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How It Went Down
How It Went Down
How It Went Down
Ebook318 pages3 hours

How It Went Down

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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About this ebook

A 2015 Coretta Scott King Author Honor Book

When sixteen-year-old Tariq Johnson dies from two gunshot wounds, his community is thrown into an uproar. Tariq was black. The shooter, Jack Franklin, is white.

In the aftermath of Tariq's death, everyone has something to say, but no two accounts of the events line up. Day by day, new twists further obscure the truth.

Tariq's friends, family, and community struggle to make sense of the tragedy, and to cope with the hole left behind when a life is cut short. In their own words, they grapple for a way to say with certainty: This is how it went down.

This title has Common Core connections.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 21, 2014
ISBN9781627791595
Author

Kekla Magoon

Kekla Magoon is the author of many novels and nonfiction books, including The Rock and the River, How It Went Down, The Season of Styx Malone, and Revolution in Our Time: The Black Panther Party’s Promise to the People. Kekla received the 2021 Margaret A. Edwards Award for significant and lasting contribution to young adult literature. She has been a National Book Award finalist in addition to receiving an NAACP Image Award, the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, a Printz Honor, four Coretta Scott King Honors, and two Walter Award Honors. Kekla teaches writing for children and young adults at Vermont College of Fine Arts. Visit her online at keklamagoon.com.

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Rating: 4.074257558415842 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Loved this book! Written years before Dear Martin and The Hate U Give, but tackling a similar subject of a black teen being killed by a white man. The great part of this book is that it’s so real - no one knows for sure if the teen was armed, if he threatened someone, if he was thief - we hear from everyone involved with the main character and his city block, and nothing is certain.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The story of a young African-American male that was shot down on the streets with multiple witnesses is told from a variety of perspectives and points-of-view. This is a very timely book due to all the hate crimes, questionable law enforcement news stories, and protests as of lately in the United States. At times I got lost/confused among all the different perspectives, but I could pretty easily find my place again. The fast pace of the writing is great and I do like that the story of this young man was told in this format. A great young adult read!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This was an interesting and relevant read considering what has happened in the US in the past few months and it showed how what people "saw" varied depending on their beliefs, experiences and perceptions. "How it went Down" was narrated by a very large cast of friends, family members, neighbours and witnesses. This gave a range of perspectives on the shooting and provided an interesting insight into gang life and black communities. However, there were just so many of characters that it took me ages to work out who was who each time it was their turn to narrate part of the story which, for me, was the book's downfall.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Brilliant and poignant. As intended, the book asks far more questions than it answers, forcing the readers to be conscientious thinkers and analyze their own thoughts. The characters are realistic and relatable. The plot is fascinating and unfolds at a delicate, intriguing pace. Will definitely recommend for my middle school students.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A story familiar to any American: in a poor urban neighborhood, there's a scuffle. A white man in a passing car, stops, draws his gun, fires, and a black teenager Tariq Johnson is dead. The police let the shooter go claiming he was exercising self-defense. The novel is told from many voices of Tariq's family, friends, neighbors, and a visiting minister (who is also running for office) who arrives in town to offer his support. They offer conflicting views - was Tariq a gang member or not, did he have a gun or not - as well as memories of Tariq, and their part in the communal grieving process. This highly nuanced book shows that there are no angels but also that there is no one unworthy of empathy.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Stunning book. I read All American Boys last fall and LOVED it. So friends kept telling me how much this book would grab me and their praise was spot on. Excellent read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A fascinating character study and an extraordinary look at how a singular event can have so many different perspectives. What's most striking here is that despite the multitude of eyewitnesses, and the opinions and assumptions from the author's diverse cast, readers will never get the full story, because the shooter isn't talking and his victim is dead.

    How It Went Down would be an excellent choice for book clubs and teen reading lists. There is so much to discuss here: stereotypes, racism, gang mentality, self-perception, self-defense, murder, and more. While this book mirrors recent incidences across the country, the author downplays any sensationalism and bias, steering readers away from the cliches. Instead, How It Went Down richly captures the range of a community's emotions and the ripple effect an explosive event can have in the lives of so many, even those on the periphery. Mesmerizing and heartbreaking, this is a deeply thoughtful book that reveals the prejudices in all of us. I was riveted.

    With the passing of teen literary giant Walter Dean Meyers, young adult bloggers have been speculating over who will take up his mantle. If this book is any indication of what we can expect in the future, the answer is Kekla Magoon.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Another young adult book from AudioFile Sync free summer audio's. This one is very good. I like this author and would read more by her. It's a story that starts with the killing of a black youth by a white man in the streets of an urban setting. The story examines all the different ways the community experiences and defines this event. This is so well done. I would read more by this author. The audio is read by several narrators and is quite good.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Timely, street-real and compelling. Readers will race through this book, eager to hear the voices of the people affected by Tariq's killing. We hear from gang members, girlfriends, Tariq's family, the Al-Sharpton-like Reverend Sloan, and people who worked near where Tariq died. Yes, there are obscentites but it's never gratuitous, and there is plenty of dope smoking, drinking and talk about f***ing people up. Beyond all that is a multi-layered look at an all-too-common event that will inspire heavy thought and lively conversation.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The multiple voices that tell the story in *How It Went Down* constitute a symphony of grief, rage, bewilderment, exploitation, and despair in the aftermath of a black teenager’s shooting death at the hands of a white man. Mirroring the too numerous cases we see in the news these days, the black teen (Tariq Johnson) might or might not have been armed. The shooter (Jack Franklin) might or might not have been justified in his actions. The witnesses—one a would-be do-gooder (white man Brian Trellis) and the rest members of a street gang that Tariq might or might not have belonged to—might or might not be telling the truth. The only thing that’s certain in this narrative—and all of the real-life narratives that this novel emulates—is that truth is a construct and reality (along with meaning) often eludes our grasp.Kekla Magoon skillfully orchestrates eighteen perspectives in telling the story of Tariq Johnson’s death and its aftermath. The shooting creates permanent ripple effects throughout Tariq’s community, among his family, close friends, and acquaintances. Reminiscent of Faulkner’s *As I Lay Dying*, *How It Went Down* eschews any pretense to narrative authority as it relies completely on the inevitable fallibility of first-person narration. Omniscience, Magoon seems to imply, is itself a fiction, and the only truth available to us is the one we are able to construct and live comfortably with.An undeniably stark and powerful work of fiction, this novel addresses one of the sad realities of racism in contemporary American culture. It examines not only the senseless violence that claims the lives of innocent victims—it also takes an unflinching look at the impact of that violence on the ones left behind to mourn.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    How it Went Down is a must-read book that is timely and appropriate. After 16 year old Tariq Johnson was shot, friends, family members, and members of the community share their points-of-view on “how it went down.” Kekla Magoon did a great job with weaving these different viewpoints together, and each character had a distinct voice. I always appreciate an author who is able to succeed with this type of writing, as I’ve read many books where the multiple voices idea has flopped. I received a copy of this book in audio format, and at first I was concerned that the wide variety of readers would be confusing, but it turned out to be easy to follow. The readers did an excellent job bringing the words to life.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    How It Went Down is not a book I would typically ever read, and I certainly would have never picked it up in audio format if I hadn’t been gifted it through LibraryThing’s Early Reviewers. While I enjoyed reading the story of the search for T’s murder, it definitely wasn’t something I would seek out again. For one, it just wasn’t my type of book. I’m not a big fan of the gang shooting themed books – no idea why, they just don’t appeal to me. Perhaps because I haven’t had much experience with them. Second, there were so many POV’s is had my head reeling! Ya’ll know I can barely follow three points of view, not four or five! Regardless of my like-but-not-love of this book, How It Went Down was a turning point in my love of reading. I didn’t realize I that I could love I listening to audiobooks. I thought since my memory was so spazzy, I wouldn’t be able to follow along, but that was so not my experience – It was actually the writing I couldn’t follow. In fact, I’ve found a way to enjoy doing my pesky chores. Instead of leaving them to the last-minute, I now spend my time finding excuses to do my chores so I can get more audiobook reading in!So while I wasn’t completely sold on How It Went Down, I’m excited to see where my audiobook journey takes me!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A very timely novel and an easy read, How it Went Down was both fascinating and heartbreaking. It is the story of a young black man (16) shot down while on his way home from buying groceries, told from the perspectives of the various people in his community--both those who were there and those who weren't. The voices of the various first-person narrators are both clear and distinct, and bring the story alive. Furthermore, Magoon does an excellent job of showing the impact the shooting has on everyone in the community, from the grocer who was following the young man to give him his change, to the neighborhood gangsters who watch the event, to the nationally known pastor who comes to town to eulogize the boy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Tariq Johnson was shot. Was it murder, self-defense, or random? Tariq was black, his shooter, Franklin is white. The community speaks out, and believe me you hear many different scenarios, not the least of which, is Tariq's mother, grandmother, and sister who are all besides themselves with grief. Franklin claims it was self-defense, but did Tariq even have a weapon as he left the small corner store? Outrage in the form of justice and revenge come out as the press, religious leaders, friends, family, and acquaintances say their peace. How It Went Down is downright powerful. I can't find any other words that would convey its message more clearly. Everyone and everybody sees Tariq's death differently. Will his death make a difference? Will it ignite a revolt? Will is heal a community or tear it apart? What will it do to the sister who loved him with all her heart? These are questions that cannot be answered in a fleeting moment...they will live inside for days, weeks, months, and years to come. Masterful writing with a complex message. I cannot say enough about this book.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    The reason I gave this book such a low rating is because I didn't enjoy it at all. To me it had way too many characters going back and forth telling the same story. It felt like a struggle to finish this book. There were days I just couldn't get into it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Told from multiple character perspectives, _How It Went Down_ compels readers to bear witness to the murder of sixteen year old Tariq Johnson. The novel spans the seven days after his death. Memory is a faulty thing, and multiple witnesses will see different things, hold different truths. Was Tariq a gang initiated thug carrying a gun, or a friend and loving big brother bringing home groceries? How are we shaped by where we call home? Which persona is the sum of a person? And how does your life impact those around you? This ripped-from-the-headlines read is worthy of your time.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Ripped from the Michael Brown headlines, YA author Kekla Magoon's October 2014 novel almost reads like a reenactment of the Ferguson tragedy. A fictional Underhill neighborhood is dominated by two gangs. Tariq Johnson has resisted the intense pressure to join, although two of his friends have succumbed, and one is in jail for a murder he did not commit. Just like in Ferguson, through a series of events that might be common and harmless on any other day, Tariq is murdered by a white man who is then released on bail. The community roils, an Al Sharpton-like candidate comes to help the Johnson family, and all of Tariq's neighborhood and family connections and loyalties are unraveled and revealed in a tense nine days timeframe.The tragic story is told from all points of view and secrets are revealed by all narrators, to build a complete picture of a boy and the minefields of his neighborhood. This is a must read for all, but especially if you are white, with friends who start out their lecture with "I'm not a racist, but...". Please buy them this excellent, memorable book.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    People see what they expect to see. And no two people see things exactly the same way. Tariq Johnson was a sixteen-year-old black boy shot by a white man. This book begins with accounts of the shooting by the various eyewitnesses. But none of the accounts match. Did Tariq have a gun? Was he a gang member? Was the shooting self-defense? His neighborhood is turned upside down by the events. The lives of the witnesses will never be the same. A very timely story with a powerful message that never feels preachy. Richly detailed characters pulled me in and held me throughout. Highly recommended!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A very powerful read. Tear-jerking at every page. How horrible our world has become.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Magoon focuses on the shooting of a black teenager and then tells the story from the many voices in his community, including near-strangers, best friends, family, and the people who think they know him best. It's a story about community as much as it is about racial tensions and the brutalizing of young black men. It's a poignant, lyrical story that slowly seeps out the heartbreak on each page. Worth the read.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    In this novel Magoon uses the viewpoints of 18 characters to look at the shooting death of a Black teenager, Tariq Johnson, by a white man in an unnamed city. These characters include his friends and relatives, a politician, local shopkeepers, men and women, a politician, witnesses and not--a variety of people living or working, or who formerly lived, in the neighborhood. These 18 different viewpoints also show how everyone who knew Tariq knew a different side of him. From his best friend to his younger sister, to the shopkeeper he regularly bought groceries from, to the friends convincing him to join the neighborhood gang--everyone thought they knew him, and all would be surprised at his real self. This did, though, also make the story somewhat hard to follow. Who was he? And what really happened when he was shot? This is never answered definitively, but I think that is part of the point of the story. There is no way to know.I am not the target audience for this YA book. And it very much is a YA book, bringing in concerns of teens everywhere--friendships, the future, school, money, fitting in, hopes and dreams, staying true to yourself, siblings, parents. Even the design of the book feels very YA to me (large chapter heads, lots of blank space). My teen sons both read this for school, and neither enjoyed it. They both found it confusing and "terrible". My kids do not like fiction and only read what fiction is required for school, so it doesn't surprise me that they did not like this. This is a reader's book in construction and lack of resolution.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I got way more into this than I was expecting. It’s the story of a shooting in an inner city told from the point of view of different witnesses and people connected to the person who was shot. No one has exactly the same story or feels precisely the same. I tried to understand each perspective and feel what they felt. It’s not really the type of story that gives you any answers. It may change the way you think about things though.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is a very timely look at the shooting death of a black teen by a while man. It is told from a variety of perspectives – friends of the victim, a friend of the man who shot him, family members, a minister/politician shaped in the form of the Rev. Al Sharpton and various other community members. It is a fascinating trip about how the truth varies from person to person, with the real truth somewhere in between these stories. Loved it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Multi-faced look at a street shooting, black youth, white man. The boy may or may not have been armed. The man may or may not have felt threatened. The boy may or my not have been a member of the local gang. First-person accounts from 10+ witnesses commence from the in-the-moment shooting to the vigils, to the funeral and afterwards. Author Magoon does a good job in giving each character a unique voice, especially the usually-unheard perspectives of the fellow street teens. In the end, there is no clear consensus of "How It Went Down" only an over-riding sense of sadness and loss. For this reader it was, at times, a bit didactic and difficult to keep the characters straight. Nonetheless an important read with the 2014 Ferguson shootings, etc.

Book preview

How It Went Down - Kekla Magoon

DAY ONE

1. PULSE

JENNICA

Red. Black. White. That’s all I remember. It was a blur, like a dream sequence in the sort of movie that comes with subtitles.

Red. Blood, spreading like spilled ink.

Black. His hair and skin, and the tar beneath him. He was kind of sprawled out, and it seemed almost right for him to be down there, like he blended in.

White. I couldn’t make sense of it at first. It wasn’t clean white, like snow. More of a wispy, dirty white, like clouds on an average winter day. I found out later he had a carton of milk in his hand. It got a bullet right through it, started leaking like a drain and puddling up on the pavement.

The spilled milk seemed wronger than the blood, somehow. I keep thinking that.

BRIAN TRELLIS

I’m not sure I had time to blink. It was over in a minute.

My brain coiled around the knowledge: The boy in the hoodie has been shot. The loud sound echoed in my ears, as did his final whimper. The soft clatter-crash of his fall. The sound—yes, the sound—of the look the shooter gave me. It had a voice, that look. Sharp and clear like a bell.

I ended up kneeling beside him, the wrecked, bleeding boy. Flat-looking now, so flat.

My hands got dirty. Sidewalk dust, glass shards, blood.

I got blood on my lip. One nervous dart of my tongue, and I tasted it. My throat filled with the need to retch.

Nothing happened.

Except I was blinking now. Blinking down at the boy.

His eyes were open, unblinking.

NOODLE

They do it in the movies. Reach down and close the dead asshole’s eyes. But I wasn’t about to touch him.

He stared up at me, and it was fucking creepy.

Jennica knelt beside him, in the spreading gray-white pool. We got to go, I told her, but she could not be moved.

One-two-three-four-five, she chanted, though the life was gone from his body.

She wouldn’t leave, wouldn’t stop crying. I couldn’t get her up. She stayed there, pumping on his chest and whatnot, a fierce kinda goddess in the half-light.

We got to go, I said again, and she looked up at me, eyes like switchblades, like she’d fight to the death to put it all back, put it right. She was striking hot, perfection. All I could think was, I’m with that.

If it was up to me, we woulda bugged out right away like the rest of the Kings, but Jennica’s too good for that.

Every fucking minute, another thing reminds me I’m not good enough for her.

SAMMY

Run. All that was in my mind was fucking run.

Couldn’t think about T falling, or the guy who shot him getting away. Especially not him getting away.

Couldn’t think about T dying, or how easy I coulda stopped it. Especially not how easy.

Maybe he won’t die. I tried to think it like a prayer.

T’s not a screwup like me. He’s lucky. Two shots to the chest—yeah, he could make it. It felt wrong to run, knowing that, but I couldn’t stop the steam under my feet.

I kept my eye on Brick’s jacket and ran where he led me.

Tried to forget I had a piece in my hand. Sleek metal body, cold and strong.

Clutched in my warm, weak fingers.

I fumbled it down into my belt. Tried to forget I could have helped out Tariq with it, taken his killer down.

The piece felt heavy at my waist. Made running kind of awkward, but I kept on after Brick.

I need a gun. I know that. But what good will it ever do me if, when the moment comes, I can’t stand up?

TINA

Siren song

Out the open window

Siren song

Weee-ooo-weee-ooo

Siren song

And I squeeze my eyes shut

Siren song

Fingers in my ears

Siren song

Make it stop

Make it stop now

Sirens mean bad news

2. WHAT THEY SAW

9-1-1 EMERGENCY RESPONSE—CALL LOG

[June 2, 5:32 P.M.–5:36 P.M.]

OPERATOR: 9-1-1, what’s your emergency?

CALLER: I need the police. A boy’s been shot.

OPERATOR: What’s your location, sir?

CALLER: Shot. Some guy just shot the kid in the back. White guy. He pulled over his car and just—like—

OPERATOR: Sir, I’m notifying the police and EMTs. I need an address. Where are you calling from?

CALLER: I’m on Peach Street. They’re right outside. 219 South Peach. He’s been shot. He’s on the ground—

[loud bursting sound, over static]

CALLER: Oh, God. He shot him again.

OPERATOR: Sir?

CALLER: [indecipherable muttering]

OPERATOR: Sir? Can you repeat that? Are you in danger? Please move to a safe location.

CALLER: He’s driving away! He’s driving away. He’s back in his car—

OPERATOR: Sir, the police are on their way.

CALLER: I can see the license. I’m going to try—

[sound of door chimes]

OPERATOR: Sir, please step back inside. Is the shooter still on the scene?

CALLER: Oh, God.

OPERATOR: Sir?

CALLER: There’s blood everywhere. [shouts] CPR! We need CPR!

OPERATOR: Is the shooter still on the scene? Sir, please go back inside. The police are on their way.

CALLER: It’s a dark blue car. Small. KL7— I can’t see. He’s just going …

OPERATOR: Which direction is he going?

CALLER: Uh … straight down Peach. No, he just turned right on Wilson. Or maybe Van Buren. It’s a ways down. I could get my car—

OPERATOR: No, sir. Please stay on the scene.

CALLER: [shouts] That’s the guy, that’s the guy. Blue car, just turned. That’s the shooter.

OPERATOR: Sir? Has the shooter returned to the scene?

CALLER: [shouts] Go get him! Go get him!

OPERATOR: Sir, who are you talking to?

CALLER: He can’t just shoot and run like that.

OPERATOR: Do not attempt to pursue the suspect. I’ve relayed the information to the police. They will take care of it. How many people have been shot?

CALLER: One, just one. Oh, God. It’s Tariq.

OPERATOR: Tariq?

CALLER: Oh, God. His mama. [shouts] Push harder, girl! You got to blow into his mouth.

[sirens in the background]

OPERATOR: Sir, the police and ambulance will be arriving very shortly.

CALLER: They’re coming. They’re coming. I’ve got to go.

OPERATOR: Sir, please stay on the line.

CALLER: I’ve got to go.

[dial tone]

BRIAN TRELLIS

I was coming out of the hardware store when I heard a guy down the street shouting, Stop, thief!

I look, and this is what I see: Farther down the sidewalk, a shop clerk with an apron on comes running out of the convenience store, waving his arms in the air. Come back here!

Streaking past me, just right there in front of me, goes a dark face in a black hoodie. The hood’s fallen back somewhat, like he can’t hold it in place while he’s hurrying. He’s trotting down the street pretty quick, his shoulders all hunched around his haul. I can see it on his face. He thinks he’s home free. He slides past me.

Not so fast, sucker.

I step up after the little fool. There’s a bunch of other guys around, but no one’s making a move to stop him. By the looks, they’re all members of the 8-5 Kings. They don’t care enough to stop him, but he’s not getting away.

Not on my watch.

I step up, clamp my hand down on his shoulder. I got a big hand, real meaty. Takes all of his shoulder under it like a handlebar. Not so fast, I tell him. The Kings scare me, sure, but not this little scrap of a kid.

Hey. Get up off me, yo. He starts squirming. But it’s no work at all to hold him. Come on, he says. Let me go.

This is a matter for the police, I say, holding firm.

What’s your problem, man? he says.

"Woooooo, go the Kings, crowding around us. Tariq’s gonna take down the big man."

I read it all wrong. He wasn’t just passing by the Kings; I guess he’s one of them. They’re calling out to him, egging him on. Maybe it’s some kind of initiation.

Hoodie boy struggles. From under his arm, something small, roundish, and firm pushes out at me.

He’s got a gun, I hear someone say. Shit, back it up!

I can hold my own in a fistfight, but I’m not about to get shot to save some corner store fifty bucks in loot, or whatever this thug pilfered. I let him go. Don’t shoot. I back away. I didn’t mean nothing by it.

Kid spins around, face all stormy. His arms are full. My heart’s pounding. My eyes drop to the gun in his hand. He’s facing me now. I’m bracing myself, thinking, Why’d I have to try and get tough? Thinking, I’m about to die. But it’s not right. I’m looking at his hand. Looking for that deadly glint of metal, but there isn’t anything, and then out of nowhere, the kid is falling. He buckles like a hinge and drops. I hear a loud noise and the sound of glass breaking. Something liquid splashes over my feet. I jump back, but the kid is just down.

Oh, shit, someone shouts. Was that for real?

Tariq, someone says.

We gotta get the fuck out. Someone else.

Three different voices.

I hear another sound, unfamiliar and close. A popping, kind of pinging, very loud. By the time I turn, what I see is a white man, hustling away. I see people running, ducking. Hear the jingle of bells on a door.

What happened? I say it out loud, to the air. What just happened?

JENNICA

We were a little high, me and Noodle both. I regret that now, but I can’t undo it. We were across the street. I didn’t see the first shot, ’cause we were cozying up on the stoop there like normal, but I saw the second one. Tariq was already on the ground. The guy standing over him put a bullet in him, right there on the sidewalk. Then he jumped in his car and drove off.

Noodle said I was like some kind of hero. The guy drove off, and people were screaming, but Noodle said I just walked right across the street to where Tariq was lying. I don’t remember doing that.

I do remember I got blood on my hands. From the CPR. I got it on my clothes, too, on everything. I remember being on my knees in this terrible pool and pushing up and down on his chest with my arms locked, like I learned.

We took this class in school last year, about how to save a person’s life. I guess I should have signed up for it again this year. I didn’t know enough. I couldn’t save him.

My eyes got all blurry, and his mouth was all bloody, and I couldn’t bring myself to breathe into it. Maybe that was wrong, but I also remember worrying I might blow blood down his throat. Can that happen? I wanted to ask the ambulance man who took over after me, but I couldn’t manage the words. I still haven’t tried to find out.

I’m not sure I really want to know.

NOODLE

Leave it to Tariq to mess up my afternoon. We were sitting on the stoop, Jennica whispering all sexy in my ear. We were waiting for Brick, but I was about ready to bail on meeting up with the guys and find a quiet place, just the two of us.

Then I heard Tariq’s voice, chirping from all the way across the street. Loudmouthed little punk. I quit kissing on my girl and looked over there. Tariq was talking to Brick, who must’ve come up right about the same time, a couple other guys along with him.

Jennica leaned into my neck, all high and turned on. And I was pissed then, because I should have been enjoying it. But there went T, arms full of milk and stuff. It figured—he would be too cheap to pay Rocky five cents for a grocery sack.

He had some nerve, talking shit to Brick after everything that went down last week.

Brick was trying to get T to step up into the Kings for real, instead of dancing around the edges like he had been. I never could figure why he wanted that chickenshit dabbler as his lieutenant. Neither of them seemed to understand what they were saying when they talked about being number one and number two—that it would make me number three. Plus, Tariq is almost five years younger than me. What, I’m supposed to take a back seat to some punk kid who didn’t even really want in? No way should T step up to outrank me. But Brick was determined about it; I still don’t get why.

Across the street, Tariq had to go and drag the big, light guy into it. Guy looked like a refrigerator, but T was talking smack, as usual. Now things were looking up, I thought. I’d seen Tariq in a fistfight. He didn’t have the skills to go up against a guy that size. Fool. I don’t know what Brick saw in that pile of mess.

The Kings crowded in closer to watch the fight. I craned my neck up, trying to see past their shoulders. If Tariq was about to get his ass beat, I was sure as shit gonna be watching. But my view was blocked, partly by the guys and mostly by the car that stopped in the middle of the street.

White dude jumped out. Hauled ass up onto the curb.

Someone—Sammy, I think—shouted, He has a gun!

I leaped up, startling Jennica. The Kings backed out, in a loose circle around Tariq and the big man. The big man threw his hands up.

Tariq turned around, facing the new guy. His voice, typically loud. Annoying. Mind your own business, cracker. All his shit falls out of his hands. One arm stretched out in front.

Then the shots. One, two.

I thought, Damn. That motherfucker’s about to get made. T’s talking shit one minute, the next he smokes a whitey right in front of Brick? That’d earn him a straight shot to the number two spot. No question.

But it was Tariq who fell. Slow motion. The Kings peeled off and scattered. White dude scrambled to his car. The gun in his hand was silver. Nine millimeter. His arm, straight down. Finger still on the trigger. Wild eyes.

I threw myself down on top of Jennica. We landed awkwardly against the stairs. Her fingers fluttered against my shirt, around my ribs. Oh, God, she murmured. Oh, my God.

I stayed like that—I didn’t know what else that crazy white bastard might do—until the car rumbled off down the street with a squeal of tires.

Was that for real? Sammy screamed.

We gotta get the fuck outta here, ordered Brick. Now.

Jennica pushed me off and ran across the street. Tariq, she cried. She planted her hands on his chest and started CPR. Jake came running out of his liquor store, phone up against his ear, shouting, too. Halfway down the block, another white guy stood frozen, watching.

Jake’s voice and Jennica’s crying—those were the only sounds on the block. The other Kings had disappeared. Everyone else had gone inside. The rumble of the car faded, became part of the distant background hum.

I followed Jennica across the street. Couldn’t see no choice about it—that’s my girl. Stood on the curb, looked down at T’s flat, leaking body.

He was asking for it, I told myself.

If that guy didn’t pop him, someone else was gonna, that’s for damn sure. Kid couldn’t keep his mouth shut for a hot second, ’less he was stuffing a snack in his face.

Brick must have been tripping; no way was T ever gonna be good enough to replace me. I looked upon his slack cheeks, open eyes, and all I felt was relieved. Good riddance, Tariq Johnson.

I was there. I saw the whole thing. Fucker had it coming.

BRICK

You can’t fault a brother for getting heated. Tariq be talking shit to me, like usual, coming down the street. That little punk. I taught him everything he knows, then he up and flaked out on me, talking about college and turning his back on his

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