Pass It Forward
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About this ebook
Lucas has big dreams of getting a basketball scholarship and helping his mom out of poverty. When a growth spurt helps Lucas become a force on the court, his dreams finally seem within reach. But Lucas's brother tries to steer him toward a very different path: making easy money on the street. Can Lucas keep his focus and stay true to his dream?
Patrick Jones
Patrick Jones lives in Minneapolis and is the author of many novels including the Support and Defend series. A former librarian, Jones received lifetime achievement awards from the American Library Association and the Catholic Library Association.
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Pass It Forward - Patrick Jones
1
Wednesday Morning
February 8
Lucas Washington’s apartment
Mom’s alarm blares from her room. In our tiny one-bedroom, the buzz wakes me up too.
I roll over on the rough, worn sofa where I sleep. I lift my old watch off the orange crate that serves as a table. It is 5:00 a.m. Mom needs to be at her hospital job by 7:00. About when she starts lifting patients from their wheelchairs, I’ll be elevating iron at the school weight room.
I pull the thin blanket over me and shiver in our heatless apartment. A few times this winter when it got really cold, Mom would leave open the oven after she’d cooked some packaged food left over from her other job at the nursing home. It is only once a month they clean the pantry. Mostly we live on Hamburger Helper without the hamburger.
Mom, you okay?
I yell. It seems all I ever do anymore is yell. I can’t seem to control the sound of my voice. Over the summer, before my senior year, my voice got even deeper and I had a late-life growth spurt. I went from a small point guard to a passing forward, but Coach switched me again halfway through the season. As soon as I got the ball to shoot, we got hot—unlike this apartment—and qualified for the state finals, which start tonight. Since our record is the worst of any team in Alabama’s 6A conference, we won’t play any of our tournament games in our own gym. Coach says we all need to kick in for gas money. If we make it to the semi-finals, the games will be at the Birmingham Convention Complex.
Luke, come help me!
Mom shouts from the other room. I get up, rub the sleep out of my eyes, and walk through our mostly bare apartment. There is no sense having stuff if one day you might come home to find it all on the curb or in a Dumpster. I figure if I don’t have anything, I can’t lose anything or have somebody take it away again. Hurry up, Luke!
I use my new long legs to get to her room in sprinter’s time. I gained all this size but didn’t lose my speed. I’m awkward everyplace except on the basketball court. I help Mom out of bed just like she’ll help others later today. It seems like heavy lifting is all our family does.
For us, nothing comes easy. Easy comes with a price that we can’t afford.
2
Wednesday Afternoon
February 8
Jackson High School
The first bell rings to start class, but I don’t move a hard muscle. I sit motionless in the high school counselor’s office. You have a better chance of winning the lottery than getting drafted to play in the NBA—or even getting recruited to play D-1 college ball,
Mr. Edwards tells me during our first-ever meeting. Coach had said I should meet with Mr. Edwards because colleges might want to talk to me after we win State.
Every corner store in my neighborhood sells tickets; maybe I’ll buy one,
I joke. His brown tie is tied so tightly around his neck, it looks like his face should be turning purple. What should I do?
Edwards’s expression flashes a stop bothering me
look. Maybe a trade school?
I don’t know anybody going to trade school.
Actually, I don’t know anyone going to college, period. My oldest brother, Mark, went off to college to play ball, but he broke his ankle, lost his scholarship, and put his college career in the rearview.
Russell Walker is going to A+ Auto Mechanics this summer. You should talk to him.
"I don’t know him.