Freaks and Revelations

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Authors: Davida Wills Hurwin

Tags: #Alcohol, #Fiction, #Prejudice & Racism, #Boys & Men, #Punk culture, #Drugs, #Drug Abuse, #Men, #Prejudices, #Substance Abuse, #Bullying, #Boys, #California, #YA), #Social Issues, #Young Adult Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #Violence, #United States, #Social Issues - Violence, #People & Places, #Family, #General fiction (Children's, #Social Issues - Adolescence, #Social Issues - Bullying, #Social Problems (General) (Young Adult), #Family problems, #General, #Homosexuality, #California - History - 20th century, #Social Issues - Prejudice & Racism, #Children: Young Adult (Gr. 10-12), #Hate, #Children's Books - Young Adult Fiction, #Adolescence

BOOK: Freaks and Revelations
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Copyright

Copyright © 2009 by Davida Wills Hurwin

All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Little, Brown and Company

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www.HachetteBookGroup.com
.

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Little, Brown and Company is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

The Little, Brown name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

First eBook Edition: November 2009

This book is a work of fiction. The events described are imaginary and all of the characters are fictitious. The story was inspired by the experiences of Tim Zaal and Matthew Boger, who met in the same way Doug and Jason meet in this book. All of the characters in this book, including Doug and Jason and their friends and family, and the dialogue and the events that take place in it, are fictitious. Any resemblance in this novel to real events or people, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended to portray any actual persons.

ISBN: 978-0-316-07175-8

For my daughter,

Frazier Malone

In loving memory of my second mom,

Frances Grace Williams

I know where I am by the sounds
that play rhythms like raindrops through tin pipes,
moonlight that falls in secret messages, and
echoes of invitations to places unknown.
I am strong here; I am the all of me,
the beginning and the celebration,
the promise and the reward;
I am not afraid, not now.
Not anymore.
I am a child and I believe.
I am a child and all things are possible.
Thoughts of a boy before sunrise
On March 27, 1980, a horrible thing happened.
I never saw a kid that night;
I saw a creature, an enemy, taking something that belonged to me. That’s not an excuse, I know—there is no excuse, no good reason. It’s not an apology either. Apologies don’t really help. The thing is done. I did it.

1973

SEVEN YEARS BEFORE

LOS ANGELES COUNTY, CALIFORNIA

{1}

“Stupid kid. Stupid, stupid,
stupid
kid.”

My dad: muttering, pacing, dark, starting to swell, making my heart beat even faster than it already does from running. Mom’s nowhere in sight, even though it was her that called us. Henry’s dad watches from the lawn. He reminds me of a rabbit caught in headlights.

“Are we in trouble?” Henry whispers to the back of my ear. We stand at the edge of his driveway, trying to catch our breath, both of us clutching our action figures.

“Shhhh.” I poke him with my David Steele.

“I told you we’d get caught.”

“So what.”

He tries to take my hand but I cross my arms in front of my chest. This isn’t like when we were little, before he moved, when we did Indian Guides together. We’re
ten
now, I’ll be eleven in a couple of months. Boys don’t hold hands.

My dad snaps his head toward us. I hold my breath, back up into Henry. Why didn’t I listen? Why did I make Henry go down to those old wells anyway? Was it that great to have David Steele and Big Jim be able to smash up all that dirt?

Yeah, it was. The dirt sods were the best I ever saw. Just right for action figures, just like Henry said. I pushed the button on David Steele’s back and
THWACK
—his arm swung over and slammed his iron pipe into the dirt,
HARD
. Henry’s guy did the same with his axe. But we snuck down, nobody saw us go. How did they know we were there?

Without warning, my dad turns and stomps toward the car.

“What’s wrong with him?” my friend whispers.

I glance over. Can Henry see him swelling up?

“He gets like this sometimes.”

Now he’s in the car, backing it toward us, fast, the rear tires sliding back and forth on the dirt. Henry’s dad grabs our shoulders, edges us up onto the grass. Our moms come out on the porch. Mine holds my pirate suitcase and her big red leather one. What’s going on?

“I thought you were staying till Sunday,” Henry says. I shrug.

His mom whispers something to mine, who shakes her head no, and then smiles that stupid frozen smile she gets when she’s scared or doesn’t know what to do. My stomach cramps up. Something bad has happened. Something way worse than us two guys playing down by the wells.

“Both of you,” my father barks, pointing first at Mom, then at me, “in the car.”

I take two steps and remember my sleeping bag spread out on the floor in Henry’s room, the brand new
expensive
sleeping bag I begged for and almost didn’t get because my dad said I’d mess it up. I dash to the house, slide down the wood floor in the hallway to Henry’s room, and snatch up the bag. I’ll be in that car before my mom even crosses the yard. With a grin on my face, I fly out the door, right into my huge glaring pissed-off father.

“WHAT. DID. I. SAY.” The words come from the back of his throat, low and scary, like a pit bull growling. Henry hears and his eyes bug out.

My dad vice-grips my arm and drags me stumbling backwards across the yard. I drop the bag and almost lose David Steele. He tosses me into the backseat of the car and slams the door. Of course I land on my bad hip, but I manage not to cry out. Henry’s mom scurries to pick up the bag and Mom opens the front car door to receive it. Too late—we’re moving, leaving Henry and his parents in a haze of dust. Mom just manages to close her door before we turn onto the street. I look back through the rear window. I wave to Henry, but he doesn’t wave back.

Tucking David Steele under my arm, I fasten my seat belt, not easy to do with my dad lurching around corners. My hip hurts from landing on it. Nobody’s telling me anything. Dad runs a red light, then another, making the tires squeal as we zoom onto the ramp and over to the freeway.

“Please slow down, Roger,” my mom begs. She’s got that same frozen smile. I hate that smile. I hate how her voice changes, how her back slumps. If I said something now, she wouldn’t hear it—she’s only hearing
him
.

“You want out?” Dad growls.

“No, I just—”

“Maybe you wanna walk home?”

“No. But, Roger—” Her voice creeps even higher.

“Shut up then, okay? Can you shut up for once?” He cuts across three lanes of traffic and the back of a big blue car materializes in front of us, maybe two feet away. Mom makes a funny little sound and Dad brakes, throwing us both forwards. Mom bashes her head on the window frame. I grunt as I smack my face into the back of her seat. Dad guns it and I slam back, hard. I peek at the speedometer: eighty-five. My mom doesn’t talk again.

*   *   *

“He’s stupid,” my dad blurts, loudly, suddenly, startling me. “Just plain
stupid
.” It seems we’ve been driving for hours. My gut and my heart both clench up. Does he mean me?

“He didn’t know,” Mom says.

“The kid’s seventeen years old, Mary. I told him to stay away from there. He knew. Okay?” He snorts, shakes his head. “Serves him right, getting shot. Maybe now he’ll listen.”

Something happens to the air around me; it shimmers like the air off sidewalks on hot days, and suddenly there isn’t enough of it to breathe.

My brother is shot?

I hear the words. I can’t seem to put together what they mean.

“He’ll be all right,” Mom says.

“Yeah? Who died and made you God?”

Mom starts crying, whimpering really, her shoulders bouncing up and down, her hand covering her face. Every little while, she blows her nose.

My brother is shot.

Is he dead?

Can Carl be dead?

I imagine bullets flying, hitting Carl, then whizzing through the air, looking for the rest of us. If Carl can be shot, so can we. If Carl can die, anyone can. Even us. My dad weaves and cusses. Mom cries. My hands shake, then my arms. Then my whole body. I taste vomit in the back of my throat and I swallow it back down. Better that than face my dad if I puke in his car. He’s swelled so big now I don’t know how he fits in the seat.

I hold David Steele as tight as I can and pray for him to turn life-size. I want him to be huge, bigger even than my dad. He can slide over and sit next to me, right behind my dad’s seat. Except my dad won’t be able to see him. Just me. We’ll wait. When the time’s right, David Steele will turn his head and we’ll smile at each other. Both of us will know exactly what’s coming next. We’ll wait a bit more, until Dad pulls off the freeway and maybe stops at the stoplight or even until he turns into our driveway.

David Steele will look over again and this time he’ll wink.

I’ll nod and wink back.

I won’t even need to push the button.

{2}

“Don’t let him be dead, don’t let him be dead,” Grams mutters over and over, pacing the living room. It took three and a half hours for us to get back from Henry’s ranch. My head feels weird, like there’s a motor running inside it. Everybody else is at the hospital: Mom, Dad, Grandpa, my sister, Chelsea, and of course, Carl. I’m not allowed because I’m too young. Grams has to stay with me. The TV’s on, but I’m not watching, just staring in that general direction. I’m listening to my grandma. I want to know what’s going on.

The phone rings. Grams stops moving and her face goes pale. I hold David Steele close to my chest, like he could make my heart stop pounding. With a glance at me, Grams ignores the phone on the table and lumbers into the kitchen to take the call. I know it’s my mom. I gulp in air and blow it out.

“Hello?” Grams says. Her voice sounds crackly. I’d get up and turn the TV down, but then she’d know I’m listening.

“Here’s the story of a man named Brady…”

I turn my ear toward the kitchen. It doesn’t help: she’s whispering.

“Please don’t let him be dead,” I echo.

*   *   *

It feels like forever until Grams comes back in. Her face is worse, gray and tight. Looking at her makes my stomach clench. When I breathe, inside me is an earthquake.

“A nigger shot him,” she mumbles.

She’s not talking to me, I know that. She doesn’t look at me; it’s like I’m not there. She wipes her mouth hard, sighs, plops down on the couch with a groan, and reaches for the wine bottle. It’s empty. “Damn it,” she growls and now looks in my direction. “Get my bottle from the fridge,” she orders. I jump up and dash for the kitchen. I bring both the wine and the opener.

She’s holding David Steele. I set the bottle down and reach for him. She smirks as she hands him off, with the exact same face my grandpa gets when he’s talking to Dad. She stabs the corkscrew into the top of the cork, twists like she wants to hurt someone. “You’re ten years old, Douglas. Does your father know you play with dolls?”

“He’s not a doll. He’s an
action figure
. I don’t play with dolls.” I whisper it, but it wouldn’t matter if I yelled. She isn’t listening.

“What’s this world coming to?” She pulls out the cork. “I don’t know anymore. I just don’t know.” Grams fills her glass to the top. “Decent people getting shot.” She downs it.

I slip off the couch with David Steele and scoot on my butt around the corner, leaning against the side. I hate Grams when she drinks. I hate having to be alone with her—she always makes fun of me. I hate that she said that word. It makes me think we’re still not safe. It’s a bad word. When my father says it, Mom makes him shush.

I push David Steele’s button—
thwack!!

Is Carl dead? No, then she’d be crying.

I push again.
Thwack!!!

But he’s shot. My brother is shot. A bad guy shot him, right over by my old school. Exactly where I used to cross the street with Larry, the crossing guard. I don’t want to think about it but I don’t know how to stop. My brain plays it over and over:
A bad guy shot my brother, a bad guy shot my brother.
I look behind me; I’m not sure why except now I know bad guys are everywhere. They find you even when you move.

THWACK.

We’re supposed to be safe in this house. There aren’t supposed to be cholas here, like in Pomona. No black people, either. A few Orientals, but they don’t bother anybody. Good thing my father could see the handwriting on the wall, that’s what Mom said. Things were changing where we used to live. White people had to look out for themselves. Cholas were everywhere.

Cholas are like Mexicans, but worse. They hate white people. I never saw one, but I heard my sister talk about them, and I figured out that they’re probably a lot like Medusa from
Sinbad and the Seven Seas
, which I used to watch all the time when I was little. Except, instead of snakes for hair, they’ve got sharp shiny razorblades hanging onto long black strands.

When we lived in Pomona, they took over Chelsea’s high school. Me and Mom found this out when Chels came home crying. She never cried, so I knew right off that it was bad. Really bad. I listened to her tell Mom how she almost got beat up. How her friend did get smacked, right in the head. How Chels never wanted to go back. I could just see it: cholas standing up on top of the lockers in the girls’ gym room, like Medusa on the cliffs, waiting for the white girls to come by.

THWACK! THWACK!!!

I peek around the couch. Grams is sitting up, head lolling to the side, snoring. Her glass is tipped; drops of wine look like blood on the couch. What will happen now? Will we move again? Will Carl be okay? Will more black guys try to shoot more white people? Will the cholas come and take over our schools here too?

What if they come to our house?

Pomona isn’t far. Carl goes back there all the time to hang out with friends. At least he used to. He might not anymore, not after being shot. But what if he wasn’t careful what he said to people? Maybe the bad guys found out where we live. My dad has a gun. Will he shoot them? I look around. Where will I hide? I check the windows. What will I do?

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