Fourteen-year-old Tommy is a troublemaker, but he’s basically got a good heart, in spite of the awful circumstances of his home life. When his mother abandons him, he is sent to foster care, where he must learn to fend for himself. Then he meets Daquan, and the two young men form an instant bond based on their shared hardships. Together they try to navigate life without a parent’s guidance and avoid the darker elements of the dirty streets of Boston.
When Tommy’s mother re-enters his life, he sees a way back to the stable family life he desires. Determined, he sets out to do whatever it takes to make a home with his mother. With the help of Daquan, will Tommy be able to stay out of trouble long enough to make it home?
Release date:
September 24, 2019
Publisher:
Urban Books
Print pages:
288
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There used to be a framed picture on our kitchen wall that said HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS. When I first learned to read, I stared at that picture and tried to understand a concept that my developing brain couldn’t comprehend. As I got older, I realized what the saying actually meant. I was definitely home when I was with the ones I loved.
We lived in the projects in Southie, the Irish section of Boston. Dad was a two-bit hustler. Mom stayed at home with me. To support the family, my father would do whatever he had to do. He was a jovial drunk who loved gambling, so holding down a steady job wasn’t easy, but because everyone liked him, they looked out for him. The Irish gang that ran the streets of Boston at the time, the Cushing Hill Gang, were the ones who used him the most. He’d run numbers, collect payments, drive getaway cars during robberies . . . never anything with too much responsibility. He was one of those outer fringe, low-level gangsters never fully accepted into the “family.”
In those days, I had no idea what my dad did for a living, but I started to get curious one day when my friend, Derek, said something about it.
“Mom, what’s a two-bit hustler?” I snuggled up to her on our couch.
“Where’d you hear that?” She stroked my hair.
“Derek’s dad told him that Dad was a two-bit hustler.”
My mother stopped stroking my hair. “When did he say this?”
“Today. He also said Dad was avoiding real work.”
“Your father works hard. He loves us very much and is a good provider for our family. He is a very generous man. Derek’s dad owes your father money. That’s why he’s calling your father names. Your father is just trying to get the money back that he’s owed.”
“What does he do?”
“He provides for us. I told you.”
I sat up and faced my mother. “I know, but, like, Derek’s dad is a fireman, and Jay’s dad builds buildings. What does Dad do?”
“Your father doesn’t have a traditional job like your friends’ dads. He works for a business that loans money to people—”
“Like a bank?”
“Yeah, something like that. So, they loan money to people like Derek’s dad, and then your father goes and collects the money when it’s time for them to be paid back.”
“Oh, okay.” I relaxed back into my mother’s arms. She began stroking my hair again as we watched TV.
After a few minutes, my mother said, “The next time someone says that about your father, pop ’em in the mouth.”
Derek never said anything again about my father, but a few days later, I saw his dad with a black eye.
My father spent a lot of time away from the house to provide for our family, which meant that I spent a lot of time with my mother. We did everything together. When I wasn’t in school, I was running errands or spending time at home with her. She always protected and comforted me in those days, like one day, when we were at the grocery store. My mother and I were on line. I sat in the cart, facing my mother. It was a Friday before a holiday weekend, so the store was crowded and all the cashiers had long lines. I was getting antsy.
“Can I look at the gumball machines?” I asked.
My mother lifted me out of the cart. “Go on. Don’t wander off. Stay at the gumballs.”
“Okay!” I ran to the front of the store. The gumball machines were the last thing people would pass as they exited the store. I sat in front of the machines—two rows of four machines, one on top of the other—and daydreamed about which prizes, gumballs, and candies I wanted. I carefully inspected each machine, turning the knobs and lifting the doors in hopes that maybe one was broken and would produce a prize.
I looked back at my mother. The man standing in front of her was collecting his grocery bag, and my mother was emptying her cart onto the counter. I watched the man approach me. His wrinkled gray face was off-putting in a way that puzzled me. My mother had taught me not to stare, but I couldn’t help myself in that moment.
“You want a quarter?” he asked.
The kindness and generosity of this odd-looking man surprised me. It was the opposite of what I expected from someone with his looks. It was so unexpected that I was unable to speak, only nod.
He reached in his pocket, took out a crumpled receipt, and threw it at me, hitting me in my face. He laughed, “Then go out and earn it.”
I started crying and ran to my mother.
“What’s wrong, Tommy?” she asked.
Through my tears, I said, “A man asked if I wanted a quarter. When I said yes, he threw a piece of paper at me and hit me in my face,” I sobbed, “and said ‘go earn it.’ Then he laughed at me.”
My mother turned to the cashier. “Hold all of this. I’ll be right back.”
She picked me up. The people behind us started grumbling. “Oh, shut up,” she said to the unhappy customers.
Holding me on her hip, my mother rushed outside. “Do you see the man?”
I pointed to him in the parking lot.
My mother hurried over to him. “Hey!” she yelled.
The man turned around, a cigarette dangling from his lips. His deep wrinkles and gray skin were even uglier in the sunlight. “Whaddya want?”
“You have a problem with my child?”
“Lighten up, lady.”
“You owe him an apology.”
“It was a joke. If the sissy can’t handle it, then he needs to toughen up. I’m doing him a favor.”
My mother glared at him. “You should be ashamed.”
The man rolled his eyes, which set my mother off. She slapped the cigarette out of his mouth and knocked the grocery bag from his arms, spilling its contents. A dozen eggs lay cracked and oozing on the parking lot pavement.
The man stood stunned as my mother turned and walked back into the store.
“Now, how much do I owe?” she asked the cashier.
The customers stood silent and wide-eyed as they watched my mother calmly pay. She turned to the people in line. “Thanks for your patience.” She put me back in the cart, loaded it up with our groceries, and walked to the exit.
When we got to the gumball machines, my mother stopped and said, “You can have one thing from each machine.” She lifted me out of the cart again and handed me eight quarters.
My eyes went wide with joy. I inserted the quarters and turned the handles in euphoric anticipation, each prize, gumball, or candy better than the last.
Before we left the store, my mother asked security for an escort to our car. I recognized the security guard from our building. He lived on the floor above us.
“Anthony, that man is threatening my safety.” She motioned to the guy standing at the exit. The man came at us when we got outside, and Anthony easily pushed him aside and warned him to stay away. He started yelling and threatening us as my mother and Anthony loaded the car.
We pulled out of the parking space. I looked out the window and saw Anthony punch the man in the face and knock him to the ground. I’d never felt more protected and safe in my life.
“I love you, Mom,” I said from the back seat.
She looked at me in the rearview mirror. “I love you more.”
I thought the comfort and love of those days would last forever, but everything changed nine months after my eleventh birthday, when my father was murdered.
The story goes that he had been tasked to pick up some money for Hugh Grizzly, the head of the Cushing Hill Gang. Hugh was a mythical figure in Southie, painted as a sort of Robin Hood of the neighborhood, robbing from the rich and giving to the poor. He was also a ruthless killer.
My father had a gambling debt of his own that he needed to pay off. He came up with the bright idea of telling Hugh that the guy he was supposed to collect from hadn’t given him the full amount. Dad took the difference and paid off his own debt. When Hugh found out what had happened, my father conveniently disappeared. He left one day and never came home. To this day, I still don’t know what happened to him, but I’m almost certain Hugh murdered him to send a message to everyone. It was okay for Hugh to rob you, but don’t you dare rob Hugh.
After that, my mom couldn’t cope. Being Irish, she liked her alcohol and tried to find comfort in the bottom of whiskey bottles. She started to sell her body to support me, and because she was out there running the streets now, I had to learn to fend for myself.
A part of me felt responsible for his death and my mother’s breakdown. To release my anger and guilt, I began to wander the streets too, purposely getting into fights.
“What are you looking at?” I asked a kid sitting on a bench, his two friends on either side of him. I’d seen the three older boys around the way, but never interacted with them until this day.
“Nothin’,” he said.
“Don’t dis me.”
“Keep it movin’.”
“I’m not moving. You don’t want me here, make me move.”
The three boys jumped to their feet. It was on. Each punch landed released some anger; every punch taken was a punishment for my role in my family’s collapse. The three boys easily beat me down. I got some shots in, but three against one was too much for me to handle. Luckily, when it became impossible for me to defend myself, the boys took mercy and stopped hitting me.
“Next time we tell you to move, you need to listen.” The boy looked down at me laying on the ground.
I looked up at him and wiped the blood from my mouth. “Make me.”
He kicked me in my stomach, knocking the wind out of me, then spit in my face. All three boys laughed and congratulated each other as they walked away.
My body ached. I replayed the fight in my mind over and over as I walked home. They were punks to fight me all at once. If it was a fair one-on-one, I would have beaten them all. If they thought they scared me, they were wrong. They were dirtbags, and the next time I saw them, it would be different. As I fantasized about our next encounter, a police cruiser pulled up beside me.
The officer rolled his window down. “A little late for you to be out, don’t you think?”
It was a stupid question. I shrugged my shoulders.
“It’s past midnight. What are you doing out here?”
“Nothing. Walking around.”
“What happened?” He motioned to my shirt, and I looked down at it. It was torn and spotted with blood.
“I tripped.”
“We got a call about a fight out here. You know anything about that?”
“Nah.”
“No? You sure?”
I nodded. He was crazy if he thought I would tell him about my fight.
“You know, lying to the police is against the law.”
“I know.”
The officer stepped out of his car, so I backed away from him.
“I didn’t do anything wrong. You can’t arrest me.”
“I’m not arresting you. We’re taking you home. What’s your name and address?”
I thought about lying for a split second but quickly realized that was a dumb idea. I reluctantly gave him the information and got into the patrol car.
“You’re sure you don’t know anything about a fight?” the cop asked from the front seat.
I didn’t answer and kept looking out the window. The streets were quiet. A crescent moon struggled to shine through the clouds, creating a misty glow over the buildings. I wondered where the other boys went and why they didn’t get picked up by the cops. I had the worst luck.
My mother answered the door, blurry-eyed, in a dirty V-neck shirt and jeans. She glared at the officer standing in front of her.
“Ma’am, we’re with the Boston Police Department. Are you Mrs. O’Brian?” the officer asked.
My mother looked at me standing in between the officers. “What’d he do?”
“Nothing, ma’am. He’s a young boy out on the street past midnight with torn and blood-stained clothing. We’re bringing him home for safety.”
“Get in here, Tommy.”
I rushed past my mother and into our apartment.
“Thank you, officers.”
“Keep an eye on him, Mrs. O’Brian.”
She closed the door on the officers, turned to me in the living room, and frowned. “Where’ve you been?”
“What do you care?”
“It’s too late for you to be out.”
“You probably didn’t even know I was out.”
“That doesn’t matter. I don’t need to be worrying about you.”
I shot back, “Worry? You don’t even care about me.”
“That’s not true. It hasn’t been easy since your father’s gone, I know, but you need to grow up. I don’t need the cops in my business.”
“Is that all you care about? The cops in your business?” I yelled.
“Don’t you raise your voice at me. I’m doing what I can, no thanks to you. Running around the streets, yelling at your mother like a spoiled brat. Life isn’t easy. Get used to it.”
“I hate you.” I went to my room and slammed the door behind me. I heard my mother crying as she poured herself a drink.
The phone rang about a half hour later. My mother answered and spoke in a hushed voice. Soon after, I heard her leaving the apartment. I didn’t see her at all the next day, until later in the afternoon, when she came back to the apartment. I was in the kitchen when she came in. She looked at me without a word, then turned and walked into her bedroom, closing the door behind her.
Later that night, I walked out of the house. My mother was sitting on the couch, watching TV. She didn’t speak. I’m not even sure she looked at me.
I wandered the streets with no direction in mind. I needed to get out of the house and wanted to be away from my mother. A part of me was hoping I would find my father roaming the streets late at night. I wasn’t ready to accept that he had been killed. As I thought about my father, the cops pulled up next to me.
“We’ve got to stop meeting like this,” the cop said.
I sighed.
“Get in,” he said.
Once back at my apartment, the cops knocked on the door. My mother didn’t answer.
“She’s not home. We’ve got to take you to the precinct,” the cop said.
“No, she’s probably just asleep and doesn’t hear us. If I let you in and she’s home, can you leave me here?”
“Only if she’s in there.”
I unlocked the door and led the officers into the apartment. I called out to my mother. She didn’t answer. We walked around the tiny apartment, but she wasn’t there.
“We’ll leave a note for her to contact us and tell her you’re with us at the station. When she gets home, we can bring you back.”
They left a note on our door and took me to the precinct. Sitting behind the front desk on an uncomfortable plastic chair, I watched tired prostitutes, strung out hustlers, and drunk drivers get shuffled through the doors. The bored, nonchalant attitude of the prostitutes and hustlers told me they had been through the system plenty of times. The deer-in-headlights look of the drunk drivers told a different story. They were first-timers who thought their life was over.
I got bored watching the riff-raff getting booked and soon fell asleep. Later that night, an officer tapped my shoulder to wake me.
“Is my mom here?” I groggily asked.
“No.”
“Are you taking me home?”
He gently said, “Not tonight,” as he knelt down to get on my level and look me in the eye. “We finally got in touch with your mother. She’s not well. It’s best that you go into the foster system.”
“No,” I said as my heart started racing. “I’m sorry. I won’t get in trouble anymore. She needs me home.”
The officer shook his head sympathetically. “We tried to get her down here to pick you up, but she wouldn’t come. When we offered to take you home, she told us not to.” He rested his hands on my shoulders. His eyes looked sad. “Thomas, she said she couldn’t take care of you anymore. She was the one who said you should go into foster care.”
It took a second for me to comprehend what he was saying. I searched his face for any sign that he was joking. No signs appeared. I had known a few kids in foster care, and they were always a little off. I didn’t want to be one of them. I tried to get up and run, but the officer held me down. I struggled against his heavy grip. I clawed and punched and kicked, desperately trying to get home. My mind raced with thoughts. I needed to see my mother. She would change her mind if she saw me, if I apologized for yelling at her. The officer was mistaken. They probably spoke to the wrong woman. If I got home, I could straighten everything out. He wrapped his arms around me in a bear hug until I was physically unable and too emotionally drained to fight back.
In the early morning hours before the sunrise, a gentle woman came to take me. On the drive to her home, she said, “Tonight you’ll stay with me. In the morning, we will begin the process of finding you a nice foster home.”
“I want to go home.”
“I know, dear. It’s very confusing, but don’t worry. I’ll find you a caring family.”
We got to her home, and she showed me to my room and tucked me in. I lay in the dark room, staring at the ceiling. I just couldn’t believe my mother would give me up like that. I replayed our last fight in my mind. Was I going to foster care because I’d yelled at her? She didn’t even give me a chance to apologize. I thought my mother loved me, but how can a mother give up a child she loves? At some point that night, while trying to make sense of what was happening, I fell asleep.
Once in the system, I bounced from one foster family to the next. I would stay with a family until Child Services would move me. I didn’t always understand why they would move me. Sometimes I was more than happy to go because the foster parents were really mean or angry all the time, but some of them weren’t so bad, and I would have liked to stay.
“I don’t mind it here. Why do I have to move?” I asked the caseworker one time.
“It’s what we do. The families need breaks sometimes.”
I felt like it was my fault I was being moved so much, that I was doing something wrong. No one seemed to want me around; not foster families, not my own mother. What was it about me? It took a lot for me to feel comfortable around a new family, and by the time I felt that way, I’d be moved. This constant shuffling around caused me to retreat into myself, and I began to lash out when I felt challenged, like the time I punched one of the foster kids in his face. He was a few years older than me and was the type of kid who liked to push people’s buttons. When he sensed that something bothered a person, he would keep doing it.
One day, he was on the sidewalk with a magnifying glass, trying to fry ants. I told him I thought it was messed up to kill innocent ants.
“They’re stupid ants. Who cares?” he said.
“Why torture them?”
“Try it.” He held out the magnifying glass.
“Nah.”
He grabbed my wrist and attempted to force the magnifying glass into my hand. I pulled away.
“Come on.” He reached for my wrist again.
I slapped his hand away and punched him in his jaw. The magnifying glass flew out of his hand and shattered on the sidewalk. He rushed me, and we fought. Our foster mother, who saw what happened, came out of her house and broke up the fight. Two days later, I was moved to a new home.
It was the first home in Dorchester I had been moved to. Driving up to the house, I realized the residents of the neighborhood were primarily black. I was going to be the minority in the neighborhood. I was fourteen and had never been in a situation like that. I was used to being in Southie, where almost everyone was Irish like me. My stomach sank. I wasn’t going to have anything in common with anyone, and I was going to stick out, making me a target.
My foster parents, the Jacksons, were the first black family I’d lived with. I’d honestly never spent much time around black people, so I was nervous. Was I their first white kid? What if they didn’t even like white people? Would they treat me bad because of it? To ease my fears, I told myself it couldn’t be any worse than some of the white families I’d stayed with. Some of those families were the worst, only in it for the money. They couldn’t care less about the kids they were housing.
I was getting used to the drill: meet the parents, they act excited to have me, then a few months later, I’m being moved. It was always such a show at the beginning. Every family was the same in front of the caseworkers, so nice and happy. Some would remain nice, but others, as soon as the door closed behind the caseworker, turned nasty, barking orders and calling me names. I wondered which category the Jacksons would fall into.
“Come on. Let’s go to the playground. You can meet Daquan, the boy you’re sharing the room with,” Mrs. Jackson said.
I followed her out of the house, and we walked the few blocks to the playground.
“This is a little different than other neighborhoods I’ve lived,” I said.
“How so?”
“Am I the only white person?”
She laughed. “No. There’s a few. Is that a problem?”
“No. It’s just different.” We walked a half block in silence. Then I asked, “Will everyone hate me?”
“Don’t worry. Everyone’s all right around here.”
When we got to the playground, Mrs. Jackson called out, “Daquan!”
I saw a boy in the far corner, surrounded by younger kids, who were hanging on every word he said. The boy looked our way and acknowledged with a head nod.
“Come here.” Mrs. Jackson waved him over with a wrist full of bracelets jangling like wind chimes, swinging her arm like a third base coach signaling a runne. . .
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