Chapter no 4 – โ€Œโ€Œโ€Œโ€ŒMonday

All American Boys

โ€ŒMonday

 

 

โ€ŒIf I thought walking away from Paul would make me not think about him, or what he had done for me over the years, I was an idiot. At school on Monday it felt like everyone was talking about Rashad. Whoโ€™d seen him? What was going on? Was he coming back to school? How bad was he hurt? Was he gonna die? When you go to a school as large as ours, itโ€™s impossible to know everyone, but even in a school as large as ours you deย nitely know someone who was friends with Rashad. And of course, it worked the other way around tooโ€”especially when the cop involved was the older brother of your oldest friend.

But what was worse was that everyoneโ€”everyoneโ€”was talking about the video.ย ๎ขe clip that had made the rounds on the Sunday morning news

shows, and then went viral.ย ๎ขe video everyone had seen but me, because there was no way in hell I was putting myself back there, back at Friday night, watching that happen all over again.

Iโ€™d gotten texts all night from Dwyer and a couple of other guys on the team, other kids too, but Iโ€™d ignored them. Iโ€™d clicked my phone to mute. No way was I watching that video. I wanted to erase the whole damn memory from my mind, but I couldnโ€™t because it was like the whole damn high school had been there on the street with meโ€”everybody had seen it.

It was nonstopย Rashad buzzย all day, and by fourth period, as I was making my way up the stairs and Nam yelled to me from behind, I already knew what he was going to say.

โ€œQuinn, man. Wait up.โ€ Nam was another one of the guys on the team, our point guard when English needed a break, and he dodged around a few people to catch up with me. โ€œYo, all that shit that went down with Rashad on Friday, right?โ€

โ€œYeah, man.โ€

๎ขere were a couple of other people in the stairwell watching us.

Listening.

โ€œ๎ขe cop, thatโ€™s Guzzoโ€™s brother, right?โ€ โ€œYeah, man.โ€

โ€œBut like, thatโ€™s got to be weird, right?โ€ โ€œYeah, man. It is. Itโ€™s weird.โ€

โ€œI mean, you wonder why he did it?โ€

โ€œWhat? Steal something from Jerryโ€™s? Are you kidding?โ€

โ€œNo, man. Not Rashad. Iโ€™m talking about Paul Galluzzo. Whyโ€™d he do it?โ€ We pushed open the doors to the thirdย oor and walked down to trig. A couple guys Iโ€™d seen at Jillโ€™s on Friday nodded to me. I nodded back. โ€œWhat

the hell, Nam?โ€ I said. โ€œHe was just doing his job.โ€ โ€œYou kidding? Youโ€™ve seen the video, right?โ€ โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œWhat? You kidding?โ€

We walked into trig together and sat down in our usual seats. Mrs. Erlich sat us in alphabetical order, which put me in the last row, but Nam sat in the middle, next to English. Iย ashed a peace sign to English and he nodded, but only brieย y, then he and Nam started talking quietly. Nam looked back at me once, and I was certain they were talking about Paul and Guzzo, and therefore me too.

Why did it feel like everyone was looking at me? Wanting answers to all those questions from me? Plus, what the hell was wrong with me, anyway? Why wasย Iย the paranoid one? Shouldnโ€™t they all be looking at Guzzo instead?

๎ขen it hit me.ย ๎‚ปe video!ย Was I on it? Had anyone seen me on it?ย ๎ขat must have been why everyone was staring at me like I had four heads.ย ๎ขey

were looking at the dude who just stood there like a pants-shittingย ve-year- old watching everything happen in front of him instead of doing anything about it.

A๎‚er class, Nam and English busted out before I could catch up with them, and I was sure it was going to be a long dayโ€”and practice was going to suck. If nothing else, English and I would usually swap a few words about a party or a game from the weekend, something, anything, but today he was clearly avoiding me. I made my way downstairs, hoping not to get caught in another conversation I didnโ€™t want to have, and when I pushed open the

door to the secondย oor, I was surprised to see Jill by my locker. She was waiting for me! And she was about the only person I wanted to talk to.

โ€œHey,โ€ she said as we hugged hello. โ€œDo you want to grab lunch?โ€

Of course, Iโ€™d have had lunch with her any damn day and every damn day, and a๎‚er we both dumped our books in my locker, we skipped the cafeteria and went around the corner to Burger King.

โ€œBack-to-back burger days,โ€ I said when we found some seats.

โ€œSalad. Seriously. Does anybody actually like it? Multicolored Styrofoam.

No thanks. Iโ€™m a burger girl.โ€

โ€œHell yeah,โ€ I said. โ€œBut these arenโ€™t half as good as Paulโ€™s.โ€

โ€œYeah . . .โ€ She trailed o๏ฌ€ย and we were quiet for a moment while we ate.

But then sheย nally got to it. โ€œHave you seen Guzzo today?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ In fact, honestly, Iโ€™d actually beenย avoidingย him. We werenโ€™t in any classes together, so we usually found each other by one of our lockers or in the hallway to the gym. But not today. Of course, he hadnโ€™t come looking for me, either.

โ€œWhatever. A๎‚er you le๎‚ย yesterday, everybody was talking about how it was unfair the media had to make such a big deal of the situation. โ€˜How are cops supposed to do their jobs if theyโ€™re always under the microscope?โ€™ Rita kept saying. โ€˜Itโ€™s just backward,โ€™ she kept saying. She might be my aunt, but it bugged the hell out of me.โ€

โ€œYeah, but then look at today,โ€ I said, more mopey than I wanted to sound. โ€œAll anybodyโ€™s talking about is that stupid video.โ€

โ€œWell, duh.โ€

I didnโ€™t say anything. I just took another bite of my burger. Jill watched me as I chewed.

โ€œWhat?โ€ Iย nally said with my cheek still full. โ€œYou havenโ€™t watched it, have you?โ€

I took a sip of soda. โ€œNo,โ€ I admitted.

โ€œYou should,โ€ she said. She sounded almost a little pissed at me.

โ€œI was there. I donโ€™t want to see it again,โ€ I argued. โ€œI just keep thinking about how extreme it all was. I mean, I donโ€™t know what Rashad did, but whatever it was, I canโ€™t imagine he needed to get beaten like that. I mean, as far as I know, heโ€™s a guy looking to stay out of trouble.โ€

โ€œYeah. Exactly.โ€ She paused. โ€œAnd did you hear?โ€ she asked with more concern. โ€œHe has internal bleeding.โ€

โ€œJesus.โ€

โ€œHe has to stay in the hospital for like days.โ€ย โ€œJesus.โ€

โ€œYeah. Itโ€™s awful.โ€ I was silent again.

โ€œAnd you were there,โ€ Jill continued. โ€œI canโ€™t believe you were there.โ€

โ€œI was,โ€ I said. But as I was freaking out that she might have been saying sheโ€™d seen me in the video, my pulse suddenly quickened becauseโ€”oh, my God!โ€”Iโ€™d been there with Paul before. Or, sort of been there. Years and years ago. How had I forgotten about that? Paul, with another kid. Marc Blair. โ€œOh, Jesus,โ€ I said.

Jill nibbled on a fry and waited for me to continue.

โ€œIt was almost like that time he kicked the shit out of Marc Blair,โ€ I said. โ€œI mean, that was di๏ฌ€erent. But this thing with Rashad.ย ๎ขat thing with Marc.ย ๎ขeyโ€™re like side by side in my mind right now.โ€

โ€œOh my God,โ€ she said, scrunching up her nose. โ€œI forgot all about that.

Paulie killed that guy.โ€

Not literally. But it was bad. I hadnโ€™t actually seen it. But Iโ€™d seen the a๎‚ermath. And hereโ€™s the thingโ€”Paulโ€™d done it forย me. I felt sick.

Jill tapped the empty plastic Coke bottle against the table nervously. โ€œYou think those are the only two times?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know. I mean, itโ€™s Paul.ย ๎ขis is the same guy Iโ€™ve seen carrying my mom up the front steps, for Godโ€™s sake.โ€ I was thinking about that time Ma got trashed because it was herย rst wedding anniversary without Dad. Paul had been so gentle. Heโ€™d taken the frigging day o๏ฌ€ย just so she didnโ€™t have to spend it alone. โ€œShe was tanked,โ€ I said to Jill. โ€œAnd he helped her home. I remember him putting her down on the couch and pulling the afghan over her.โ€

โ€œPaulieโ€™s always been the good guy.โ€ โ€œ๎ขatโ€™s what I want to think.โ€

โ€œ๎ขatโ€™s what my mother kept saying last night a๎‚er the party, a๎‚er she was done yelling at me for being the worldโ€™s most ungrateful daughter for the hundredth time. โ€˜Paulieโ€™s the good guy,โ€™ she kept saying. โ€˜Why is anyone giving him a hard time?โ€™ But peopleย areย giving him a hard time. I donโ€™t know. I was watching some of the news online. Itโ€™s kind of hard not to wonder. I mean, I wasnโ€™t there, but . . .โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ve seen the video,โ€ I said,ย at.ย ๎ขe fear that I was in it kept buzzing through me.

โ€œYeah, Quinn. Everyoneโ€™s seen it. Itโ€™s crazy.โ€

I swallowed hard andย nally asked. โ€œAm I in it?โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ Jill said. โ€œNo. You must have been too far away. Di๏ฌ€erent angle. I donโ€™t know.โ€

I couldnโ€™t help it. I sighed with relief. โ€œJesus.ย ๎ขank God.โ€ Jill narrowed her eyes. โ€œ๎ขis is not about you, dumbass.โ€

I took a deep breath through my nose and just held it. She was right. Iโ€™d been all worked up about whether or not I was on the video. Rashad was in the video and he was in the hospital. Paul was in the video too. Where was he now? Sitting at his parentsโ€™ house watching all the news about himself on TV? Was he hiding?

โ€œLook,โ€ Jill went on. โ€œI get why youโ€™re worried, but when you see it, well, itโ€™s just crazy.โ€ She hesitated. โ€œI feel so stupid saying this, but I donโ€™t know. It just changes things for me.โ€

โ€œYeah,โ€ I said quietly.

Weย nished the last few fries and had to get back to school. But before we got up, I reached across the table and put my hand on Jillโ€™s. โ€œI know this sounds weird, but I kind of feel like you are the only person I can talk to about this right now.โ€

She turned her hand beneath mine and squeezed back. โ€œI know. Me too.โ€ As we walked back to school, we tried to joke a little about the party on

Friday, but we both knew we were just putting on a show and really thinking about Paul and Rashad. Because as Jill was telling me about the guy who spent half the night puking in the upstairs bathroom because heโ€™d done a keg stand right before Iโ€™d gotten there, I was thinking more about how I spent all this time playing basketball with a bunch of guys who were friends with Rashad and I didnโ€™t know jack-all about himโ€”which made me feel all kinds of asshole-ish.

When we got back, Jill had to rush to get all the way over to the physics lab, but I had econ with Ms. Webber, so I took my time at my locker, playing with my phone, but really, now I was stuck on that time Paul had beaten up Marc Blair.

When Iโ€™d been much younger, and Iย rst started going down to Gooch on my own, there was a guy who lived right next to the park who was a few

years older than me, Marc Blair. Compared to my scrawny ass, he was all muscleโ€”if it didnโ€™t get too cold in the winter, heโ€™d have played shirtless year round, a pit bull charging up and down the court on these squat, beefy legs. I was too young, and he never let me onto the court when he was there. I hated it. He didnโ€™t like me, or any of the kids younger than him either, but he didnโ€™t like me in particular, because while most kids my age played mute around him, I sometimes mouthed o๏ฌ€. Finally, a๎‚er Iโ€™d called him an asshole one too many times, he grabbed me by the collar, dragged me across the court to the chain-link fence, and pressed my face into the wire so hard it le๎‚ย a crisscross hatch of red indented on my cheek and forehead. When he let go, I cried on the spot like a goddamn baby, falling to my hands and knees. He stood back and pointed at me, and I was so scared I puked near the base of the fence. And a๎‚er that, I was always afraid of him. And I began to imagine what it would be like for Paul to beat him up. Take care of him. I thought about it with a kind of freaky hunger. Paul wasnโ€™t a cop yet. He was just the tough guy who took me under his wing. I wanted to see Marc pay. I wanted him to feel a kind of pain that matched my own level of fear whenever I was near him.

And that was the part that was tripping me up now.ย ๎ขe fear. I was making leaps in my mind now, but once Iโ€™d hung on that word โ€œfear,โ€ I remembered the time I was a freshman and I saw a senior walking down the hall. He was black, and I didnโ€™t know his name, but he was wearing an old- school Public Enemy T-shirt:ย Fear of a Black Planetโ€”the bullโ€™s-eye logo poised to eclipse the Earth. Fear.ย ๎ขe T-shirt was right. Like the way Mrs. Cambi talked about our neighborhood now. Fear. Like the way Ma told me to cross the street to the other side of the sidewalk if I was walking home alone and I saw a group of guys walking toward me. Guys.ย ๎ขat wasnโ€™t the word she used.ย ๎ขugs. Fear of thugs. Just like what some people were saying on the news. Rashad looked like a thug.

โ€œ๎ขugโ€ was the word Paul used when I told him about Marc. It was two

weeks a๎‚er Marc had pushed me into the fence. Iย nally told Paul, and Paul found him later that same night. Beat the hell out of him. Paul was banged up too, but he said heโ€™d won.ย Fucking thug wonโ€™t bug you anymore, for real.

I never found out if Marc had needed to go to the hospital that night. But if Paulโ€™s bruises and split lip were the signs of the winner, I had to image that Marc was a whole lot worse.

And now, six years later, I felt as sick as if it had happened yesterday: I was the one who could have put another kid in the hospital all those years ago, just by asking someone to take care of him. It was no di๏ฌ€erent than ordering a hit. Didnโ€™t that makeย meย a thug? Christ sake, Iโ€™d wanted to see someone elseโ€™s blood. To see him bleed.

And so I was thinking about all that when I got to Ms. Webberโ€™s class. A๎‚er she got us settled, she explained that she had a change of plan for the day. Weโ€™d get back to our study of marginal utility another day. Today we were just going to sit quietly and work on a practice section for the next test. Quietly. She emphasized that.ย Quietly.ย But as we got started, it was all too easy to see Ms. Webber twitching, smiling like she was reminding herself to, and anybody could tell she was nervous and just wanted a silent and nonteaching day of class.

Only aboutย ve minutes into it, though, Molly leaned over and asked EJ if heโ€™d been to Jillโ€™s party. Before he even had time to answer, Ms. Webber looked up from the pile of papers she was grading and pointed to EJ.

โ€œEvery time, EJ,โ€ she said abruptly, so loud that she seemed to surprise even herself.

โ€œWhat?โ€ he asked.

โ€œYou.โ€ Ms. Webberโ€™s eyes narrowed and she spoke calmly, maybe too calmly. โ€œEvery time I look up and see something going on, some distraction.

๎ขere you are. Right at the center of it. Do you need to take your test out in the hall?โ€

โ€œGuilty until proven innocent, huh?โ€ He hesitated, but not for long. Nobody likes to be spoken to like heโ€™s a damn child, least of all EJ, and he wasnโ€™t the kind of kid to stay quiet. He didnโ€™t miss a beat. โ€œJust like Rashad.โ€

I swear I could hear Ms. Webber suck in her breath as she tried toย gure out how to answer.

It was awkward for all of us. Especially because EJ was black, just like Rashad, and Ms. Webber was white, just like Paulโ€”like me and like Molly, too. I think EJ was hoping someone else would pipe up, but none of us did, not the white kids, nor any of the kids of color. We all just le๎‚ย him hanging out there untilย nally Ms. Webber found something she wanted to say.

โ€œ๎ขatโ€™s notโ€” Itโ€™s notโ€” You just canโ€™t go conย ating things like that.โ€ย ๎ขen she pointed to the copy of the test she had in front of her. โ€œ๎ขis is for your beneย t,โ€ she squeaked. โ€œWe donโ€™t have time to talk about this right now.โ€ She

took another breath. โ€œIโ€™m sorry. I know thereโ€™s a student from our school who is in the hospital today, but we donโ€™t have the full story. What I do know is that if we are going to be ready for these exams, we have to get down to business today.ย ๎ขey wonโ€™t wait for us. We have to be ready.โ€

โ€œRashad,โ€ Molly said. โ€œWhat?โ€ Ms. Webber said. EJ looked at her, surprised.

โ€œRashad,โ€ Molly said louder. โ€œ๎ขatโ€™s his name. Rashadโ€™s in the hospital.โ€ โ€œI know that,โ€ Ms. Webber said.

โ€œYeah, well,ย that studentย in the hospital isnโ€™t here to take any practice tests today because heโ€™s, you know, beaten to hell,โ€ EJ said.

โ€œRashad,โ€ Molly said again.

EJ smiled. โ€œRashad,โ€ he said louder.

๎ขey both said the name again and looked around for others to join them, but the rest of us sat there in shock.

โ€œAll right, both of you, outside now!โ€ Ms. Webber yelled. She wasย ushed straight down to the base of her neck. She stood up and walked EJ and Molly to the hall, and as they le๎‚ย they kept saying โ€œRashad, Rashad,โ€ until I couldnโ€™t hear them anymore.

And before Ms. Webber came back in, someone in the back whispered, โ€œPaul Galluzzo.โ€

๎ขe other damn name that was all over the news. I turned around to see who it was, but everyone had his or her head down. I was pretty sure itโ€™d been a guy, and I found myself looking at Rahkim and Malcolm and realized I was looking at the only two other black guys in class. I was pissed. I was pissed someone had said it, because I was sure they said it so I would hear, and I was pissed I was taking it to heart, and I was pissed Iโ€™d just done the same goddamn thing and had assumed it had been Rahkim or Malcolm, but I was pissed that I was pissed, because I was also pretty sure it had been one of them.

And mostly I was pissed because I just wanted everyone to shut up about it. Didnโ€™t talking about it just make it worse for all of us? Did everything have to be about Paul and Rashad?

I was still pissed a๎‚er school when I got to the locker room, changed, and headed out to the court. Guys were already shooting and warming up. I stretched and bounced up and down on the sidelines, keeping to myself.

๎ขat wasnโ€™t new. I like to avoid the early shoot-around, the chaos of just throwing the ball up and having it bounce out because someone elseโ€™s shot smacked it away. I liked toย nd my rhythm on my own. I got loose with a ball and worked on my handling, sprinting up and down the sidelines with shadow fake-outs, keeping the legs loose as I popped a zigzag pattern back and forth, working the day out, so I could just concentrate on basketball.

Easier said than done, though. I couldnโ€™t get my head in the zoneโ€”and found myself keeping an eye on English and Shannon Pushcart, and I knew exactly whyโ€”they were tight with Rashad. I watched English spin circles around Tooms, moving so quickly he could have been on skates on ice. Shannon, Nam, Dwyer, and Guzzo and most of the rest of the team chased loose balls that bounced o๏ฌ€ย the rim like popcorn. Nobody else seemed pissed o๏ฌ€, though. Was I the only one looking out at every goddamn interaction on the court through theย lter of Rashad and Paul? I didnโ€™t think so.

Coach gathered us at the bleachers, and theย ๎‚een of us stacked up side by side in theย rst three tiers, as if we were having our photo taken. He paced back and forth as he gave us a speech about how everybody was saying it was our year, the newspapers, people in the league, even TV sports news was covering us. But who was he kidding? He was going crazy about it too.

โ€œNow I know what youโ€™re thinking, boys, youโ€™re thinking about the scouts,โ€ Coach now said. โ€œWho is coming when? Whenโ€™s that guy from UNC coming, right, English? Or is it Georgetown?โ€ He bent toward him and grinned.

English glanced up at Coach and nodded.

โ€œBut you got to block out the bullshit,โ€ Coach said, choosing English again, this time pointing at him.ย ๎ขen he stood up and continued to pace. โ€œIf all you think about are the scouts, all you think about is yourself.ย ๎ขen we donโ€™t win.ย ๎ขen nobody wins.โ€ He paused. โ€œYou listening?โ€ he barked.

โ€œYes, Coach,โ€ we grumbled back, but he just kept on talking, not waiting for our answer.

โ€œEvery day is the same day. We are one team, and we stop the other team from getting easy shots, and we work them hard as hell on the other end so they giveย usย the easy shots. We do that as one team and we do that every day. You hear me?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ we said.

โ€œI saidย you hear me?โ€ โ€œYes!โ€ We all shouted now.

โ€œYou hear me?โ€ he boomed. โ€œYES!โ€

โ€œBring it in.โ€

We jumped out of our seats and circled him, dropping our hands into the pile.

โ€œTEAM on three.ย One, two, three.โ€ โ€œTEAM!โ€

โ€œ๎ขatโ€™s right, bring it back in here.โ€ We were all bouncing and swaying, loose bodies with blood onย re. We got our hands back in the pile.

โ€œMedia shitโ€™s gonna hound us every day. You let me handle that. You just ignore that shit.ย ๎ขereโ€™s all kinds of pressure going on out there, at school, in your lives back home. You leave it all at the door of this gym. In this gym weโ€™re only Falcons, you hear me?โ€

โ€œYES!โ€

โ€œPack it in closer!โ€

We did as we were told.

โ€œYou tell me whose house this is.โ€ โ€œOur house!โ€

โ€œWho are we?โ€ โ€œFALCONS!โ€

โ€œWho?โ€ โ€œFALCONS!โ€

โ€œWho?โ€ โ€œFALCONS!โ€

โ€œTeam on three.ย One, two, three!โ€ โ€œTEAM!โ€

๎ขat is what I wanted to believe too. Iโ€™d walked onto the court and seen the team like this: seven black guys,ย ve white guys, two Latino guys, and one Vietnamese guy. But now, a๎‚er Coachโ€™s rally, a๎‚er we got into three lines and began the weave together, passing and running, passing and running,

ve balls whipping through the air between all this, dodging in and away from each other,ย ๎‚een guys moving like the connected parts of one heavy- breathing animal, I thought that maybe leaving all the shit behind at the

door wasnโ€™t such bad advice. And hell, it wasnโ€™t my problem, really, right? Couldnโ€™t I leave it at the door wherever I went? Maybe we all should have tried to do that. It wasnโ€™t any of our problem. It was a problem of the law, and the law would work it outโ€”isnโ€™t that what it was for, for Godโ€™s sake? To take care of us?

And as I hustled to the sidelines and jumped into a full minute of foot

re, shouting the countdown from sixty with Coach, I kept wondering: Wouldnโ€™t we have been better o๏ฌ€ย thinking that way?ย All of us.ย What did we really gain by talking about thisโ€”Paul, Rashad, what happenedโ€”digging it up and making everyone feel like shit?

Maybe for this one practice we were all thinking only about the team: one unit, one thing, no parts, one whole, no problems, just one goal for one team, none of us thinking about race or racism, all of us color-blind and committed like evangelicals to the word โ€œteam,โ€ just like Coach wanted.

Maybe. But I doubted it.ย ๎ขatโ€™s what Iย wantedย to think, but it wasnโ€™t what was in my mind or gut. Instead I knew there was a problem, and I was beginning to think I was a part of itโ€”whether I was in the damn video or not.

 

 

โ€ŒThereโ€™s this dude named Aaron Douglas. Scratch that.ย ๎ขereย wasย this dude named Aaron Douglas. A painter in the time of the Harlem Renaissance. Mrs. Caperdeen, my art teacher freshman year, turned me on to him during a lesson about artists from that period. Now, I had already been into art, way before Mrs. Caperdeenโ€™s class. Iโ€™ve been drawing since I was likeย ve or six. It came from hanging out with my dad a๎‚er church on Sundays. Well, Spoony and Ma would be there too, but for some reason, when I think back on it, it always seemed like it was just me and Dad, probably because we had our own thing. Our own a๎‚er-church tradition. He would drive the whole family to this diner downtown. Ma would order the eggs and English mu๏ฌƒn, Spoony always got the French toast, and me and Dad both got pancakes.

๎ขen Spoony and Ma would go back and forth trading corny jokes, which I was usually all about, except on Sundays. Sundays was when I butted out and let the two of them have their dry humor because me and Dad, we had pancakes, co๏ฌ€ee (hot chocolate for me), and the newspaper.

Dad, of course, would beย reallyย reading the newspaper. Politics, current events, sports, every single story. But heโ€™d pull the comics section out and hand it to me. As Iโ€™m sure you can tell by now, my old man doesnโ€™t do funny all that well. But me, I loved the comics. All of them. But there was one in particular that struck me more than the others, and the funny thing is, Iโ€™m not really sure why. It deย nitely wasnโ€™t the funniest one. As a matter of fact, most times it wasnโ€™t funny at all. Not to me, at least. It was calledย ๎‚ปe Family Circus.ย A brilliant name for a comic strip, even though the family in the comic wasnโ€™t much like a circus.ย ๎ขey were pretty normal. And the strip wasnโ€™t really a โ€œstrip.โ€ It was just one image. One scene. Not like the others, which were made up of a whole bunch of di๏ฌ€erent boxes, each one telling more of the story. I know you know what I mean. Everybody knows what

comic strips look like. But this one,ย ๎‚ปe Family Circus, was just one picture, in a circle. Not even in a box like normal comics. And it was all about this normal white family. Four kids, two parents, and a grandma. And nothing ever seemed to be happening. Like I remember this one, where the oldest son, Billy, and his younger siblings are watching their grandmother talk on the phone, and it just said,ย Grandmaโ€™s phone is really old-fashioned.ย ๎ขatโ€™s it. See? No punch line. Not funny, and if anything, itโ€™s actually pretty lame. But maybe thatโ€™s why I liked them. Maybe I was fascinated by the fact that it seemed like white families, at least in comics, lived simple, easy lives.ย ๎ขat, and also the imagesโ€”I loved them.ย Lovedย them. And every Sunday a๎‚er church I would tearย ๎‚ปe Family Circusย out to save.

By the time I got to Mrs. Caperdeenโ€™s class, and by the time she taught the

lesson about Aaron Douglas, I had collected like a thousandย Family Circusย clips. I stored them all in a shoe box under my bed and would go through them sometimes, just to pick one out to copy-sketch. And a๎‚er a while, I got better at drawing and started making my own family cartoons in the same style. I called themย ๎‚ปe Real Family Circus,ย and most of them featured a cartoon version of my father shouting at a cartoon version of my brother. But when I saw Mr. Douglasโ€™s work, well,ย ๎‚ปe Family Circusย kinda went out the window. Aaron Douglas was doing a di๏ฌ€erent thing, on a whole other level.

Let me describe what his work looks like. Imagineย ๎‚ปe Lion King. But all the lions are people. Black people. So Simba and Mufasa, are, letโ€™s say, a black king and a prince. Now, imagine that youโ€™re looking at them through the thickest fog ever. So thick that you canโ€™t make out any actually feature on their bodies, but you can still see their silhouettes. So it could be any king. Or any prince. But you can still tell theyโ€™re black.ย ๎ขatโ€™s Aaron Douglasโ€™s work. And theย rst time Mrs. Caperdeen showed us a slide from his seriesย Aspects of Negro Life,ย I knew the kind of art I wanted to start making.

And so I did.ย ๎ขe only di๏ฌ€erence was that I framed mine in a circle, like

๎‚ปe Family Circus.

And thatโ€™s why I needed Ma to make sure she brought me my sketch pad and pencils.

I woke up early, and before doing anything else, before getting up and having a morning pee, or brushing my teeth, or spirometering, I turned the

TV on, muted it, then grabbed my stu๏ฌ€ย and starting sketching on a fresh page. I wasnโ€™t sure what I was drawing.

๎ขatโ€™s not true.

I knewย exactlyย what I was drawing.ย ๎ขe only thing I could. I was going to re-create the scene, what had happened to me, what was playing constantly on the news, on the page.

First the outline. A teenage boy. Hands up. No. Erase. Hands down. No. Hands behind his back. Outline of aย gure behind him. Bigger than he is. Holding him around the neck. No. Not that. Fist in the air. No. Not that either. Hand pushing through the teenage boyโ€™s chest. A building behind him. A store. Person in the doorway. Cheering.

A๎‚er the rough outline I started shading, which was the tricky part. See, in Aaron Douglasโ€™s work, thereโ€™s always this haziness.ย ๎ขis ghostliness to everything. But then thereโ€™s also lots of light. As if light beams just break through certain parts of the paintings. I like that. But in order for me to get that look with pencils, I have to do a lot of shading. A lot of licking my

nger and smearing the pencil lead to make a lighter gray on some parts of the paper, then scratch the pencil over and over again on some other areas to make darker marks. Like I said, tricky.

Clarissa came in in the middle of me rubbing my wet thumb on the paper, adding a little light to a dark area.

โ€œHey, there,โ€ she said, bringing in breakfast. โ€œHow we doing?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m cool,โ€ I said, smirking. Clarissa set the food down. Pancakes and fruit cocktail. She glanced at the pad, the black and gray smudges probably seeming like a crazy mess to her.ย ๎ขen she shot her eyes at the silent TV.

โ€œSo youโ€™re an artist, huh?โ€ she said, her focus now back on my work. โ€œYeah,โ€ I said.

โ€œI knew it.โ€

I looked at her curiously. โ€œOh yeah? How you know?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know. I could just tell.โ€ She could just tell? Yeah right. What she really meant to say was,ย I want to say something, but I donโ€™t know what to say.ย Instead she followed with, โ€œMind if I look?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s just the beginning,โ€ I prefaced, handing her the sketch pad.

Clarissa, who by the way couldnโ€™t have been much older than Spoony, maybe early twenties, white, freckles, bright-red hair, looked at the start of my new piece.

โ€œWhat you gonna call it?โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t know yet,โ€ I said, shrugging. Sheesh. Even that hurt.

โ€œWell, it looks like itโ€™s gonna be good. I mean, not good because I mean, this whole thing, this, I mean . . .โ€ She went bright red but soldiered on. โ€œI just mean it looks like itโ€™s going to be nice. Nice art,โ€ sheย nished, handing the pad back to me.

โ€œYouโ€™ve seen the news,โ€ I said, letting her o๏ฌ€ย the hook.

Clarissa glanced at the TV again.ย ๎ขen back to me. She sighed. โ€œYeah. And . . . I think itโ€™s bullshit.โ€ She put her hand to her mouth, probably realizing that maybe nurses shouldnโ€™t curse. Not that that wasย myย rule, it just seemed like it was probably discussed somewhere in the training that you might wanna refrain from using foul language around patients. I liked it, though, and even thought about responding with aย hell yeah itโ€™s bullshit!ย but

gured that would probably be a little too much. โ€œI think itโ€™s just so . . .โ€

Clarissa couldnโ€™tย nish her statement. I nodded to let her know I understood and that I was having just as much trouble trying toย gure it all out too. But one thing we could agree on was the part about it being bullshit.

To cut some of the discomfort that now surrounded us, Iย ipped through the pages in the sketchbook to show her some of my moreย nished pieces.

โ€œ๎ขis is what a completed piece looks like,โ€ I said, holding the pad up.

๎ขe image was of silhouettes of soldiers. Maybe twenty of them in a line, marching. At the back were babies. Marching. And they progressively got bigger, older, and right in the middle was the ultimate image of a strong soldier. And then they started getting smaller again, becoming a baby again.

โ€œWow,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s beautiful. Why do you frame them in a circle like this? Why not use the whole page?โ€

โ€œBecause, well, the circle changes how you see it. Like, what are we looking through? A telescope? A peephole?ย ๎ขe sight of a gun?โ€

โ€œI see,โ€ she said. โ€œBut how come none of them have faces?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know. Maybe theyโ€™re there, but theyโ€™re not. Like, ghosts. Or invisible people,โ€ I said, instantly thinking that sounded dumb, but hoping Clarissa would just think I sounded artsy.

She nodded, then glanced at the TV again. It was like a magnet. My face was on the screen. โ€œWell listen here, Rashad, the artist,โ€ Clarissa said, low. โ€œDonโ€™t forget what I said about getting up and moving around. Itโ€™s

important.โ€ She wagged herย nger at me playfully. โ€œIโ€™ll come back and check on you later.โ€

I worked on the drawing for a while, until my hand started to cramp up, which is just one of those things that happen when you work with pencil. Seems like some genius wouldโ€™veย gured out how to make pencils out of rubber or something a little so๎‚er, even though thatโ€™s probably a silly thing to even think. But when your hand starts aching in the middle of such a personal piece, thereโ€™s no telling what you might think about.

I put the pencil and pad down and decided to follow Clarissaโ€™s instructions and get up. But not only did I decide to get up, I decided to get the hell out of that empty, boring, beige hospital room. Room 409.

I climbed out of bed, snatched the back of my robe closed, and ventured out into the wildโ€”not so wildโ€”world of the hospital. I hunched over like an old man, protecting, I guess, my ribsโ€”they hurt more when I stood straight. I eased slowly down the hall, each step pricking me inside, as I looked around at the nurses and the doctors and the families standing around the beds of their loved ones in the rooms with opened doors. Phones ringing. Machines beeping. Doors opening and closing. Soda cans dropping in vending machines. Conversations about next steps and tests and surgeries. At the end of the hall was an elevator that happened to open the moment I got to it. A doctor got o๏ฌ€, and I got on for no other reason than that it was there, open, waiting for me.

I hit the โ€œ1โ€ button, and down to theย rstย oor I went. Once the doors opened again, I found myself in the busiest part of the building, the main

oor where people were checking in, doctors and nurses zipping back and forth to the cafeteria, and most importantly, where the gi๎‚ย shop was. It was the only thing remotely interesting. So, destination gi๎‚ย shop was in full e๏ฌ€ect.

It didnโ€™t take long for me to realize that hospital gi๎‚ย shops have terrible gi๎‚s. At least that one did. I mean, really bad gi๎‚s. Oh, so sorry youโ€™re in the hospital having your legs amputated. Know whatโ€™ll make you feel better? A snow globe with a unicorn in it. Oh, so sorry to hear about your cancer. But Iโ€™ve got just the picker-upper. A refrigerator magnet of a lighthouse that saysย SPRINGFIELD. Ainโ€™t no lighthouses in Springย eld, but who cares!

I poked around, looking at all the snacks (they did have good snacks), weird doodads, and whatnots, trying not to make any moves that were too

sudden. It was more of a step-step-step, swivel head to the le๎‚, then to the right. Repeat. Nice and easy.

๎ขe woman behind the counter didnโ€™t seem to be paying me any attention and instead wasย ipping through the newspaper. She had to be in her sixties. I could tell, not because she looked oldโ€”she didnโ€™tโ€”but because she had all those little moles all over her face that only old black ladies get. My grandma had them.

โ€œCan I help you?โ€ she asked, catching me o๏ฌ€ย guard. I threw my hands up and backed away from the assortment of plasticย owers.

โ€œJust lookinโ€™, just lookinโ€™,โ€ I said, wound up.

She zeroed in on me, smirked. โ€œRelax, kid. Iโ€™ve been here long enough to know that no one steals from a hospital gi๎‚ย shop. And if someone did, well, hey, I canโ€™t blame them. We should be giving this stu๏ฌ€ย away.โ€

I put my hands down, embarrassed. โ€œSorry.โ€

โ€œNever apologize when thereโ€™s nothing to be sorry for.โ€ She put her eyes back on the newspaper, licked her thumb, thenย ipped the page. I just stood there like an ass, until she spoke again. โ€œBut seriously, do you need anything?โ€

I almost apologized again, but caught myself. Not sure why I was all sorry sorry sorry, all of a sudden. โ€œNope.โ€

โ€œSo you just came to see me?โ€ she asked sarcastically. And before I could say no, she demanded, โ€œSay yes.โ€

I nodded with a big grin on my face and walked toward the counter. โ€œYes,โ€ followed by the truth. โ€œHonestly, I just needed to get out of my room.โ€

โ€œYeah, I hear ya.โ€ She closed the paper and extended her hand. โ€œWell, Iโ€™m Shirley Fitzgerald.โ€

โ€œRashad.โ€ I squeezed herย ngers lightly.

Mrs. Fitzgerald and I talked a while, but I didnโ€™t tell her anything about why I was in the hospital. At least, not the truth. I told her I got banged up in a car accident.

โ€œWere you wearing your seat belt?โ€ she asked predictably.

โ€œYep, thankfully.โ€ I felt bad lying to an old lady, but I had to.ย ๎ขis was the most comfortable I had felt in a while. Turns out the best gi๎‚ย in the gi๎‚ย shop was the fact that it didnโ€™t have a TV. No news. No fuss.

A๎‚er we got through why I was in the hospital, I asked Mrs. Fitzgerald how long sheโ€™d been working there.

โ€œI donโ€™t even know. Maybe three or four years. Lost track. Wait, let me think. Frank died . . .โ€ She started running through the timeline in her head. โ€œYeah, four years. Mercy, has it been that long?โ€ She put her hand to her neck andย ddled with the gold chain she was wearing. A ring dangled from it. โ€œMy babies are grown. My grandbabies, too. And my husband has gone on to glory, so this is how I spend my time. I volunteer here a few days a week, and on my o๏ฌ€ย days, I go and volunteer down at theย rehouse.โ€

โ€œWhat you do down there?โ€

โ€œIย ghtย res, what you think I do?โ€ she snapped.

โ€œOh,โ€ I said, stunned. I mean, she wasย old. Like, too old to be hosing down blazing houses, thatโ€™s for sure. โ€œ๎ขatโ€™s cool.โ€

โ€œ๎ขatโ€™s a lie, baby,โ€ she said, grinning, andย ipping the newspaper back open, fanning through it until she got to the comics.ย ๎ขe rest of my time with her was spent with me standing at the register and her reading funnies out loud, and either bursting with laughter, or totally shit-talking about how lame some of them were. Eventually, my body, waist up, started broiling on the inside, and I knew it was time to make my way back to the fourthย oor.

โ€œCome back and see me, Rashad. An old lady needs a little company every now and then,โ€ Mrs. Fitzgerald said.

โ€œI will.โ€

 

 

Around four oโ€™clock, I had visitors. But it wasnโ€™t my family this time. It was my boys.

โ€œHousekeeping,โ€ a light voice came from behind the door, a๎‚er a tap. โ€œHousekeeping.โ€ย ๎ขen came the idiotic snicker of only one personโ€”Carlos.

โ€œDonโ€™t come in!โ€ I yelled.

โ€œOh, come on, Rashad. I know how much youย loveย housekeeping,โ€ Carlos said, lowering his voice ten notches below its normal tone. He pushed the door open and English, Shannon, and Carlosย led in, backpacks and all.

โ€œOh man,โ€ Shannon said, instantly becoming serious when he saw me lying in the hospital bed, my face swollen, bruised, bandaged.

โ€œDude!โ€ English came right behind him, shocked. โ€œItโ€™s nothing,โ€ I said.

โ€œNothing?โ€ Now even Carlos was serious.

โ€œCome on, yโ€™all. Iโ€™ve gotten it from my family already. So just chill. Iโ€™m

ne,โ€ I insisted. Carlos leaned against the wall. English and Shannon took the chairs.ย ๎ขeir eyes, caught between bad and worse, bounced from me to the TV.ย ๎‚ปe Rashad Show, on repeat. I tried to bait them back in. โ€œTell me about the party.โ€ Carlos was theย rst to bite, of course.

โ€œYo, guess who almost got some?โ€ Carlos asked, a clownish smile spreading across his face.

โ€œWho, English?โ€ I replied.

Carlos shot me a mean mug. โ€œReally? Really, โ€™Shad?โ€ He lowered the lids of his eyes until they were almost closed, then popped them open wide and bawked, โ€œMe, man!ย ๎ขat dog bark thing totally worked! My game was on a million, man, I swear.โ€

โ€œWho was it?โ€

โ€œSweet, sweet Ti๏ฌ€any Watts.โ€ Carlos closed his eyes and puckered his lips as if he was remembering some passionate kiss.

I glared at Carlos. โ€œMyย Ti๏ฌ€any Watts?โ€

โ€œYep, cartoon-character-looking Ti๏ฌ€any.โ€ Now he wrapped his arms around himself and swayed. Asshole. My heart stopped.ย ๎ขat cop didnโ€™t kill me, but the thought of Carlos getting with Ti๏ฌ€any might be the fatal blow.

Shannon couldnโ€™t hold it in anymore and burst out laughing.ย ๎ขen Carlos

ashed a toothy smile.

โ€œSike, man. You know I wouldnโ€™t do you like that. I know her Da๏ฌ€y Duckโ€“lookinโ€™ ass is the love of your life,โ€ Carlos teased. When dealing with a clown like Carlos, the key is to never let him see youย ustered. Never let him think you take him seriously. Itโ€™s the opposite, come to think of it, of how we were trained to deal with police. With your friends, youย neverย put your hands up. I have to admit, though, Los almost got me with that one.

โ€œBy the way, she asked about you today,โ€ Shannon said. โ€œWord? What she say?โ€ I asked, eager.

โ€œJust that she and a bunch of other people were thinking about coming to visit you,โ€ Shannon explained.

โ€œNo,โ€ I waved my hand, as if I was waving o๏ฌ€ย the thought of Ti๏ฌ€any coming. โ€œNo one can come. I donโ€™t want nobody to see me like this.โ€

โ€œYou sure?โ€ Shannon asked.

โ€œYeah, man. Please. Tell everyone Iโ€™mย ne. But no visitors.โ€ I caught eyes with each of them to make sure they knew I was serious. I didnโ€™t need

anybody else standing in front of me all teary-eyed, or sitting on the edge of the bed feeling awkward. Iโ€™d already had enough of that

When I caught Carlosโ€™s eye, he jumped right back into form. โ€œMan, can I

nishย myย story?! Damn!โ€ he said, all indignant.

โ€œYeah, yeah, go โ€™head,โ€ I said, trying to rush him along. โ€œSo, the girl I got a little closer to was, drumroll please!โ€ โ€œCome on, man,โ€ I hu๏ฌ€ed.

โ€œYou wanna know or not?โ€ โ€œI donโ€™t really care.โ€

โ€œJust give me a drumroll, bro. Cโ€™mon.โ€

I shook my head and started patting on my legs, doing my best to ignore the pricking feeling in my abdomen.

โ€œLatrice Wilkes!โ€ Carlos blurted this out like a dude squatting behind a couch waiting to yellย surpriseย to an unsuspecting birthday boy. โ€œLatrice โ€˜Silkyโ€™ Wilkes.โ€

Now, Latrice Wilkes was no slouch. As a matter of fact, she was pretty much one of the coolest, prettiest girls in our class. And โ€œSilkyโ€ really wasnโ€™t her nickname.ย ๎ขatโ€™s just what we called her among each other, and I have no idea why.

โ€œFor real?โ€ I was honestly surprised. I mean, Latrice was way out of Carlosโ€™s league. โ€œOkay, okay, well, then why was it anย almost?โ€

โ€œBecause . . .โ€

โ€œBecause then Latrice saw English,โ€ Shannon interjected, with perfect timing.

โ€œWhatever! Itโ€™s because the cops came and messed my whole groove up,โ€ Carlos shot back.

I laughed. Hard. Well, as hard as I could without feeling like my head was going to explode, or my ribs were going to rip through my chest. Once I

nally got it under control, I said, โ€œWell, listen, if it makes you feel any better, the cops messed my groove up too.โ€

None of them laughed. Not one of them. You could almost feel the temperature of the room drop, like the way light dims whenever a cloud

oats in front of the sun. I was that cloud. So I changed the subject. โ€œAnyway, what else is going on at school?โ€

โ€œSame olโ€™ shit. You ainโ€™t miss much except for the fact that everybodyโ€™s talkinโ€™ about you,โ€ Shannon explained.

โ€œYeah, youย nally popular,โ€ Carlos mocked. I couldnโ€™tย gure out if he was trying to bring the mood back to a lighter tone, or if he was just trying to make up for getting crushed by Shannon. Or both. โ€œ๎ขisย mightย even land you an actual date with Ti๏ฌ€any.โ€

โ€œPlease, I donโ€™t need no broken nose to get a girl.โ€ย ๎ขe mere mention of it made the bandage itchy. I scratched it super gently.

โ€œTake what you can get, bro. Itโ€™s an easy layup,โ€ Carlos replied.

โ€œToo bad you didnโ€™t have all this layup knowledge when you were trying out for the team, huh?โ€ I owed him a good one for theย I almost got with Ti๏ฌ€anyย joke. Redemption.

โ€œYeah, whatever.โ€

Me and Carlos went back and forth because itโ€™s what we do, but neither one of our hearts was in it.ย ๎ขe jokes lacked punch. No zing. Just . . .ย at. Likeย ๎‚ปe Family Circus.

โ€œForget all that, man. When you getting outta here?โ€ Shannon asked. He stretched his legs, crossed them at the ankles.

โ€œ๎ขe doctor just le๎‚ย right before yโ€™all got here. He said my nose and ribs are healingย ne, but theyโ€™re still watching me because I got some internal bleeding. He said it hasnโ€™t gotten any worse, thank God, and that a๎‚er a few more days I should be good to go.โ€

โ€œSweet,โ€ Carlos said. Meant it. โ€œCool,โ€ Shannon said.

English didnโ€™t say nothing. He just stared at the TV like he was in a trance.

โ€œEnglish, you good?โ€ I asked.

โ€œYeah, yeah,โ€ he said, snapping out of it. โ€œI just . . . I donโ€™t know, man.

๎ขis is crazy. You know thatโ€™s Guzzoโ€™s brother, right?โ€ โ€œGuzzo?โ€

โ€œYeah, big giant goony kid on the team. His brother is the asshole who did this to you. Paul Galluzzo.ย ๎ขatโ€™s why they call Guzzo, Guzzo. Itโ€™s short for Galluzzo,โ€ English explained.

โ€œWait, you tellinโ€™ me the ogre-looking dude on the team, thatโ€™s his brother?โ€ I asked.

โ€œ๎ขatโ€™s exactly what Iโ€™m telling you.โ€ โ€œHas he said anything?โ€

โ€œNot that I know of. Coach Carney wonโ€™t let us talk about it,โ€ English explained. โ€œSays we gotta focus on the team and our season, and thatโ€™s it, and to leave all this stu๏ฌ€ย at the door. Said heโ€™d bench anybody who brought it on the court.โ€

โ€œAnd you canโ€™t a๏ฌ€ord to be benched, dude. Especially since scouts are checkinโ€™ for you, hard,โ€ I said.

โ€œYeah. But itโ€™s just nuts.โ€

โ€œYo, what I wanna know is, what the hell happened,โ€ Shannon jumped in. โ€œSince Carneyโ€™s made it clear that I ainโ€™t allowed to ask Guzzo, let me hear your side of the story. I mean, English told us what Berry said, but I wanna hear it from you.โ€

๎ขat was my cue. I knew English had already heard most of it from his sister, but I still gave the fellas the play-by-play, hoping that somewhere in it, it would make sense. But it didnโ€™t. I grabbed a bag of chips, reached into my bag to grab my cell phone, a random lady tripped over me, and the next thing I know I was getting pressed out by the o๏ฌƒcer.ย ๎ขere really wasnโ€™t anything else to the story as far as I was concerned.ย ๎ขe cop and the clerk thought I was stealing and wouldnโ€™t give me a chance to explain.

โ€œDid you resist?โ€ Shannon asked.

โ€œWhy would I resist? Cโ€™mon, man, you know I was shook. Ainโ€™t no way I was resisting,โ€ I said. โ€œAnd when he got me on the ground, thatโ€™s when he really started going in. Like, every time he hit me, I would moveโ€”who wouldnโ€™tโ€”itย HURT!โ€”and then heโ€™d tell me to stop moving. But I couldnโ€™t help it.โ€

โ€œShit,โ€ Carlos said, his eyes full wide.

English was staring at the TV again, his face now becoming aย st, tight and angry.ย ๎ขe room was stiย ing with a weird tension, this strange sadness, whenย nally Shannon spoke up. โ€œEnglish.โ€

English didnโ€™t respond. โ€œEnglish!โ€ Shannon snapped.

โ€œWhat?โ€ he snapped back. And thatโ€™s when I could tell this whole thing was getting to him. It was stirring him up inside in a way that I had never seen before. I mean, this was English Jones, the coolest dude on Earth.

English braced his hands on either arm of the chair, and for a second I thought he was going to throw it. But then he drew a deep breath and simply said, โ€œWe got practice. We gotta go.โ€

He looked from Shannon to me, his eyes slightly glassy. He stood up.

Shannon stood with him.

โ€œYo, what we gonna do about this?โ€ Carlos asked, watching English and Shannon grab their bags. He ran hisย nger along his nose like he always did when he was thinking of something he probably shouldnโ€™t have been thinking of.

โ€œI donโ€™t know. But Iโ€™m telling you, Coach ainโ€™t playing,โ€ Shannon said,

inging his bag up on his shoulder. โ€œJust leave it alone,โ€ I said.

โ€œNaw, man, we gotta do something, โ€™Shad. I mean, maybe you canโ€™t do nothing, โ€™cause you in here. And maybe these two canโ€™t do nothing because of punk-ass Carney. But Iโ€™m not on the team.โ€ Carlos caught my eye and stopped me from cracking a basketball joke before I could even open my mouth. โ€œSoย Iย can do something.ย Somebodyย gotta do something.โ€

โ€œLos, just donโ€™t be stupid,โ€ English warned, coming over to the bed and

giving meย ve.

Carlos didnโ€™t respond. Instead he just asked me if I wanted him to stay.

Carlos didnโ€™t have anywhere to be. He never had anywhere to be.

โ€œNaw, Iโ€™m cool,โ€ I said. โ€œIโ€™m sure my parents and my crazy brother will be by here later.โ€

โ€œWord,โ€ from Carlos.

โ€œWeโ€™ll be back tomorrow,โ€ from Shannon, reaching out for my hand.

Only a nod from English. And then it was just me, the TV, and the shadows, fades, and outlines of my art again. I thought about the fact that English and Shannon wanted to do something but were afraid to break the rules. I understood. I did. But the look on Englishโ€™s face was a look I had never seen. He was struggling with it all. Maybe it was what happened to me that was eating him. Or maybe it was the fact that he felt like he couldnโ€™t do anything about it. And then I thought about what kind of ridiculous plan Carlos might cook up. I just didnโ€™t want him to put himself in some stupid situation where he got his ass beat too. Even though I hadnโ€™t had to put myself in any โ€œsituationโ€ for that to happen.

I glanced at the TV. My face, again. Wasnโ€™t there anything else going on? I mean, there had to be something going on in the Middle East, right? Celebrity drama? Anything besides me?

I wasnโ€™t sure what to do about any of it, or if I even wanted anyone else to do anything on my behalf.ย ๎ขe looks on my friendsโ€™ and familyโ€™s facesโ€”it hurt me to see them that way. Especially knowing that it hurt them to see me this way. I didnโ€™t deserve this. None of us did. None of us.

I grabbed the remote, pointed it at the screen, and hit the power button to click it o๏ฌ€. But it didnโ€™t go o๏ฌ€. I clicked it again. Nothing. I slapped the remote in my palm a few times, because thatโ€™s what you do to, I guess, activate the batteries. Clicked again. Nothing.

Now, split screen. Galluzzoโ€™s face, next to mine. Him in his uniform. Me in mine. But we were not the same. We wereย notย the same.

I didnโ€™t deserve this.ย Click.ย Nothing.ย Click.ย Nothing. My eyes began to well up and my throat suddenly felt scorched, as if I had swallowedย re.ย Click. Click. Click. Click.ย Nothing. Fuck.ย Click.ย Please. Please turn o๏ฌ€.ย Please.ย His face. Next to mine. I didnโ€™t do nothing. I didnโ€™t do nothing. His face. Made my bones hurt. A scrapy feeling in the marrow stu๏ฌ€. Fuck.ย Click.ย Nothing.ย Click.ย NOTHING. I couldnโ€™t take it anymore, and before I did something stupid like throw the remote across the room, smashing it into hundreds of plastic pieces that I wish were Galluzzoโ€™s face, I leaped from the bed in a panic and yanked the cord from the wall, which turns out was also stupid because it felt like giant hands that I couldnโ€™t see were ripping me in half.

But the TV was o๏ฌ€. My face next to his, gone. Finally.

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