Chapter no 7 – โ€Œโ€Œโ€Œโ€Œโ€Œโ€Œโ€ŒThursday

All American Boys

 

โ€ŒIย woke up a frigging hour before the alarm clock. My mind was racing. Ma was still at work, Willy still snored in the trundle bed below me, and so I got up and stood in the living room, staring out the window. Pink sunrise warmed the houses on the other side of the street, but it was still early enough that the dark blue-purple of night had not completely burned away.

๎ขe whole neighborhood looked asleep. I headed for the front door, then down the stoop to the sidewalk.ย ๎ขere was no one else out. Not a single car moved on my street or the two avenues at either end. Everything was still and quiet except for the swoop and chatter of a pair of sparrows darting in and out of driveways.

I was completely alone.

I looked toward the Galluzzo house. From where I stood, I could see the Americanย ag spearing up in its holder and hanging in loose folds in the air above the front steps, and a memory bit meโ€”the day I stood beneath that

ag in a cheap, itchy, dark suit that had once been Paulโ€™s and didnโ€™tย t Guzzo, butย t me everywhere except that the shoulders were too wide. I remembered Paul, squatting in front of me as I stood on the bottom step, patting my shoulders, trying to adjust the seam so it didnโ€™t fall forward over my arm. โ€œQuinn,โ€ heโ€™d said. โ€œ๎ขere are no words that will make you feel any better that heโ€™s gone, but know thisโ€”you need anything, I mean anything, little man, you come to me.โ€ And I remembered how miserable Iโ€™d felt, but also thatโ€”because Paul made sure Iย knewย he was always going to be there for meโ€”I felt relieved. Even though I didnโ€™t have my dad anymore, at least I had a version of his protection. I remembered how Paul,ย nally satisย ed with the seam, had stood, turned toward the street, and held up his hand to block the sunlight from his eyes, and as he did, the shadow of his body fell over mine, blocking all the sunlight from me, too. I didnโ€™t have to squint. I

looked out at the faces of the people along the sidewalk in front of us and I did not feel alone.

Something else dawned on me. When Iโ€™d stood under theย ag and Iโ€™d looked up at Paul, who promised to take care of me, he had only recently graduated high school. I mean, he hadnโ€™t been much older than I was now. Heโ€™d probably been thinking the same thing I was this year: Where am I going to be next year, and what the hell am I going to do with my life?

What had happened to that guy? Who had he become?

Until this week, all anybodyโ€™d been talking about was the damn basketball scouts. Iโ€™d obsessed over it too: what I needed to do to set myself up for tomorrow, next year, and whatever the hell came down the road a๎‚er that. But as I stood in front of my own house in the cool, violet morning, I had the crazy idea that I could be standing here thirty years from now looking back. In my history class, weโ€™d talked about how some moments in history are moments people never forget. People could remember exactly where they were and what they were doing. I was three years old when 9/11 happened, so I didnโ€™t remember it like all the teachers in school did. But Ma did, because she knew what it meant for Dad. Adults were always asking each other: Where were you when it happened? Where were you?

Well, where was I when Rashad was lying in the street? Where wasย Iย the year all these black American boys were lying in the streets?ย ๎ขinking about scouts? Keeping my head down like Coach said?ย ๎‚ปatย was walking away. It was running away, for Godโ€™s sake. I. Ran. Away. Fuck that. I didnโ€™t want to run away anymore. I didnโ€™t want to pretend it wasnโ€™t happening. I wanted to turn around and run right into the face of it.

I took a deep breath as the breeze picked up, and as I stared down the street at Paulโ€™s house, I knew for damn sure what I was doingย thisย Friday night.

I went back inside and began my usual morning workout, and as I was pumping through my squats, I had an idea. I ran into the kitchen and riย ed through the junk drawers, looking for a black marker. I couldnโ€™tย nd one. I knew I didnโ€™t have one, but Willy might, so I crept through our room while he still slept and tried toย nd something that might work. Finally, in a green plastic box on theย oor on his side of the closet, I found a big, black permanent marker.ย ๎ขen I dug out one of my plain white T-shirts.

On the front, I wrote:ย Iโ€™M MARCHING

On the back, I wrote:ย ARE YOU?

 

 

๎ขere were plenty of kids, black, white, and everyone else, who looked at me like I was a dumbass when I got to school wearing the T-shirt. And there were plenty of kids, black, white, and everyone else, who nodded or slapped hands with me. Even in English class, Mrs. Tracey looked at my T-shirt and smiled. โ€œMe too,โ€ she said. And I was actually daring to think that the day was going down much easier than I thought it would when I saw Dean Wyko๏ฌ€ย walking down the hall between second and third periods. He stepped in front of me, one eyebrow raised, and read my T-shirt. I assumed he was going to give me one of his signatureย nger curls, that thing he does thatโ€™s kind of like heโ€™s making fun of himself but also isnโ€™t and he actually expects you to come closer when he does it. As dean of students, he was also Dean of Discipline, and since I was โ€œthe model sonโ€ Quinn Collins, Iโ€™d never been called to his o๏ฌƒce before, and I thought, well, if this was going to be myย rst time, it was worth it. But he didnโ€™t give me theย nger curl. He nodded, threw a little frown in, but kept on walking, not giving me a hard time at all.

Yes, there were some kids giving me the stink eye for wearing the shirt, but no one directly gave me shit until Dwyer found me in the hall a๎‚er fourth period. He grabbed my elbow and pulled me over to the lockers.

โ€œWhat the hell, man?โ€ His freckly face was so close to mine he barely had to speak much louder than a whisper. โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€

โ€œWhat it says Iโ€™m doing.โ€

Dwyer glanced around the hall. โ€œI said donโ€™t fuck this up, not fuck this up even more. What the hell, man? You better not let Coach see that shirt. No protest, remember?โ€

โ€œDude,โ€ I said, yanking my arm out of his grip and stepping back. โ€œPeople should be able to go to the protest if they want. Itโ€™s important, man.โ€

He pulled up and looked down at me, giving me a face worse than Dean Wyko๏ฌ€ย had ever given anybody. โ€œYouโ€™re wack,โ€ Dwyer told me. โ€œWhat the hell happened to you?โ€ And then he split for class, leaving me to chew on that by myself. I didnโ€™t have the words for it, but I felt I had an answer to the question.

๎ขe rest of the day was a blur of distraction. Nobody was getting much done in class, and I had to hand it to Mrs. Erlich, because she trashed her trig plan for the day and wrote a bunch of facts andย gures on the board, which I started copying into my notebook, fast.

In 2012, in the United Kingdom, the number of people (regardless of race) shot and killed by police o๏ฌƒcers: 1

In 2013, in the United Kingdom, the number of times police o๏ฌƒcers ๏ฌred guns in the line of duty/the number of people fatally shot: 3/0

In the United States, in the seven year period ending in 2012, a white police o๏ฌƒcer killed a black person nearly two times a week.

โ€œIโ€™m not much of a talker,โ€ sheย nished up. โ€œYou know that. But I know numbers.ย ๎ขe numbers donโ€™t lie, kids.ย ๎ขe numbers always tell a story.โ€

 

 

Guzzo was nowhere at lunch, but even though heโ€™d avoided me all day, I knew heโ€™d seen me, seen my T-shirt. At basketball practice, though, he couldnโ€™t avoid me anymore. He showed up late, just as Coach blew his whistle and a chaotic warm-up came to an end. I tried to catch Guzzoโ€™s eye, but he wouldnโ€™t look at me. Coach had us run drills to get the blood pumping, and then we practiced four orย ve plays.ย ๎ขe last play was designed speciย cally for English, and Coach called it โ€œFist.โ€ It was an isolation o๏ฌ€ense to run when another team played us man-to-man defense. Weโ€™d all form a column in the paint as English called the play at the top of the key, and then weโ€™d scatter and make a wide box away from the net so English could take his man one-on-one to the hoop, because he could beat anybody o๏ฌ€ย the dribble. And he did. Even though we knew the play, as we ran it, English beat us all, again and again. He was unstoppable.

And when it wasย nally time to scrimmage, Coach asked us to play hard, and he let the point guards call whatever plays they wanted. He struck a good balanceโ€”I was playing on the team opposite English most of the time, and even though Fist was designed for him, he didnโ€™t call it. He ran every

other play, once, twice, he ran Gold three times, and thenย nally, a๎‚er Iโ€™d sunk a three from my sweet spot, English calmly walked the ball up the court to the hash mark and called Fist. He blazed past Nam for the easy layup. We missed at the other end, and English didnโ€™t push the fast break. He slowed it all down, got to the top of the key, called Fist again, spun a circle around Nam, and another one around Toomsโ€”who came in from the weak side to helpโ€”and swooped under the basket with a reverse layup. He did it a third time in row, and this time, when he put hisย st in the air, he paused and said, โ€œRashad,โ€ and waved hisย st like aย ag before zigzagging aย erce line to the hoop, banging and slipping past nearly everybody. He yelled and slapped the backboard as he went up for the layup and nailed it.

We were glistening with sweat under the incandescent lights in the gym, all breathing heavy, even English, as he jogged backward to set up for D, and somehow, even though I was concentrating on the play, another part of my brain recognized how stupid it was to believe Rashadโ€™s name wasnโ€™t on all our mindsโ€”how interconnected all these things were in our lives, how we couldnโ€™t just separate basketball from the rest of our life, just like we couldnโ€™t separate history from the present, just like we couldnโ€™t have racism in America without racists.

My team pushed the ball up the court, and you could already feel the nerves bouncing in our bodies. Nam kicked the ball down low as I made my cut to the far corner, but someone else got aย nger on it, so it spun o๏ฌ€ย course, and Guzzo and I chased a๎‚er the loose ball. It had nearly rolled out of bounds, but he slammed into me anyway. We hit theย oor, and what might have looked like good hustle was actually just us ripping at each other more than the ball itself, elbowing each other, untilย nally, the ball rolled away and the two of us wrestled on theย oor. I slipped out of Guzzoโ€™s grip and got to my feet. His face was a twisted mitt of hate. He hated my guts, and I think he hated everyoneโ€™s guts at that moment, but mine most of all, and I didnโ€™t blame him.

Coach blew his whistle, but Guzzo just stared dead at me.

We got back into the scrimmage, and I tried to shake it o๏ฌ€, but I couldnโ€™t shake the snarl on Guzzoโ€™s face when he looked at me, any more than I could shake Rashadโ€™s name from my head.

๎ขe game started up again, and a๎‚er only a few trips up and down the court I found myself going for a rebound against Guzzo, and it was like he

had been waiting for this all day, because as I went up for the ball, I caught a

ash of his elbow in the corner of my eye, and then I felt my lip explode. I fell straight on my ass, tried to stand, wobbled, and collapsed. Everybody was around me in seconds. Guzzoย rst. He had his hand out, helping me up, apologizing loudly, saying it was an accident. My whole head rang like the bells of St. Maryโ€™s a๎‚er Easter Mass.

It was an accident, Guzzo kept insisting, and while Iโ€™m sure no one believed him, Coach let it slide and told me to go clean myself up. It was getting near the end of practice anyway, and I didnโ€™t want to hear any damn speeches or anythingโ€”especially more rules about not going to the march. Iโ€™d worn the T-shirt. Now I was committed. As I washed and got changed, my mind was onย re, and it would have been impossible to chantย teamย if Coach had asked me to.

I was ready to go when the rest of the team came into the locker room. I slung my backpack over my shoulder, and on my way out, I found English. I told him we should just call the play Rashad, instead of Fist, something everybody in the stands would have to hear every time we ran the play.

โ€œI know,โ€ English told me. โ€œIโ€™d already been thinking that.โ€ We smiled and slapped hands.

I was out of the locker room and heading down the hall to the doors, when Coach called my name. I turned, and he called me back to him. He stood with his legs spread in his Superman stance by the door to the locker room, but twirling his whistle in one hand.

โ€œCollins,โ€ he said when I got back to him. โ€œI donโ€™t think youโ€™re thinking this through.โ€

I shrugged.

He gestured to my shirt. โ€œI want to remind you what Iโ€™m talking about.โ€ I nodded.

โ€œYes, sir,โ€ I said.ย ๎ขe tone in his voice wasย at and deadening and frankly starting to scare me a little.

โ€œ๎ขis bullshit,โ€ he said, pointing at my chest again, โ€œhas to stop. You know the rules.โ€

โ€œSirโ€”โ€ I began, but he cut me o๏ฌ€.

โ€œNo excuses. Iโ€™m calling your mother about this too. You need to straighten your shit out, stay focused, and remember we have everything

riding on next week and every practice and every game for the rest of the season. You hear me?โ€

I was about to speak, but he put his hand up.

โ€œActions speak louder than words, son.โ€ He bent forward, his eyes wide. โ€œYouโ€™ve got too much riding on this, Collins.โ€

He turned and walked past the locker room toward his o๏ฌƒce, and even though I hate when people call me โ€œsonโ€โ€”like they have any frigging right to call me thatโ€”I couldnโ€™t go a๎‚er him or tell him, or say anything to him, because I knew for damn sure he meant what he said and he was going to call Ma right then.

I got the hell out of there before anyone else slipped out of the locker room to give me a hard time, and I le๎‚ย the gym by the side door, like usual. I was about to pull out my phone to text Jill when I saw Guzzo leaning against the wall a few feet away, still in his basketball shorts and T-shirt.

โ€œIโ€™ve been trying toย nd you all dayโ€”โ€ I started, but he didnโ€™t waste any time talking. He charged. He swung as soon as he was close enough, and I blocked it, but the force knocked me back into the brick wall. He swung again and I shielded my head, but he got me in the chest with his otherย st, I lost my guard and he slugged me across the cheek. I spun and hit the ground.

I wasnโ€™t thinking clearly, the grooves in the concrete were moving in and out of focus, but I knew enough to know that my body wasnโ€™t being hit anymore. Mostly I wasย ne; heโ€™d hit twice, and that must have been enough. Maybe heโ€™d even scared himself, because if heโ€™d wanted to, he could have ruined me right there, but instead he just hovered over me, calling me all kinds of names, telling me how awful I was for turning my back on him, on Paul, following the crowd and jumping on the Rashad bandwagon because it was the easy thing to do.

โ€œFirst Jill gets all crazy and radical. And now you? What the fuck?โ€ I rolled over and tried to catch my breath.

โ€œDonโ€™t let me see your face in our house again,โ€ Guzzo went on. โ€œDonโ€™t even speak to me. We play ball, but we donโ€™t speak to each other. You got me?โ€

I sat up against the brick wall and gave a short nod. I unzipped my coat and wiped the blood from my mouth with the T-shirt that said I was

marching. At the sight of the shirt, Guzzo spat on me and slammed the door behind him as he stormed back into the gym.

I didnโ€™t want anyone making more of a big deal about Guzzo and me, so I hauled myself up and hurried away before anyone came out. I went the long way around, hit the Burger King, and leaned against the stall door in the bathroom with wads of toilet paper pressed to my lips until the bleeding stopped. I was all right. I could walk. I could see. Iโ€™d stopped bleeding. My cheekbone didnโ€™t feel broken. I didnโ€™t need to go to the hospital or anything.

Oh, shit.

I stood in the locked stall, staring up at the weak,ย ickering bathroom light, thinking about how Iโ€™d seen Rashad on the concrete a week before and I hadnโ€™t even known who he was. And now, not even a week laterโ€”what the hell? Rashad and I had been beaten up by brothers from the same family?

But even thinking that was o๏ฌ€ย base, because there was no comparison.

๎ขe beatings were no comparison.ย ๎ขe reasons for the beatings were no comparison. I wasnโ€™t going to stand there and pretend I knew what life was like for Rashad.ย ๎ขere was no way. We lived in the same goddamn city, went to the same goddamn school, and our lives were so very goddamn di๏ฌ€erent.

Why? Youโ€™d think weโ€™d have so much in common, for Godโ€™s sake. Maybe we even did. And yet, why was there so much shit in between us, so much shit I could barely even see the guy?

It was like Jill had said. Nobody wants to think heโ€™s being a racist, but maybe it was a bigger problem, like everyone was just ignoring it, like it was invisible. Maybe itย wasย all about racism? I hated that shit, and I hated thinking it had so much power over all our livesโ€”even the people I knew best. Even me.

I wanted toย gure out all that bullshit in between us. So now there was something else I wanted to do. I wanted to see the whole dude who lived that life.

 

 

I was frigging exhausted when I got home, but it didnโ€™t matter, because my

ghts for the day werenโ€™t done. Ma always hadย ๎ขursday nights o๏ฌ€. It was herย rst night home in seven days, and when I got in, I learned that, yes, Coach had called and warned her that something was going on between

Guzzo and me. So there I was, looking like a crazy person, and there was Ma, looking at me like I was a crazy person, and atย rst she justย uttered around trying to make sure I didnโ€™t have a broken nose, or jaw, or loose teeth, or any of that, but when sheย nally accepted that the worst of it was a bruise on my cheek and a lip that looked like Iโ€™d tried to eat spaghetti with a steak knife, sheย nally sat down across from me at the little round kitchen table, leaned her head into one hand, and asked me what the hell I was doing.

Willy was at the table too, doing homework, and I looked to him. โ€œSee that?โ€ I said. โ€œNot โ€˜What did Guzzo do?โ€™ What didย Iย do?โ€

Ma frowned. Pointed to my bloody T-shirt. โ€œDonโ€™t be coy with me, Quinn Marshall Collins.โ€

โ€œMa!โ€ Willy yelped. โ€œCome on! Guzzo beat him up. Why are you getting on him?โ€

I stuck out myย st and Willy bumped it. โ€œ๎ขanks, man,โ€ I said.

Ma raised a half smile at Willy. โ€œYou canโ€™t play two against one on me. Iโ€™m immune. Iโ€™m your mother.โ€

โ€œBut Ma!โ€ Willy said.

She reached over and gently held his wrist. โ€œPlease,โ€ she said. โ€œLet me speak with your brother.โ€ She turned back to me. โ€œWhat are you doing with that shirt?โ€

โ€œLetting people know Iโ€™m going to the march.โ€ โ€œYou arenโ€™t going to the march, Quinn.โ€

โ€œYes, I am.โ€

โ€œNo, you are not. Iโ€™ll miss work tomorrow night. Weโ€™ll all stay home and weโ€™ll have a family night at home for once.โ€

โ€œMa,โ€ I said. โ€œIโ€™m going to the march.โ€

โ€œListen,โ€ she said. โ€œA๎‚er Coach Carney called, I called Rita. Guzzo told her why the two of you got into aย ght.โ€ She sat back, folding her arms across her chest, accusatory. โ€œI know this is all complicated, but think about what youโ€™re doing to the Galluzzos.โ€ She pointed to the shirt again. โ€œWhat is all this? Youโ€™re not marching!โ€ She paused, rubbed her forehead, and when she was calm again, she continued. โ€œHoney, I know you think you are doing the right thing, but you arenโ€™t.โ€

โ€œI think I am.โ€

โ€œNo, what you are doing is thinking very selย shly.โ€ She got up and poured herself a glass of water and stayed standing against the counter. โ€œYou think you are taking the moral high road, but what does this all mean for the rest of your family, Quinn? What does it mean for me and your brother?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m kind of hoping youโ€™ll have my back.โ€

โ€œNo, Quinn. Look,โ€ she continued. โ€œJust step out of the way. Even if itโ€™s ugly at school, this isnโ€™t yourย ght. Why are you jumping into the middle of it?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m already there, Ma. I was there Friday night. Ma, Iย sawย it. Iโ€™m right in the middle of it, which is why I canโ€™t do nothing.โ€

She took a sip of water and stared at me. โ€œHave you seen the video, Ma?โ€

Willy turned to me. โ€œI have.โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ Ma cried. โ€œWhy would either of you watch it? Watch the fool theyโ€™re making Paulie out to be? Do you see what youโ€™ve done, Quinn? Youโ€™re just dragging us all into it with you.โ€

โ€œMa,โ€ I said, pushing back my chair and standing. โ€œYouโ€™re already in the middle of it too. I think we all are.โ€

She gripped the countertop. โ€œI donโ€™t know how to talk to you right now.โ€ She paused, and then added, โ€œWhat would yourย fatherย say if he were here?โ€

She never invoked Dad. Even though the whole town whipped out their Saint Springย eld cards whenever it was most convenient, Ma never did. Dad had been her high school sweetheart, her husband, and the father of her two boys, and so for her, thatโ€™s what cameย rst. He wasnโ€™t a symbol. He was just gone. Gone for seven years now, and Ma was frigging exhausted.

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ I said, working hard to keep my voice level. โ€œBut I know he stood up for what he believed in.โ€

I walked across the kitchen and wrapped my arms around her. She put her glass down and hugged me back, her thinย ngers holding on to me tight.

 

 

When Paul Galluzzo told me he was signing up to become a cop, he and I were practicing three-pointers in the Galluzzo driveway. I was in ninth grade, and basketball tryouts were one week away. Guzzo was still inside, changing, and before he came out, Paul tossed the basketball up and down

in one hand and dropped his other hand on my shoulder. โ€œYour dad,โ€ he told me. โ€œJust thinking about him inspires me. Iโ€™ve been doing a lot of thinking lately. And I realize, your father was a hero. I want to be somebody like that. I want to be somebody who makes a di๏ฌ€erence too.โ€ He might have been the two hundredth person to tell me my father was a hero, but this was the strangest time, because it was theย rst time Iโ€™d heard someone say it and it didnโ€™t piss me o๏ฌ€.

โ€œMan, you already are somebody who makes a di๏ฌ€erence,โ€ I told him.

He laughed. โ€œNah, but I mean make a di๏ฌ€erence in the world. Like a real di๏ฌ€erence. Like your dad.โ€

Iย did not want to be a hero. I did not want to make any of what had happened in the last week about me.ย ๎ขere was a guy whoโ€™d just spent six days in the hospital because the guy whoโ€™d beenย myย personal hero for four years had put him there.ย Paul beat Rashad.ย ๎ขat was the truth. And if Ma was going to talk about Dad, so was I. She didnโ€™t remember Dad the hero, she remembered Dad the manโ€”and so did I. I knew him too. He was a hero, not in the way people always talked about himโ€”not the soldier, not the war heroโ€”but because of the person he was.

Paulโ€™d gotten it all wrong. Becoming a cop would not make him a heroโ€” but what kind of cop he became could have.

Iโ€™d been thinking about that all day, but I didnโ€™t have the words for it until Ma brought up Dad. Everybody wanted me to be loyal. Ma wanted me to be loyal. Guzzo wanted me to be loyal. Paul wanted me to be loyal.ย Your dad was loyal to the end,ย theyโ€™d all tell me.ย Loyal to his country,ย loyal to his family,ย they meant. But it wasnโ€™t about loyalty. It was about him standing up for what he believed in. And I wanted to be my dadโ€™s son. Someone who believed a better world was possibleโ€”someone who stood up for it.

 

 

โ€ŒMy mother did eventually show up with the lawyer she found Wednesday evening, but by the time she got there, I was wiped, maybe from getting up so early talking with Dad, or maybe from actually talking with Dad, or maybe from talking with Mrs. Fitzgerald, or maybe from all of it. I was beat. I tried to rally up the energy because this attorney, a young woman named Maya Whitmeyer, was deย nitely there to talk business, or law, or whatever, but I just couldnโ€™t. I was so sick of talking about it.

โ€œSon, can you at least just tell her the story, beginning to end?โ€ my mother requested. And of course, I did. Again. I rambled o๏ฌ€ย every detail, just like I had done with my parents, my brother, and my friends. Ms. Whitmeyer took notes in crazy fast writing and asked if the o๏ฌƒcer ever even read me my rights (the right to remain silent, the right to blah blah blah), which, once I thought about it, I realized he hadnโ€™t. He just skipped to the part about me not having the right to be in that store. She then explained that this should be โ€œopen-and-shut,โ€ which was lawyer-talk for โ€œeasy.โ€ But we all knew that it wasnโ€™t that simple.ย ๎ขese types of cases were never easy. We had all seen cops get away with far worse, so why would this be any di๏ฌ€erent? I mean, I wasnโ€™t killed. True, I hadnโ€™t even touched the cop; the video footage showed it all. I even had a witness. Still, there was no such thing as โ€œopen-and-shutโ€ in cases like these. But I appreciated the lawyerโ€™s conย dence. I guess somebody had to be hopeful.

๎ขere were so many questions I had for the lawyer, like why, exactly, she felt like this was going to be โ€œopen-and-shut.โ€ But honestly, I was just too exhausted to even get into it. Before dri๎‚ing back to sleep, I made sure to give my mother Ms. Lansingโ€™s card. Iโ€™d barely glanced at it when she gave it to me, but before I handed it to my mom, I checked it out.

KATIE LANSING

Archivist

Springย eld Department of Records and Information Services

Under her name and title was her phone number and e-mail. Seemed like another o๏ฌƒce job to me. Anything that said โ€œDepartment of โ€ just meant the job came with a cubicle and beneย ts. At least thatโ€™s what Spoony always said. I handed the card to my mother.

โ€œ๎ขis is the lady who was in the store. She was here today,โ€ I said.

โ€œHere?โ€ my mother asked, nearly leaping out of her seat.ย ๎ขe lawyer did the exact same thing.

โ€œYeah. She came by to see me. She told me to tell you that she would testify.โ€

My mother stared at the card, a huge smile coming across her face, then handed it to the lawyer, who scanned it, then nodded and murmured, โ€œ๎ขis is good.ย ๎ขis is good.โ€ And that was good night for me.

๎ขursday morning I was awakened by Dr. Barnes. He had come by to let me know that my vitals had been stable for forty-eight hours nowโ€”Clarissa had been keeping track, and I had been keeping up with my spirometering

โ€”and the internal bleeding hadย nally subsided. I just needed to stay put for a few more hours and then heโ€™d be discharging me. Well, once my parents got there.

Best news ever. I was so ready to go. I took a shower, making sure I didnโ€™t get the bandage on my nose too wet, and I had to wash my torso lightlyโ€” even the slightest pressure on my ribs still made me see white. But when I got out of the bathroom, I realized that the only clothes I had were the ones I had on when I got to the hospital. My mother hadnโ€™t brought me anything clean to wear besides fresh underwearโ€”she brought eight pairs! Actual clothes seemed to slip her mind. And if she hadnโ€™t thought about it, I knew my father hadnโ€™t thought about it. And Spoonyโ€”forget about it. I reached into the bottom drawer of the side table, which was also a dresser, and pulled out the plastic bag stu๏ฌ€ed into it. I picked at the knot in the drawstringโ€”damn, it was tightโ€”until the mouth of the bagย nally opened. I pulled my clothes out. First my jeans. I gave them a shake and laid them on one of the chairs.ย ๎ขey wereย lthy and there was a small hole in the le๎‚ย knee, the knee that hit the groundย rst. Next came my shirt, swatting it out of the

tight ball it had been in for the previousย ve days, the wrinkles deep and seemingly permanent.ย ๎ขere was blood up by the collar. I laid it on another chair.ย ๎ขe jacket Spoony gave me was in the closet. I opened that door, looked at the sleeve ripped a good three inches in the shoulder seam. I didnโ€™t bother taking it outโ€”no reason to yet. I felt exhausted again, so I sat on the edge of the bed in nothing but clean boxers and looked at my clothes all ragged and torn. My blood on the shirt, concrete dust dingy-ing up the denim. Clothes that I would probably never wear again.

โ€œHello?โ€ Clarissaโ€™s voice came from behind the door, just before she poked her head in like usual. I didnโ€™tย inch. It honestly didnโ€™t matter. โ€œWhoops, Iโ€™m sorry,โ€ she said, noticing that I wasnโ€™t dressed.

โ€œItโ€™s cool,โ€ I replied, grabbing the gown. โ€œCome in.โ€

Clarissa came in as I snapped the gown shut. โ€œSo, I hear youโ€™re leaving us,โ€ she said, pushing in the breakfast tray for the last time.

โ€œ๎ขatโ€™s what Dr. Barnes said.โ€

โ€œGood,โ€ Clarissa said. She twisted her hair up in a bun and checked my vitals, I guess just as aย nal precautionary measure. It wouldโ€™ve sucked if she heard something weird in my heart, or if my temperature or blood pressure was high, and then I couldnโ€™t go home. Luckily, everything wasย ne. โ€œSo whatโ€™s theย rst thing youโ€™re going to do when you get out of here?โ€

Funny, I hadnโ€™t really thought about it. I just wanted to go home. โ€œI donโ€™t really know. I guess try to see my boys. Put on some clean clothes,โ€ I said, smirking awkwardly. Clarissa glanced to the chairs where I had my dirty T- shirt and jeans spread out like some kind of strange art exhibit.

โ€œOh my . . .โ€ She put her hand over her mouth. โ€œYou want me to put those back in the bag?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I said. โ€œI got it.โ€ I grabbed the shirt and jeans as Clarissa held the bag open for me to dump them in. I didnโ€™t want her to have to touch that stu๏ฌ€.ย ๎ขen I tied the drawstring back in a knot and made the decision right then and there to put the bag in the trash.

โ€œWell, Iโ€™m probably not going to see you, so you make sure you take care of yourself.โ€

โ€œ๎ขanks for everything. Really.โ€ I sat back on the bed as Clarissa gathered up her equipment.

โ€œBut before I go, I wanted to ask . . . did you everย nish that drawing you were working on?โ€

โ€œYeah, Iย nished it yesterday.โ€ I slid my sketch pad o๏ฌ€ย the dresser and handed it to her.

โ€œWow,โ€ Clarissa said, gazing at the paper, then glancing back at me. โ€œRashad, this is incredible. You should be proud.โ€ย ๎ขen she looked a little closer. โ€œHey . . . this one has a face.โ€

โ€œYeah.โ€

โ€œWhy?โ€

โ€œBecause, well, whoever is looking at this scene, you, me, I donโ€™t know, that lady Claudia James, my friends, my family, Mrs. Fitzgeraldโ€”โ€

โ€œWho?โ€

โ€œ๎ขis lady I met,โ€ I said. โ€œAnyway, all of us looking at the scene see the person who has the hand put through his chest.ย ๎ขe dude with his heart torn out. Itโ€™s impossible to ignore him. He has a face. He deserves a face.โ€

Clarissa looked from the drawing, to me, then back to the drawing. โ€œYeah, he does.โ€

 

 

My mom and dad showed up a few hours later. I had texted my mother, reminding her to bring me clean clothes, which she did. I also texted English, Shannon, and Carlos to let them know that I wasย nally on my way home.

#RashadIsAbsentAgainToday is what they all texted back, along with,

THURSDAY 5:33 p.m. from Los

ABOUT TIME. I ALMOST HAD TO REALLY STEAL TIFF. GIVE HER A SHOULDER TO CRY ON.

THURSDAY 5:34 p.m. from Shannon

DUDE IM SO GLAD UR OUT. SHIT IS CRAZY. GUZZO GOT INTO IT WITH QUINN AT PRACTICE. YOU KNO QUINN?

THURSDAY 5:35 p.m. to Shannon WHO IS QUINN?

THURSDAY 5:36 p.m. from Shannon

HEโ€™S ON THE TEAM. MEAN JUMPSHOT. U MIGHT NOT KNO HIM. BUT GUZZO HIS BOY, AND THEY WENT AT IT OVER THIS WHOLE THING.

THURSDAY 5:38 p.m. from Los

IM COMIN OVER 2NITE AROUND 8 SOLDIER-BOY. NO CRYING. I KNO HOW MUCH UVE MISSED ME LOL

THURSDAY 5:39 p.m. from English

DUDE WE GOTTA TALK. SCHOOL IS INTENSE. EVERYBDYโ€™S PICKED A SIDE.

THURSDAY 5:41 p.m. to English

I KNO. COME THRU 2NITE. LOS IS COMING. BRING SHAN.

And before I knew it, I was leaving the hospital, wearing a sweat suit, carrying nothing but my notepad. But before we le๎‚, I tore out the piece Iโ€™d drawn and set it on the food tray for Clarissa. Just to thank her again. I wish I couldโ€™ve seen Mrs. Fitzgerald one more time, but the truth is, when it was

nally time to go, I was ready to get the hell out of there. I didnโ€™t want to make any extra stops.

Apparently, the lawyer my folks hired asked the media to give us some privacy, which was a good thing because we didnโ€™t have to dash from the hospital to the car through a mob of cameras and microphones.ย ๎ขat would have been too much for me. Instead, it was just a few short, peaceful steps from the door to the car. I sat in the backseat as my dad drove through the city. Neither of my parents said much, which was weird. I had this strange feeling like they were uncomfortable around me, or around each other. Something was di๏ฌ€erent, but I couldnโ€™t put myย nger on it.

I cracked the window, the fall crisp seeping in, the familiar static of air pushing through a tight space.ย ๎ขrough neighborhoods, down the crowded streets, First Street, Second Street,ย ๎ขird Street. Red light. My father put his blinker on, but there was no reason for him to turn. We lived straight ahead. But he made a le๎‚ย atย ๎ขird and went around the block, coming back out to Main Street at Fi๎‚h, the whole time glancing at me weird through the rearview. But I knew what he was doing. He was dodging Fourth Street. He wanted to skip Jerryโ€™s, as if him not driving by it made it no longer exist. As if thatโ€™s all it would take to help me forget. Maybe he was doing it for

himself, but the way my parents were acting made it clear that this was something they had discussed.

I decided not to bring it up, and instead just sat quietly until we got to the house, where I went straight in my room, to be around all my things. All my faceless sketches taped to the wall above my tiny twin bed. But more importantly, I needed my computer, so that I could scour the Internet to try to catch up on my own life. You know how weird it is to hashtag yourself, to read posts and updates other peopleโ€”most of whom you donโ€™t even knowโ€” make about you? Itโ€™s strange. But I did it anyway.

#RashadIsAbsentAgainToday brought up hundreds, maybe a thousand posts. Some were just pictures of all these random places with that tag, just like Spoony showed me. I knew where theย rst one started. At least I thought I knew. But I had no idea where all the other ones came from. Other links connected to the hashtag were of the news clips. Turns out, I was only watching the local news channel (the hospital could only getย ve or six channels anyway), but I was being covered in all the newspapers, and even on cable news channels. What the . . . this was insane!ย ๎ขere were clips of panel discussions, where preachers and community leaders sat around arguing for me. Defending me. I mean, not just me, but, yโ€™know. And then there were some clips of people defending Galluzzo, everyone saying the same things:ย He was just doing his job, andย Heโ€™s a good guy, andย We donโ€™t know if that boy was stealing or not. And there were pictures of people holding up pieces of paper with the hashtag written on it. Some of them just saidย ABSENT AGAIN.ย ๎ขere was even one of somebody in a T-shirt, I couldnโ€™t see the face, but written on the front of the shirt wasย Iโ€™M MARCHING, and then the back saidย ARE YOU?

Besides all this, the wildest part was seeing all the pictures of me snatched from websites and social media pages. Some of them were of me dressed in my usual, everyday wear. Jeans sagged just below the waist, T-shirt, sneakers. Pictures of me throwing up the peace sign, someโ€”the ones Spoony fearedโ€” of meย ipping o๏ฌ€ย the camera. Carlos and the fellas had been cropped out.

๎ขese images would have nasty comments under them from people saying stu๏ฌ€ย like,ย Looks like heโ€™d rob a store, andย If heโ€™d pull his pants up, maybe he wouldโ€™ve gotten away with the crime! Lol, andย Is that a gang sign?ย Other pictures were of me in my ROTC uniform. Of course, those had loads of

comments like,ย Does this look like a thug?ย andย If he were white with this uniform on, would you still question him?

Everything was a mess.ย ๎ขe real world.ย ๎ขe cyberworld. All of it. I wanted to turn the computer o๏ฌ€, but it was like seeing a car wreckโ€”you keep looking. And I kept digging. Deeper and deeper into the rabbit hole,ย nding pictures and comments about my family. People saying that my father was a dirty cop and asking why everybody cared so much about me when my dad shot a kid for the same reason years ago.ย Oh, so just because O๏ฌƒcer Galluzzoโ€™s white, everybodyโ€™s mad now? What about O๏ฌƒcer Butler!ย ๎‚ปis kid is the son of a bad cop. Karma is a bitch!ย I have to admit, that one stung the most. Rage started to surge through me, but instead of shutting my computer down, I decided to try to look up Darnell Shackleford. I hated knowing what I now knew about my father.ย ๎ขat he had done this to someone, and even if he didnโ€™t mean to, he ruined an innocent kidโ€™s life forever. All because of fear and assumption. And even though my father lived with the guilt, I now had to live with it too. So as I clicked on theย rst image link to pop up, as I stared at Darnellโ€™s high school senior picture, the arms of his wheelchair peeking into the camera too, I made it clear to myself that this protest, this whole thing, was also for him.

English, Shannon, and Carlos got to my house around eight. My mother ordered Motherโ€™s Pizza for us and had Spoony pick it up on his way in. We sat at the kitchen table waiting as patiently as possible for Ma to pick her slices before we dove in, tearing the cheesy triangles from the pie as if we had never eaten pizza before.

โ€œSo whatโ€™s been going on?โ€ I said, picking o๏ฌ€ย the pepperonis and eating them like chips. Seemed like a stupid question to ask, but up until that point weโ€™d all been sitting there listening to Carlos ramble on about how he thought Silky Wilkes really liked him. โ€œI know yโ€™all didnโ€™t come over here just to let this dude talk about Latrice.โ€

โ€œNaw, it was for the free pizza,โ€ Shannon said with a smirk.

โ€œOh really?โ€ from my mother, who was using a fork and knife to cut hers. โ€œKiddinโ€™, Mrs. Butler.โ€

โ€œMan, seriously, we just wanted to catch you up,โ€ English cut in. โ€œPeople have been on edge. Even me. A few days ago I got into it with that dude Quinn I was telling you about. He was kickinโ€™ all that โ€˜Paul was doing his jobโ€™ crap, while you were laid up in the hospital with your ribs busted. I mean, itโ€™s

wild. But then today, that same dude got into it with Guzzo at practice.ย ๎ขen a๎‚erward the dude, Quinn, came up to me to say that we should just call this one play we have, itโ€™s like an isolation play for meโ€โ€”I had no idea what he was talking aboutโ€”โ€œhe agreed that we should just call it โ€˜Rashad.โ€™โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œYep. Coach Carney named it โ€˜Fist,โ€™ but I called it โ€˜Rashadโ€™ in practice, and Iโ€™m gonna call it that in the game, too. Quinn was with me.โ€

โ€œAre you sure thatโ€™s a good idea?โ€ I asked, feeling really weird. Plus, I didnโ€™t want English to get benched for something like renaming a play a๎‚er me.

โ€œDude, at this point, I donโ€™t care. It ainโ€™t like people ainโ€™t thinkinโ€™ โ€™bout it anyway. Itโ€™s on everybodyโ€™s mind.โ€

โ€œPlus, โ€˜Rashad Is Absent Again Todayโ€™ caught on like wildย re,โ€ Shannon said.

I looked at Carlos, who was trying to shove a whole slice in his mouth. โ€œWha?โ€ he grunted.

โ€œI know it was you,โ€ I said. โ€œAnd for the record, you shouldโ€™ve did it in a way where the paint dripped. Almost like vampire blood style.โ€

Carlos chewed and chewed, thenย nally swallowed. โ€œI donโ€™t know what youโ€™re talkinโ€™ โ€™bout.โ€ He smiled. โ€œBut thatโ€™s a good idea!โ€

Spoony shook his head. But not in theย my little brother and his annoying friendsย way. In the proud way. โ€œSo this protest,โ€ he said, getting down to business.

โ€œItโ€™s tomorrow atย ve thirty,โ€ English said. โ€œWeโ€™re starting at Jerryโ€™s and working our way down to the police station.โ€

โ€œYโ€™all are gonna miss practice?โ€ I asked, concerned.

โ€œWho cares?โ€ Shannon said, nodding to me. My boys. My brothers. โ€œYou should know, โ€™Shad, that Ti๏ฌ€any has been working with Jill and theyโ€™ve been planning the crap out of this thing. Her and Jill have been the main students organizing it from our school.โ€

โ€œBut it ainโ€™t just our school,โ€ English explained, quick. โ€œItโ€™s all kinds of people. Other schools. Folks in the neighborhood. Di๏ฌ€erent businesses.โ€

โ€œI called Pastor Johnson, and he said heโ€™d round up some folks too,โ€ Ma added. I was cool with the pastor coming, but my mother being on board, that really got me. My father, well, I wasnโ€™t sure. He wasnโ€™t out there with us, was he? Nope. He was in his room, hiding.

Spoony leaned forward. โ€œFellas, can I make a suggestion? When we get to the station, we should have a die-in.โ€

โ€œA what?โ€ My mother went bug-eyed, probably at the word โ€œdie.โ€

โ€œA die-in. Itโ€™s basically when you lie on the ground as a form of protest. Sorta like how the sit-ins were back in the day. But when you lie down, they canโ€™t push you over, they canโ€™t do anything to you, really, because you are already on the ground.โ€

โ€œ๎ขey could kick you!โ€ My mother wasnโ€™t a fan of this idea.

โ€œBut they wonโ€™t. Too many cameras.โ€ Spoony looked at Ma. โ€œI promise.

Itโ€™ll beย ne.โ€ She nodded, nervously.

โ€œBut once we lie down, then what?โ€ I asked, because the way I saw it, putting my body back on the sidewalk wasnโ€™t my idea of a protest. It was my idea of a nightmare.

โ€œ๎ขen we make the most powerful statement we can make.โ€ Spoony dug in his bag and pulled out a stack of papers. โ€œWe read every name on this list. Out loud.โ€

You'll Also Like