Rashad is absent again today.
Thatโs the sidewalk graffiti that started it allโฆ
Well, no, actually, a lady tripping over Rashad at the store, making him drop a bag of chips, was what started it all. Because it didnโt matter what Rashad said nextโthat it was an accident, that he wasnโt stealingโthe cop just kept pounding him. Over and over, pummeling him into the pavement. So then Rashad, an ROTC kid with mad art skills, was absent againโฆand againโฆstuck in a hospital room. Why? Because itย lookedย like he was stealing. And he was a black kid in baggy clothes. So he must have been stealing.
And thatโs how it started.
And thatโs what Quinn, a white kid, saw. He saw his best friendโs older brother beating the daylights out of a classmate. At first Quinn doesnโt tell a soulโฆHeโs not even sure he understands it. And does it matter? The whole thing was caught on camera, anyway. But when the schoolโand nationโstart to divide on what happens, blame spreads like wildfire fed by ugly words like โracismโ and โpolice brutality.โ Quinn realizes heโsย gotย to understand it, because, bystander or not, heโs a part of history. He just has to figure out what side of history that will be.
Rashad and Quinnโone black, one white, both Americanโface the unspeakable truth that racism and prejudice didnโt die after the civil rights movement. Thereโs a future at stake, a future where no one else will have to be absent because of police brutality. They just have to risk everything to change the world.
Cuz thatโs how it can end.