โOn Tuesday morning, everything changedโfor real.
Spray painted in wide, loopy neon-blue letters like a script of stars so bright they glowed in the day, and stretched so large it covered the entire sidewalk at the foot of the front stairs, was a gra๏ฌti tag. A tag so huge every single student, teacher, administrator, sta๏ฌย member, parent, and visitor to Springย eld Central had to step over or around, and could not miss:
RASHAD IS ABSENT AGAIN TODAY
Everybody was staring at it, taking photos of it, posing with it, and deย nitely talking about it. As soon as I saw it, I felt a ball of shredded nerves unwind and whip around my stomach.ย Oh shit!ย And myย rst thought was, probably just like everyone elseโs: Whoโd done it?
Atย rst you could tell the teachers were deliberately avoiding discussing it, but it was pretty much all we (the students) talked about between classes or at lunch. I say โwe,โ but I was still trying to take Coachโs advice and ignore all distractions, so when it came up, I tried not to engage. But it was frigging impossible. At lunch, kids were taking food from the cafeteria and heading out to the front steps, eating and talking while sitting near the giant gra๏ฌti tag, but I avoided that and looked for some of the guys on the team in the cafeteria. Weโd always sat together at lunch, only in fragments, never the whole team together, but with the impromptu gathering out front, everything had shi๎ed.
Only Guzzo, Dwyer, Hales, and Reegan sat insideโthe four other white guys on the team. Guzzo looked up and saw me in line. He waved me over to their table, and although heโd ignored me all day yesterday, his interest now kind of ticked me o๏ฌ. See, that wasnโt Guzzoโs style. Usually, heโd let
others call the shots. But today he was too insistent, beckoning me like he was some kind of Maย a boss and I was supposed to hustle right over to him. And besides, once I had my sad, soupy Sloppy Joe on the tray and looked out over the rest of the cafeteria, I realized it wasnโt just the basketball team divided up this way today. Paul had once told me about how the cityโs demographics had changed over the last thirty years, and why that mattered for his job. โItโs harder to be a cop here now than it used to be,โ heโd said, and his facts had been so particular I couldnโt help but think of them now as I looked across the deserted tables in the half-empty room.ย ๎ขirty years ago the city had been 84 percent white, Paulโd told me. Now, not counting Hispanics and Latinos who identiย ed as white, Springย eld was 37 percent white. Strange how some of that stu๏ฌย just sticks to you, especially the shit that suddenly feels so real. Because right now, only about half the high school who had lunchย ๎h period sat in the cafeteria that day.ย ๎ขe white
half.
I would have stood there like an idiot, feeling those nerves in my stomach start to spin again, if I hadnโt felt a push from behind.
โHey,โ Jill said. โHey.โ
โWhere you sitting?โ
It was probably theย rst time since Iโd been in high school that Iโd ever been asked that question. Iโm not a total fucknut. I know for some people, especially at the beginning of high school, where to sit and who youโll sit with is a big deal. Not everyone feels like they automatically belong. Not everyone feels like wherever they go theyโll be welcome. But I did. Iโd always just walked into the cafeteria and sat wherever the hell I wanted. In fact, I did that pretty much anywhere I went unless the seats were already assigned.
โUm.โ I paused. โNot sure.โ
โYeah, but you know whatโs weird? I want to go sit outside.โ
โMe too,โ I said, only realizing when she had said it that thatโs what I reallyย didย want to do. โBut would that be weird?โ
โI justย saidย it was weird! But I donโt think anyone out there would mind.โ Huh. I hadnโt thought of it like that. Iโd been thinking of the guys inside.
โNo,โ I said, nodding to Guzzoโs table. โ๎ขose dudes.โ
Guzzo probably realized what we were talking about, because he got up and walked over to us. โYou two going to stand there all day? Come sit
down.โ And once he had come over, it felt impossible not to follow him, so we did.
Dwyer, Hales, and Reegan got lost in a conversation about their fantasy basketball league teams while Guzzo pressed us. โSeriously,โ he said. โYou two are spending a lot of time together.โ
Jill laughed. โYou guys are all family to me.โ
โQuinnโs not,โ Guzzo said, looking at me, but in an odd way. โNot really.
Or is he?โ
โIโm right here, man. No need to be all cold about it.โ โIโm not the one who ran away from the barbecue.โ โJesus. Seriously? Youโre crying about that?โ
He opened his mouth to say something more, but Jill interrupted him. โGuys, youโve been at it since Friday. Iโve seen it.โ
๎ขis shut us both up. I bit into my hash brown, but it was so greasy, I just ended up shoving the whole thing in my mouth. While I chewed, Guzzo gave me that look again. โQuinnโs the one acting weird.โ
โCome on,โ Jill said. โItโs not only him. You are too. But why not? I would be too if I had been there and seen Paul whaling on Rashad.โ
โWhat the fuck?โ Guzzo threw his plastic fork down on his tray. โShut up about that.โ Hales glanced over skeptically, and Guzzo leaned in close to us. โDid you tell anyone else?โ he asked her.
โ๎ขat you were there?โ she said. โNo. Is it a secret?โ
โOf course!โ Guzzo said. His hand clenched into aย st. โYou told her?โ he said to me. โAre you fucking demented? Nobody should know about this. Not even my brother.โ
โWhat?โ I said. โMan, we arenโt in any trouble. We didnโt do anything.โ โYou really are stupid,โ Guzzo said, picking his fork back up and pointing
it at me. Red bits of Sloppy Joe dripped from the tines. โDonโt tell anyone else we were there.ย ๎ขe force, theyโre worried for my brother.ย ๎ขeyโve given him some time so he can stay o๏ฌย the streets.ย ๎ขereโs probably going to be a lawsuit because thereโs always a lawsuit these days. Look, whatever, how the hell is he supposed to do what he needs to do if he gets sued for just doing his job?โ
โListen to you!โ Jill exclaimed, leaning in now too, agitated. โYou sound like our mothers. But tell that to Rashadโs family. Rashadโsย absentย today. Again. I mean, I know that guy too.โ
Guzzo looked disgusted. โYou donโt know him,โ he said, waving her o๏ฌ. โYou just like thinking you know him because now heโs a celebrity. A celebrity-victim, or whatever.ย ๎ขatโs bullshit.โ He gestured to the doors behind us. โYou need to get outside before next period? Was that where you were headed before I called you over?โ
I glanced at Jill. โDude,โ I said to Guzzo. โCome on. It doesnโt have to be like that.โ
โIt already is like that, asshole,โ Guzzo said. He pushed his chair back and stood up. โYouย know. Paul was just trying to help someone inside the store.
๎ขatโs what he says. And then thereโs the whole stopping people from stealing thing.โ He was breathing heavy. Fighting toย nd words. โAnd, by the way,โ heย nally said, pointing at me, โPaulโs staying with us, you know. If youโre curious. Remember him? My brother?ย ๎ขe dude who fuckingย raisedย you. Feel free to drop by. I mean, you are likeย family. Isnโt he, Jill?โ
For once in her life, Jill didnโt shoot back the last word, and Guzzo stalked o๏ฌย without looking back at either of us. I was about to get up too, because I was sick of it allโI hadnโt started it, why the hell did I have to be in the middle of it? But as I pushed my own chair back, Dwyer grabbed my arm.
โListen, man,โ he said. โYouโve got toย x this. We got to get the team straight. Weโve got scouts coming, man.ย ๎ขis is too big.ย ๎ขis is our life, man. Our futures. Donโt be a dick about it. Like Coach said. Leave it at the door. All of it, you know?โ
What he said stuck with me for the rest of the day. Yeah, I was thinking about the damn scouts tooโof course I was!ย ๎ขe kind of doors a scoutโs praise might open.ย ๎ขe kinds of scholarships a kid like me needed when Ma was working night shi๎s over at Uline. I knew it was my future, and Dwyerโs, and everyone elseโs, too. How could I not? Itโd been on my mind in one way or another since Iโd started working out with Paulโback when he was taller than me, not just bigger,ย icking his wrists and teaching me how to sneak a crossover right in front of my opponent.ย ๎ขose hands.ย ๎ขere was so much history slapping hands and saying yes to Paul.
As what Dwyer had said to me replayed again and again in my head, it began to say something else, too. Like maybe I was hearing what Dwyer was saying under his breath, between his words. He almost sounded scared, or not scared, but nervous. It wasnโt Dwyer. It was fear. It seemed to follow me
like my shadow these days, but I recognized now how it was trailing everyone else, too.
At practice, Coach had us running like crazy. Hales got so winded he puked in the trash can by the door to the hallway. โBoot and rally,โ Reegan yelled to him. He wanted to laugh but he was too out of breath.ย ๎ขe rest of us crouched with our hands on our knees, or folded on our heads, trying to avoid cramps, and Coach paced in between us like he was a doctor walking through the asthma ward.
โGame ready,โ he lectured. โ๎ขe team that makes its free throws when everyone is tired and strung out is the team that wins its games.โย ๎ขen he broke us into groups at the six baskets around the gym and told us to keep score. Ten free throws each, switching shooters every two shots.ย ๎ขe score mattered. He didnโt say it, but this was part of the evaluation to see who would be a starter. Who could get points on the board at the beginning of the game, and at the end of the game, when his legs were jelly and his lungs aย re collapsing. A scout might be the key to your future, but you had to be on the court, in a pressure situation, sticking it to the other team, in order for the scout to even see you.ย ๎ขen you had to make the shot. I missed my
rst shot, but it was the only one I missed.ย ๎ขere were plenty of seven out of tens, some lower. Only English scored a perfect ten.
We spent another hour practicing some plays, putting them into action in little scrimmages, and then Coach sent us to the weight room in pairs. We didnโt have to keep score here. Not for his sake, at least. Of course we kept score among ourselves.
Nobody could press or li๎ย or squat nearly as much as Guzzo and Tooms and Martinez, so they always had their own competition, and the rest of us had ours. I paired up with English, and we started on the leg machines while the big guys hit the bench. He and I didnโt say much atย rst, but as we moved around the room to di๏ฌerent machines, we got into what was really on both our minds.
โHey, man,โ I asked. โYou know who wrote that gra๏ฌti?โ โWhy are you asking me?โ he said.
โHeโs your friend, man.โ โHe has a lot of friends.โ
โCome on, man. Iโm just curious. Iโm just asking.โ โNah. It canโt be โjust asking.โ It never is.โ
โFine.โ I put anotherย ve pounds on either side of the bar for him, and then kept my voice low as I continued. โGuzzoโs pissed. He thinks someone did it to make a statement.โ
English cocked half a grin as he lay down beneath the bar and began his set. โOf course.ย ๎ขatโs the point.โ
โNo, but like, itโs saying that Rashad is innocent, so that makes his brother guilty.โ
English put the bar back up on the rack and sat up. He looked at me like I was nuts. โMan, Rashad didnโt do shit.โ
โYeah, but what if Paul was just doing his job?ย ๎ขen no oneโs guilty.โ But even as I said it, I felt like I was Guzzo suddenly, or someone in the family, his family, and I wished I wasnโt. โAh, never mind. Letโs just forget it.โ
โForget it? Forget my friend is in the hospital?โ English stared at me, pissed. โSince when is beating the shit out of somebody who hasnโt done a damn thingย just doing your job? Man, thereโs no way Iโm going to pretend it didnโt happen.โ He leaned back, looked at the ceiling, and pressed the weight back up. โI canโt.โ He brought the weight down, and then up again. โI wonโt.โ
He li๎ed the bar again quickly, but on the eighth rep, he struggled. โLook,โ I said, reaching out, ready to help him with the next rep. โI just
wish this wasnโt happening. I mean, for everyoneโs sake.โ He fought to get the ninth rep more than halfway up.
โYou need a hand?โ I said, putting myย ngers beneath the bar, helping him li๎ย it slightly.
โFuck no,โ he spat. I pulled myย ngers back but kept them close. He pushed the bar up slowly, then lowered it and began the last rep. He grunted and got the last one up and onto the rack.
โMaybe he got out of hand?โ I just had to say. โMaybe he was on drugs.โ โOn drugs? What are you? Seventy-ย ve? Since when have you ever gotten
o๏ฌย your ass, let alone thrown a punch, when you were stoned, man?โ โMeth?โ
โOnly white people do that shit.โ โFuck you, man.โ
โNo, fuck you, Quinn.โ He stood and pointed at me. โWhy does it automatically gotta be Rashadโs fault? Why do people think he was on drugs?ย ๎ขat dude doesnโt do drugs. Heโs ROTC, man. His dad would kick his ass.ย Youย do drugs, asshole.โ
โJust a pu๏ฌย here and there, man, come on. I donโtย doย drugs.โ
โIโve seen you smoking a blunt. Metcalf sold you that shit. Metcalfโa white dude, by the way. Man, that shit could have been laced with crack, or fucking Drano. You donโt know what you talkinโ โbout.โ
โLook, man, Iโm not trying to say anything bad about Rashad. Iโm just saying that spray painting โRashad is absent again todayโ on the concrete in front of school is like, I donโt know, extreme. Heโs not dead.โ
โBut heย couldย be. You have no idea. You have no idea, Quinn.ย ๎ขe point is, he could be.ย ๎ขen what? Is that what it would take to look at this thing di๏ฌerently? You need him to be dead? Shame on you, man. I had no idea you were such a dick. You want to forget all this. Maybe you can. But I wonโt.โ He stood and caught his breath. โWhat do you know, anyway? White boy like you can just walk away whenever you want. Everyone just sees you as Mr. All-American boy, and you can just keep on walking, thinking about other things. Just keep on living, like this shit donโt even exist.โ He waved his hand in my face and blew a breath out the side of his mouth. โMan, Iโm done with you.โย ๎ขen he sauntered o๏ฌย slowly, making sure I knew he was dismissing me, leaving me looking like the idiot I was.
When Coach called us back out to the court, I was now not just physically wiped, but mentally wiped too. I was getting a drink of water at the fountain and Guzzo came up behind me. He jabbed me in the back and I coughed up the water. He laughed. โ๎ขanks,โ he said, grinning. โI mean it. I heard all that with English.ย ๎ขanks for having Paulโs back.โ
An unexpected wave of anger surged through me.ย ๎ขat hadnโt been my intention at all. Iโd seen what Paul had done. I didnโt think it was right. But I hadnโt thought the spray paint was right either.
โMaybe somebody should spray paint something else tomorrow,โ Guzzo said. โWhaddya think it should say?โ
โDonโt,โ I said. โWhat?โ
โDonโt be an asshole.โ
Guzzo slapped the wall with his open palm. โI donโt fucking get you, man. One minute youโre in there defending my brother and the next you are basically telling me to fuck o๏ฌ. Youโre demented.โ He stomped o๏ฌย to join the huddle at half-court.
๎ขank God Coach didnโt try to get us all together in a rallying cry, because I sure as hell wasnโt up for it, but neither was anyone else, probably. Instead he broke us into two teams ofย ve and put the others on the bench, ready to sub in. I was on the same team as English, and before we began I pulled him aside.
โLook,โ I said. โIโm sorry, man. I sounded like an idiot.โ He didnโt say anything back. โNo, seriously. Iโm sorry. I donโt want to be a dick. Iโm just trying toย gure this all out. Rashadโs your friend. But I get what else youโre saying too. SoโIโm sorry.โ
โMan, you have no idea how many times youโve sounded like a dick. You think it was just today? Look,โ he said, passing me the ball hard. โJust donโt miss when I give you the ball.โ
But I did. When we got into the scrimmage, I popped free and missed the
rst open shot. I got another chance on a fast break, and I could have passed, but I forced a di๏ฌcult shot because Iโd missed the last one. I missed that one too. Coach called me over. โWhereโs your head?โ
โUp my ass,โ I blurted.
โWhat?โ He grabbed my arm. โWhat did you say?โ
โMy head,โ I said. โItโs up my ass. I donโt know what the hell Iโm doing.โ โMaybe a couple suicides will wipe the shit o๏ฌย your face. Do them. Two.
Along the sideline. Now. Go.โ
I didnโt have to look at Guzzo to know he was smiling all smug, watching me out of the corner of his eye while he continued playing. I think English was maybe smiling too.
And for theย rst time since I could remember, as I sprinted up and down the court, I didnโt have my fatherโs voice in my head. I heard my own. I wasnโt telling myself toย PUSH, or to goย FASTER. Instead I thought about the guy whoโd just said all those things to English.ย ๎ขe guy who hadnโt meant to sound hurtful.ย ๎ขe guy who was just trying to walk down the middle and not disturb anybody, basically give some meaning to what Iโd seen in the street outside Jerryโs. And hereโs what I realized I was saying beneath it all: I didnโt want my life to change from the way it was before Iโd seen that.
When Iย nished the suicides, I had to hold my hand against the wall to catch my breath. English was frigging right.ย ๎ขe problem was that my lifeย didnโtย have to change. If I wanted to, I could just keep my head down and
focus on the team, like Coach wanted, and that could be that. Isnโt that what I wanted?
๎ขen why did it feel so shitty?
I had to squat down and touch theย oor, feeling suddenly nauseous, nauseous at the idea that I could just walk away from everything that was happening to Rashad, everything that was happening to Paul, everything that was happening to everyone at school, everything that was happening to me, too. I could just walk away from it all like a ghost. What kind of a person did that make me, if I did?
๎ขose were Maโs words, and when I got home, I found myself, for theย rst time in a long time, also admitting that I wished she was home and not working. Of course, that made me feel like a goddamn kid, so I made myself feel like I was worth something by helping Willy with his homework. He was glad for it, but probably not as much as I was that he needed me and I could actually help himย gure out his fractions.
Later, though, my mind dri๎ed back to Rashad, and I totally blew dinner. It should have been simple. Iโd made mac and cheese with tuna, peas, and hot sauce more times than I could count, but I overcooked the pasta and there was way too much hot sauce. Willy fanned his mouth a๎er theย rst bite.
โAhhh,โ he said. โAre you trying to kill me?โ
I improvised by shredding some extra cheddar cheese into our bowls, and guiltily, I felt glad that he had his headphones onโthough Ma would have killed him for that stunt at the dinner tableโbecause my thoughts would not let up. Now I was thinking about how, if I wanted to, I could walk away and not think about Rashad, in a way that English or Shannon or Tooms or any of the guys at school who were not white could not. Even if they didnโt know Rashad, even if, for some reason, they hated Rashad, they couldnโt just ignore what happened to him; they couldnโt walk away.ย ๎ขey were probably afraid, too. Afraid of people like Paul. Afraid of cops in general. Hell, they were probably afraid of people like me. I didnโt blame them. Iโd be afraid too, even if I was a frigging house like Tooms. But I didnโt have to be because my shield was that I was white. It didnโt matter that I knew Paul. I could be all the way across the country in California and Iโd still be white, cops and everyone else would still see me as just a โregular kid,โ an โAll-Americanโ boy. โRegular.โ โAll American.โ White. Fuck.
But then, a๎er dinner, as I was helping Willy with the last of his math homework, I realized something worse: It wasnโt only that I could walk away
โI alreadyย hadย walked away. Well, I was sick of it. I was sick of being a dick. Not watching the damn video was walking away too, and I needed to watch it.
I borrowed Willyโs headphones, plugged them into my phone, loaded up YouTube, and I watched it right there at the kitchen table. It was the shaky video taken from across the street at Jerryโs and I was immediately back at Friday night, watching it happen all over again.ย ๎ขere were two other videos too. I watched Rashadโs body twisting on the concrete sidewalk.ย ๎ขe video was taken from too far away. I couldnโt hear what he was saying, I couldnโt hear Paul. I heard the noise of the street just as Iโd heard it that night, and I felt a zip line of fear rip right into the pit of my stomach. On Friday Iโd been down the street, watching. But there, at the Formica table, I had a front-row seat. Close to Rashad and Paul. I could almost see myself hovering just beyond the frame of the shot. I texted Jill and told her how bizarre it was to see it.
TUESDAY 9:43 p.m. from Jill FINALLY. NOW EVRYBDYS SEEN IT
We went back and forth a few times, and then I just got fed up.
TUESDAY 9:55 p.m. to Jill HEY. CAN YOU TALK?
TUESDAY 9:56 p.m. from Jill WHA?
TUESDAY 9:56 p.m. to Jill
NO. I MEAN IT. ON THE PHONE. TALK?
TUESDAY 9:57 p.m. from Jill WHATEVER
TUESDAY 9:57 p.m. to Jill
LIKE, I NEED TO TALK.
She buzzed a second later, and I got up, slid the headphones across the table to Willy, and le๎ย the kitchen. We said our hellos and all that as I walked into the living room.
โI feel so gross,โ I said. โI keep telling myself it isnโt my problem. But it is.
It is my problem. I just donโt know what to do.โ
โYeah, but it isnโt only your problem. Itโs everyoneโs problem.โ โBut I still donโt know what to do. Like, tell the police?โ
She paused, and I heard her breathe. โMaybe.โ
โJesus.โ Telling the police meant telling Paulโs friends. Meant Paulโs friends tellingย himย what I was doing.
โBut everyoneโs seen it, Quinn. Itโsย all ourย problem. But whatย isย that problem?โย ๎ขen it was my turn to be quiet, and I shu๏ฌed over to the couch and sat down. โWhat is it?โ Her voice rose. โExcessive violence?โ
โI donโt know. Unnecessary beating. Uh . . . shit, police brutality?โ โYeah.โ
โAnd, you know.ย ๎ขe way itโs all working out. Itโs more.โ โLike who was sitting where at lunch?โ
I looked at the carpet between my feet. โYeah.โ
โAnd whose lockers they looked inย rst for spray paint cans?โ โYeah. Shit, really?ย ๎ขat happened?โ
โ๎ขatโs what I saw.ย ๎ขree black students, boys, in a row.ย ๎ขen Martinez.
๎ขey skipped me!โ
โFuck!โ I let the air in my cheeksย ll and then slowly blow out. โSo yeah.
Like all that.โ
โLike Paulโs white and Rashadโs black.โ
I just sat there staring at the door to the kitchen like a dumbass zombie trying toย nd some words.
โPaul says he did what he did because he was protecting some white lady in the store,โ Jill added.
โWhat?โ
โYeah.ย ๎ขatโs what my mom says. But, uh, really?โ โSeriously.โ
โYou think it would have been the same if the lady wasnโt white, or if Rashad wasnโt black?โ
โSeriously.โ โSeriously, what?โ
โWhy is it taking meย ve minutes to say the word racism?โ โMaybe youโre racist?โ
โDonโt joke.ย ๎ขis is serious.โ โIโm not.โ
โIโm not racist!โ
She hesitated, and I sat there, stinking in my own sweat, needing her to say something. Eventually she did.
โNot like KKK racist,โ she said. โI donโt think most people think theyโre racist. But every time something like this happens, you could, like you said, say, โNot my problem.โ You could say, โItโs a one-time thing.โย Every timeย it happened.โ
I wanted to say something, but it was like my head just pounded and every word that came to mind just shook and fell back into my throat.
โI think itโs all racism,โ Jill said for me.
โAnd if I donโt do something,โ Iย nally mustered, โif I just stay silent, itโs just like saying itโs not my problem.โ
โMr. Fisher spent our whole history class talking about it. If anybody wanted to talk about it more a๎er school, he would. Me and Ti๏ฌany talked about it all day, so we went.ย ๎ขere were a bunch of us there, and Fisherโs helping usย gure out what to do.โ
โI wish I could have gone. But I had basketball. But I have to do something!โ
โLetโs see what other people are doing tomorrow.โ
We said our good-byes, and I sat there on the couch, staring into the kitchen looking at Willy. His head bent down so close to the paper he was scribbling his answers on, the red headphones like beacons on either side of his headโit was like he was buried deep within his own little world. I felt like Iโd been doing the same damn thing the last couple daysโtrying to stare so hard at my own two feet so I wouldnโt have to look up and see what was really going on. And while Iโd been doing that, Iโd been walking in the wrong direction.
I didnโt want to walk away anymore.
โAs the story of sixteen-year-old West Spring๏ฌeld native Rashad Butler develops, the city seems to be split in terms of which side of the argument they fall on in this case. Was it about race?ย ๎ปe abuse of power? Or was it just another case of a teenage criminal, caught red-handed? For those who are just joining us, weโve been covering this story for a few days now. Last Friday, Butler was accused of shopli๎ing, public nuisance, and resisting arrest.ย ๎ปe o๏ฌcer involved, Paul Galluzzo, is shown here forcibly removing Butler from Jerryโs Corner Mart. Butler seems to be cooperating with the o๏ฌcer, but as you can see, he is taken to the ground. Warning:ย ๎ปe rest of the scene is a bit graphic. We were able to catch up with Claudia James, the person who actually shot this footage from her phone.โ
โIt was just like yโall saw it.ย ๎ปat boy was being manhandled, and he kept
saying that he didnโt do nothing. He kept trying to explain. But the o๏ฌcer was just yelling, โShut up! Shut up!โ And then slammed him.ย ๎ปen once he had him on the ground he started, like, punching and kneeing him in the back. He shoved his forearm on the back of the boyโs neck. It was crazy.โ
โBut had he been handcu๏ฌed?โ
โOnce he was on the ground, he was. I mean, how could he have been resisting?โ
โBut not everyone shares Ms. Jamesโs view. Some people feel that whatever it takes to clean up the community, so be it. Like Roger Stuckey.โ
โWe donโt know what happened in that store, so Iโm not gonna sit here and just say this kid is innocent. He might not be. Iโm a cabdriver, and I work nights, and the truth is, if that kid was trying to hail me down, and it was dark outside, I would keep on going.โ
โAnd why is that? Because of the way he looks?โ
โI mean, listen, Iโve been robbed before. Right around here. And I just . . . I donโt ever want to be robbed again. And he looks like the guy who robbed me. He was dressed just like him.ย ๎ปese kids are crazy these days, and whatever itโs gonna take to make the people who live around here feel safe, Iโm all for it.โ
When I woke up, I followed the same routine as the day before. Well, not exactly the same. First I plugged the TV back in.ย ๎ขen I tried to turn it on, but the remote was still on the fritz. Sometimes when the batteries are getting weak, and smacking it against your palm doesnโt work, you have to slide the back o๏ฌย and run your thumb over the batteries to turn them, and that makes them work. Sometimes.ย ๎ขis time.
๎ขe TV came on and I watched for a minute. Everyone had opinions.ย ๎ขe lady who caught the incident on tape seemed to side with me and thought the cop was wrong. But not everybody felt that way.ย ๎ขere was a cabbie who straight up said he wouldnโt pick me up if he saw me at night.ย ๎ขat really pissed me o๏ฌ. I mean, I had heard Spoony talk about that for years. I never took cabs (the bus was cheaper), but he was always going on and on about how he could never catch a cab because of the way he looked. But I didnโt look nothing like Spoony. Nothing. I mean, I wear jeans and T-shirts, and he wears jeans and T-shirts, so we look alike in that way, but who doesnโt wear jeans and T-shirts? Every kid in my school does. And sneakers. And sweatshirts. And jackets. So what exactly does a kid who โlooks like meโ look like? Seriously, what the hell?
You would think I would cut the TV o๏ฌ, but I didnโt. Maybe because there was something about having this moment in my life, literally hovering above my head, that served as some kind of weird inspiration for the picture I was making. So, as usual, I muted it, then dove into my art. Oatmeal for breakfast. Chicken burrito for lunch. Ginger ale. Art in between it all.
Clarissa had been in and out of the room, checking my vitals. Checking to make sure I was eating and using my spirometer. Checking to see how the piece was coming along.
โItโs gonna be so good when itโs done,โ she said, jotting down my blood pressure. She looked exhausted.
โYou work every day?โ I asked, shrugging o๏ฌย her compliment. Itโs not that I was trying to be rude. I just didnโt really know if โgoodโ was how this piece was actually going to end up.
โI have been. I usually work every other day, twelve-hour shi๎s. But I took on some extra work this week. Covering for a friend.โ
It wasnโt hard to tell that thatโs just how Clarissa was. A for-real, for-real nice person. So when she brought the lunch in, I told her how thankful I was that she had been looking a๎er me, and how happy I was that she had taken those extra shi๎s. My mother always raised me to be thankful. She always said, nobody owes you anything, so when you get something, be appreciative. And I was.
โI mean, I know itโs your job, but youโre really good at it. So, thanks.โ
Clarissaย ashed a smile that slipped into an unexpected yawn. โItโs my pleasure. Just trying to add a little sunshine,โ she said, li๎ing a hand to her mouth. She was so sweet, but man was she corny!
โI hear ya. Well, youโre doing that. Every time you come in here, you brighten the whole room up. Maybe itโs the hair.โ
๎ขe red hair up against her pale skin, likeย re burning at the end of a match.
โAh, yes. Ginger magic,โ she joked. โYou know, Iโm the last of a dying breed.โ
โWhat you mean?โ
โI mean, gingers. Redheads. Weโre going extinct.โ โSeriously? Like something is killing yโall?โ
โNot exactly. Itโs like, not enough redheads are having babies with other redheads. So weโre just not being born anymore.โ Clarissa laughed, then glanced up at the muted TV. Her eyes narrowed. โCheck it out.โ
I looked up, reluctantly, and there on the screen was the police chief. So I unmuted. We listened. He didnโt really say much except that they were investigating everything and that he had โthe utmost faith in O๏ฌcer Galluzzoโs judgmentโ and that the o๏ฌcer was โa veteran with an immaculate record.โ
โYeah, I bet,โ Clarissa said.ย ๎ขen, noticing me taking it all in, she added, โHey, donโt let the bastards get you down.โ
โYeah.โ
โYou know that song?โ
โWhat song?โ
โDonโt let the bastardsโโ She stopped, grinned. โNever mind.โ
When Ma showed up, the TV was still unmuted. And the story was stillย developing. And I was still drawing.
โKnock, knock,โ Ma said, tapping the door frame. Clarissa had asked me if I wanted the door open or closed, and I told her open. It just seemed like a good idea to let some air in. Or maybe let some of the su๏ฌocating feeling of the room out.
โHey,โ I said, now a bed remote expert, adjusting it so that I was sitting more upright.
โHow you feeling?โ Ma asked, coming in. She was alone.
โIโmย ne. Just doing some drawing,โ I told her. โWhereโs Dad?โ
She kissed me on the forehead, then sat on the side of the bed. โHe couldnโt make it. Something upset his stomach, and he was throwing up all night.โ
โIs he okay?โ
โYeah, yeah, heโsย ne,โ she said. She dug in her purse, pulled out an envelope, and set it on the side table. โ๎ขis came to the house for you.โ
โWhoโs it from?โ
โItโs from Chief Killabrew.โ I nodded but didnโt say anything. Iย gured it was a get-well-soon card, or something like that. Couldnโt even read it because my mother was way more concerned with more pressing issues. โHave you eaten?โ
โYes, Ma, I ate. Breakfast and lunch,โ I said with a groan. I knew this was only the beginning of the mother questions. Itโs like all moms have a checklist that they read through to make sure their kids are okay.
-
Have you eaten?ย ๎ขe most important one.
-
Are you hungry?ย Not to be confused with #1. And asked even if you say youโve eaten.
- Have you pooped?ย Just to make sure youโre eating the right stu๏ฌ.
-
Have you bathed?ย And if youโre my mom,
-
What are you drawing?
I handed her the notebook. She looked at it and instantly started to get emotional, her eyes tearing up. She was blinking them back when a clip of Claudia James, the lady who taped the whole thing, came back on the screen.
My mother watched, still holding the sketch pad.
โYou know, some people think the cop was justiย ed.ย ๎ขey say he was just doing his job,โ I said, darting my eyes from the TV to my mother.
She looked at me. Her face looked like it was made of clay. Like it could crack at any second.
โHisย job?โ she said, the tearsย nally dropping. โYou are not a criminal, Rashad. I know that. I know every word you said was true. You didnโt deserve this. Youโre not a criminal,โ she repeated. I could feel the heat rising in the room. In her. I didnโt know how she had been dealing with this at home, or if she and Dad had been getting into it, or what. But in that moment, the water in the kettle hadย nally started to boil in front of me. My mother was steaming.
โYouโre not some animal that they can just hunt. Youโre not some punching bag, some thing for them to beat on whenever they feel like it,โ she said, slapping my sketchbook down. She continued to lose her battle with the tears. โ๎ขis isย notย okay,โ she said. It was theย rst time I had ever heard her say itโusually it was Spoony. โItโsย not. Itโsย notย okay.โย ๎ขe TV cut back to the police chief. He said Galluzzo would be placed on paid leave until they got to the bottom of this. My mother clenched her jaw as the chief spoke.
๎ขen theyย ashed Galluzzoโs face on the screen. Maโs breath caught when she saw his mug on the screen. โ๎ขat asshole,โ she growled.
Hereโs the thing: My mother almost never curses. I think I may have heard her say โdamn,โ maybe once, but thatโs really it. Sheโs just not that type. So to hear her say โassholeโ let me know how angry she really was, that this thing was breaking her down inside too.
โIโm sorry,โ she said immediately, trying to get back to mom mode. She reached over and grabbed a napkin o๏ฌย my food tray to pat her face dry. โIโm sorry,โ she said again, forcing a crooked smile, which she was only able to keep up for aboutย ve secondsโyikes!โbefore crumbling into pieces. She was sobbing and panting, short and choppy, dabbing at her pouring eyes and
nose with the napkin. It was like everything she had been holding in was nowย nally coming out.
I leaned forward and inched myself closer to her. Each small movement felt like a knife blade pushing into my side. But I didnโt care, I had to get to her.ย ๎ขen my arms were around her, and nowย Iย was crying, my body burning on the inside, while I told her over and over again, โItโs okay. Itโs okay. Iโm gonna beย ne.โ And as she pulled away to blow her nose once more, working as hard as she could to paint that half-full smile back on her face, I reached for the remote and (please work, please work, please work) changed the channel.
Spoony showed up about an hour later with Berry. My mother and I had calmed down and were watchingย Family Feud, laughing at some of the stupid answers people were coming up with.
โName something you might ๏ฌnd under your bed.โ โA monster!โ
โNaw, they donโt hide under there no more. Or in closets,โ Spoony said, making an entrance as usual. โ๎ขey hide in plain sight, with uniforms and badges.โ Spoony. Always an agenda.
โHi, Mrs. Butler,โ Berry said, coming over to my mom with her arms out for a hug.
โHi, sweetheart. Ainโt you supposed to be in school?โ Ma kissed Berry on the cheek.
Berry was in law school. Yep, law school. My dad always got on Spoony, asking him why he wasnโt inspired to make something of himself since he dated such a smart girl.ย ๎ขen heโd say, โWell, at least you got enough sense to get a smart girl. I guess I gotta give you credit for that.โ
โIโll put in some extra work at the library this weekend.ย ๎ขis is far more important,โ Berry said. Spoony gave meย ve, then he and Berry switched places so he could hug Ma, and Berry could hug me.
โWassup, big man?โ she said, touching her cheek to mine. Berry was the female version of English. Absolutely gorgeous. And so cool. And smart. Everything wrapped up in one girl. And she was everybodyโsย rst crush. Me, Shannon, and Carlos. We all loved Berry, and English knew it. We used to
tease him so bad about her, and he hated it, but put up with it because thatโs just what we do. Jokes. But once Spoony started dating her, we cut all the jokes out, because even though Spoony wasnโt anywhere near perfect, he was deย nitely a dude who got respect. I donโt know why. He just did. Itโs not like anyone had ever seen him do anything crazy, but he had this presence about him. A conย dence that made it seem like he wasnโt scared of anything or anybody. So the Berry jokes were over, and she instantly fell intoย big sister zone. โHow you holdinโ up?โ she asked now.
โOh, you know me. Living a luxurious life,โ I said.
โLooks like it,โ Berry replied, but even though she was smiling, I could see the sadness in her eyes. I could see the sadness in everybodyโs eyes. My motherโs, Spoonyโs, my friendsโ, Clarissaโs, even the lady on TV whoย lmed everythingโClaudiaโs.
โโShad, I want you to see something,โ Spoony said, easing Berryโs backpack o๏ฌย her shoulder. He unzipped it, pulled out her laptop. โ๎ขey got Wi-Fi in here?โ
โI donโt think so,โ I said, wanting to laugh at him. I donโt know why, but I just thought that was so funny.
He put the laptop back in the bag.
โHere, just use my phone,โ Berry said, digging in her back pocket. She tapped the screen a few times, then handed it to Spoony, who handed it to me.
โLook at this.โ
On the screen was a picture of my school. And on the sidewalk was some writing. I enlarged the image and did a double take.ย RASHAD IS ABSENT AGAIN TODAYย is what it said, spray painted in bright-blue loopy letters.
โWhat is this?โ I asked, staring.
โ๎ขereโs major buzz about this thing, man. Facebook, Twitter, everywhere. People are pissed o๏ฌ. Kids your age.ย ๎ขeyโre speaking up, man.โ
I stared at the picture.ย ๎ขe letters, the tiny loop at the stop of the cursiveย s.
So familiar.ย ๎ขere was only one person I knew who did that. Carlos. โEnglish texted me earlier saying that some of the kids at your school
have been talking about a protest. He sent me that picture,โ Berry said. โBut thatโs not the only one.โ She reached for the phone and began swiping through photos, showing me picture a๎er picture ofย RASHAD IS ABSENT AGAIN TODAY, tagged all over the city. I knew theย rst one was from Carlos, but not
all the rest of them, because I didnโt recognize the lettering, plus they were too loose. Amateur. I had no idea who those were from.
โ๎ขereโs even a hashtag,โ she said. #RashadIsAbsentAgainToday.
I couldnโt believe it. I had become a hashtag. I had become searchable. A trending topic. Another number on someoneโs chart. But to me, I was still . . . just me.
โA protest?โ I thumbed the screen, going from picture to picture. It just seemed weird that there was so much fuss over me.
โYeah, man,โ Spoony conย rmed.
โA protest?โ my mother repeated, her eyebrows knitting together. โI donโt know about this. I donโt want nobody else getting hurt.โ
Aย erce look came over Spoonyโs face. โMa, we have a right to protest. We have a right to be upset.โ
โI know that, Spoony. You donโt think I know that?โ Maโs voice rose. Spoony had no idea thatย ourย mom had just called the cop an asshole. Heโd missed that. โYou donโt think Iโm angry?โ She glared at him, burned straight through his hoodie.
โI know you are. Sorry,โ he said, humbled. โIโm just so tired of this.โ
โI am too,โ Ma said, coming back down. โAnd I know protests can be good. Just like I know that not all cops are bad. I married one.โ
โIโm not sure Dadโs the best example of a good cop,โ Spoony said quicker than quick, the words sharp enough to cut.
Ma gave him a look. Not upset. But sad. Like she was sad that her son seemed so angry, so distrusting. And she didnโt even say anything to refute his statement, didnโt even argue with him, which to me was strange.
โWhy not?โ I asked.
Spoony looked from me to Ma before brushing the whole thing o๏ฌย with, โNothing. Doesnโt matter.โ
โListen, I just donโt want them toย nd a reason to beat more people. To kill people.โ Mom refocused the conversation, her eyes back on me. โAnd since apparently they donโt trust us, I donโt trust them.โ
โBut Ma, all we want is to feel like we can be who we are without being accused of being something else.ย ๎ขatโs all,โ Spoony tried again.
โBut do protests even work?โ I asked. I mean, I was all for the idea. I really was. But the only time I had ever heard about any protests actually
working was Dr. Kingโs.ย ๎ขatโs it. Ainโt never heard of no other ones making a di๏ฌerence.
โDo they work?โ Spoony looked at me crazy, aย how I could even ask such a questionย look.
Berry stepped in. โ๎ขeyโre a piece to the puzzle. I mean, there are a lot of pieces, like reforming laws and things like that. But protests are what sends the message to the folks in power that something needs to change.ย ๎ขat people are fed up,โ she explained. โWe have a right to voice how we feel, and isnโt that better than just doing nothing?โ
Spoony and Berry tag-teamed me with the more political activism mumbo jumbo than I could stand, until at last, thank God, English, Shannon, and Carlos showed up.ย ๎ขey all hugged my mom and Berry, and dapped up Spoony.
โYo, you heard about the protest?โ Carlos shot o๏ฌย instantly, picking up right where my brother and Berry had le๎ย o๏ฌ. โHashtag RashadIsAbsentAgainToday.โ
I looked at him. He looked at me. Friendship ESP. โSo this thing is really gonna happen?โ I asked.
โDude, even Ti๏ฌany was talking about it in Mr. Fisherโs class,โ English said. Mr. Fisher was a history teacher at the school. Kind of a weird guy, but still supercool. White hair. Jacked-up bowl cut. Weird cloth ties. Shirt tucked in tight jeans. But he knew all about history and would celebrate Black History Month in Februaryย andย March.ย ๎ขe only other teacher who was down for stu๏ฌย like that was Mrs. Tracey, the English teacher. Shannon and Carlos used to always joke about how Mr. Fisher and Mrs. Tracey were probably dating, probably having gross sex a๎er school on Mrs. Traceyโs desk, on top ofย Shakespeareโs Sonnetsย or something.
โFor real?โ I asked.
โYeah, man. Fish is really supporting it. Like, heโs helping us plan it and everything.โ English was gassed. โHe kept saying how we are part of history. How this is part of history.โ
โWord? Is he giving out extra credit for it?โ I joked, just to try to lighten the mood.
โโShad, we serious, man,โ Carlos said. โLike, for real.โ
โTold you, โShad,โ Spoony said. โ๎ขis thing is bubbling. People are sick of it.โ He looked at Ma, who seemed caught somewhere between mad and
worried. โMa, seriously, what if he was killed?โ
โBut he wasnโt,โ she said, straight, the same way my dad had said a few days before when Spoony said the same thing.
โBut what about all the others?โ Spoony said. โMatter fact, how many of yโall been messed with by the cops?โ
โMan, what? Iโve been pulled over so many times,โ Carlos said. โBecause you speed,โ I jumped in.
โYeah, true. But at least three times, theyโve made me get out the car while they tore it apart looking for drugs or guns or whatever they thought I had.ย ๎ขen when they didnโtย nd nothing, they let me go with a speeding ticket, but le๎ย my car a mess. Glove compartment emptied out. Trunk all dug through. Just trashed my ride for no reason.โ
โMan, Iโve been stopped on the street,โ English said. โYou have?โ Berry sparked up.
โYeah. More than once, too. Cops wanting me to li๎ย my shirt so they could see if I had weapons on me. Pat-downs and all that.โ
โWhy didnโt you tell me?โ Berry asked.
โBecause I already know what time it is. Iโd seen it before, so it was nothing. Plus I didnโt want you freakinโ out.โ
โAt least yours were only pat-downs. One time they had me facedown on the sidewalk on Overlook Street. Said they got word that there was a robbery and said the description of the person wasย ve-foot-nine, dark skin, with a black T-shirt and black sneakers on,โ Shannon explained. โ๎ขat couldโve been anybody.โ
โ๎ขat couldโve been any kid I work with at the rec center. Matter fact, that couldโve been me!โ Spoony chimed in.
โExactly,โ Berry agreed.
And I wished the stories stopped there. I really did. But they didnโt.ย ๎ขey went on and on, story a๎er story about not trusting police o๏ฌcers because they always seemed to act like bullies. And even though there were times when theyโd been helpful, the bad times . . . were BAD TIMES. And it just seemed like they didnโt . . . I donโt know. Like, they see us. But they donโt reallyย seeย us.
โOkay,โ I said.
โOkay what?โ Spoony asked.
โOkay. Iโm down with the protest.โ I have to admit, I said I was down but I wasnโt really sure I meant it. I was scared. And itโs not like they needed me to sign on.ย ๎ขis wasnโt really about me.ย ๎ขis was bigger than me. I knew that now. But I wanted my brother and my friends to know, since the spotlight was on me, that I was in.ย ๎ขat I would stand with them.
๎ขat is, if I could get out of the hospital.
โName a word that rhymes with grain.โ โPain.โ
โGood answer! Good answer!โ