Excerpt from Retaliation: A Novel
The Letter
Miss Yasmin,
You visited my school
last month in Southeast, DC. I was the girl sitting way in the back with long braids. You probably don’t remember me.
I didn’t say one word during your whole speech. But since you gave us your MySpace address, I checked you out and decided
to connect. All that stuff you were saying about choosing the life you want and being positive, it sounds good, but it doesn’t
work around here. In my ‘hood we have people fighting that live two blocks from each other. I live in the Deuce Trés
(23rd
Street) and we’re at war with Deuce Five (25th
Street.) If somebody from Deuce Five sees someone from Deuce Trés, a fight can jump off right on
the spot. Hearing guns pop off is an every day, every hour situation. I used
to have friends in like 3rd grade that lived in the Deuce Five area, but now if I see one of them, they act like
they don’t know me, and I gotta act all rumble tumble or they’ll try to punk me. And that’s just when I
get home. At school, girls are fighting each other over boys, what you look like and what you wearing. I’ve always tried
to be cool with everybody. Ugly girls, pretty girls, best dressed and bummy, they’ve all been my friends--until nine
days ago, when I was coming out the mini-mart and this girl and two of her friends jumped me. I don’t know why they
jumped me, not really. I would tell you, but it’d make this letter too long. My point is you said we could choose the
life we wanted, and I didn’t choose to be jumped. I didn’t choose to live in a neighborhood where people are dying
everyday. But that’s exactly where I am. If you say we can choose our life, you gotta help me choose something different.
‘Cause right now, I’m carrying a switchblade everywhere I go. And if the wrong person steps to me, I’m choosing
death- for my enemy.
Your girl,
Tashera
Chapter 1
Monday, April 2
For
the latter part of the day at Marion Barry
High School, Tashera Odom dreamt about an oatmeal crème pie and a grape
soda. When the school bell rang, she couldn’t wait to get on the bus and jet to the store for her coveted snack. Her
trademark invisible braids – with a red braid in the front and all of them in a ponytail – bounced as much as
she did as she walked into Meha’s Mini-Mart on R Street
in SE, Washington, DC. When
Tashera reached the counter, Mr. Cho asked her about her family.
“Shee Shee, you here by yourself today?
No brother with you today?”
“Nah, I’m rolling solo. But I had
to get my snack on.” Tashera’s brother Khalil was confined to a wheelchair and stayed at home until she returned
from school. He mostly played video games all day. Tashera knew he’d be mad that she didn’t get him before she
walked to the store, but her cravings didn’t want her to go home first.
As
Mr. Cho took her money, Tashera heard loud music outside. She turned toward the front door and saw an old car, like a Chevy
or a Ford with dark tinted windows.
“Those windows are so dark. They’ll
mess around and get arrested if the police catch ‘em,” Tashera said. Mr. Cho just looked at Tashera and nodded.
Tashera exited the store, turned up the volume
on her iPod and took a left up the street. Her house in Barry Farms was a short five-block walk away. At the end of the first
block, the car with the tinted windows began to follow her. Tashera cut through
an open parking lot and the car pulled in front of her.
“What the…?” Tashera said almost
dropping her oatmeal crème pie from her hand. Three girls in hoodies and black sunglasses jumped out of the car and surrounded
Tashera who took her ear buds off and put them deep into her jeans pocket.
“Yeah, we got you now,” the short
girl said. The girls circled Tashera, who tried to cut out of the circle, but
the biggest girl out of the crew kept pushing her back.
Tashera stared at the girls’ faces. One
of the girls looked vaguely familiar, but she couldn’t remember where she’d seen her. I gotta find a way outta this, Tashera thought. I gotta come up with an escape route. Tashera had run track from sixth grade through eighth grade. She’d
even competed in the state finals. The three girls, one tall and muscular, one short and dumpy, and the other tall and slim
wouldn’t really have a chance if Tashera started running. No way she’d let them catch her.
“I don’t know you,” she said.
“You got me confused with somebody else.”
“Nah, it’s you. Everybody says it’s
you, now you gon’ get yours.”
Tashera dropped her bag with her soda and her
brother’s pork rinds inside. She tugged at the straps on her book bag. She didn’t want her book bag falling when
she bolted the scene. She decided it would be easier to knock the skinny girl down and run the rest of the way home because
the two heavier girls wouldn’t be able to catch up. As the clock struck three in her head, Tashera ran toward the skinny
girl as hard as she could, throwing a hard elbow toward the girl’s rib cage. The shorter girl, almost foreseeing Tashera’s
move, stuck her stubby leg in front of Tashera, and they watched as she fell face first to the ground. All three of the girls
took turns kicking Tashera in the back, legs, and belly.
“You ain’t gon’ be able to
have no babies now,” the big girl shouted and kicked Tashera as hard as she could just below her belly button.
Tashera
passed out.
****
Paramedic
Ashe Thurgood had been visiting his elderly grandmother when he looked out the window and saw three girls kicking and yelling
at a girl who lay motionless on the ground. He picked up his cell phone and called police though he didn’t believe that
they would come to Barry Farms in a rush to save a girl who had been jumped. He grabbed his medical bag and ran through the
parking lot.
“Y’all need to step away from her,”
Ashe yelled as he flashed his paramedic’s badge. The three girls looked
at him. Tashera let out a moan on the ground.
“What you gonna do with that?” The
big girl asked while looking at Ashe’s badge.
“Nothing. But I’m a fifth degree
black belt, and if you don’t get back in your vehicle and get away from this girl, I’ll be forced to subdue you.”
“Calia, let’s go. Let’s go,”
the skinny girl said to her crew.
“Don’t say my name,” uttered
the big girl.
Ashe kneeled down and felt around Tashera’s
abdomen. He could tell at least two of her ribs were broken. He picked up his phone, ready to dial 911. Instead, he called
one of his friends who was still at work driving an ambulance and told him to come pick them up. He hoped that the girl’s
internal bleeding wouldn’t kill her before the ambulance got there.
****
Khalil
Odom wheeled himself to the window in the living room and waited for Tashera. Though he was five years older than her, Khalil
liked spending time with his 17-year-old sister. Besides, he needed her. The area along his spine where the bullet had entered
was especially sore, and his little sister Shera would put a heating pad on it to make the pain go away.
Every
time that pain resonated, Khalil thought back to his life just a few short years ago. Four years ago, he was 2nd
lieutenant of the Deuce Trés crew. In a robbery gone bad, Khalil was shot by
a part-time security guard who was determined to prevent the neighborhood electronics store from getting robbed. It was supposed
to be an easy inside job. Darren had sweet-talked a lady supervisor at Eddie’s Electronics to give him a copy of the
key that unlocked the bars and gates in the front of the store. After the gates opened, the Deuce Trés crew had planned to
go into the store and take at least three flat screen televisions. But the lady supervisor failed to mention that Eddie’s
Electronics had an undercover security guard patrolling the store every thirty minutes. When Khalil attempted to load his
television into the trunk of their Escalade, the security guard started shooting. The back window of the truck shattered and
so did Khalil’s spine.
****
Khalil
had gone to therapy for the past four years and every doctor told him that he’d never walk again. They also told him
that he wouldn’t be in any pain, but as a person who’d been paralyzed from the waist down, Khalil felt pain in
his back every day that he opened his eyes.
Khalil
took out a cell phone that was strapped into a pouch on his chair. He didn’t normally worry about his sister, but today
his hand began to shake around the time that Tashera would have been home. He called Tashera’s phone and it just rang.
Khalil hung up and went back over to the video game console. He shut the TV off just as his phone rang. He looked at the Caller
ID. It was Tashera.
“Where you been all day?” he said
when he answered the phone. “You know we’re supposed to go to the store.”
“Sir, I’m with the girl who had this
phone in her backpack. She’s unconscious. We’re on the way to Greater Southeast Community Hospital. She was jumped
by a group of girls. A couple of her ribs are broken and she’s bleeding internally.”
“No,” Khalil screamed and threw the phone against the television. “This can’t be happening,”
Khalil cried.