Criminal Minded Read online




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  PROLOGUE - I got a story to tell

  ONE - look through my eyes

  Lamin

  Olivia

  Lamin

  TWO - zion

  Lamin

  Zion

  THREE - things done changed

  Lamin

  FOUR - forbidden fruit

  Lamin

  Olivia

  Lamin

  Olivia

  Lamin

  FIVE - fallin’

  Lamin

  Curtis

  Lamin

  SIX - slippin’

  Zion

  Olivia

  Lamin

  Lucky

  Zion

  Olivia

  SEVEN - shot down

  Olivia

  Zion

  EIGHT - can’t stop the reign

  Lucky

  Lamin

  Olivia

  Lamin

  NINE - a lot to learn

  Zion

  Olivia

  Zion

  TEN - the wise man

  Lucky

  Lamin

  ELEVEN - the hustle

  Curtis

  Lamin

  TWELVE - the exodus

  Olivia

  Lamin

  Lucky

  THIRTEEN - following in footsteps

  Olivia

  Lamin

  FOURTEEN - close encounters

  Curtis

  Lamin

  FIFTEEN - foolish

  Curtis

  Zion

  Curtis

  SIXTEEN - kick in the door

  Olivia

  Lamin

  Lucky

  Olivia

  Lamin

  Lucky

  Zion

  SEVENTEEN - twisted

  Lamin

  EIGHTEEN - all eyes on me

  Lucky

  Lamin

  NINETEEN - the quiet storm

  Olivia

  Lucky

  TWENTY - my downfall

  Zion

  Curtis

  Zion

  TWENTY-ONE - moving on

  Olivia

  Lucky

  Lamin

  Lucky

  Lamin

  Lucky

  TWENTY-TWO - the prodigal son

  Curtis

  Zion

  Lucky

  Lamin

  Zion

  Curtis

  Lamin

  Curtis

  TWENTY-THREE - am I my brother’s keeper?

  Zion

  Lamin

  Curtis

  Olivia

  Lamin

  Zion

  TWENTY-FOUR - the grand finale

  Lamin

  Olivia

  EPILOGUE - the everyday struggle

  The Slams of Shaolin

  ALSO BY TRACY BROWN

  Acknowledgments

  Copyright Page

  I dedicate this book to the memory of my grandfather, William Brown, Sr. I still remember your face, your voice, and your delicious cooking. I remember the stories that you sat and told me about my ancestors, about your life. I remember all the things you taught me, all the ways you looked out for me. And I will always remember the way you used to wear your hats—dipped to the side like a true Brown. Every time I put on a hat, I think of you.

  You are my inspiration—a man who personified strength, courage, and wisdom. Your life taught me that there is no excuse for failure. You succeeded in life—owned a home, several cars and provided for your family—despite the fact that you never learned to read or write. It must make you smile to see me now, writing books. I hope you’re proud of me for what I have accomplished despite my hardships, just as I am proud of you for what you accomplished despite yours. You are, and always will be, my hero.

  I love you so much. And I miss you even more.

  Rest in Peace, Pop.

  PROLOGUE

  I got a story to tell

  Lamin

  Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Lamin Michaels. And I got a story to tell. I want to take you on a journey through a decade that changed everybody’s life. This is not just my story. It’s the story of my whole crew’s rise to prominence. And the ways in which we managed to fuck it all up.

  The journey I’m about to share with you begins in the place I called home most of my life: Staten Island, New York, aka Shaolin. Call it what you want, but it became the setting for some of the most traumatic experiences in our young lives.

  I guess you could say it all started in the summer of 1989. We learned some hard lessons that summer and realized that life can sometimes reveal painful truths. Even though we were only high school students at the time, we all lost a big piece of our childhood innocence that summer.

  This is our story.

  With summer approaching in 1989, I was sixteen years old and a junior at Port Richmond High School. Fashion was a big deal to us back then. For the first time, we were beginning to see our rap icons on television, and we all wanted to look like them. Public Enemy had us runnin’ out to buy “Fight the Power” T-shirts and wearing clocks around our necks. Some of us wore our heritage proudly with African pendants in green, black, and red. Some of us rocked gold chains and Adidas. Run-D.M.C. was definitely the shit! But Big Daddy Kane’s “Ain’t No Half Steppin’” boomed from my speakers more than anything. I played that song like every day! I even put cuts in my eyebrows to pay homage to hip-hop’s No. 1 playa at that time.

  That year, our school’s football team, the Raiders, was one of the best on Staten Island. Our only real competition was McKee High School’s Seagulls. But our team was nice. School pep rallies and victory parties were constant, and we were all happy and carefree. But, by the time the weather got warm that year, me and most of my peers were already on a collision course with fate.

  I was a mischievous child. Always in trouble. Hangin’ out on the block at all hours of the night, smokin’ weed, drinkin’ forties, gettin’ my dick sucked by the shorties from around the way. You name it, I was doin’ it.

  Back then, not too many girls our age would listen to their mothers when they told them to keep their legs closed. Girls were sexually free, so dudes like myself had spent much of the school year cuttin’ out and finger–poppin’ shorties as often as possible. It wasn’t difficult at all to walk right past the security guards in the school’s lobby at 10:00 A.M. on any given school day without so much as a glance in our direction. Nobody gave a damn.

  So everybody failed something. Summer school or night school became necessary, and for the first time, different neighborhoods clashed in the city’s steamiest seasons.

  Keep in mind we were young dudes learning the ropes of the block and whatchin’ hustlers get paid. Whatever that hustle was … crack, rappin’, weed, pimpin’ … whatever! Young black males were getting money. A few bought into the American Dream, got good grades and part-time jobs. But most? Well, most of them were like me. Young, unafraid of anything, and determined to get that paper.

  ONE

  look through my eyes

  Lamin

  My cousin Curtis is more than just my cousin. He’s my right-hand man. His moms (Inez Michaels) and my moms (Nadia Michaels) are sisters. But they rarely speak. I like to think of them as flip sides of the same coin. Both of them were single mothers trying their best to raise their children in the midst of a storm. Crack was at epidemic proportions. The Rockefeller drug laws were guaranteeing you a mandated prison sentence of fifteen years (minimum!) if caught with even small amounts of narcotics. And we were sixteen-year-old black boys growing up in the ghettos of New York.

  Aunt Inez always worked hard for what she h
as. She had Curtis when she was fresh out of high school, but she never accepted any type of government aid. No welfare, no WIC, food stamps, Medicaid … nothing! That type of pride caused her to have to work two and sometimes three jobs to make ends meet. That meant that Curtis spent a lot of time at the home of our grandparents—we call them Grandma and Papa. Curtis’ father has kids all over the place and he don’t do shit for none of them.

  My mother, on the other hand, could never imagine a life without government assistance. From the moment me and my sister, Olivia, were born, she supported us with the help of Uncle Sam. She gets it all: food stamps, Section 8, Aid for Dependent Children, Medicaid, disability … you name it, she gets it. My mother also participates in these scams they call “fair hearings,” which she usually wins.

  For example, in our house on Grandview Avenue (which we rent with the help of Section 8), we had a fire in the kitchen once. It was a small one, but it was enough to cause my mother to apply for a fair hearing six months later. Her argument? She claimed that she couldn’t prepare meals for her children in the kitchen (which was bullshit ’cause we had steaks, fried chicken, and baked macaroni all the time) and was forced to use her cash—since she claimed that the food stamps they gave her were not enough—to purchase meals for us outside. She won that hearing to the tune of $4,700. That paid for the fifty-five-inch television she bought for the living room, and the leather sectional we sat on. As for the house we lived in, it’s a three-bedroom duplex with a sunken living room. Hardly what you would expect for a single mother of two on welfare. God bless America.

  My moms always felt that Aunt Inez thought she was better than us. “Just ’cause she got a job and I get welfare don’t mean shit. If you ask me, she’s the fool! I never have to worry about where my next meal is coming from.” My mother’s logic was always questionable.

  My mother also has a brother named Eli. It wasn’t short for Elijah or Elias or anything like that. Back in the day, black folks would name their children what most would consider nicknames, sometimes even initials (T.J., A.J., etc.). My uncle’s name is simple. So is his life. He has never lived anywhere except my grandmother’s home. In ’89, he was forty-two years old and had not had a job in his life. Him and my mother got along just fine.

  Curtis and Aunt Inez lived modestly. They had a two-bedroom apartment on Continental Place, which was right around the corner from our house. Both of our houses were a stone’s throw away from the projects. I always felt that our houses might as well have been part of the projects. We went to school with all the kids from the projects. We played with all the kids from the projects. Ultimately, we found ourselves knee-deep in shit with kids from the projects.

  Curtis is his mother’s only child. I always felt bad about that. Even though Olivia, my little sister, is a girl, she is still good company. She’s one year younger than me (despite the fact that we have different fathers), so the two of us are very close. Olivia and I never had a problem doing what we wanted or going where we wanted. Our moms didn’t care, as long as her government check came on time. Our fathers were both nonexistent. Mine left the minute my moms told him she was pregnant, and Olivia’s died in ’79 from some kind of cancer. As we got older, I became Olivia’s unofficial guardian. I took that responsibility very seriously. My moms never offered us any type of guidance. But the bills were always paid, and we both sported the hottest Adidas, Reeboks, or whatever was popular at the moment. I guess that contributed to our obsession with money. Money bought the finer things in life. And to us, nothing was more important than that.

  Curtis also had a lot of time on his hands, since his moms was always at work. Not wanting Curtis to get caught up in the ever-present street life, Aunt Inez sent him to stay with our grandparents in Park Hill for the summer. It seemed like a good idea at the time, and although I knew I would miss him, I figured Curtis would have a good summer eating Papa’s delicious cooking. (Contrary to the stereotype of grandmothers who throw down in the kitchen, Papa was the chef in the family. That was how he’d made a living all of his life and his meals could make a grown man cry!) But, despite Aunt Inez’s good intentions, Curtis found himself at the first major crossroads in his life.

  Olivia

  For me, ’89 was the year I lost my best friend and the year I met the love of my life. Curtis was my best friend. He’s also my first cousin. Even though he’s a year older than I am, he always had time for me. Growing up, I was the biggest tomboy! And I constantly followed my brother Lamin and our cousin Curtis wherever they went. If they were climbing trees, so was I. If they were catching fireflies, I poked the holes in the jar so that the fireflies could breathe. If they played basketball, I had to be down. It seemed like only yesterday when we were carefree little kids. Today, that couldn’t be further from the truth.

  See, 1989 was like a golden age for me. Rap music was the sound-track of our inner-city lives and everyone was learning how to floss. Gold chains and gold fronts, designer shades, expensive shoes, Kangols, Adidas, Bally’s, MCM and Dapper Dan suits … everybody was stylin’. But stylin’ cost major cheese and that meant that most people were frontin’. Most people were living beyond their means and spending the rent money to look nice. But me and Lamin learned early how to hustle. We got it from our moms. Mommy always kept money pouring into the Michaels’ household. Most of it came from government benefits. But a lot of it was from doing what she had to do to get money. Mommy had every dude she dealt with eating out of the palm of her hand. I wasn’t happy about all the men she brought into our house but I enjoyed the shopping sprees and trips to the hair and nail salon that followed. Lamin hated that shit. The older we got, the more I saw how bothered Lamin was by my mother’s revolving bedroom door.

  But we were able to keep our minds off of all that by spending our time with Curtis. Being with him and Lamin taught me so much. I learned how guys talk to one another about girls. I learned what guys look for in a girl. I learned how to survive in the streets. Lamin was my brother and I loved him dearly. Curtis was my very best friend. But, ultimately, I learned the hard way that even Curtis—my hero—could fuck up so bad that his life would never be the same.

  Lamin

  Like me, Curtis had to attend summer school. I went to my regular high school for the summer. But Curtis had to go to the school closest to my grandparent’s house—New Dorp High School. None of us anticipated Curtis running into any trouble. Papa and Grandma lived in a modest house on a quiet street in Park Hill called Vanderbilt Avenue. It was close to the notorious Park Hill Housing complex, but far enough away that it felt a bit safer. However, since Curtis wound up in summer school, he also wound up in the midst of some of Park Hill’s biggest knuckleheads.

  On the first day of summer school, July 5, 1989, Curtis called me.

  “Yo, La,” he said. “These niggas out here think they real hard! Most of them mu’fuckas just stand around giving me the screw face. But this one nigga … they call him Jah like he’s God … he rolled up on me today, La!”

  I had never heard my cousin sound so anguished. I knew he could handle himself since the two of us had gone toe-to-toe with our share of assholes in the ’hood. But this time, Curtis sounded like he wasn’t so confident.

  “Jah, huh?” I asked. “What’s this nigga look like?”

  “He’s about my height … six feet tall I guess. But this dude is a fuckin’ menace. All he keeps saying is, ‘You ain’t from around here, muthafucka. This is Killa Hill. We’re murderers out here. This is Killa Hill, nigga.’ His boys just follow him around and look hard but this muthafucka got a lot of mouth!”

  I thought about what Curtis was saying. I was big for my age and I could be intimidating. I’m about six feet four inches, and my love of sports has blessed me with an athletic build. I thought it might be wise for me to round up some of the neighborhood thugs and take a ride to Park Hill to show support for my cousin. But then, he dropped a bomb I wasn’t expecting.

  “La, the nigga pulled a gun on
me.”

  My whole demeanor changed when he told me that shit. “He pulled a gun on you?” I asked to be sure I had heard him right.

  “Word, La! The nigga pulled up his shirt and showed me the handle of a gun in his waistband. He said, ‘Killa Hill, muthafucka! You ain’t from here, so don’t come here!’ I just walked off and caught the bus home. But I gotta face that nigga tomorrow, La. How would you handle this?”

  Damn! I thought to myself. What a tough question to answer. I gave it some thought and said, “Don’t go to school tomorrow. I’ll come out there and we’ll take a ride up to New Dorp together.”

  Curtis seemed content with this answer and we hung up the phone with plans to meet the following day. I called up some niggas from around the way who were the ride-or-die type. Everyone was down for whatever when it came to Curtis, so I was confident that we would prevail over any so-called beef.

  The next day, I woke up at 10:00 A.M. and called all my boys to confirm our plans. Everything was on point. I took a shower and admired the muscles on my dark brown body in the mirror. I was ready to crack this nigga Jah’s face open.