The Trouble Boys Read online




  The Trouble Boys

  E.R. Fallon

  Copyright © 2021 E.R. Fallon

  The right of E.R. Fallon to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by her in accordance to the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  First published in 2018

  Republished 2021 by Bloodhound Books.

  Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publisher or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.

  All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  www.bloodhoundbooks.com

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  Print ISBN 978-1-914614-16-3

  Contents

  Also by E.R. Fallon

  Love best-selling fiction?

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  A note from the publisher

  Love best-selling fiction?

  You will also enjoy:

  About the Author

  Also by E.R. Fallon

  The Trouble Trilogy

  The Trouble Girls (Book 2)

  The Trouble Legacy (Book 3)

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  To my family

  1

  Kilrea, Northern Ireland, 1935

  Michael was not really Colin O’Brien’s father, or so Michael’s wife Líadan had claimed during a Christmas celebration. Though no one but Michael’s mother paid attention to the allegation. Líadan had always been thought of as eccentric, and everyone gathered around the small table had long ago become accustomed to her nonsense.

  “Colin has eyes like a stormy ocean,” the granny commented to her son. “Only one person in our family has eyes that color, and it’s not you or your missus.”

  “Ah, Mother, be quiet,” Michael said. “You’ve had too much whiskey in your coffee.”

  “Still,” the granny continued. “You can’t help but wonder…”

  The young Colin himself never questioned his parentage. All he knew was that his hair was the same coal-black as his father’s, and they even had the same smile. His mother was blonde with green eyes, and had been born in New York City to Irish and Welsh parents, returning to Ireland with her father as a young teenager after her mother’s death. None of her children looked much like her, not just Colin; they mostly looked a lot like their father.

  It was Colin’s father’s final decision to move to New York, but it was his mother who had initiated the idea. Líadan could hardly get out of bed on some days, but she had talked endlessly about the city of her girlhood. The city, where in her words, every person, no matter where they lived, had a marvelous view; where work could be found practically at the drop of a hat; and where education was provided for free for the entirety of one’s life. Where, if one worked hard enough, a home could be bought in the country, a house with a barn and a large acreage with enough room for horses. Where they had doctors who could help his mother get better.

  It had sounded pretty good to Colin’s father. After all, the family was living with their granny and Colin’s father worked as a clean-up man at the local abbatoir, mopping up blood and the sorts of nasty things that fell to the floor from dead animals when they were stripped for their meat.

  Colin was six when the idea came into his mother’s head, and he was eight by the time she had actually convinced Colin’s father to make the journey. At eight years old, Colin might not have known much, but he wasn’t sure he wanted to live in this place called the United States.

  “Don’t they have cowboys there?” he asked his father. “And the Indians, who live in animals?”

  His father chuckled softly and took a break from reading the newspaper. He looked over at Colin and watched him through his eyeglasses. “A long time ago, they lived in shelters covered with the skins of hunted animals.”

  “Will we live in an animal skin in New York?”

  At this his father chuckled greatly. “No. I expect we’ll be living in what we call a flat here, and what the Americans call an apartment.”

  “Apartment,” Colin said several times, as though it was very important for him to remember the word. “When will we be going there?”

  “Your mammy and I will be leaving in a month or so to get everything settled first. Then your sister, your brother, and you will meet us there.”

  Colin’s older brother, Danny, entered the room. “Meet who?” he asked.

  Michael looked up from his reading again. “I was telling Colin your mam and I will be leaving for New York first. Then you’ll be meeting us there.”

  “You’ll probably leave us here,” Danny said, and left the room.

  Colin could hear his sister, Maureen, who was a little younger than Danny, singing softly in the other room. Maureen was the smart one in the family, and would have been attending a posh school in Belfast next year on a scholarship if the family hadn’t been moving to New York.

  Colin’s father sighed and Colin smiled at him.

  “Will we really be meeting you and Mammy there, or are you going to leave us here with granny?” Colin asked.

  His father frowned. “Of course you’ll be coming.”

  “Will you play your accordion for us?”

  “Now?”

  Colin nodded.

  “Not tonight. It’s getting late.” He gestured for Colin to leave. “Go to bed.”

  Two months later, Colin’s parents had sent word for their children to meet them in New York.

  Colin sang as he boarded the large passenger ferry with Danny, who looked weighed down by their belongings.

  “Be quiet,” Danny whispered as Colin sang loudly. “You should really carry your own luggage. You aren’t little anymore.”

  “But Maureen doesn’t carry her own things, and she’s older than me,” Colin said.

  “I’m helping her out because she’s a girl.”

  Colin sang high above Danny’s voice.

  “Why did Mam and Da go to America first?” Colin asked when he’d stopped singing.

  “They had to find a place for us all to live before we came there,” Danny said.

  Colin’s eyes widened. “A big house?”

  Danny smirked. “I wouldn’t count on it.”

  Maureen was inside the cabin buying them a snack. Danny reached into his coat pocket, took out a coin and leaned against the thick railing that kept them from falling into the churning, foamy sea. He tossed the coin into the fast-moving water as the heavy boat plowed through the crest of a wave.

  “You wasted money,” Colin shouted at his brother.

  A few other passengers turned to look, but then quickly went back to their own troubles.

  Danny shrugged. “It was only a coin.”

  “Granny says one coin is worth more than the moment of joy you get from throwing it.”

  “I don’t care what she believes.”

  “Why not?”

  “Granny’s an old woman
. She’s got old ideas.”

  Colin looked up at his brother, who was a lot older than him, both physically and in his way of thinking. “Will Granny die soon?”

  “I don’t know.” Danny seemed uninterested in the thought.

  “Da will be sad.”

  “He might be glad. Granny isn’t very nice.”

  Colin looked at his brother, appalled. “But she’s his mam.”

  “Doesn’t mean she’s nice.”

  “What about when our mam dies?”

  “I don’t really think about that yet,” Danny said.

  “Why not?”

  “Because Mam’s younger, and I don’t like to think that far ahead.”

  “What will America be like?” Colin asked.

  “It will be different than home.”

  “What does that mean?”

  “It might be better. It might be worse. I don’t know. Stop asking me questions.”

  Colin fell silent as his brother turned away from him. He didn’t want to displease Danny.

  Colin began to focus his attention on the other passengers. There was a shorter boy, but who he assumed was close to his age, standing not too far to his right. The boy had combed brown hair and an approachable look in his large, light eyes. He was dressed in a dark suit and tie, as if he might have been coming from church or from a wedding. He appeared to be by himself.

  After Danny started flirting with a girl, Colin walked toward the other boy.

  “Hello,” he said with a wave. “What are you doing?”

  The boy sized him up. “Minding my own business. Unlike you.” The boy had an American accent, which Colin had never heard before, and maybe only once or twice on the radio at his granny’s house.

  “I’m going home after a vacation. My parents are in the cabin,” the boy said after a while.

  “You’re a Yank?” Colin said excitedly. He thought he might make an American friend before he even reached America.

  The boy, who had since turned his back to Colin, whipped around to face him. “What did you call me?”

  “Are you a Yank, because of your accent?” Colin wasn’t trying to be rude. He simply didn’t know any better. “I’m on my way to America. I’ll be living there.”

  The boy glared at him, and Colin wished he’d never said hello. His body quivered. He recoiled and ran away from the other boy.

  A few minutes later, when Colin went to use the toilet, he came out of the room and found the boy waiting for him on the back deck of the ferry. Colin didn’t see Danny or Maureen, and there was no one else at that part of the ferry, which was a cold and windy place to stand or sit.

  The boy waited in his path so that Colin couldn’t walk by without colliding into him. Colin tried to walk past him, but the boy shook his head and wouldn’t move. So Colin tried politeness.

  “Excuse me.” He attempted to walk forward again.

  Although Colin stood over the boy he froze, because now he could tell the boy was older than him and he had a menacing look in his eyes. The boy shoved Colin backwards into a wall. Colin had never been in a fight, and he felt a sensation he had never felt before. He felt genuine fear for his life.

  The boy took off his suit jacket and threw it on the ground by Colin’s foot. He wasn’t wearing cufflinks and easily rolled up his shirtsleeves. Then he punched Colin in the chest.

  Colin fell to the dirty ground, which felt hard and painful to his thin body.

  The boy picked up his jacket and ran off, shouting over his shoulder.

  “I just gave you your first American greeting.”

  It was Colin’s first taste of what might be waiting for him overseas. And even at a young age it scared him. Was this what America would be like?

  “Where have you been?” Danny asked Colin when he found him sitting on a bench and looking out at the stormy seas.

  The swells made the large ferry rock back and forth, and some passengers were retching into the sea.

  “Are you ill?” Danny asked.

  “No.”

  “Then why are you bending over and holding your stomach?”

  Colin pointed at the standing passengers who were ill. “I’m not throwing up like them, am I? I have a stomachache, that’s all.”

  As much as Colin feared the older boy who’d punched him, he feared even more what Danny might do to the boy if Colin told him what had happened. Danny might have acted as though his younger brother annoyed him, but Colin knew he wouldn’t permit anyone to hurt him and get away with it. He also didn’t want Danny to find out he’d been beaten by a boy whose build was slighter than his.

  “You’re ill from the sea,” Danny insisted.

  Colin rose to his feet. “No, I’m not.” He winced at the pain he still felt in his chest. The cool air tasted like salt.

  Danny looked puzzled. “What’s wrong with you?”

  “Nothing.”

  Maureen appeared with fish and chips wrapped in paper and held Colin’s hand. She smoothed back his hair. “Are you all right, Colin?”

  “The sea’s making him ill,” Danny told her.

  “No, it’s not. I’m just hungry.”

  Maureen kissed his cheek and showed him the food. “Here, this’ll make you feel better.”

  “Mam says New York is the place of dreams,” Colin told his brother and sister as they watched their ferry dock in England.

  Danny smiled at his brother. “Maybe it is.”

  “Do you think that we’ll be living in a big house?” Colin asked. “Mam had a house when she lived there.”

  “I’m afraid not.” Maureen’s green eyes softened.

  Danny shrugged, as though he didn’t want to dissuade too many of Colin’s dreams.

  “In America, they call minerals ‘soda pop’,” Colin said. Maureen smiled at him.

  They took a crowded bus to a large docking station. Colin had never been to England, while his brother had gone there a few times with their father. He stared out the bus window, not speaking much, quietly taking in all he could see. With the third-class tickets their parents had mailed from the US, they boarded The Lady Anna, an immense ocean liner that would take them the remainder of the way to New York City.

  The Lady Anna varied in its passengers. Some were tourists returning to the States from vacations in Europe, others were English couples and families traveling to visit New York – and a few, like Colin and his siblings, were immigrants.

  Colin stayed close to his brother and sister as they boarded the giant white ship. He feared that the boy who’d hit him might appear again.

  Colin’s eyes went huge when he saw the numerous people boarding alongside them and in front of them.

  “Are they all going to New York like us?” he asked his siblings. Danny shrugged.

  “But where would they go if they didn’t go to New York?”

  “We don’t know,” Maureen said. “They probably aren’t all going to New York.”

  “Good, because I don’t want them all living with us.” Maureen and Danny laughed.

  “Our Uncle Rick lives in New York, you know,” Maureen told Colin.

  “Da’s younger brother?” She nodded.

  “Will we be living with him?”

  “We don’t know.” Danny grabbed Colin’s and Maureen’s hands to board the ship.

  “Will we sleep on the ship?” Colin asked.

  “Yes. We’ll be staying in a cabin,” Maureen said.

  Colin’s father met them at the dock in New York less than a week later. Their mother, his father explained, was at their new home, tidying up and getting the place settled and ready for their arrival.

  Despite what Maureen had said, Colin envisioned his new home would be a palace, or at the very least a beautiful large house painted white on the outside and with red shutters. He had seen pictures of such homes in American magazines that his mother had sent away for in Kilrea. His father had assured him that their lives would be better in New York, and, to Colin, a large house would mean a be
tter life.

  His father was eager for news from home when he met them at the port. Colin kept craning his neck to get a better view of the Statue of Liberty in the harbor that his granny had spoken to him about.

  “How’s Granny?” Colin’s father asked Maureen after they had loaded the last of their luggage into a taxi.

  “She’s well.”

  Colin gaped around the place where their ship had landed. It wasn’t a pretty area. It appeared desolate, and had a heavy feeling about it, as though it was a person who was lonely.

  Colin’s father grabbed his hand and put him in the taxi in the seat next to Danny. Maureen sat alongside Colin, and their father rode up front with the driver. The taxi smelled of cigarette smoke. Colin looked out the smudged windows. He had thought they would be leaving this ugly place to travel to their new home, but when the taxi headed deeper into the awful, dirty place, he knew this wouldn’t be the case. The sky, what he could see of it, seemed unusually bleak. Broken glass, cigarette stubs, and pieces of old newspaper littered the fractured sidewalks, the congested streets overshadowed by dark warehouses.

  “This is our home?” Danny asked when the taxi pulled in front of an old brick building.

  “Yes. It’s a start,” their father said with a sigh.

  The outside of the building was in need of a thorough washing, the brick discolored from urban soot. The building’s steps were broken in many places. Colin’s face couldn’t hide his disappointment. He helped his father and brother unload their luggage from the taxi.