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Crackhead
Crackhead Read online
Lisa Lennox’s debut novel transports us to the heart of the crack era—the South Bronx, New York, 1989.
In the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, the crack epidemic swept through inner-city communities like the plague. Mothers abandoned their children and took to the street for a hit. Fathers sold everything they owned to get a taste. The crackhead was rampant. Some neighborhoods were never the same.
Enter Laci Johnson, a privileged, smart, beautiful teenage girl from across town, who teams up with the South Bronx Bitches—an infamous girl group known for chasing men and money. When the SBB becomes envious of Laci, they devise a plan to destroy her life.
Finding love in the most unexpected of places, Laci turns to a local drug dealer to help save her and heal the wounds of her new addiction.
Lisa Lennox is the pseudonym for
a bestselling author.
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COVER PHOTOGRAPH BY RVIE TAHILRAMANI/VETTA/GETTY IMAGES
ALSO BY LISA LENNOX
Crackhead II
Played
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2004 by Triple Crown Publications. Compilation and Introduction copyright © 2004 by Triple Crown Publications.
Originally published in 2004 by Triple Crown Publications.
Published by arrangement with Triple Crown Publications.
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Atria Books Subsidiary Rights Department, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.
First Atria Paperback edition March 2012
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10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Lennox, Lisa.
Crackhead : a novel / Lisa Lennox.—1st Atria Books trade paperback ed.
p. cm.
1. Drug addicts—Fiction. 2. Young women—Fiction. 3. African
American women—Fiction. 4. Bronx (New York, NY)—Fiction.
5. Urban fiction. I. Title.
PS3612.E5496C7 2012
813’.6—dc23 2011035095
ISBN: 978-1-4516-6173-6 (print)
ISBN: 978-1-4516-6174-3 (ebook)
This book goes out to all those addicted to crack cocaine— with God all things are possible.
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CONTENTS
Foreword
Introduction: Roll Call
Chapter 1: Diamond Girl
Chapter 2: Follow the Leader
Chapter 3: God Bless the Child
Chapter 4: Nasty Girls
Chapter 5: Criminal-Minded
Chapter 6: Girl Talk
Chapter 7: Schemin’
Chapter 8: On Cloud Nine
Chapter 9: Strictly Business
Chapter 10: Triple-Crossed
Chapter 11: Callin’ Shots
Chapter 12: Me, myself, and I
Chapter 13: The Hit
Chapter 14: Growing Pains
Chapter 15: Family Ties
Chapter 16: That’s what Friends are for
Chapter 17: It takes Two
Chapter 18: She’s gotta have it
Chapter 19: Thinking of a Master Plan
Chapter 20: Make it Last Forever
Chapter 21: Too Little, Too Late
Chapter 22: Truth Hurts
Chapter 23: A Lover Scorned
Chapter 24: Unfinished Business
Chapter 25: What you won’t do for Love
Chapter 26: The Big Payback
Chapter 27: Boston University
Acknowledgments
FOREWORD
STUDIES SHOW THAT animals addicted to cocaine preferred the drug to food even when it meant possible starvation, and many users of its second cousin, crack, report being hooked after only the first use. This horrible addiction is three-fold: psychological, physical, and emotional.
The College of Communication, Boston University, September 1989
INTRODUCTION
Roll Call
THE LAST FEW students stumbled into Mr. Giencanna’s Introduction to Philosophy class like zombies. It was only 9:30 a.m.—still too goddamn early in the morning to be trying to philosophize over some shit. No one felt like being there. Unfortunately, taking this class, not to mention dealing with Mr. Giencanna, was a necessary evil. Mr. Giencanna was one of those teachers that taught a little bit of everything, and no matter what, all students would cross his path sooner or later.
Standing at the front of the room, staring mercilessly at the students, Mr. Giencanna stood in his usual hard-ass stance. He had been a counselor at a boy’s home in New York City before becoming a teacher. The children there were violent and hardened, and the staff treated them as such. Now, Mr. Giencanna displayed that same attitude with his current students.
Observing the angry mob of young adults, who seemed more pissed off about learning than being grateful for it, Mr. Giencanna shook his head. “Look at you all,” he said with disgust. “Not one enthusiastic face in here eager to feed his or her mind. If you don’t feed your mind, then how are you going to feed your belly when it comes time to survive on your own?” The room was filled with blank faces, and there was no response. “Mark my words,” he continued, “without knowledge you’re all bound for the welfare line or the penitentiary.” Nobody was trying to hear him, and he proceeded with the daily roll call.
“Mr. Jason Abbott?” Mr. Giencanna called out, fixing his glasses on his hawklike nose.
“Here,” a young man in the rear spoke up.
“Casey Bernard?”
“Right here,” said another male’s voice.
“Miss Natalie Farmer?”
This time there was no reply.
“Natalie Farmer?” he repeated.
A young man wearing a blue and gray varsity jacket nudged Natalie, who was at her desk, dozing off.
“What?” she said sleepily, and with an attitude.
He nodded toward their instructor. “Roll call. That’s what,” he replied.
“I’m here, Mr. Giencanna, sir,” Natalie said, wiping around her mouth.
“Stay with us, please, Miss Farmer,” said Mr. Giencanna. Although he phrased it like a request, Natalie knew by his stern tone and the piercing look in his eyes that it was, without a doubt, an order.
Mr. Giencanna cleared his throat and continued. “Miss Julacia Johnson?”
Once again there was no reply. The classroom was silent as everyone looked around to see if there was another nodding student somewhere. Everyone appeared to be wide awake.
“Perhaps we have another sleep
ing beauty amongst us,” Mr. Giencanna said sarcastically. “Is there a Miss Julacia Johnson present?”
Still there was no reply.
“Julacia Johnson?” he repeated, very much irritated this time. The silence remained.
The welfare line or the penitentiary, he thought as he prepared to call the next name.
CHAPTER 1
Diamond Girl
SO, TALK TO me, Laci. We have a lot to discuss,” Laci’s mother, Margaret, said as she sat down Indian-style on the edge of Laci’s bed. She looked more like one of Laci’s peers than she did her mother.
“What do you mean ‘a lot’?” Laci said as she fumbled through the endless name-brand clothes in her oversized walk-in closet—Gucci, Fendi, Troop, Liz Claiborne, Guess. She was in the process of throwing out old clothes that she hadn’t worn in a while or that were worn out. She had to make room for the new ones she planned on purchasing during their annual mother-daughter shopping spree. Summer and college were right around the corner, and she would need a new wardrobe to set things off.
“Just what I said—a lot,” Margaret said, smiling. “I want to know everything.”
“Everything, like what?” Laci asked, intentionally stalling.
“Like whether you’ve decided where you want to go for the graduation trip I’m sending you on. Like, do you have a boyfriend who might want to go on the trip with you?” Margaret leaned in, looking for some kind of response in her daughter’s face.
“I knew you were fishing for something,” Laci said as she flung a handful of clothes from her closet onto the floor.
“Well, you’re only the most beautiful seventeen-year-old girl in the world,” her mother said proudly. “And I’m not just saying that because I was a model and you are my daughter.”
Julacia, or Laci, as she was called, was indeed very attractive. She was small in stature and had a face like a porcelain doll. Her long, black, shiny Shirley Temple–like curls cascaded across the left side of her forehead, tickling her perfectly arched eyebrow. Her moody brown eyes complimented her light butterscotch skin tone. She was often mistaken for being Puerto Rican. In 1989, there weren’t exactly a whole bunch of biracial kids walking around. Laci could have fit right in with Pebbles or Mariah Carey, with her light skin with “good” hair. At 5′4″, Laci was thick and curvy in all the right places. She was tight-to-def with junk in the trunk, a slim waist, and nice B-cup breasts. Though never one to be conceited, Laci knew she had a bangin’ body and a funky fresh style to match. She would look good even if she were dressed in rags.
“Mom . . .” Laci said wearily.
“Tell me, tell me, tell me,” her mother asked anxiously, bouncing on the bed like a giddy teenager. “What’s his name? What does he look like?”
“What are you talking about?” Laci said, sucking her teeth. “There is no he. And you know you’d be the first to know if there was.”
“So you say,” Margaret replied, giving Laci a doubtful look.
“Mom, I’m not seeing anybody.” Laci had sadness in her eyes.
“Come on, baby,” Margaret said with a wink. “I’m not only your mother, but your friend, too. All we have is each other. I love being a part of your life. In a way, I live through you. You make me feel like I’m seventeen again. So, get to talkin’, honey. Is he tall, short, thin, buff, or what?”
“Mom,” Laci whined, stepping out of the closet with an old sundress in her hand. “I don’t have a boyfriend.” She threw the dress in the pile she had started on the floor, then walked over to her bed and crawled to the middle of it.
“Okay, if you say you’re not seeing anybody, then I’ll have to believe you.” Margaret grabbed Laci’s old Cabbage Patch doll that was lying on the bed. “So where are you going on your vacation? Have you thought of someplace nice?”
“I was thinking of Puerto Rico,” Laci said excitedly.
“Ooh, that sounds nice. So should I go ahead and book a ticket for you . . . and your boyfriend?” Margaret started kissing the doll. Laci laughed and playfully threw a pillow at her. “Oh, boy, you shouldn’t have done that. You don’t want to tell me who your boyfriend is, huh? Then take that!” She pounded Laci repeatedly with a pillow and began to laugh hysterically.
“Mom, please stop,” Laci pleaded. “You’re messing up my hair!”
“If you didn’t have a boyfriend, then you wouldn’t care how your hair looked. Now, what’s his name?” Margaret asked out of breath, getting in another hit.
“Wait, wait,” Laci said, reaching for her ringing Mickey Mouse phone on the nightstand next to the bed. “Hello?” she said, catching her breath.
“Hey, Laci?” the voice on the other end said.
“Yes, this is she,” Laci replied, not recognizing the voice. “Who is this?”
“Girl, its Monique,” said the smiling voice. “What you doin’?”
“Laci,” her mother called from behind her, “You want to catch a movie or go to dinner tonight? You know . . . celebrate your upcoming graduation, going off to Boston?”
“Hold on, Monique,” Laci said, covering the phone. “What’d you say, Mom?”
“I said do you wanna go out and celebrate tonight? With graduation right around the corner and you going off to college, I figured that was cause enough for us to get out of this house and go do something.”
“Okay, Mom. After I get off the phone, we’ll see.” Laci then directed her attention back to the phone. “Monique . . . you still there?” Laci’s mother hit her again with a pillow, which landed on the bed. Laci tried to hurry up and grab the pillow to get the last hit, but her mother was too quick and ran out of the room.
“Yeah, I’m here,” Monique answered.
“Okay, girl,” Laci said, chuckling and breathing hard.
“Why you breathing so hard?”
“Fooling around with my crazy mother. We were having a pillow fight,” Laci giggled. “She wants to take me out tonight.”
As usual, Monique tried to twist Laci’s words around. “Why you try’na throw shit up in my face?” she snapped.
Laci should have seen it coming. Of all the girls in Tonette’s crew (which included Shaunna, Crystal, Monique, and of course Tonette), Monique seemed to be the most envious of Laci’s relationship with her mother.
Monique had been living with her grandmother for the last few years. Her mother died when she was just a freshman in high school. Not an addict herself, Monique’s mother had made the all-too-common mistake of sleeping with a dope fiend, who was infected with some mysterious new virus called HIV.
“What are you talking about?” Laci asked, getting sick of Monique’s attitude.
“What are you talking about?” Monique replied, mimicking Laci’s proper English. “You sound like a white girl.”
“Look,” Laci huffed, “was there a reason for this call, or did you just feel like starting another argument?”
“Never mind,” Monique said, sucking her teeth. “You ain’t gon’ wanna go. Forget it. I didn’t mean to interrupt your pillow fight. Go hang out with your mommy. I need to call the rest of the crew to make sure they’re wit’ it. Peace out.”
Laci was confused. Her face revealed the frustration she endured on a daily basis as a result of interacting with her homegirls. It was safe to say that she was the prima donna of the pack. She definitely had the most going for her; sweet and laid back, Laci was the complete opposite of her loud, foul-mouthed friends from the South Bronx. Born with a silver spoon in her mouth, Laci was living the lifestyle of the rich and famous compared to her girls. Her mother was white and a former model featured in such magazines as Sports Illustrated, Cosmopolitan, and Glamour. Her dad, Jay Johnson, was black and a corporate lawyer. As the only child, Laci got whatever she wanted, even if she didn’t ask for it. After her father died of a massive heart attack, mother and daughter moved back to Riverdale, one of New York City’s wealthier neighborhoods, also located in the Bronx. Although Laci and her girls lived in the same borough, they
lived worlds apart.
It probably would have been in her best interest to not associate with a group of around-the-way girls. Being connected with one of the Bronx’s most well-known female crews, it was also probably in her best interest to be seen and not heard. No matter what came out of Laci’s mouth, it was always viewed as her being bougie, uppity, a snob. Wanting so badly to be a part of something blinded her to the point where she couldn’t see that not everybody was down for her. Some of those girls wanted to be her, and it was only a matter of time before jealousy would rear its ugly head.
Laci was so taken aback by Monique’s negative attitude that she didn’t even notice her mother come back into the bedroom. “Laci, what’s the matter?” Margaret asked, noticing the sudden change in her disposition.
“Uh, nothing,” Laci lied.
“Laci . . .” Her mother had that I know you’re lying tone in her voice.
Laci sighed. “It’s just that the girls are always so confrontational with me. Everything I say is bad. Like when they ask me questions, it’s almost like they do it just to argue with me,” she said in frustration.
“I don’t understand,” her mother said, leaning in the doorway with her arms folded. “Give me an example of what you’re talking about.”
“Like us having money, or you and I being so close.” Laci sighed again, falling back on the bed.
“What about us?” Margaret asked, confused.
“When I talk about you and me going shopping, they get all uptight. They don’t have any money. I’m tired of being sorry for not being poor.”
“Really?” Margaret asked, concerned. She walked over to the bed and sat down next to Laci. “I didn’t know this about your new friends.”
Laci nodded. “And I don’t care about that, Mom. I just want to hang with them, you know? When’s the last time you’ve known me to have a group of friends?” Margaret remained silent. “Exactly.” Laci sighed again.
“And why is it that you want to hang out with them? I’m sure there are plenty of nice kids at your school.”