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Authors: M.K. Asante

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“You getting any ass yet?” he asked, submarine voice. I just laughed. His thick hands pulled me close.

“Huh?” He studied me, tightening his grip. I nodded a lil’ nod. “My boy!” He scrubbed the top of my head like a lotto scratch-off. “Life is all about ass … You’re either covering it, laughing it off, kicking it, kissing it, busting it for some white man at the job, or getting some!” I cracked up.

“Just remember,” he said. “Sex is like riding a bike: you gotta keep pumping if you want to go anywhere … Lemme ask you something else?”

“What’s up, Unc?”

“You eating pussy yet?” He grabbed me.

“Come on, Unc,” squiggling out of his grip.

“Let me smell your breath.” He chased as I jetted out of the room.

He found me in my room.

“Put your shit up,” he said, putting his hands, like boulders, in front of his grill. He threw a jab at me. “Fuck you gon’ do, nephew?” Sizing me up like a fitted hat. I jumped out of my seat.

“Gotta be ready for anything.” Touched my chin with another jab. “C’mon now, put your shit up.” I threw my hands
up. He caught me again—bang. “Keep ’em up, young buck. Up! Protect them pussy-eating lips.”

I moved them up. His fist on my ribs. My hands fell like they were asleep. His fist on my chin. He picked me apart, then showed me how to hold my hands.

“Stand strong, feet shoulder width apart, like this.” Planted his feet, fixed my stance. “And if you ever want to kiss a ngh good night,” staring into his right fist, “swing it like this. Land it right there,” landing it slo-mo on my face.

I pulled back and tried to throw the same punch. “Like that?”

“Yup, just like that,” catching my punch. “That punch right there will make a ngh swallow and spit at the same damn time.”

Unc can fight anybody, whoop anybody’s ass … except for dynamite. Dynamite is crack and heroin mixed up—it’s undefeated.

“You clean?” my mom asked him on the phone the other day. I was eavesdropping on the other phone.

“Seven months. Think about using every day, but I’m clean. Intend on staying that way too.” Before they hung up, he said, “Send the boy. I’ll get him in line.”

Uzi’s going through his dresser. It’s got so much graffiti on it I can’t tell the original color. It’s bombed out like one of the
subway cars in the train yard near my grandma’s house on Grand Concourse in the Bronx.

Top drawer—

“Want these?” he asks, tossing nunchucks at me.

“Yeah!” I catch, swing. They’re really just two wooden paper towel holders chained together.

“Take these too.” He throws brass knuckles at me. I slide my fingers into the four holes that look like the Audi rings. Make a fist.

“And yo—don’t get caught with none of this shit either,” Uzi tells me. I nod like a bobblehead and throw a brass jab at the air. “I’m not tryna hear Mom’s mouth.”

Middle drawer—

Black and silver Krylon spray paint and a couple of fat cap nozzles.

Bottom drawer—

A Phillies Blunt box full of sticky photos. He hands me this pic of a naked jawn. “What you know about that, Malo?”

“Damn,” I say. “Her titties look like two bald heads.” Uzi laughs and hands me another photo.

“ ’Member this?” It’s a hazy pic of me and Uzi.

“Nah,” I say. “When was this?”

“That’s from when we moved here. Our first day in Philly. Mom took this,” he says. I keep staring at the photo.

“I look shook.”

“You were! You don’t remember that day? You don’t remember
what you asked me when we were watching the fire?”

I shake my head nah. “What fire?”

“That was the day they bombed MOVE.”

“Who bombed who?”

“Mayor Goode had the police drop a bomb on this group called MOVE, right there on Osage Avenue. We could see the blaze from our building.”

“Oh yeah,” I say slow, remembering, seeing the smoke curl behind my eyes. “That was a bomb?”

“Yeah, they dropped C-4 with Tovex on the whole block. That’s the shit NASA uses to blow up asteroids and whatnot. Mad people died—women, kids. Shit was crazy. Mom is friends with one of the survivors—Ramona Africa.”

“So what did I ask?”

“We were watching it go down—the smoke, the helicopters, sirens—you asked me if it was the end of the world.” We both laugh. “It was, though, in a way. It was the end of the world we knew. We moved into a burning city.”

He pulls one last thing out of his dresser: a deck of cards. He shuffles them, then they disappear, and reappear in my pocket. I’m like, “What the …?” and he’s just flashing this crazy grin.

“See, Malo, every ngh knows magic—look how we disappear when five-o rolls up.” I laugh, thinking,
And reappear in jail?
“For real, though, magic is all about misdirection. Large movements to cover small movements. And every magician needs a signature trick.”

I wish I knew magic. My signature trick would be to make the cops—the ones that stormed through our door that day,
then into my dreams most nights like a horrible movie playing over and over in my head—disappear. Poof. Be gone.

I hug Uzi tight and try not to let go. I feel like if I let him go, he’ll be gone forever. I can’t fight back the tears. If he comes back tomorrow, it’ll be too long.

*
“All Night Long,” Common, 1996.


“It Ain’t Hard to Tell,” Nas, 1996.

3
10 Gs

I wake up in Uzi’s room. Kool G Rap, Big Daddy Kane, the Fat Boys, Rob Base, Eric B and Rakim, Cool C, NWA, the Ultra-magnetic MCs, Crown Rulers, PE, Wu-Tang, and like three years’ worth of
Jet
magazine Beauties of the Week watching over me. Dimes in bikinis and baby oil.
Lashonda Harrington is from Abilene, TX. She enjoys scuba diving, reading, and cooking. Shanika Frazier is from Dayton, OH. The 5′5″ model enjoys exercising, shopping, and dancing. Kia Dawson is from Trenton, NJ. She plans to study business administration and communications. Kimberly Jackson is an aspiring songwriter who resides in Texas. She enjoys playing dominoes and watching football. Malo enjoys them all
.

Uzi’s gone, but I can still hear him singing, “Wake up, wake up, wake up,” over my bed in his Bone Thugs-N-Harmony voice. When he was here, we’d walk to Broad and Olney together
to go to school, cracking jokes and laughing the whole way. He’d hop on the C or the 55, whichever came first, and I’d get on the sub, the Orange Line. Now it’s just me, solo-dolo. I feel naked without him.

I walk up to the corner of 10th and Godfrey—we call it 10 Gs—where all of Uzi’s boys chill. They stand where they always stand, between the liquor store and the corner store, next to the Fern Rock Apartments fence, under the train tracks, and across the street from Rock Steady, this bugged ngh who sits on a crate all day with a broken radio, rocking his head back and forth to a beat no one else can hear. My mom calls them the “corner boys” because they’re always out there, posted like guards at a checkpoint. They hug the block, huddled in hustle, eyeing everything and everyone everywhere every day.

She says: “They’re bringing down the neighborhood … They’re looking for trouble … They’re an eyesore.”

I just say: “Waddup?”

All the usual suspects are here: Ted, Scoop, D-Rock, and AB—the squad.

“ ’Sup, young buck?” Scoop rumbles, shaking my hand like he’s trying to prove a point, squeezing the red out. My hand feels like a Juicy Juice carton.

“Damn, man,” I say, shaking the sting out.

“Yeah! You feel that shit, ngh?” He laughs his wicked laugh like he’s possessed or something. “I break, not shake. I crush, not brush. Bruise, not cruise.”

“Y’all up early?” I say, since I know none of them are in school. I think they’d be seniors like Uzi. They all dropped out around the same time. Ted always says he graduated valedictorian from the school of hard knocks.

9 6 the deal, we real about this cheddar, forever

Corner standing, in any weather
*

“Up early? Nah, you up early. We ain’t been to sleep yet. We up late.”

“Sleep is the cousin of death,” D-Rock says.

“Speaking of cousins,” Scoop says, his sharp face behind a Newport, “you talk to Kiki?” Scoop is skinny with a face the color of unfinished wood. Cartoon eyes sunk low in sleepy sockets. Long dangly arms. A meaty W. C. Fields nose that’s always red at the tip like Rudolph’s. He’s got the kind of hair that can go to the Puerto Rican, black, or white-boy barbershops, the shape-up curly top with gel. He’s wearing all Polo—his outfit looks like a horse stable.

“Nah.”

Takes a drag. “She still mad?”

“She’s always mad at ya black ass,” Ted says.

“Fuck you, Theodore.” Scoop and Ted are always talking shit to each other, it’s how they show love.

Kianna—Kiki—is my older cousin and Scoop’s girl. This time she’s mad at him because he beat up these two guys her first day at college. She goes to Albright in Reading, up there with all the name-brand outlets and the Puerto Rican gangs.

We helped her move into her dorm, me and Scoop, carrying
all her stuff up three flights of stairs. After that we found the gym on campus. It’s nice, state-of-the-art everything. We were playing basketball against these two dudes—“college nghz,” Scoop kept calling them, like it’s a diss. I don’t even know what homie said, but he said something, and Scoop just went off. Dropped dude with a right hook to the jaw. Then he rushed my guy like a gust of wind—strangled him. I was just standing there shell-shocked at the three-point line, like,
What the fuck, Scoop?

We left right before the cops came. The school put Kianna on some kind of probation.

“I can’t take him anywhere,” she whines to me on the phone. “He’s too niggerish. I’m getting too old for this shit.” I remember when all that thug shit turned her on. “It’s not cute anymore,” she says. “I’m in college now.”

I’ll never forget the first day I met Scoop: “Why they call you Scoop?” I asked.

“Cuz I be scooping nghz’ chins with uppercuts!” he said in his Badlands rasp. He’s from the Badlands, 3rd and Cambria. His voice is ill because no one sounds like him. It’s like he has a rattly muffler in his throat. His tone can flip from vicious to hilarious to straight cryptic in a blink.

I fucked with those beyond my age bracket

cuz they analyze and mack to get the papers and stack it

A hooptie skids in the middle of the street. Some lady I see around sometimes, older, always in scrubs, rolls down the window. Shakes her head.

“Damn, y’all
still
out here?” she jokes.

Ted jumps up, strikes a pose, and sings “Always and Forever” like Heatwave.

“Yo, Malo, why your peoples ship your big brother away like that?” Ted asks.

“I can’t even call it.” I step to school.

*
“Illegal Life,” Capone-N-Noreaga, 1996.


“Gimme Yours,” AZ, 1995.

4
Friends or Foes?

My school colors are piss yellow and shit brown. The building is the color of shit too, like someone took a monster dump and smeared it all over.

This kid Fritz, my boy Ryan’s cousin, actually did that last year on Mischief Night, the night before Halloween. Me and the squad went out mobbing around Olney, throwing eggs at cars, buses, people, whatever, it’s a Philly tradition. We doused this abandoned U-Haul truck, Florida plates, with kerosene Ryan found in his uncle’s basement. Nobody wanted to light it … 
fuck it, I’ll do it
. I swiped the match, stared long and hard into its glow until the flame crept down, pinching my fingertips, then threw it in. The fire jumped up like hibachi, scorching my leg. We ran up 7th Street as the truck blew up. After that, Fritz, who I’ve never liked and is known for taking shit a hundred miles too far, decided to literally take shit too far. We all told him not to do it but he was hell-bent. He took a shit in the bushes, scooped it up with the
Philadelphia Daily
News
, and smeared it on somebody’s front door—the wrong somebody. Nasty. That somebody, a stocky old head who was in the Gulf War, caught Fritz and it was lights out. Fritz gets what he deserves, what’s coming to him. Dude beat his ass with a Louisville Slugger. Then he made Fritz eat it … his own shit.

That’s what going to a Friends school is like—eating your own shit. And inside Principal Roach’s office, where I am now, is even worse than eating your own shit—it’s eating someone else’s. Roach limps around all day yelling at me about rules. He’s got that rare type of limp that, once you meet him, you feel like he deserves.

I don’t even know why I’m here or what I did. My teacher just sent me here as soon as I walked in. Roach’s office is small and messy. Greasy thumbprints smudge all his scattered papers like drunk watermarks. I’m sitting here, waiting for him, thinking how I’d rather scrape dry blood off the sidewalk than be here waiting for him.

I wonder what Uzi is up to. What he’s doing right now? I wish I was in the desert with him. I got a letter from him the other day:

Malo,

Wassup kid? Damn it’s been a minute since we spoke yo. Uncle Jabbar kicked me out. Fuck him, he’s a hater … He’s jealous or some shit. He’s tryna b my pop but I don’t have a pop. My journey = my pop. My mistakes = my beatings. My personal triumphs = my pat on the head.

I’m good though, I always got a chick or two or five to lay up wit for a day or so, then on to the next. I wish u could be out here man, u should see this shit, a Philly ngh in AZ, doin rap shows, smuttin these coke-snortin Beckys and Suzies in their $2000 a month trust fund baby condo flop houses—shit is wild, just stay there for like a week partying, binging, it’s nuts.

I hit Moms up for money sometimes, she’ll send a couple dollars Western Union. I don’t even really need the shit, I think I do it out of spite, like fuck it, u want me to stay away? Then pay!

My new crew is N.A.M. / New Age Militia / Nubian Apocalyptic Military / Niggaz Anglos and Mexicans / Nines and Macs / Narcotics and Money, u know! We just b partying, getting money, rumblin, gettin into all types of shit but overall just havin a good ass time in this short ass life we got dog.

Arizona is a gun state so u can buy ratchets at the pawn shop yo! Everybody’s strapped! I like carrying my AP-9, it’s like a newer version of the bum ass TEC-9, jawn is vicious … Get down or lay down! I’m not trying to hurt nobody, Malo, but these nghz out here b trippin, they gangbang and shit, I gotta protect my self cuz I’m all I got!

I’m still out here alone tho, I feel like an orphan, it seems like all my boys come from some kind of mysterious background … no family, no roots, I’m a Nomadic Addict Merchant (N.A.M.) … that’s why we call ourselves a fam, a band of brothers.

And for real, Malo, I’m in no rush to come home. I want
to see u, be around u, but other than that, I might not ever come back … I’m finally free yo! I don’t have to live up to my parents, my potential, nothin … does that sound fucked up? It’s not. Look at all the 1st-round draft picks in the NFL or NBA that turned into bust, u know why?

Expectation before acclimation … Tryin to live up to some shit they wasn’t even comfortable wit yet … Yahmean?

Look, man, take care of Mom, I know she is probably going through it. She’s a quiet screamer, she won’t tell me what the real deal is, so just look out for her. Play all the leeches in her life close, make them uncomfortable. Make sure Dad treats u with respect, and if he don’t, show him none, none! … N.A.M.! (New Asante Men!)

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