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Still (Grip Book 2)(25)

By:Kennedy Ryan


"Thank you for joining us today," the host says. "We're continuing our  web series entitled Helping Ourselves. Each week we discuss an  initiative or a group of people making a difference in communities of  color."

Angie, her hair in its natural state, a beautiful nimbus of textured  waves and curls, wears skinny jeans and an off-the-shoulder sweatshirt.  Her skin is tiramisu brown, glowing with health and good makeup. She  exudes complete confidence. I haven't had any interaction with her at  all, but I'm already impressed by what I see.

"We're broadcasting on YouTube and Periscope," Angie continues, smiling  into the camera. "We're also live tweeting, and the official hashtag is  #HelpingOurselves."

She gestures to her right, where Grip, Qwest, and a few other  celebrities are seated. I try not to read too much into the fact that  Grip and Qwest are right beside each other.

Angie performs quick introductions for each person, famous in their own  right and arena, but Grip is the best known, by far. He's not doing  anything that should make you want to look at him instead of everyone  else, but you do. You just do not want to take your eyes off him.

Or maybe that's just me.

A new sense of purpose rests on Grip's shoulders since he started Dr.  Hammond's class and moved to New York. He's definitely still engaged as  an artist, still the studio rat he's always been, but there's more to  his life now, and I can tell it is deeply satisfying to him. It's  significance. He wouldn't be the man I love without this passion, this  thirst to do something about the things that need doing.

He's laughing at something Angie said that I missed because I've been  caught mid-drool. He leans back, his casual posture a thin veil over the  coiled energy always waiting to spring forth. The Run DMC shirt fits  the lean musculature of his chest and arms. I smile at the cheap black  plastic watch on his wrist that he's never without, the one I won for  him that night years ago. Qwest may have more in common with  him-culture, music, challenges-but that watch reminds me that Grip and I  have a history and a future.

"Grip, you've always been socially conscious," Angie says. "But ‘Bruise'  kind of put everyone on notice and started a lot of dialogue. Can you  talk a little about what went into that song?"

"Yeah, sure. I grew up with that tension." Grip leans forward, elbows  propped on his knees and eyes lit by conviction. "Needing law  enforcement because I lived in such a dangerous place, but fearing cops  because we never felt they were checking for us. I didn't write the song  to take a side as much as to represent both sides, and hopefully show  that we're more alike than we are different, find some common ground to  negotiate the most difficult things. It's not right when unarmed black  men are shot in the back for doing nothing and then officers walk away  with impunity, but it's also not right when good cops are judged by the  same stripes as the bad ones. It's not right to ambush good cops to make  a point. Nina Simone said it's an artist's responsibility to reflect  their times. That's what I want to do."

A wide grin hangs between my cheeks, pride swelling in my chest. His  intelligence and passion are evident every time he answers a question.  Angie has assembled a great group, each of them incredibly talented and  popular, leveraging their moment for causes close to their hearts. I'm  even touched when Qwest talks about Our Girls, the initiative she works  with to raise awareness about women of color who go missing and the fact  that they receive less media coverage and less attention.         

     



 

"Grip, you're here in New York now, right?" Angie asks near the end of the allotted broadcast time. "At NYU?"

"Yeah, for the semester." Grip grins. "I love New Yorkers because they  don't give a damn about me most days. I walk to class and grab coffee  and go home like everybody else. There's an anonymity here that I really  enjoy."

"And what are you studying?" Angie asks.

"I'm taking Dr. Israel Hammond's course on systemic bias in the criminal justice system. He's a guest professor this semester."

"Now that's a woke brother." Approval shines from Angie's eyes. "I read  Virus when it came out. It should be required reading for everyone."

"He's brilliant and cool as a fan." Grip returns her smile.

The open curiosity gives way to a calculation I've seen on faces like  hers on shows like these a hundred times. Even before she asks her next  question, I sense the interview about to take a different turn. Call it  premonition, or call it one ruthless bitch recognizing another, but I  know.

"And you've been sighted with your girlfriend here in the city," she says. "She moved here, too, right?"

Grip must recognize that look, too. He shutters his expression, but keeps smiling.

"Yeah, she grew up here."

"I keep it real, Grip." Angie spreads the look to the rest of the  panelists. "Every person here has been on the receiving end of my real.  It's your first time, but I'm not gonna treat you any different."

Oh, God. What is she about to say?

"You sound like you understand and want to raise awareness about the  issues facing black people." The "but" is all over her face before she  even says it. "But, really how woke can you be sleeping with a white  woman?"

All the air freeze-dries in my chest, just stalls and is enveloped in cold.

"What did you say?" Grip's brows bend like an accordion into a  disbelieving scowl. "What does that have to do with being woke? With  wanting to make a difference?"

"I'm just saying we get sick and tired of watching men like you talk  about the cause," Angie says, her polite mask falling away, the  indignation she must have been hiding rearing its head. "Talk about what  our community needs and esteem black women from one side of your neck,  and then go and choose a white woman as your partner. You out here  playing in the snow. It's a little hypocritical."

"How is it hypocritical?" Controlled rage is evident in Grip's narrowed  eyes and the fists clenched on his knees. "I don't see anything  incongruent about those two things, unless you are operating under the  false assumption that me wanting to end systemic racism equates to me  hating white people. I don't hate white people-I hate racism."

Grip pauses meaningfully, tipping his chin back to study her closely.

"Racism in any form," he says. "Even the reverse kind."

"This isn't reverse racism," Angie snaps back, bouncing hot eyes to  Qwest where she's seated beside Grip. "We gave you a pass when you chose  a white woman over the black woman you said was your queen."

Not true. It drives me crazy when people assume "Queen" was written for  Qwest, and the #GripzQueen hashtag still haunts me occasionally on  social media.

"Did you hear me asking for a pass?" Grip cocks one brow, his voice even  but taut with outrage. "You don't give me passes because I don't need  your approval."

"All I'm saying is I bet you won't find Dr. Hammond pulling this. You  may talk woke," Angie asserts with relish, "but your walk is broke."

Oh, I bet she's been saving that line for a special occasion.

"Oh, you wanna compare walks?" Grip sits up straight, his words sounding  like a battle cry. "Check my record-I've put my resources where my  mouth is. I take every chance to engage with these issues, not just  throw money at them, and what exactly have you done other than start  Twitter beef and host a podcast?"

"Don't throw shade at me for voicing what most black women think," she  fires back. "I just thought I should bring it up because I wasn't sure  if you were ashamed of her or what. We rarely see you out or in the news  with her the way you have been in past relationships. You must realize  how bad it looks."

"I see no need to satisfy the curiosity of people who don't mean well,"  Grip replies. "Who only want to play in mud and make a mess of people's  lives on Twitter and Instagram. She isn't a public figure, and I'm  protective of her privacy. She chose me, but she didn't ask to live on  blast. I try to honor that. Believe me, it has nothing to do with me  being embarrassed."         

     



 

"She may not be a public figure," Angie says. "But she's sleeping with  one, and she's related to one. Her name is Bristol Gray, for those who  may have missed it since you've been hiding her, and her brother is  Rhyson Gray-now that's a big name. You don't mess around. Go white or go  home, huh?"

"I came on this panel to talk about issues," Grip says. "Real issues  that are costing us lives and compromising our future. You, however,  chose to talk about shit that doesn't matter and isn't anyone's business  but mine and my girlfriend's. I bet the men sitting in jail too long  for petty crimes, or for crimes they didn't even commit, those looking  for jobs or needing education to even compete for them, all the people I  want to help won't give a damn if the person helping has a white  girlfriend or not."