best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 16

The Hate U Give

Ms. Ofrah arranged for me to do an interview with one of the national news programs todayโ€”exactly a week before I testify before the grand jury next Monday.

Itโ€™s around six oโ€™clock when the limo that the news program sent arrives. My familyโ€™s coming with me. I doubt my brothers will be interviewed, but Seven wants to support me. Sekani claims he does too, but really heโ€™s hoping heโ€™ll get โ€œdiscoveredโ€ somehow with all those cameras around.

My parents told him about everything. As much as he gets on my nerves, it was sweet when he gave me a handmade card that said โ€œSorry.โ€ Until I opened it. There was drawing of me crying over Khalil, and I had devil horns. Sekani said he wanted it to be โ€œreal.โ€ Little asshole.

We all head out to the limo. Some neighbors watch curiously from their porches and yards. Momma made all of us, including Daddy, dress up like weโ€™re going to Christ Templeโ€”not quite Easter formal but not โ€œdiverse churchโ€ casual. She says weโ€™re not gonna have the news people thinking weโ€™re โ€œhood rats.โ€

So as weโ€™re walking to the car, sheโ€™s all, โ€œWhen we get there, donโ€™t touch anything and only speak when somebody speaks to you. Itโ€™s โ€˜yes, maโ€™amโ€™ and โ€˜yes, sir,โ€™ or โ€˜no, maโ€™amโ€™ and โ€˜no, sir.โ€™ Do I make myself clear?โ€

โ€œYes, maโ€™am,โ€ the three of us say.

โ€œAll right now, Starr,โ€ one of our neighbors calls out. I get that just about every day in the neighborhood now. Wordโ€™s spreading around the Garden that Iโ€™m the witness. โ€œAll right nowโ€ is more than a greeting. Itโ€™s a simple way people let me know they got my back.

The best part though? Itโ€™s never โ€œAll right now, Big Mavโ€™s daughter who works in the store.โ€ Itโ€™s always Starr.

We leave in the limo. I drum my fingers on my knee as I watch the neighborhood pass by. Iโ€™ve talked to detectives and the DA, and next

week Iโ€™ll talk to the grand jury. Iโ€™ve talked about that night so much I can repeat it back in my sleep. But the whole world will see this.

My phone vibrates in my blazer pocket. A couple of texts from Chris.

My mom wants to know what color your prom dress is. Something about the tailor needs to know ASAP.

Oh, shit. The Junior-Senior Prom is Saturday. I havenโ€™t bought a dress. With all this Khalil stuff, Iโ€™m not sure I wanna go. Momma said I need to get my mind off things. I said no. She gave me โ€œthe look.โ€

So Iโ€™m going to the damn prom. This dictatorship sheโ€™s on? Not cool.

I text Chris back.

Uh . . . light blue?

He responds:

You donโ€™t have a dress yet?

Iโ€™ve got plenty of time, I write back.ย Just been busy.

Itโ€™s true. Ms. Ofrah prepared me for this interview every day after school. Some days we finished early, and I helped out around Just Us for Justice. Answered phones, passed out flyers, anything they needed me to do. Sometimes I listened in on their staff meetings as they discussed police reform ideas and the importance of telling the community to protest not riot.

I asked Dr. Davis if Just Us could have a roundtable discussion at Williamson like they do at Garden High. He said he didnโ€™t see the need.

Chris replies to my prom text:

Okay, if you say so Btw Vante says sup.

About to kill him on Madden

He needs to stop calling me Bieber tho

After all that โ€œwhite boy trying to be blackโ€ shit DeVante said about Chris, lately heโ€™s at Chrisโ€™s house more than I am. Chris invited him over to play Madden, and all of a sudden theyโ€™re โ€œbros.โ€ According to DeVante, Chrisโ€™s massive video game collection makes up for his whiteness.

I told DeVante heโ€™s a video game thot. He told me to shut up. Weโ€™re cool like that though.

We arrive at a fancy hotel downtown. A white guy in a hoodie waits under the awning leading up to the door. He has a clipboard under his arm and a Starbucks cup in his hand.

Still, he somehow manages to open the limo door and shake our hands when we get out. โ€œJohn, the producer. Itโ€™s a pleasure to meet you.โ€ He shakes my hand a second time. โ€œAnd let me guess, youโ€™re Starr.โ€

โ€œYes, sir.โ€

โ€œThank you so much for having the bravery to do this.โ€

Thereโ€™s that word again. Bravery. Brave peoplesโ€™ legs donโ€™t shake. Brave people donโ€™t feel like puking. Brave people sure donโ€™t have to remind themselves how to breathe if they think about that night too hard. If bravery is a medical condition, everybodyโ€™s misdiagnosed me.

John leads us through all of these twists and turns, and Iโ€™m so glad Iโ€™m wearing flats. He canโ€™t stop talking about how important the interview is and how much they wanna get the truth out there. Heโ€™s not exactly adding to my โ€œbravery.โ€

He takes us to the hotel courtyard, where some camera operators and other show people are setting up. In the middle of the chaos, the interviewer, Diane Carey, is getting her makeup done.

Itโ€™s weird seeing her in the flesh and not as a bunch of pixels on TV. When I was younger, every single time I spent the night at Nanaโ€™s house she made me sleep in one of her long-ass nightgowns, say my bedtime prayers for at least five minutes, and watch Diane Careyโ€™s news report so I could be โ€œknowledgeable of the world.โ€

โ€œHi!โ€ Mrs. Careyโ€™s face lights up when she sees us. She comes over, and I gotta give the makeup lady props โ€™cause she follows her and keeps working like a pro. Mrs. Carey shakes our hands. โ€œDiane. So nice to meet you all. And you must be Starr,โ€ she says to me. โ€œDonโ€™t be nervous. This will simply be a conversation between the two of us.โ€

The whole time she talks, some guy snaps photos of us. Yeah, this will be a normal conversation.

โ€œStarr, we were thinking we could get shots of you and Diane walking and talking around the courtyard,โ€ John says. โ€œThen weโ€™ll go up to the suite and do the conversations between you and Diane; you, Diane, and Ms. Ofrah; and finally you and your parents. After that, weโ€™ll be all set.โ€

One of the production people mics me up as John gives me a rundown of this walk and talk thing. โ€œItโ€™s only a transitional shot,โ€ he says. โ€œSimple stuff.โ€

Simple my ass. The first time, I practically power-walk. The second time, I walk like Iโ€™m in a funeral processional and canโ€™t answer Mrs. Careyโ€™s questions. I never realized walking and talking required so much coordination.

Once we get that right, we take an elevator to the top floor. John leads us to a huge suiteโ€”seriously, it looks like a penthouseโ€” overlooking downtown. About a dozen people are setting up cameras and

lighting. Ms. Ofrahโ€™s there in one of her Khalil shirts and a skirt. John says theyโ€™re ready for me.

I sit in the loveseat across from Mrs. Carey. Iโ€™ve never been able to cross my legs, for whatever reason, so thatโ€™s out the question. They check my mic, and Mrs. Carey tells me to relax. Soon, the cameras are rolling.

โ€œMillions of people around the world have heard the name Khalil Harris,โ€ she says, โ€œand theyโ€™ve developed their own ideas of who he was. Who was he to you?โ€

More than he may have ever realized.ย โ€œOne of my best friends,โ€ I say. โ€œWe knew each other since we were babies. If he were here, heโ€™d point out that he was five months, two weeks, and three days older than me.โ€ We both chuckle at that. โ€œBut thatโ€™s who Khalil isโ€”was.โ€

Damn. It hurts to correct myself.

โ€œHe was a jokester. Even when things were hard, heโ€™d somehow find some light in it. And he . . .โ€ My voice cracks.

I know itโ€™s corny, but I think heโ€™s here. His nosy ass would show up to make sure I say the right things. Probably calling me his number one fan or some annoying title that only Khalil can think of.

I miss that boy.

โ€œHe had a big heart,โ€ I say. โ€œI know that some people call him a thug, but if you knew him, youโ€™d know that wasnโ€™t the case at all. Iโ€™m not saying he was an angel or anything, but he wasnโ€™t a bad person. He was a

. . .โ€ I shrug. โ€œHe was a kid.โ€ She nods. โ€œHe was a kid.โ€ โ€œHe was a kid.โ€

โ€œWhat do you think about people who focus on the not-so-good aspect of him?โ€ she asks. โ€œThe fact that he may have sold drugs?โ€

Ms. Ofrah once said that this is how I fight, with my voice. So I fight.

โ€œI hate it,โ€ I say. โ€œIf people knew why he sold drugs, they wouldnโ€™t talk about him that way.โ€

Mrs. Carey sits up a little. โ€œWhy did he sell them?โ€

I glance at Ms. Ofrah, and she shakes her head. During all our prep meetings, she advised me not to go into details about Khalil selling drugs. She said the public doesnโ€™t have to know about that.

But then I look at the camera, suddenly aware that millions of people will watch this in a few days. King may be one of them. Although his threat is loud in my head, itโ€™s not nearly as loud as what Kenya said that day in the store.

Khalil would defend me. I should defend him. So I gear up to throw a punch.

โ€œKhalilโ€™s mom is a drug addict,โ€ I tell Mrs. Carey. โ€œAnybody who knew him knew how much that bothered him and how much he hated drugs. He only sold them to help her out of a situation with the biggest drug dealer and gang leader in the neighborhood.โ€

Ms. Ofrah noticeably sighs. My parents have wide eyes.

Itโ€™s dry snitching, but itโ€™s snitching. Anybody who knows anything about Garden Heights will know exactly who Iโ€™m talking about. Hell, if they watch Mr. Lewisโ€™s interview they can figure it out.

But hey, since King wants to go around the neighborhood lying and saying Khalil repped his set, I can let the world know Khalil was forced to sell drugs for him. โ€œHis momโ€™s life was in danger,โ€ I say. โ€œThatโ€™s the only reason heโ€™d ever do something like that. And he wasnโ€™t a gang memberโ€”โ€

โ€œHe wasnโ€™t?โ€

โ€œNo, maโ€™am. He never wanted to fall into that type of life. But I guessโ€”โ€ I think about DeVante for some reason. โ€œI donโ€™t understand how everyone can make it seem like itโ€™s okay he got killed if he was a drug dealer and a gangbanger.โ€

A hook straight to the jaw. โ€œThe media?โ€ she asks.

โ€œYes, maโ€™am. It seems like they always talk about what he may have said, what he may have done, what he may not have done. I didnโ€™t know a dead person could be charged in his own murder, you know?โ€

The moment I say it, I know itโ€™s my jab to the mouth.

Mrs. Carey asks for my account of that night. I canโ€™t go into a lot of detailsโ€”Ms. Ofrah told me not toโ€”but I tell her we did everything One- Fifteen asked and never once cussed at him like his father claims. I tell her how afraid I was, how Khalil was so concerned about me that he opened the door and asked if I was okay.

โ€œSo he didnโ€™t make a threat on Officer Cruiseโ€™s life?โ€ she questions. โ€œNo, maโ€™am. His exact words were, โ€˜Starr, are you okay?โ€™ That was

the last thing he said, andโ€”โ€

Iโ€™m ugly crying, describing the moment when the shots rang out and Khalil looked at me for the last time; how I held him in the street and saw his eyes gloss over. I tell her One-Fifteen pointed his gun at me.

โ€œHe pointed his gun at you?โ€ she asks.

โ€œYes, maโ€™am. He kept it on me until the other officers arrived.โ€

Behind the cameras, Momma puts her hand over her mouth. Fury sparks in Daddyโ€™s eyes. Ms. Ofrah looks stunned.

Itโ€™s another jab.

See, I only told Uncle Carlos that part.

Mrs. Carey gives me Kleenex and a moment to get myself together. โ€œHas this situation made you fearful of cops?โ€ she eventually asks.

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ I say truthfully. โ€œMy uncleโ€™s a cop. I know not all cops are bad. And they risk their lives, you know? Iโ€™m always scared for my uncle. But Iโ€™m tired of them assuming. Especially when it comes to black people.โ€

โ€œYou wish that more cops wouldnโ€™t make assumptions about black people?โ€ she clarifies.

โ€œRight. This all happened becauseย heโ€โ€”I canโ€™t say his name

โ€”โ€œassumed that we were up to no good. Because weโ€™re black and because of where we live. We were just two kids, minding our business, you know? His assumption killed Khalil. It couldโ€™ve killed me.โ€

A kick straight to the ribs.

โ€œIf Officer Cruise were sitting here,โ€ Mrs. Carey says, โ€œwhat would you say to him?โ€

I blink several times. My mouth waters, but I swallow. No way Iโ€™m gonna let myself cry or throw up from thinking about that man.

If he were sitting here, I donโ€™t have enough Black Jesus in me to tell him I forgive him. Instead Iโ€™d probably punch him. Straight up.

But Ms. Ofrah says this interview is the way I fight. When you fight, you put yourself out there, not caring who you hurt or if youโ€™ll get hurt.

So I throw one more blow, right at One-Fifteen. โ€œIโ€™d ask him if he wished he shot me too.โ€

You'll Also Like