This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance between a character in this story to a person living or dead is purely coincidental. All the persons having sex in this story are over 18.
Any discussion of the provisions of laws in this story are purely for the purpose of the narrative and should not be taken as either a correct statement of the law nor as legal advice.
The book I reference in the introduction, "No Way to Treat a Child", actually exists. It is a scathing indictment of how the foster care system in this country operates. If you haven't read it, you should. You'll begin to understand the damage done to children in the system and why so many of them turn out so badly when they age out of the system.
My apologies to the U.S. Marshal's Service. I needed a mechanism to move the story along and they sprang to mind. Their record of protecting persons in WitSec is astonishing and they deserve kudos. But when you need a villain to keep the story moving, you can't go wrong with accusing a government agency of administrative failure and their witness protection mission made them the logical choice.
Finally, as always, I welcome comments and feedback. I'm new at this writing thing and am still trying to find my voice. Please be gentle.
THRICE RESCUED
INTRODUCTION
I've been rescued from a life of chaos on three occasions. Gunny Hopkins and Mrs. Hopkins rescued me twice, intervening on each occasion to redirect a life spiraling into the toilet. The third rescue came about in a completely different fashion, but it has every prospect of lasting for a lifetime.
My name is David Derr. Folks who know me well call me Davie. I spent twelve years of my life in foster care. I never knew my father. I'm not certain my mother even knew who my sperm donor was. If she did, she never told me or my grandmother. My mother was an addict. I spent the first six years with her dropping in and out of my life, although it was more out than in. Most of that time my grandmother was caring for me. Grandmom died shortly before I started first grade, relinquishing my care to my heroin addicted mother.
My time in mom's custody turned out to be very short. I came home from school about two months after my grandmother's death to find my mother asleep in the bed, a needle sticking out of her arm. I tried repeatedly to wake her. Experience told me that sometimes she just needed to sleep it off and so I waited. I ended up waiting for three days, feeding myself on whatever I could find in the refrigerator and the box of cereal I climbed up on a chair to get out of the cabinet. After I failed to turn up for school for the third consecutive day and mom failed to answer the phone, my first-grade teacher, Mrs. Gallagher, showed up with her patrolman husband to check on me. When they knocked on the door, I wasn't going to let them in, until Mrs. Gallagher finally convinced me it was OK. I told them mommy was sleeping and Mrs. Gallagher went to check on her. She called her husband into the bedroom. He confirmed that my mother was dead. They then called Children and Youth Services and I was scooped up into the foster care system.
Years after my foster care experience, a woman named Naomi Schaefer Riley wrote a book called "No Way to Treat a Child." It's an indictment of the foster care system. My only problem with her conclusions is that she wasn't nearly harsh enough about how destructive that system is to a child trapped in it.
CYS made some desultory efforts to locate relatives with whom they could place me. If I had any living family, I never knew any of them. This was long before the whole fascination with genetic testing and searching for relatives in the various online databases became popular, so it was mostly going through my mother's things to see if there were any names or phone numbers. CYS drew a blank and off I went to long term care in a mightily flawed system.
When I later tallied up the total, I calculated that I'd been fostered by twelve different families in nine separate schools by the time I reached age 14. I wasn't a difficult or rebellious child, but several of the foster care families were almost as dysfunctional as my own had been. And many of them were just in it for the payment they got for keeping me. I saw all kinds of chicanery, bullying, physical and sexual abuse, and just plain neglect. The families with multiple foster children and children of their own were the worst. There was a decidedly two-tiered standard of care in those families, with their natural children strongly favored. Those years of my life were chaotic, to say the least, and I was on a fast track to a life of disfunction when Gunny and Mrs. H intervened.
CHAPTER ONE
I first met Gunny Hopkins in freshman gym class. He was African-American, a retired Marine gunnery sergeant who had undertaken a second career as a high school gym teacher. He was probably in his late 40s when I first encountered him. Meeting him was memorable. The guy was about 6'4" tall and weighed nearly 240. If there was an ounce of fat on his body, it was well hidden. He scared the living daylights out of every boy in the student body, not the least because his side gig after school was owning and operating a martial arts studio in a strip center near the high school. Several of the people I met had trained with him and they told me that he had a wall full of trophies from martial arts tournaments, although he no longer competed. No one I ever met at school had even a passing thought of giving him grief.
Mrs. Hopkins was a school guidance counselor, responsible for the freshman class. She stood about 5'2" and probably weighed no more than 110 pounds. She had Gunny H wrapped around her little finger. I didn't learn until later that they had three children, two boys and a girl. The boys were both Marine officers and the girl was still in college, majoring in early childhood education. I would subsequently learn that as intimidating as Gunny Hopkins was, he didn't hold a candle to Mrs. H when she got wound up. She was a freaking force of nature when that happened. I would also subsequently learn that Gunny and Mrs. H were qualified as foster parents, a legacy of their caring for a niece whose parents had been addicts and lost custody of her. They had successfully finished raising her and the niece was now married to a Marine NCO and had two children.
I had arrived at the latest foster family a few weeks before beginning my freshman year of high school. They were not one of the better families into whose care I had been deposited. The father was an alcoholic, short-tempered and quick to lash out. The family had just had two foster children age out and they had depended on the monthly revenues from those children for their care to make ends meet. Between the alcohol, the temper, the financial strains, and the short time I had to adjust to latest living arrangements, I expected trouble. It came about two weeks after I started high school.
My unstable foster care history had left me woefully behind my peers educationally. On my initial high school assessment test, I'd scored as a fifth grader in reading and a fourth grader in math. That guaranteed me a meeting with Mrs. H shortly after I arrived at her school. The meeting was intended to map out an individual education plan to bring me up to grade level. It turned out to be a great deal more than that.
The morning before I met with Mrs. H, my foster father had gone off on me. He'd misplaced his wallet and accused me of stealing it. When I couldn't produce it, he'd beaten me, leaving me bruised from shoulders to waist, splitting my lower lip and blackening an eye. I'd managed to escape and had gone to school, expecting a normal day. I'd either forgotten or never known about the meeting with Mrs. H. When my homeroom teacher told me to report to guidance in place of my first period class, I walked down the hall and entered her office. The next thirty minutes changed my life completely.
I'd done the new student drill so often that I could narrate both sides of the conversation. As a foster kid in a new school, I was accustomed to a cursory interview and an immediate relegation to "hopeless, don't waste time on this one" response. Perhaps it was cynical of me, but the last thing I expected when I walked in her door was for Mrs. H to actually care about me.