Final
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READ WITH Track Suggestion- "Road to Perdition"
By: Thomas Newman
"Road to Perdition" Theme Link
By: Thomas Newman
"Road to Perdition" Theme Link
It was dark in Opole, and Isaiah could still hear the sound
of gun fire and screams echoing not too far from where he relocated his
mother. With eyes strained and hands
covering his ears, he imagined that the fighting must have swept through the
alleyway behind Jedynka where he previously stayed. Isaiah cursed under his breath at the
fighting, the death of his friend Irwin, and most of all, the Germans. As he cursed incessantly, at times slurring
his words and manufacturing nee curse words, he checked his mother’s expression
to see if she would frown at his cursing.
When he noticed her eyes close, he would curse once more and rub his
burns. Minutes passed as the thunderous
booming deescalated into one earth shattering explosion every ten
minutes. Isaiah thought to himself that
he was desperate, now more than ever to meet with the man named Sparrow. He surveyed the atmosphere; a dark and cold
ceiling, no sign of clouds, a familiar sight.
The lights on the buildings were turned off and the silent streets
exhibited a ravaged and desolate place.
To Isaiah, that meant it was time to search for Sparrow. After stretching and then slowly rising to
his feet, timing himself to move quickly after another boom in the distance, he
carried his mother to the Cove, a separate tavern not too far from Jedynka but
away from the remnants of the explosion.
It was not hard for Isaiah to find the man he searched for because as
soon as he staggered to the Cove with his mother on his shoulders, he was
surrounded by several anxious men who relaxed with long rods and bricks holstered
to their sides. Sparrow quickly
presented himself as Isaiah neared the guarded group. It was easy to see why Sparrow, among the
others, was the man to talk to. Not only
was his presentation forceful and aggressive, but his dirtied appearance and
blood stained khakis gave him away as someone eager to fight. And the men surrounding him, some almost as
young as Isaiah, seemed to cling to their fearless leader as they hurdled by the
entrance to the tavern.
“Who are you and what do you
want?” Sparrow asked grudgingly with his
long face and whiskers inches away from Isaiah.
“You wearin’ a vest?” One of the men asked Isaiah and proceeded to
handle him abrasively by his neck, peering down his shirt.
“Back off, Gabe. Can’t ya see he is a Jew… and he ain’t
fighting back is he?” As soon as he was
confronted by Sparrow, Gabe released Isaiah who had not resisted Gabe’s hold as
he stood, still holding his mother up by an arm. Isaiah thought that sadly, none of them had
offered to help his mother.
“I’ll ask once more, what do you
want boy?”
“Caroline sent me, sir. She says you can help me and my mother.”
“Caroline? How do you know that whore?” The other men snickered but Isaiah was unsure
what Sparrow had just asked him so he continued his plea for help.
“Caroline said you can take me and
my mother to Warsaw.”
“You and your mother?”
“Yes,” Isaiah replied setting him
mother down by the foot of the stairs so she may hold herself up. He also sheepishly stepped back so the men
could get a better view and see her, hoping her sick expression received
Sparrow’s sympathy.
“Where is your mother?” Sparrow
questioned abrasively. Isaiah once more
heaved his mother to a standing position and then this time, sat her on the
bottom step.
“Pardon?” Sparrow remained fixed on Isaiah then relaxed
his bent over posture to look at the men beside him with a dumbfounded
expression. Soon after, he followed with
a chuckle.
“The Germans have turned this boy
mad,” he expressed loudly to his men causing Isaiah to be heckled at while they
crowded him and played with their bats. “Son
you say you want to go to Warsaw
with your mother?” Sparrow, hunched over
once again, asked nodding towards Isaiah’s shoulder, though Isaiah had put his
mother on the step beside Sparrow.
“Yes please, Caroline says you can help
me get some medicine for ma mum.” Sparrow
sighed while staring intently at Isaiah.
“You know what lad, you see my
friends, well they and ma-self were just about to hit up the Germans who caused
the explosion earlier today. You say you
want to go to Warsaw,
eh? Well, you would have to do something
for me, fair?” Before answering, Isaiah
glanced at the men holding the rods and bricks.
“I do not want to fight sir. I just want some medicine for my ma.”
“And you will get it,” Sparrow snapped
and lifted himself with eyes glaring and body towering over Isaiah. “But you know who is stopping us from getting
your medicine and going out of these walls?
Those bastard Germans.” Sparrow
answered back tersely as he grabbed his knees and inched his face closer to Isaiah,
spitting as he spoke. “You want to help
your mother? You want to get her
medicine? Then join us and fight the
enemy!” His coarse breath and alcohol
stench hung in the air between him and Isaiah, as both man and boy glared at
each other. Then, with a slight grin,
Sparrow relaxed his shoulders once more and heaved his cracked rod over his
shoulders. He and the rest of the men in
his entourage then began walking in the direction of the explosion that took
place earlier that day.
“You are either in or out, boy! This is your war too… you are a Jew and the
Germans are your enemy… choose to fight and get medicine for your mum!”
As Sparrow marched off, flailing
his wooden rod in the air, he turned and screamed to Isaiah. It seemed to Isaiah, as he stayed back and
watched the other men walk further into Opole
and into the fight that Sparrow’s echoing last words were not just meant for
him but for all the Jews in Opole. So thunderous, so fearless, Sparrow was ready
to die that night. As the men walked
farther away, Isaiah stood still imploding with animosity and rage for the
fighting, for the German soldiers, for the explosion that killed Irwin. Determined to avenge his friend, Isaiah turned
to his mother, he wanted so badly to fight.
He was going to fight.
As he stared blankly at the cracked brick wall
of the Cove, where his mother was sitting, tears began to fall from his eyes. He hoped this would be the time his mother
would tell him what he should do. He did not want to leave her, though he knew
Sparrow would increase their fortune and finally help them leave Opole so they can go to Warsaw.
Isaiah then dropped his head and clasped his hands on them. He could not see his mother anymore.
As he stood alone in the dim lit
alleyway by the Cove, sobbing, he tightened his eyes so he could see her again. With eyes shut, he remembered sleeping on
asphalt while his mother slept on mattresses…
He remembered searching through the
dumpster earlier that day for clothing to cover his mother…
He remembered five years ago and his father’s
brave attempt to protect him which cost him his life…
He remembered his father’s glare.
Most of all, as Isaiah stood with his eyes
closed, he remembered his mother’s beaming smile to him as she cowered over his
two sisters while her long blond hair brushed over his face, before being
crushed by the ceiling that had collapsed.
Her body as well as his father’s body
withstood the weight of the collapsing ceiling.
Both his parents saved his life five years ago while taking theirs. His mother had protected him, but all he
could remember was his father’s glare.
He opened his eyes, now stinging with
dried tears as he looked upon the beaming smile of his mother, as he envisioned
it would have been.
“It’s okay mama. I want to but I won’t go with them.”
Isaiah thought to himself that he
could not loose his life now because he still had a promise to keep and give
his mother the most special Christmas present ever. Isaiah sighed, reached for his mother’s hand and
walked with her away from the direction Sparrow took his men, away from the
fighting. The tired, lonely, and hungry
Isaiah turned away from Opole.
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