Billy Bradley’s Sad Song
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Once a
while back, maybe three months ago, Peter Paul Markin was reading a short story
by Nelson Algren, a bottle of milk for mother, about the hard case demise of a young 1950s
Chicago jack-roller named Disek, Cisek, or Bisek, some Polish name, who stepped over the line, his professional
jack-roller line, and murdered his mark who
after he faced the police grilling and was alone in his cell he thought, given
his tough life’s circumstances, “well I didn’t expect to make twenty-one
anyway,” or words to that effect as he faced the big step off . That got Peter
Paul to thinking about a guy, a corner boy guy he knew back in the day, back in
the old Adamsville projects days of his stormy youth, Billy Bradley, William
James Bradley when the teacher called his name, and about how one night in the
summer between the sixth and seventh grade, just before junior high school, when
they had committed some petty larceny (they called it “clipping” then, grabbing
stuff, jewelry, rings mainly, from
stores and walking out with it) that he didn’t expect to make it to twenty-one
either. And as it turned out he just barely made twenty-two when they
found him that time face down in Sonora down Mexico way when a big drug deal Billy
was trying to put together went wrong, went very wrong and he wound up with two
slugs in his head.
The substance of Billy point and Peter
Paul really couldn’t argue with him on it was that the deck was stacked against
guys like him and Peter Paul. Guys coming from poor families up against it from
day one whether it was struggling for the rent money and usually being late on
that, or some broken down old car that either didn’t work or was in desperate need
of repairs, or having to decide whether this week the family would have chicken
or peanut butter. Stuff like that day in and day out wore on a person. He said
he was through with that it was not for him. He was either going uptown or he
was going busted, No in between. Nada. And if things didn’t work out he said he
would at least have lived the righteous life not like his people who were clueless
about how to get ahead in this wicked old world. He said more stuff too, stuff
like how he wouldn’t let the cops take him alive if it came to that but Peter
Paul took that as so much hot air then because things at that moment didn’t
look as hopeless as they would become.
Peter
Paul, having moved on from Billy’s world a few years after that conversation once he
finally decided that crime, doing and paying for crime, was just too much
effort against reading books and stuff, had nevertheless followed Billy’s
doings for a while and then as they got older, maybe out of high school older
he lost all contact until he heard the news, heard it from his mother who heard
it through an old projects friend. So, no, he did not know the details of
Billy’s demise but when he heard the news he immediately thought back to that
summer night and how Billy, all twelve- years old of him, had a pretty good
sense that his time was not long. And that got Peter Paul to thinking further
that maybe there were some tell-tale signs along the way that would have
pointed directly to Billy’s fate.
So Peter
Paul spent the better part of a couple of hours thinking about how the fates had
dealt Billy a tough hand. He thought back, way back to the early grades in
school since they had lived in the same tenement block, were in the same grade,
and had the same teachers, but nothing stood out until he thought about Billy’s
reaction to the time that he lost the local talent show to a trio of doo wop
sisters (literally) who went on to some regional fame during those heady late
1950s days when girl doo wop groups were sweeping all before them in the roll
and rock night. Billy did not take it well, not at all, he
thought the fix was in, thought the sisters probably gave the promoter a little
something on the side, or the promise of it and he was out, out of his career
as the next Elvis. As he thought about the details of that contest, since he
was in the audience for the performances, Peter Paul could see where that event
was a turning point for Billy.
Billy
really was a good singing, really had some what would later be called charisma, could do some nice covers of the
latest guy hits, Elvis, Roy Orbison, Chuck Berry, at the various church and school sock hops that
drove the teen and pre-teen social
calendar. And he was a good- looking guy too and the local pre-teen girls would
get all moony over him while he was singing. So Billy figured, and Peter Paul
figured right along with him, that he was a shoo-in to win that local talent
contest sponsored by a radio station in Boston, WMEX, which was giving a record
audition as the prize. Yah, Billy wanted that bad to get under from under the
low-rent projects, get out from under his ever nagging mother, and out from
under his mostly absent father who when around decided that Billy was his
punching bag, until Billy got big enough to fend for himself. And Peter Paul
thought he did a great job on Elvis’ One Night With You, had all the pre-teen
girls, and few older ones too, high school girls, all moony as usual. But that
time that late 1958 time was the time of doo wop and not of solo performers
singing their hearts out.
Billy
said it was all right, said he would get out from
under somehow, said he would get the gold the next time but in that twelve-year
old night something snapped, snapped hard in Billy’s estimation of the world. Peter
Paul, at that point Billy’s best friend, saw it, and saw that he kind of
drifted away from his musical interests and started getting into clipping
stuff. With Peter Pau right there with him, for a while, until
they got caught at a jewelry store one day and that led
Peter Paul the other way. After a while their paths met only occasionally when
Peter Paul would amble back to the old neighborhood and they would cut up old
torches. Then Billy dropped out of school and Peter
Paul kept hearing about gas station robberies and maybe a variety store once in
a while that had Billy’s signature all over it.
The last serious talk that Peter Paul had with Billy
was just before he graduated from high school when Billy called up his mother’s
house to offer congratulations and Peter Paul happened to be there. They talked
for about an hour, talked about this and that, about Peter Paul going to college
and about Billy moving up to Boston to move a little more into the big time,
big time dope dealing as it turned out. Billy said not more low- rent stick-
ups for him drugs were where the money, the easy money, was
and he was going for the gold. He said it in such a way, or Peter Paul took it
that way, that this was an either up or out situation. Then he didn’t heard
from Billy much after that and then not at all as he got deeper into the trade.
And then the other show dropped down in Mexico. Peter Paul finished up his
thinking this way-some guys do all their living in the front end and that is
the way the deal went down with Billy. Still he thought, thought long and hard, Billy had a lot more than twenty-two in him.
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