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A Hero Grows in Brooklyn
A Hero Grows in Brooklyn
A Hero Grows in Brooklyn
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A Hero Grows in Brooklyn

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Steve Marino is not seeking to become a junior high school hero. However, he is interested in "respect." Should he follow in his father's footsteps, a big strong man who is quick to put others down, be provoked into violence and discipline Steve with the back of his hand? Or would it be better to adopt his Uncle Rickey's approach, a guy who is just as big and strong as Steve's dad, but with a knack for avoiding violence and developing a friendly loyalty by participating in fun activities?

Before he can decide, suddenly Steve is shocked to find his father's approach has flung his family into utter poverty. Now, forced to move in the middle of the school year, a deeply depressed Steve tearfully asks, "How can I start all over? I put everything into making things work right in Bensonhurst. I've lost everything."

Things turn dramatically worse. As Steve signs up to attend his new school, two police officers and several parents show up. "Who's gonna be the next to die!?" screams one of the parents. "Huh!? Who's gonna be next!? Answer me! ANSWER ME!"

And so begins Steve's first bleak day at Cunningham Junior High.

In this deathly atmosphere, Steve seeks to earn the respect of his new classmates while trying to come to grips with his turbulent feelings for one of his classmates, the beautiful and strange Mysterious Jane.

Amidst gut wrenching swirling emotions, Steve discovers he must face the Skull Bones, a knife slashing gang. Armed only with courage, he takes on the fight of his life.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherJeffrey Rubin
Release dateFeb 27, 2012
ISBN9781465829184
A Hero Grows in Brooklyn
Author

Jeffrey Rubin

Jeffrey Rubin grew up in Brooklyn, received his PhD degree from the University of Minnesota and has taught conflict resolution there as well as at a psychiatric clinic, a correctional facility and a number of public schools. He has published articles on anger and conflict resolution in major psychology journals and has authored three novels.

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    Book preview

    A Hero Grows in Brooklyn - Jeffrey Rubin

    A Hero Grows In Brooklyn

    By Jeffrey Rubin

    Copyright 2012 Jeffrey Rubin

    Smashwords Edition

    Smashwords Edition, License Notes

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    CHAPTER 1

    In the shadows of a leafy maple tree, a scrawny five year old pitches a pink rubber ball up against the steps of his dusty red stoop. As it bounces back, he pretends to be playing shortstop for his favorite team, the Brooklyn Dodgers. He bends slightly forward, reaches out with his hands, and smoothly makes the catch. Quickly he fires to first base. When the ball slams into the outstretched glove of Gil Hodges, a roar sweeps across Ebbets Field!

    Nice play, kid! Jackie Robinson calls out from third base.

    The boy tips his cap. The crowd begins to shout his name, Steve! Steve! Steve!

    Now, up on the pitcher’s mound, the boy wipes some sweat from his brow and then leans forward, copying the exact movements of Don Newcombe. As he begins his windup, a purring vehicle pulls up behind him. Turning around to get a better look, he sees his Uncle Ricky at the wheel of a midnight blue Ford pick-up. Suddenly, the summer’s biggest hit, Rock Around The Clock, comes bursting from the rolled down windows. The boy’s hips and arms begin to dance and he cries out over the thrilling music, Uncle Ricky! Uncle Ricky!

    "How’s it goin’, Steve?" Ricky yells back while he finishes parking.

    As the final words of the song are reached, Steve and his uncle join in, We’re gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock TONIGHT!!

    The pick-up’s driver-side door swings open, and Ricky steps out stretching his tall, lean, and muscular body. He’s wearing a short sleeve white shirt which is open at the neck and hangs just above the top of his white linen trousers. His bronze complexion provides contrast to the fine cloth in his outfit—as does his black hair, belt, and well-shined shoes. Steve runs over and leaps into his arms.

    Ricky lifts Steve, turns him upside down, flips him right side up, throws him way up in the air, and catches him. Steve is laughing and laughing. Now Ricky begins to playfully mess Steve’s golden highlighted dark brown hair.

    Cut that out, or I’m gonna beat ya up, says Steve.

    Ricky returns Steve to the ground and with twinkling eyes, crouches down, and throws up his dukes. The two dance around sparring.

    Steve takes a jab at his uncle’s chest.

    Ricky blocks it.

    Steve quickly follows with a swing to the shoulder and hits pay dirt.

    Ricky pretends to wince from the pain.

    I got ya good that time, Uncle Ricky.

    Ricky rolls his eyes around while looking like he’s about to topple over. Then he smiles, takes a comb from his back pocket, and slides it through his thick ebon hair. His Romanesque facial features are striking and it’s easy to imagine him a dashing young emperor. When he begins to speak, however, the way he mixes Italian words in with a distinct Brooklyn accent exclaims to anyone within earshot that the handsome young man standing before us is hardly some imperial leader.

    "Simpatico bambino, go on with ya stoopball. Show me how good ya are."

    Steve steps into position, throws the ball up against the steps, and on the rebound makes a nice pick-up on a short hop.

    "Bene!" cries Ricky.

    Steve throws it again and this time the ball bounces off the edge of a step, lines back to Steve, who deftly sticks out his hands and nabs it.

    "Bravissimo!" Ricky cries out clapping his hands.

    Ricky watches for a few more minutes, his eyebrows rising each time Steve makes an impressive catch. Steve’s practicing for hours this summer has really paid off. He’s dazzling to watch.

    "Non c’e male, says Ricky, not bad."

    I’m pretty good Uncle Ricky, ain’t I?

    "Bene! Mama Mia!"

    You really think so, Uncle Ricky?

    Yes! Yes! But now let me tell you why I stopped by. I thought maybe you and me, we’d go up ta the Stadium today ta catch the Yanks.

    As Steve makes out what Ricky has just proposed, his right hand, which had been cocked to throw the ball up against the steps and is now in forward motion, comes to an abrupt halt. He turns to his uncle. There are five seconds of silence. And then—"Aaaaaaaaaaaaaa!" You’d think Steve had fallen from a window. Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!

    CHAPTER 2

    Steve’s mom, hearing her son’s screaming screech, rushes out on the stoop with a hand over her heart, and she screams, Sister of Mary!

    Ricky quickly runs his hands through his hair and looks up to her. "Ciao, Marie," he says with a smile.

    The crunched up forehead and lowered eyebrows that Marie had when she first came running out is now easing into relief. And in that relief, we see a very pleasant face with smooth, olive-brown skin, and dark eyes that sparkle. Her nose is well proportioned and she can often be found with a sweet, sweet smile. It is true that she is a bit heavier than the models in the fashion magazines, but she has nearly come to accept this about herself.

    Here on the stoop of this four family brick house, Marie aims a frown at her brother-in-law. Whadaya have Stevie all worked up about, Ricky?

    I thought I’d take him up to the Stadium today, he responds with an altogether good-natured smile. The Yanks are playin’ a double header ‘gainst Boston.

    Marie rubs her arm. Taking the boy to see the Yankees, she says. Mike’s a Dodger fan. He’ll think you’re trying to turn him into a traitor.

    Uncle Ricky, how come you ain’t no Dodger fan like Dad? asks Steve. You’re from Brooklyn like the rest of us.

    Ricky crouches down so he’s eye to eye with our young hero. Steve, the Dodgers got Carl Furillo, Jackie Robinson, Pee Wee Reese, Gil Hodges, Roy Campanalla, and The Duke. They’re a great bunch of boys. Why I’m a Yankees fan? Hmmm. Ricky’s forehead creases. He slides his right hand through his hair. "Well, to tell ya the truth, I ain’t really sure. Ever since I remember, your dad loved the Dodgers and I loved the Yanks. I guess for me it’s got somethin’ ta do with Joe DiMaggio. When I was a boy he was the Yankees' centerfielder, and wow, I went for him in a big way. Every day I’d find out how he made out—and well, he was a paesano, a paesano with viva forza! And well, then he retired. By that time I guess I just got used to rooting for the Yanks. Ricky shrugs his shoulders. So there ya have it. Ya still wanna go see ‘em today?"

    Yeah! But what’ll Dad say?

    Well, let’s go see, says Ricky, and he straightens up and leads the way from the stoop into the apartment. Heading toward the kitchen through a hallway with old black and white family pictures hanging on the walls, Ricky breathes in deeply. Mmmmmm. Smells like garlic, olive oil and tomatoes. Ya making some of your great sauce, Marie?

    She turns to Ricky beaming. On Sundays, I like to make a big pot before the heat sets in so in the evening, and a few times during the week when I get home from work, I can get supper together a little easier.

    Your sauce, says Ricky, it sings in the mouth. With this, he puts his right hand’s thumb, pointer, and middle fingers together, kisses their tips, and points them up to the sky.

    Steve’s dad, Michelangelo Marino, who is called Mike for short, is sitting at the kitchen table in a white undershirt, his arm muscles rippling as he sips a cup of coffee and bites into a donut. He has remarkably broad shoulders, just a hint of a pot belly, and his nose looks like it’s been crushed at least a half dozen times. It is just as he reaches for a lit cigarette that is burning in a heavy glass ashtray when he notices his younger brother, Ricky. "Dio mio! he flares. What the hell do you want?"

    Ricky attempts a response but Mike harshly interrupts—

    Ya come down here to say I told ya so ‘bout last night’s gad damn poker game?

    No I ain’t…

    "Va all’ inferno!" Mike screams.

    "Calma," Ricky softly replies, and with great effort he restrains himself from repeating the sentence he had told Mike a few months earlier—There’d be nothing wrong with the poker game if the guys ya play with played nickel, dime, quarter, but they’re all trying to make out like they’re a bunch of gaddamn Rockefellers.

    "Dio mio! Mike hollers pounding the table. I couldn’t pull a decent card all night. Bastardo!" Mike glares down at the table, pounds it again, moans, and turns silent.

    Ricky waits patiently.

    Steve lets out a long sigh, runs to Ricky, then to his mother, and then back to Ricky. He pulls on Ricky’s sleeve while looking wide eyed into his eyes.

    Soon, Ricky whispers.

    Steve puts his hands on his head, and then flings them in the air.

    With a large wooden spoon, Marie stirs the sauce she has cooking in a pot on the gas stove as steam wafts upward toward the ceiling.

    When Mike moans again, Marie glances over to him. She notices how, in such a familiar way, he looks at his cigarette, flicks the ashes into the ashtray, and takes a long drag.

    The first time I saw him, she says to herself, we were teenagers in Angelo’s Pizzeria and he was smoking a cigarette exactly like he is now with the same angry expression. And then he turned, looked me over, and his anger turned into a wonderful smile; my how I fell for him. I remember thinking, if only I were fifteen pounds thinner.

    With this memory, her whole struggle with her weight flashes before her—all those hours with her back to her mirror crying her eyes out; all those desperate diets that all, ultimately, failed.

    As these recollections pass by, their tone begins to undergo a shift. Marie recalls how, over the years, she has encountered so many wonderful women that pleased without perfect physical beauty. Complete satisfaction with my weight, she decides, could have led to, well, a kind of contentment. Yes, I believe so. I’ve been developing higher character because of all that I’ve been through. And character is far more important than shallow appearances.

    After what seems to be a hundred years to Steve, Mike crushes out his cigarette, and looks up at Ricky. Ya take Mom to church this morning?

    Yeah.

    Ya know I would have done it but I didn’t get home till dawn. Did she say anything?

    She said she likes it when you take her. She was disappointed.

    Well, it’s good for you to go for a change, Ricky. Was Chris Bellona there? She’s always asking ‘bout you. What a looker.

    Steve glances at his dad, and then his uncle. He spins around, flops down on a kitchen chair, leans forward, and puts his elbows on his knees, his eyes on the floor. Softly, he sighs and his cheeks begin to burn. Who cares about Chris Bellona, he says to himself. What about the Yankees!?

    Yeah, she was there, says Ricky. When we got out of church, I was talking to Mom under the big maple out front and she’s by her car in the lot. After a couple of minutes, she calls after me. So I tell Mom I’ll be right back and I go over, ya know, to see what she wants. ‘Hi, beautiful,’ I says. Then she places her hands on my shoulder and leans into me, kinda snuggling. I can smell her perfume and feel her soft… and his glimmering brown eyes lose focus on anything present in the room. An observer studying those fine glowing eyes at this moment would be at a loss to say exactly what they are seeing, and yet there would be no doubt they are looking in the general direction of heaven.

    Well, says Mike, if you could get that far with Chris at church, think of how far you could get if ya take her out on a Saturday night. Ya ought da ask her out.

    A lady like that comes from a pretty well off family, I don’t think I can afford her.

    "It’s your chance for amore," says Marie. "Take her for a walk in Prospect Park, and then after, you could go to Juniors’ Restaurant. It’s a little more expensive than a typical deli, but not too bad. It would be very nice, and you can see, maybe amore is just waiting for you, Ricky Marino."

    I already know I like her. I like her a lot, and as Ricky says this he brings his hands to his heart.

    So, says Marie, what are you waiting for?

    The thing is, once I spend the evening with her I’ll be completely hooked and I’ll want to take her to the nicest places and I just can’t afford that right now.

    That’s no way to think, says Mike. If ya both like each other ya work it out, for Christ's sake!

    Ricky pulls up a chair next to his brother’s and sits down. Leaning forward, his hands open, palms facing Mike, he says, "Ya see, it’s like this. I like being a longshoreman, the ocean air, the guys all working together loading and unloading the great international ships… work where ya get to use your arms and legs, I love that. It’s just, well, ya see, last week during my vacation I worked on the cabinet and I got this burning feeling that I want to work with wood in a sea side shop more than doing the dock stuff. When I make a table or a chair or a cabinet, I’m using my arms and legs, and to me, it’s not just a piece of furniture, it’s, well it’s a work of art, comprendo?"

    If ya feel that way about it, says

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