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Lockdown
Lockdown
Lockdown
Ebook190 pages2 hours

Lockdown

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Lockdown is the powerful tale of fourteen-year-old Reese Anderson, who has spent 22 months in a tiny cell at a “progress center.” Living in fear and isolation, Reese begins looking within himself to find a way out of the prison system.

Acclaimed author Walter Dean Myers offers an honest story about finding a way to make it without getting lost in the shuffle. Told with compassion and truth, Lockdown is also a compelling first-person read that "could resonate with teens on a dangerous path."*

When I first got to Progress, it freaked me out to be locked in a room and unable to get out. But after a while, when you got to thinking about it, you knew nobody could get in, either.

It seems as if the only progress that's going on at Progress juvenile facility is moving from juvy jail to real jail. Reese wants out early, but is he supposed to just sit back and let his friend Toon get jumped? Then Reese gets a second chance when he's picked for the work program at a senior citizens' home. He doesn't mean to keep messing up, but it's not so easy, at Progress or in life. One of the residents, Mr. Hooft, gives him a particularly hard time. If he can convince Mr. Hooft that he's a decent person, not a criminal, maybe he'll be able to convince himself.

Walter Dean Myers was a New York Times bestselling author, Printz Award winner, five-time winner of the Coretta Scott King Award, two-time Newbery Honor recipient, and the National Ambassador for Young People's Literature. Maria Russo, writing in the New York Times, called Myers "one of the greats and a champion of diversity in children’s books well before the cause got mainstream attention."

*Kirkus

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateFeb 2, 2010
ISBN9780061968549
Author

Walter Dean Myers

Walter Dean Myers was the New York Times bestselling author of Monster, the winner of the first Michael L. Printz Award; a former National Ambassador for Young People's Literature; and an inaugural NYC Literary Honoree. Myers received every single major award in the field of children's literature. He was the author of two Newbery Honor Books and six Coretta Scott King Awardees. He was the recipient of the Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement in writing for young adults, a three-time National Book Award Finalist, as well as the first-ever recipient of the Coretta Scott King-Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement.

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Rating: 3.8271605358024687 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Reese is in a juvenile correction facility, “Progress”, for stealing blank prescription pads. Shortly before he is to be released, he is chosen to work in a nursing home as part of a pilot project reintroducing delinquents to society. Reese gets to know one of the elderly residents, Mr. Hooft, who is suspicious of black people and convinced Reese is a hardened criminal.As if Mr. Hooft’s prejudice is not enough, Reese has to contend with unpleasant wardens and inmates at the progress center while struggling to keep his temper if he is to earn early discharge. Outside, life isn’t very promising either. Reese’s mother has a drug addiction, his sister Isis is young and vulnerable, and his brother Willis may be involved in local petty crime. Can Reese be a model prisoner and a good friend, son and sibling?Meyers makes strong criticism of the effectiveness of the juvenile correction system the ulterior motives behind some parental actions and the divergent realities of different social and racial groups. His characters are believable and the story weaves some less well known historical information together with the social issues.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Reese is serving time in juvenile detention for stealing prescription pads from a pharmacist. He's there among youths of varying thuggery, from the volatile "King Kong" to childlike Toon. Reese isn't as hardened as most others but he's prepared to defend himself when necessary. You sense he walks a fine line but it would be a struggle to stay on the side of right. His work program at a nursing home introduces him to old Mr. Hooft whose stories about being imprisoned in a war camp give Reese something to think about. (BTW, I HIGHLY doubt the nurses are allowed to teach Reese how to change Mr. Hooft's bandages.) For kids in similar situations, reading Reese's story will hopefully enlighten them to finding their own right path.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Crabs in a bucket - that's Mr. Cintron's take on it. Any crab that tries to get out, the other crabs just clamp on and drag him back in until getting out seems like a futile prospect. For Reese, doing time in Progress, a juvenile detention center, the future doesn't seem particularly bright. In fact, if he can't learn to control his temper, Progress is only a gateway to a more serious locale upstate, and everything seems out to get him, from his fellow inmates to the patients at his work-release job. But maybe, just maybe if he can keep it together long enough....Myers characters often offer a palatable window into an uncomfortable world most of us wouldn't want to visit, let along live in, and this book is no exception. From the uncomfortable group sessions run by social workers and counselors who have no real answers, to the suspicious looks and fear greeting Reese at Evergreen (itself a not particularly pleasant detention facility of a different sort), there's a definite lesson here. I was glad to see the realistic conclusion with plenty of room for thought and discussion - Reese may work his way out, but there's no guaranteed fairy tale happy ending, just like life.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    15 year old Reese is in juvenile prison, guilty of theft. Is he safer in his room, locked down where no one can get him, in prison, where his peers demand violence, or out in the real world, where the fact of his conviction will forever mar his future?I was immediately drawn to Reese, even though his experiences are worlds different from mine. And I was easily drawn into his daily life - his friendship with an elderly man, his defence of a younger prisoner, and his fear of never pulling free of trouble. I was so drawn in that I found the ending sudden and unsatisfying - Reese's personal growth was wonderful to watch, but I would have liked to see some of the loose ends tied in more elaborate knots.I'd give this to teens looking for gritty realistic fiction about prisons, racism, class-ism, or youth crime.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Walter Dean Myers has written another terse, authentic book about the hard life of a teenager with few choices in front of him. 15 year-old Reese stole prescription pads from a doctor's office and sold them to a drug dealer. Reese got busted and is now serving time in a juvenile jail. Even though he's also part of a trial program to help young offenders turn their life around, Reese's life is anything but safe and secure. Inside, he faces threats from many of the boys destined to be repeat offenders: King Kong, Play, Diego, Cobo. As part of the new program, Reese gets to work at an elderly care facility, where he meets Mr. Hooft. The older man's stories help Reese put some of his own life in perspective, but Reese still has to overcome the man's impression that Reese is a criminal. At 247 pages with large type, this is a perfect book for young male readers who believe they don't like to read. It's gritty, and while not always fast paced, it is at least interesting in its look behind the locked doors of jail that most of the readers (hopefully) will never see. Those who have read plenty of Myers other books will feel like they've read this one before in one form or another.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Reese is 14 and in the second year of his sentence at the Progress juvenile detention center. He was arrested and convicted for stealing a doctor's prescription pads, and selling them to a drug dealer. If he behaves and follows all the rules, he might be able to get out early, especially if he gets good reports from his work assignment at a nearby nursing home. If he can't manage that, he'll get sent "upstate" and the prison there is far worse, with much less chance of getting out alive. Reese is smart, but he's made mistakes, and he knows the system will hold those against him... as well as the fact that his mother is an addict, his stepfather is abusive, and his family lives in the projects. Reese has hope, courage, and struggles every day to balance the choices he makes. If he stands up for a weaker boy, the inevitable fight will mean more time added to his sentence, but if he stands by and does nothing, he loses his self-respect. His goal is to get out and find a legit way to earn money to send his little sister Icy to college and get her out of the trap of poverty and crime, but to do that he has to get through the rest of his time at Progress. Actions and consequences are everything. The situations are realistic and uncertain, with threatened and real violence. Some language, but this is an honest part of the story... the conversations wouldn't ring true for imprisoned inner city thugs and thieves otherwise. 8th grade and up.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    For some reason, this one has been sitting on my shelf for months. I thought I better read it when saw it received an NBA nomination and glad I did. This novel is Walter at his very best!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Walter Dean Myers has written a new novel that will strongly appeal to teens who loved Monster. I don’t really have to say anything else, do I? You’re going to buy this book and put it in your libraries and share it with your teens. I know I can’t wait to do exactly that.Like Steve in Monster, Reese is a kid who made a mistake and is facing consequences that are much bigger than he ever anticipated. Now he’s finding out firsthand how one mistake can spiral into a lifetime of them. Reese is in a juvenile prison for stealing prescription pads from a doctor and selling them to a local drug dealer. He’s a good kid who was in a tough situation, trying to care for his younger brother and sister while also trying to keep any money he made out of his drug-addicted mother’s hands. And he has committed what he saw as a victimless crime – if all went well, the doctor might never even notice that the pads were missing.Reese is a pretty self-aware young man, and even considering his difficult family life he recognizes that it is ultimately his own choice that put him in his current situation. What he did not anticipate is the repercussions of ending up in a jail system that seems designed to drag inmates further down. And it’s not just the dimmed job prospects and difficulty of finishing high school after he gets out – so many decisions he must make every day do not have a good option. Should Reese ignore it when gang members brutally beat up a defenseless younger kid, or defend him? Reese cannot be passive in situations like these, and by trying to do the right thing he ends up making enemies of other prisoners while also getting himself labeled a troublemaker by guards and risking being sent to a more dangerous facility. Reese is quickly finding out the truth behind some of his dad’s words: “One time when my pops wasn’t being too stupid he said the streets were like quicksand covered with whip cream. You knew when they were slowing your ass down, but it always came as a surprise when you got sucked under” (pages 98-99).At least one person in the prison system recognizes some potential in Reese and presents him with an opportunity to keep from getting sucked under. When Reese is selected for a program that sends young, nonviolent prisoners into the workforce during the day, he makes a connection in the nursing home where he is assigned to work. Like Steve in Monster, Reese is starting to look at his life and experiences through a new lens – not through the literal lens that Steve used in his screenwriting and movie planning, but the lens of another person’s life experience. Reese and Mr. Hooft, a grumpy old man who at first pushes Reese away with racist comments and needling remarks about prison, are both surprised by the similarities they discover in their lives.And while Reese’s relationship with Mr. Hooft is illuminating, it is in his interactions with his younger sister Icy that he really shines. Even in the times that Reese is most hopeless about his own future, he is determined to protect and support his funny, precocious baby sister in achieving her goals. And we’re not talking about just any goals – we’re talking Princeton, following that up with the White House, and finally stopping war by giving everybody free food. This girl is going places – and her big brother is going to make sure of it. Reese’s life never feels hopeless as long as he sees the promise in this little girl who he loves so much.Walter Dean Myers’ ability to channel the voice of urban black teenagers is second to none, and it is this skill even more than his choice of subject matter that makes his novels appeal so strongly to urban teens. The really astonishing thing is that he doesn’t do it by using lots of slang or dialect, which would date the book quickly – it’s almost entirely in the rhythm of his writing, and it comes through both in the dialogue and in Reese’s narration. The reader can hear Reese’s voice, and it makes his story so much more immediate and compelling. And Reese’s voice and story are both worth hearing.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Lockdown is Mr. Myers second recent look at the lives of young men behind bars in America. An alternative to Monster, Lockdown is the story of Reese, a fourteen-year-old sent to a special juvenile facility called Progress for stealing perscription pads from a doctor's office. Reese is not exactly a star inmate. He has problems with the other boys in Progress, typically because he comes to the defense of 'Toon, a smaller boy Reese befriends, who is bullied by the older, bigger inmates. When he is not in trouble, Reese is allowed to work at a nearby senior home where he is given the job of helping Mr. Hooft, a bed-ridden old man who'd rather be anywhere other than a home waited on by a black teenager. Over time the two share their stories and become friends. Mr. Hooft was also in prison as a child, in his case a Japanese prison where all Europeans living in Shanghai were sent after the invasion of China during World War II. Reese has few people in his life who are on his side. His mother is willing to sacrifice him in order to hang on to her current boyfriend The other inmates at Progress, outside of 'Toon, cannot be trusted. The gaurds are waiting for him to screw up and sure that he will. The warden believes Reese has blown every chance he gave him and does not have much faith in him as a result. Mr. Hooft and Reese's little sister Isis are the only ones who believe he can turn his life around. Unfortunately, Reese's story is all too common in the United States today. To their credit, neither Reese nor Mr. Myers point the blame for Reese's situation at anyone other than Reese. While the deck is certainly stacked against him, Reese knows he must choose how he'll play the cards he has been dealt. Those of us who started life with a better hand would do well to remember that the family we are born into could easily have been one like Reese's. Would we be able to play our cards any better than he did?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Reese is a unique young man, that you grow to see as a troubled kid, and not as a violent criminal. His desire to change really becomes tied to his ability to change what he goes home to. If he is frustrated by his family's poverty and his failure at school, then his behavior is one that will match it; he will eventually turn to crime again to support his family and find his own value. As you read, the question definitely comes through from Myers of how we can help these kids change. What can we do, as a society, to eliminate the need these young, impoverished inner-city kids have for finding their sense of self through crime? Does our current system work, and what can we offer these young people once they get out of the juvenile corrections system?I did think that Myers reached inside the system, and into this one young man's life in a very smart sort of way. We are privy to Reese's life, so that we see his pain over his family's circumstances (his brother also into criminal activity, and a younger sister that he fears for in the future), and also the stand up person that Reese would like to be as he stands up for other inmates who are too weak to protect themselves. You do really care for Reese, and want to see his success.One thing that I really couldn't shake in the book though, was the behavior of the adults who worked in the facility. Many of the violent scenes within the facility occurred after prodding and neglect by those who were there to protect the inmates. In fact, several times these "adults" egged the students on with horrible, personal comments that were threatening, and obviously created plenty of increased stress on Reese and the other young men. To these situations, I disconnected a little. Having worked with young men who had recently been released from our state's juvenile corrections facility, I can say that I never encountered a single adult who deliberately maligned or neglected one of these students. My hope is that I'm not living and working in ideals, and that there really aren't places where the majority of the adults turn their backs on the youth they are working with. Really, I hope this is creative license, and not reality.Now, I realize that I focused on a rather minute part of Reese's story, but I will say that it really picked away at me. For a character as eager for happiness as Reese was (and many of the other teens locked up), I wanted to see the adults supporting these changes. Overall, I think it is yet another really great book for teens, and that Walter Dean Myers leads the pack in creating novels that disillusioned teens and overachievers alike will embrace. Please note that my professional rant is an aside to a really great story that I would hand to a wide variety of my reluctant readers. I have to say that if you haven't yet read Walter Dean Myers, I would become familiar with him as soon as possible. Many of his books have entered the doors of my classroom, in the hands of my students. His work is prolific, and shows great care for today's youth and children.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is a National Book Award finalist, and it made me read a book that I probably would not have read. I would suspect that this book would be really popular in Glendale, but I’m sure it’s not so popular here. Reese is in juvenile detention, and Myers pulls no punches in depicting the harshness of his jail time. He fully admits what happened and why he did what he did. But he is struggling to find another way, especially after the police come back for him in regards to a new crime he could not possibly have committed. Some things in this story are stereotypical to me – Reese’s family are dealing and abusing drugs, except for the favored little sister. Reese believes that this young girl can go to college and make something of herself, and at the end of his time he commits himself not to save himself, but to save her. The prison information is gritty and does not make prison sound appealing at all. I think this is a really good book, and it really did make me worry about Reese and his future. As always with Myers, well-written.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Good story. Reese's character is believable and you want things to work out for him. He tries to make it in a tough juvenile detention facility and manages to keep hope that he will get out. Reece is selected for a work program at a nursing home. He connects with a patient Mr. Hooft who challenges Reese to show him that he is not a criminal. I liked this book as much as, maybe more than, Monster.

Book preview

Lockdown - Walter Dean Myers

CHAPTER 1

I hope you mess this up! I hope you blow it big-time! You’re supposed to be smart. You think you’re smart, right?

Sir . . .

Shut up, worm! Mr. Pugh looked over his shoulder at me. If you had any smarts, you’d be out on the streets. But you’re in jail, ain’t you? Ain’t you?

Yes, sir.

And you know this work program is bullshit. Just more work for me and the staff. But I’m counting on you, worm. All you got to do is walk away when nobody’s looking. When they catch you, I’m going to put you in a hole so deep, you won’t even remember what daylight looks like.

The van stopped. I could see Mr. Pugh looking out the window. Then he got out and came around the back. I was handcuffed to the rail, and he climbed in and unhooked me.

Turn around.

I hated having my hands cuffed behind me—all the kids did—but I twisted around in the van like he said. He cuffed me, then pulled me out of the van by my sleeve. I stumbled a little but I didn’t fall. I stood behind the van with my head down like I was supposed to as he locked it up. Then he took me by the arm and led me to a side door.

He stopped just inside the door while he looked around; then he took me over to a woman sitting behind a desk. She was small, Spanishy looking, with dark eyes that went quickly from me to Mr. Pugh.

Yes?

I’m here to see a Father Santora, Mr. Pugh said. This is the inmate.

The receptionist smiled at me, then picked up the phone on her desk and made a call.

The people from Progress are here, Father, she said into the phone.

Mr. Pugh was a big man, as wide as he was tall, but the thing that got to you was that he didn’t have any eyebrows. His skin was really white and he was bald, so it looked like his face ran all the way up his head. I knew he didn’t want to have to drive me to the nursing home, but I didn’t care.

Mr. Pugh didn’t uncuff me until the man from the hospital had signed the papers.

I’ll be back to pick him up at four, Mr. Pugh said. I’ll leave a pair of cuffs in case you need them.

I watched as Mr. Pugh headed for the door. I used to think I couldn’t hate anyone as much as I hated my father, but Mr. Pugh was coming close.

Well, welcome to Evergreen, the man said. I’m Father Santora and I run the facility. This is Sonya, and your name is . . . He looked at the paper. Maurice Anderson. Do you mind if we call you Maurice?

Most people I know call me Reese, I said.

Okay, then we’ll call you Reese, Father Santora said. You’ll be coming here ten days a month for the next eight weeks in your work-release program. We think you’ll like it here.

He left the handcuffs with Sonya and took me into the elevator. He looked okay, but a lot of people looked okay.

Evergreen is basically a facility for senior citizens, Father Santora said. It’s not a hospital so much as a refuge. People reach a stage in their lives where they need to have assistance from day to day.

What am I going to be doing here? I asked.

You’ll be working under Mrs. Silvey, he said. She sees to the comfort of the residents. It’ll probably be cleaning the hallways or running errands for the seniors. But she’ll let you know. How old are you?

Fourteen. I’ll be fifteen next month.

You play basketball? he asked, smiling.

No, not really, I said.

Father Santora asked me if I minded sitting down on a bench in one of the hallways and said he was going to look for Mrs. Silvey. I said it was fine with me.

The place smelled like a hospital. I saw two old guys walking down toward the end of the hall holding hands. They were really old looking and one of them was stooped over, so I figured he was sick.

I sat there for a while and then Father Santora came back with a woman. I stood up and kind of nodded.

She looked me up and down and asked me how tall I was.

I don’t know, I said. Maybe about five five.

You’re five seven, she said. Maybe five six and a half. You have family in the city?

Yes, ma’am.

Well, welcome to Evergreen. Come with me.

Father Santora was smiling as I left with the lady. She took me down the hallway and up a flight of stairs to the next floor. It was like a big dayroom, and people were sitting around playing cards or watching television. She took me to a closet and opened it. Inside there was a small plastic bucket and a kind of stick with a grabber on it to pick up paper off the ground.

There’s a lot of paper and trash on the floor, she said. Sometimes the residents get careless. I want you to go around and pick up anything you recognize as trash. If someone argues with you, says that something isn’t trash, then you either put it back where you found it or offer it to them. You understand that?

Yes, ma’am.

And I don’t want you touching anything nasty with your hands, she said. "And I need you to wash your hands at least twice a day and keep your hands out of your face and especially away from your eyes. I don’t want you getting sick.

Never argue with anyone here, she went on. Do you understand that?

Yes, ma’am.

Father Santora said they call you Reese, is that right?

Yes, ma’am.

Okay, Reese. So, you’ll be working here from ten to four. At twelve, after the residents have eaten, you’ll eat with the staff. It’s a very informal, catch-as-catch-can kind of meal. At three thirty you’ll clean up and get ready to go back to Progress. How long have you been there?

Twenty-two months.

She looked at me like she was surprised, but she didn’t say anything.

My office is on this floor. It’s room 307. If you can’t remember that, Simi or Nancy—they’re on our staff and will work directly with you—will tell you. If you have a problem you’ll come to me, right?

Yes, ma’am.

And Reese. She stopped and took a deep breath. Many of the residents here are on medication. You’re not to touch any of the medications for any reason. Even if you see a bottle on the floor, you’ll tell Simi or Nancy. Do you understand that?

Yeah.

She left me, and I took the bucket and grabber out of the closet. I noticed there were some hooks in the closet so I could hang my clothes if it was raining. I hoped it didn’t rain on the days I was coming to Evergreen, because I didn’t want them seeing me in my orange rain hood.

I walked around the dayroom most of the morning picking up little pieces of paper. Most of the people sitting around were white and they were all real old. I heard some of them talking and it wasn’t in English, so I thought they might have been talking about me. I didn’t care. It was better than being at the Progress Center.

A tiny little woman saw me coming near her and she took an orange off the tray she was sitting near and put it behind her back. I wanted to smile but I didn’t. One man looked big and he had something wrong with the skin on his face. I thought maybe he was in some pain or something.

Hey, what’s your name? another woman asked me.

I was about to tell her but she looked away.

I started walking away, but then she yelled at me and asked me my name again.

Reese, I said.

What kind of name is that?

And he’s only got one name, another woman said. Maybe his family couldn’t afford two names.

It’s really Maurice, I said. Maurice Anderson.

The day went by fast. I kept the floor clear, which was easy. I met two more people from the Evergreen staff at lunchtime. One was a short, heavy black girl with an African-sounding name. She talked on her cell phone all the while we were in the staff room, which was a little room on the second floor with a coffeepot, a microwave, and a small refrigerator.

The other one was a Puerto Rican guy. He said he did the maintenance work, but he looked like he couldn’t see too good out of his thick glasses. There were sandwiches and soup for lunch. It was good. Or at least better than what we had at Progress.

Three thirty and I put the bucket and pickup thing back in the closet and washed up. Mrs. Silvey told me to wait on the first floor for the van. When I got there, a delivery guy was bringing packages and kidding around with the receptionist. I thought I would like to do that, have a regular job and kid around with people I met.

Mr. Pugh showed up at five minutes to four and made a motion for me to turn around. Sucker didn’t have to do that and he knew it.

I turned around and he handcuffed me with the receptionist looking. That made me feel bad, but I knew he wanted me to feel bad.

He didn’t say nothing on the way back to Progress, but I knew what he was waiting for. He took me into the reception room right away and closed the door.

You know the routine, he said.

I stripped down and bent over while he searched me.

It was almost not worth it. I hated being searched, having Pugh or anybody putting their hands all up in me. But I knew if I got through the two months working at Evergreen and didn’t mess up, I had a chance for an early out when my hearing came up. That’s all I thought about as Pugh messed with me. Getting back out on the street again.

CHAPTER 2

When I got back from Evergreen Mr. Cintron asked me how I liked it and I said I thought it was okay.

Just okay? he asked.

They treated me okay, I said. I wasn’t locked in my room or nothing, so I guess it was okay.

Well, that’s your choice, Reese, he said. You can spend the rest of your life in some kind of institution like this or you can be out there in the world. And what you got to keep in your head—what you got to focus on—is that ‘okay’ is a lot better than being in a place like this.

That was all good and everything, and I knew he was right, but I didn’t know what was going down with me. Mr. Cintron talked about it like it was something easy. You go this way or you go that way. Maybe for him it was easy.

He was cool, though. He was tall, about thirtysomething or maybe even forty. He looked Spanish but he sounded pure white. He was the only one at Progress who I believed most of the time.

There were only twelve of us in Section A, and in the morning Mr. Pugh marched us to breakfast. When Mr. Wilson marched us to breakfast we could have our hands down by our sides, but when Mr. Pugh took us anywhere we had to have our hands behind our backs with our wrists crossed like we were handcuffed, even though we weren’t. The breakfast was the same old stuff. Scrambled eggs, oatmeal, juice, and bologna. It was okay. I liked it when the bologna was burned sometimes. When I was home and Icy made breakfast, she burned everything. She liked to see the food cooking. It was burned but I didn’t mind.

The word was that something was going to happen after dinner. When we finished breakfast and took the trays to the window for the dishwashers, I asked Play what was happening.

Diego wants to jump Toon into the 3-5-7s, Play said.

Toon? I asked. He ain’t nothing but twelve!

And what’s he going to do in the 3-5-7s? Play said.

Shut up! Mr. Pugh hollered from across the room.

We lined up and went back to our quarters. I checked everything real quick because I didn’t want any trouble. The floor was swept, the bed made, and the sink clean. I knew that as long as everything went down correct, I would stay on level one and in the early-release program. If I started getting demerits and fell into level three or four, then I wouldn’t have any privileges and would have a harder time getting out early.

Eight o’clock and we went to school. Me, Leon, Diego, and this white girl named Kat were in the same class. They said she’d cut up a guy who was trying to mess with her and drank a soda while the guy was lying on the floor bleeding.

Play was fifteen and a nice guy, but he was facing juvy life for shooting a guy. His lawyer was still working on his case. Diego was fifteen and was doing a year for breaking and entering. Leon was fourteen and was in for shoplifting and punching a security guard. Toon was in because he wouldn’t go to school or listen to nobody. He said his parents had been accountants in Mumbai before they came to the States. His real name was

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