Trent
It’s cold.
And I want to get out
Of this darn place.
I’m not sure
How I’ll leave
Because after all
I’m just
An unemployed kid
Who hates
Pretty
Much everything.
I’m sitting
Here in my dark room
With the blinds
Shut and
The light off.
Thinking and wondering
How I could leave.
My foster family
Wouldn’t care.
Wouldn’t care that I’m gone.
My foster brother
Lukas
Told me they didn’t
Want me anyway
So why would they care if
They woke up and I was
Not there?
They wouldn’t.
I wouldn’t.
But I can’t do it
By myself.
After all, two is
Better than one.
Wait, I know.
I know who will go with me.
Liam
I’ve been living
In this stinking foster home
For two years
And my only friend is
a boy named Trent
from across the road
Who hates
Pretty
Much everything.
But then
So do I.
It’s 3am,
A usual bedtime hour
For an unwanted kid
Like me.
I hear a knock
A knock on my window.
Climbing off my bed
I visit the window
Man it’s cold by the glass
Outside it’s dark
And who should be standing there
But Trent?
Fully clothed
Holding a bag and
A bus timetable in his hand.
“Liam,” he says, “let’s get outta
This place,
And live a life
Our parents would be
Proud of.”
And the way he says it
It almost sounds like we could be brothers
And we are.
Kind of.
Without a thought
For my foster family
And their perfect, undefiled lives
I pack up a backpack with everything
I own.
Which is only
A toothbrush,
My book that I stole
From my foster sister’s room,
And a grey hoodie I own
The one thing I bought
Before I was here.
And the one thing that I have
That my real parents gave me:
A photograph
Of them, my kin
By blood we’re connected
And I know what they
Look like
Or looked like, anyways.
And on the back?
A note.
‘Liam don’t
Forget us
Because we
Want you back’.
So I climb out of the window
And I say to Trent,
“Alright, brother,
Let’s find out
Where we really belonged
Once upon
A time.”
Trent
We’re really
Doing it
Me and my brother Liam
Who isn’t really
My brother
But then, who is
If not for Liam?
I’ve got nobody
At least Liam
Has a photograph
And a note from his real
Family.
And as we run
I can’t help but wonder
If my real parents are out there
Looking for me like Liam’s
Are looking for him?
Or even if they are still
alive?
We’ve been running
Just me and Liam
For hours’ now
Our breath is like clouds
Because it’s darn cold out here
And I can barely
Suck in a breath.
“Liam,” I pant,
“Please let’s stop
Before I can’t go on.”
And Liam nods
And stops
And we sit as I catch
My escaping breath.
Liam isn’t even panting
He’s always been an endurance
Kind of runner.
I can see something
Gleaming in Liam’s
Bright blue eyes
He’s hopeful
I’m not.
“Liam,” I say,
“What are we holding on to?”
Liam looks at me
He’s smiling.
Liam
“That our parents are out there,
Trent, and we might find them.”
I get to my feet, pulling Trent
To his own.
“Think,” I say,
“We might have been brothers.”
Trent looks doubtful
More than he had when we
Left our stinking foster homes.
Then he gives me a smile
A small one
But a smile nonetheless.
“Liam,” he says,
“We’re more like
Brothers than
Any real brother could be.”
Trent is my best friend
And together we’re running
Running once again
Through the park and
Streets of our little town
But it’s not really ours
Our future hasn’t even been
Written.
We’ve got a bus to catch
We’re getting out of here.
Hope
Is what
We’re holding on to.
Trent
The bus driver lets us on
For free.
Good thing too
Because I didn’t bring money
Neither did Liam
But we don’t have any
Anyway.
“Boys,” he tells us,
“I hope you
Find what you’re looking for.”
And we thank him.
He seems nice
As he revs up
His shiny bus and lets us
Sit at the coveted
Back of the bus
Amongst people
Getting up early
Heading to their jobs to earn
The money they’ll use
To give to their complete and wonderful
Families.
“Where are we going?” Liam asks me.
But I don’t know.
Just outta the place we’ve been stuck
Forced to stay in
For too long.
I guess
I should be grateful to
My foster family for taking me in
But my real family is out there
Surely.
Hopefully.
Liam
We’ve been on this bus
All darn day.
My back hurts from sitting
On this seat since the sun went up
Till now, when it’s
Going down.
Suddenly I let out
A laugh.
“What?” Trent asks.
I’m just imagining my foster mother’s
Face
When she called me out of bed
Only to find
I already was
And all that’s left of me is a note
‘Thanks for everything,
But I needed to leave.
I’m going to find my parents.
Don’t come after me.
I’ll be long gone.’
I laugh again.
Trent
Liam keeps laughing
About the joke he sprung
On his foster family.
He says he left a note
For them to find.
I realise
I left nothing for them.
I just disappeared.
I almost laugh myself.
Lukas can take back all the things
I borrowed
Without asking.
And he can lounge on my bed and
Play with the action figures
We’re both way too old for.
Suddenly I remember.
My cat.
Jaspar was still at Lukas’ house.
Lukas would be patting her and stroking her
And laughing because now he’s got
The only friend
I ever had
Before Liam.
Jaspar wasn’t really my cat
But my foster mother said that
If she made me feel comfortable
Then I could call her mine for a while.
I let a tear slip out
Because she’ll be wondering
Where I’ve gone.
But I wipe it up because
We’re supposed to be escaping
Me and Liam.
Liam
Trent thinks I didn’t see
The tear that slipped out on his cheek
But I did.
As the bus driver stops at the next stop and
People coming home from work
Get on, I tell Trent,
“Let’s get off and find
Somebody kind
Who also has food.”
We thank the driver
Who shakes our hands,
Wishes us luck.
The town we’re in
Is far, far away
From the one we were
Trapped in.
At least,
I thought,
No one will be able to trace us
Now.
It’s dark
About 10pm.
I jog up to a big sign
Illuminated by lights
It’s a map
And I can see an information centre
Shown by an ‘I’ on the billboard.
“Should we go there?” Trent asks.
I think we should.
We should find a place that can
Tell us where our parents are.
It takes us
Ten minutes
To run down
To where the
information centre is.
Right next to the
Child Protection Society
Headquarters.
I didn’t even see it on
The billboard.
Neither did Trent.
I suddenly can see
The hope in Trent’s eyes
That I felt growing in mine.
We were a step closer to discovering where we once
Belonged. Truly belonged.
Suddenly Trent curses.
The door is closed and locked
And a sign says,
‘Sorry,
We’re closed’.
Trent doesn’t accept
Their apology
Neither do I.
But we’re helpless
Powerless.
Nobody’s there.
So there’s nothing we can do
But wait.
In the cold
In the dark.
Until morning.
Trent
I don’t believe this.
I’ve never slept
On a street
Except once.
Before some agency
Found me and
Sent me to the stinking
Foster home
With people who didn’t really
Want me there.
At least, the foster siblings
I was stuck with
Didn’t.
I thought my situation
Would be better than
The one I had just escaped from.
But I guess I was
Wrong to hope
As Liam was hoping.
“Things could be worse,”
He says to me.
Yeah, I tell myself.
I could be a homeless kid
Sleeping outside
With no family
No food
No shelter
And no friends
Except for my brother
Who isn’t even my brother.
He’s just my best friend
Who’s stuck in the same
Darn situation as me.
This
Stinks.
It’s now that
I really want Jaspar
Not just because I love her
And she loves me
But because she’s warm
And I’m not.
Liam notices me
Shivering.
He hands me the
Grey hoodie I knew he
Managed to buy once.
I spread the hoodie over
My cold legs.
What an idiot,
I thought,
To not wear my long pants.
I wonder if
My real parents
Are living around here
Feeling the same cold.
“Liam,” I say suddenly,
“We might have been brothers
Once upon a time
When we truly belonged somewhere.”
And I realise
That without Liam
I really would have nobody
In the world.
Trent
Morning.
I stretch
I’m stiff as a board
I look at Liam.
He’s still sleeping.
I shake him.
If somebody finds us here
We might get sent home
For being homeless
Seems ironic.
But where’s home?
Don’t have one.
Tough for anyone
Trying to send us home.
Liam stretches too.
Both of us stand
Our joints cracking like a whip
And we
Take off to
The public toilet block
To ‘freshen up’.
But how fresh is fresh
When you’ve been in the same clothes for two days
And slept on a street all night?
Liam shuts himself
In a cubicle
And I try and
Fix my hair
Wash my face
Look presentable.
Nobody’s gonna talk to a kid
Who looks like a vagabond
A thought hits me
As I wash my hands.
Is that what we are?
Vagabonds?
I guess it is
Until we
Find our home.
I look at Liam,
Who’s fiddling
With his strawberry-blonde
Hair.
We might have been brothers,
Once upon a time.
Liam
I think we look
Better than we did
After spending the night
On a step
Outside a shop
Like homeless kids.
Which I guess is what we were.
But there was still one
Big problem.
Neither Trent
Nor I
Had eaten since before
We’d run away.
At 3am yesterday morning.
Seems like an age ago.
People are walking around
Giving us looks
But none stop to talk.
The hunger was dulling our eyes
And making us look
Almost as hollow
As our hearts were beginning to feel.
But all
We can do
Is head
Back to the
Child Protection Society Headquarters
And hope we can
Get them to
Find who we truly belong to.
What’s the worst
That could happen?
I ask myself as Trent leads the way.
They could only send
Me back to a stinking foster home
And then
I’d just run away again
Me and Trent
Could just leave.
Because
Me and Trent
Might have been brothers
Once upon
A time
So they can’t split us up.
A horrible thought comes
To me as
We push open the doors to the CPS HQ.
If both our sets of parent
Were indeed alive
And wanted us back
Then what would happen to me and Trent?
We’d be split up.
I want to tell Trent my fears
But I can see the excitement in
His brown eyes
As we walk
Up to the desk
Where a lady sits.
I won’t say anything.
But the thought won’t leave.
Just like I won’t leave
Until we find Trent’s parents.
Trent
The lady looks like she
Might leave
When she sets eyes on
Us two ragamuffins
Coming up to her desk
With the light of hunger
In our eyes
And the stench of
Homelessness on us.
But I put down my hand
On the desk
Before she can rush off.
“Please,” I say
In my politest voice,
“We want to know who
Our parents are.”
The lady gives us a little smile
But it doesn’t
Reach her eyes.
Nonetheless she
Nods and says
“Do you have any details
at all?”
And it’s Liam’s turn
To come up to the desk
And hand the lady
The photograph
And the note.
“What is your
name?” the lady
Asks Liam.
Liam can barely contain his
Excitement.
“Liam Charlie Hughes,” he says.
The lady types.
We wait.
You could have heard
A pin drop
And the beating of
My unsteady heart.
The lady presses a key
And a
Printer begins
To whirr.
Out comes a sheet of
Paper.
I can hardly believe
What Liam reads.
We might have been brothers.
But we’re not.
Liam
We might have been brothers.
But we’re not.
The paper reads
‘Mother:
Bonnie Tabitha Hughes.
Father:
Charlie Steve Hughes.’
And what gets my heart
Beating more
Is that it says
I have a brother.
And actual
Blood brother
Called Jim.
But I don’t really want a brother.
I already have one.
I read the address where
They supposedly live.
I have to go there.
It says it’s a long,
Long way from here.
I can’t believe it.
We might have been brothers.
I can’t even
Comprehend
That it was this easy
That I found my parents
But the next problem is
Do they want me?
The note says
That they do.
Do Trent’s parents want him?
He doesn’t have a note.
And he doesn’t have a brother.
Except me.
Trent
I’m holding paper now.
It says-
Wait. It says I have
A brother.
Who isn’t Liam.
Whose name is Alfie.
I don’t want another brother
Maybe this was a bad idea
Is being a vagabond
Such a bad thing?
If I can be Liam’s brother?
But wait
The paper says
I have a mother.
Her name is Sarah Johnson
But the spot
Where my father’s name
Should be
Is empty.
Except for one word,
UNKNOWN.
But I don’t care.
Because there is
An address.
It’s a right here.
In this little town.
Only a few streets away.
And I can go there and meet my family
Find out why they couldn’t keep me
Why my mum didn’t want me.
Why she kept her other son and not me.
Why I have no father.
My head
Is spinning.
I just
Can’t
Even
Deal with this excitement
That’s mixed
With a ton of misery
What’s going to happen to Liam?
My brother?
His family is written down
On that piece
Of paper.
But I’m not there.
We might have been brothers.
But we’re not.
Liam
The lady arranges for
Me to be
Sent directly
To my family’s house
To meet my parents
And my brother Jim.
I can’t wait
To find out why
I wasn’t kept
And Jim was.
There is no time for me to
Tell Trent that
While we can’t have been brothers
I still consider him
My brother
My only brother.
The escort is taking me away
The worker from
The CPS is driving me away
I look out of the back window
Of the black car
They sit me in.
And there is Trent.
Standing
There
On the curb with another worker
Who is on the phone
To Trent’s family
A few streets away.
A tear slips out
And I let it.
We might have been brothers.
And now we
Might not even
See each other again.
Trent
My brother has just driven away.
I couldn’t tell him that
He still is my brother
My only brother.
The CPS worker drives me across the street to my family.
I’m not
A vagabond
Anymore.
But
I still feel homeless.
No Liam.
No Jaspar.
Nobody but my blood kin.
Liam
I’ve been miserable
Since I arrived.
My family is nice
Mum said she
Couldn’t keep me
Because the family
Was broke
But I don’t care.
Mum drove me for hours and hours today.
She said it was a surprise
But I don’t want surprises
Because she brought
Jim.
Jim’s OK I guess
But he’s not Trent.
Our road trip is spent
With Jim
Talking in the front
And me sitting silently in the back.
I hate
Pretty
Much everything.
Because we might have been brothers…
Trent
But we’re not.
Mum took me to the park today.
But she brought Alfie and I don’t want Alfie
Because he’s not my brother
Liam is.
Mum talks on the phone for an hour
I don’t know who she’s talking to
And I don’t care.
I keep thinking
That we might have been
Brothers
But-
A lady walks towards Mum.
She has two boys with her.
One has strawberry-blonde hair
And the other has brown.
I can’t move because it reminds me too much of
Liam’s hair.
The two women talk and the brown-haired boy talks to Alfie.
But the strawberry-blonde boy stops.
He’s looking at me.
He drops
The backpack he
Was holding.
I know who it is.
Liam
I know who it is.
It’s my brother.
My only brother.
I’m
Running.
He’s running.
It’s Trent.
And
When we reach
One another
It’s a tight embrace
Because we're still brothers
Trent
Even though
We’re not brothers
Liam is more of a brother than
Any other brother I can have
More than my
Actual brother Alfie
More than his
Actual brother Jim.
“Liam,” I say,
“We might have been brothers.”
Liam doesn’t hide the tear he lets loose.
My tears
Are unbidden yet
Unhidden.
“Trent,” Liam says,
“We are brothers.”
And it
Doesn’t matter
That we live
A world away.
No amount of
Distance can change the fact
That we might have been brothers
And we always will be.
Liam
“Bye Jim!”
I call as I run
out the door
And down the street
to the bus stop.
I’m going to meet Trent.
We moved house a while ago
Now Trent and I live closer.
Because he’s
my brother.
And
he always will be.
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