate and planned way.โ She looks at Momma. โYou said the DA called yesterday?โ
โYes. Theyโd like to meet with Starr tomorrow.โ
โMakes sense. The case was turned over to their office, and theyโre preparing to take it to a grand jury.โ
โWhat does that mean?โ I ask.
โA jury will decide if charges should be brought against Officer Cruise.โ
โAnd Starr will have to testify to the grand jury,โ Daddy says.
Ms. Ofrah nods. โItโs a bit different from a normal trial. There wonโt be a judge or a defense attorney present, and the DA will ask Starr questions.โ
โBut what if I canโt answer them all?โ โWhat do you mean?โ Ms. Ofrah says.
โIโthe gun in the car stuff. On the news they said there may have been a gun in the car, like that changes everything. I honestly donโt know if there was.โ
Ms. Ofrah opens a folder thatโs on her desk, takes a piece of paper out, and pushes it toward me. Itโs a photograph of Khalilโs black hairbrush, the one he used in the car.
โThatโs the so-called gun,โ Ms. Ofrah explains. โOfficer Cruise claims he saw it in the car door, and he assumed Khalil was reaching for it. The handle was thick enough, black enough, for him to assume it was a gun.โ
โAnd Khalil was black enough,โ Daddy adds. A hairbrush.
Khalil died over a fucking hairbrush.
Ms. Ofrah slips the photograph back in the folder. โItโll be interesting to see how his father addresses it in his interview tonight.โ
Hold up. โInterview?โ I ask.
Momma shifts a little in her chair. โUm . . . the officerโs father has a television interview thatโs airing tonight.โ
I glance from her to Daddy. โAnd nobody told me?โ โโCause it ainโt worth talking about, baby,โ Daddy says.
I look at Ms. Ofrah. โSo his dad can give his sonโs side to the whole world, and I canโt give mine and Khalilโs? Heโs gonna have everybody thinking One-Fifteenโs the victim.โ
โNot necessarily,โ Ms. Ofrah says. โSometimes these kinds of things backfire. And at the end of the day, the court of public opinion has no say in this. The grand jury does. If they see enough evidence, which they should, Officer Cruise will be charged and tried.โ
โIf,โ I repeat.
A wave of awkward silence rolls in. One-Fifteenโs father is his voice, but Iโm Khalilโs. The only way people will know his side of the story is if I speak out.
I look out the drive-through window at the car wash next door. Water cascades from a hose, making rainbows against the sunlight like it did six years ago, right before bullets took Natasha.
I turn to Ms. Ofrah. โWhen I was ten, I saw my other best friend get murdered in a drive-by.โ
Funny howย murderedย comes out easily now.
โOh.โ Ms. Ofrah sinks back. โI didnโtโ Iโm so sorry, Starr.โ
I stare at my fingers and fumble with them. Tears well in my eyes. โIโve tried to forget it, but I remember everything. The shots, the look on Natashaโs face. They never caught the person who did it. I guess it didnโt matter enough. But it did matter.ย Sheย mattered.โ I look at Ms. Ofrah, but I can barely see her for all the tears. โAnd I want everyone to know that Khalil mattered too.โ
Ms. Ofrah blinks. A lot. โAbsolutely. Iโโ She clears her throat. โI would like to represent you, Starr. Pro bono, in fact.โ
Momma nods, and sheโs teary-eyed too.
โIโll do whatever I can to make sure youโre heard, Starr. Because just like Khalil and Natasha mattered, you matter and your voice matters. I
can start by trying to get you a television interview.โ She looks at my parents. โIf youโre okay with that.โ
โAs long as they donโt reveal her identity, yeah,โ Daddy says.
โThat shouldnโt be a problem,โ she says. โWe will absolutely make sure her privacy is protected.โ
A quiet buzzing comes from Daddyโs way. He takes out his phone and answers. The person on the other end shouts something, but I canโt make it out. โAy, calm down, Vante. Say that again?โ The response makes Daddy stand up. โIโm coming. You call nine-one-one?โ
โWhatโs wrong?โ Momma says.
He motions for us to follow him. โStay with him, aโight? We on the way.โ