Authors: Helen Frost
Sometimes it seems like it don't matter
if you lie or tell the truth.
People pick out what they want to believeâ
all you can do is hope they pick
the things that count. Tomorrow, I finally got my court
date. So much dependin' on which judge
I get and what he's feelin' like when I come in. One judge
knows Grandmama, and that ain't s'posed to matter,
but I can tell you, I'll be glad if he has court
tomorrow. Grandmama's been comin' to see me. She says,
Truth
is easy. You don't got so much to remember.
She picked
out a nice dress for me to wear:
Believe
me, Carmen, it's important how you look.
I do believe
that, but there's a lot about my looks that I can't change. Judge
me by my character, like Dr. King said. Well, I can't pick
my judge, and I can't change the facts, or for that matter
what they think is facts. Truth
is, I'm part guilty, part innocent, and the court
decides how to put that together. Last time I had court
I said I wasn't drinkin'âonly with some kids that was. They believed
me, and I just got probation. Now this time, truth
is I did have one beer. I can hear that judge
already, all stern, sayin',
Young lady, this matter
before us is serious.
I know I gotta start pickin'
better friends. Anytime someone say,
We'll pick
you up for a party
, I just go along. It shouldn't take the court
to make me use more sense. What's the matter
with me, anyhow, that I don't make my own mind up? I believe
most of the things the judge
says, but sometimes I wonder, what
is
the whole truth?
I know I'm the only one that can tell myself the truth
and make me listen. If I go home, will I just pick
up where I left off, or can I change? That's for the judge
to decide, I guess. I'm hopin' I can go home after court
tomorrow and stay out of trouble. Grandmama believes
me, that I want to try. She says,
Girl, no matter
what you do, I keep on believin' in you.
She should be a judge
herself, the way she picks through lies and truth
and court talk, and comes up with that one thing that matters.
DO NOT LEAVE CHILDREN UNATTENDEDÂ Â Â Â Â
HARRIS
After school and on weekends I go to the library
and do my homework or listen
to music. I brush my teeth, wash my hair,
and, a couple times a week, I shave. They have
a private sink in one of the handicap stalls.
Sometimes I go in the youth section and sign
up to play computer games. There's a sign
in there:
DO NOT LEAVE CHILDREN UNATTENDED IN THE LIBRARY
.
I know there's younger kids than me who use the sink in that stall
like I do. I keep my eye on them. I try to listen
to adults that talk to them, especially in the rest room. Last week, I had
something creepy happen when I was combing my hair.
A guy made a comment about my
gorgeous red hair
,
which is nothing new. But right after thatâthe first sign
of something weirdâhe asked if he could have
a picture of me. I got out of there fast. When the library
was about to close, he left the same time I did.
Hey, listen
,
he said,
you need a ride somewhere?
I said,
No, thanks
, stalled
for time until he left. The next day, I came out of the stall
and he was in the rest room combing his hair.
He said something to me, but I didn't stay to listen.
Now I watch every move he makes. If I ever see a sign
that he's messing with one of the kids that hang out in the library,
I'llâwell, I don't know what I'll do, but I know I'd have
to help. I guess I'd act casual, like I had
some reason to be thereâbut I'd stall
around and eavesdrop till he left the kid alone. The library
should be a safe place, and if a kid needs a place to comb his hair,
just let him be. Hey! I finally got a job. I'm going in to sign
the paperwork this afternoon. I have to listen
to a tape about dishwashing safety. That's funny! I've listened
to my mother harp on that stuff all my life. Likeâyou have
to scrub the cutting board. Use bleach or boiling water. There's a sign
in the rest roomâin fact, there's one in every stallâ
reminding us employees to wash our hands. We have to use hair
nets if we get anywhere near food. The librarians
won't be seeing so much of me now. That's a good sign. I'll have
a bathroom I can use at work, and I'll just use the library stall
to wash my hair. I'll listen to music while it dries.
WE CAN BOTH SEEÂ Â Â Â Â
KATIE
1.
Once in a while, something good happens, and things fall
into place. I was getting to the point
where I thought I'd have to quit
school. I couldn't afford a car,
and I didn't have the time for that long bus ride.
Then this new guy, Harris, shows up at work.
I know him a little from school. Freshman year, we worked
together on a lab report, and once last fall
I sat with him on the bus ride
coming home from a field trip to Oak Point.
Now, it turns out, he has a car,
and I can get from school to work with him. I don't have to quit
school or my job. It's like someone's saying,
Katie, don't quit
now; you've come this far and you've worked
hard to get here.
Every afternoon, I lean back in that car
and close my eyes. Sometimes I actually fall
asleep. Of course, I make it a point
to pay for gas. I've never expected a free ride.
Â
Â
Â
2. (two weeks later)
Whenever we get off work together, Harris gives me a ride
home. But I can't find out where he lives. He won't say, so I quit
asking. Maybe that's a sore point
with him, like it sort of is with me. Sometimes after work
I invite him in, and Keesha jokes around that I'm falling
in love. It isn't that, but I keep thinking about his car,
full of clothes and blankets. I bet anything he lives in that car.
I bet when it gets cold he rides
around until the car warms up, and then he falls
asleep till he gets cold again. Keesha says I should quit
worrying about other people.
You have to work
hard enough to take care of yourself!
Good point,
but I could make the same point
back to her. She says if it turns out his car
is all he's got, and if he has enough hours at work
to pay for food, next time he gives me a ride
I could let him know that if he ever wants to quit
all that, there's room here. I remember last fall,
I met Keesha at a low point in my life. I almost quit
both school and work. Through all that's happened, she never let me fall.
Now we can both see: Harris has a car, but he needs a ride.
It used to be when kids showed up they'd say,
I'm lookin' for Joe's house. Somebody sent me here
and said to ask you for a place to stay
tonight.
They'd stay a week, a month, a year â¦
It's still like that, 'cept now they look at me
like,
Where'd you come from? Ain't this Keesha's house?
I go get Keesha, and I watch while she
checks out the situation, thinks what couch
or bed we got. Time and again, she makes
the right decision. She helps so many kids.
The way she holds her head up, my heart breaksâ
ain't nobody thinkin' 'bout what Keesha needs.
I love this girl whatever way I can,
too young to be her father, too old to be her man.
SAME OLD STORYÂ Â Â Â Â
CHARLES (DONTAY'S FATHER)
A month now, Dontay's missing. Letter came
todayâhis foster father still ain't said
just why the boy run off. Sound like the same
old story: they get paid, he don't get fed.
Ain't nobody seen my boy. I know Lucille
be sick with worry tooâour youngest son
in danger, us in here just prayin' he'll
be found before he mess up bad. Just one
mistake. He'll think he won't get caught. Might
be right, a time or two. But he won't stop.
Stakes get higher; can't get out; some night
somebody got no use for him. I got
two years behind me, about one more to go.
There's too much I can't see. Too much I know.
HE'S GOT A PLACEÂ Â Â Â Â
ANTHONY (DONTAY'S FOSTER FATHER)
Sounds like Charles and Lucille are blaming us
for Dontay being gone so long. We've
tried to keep them up to date, and trust
they'll call us if he contacts them. We leave
the front porch light on every night in case
he comes back here. Lenora keeps his bed
made up, and we agree he's got a place
with us if he comes back. We must have said
something that set Dontay offâit's hard to know.
The rules that make our own kids feel secure
don't work that way for him. He has to show
how much he doesn't need us, but I'm not so sure.
There's so many things he should be told
but he can't hear them. Fourteen years old.
WHO'D BE HURT?    Â
JUDGE DAVISON
The juvenile system is set up
to protect kids and the community at large.
I don't see it as either “pass a cup
of kindness” or “put the monsters behind bars.”
Take Carmen: I read her case and try to judge
what she did, what she intended, what she knew.
She's not perfect. There's a little smudge
or two in here I can't ignore. But who
would I be helping by coming down too hard?
Who'd be hurt by letting her go home?
I weigh the facts, decide what I regard
as truth, and think what I'd want for my own
child. I believe Carmen will be okay.
I'll talk straight, then send her on her way.
SHE'S DOING OKAYÂ Â Â Â Â
WILLIAM (KEESHA'S FATHER)
Tobias knows the place where Keesha stays,
that house on Jackson Street with a blue door.
She's prob'ly better off there. Still, some days
I wonderâif I went over there and swore
I'd stay sober: first, would she come home?
and second, could I keep my word?
Sounds like she's doing okay on her own,
and why should she believe me now? Third
time I've been through this. The other two
I lasted a few weeks, then let someone talk
me into
just one drink.
Twelve Steps. That shoe
fits some people, but it's not the way I walk.
Love holds up an angry fist to pride;
they beat each other down till I'm half dead inside.
WHERE'S HARRIS?    Â
JEANNINE (HARRIS'S MOTHER)
Hey, King, come here. You miss him too, I know.
The house has been so quiet since he left.
You were a puppy when he was a boy, and now
we're both getting old. Where's Harris? What Greg calls the
theft
of his blankets and clothes at least lets me hope he's warm.
I keep setting his place and cooking for three. More
for you, I suppose ⦠3:17 ⦠An alarm
goes offâyou hear it tooâeach day when the door
stays closed. Harris is not choosing this. Greg's wrong.
I've read enough books by now to know.
Could Greg change his mind? It could take a long
time. Does Harris have any safe place to go?
All these questions, and who am I talking to?
King, the only one listening seems to be you.
SKATING OFF ALONEÂ Â Â Â Â
MARTHA (KATIE'S MOTHER)
I dreamed of Katie skating in the blue
costume I wore when I was seventeen.
Someone pushed her and she fellâwho
was it? She sprawled on the ice, weeping, between
two skaters who went sailing on, leaving meâ
I mean
her
âleaving Katie there. Who's this Joe
who lets these kids stay in his house for free?
Could he be molesting Katie?
No,
Mom, no one's hurting us. This place
is safe.
She's clear on that. But why so cold
toward me? She gets that look on her face
like I should know what's wrong without being told.
In the dream, she slammed down the phone.
Then sheâor was it me?âwent skating off alone.
KEESHA'S BROTHERÂ Â Â Â Â
STEPHIE
Oh, God! It's Keesha's brother in the paper.
Front page story:
Tobias Walker, age
fourteen, was found dead Tuesday afternoon
outside a house on Seventh Street.
An investigation is under way. Witnesses are asked