The Great Depression. The orphaned family is riding in a Model-T. The oldest boy is driving, the boys are in back with their sisters.
To say life is hard doesn't even scratch the surface. Food is hard to come by. Money is a myth. Their parents are dead. No honest work can be found within five counties.
Only last night, they stole gas and cigarettes from a filling station. Now they're thieves, too.
Sometimes, it feels like they’re breathing borrowed air. They run from town to town, digging ditches, framing barns, loading mill trucks for pennies.
Today, the boys have been hired as roofers. A jobsite is where they are now. The bossman will pay them forty cents for a workday.
Forty cents. It’s highway robbery. Welcome to 1935, nobody's getting rich in Alabama.
It's a hot day. They’re weak from malnutrition. The boys are wearing homemade tool belts their sisters made. They haven’t eaten in days.
They stand in the shade. The workers are passing around breakfast—a bottle of milk spiked with liquor. It goes straight to the
boys’ heads and makes them dizzy.
The three brothers crawl on a three-story roof, pounding hammers. They’re dehydrated. Clumsy. They are inexperienced. Especially the youngest boy. He's fourteen. He is awkward on his feet.
He slips. It all happens so fast.
Game over.
He hits the ground so hard he bounces. The workmen all see it. The boy is face-down. Blood trickles from his mouth. His chest quits moving. No pulse.
The bossman comes running. There’s no doubt. The kid is gone.
They cover him with a tarp. The world has stopped spinning. The oldest brother is white with shock. His sisters are screaming.
Life is hell, the oldest thinks to himself. Childbirth took their mother. Pneumonia took their father. The bank took their home. Now tragedy owns their youngest brother.
The workers place the child’s body into the rear of…