Your Grandpa is a felon and a Christian. He says he's a felon because he's a Christian. So says Aunt Sweet to her nephew Dustin, when her father, who has been raising Dustin, is arrested for hiding migrant workers. The law that makes harbouring 'illegals' an offence is the brainchild of the ferociously ambitious Oklahoma politician Monica Moorehouse. Aunt Sweet takes Dustin in, but Dustin is bullied by her son Carl Albert, and goes on the run, aided by an illegal the sheriffs didn't find. Meanwhile, Sweet is asked by Dustin's married sister to hide her husband, Juanito, a Mexican without papers. As Grandpa Brown holds fast to his beliefs and Dustin remains missing, Aunt Sweet fights to hold the family together, and to do what seems right. In a gripping and compelling narrative, Kind of Kin lays bare the consequences of a law that exiles workers, turns friends into informers, and tears apart families. It also shows how some - and ultimately a whole town - will unite to protect their own.
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Kind of Kin
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Contents
Part One A Felon and a Christian
Sunday | February 17, 2008 | 12:30 P.M. Sweet Kirkendallās house | Cedar, Oklahoma
Monday | February 18, 2008 | 4:30 A.M. Sweetās house | Cedar
Monday | February 18, 2008 | 8:45 A.M. State Capitol Building | Oklahoma City
Monday | February 18, 2008 | 8:45 A.M. Bob Brownās farm | Cedar
Monday | February 18, 2008 | Morning Brownās farm | Cedar
Monday | February 18, 2008 | 9:55 A.M. Latimer County Courthouse | Wilburton, Oklahoma
Monday | February 18, 2008 | Evening Brownās farm | Cedar
Monday | February 18, 2008 | 5:30 P.M. Brownās farm | Cedar
Tuesday | February 19, 2008 | 6:45 A.M. Main Street | Cedar
Tuesday | February 19, 2008 | 5:30 P.M. Cattlemenās Steakhouse | Oklahoma City
Tuesday | February 19, 2008 | Night Brownās farm | Cedar
Wednesday | February 20, 2008 | 7:30 A.M. Latimer County Sheriffās Office | Wilburton
Wednesday | February 20, 2008 | 7:50 A.M. Latimer County Jail | Wilburton
Wednesday | February 20, 2008 | 8:20 A.M. Sweetās house | Cedar
Thursday | February 21, 2008 | 1:30 P.M. State Capitol Building | Oklahoma City
Part Two Gone Astray
Sunday | February 24, 2008 | 10:40 A.M. Sweetās house | Cedar
Sunday | February 24, 2008 | 11:55 P.M. Latimer County Jail | Wilburton
Monday | February 25, 2008 | 2:57 A.M. Sweetās house | Cedar
Monday | February 25, 2008 | 7:00 A.M. Hunterās Ridge Apartments | Oklahoma City
Monday | February 25, 2008 | 7:00 A.M. Brownās farm | Cedar
Monday | February 25, 2008 | 1:30 P.M. State Capitol Building | Oklahoma City
Monday | February 25, 2008 | 1:30 P.M. Brownās farm | Cedar
Monday | February 25, 2008 | 5:00 P.M. Paseo District | Oklahoma City
Tuesday | February 26, 2008 | Morning Near the Gloss Mountains | Northwestern Oklahoma
Tuesday | February 26, 2008 | 5:15 P.M. Baptist parsonage | Cedar
Tuesday | February 26, 2008 | Evening In the Gloss Mountains
Tuesday | February 26, 2008 | 6:00 P.M. Brownās farm | Cedar
Tuesday | February 26, 2008 | Night In the Gloss Mountains
Tuesday | February 26, 2008 | 7:30 P.M. Brownās farm | Cedar
Tuesday | February 26, 2008 | Night In the Gloss Mountains
Tuesday | February 26, 2008 | 10:45 P.M. Moorehouse residence on Peaceable Road McAlester, Oklahoma
Tuesday | February 26, 2008 | Night In the Gloss Mountains
Part Three Welcome the Stranger
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | 6:15 A.M. Moorehouse residence | McAlester
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | 7:30 A.M. First Baptist Church | Cedar
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | 8:00 A.M. Latimer County Jail | Wilburton
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | 8:45 A.M. First Baptist Church | Cedar
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | Late morning Watonga Municipal Hospital | Watonga, Oklahoma
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | 10:45 A.M. First Baptist Church | Cedar
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | Afternoon Watonga Hospital
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | 1:30 P.M. First Baptist Church | Cedar
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | Afternoon Watonga Hospital
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | 5:30 P.M. First Baptist Church | Cedar
Wednesday | February 27, 2008 | 8:00 P.M. Cedar
Part Four Postlude ONE WEEK LATER
Saturday | March 8, 2008 | 7:00 P.M. Sweetās house | Cedar
Saturday | March 8, 2008 | 7:00 P.M. Garvin County Immigration Detention Center Pauls Valley, Oklahoma
Saturday | March 8, 2008 | 7:30 P.M. Sweetās house | Cedar
Saturday | March 8, 2008 | 7:30 P.M. National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum Oklahoma City
Saturday | March 8, 2008 | 7:45 P.M. Sweetās house | Cedar
Saturday | March 8, 2008 | 8:00 P.M. Sweetās house | Cedar
Saturday | March 8, 2008 | 8:00 P.M. Latimer County Jail | Wilburton
Saturday | March 8, 2008 | 9:30 P.M. Sweetās house | Cedar
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Part One

A Felon and a Christian
Sunday | February 17, 2008 | 12:30 P.M.
Sweet Kirkendallās house | Cedar, Oklahoma
āYour grandpa is a felon,ā Aunt Sweet said. āA felon and a Christian. He says heās a felon because heās a Christian. Now, what kind of baloney is that?ā She jerked the bib strings tight around Mr. Bledsoeās neck. The old man coughed. āSorry, Dad.ā Aunt Sweet loosened the ties and snatched a baby food jar off the table. She pointed the spoon in her left hand at me like I might be fixing to argue. āTell him Iāll be up there tomorrow. You tell him I said heās got a serious amount of explaining to do.ā She scooped up a dab of prunes. āOpen your mouth, Dad. Carl Albert, hurry up.ā
My cousin kept licking the Cheez Whiz out the sides of his sandwich like we had all the time in the world, which we didnāt. Visiting hours start at one, the preacher said, and it was already twelve thirty. I heard a car motor outside and I ran to the front room to look, but it was only old Claudie Ott driving her Chrysler home from church. I squinted across the railroad tracks and the highway toward First Baptist at the far end of the street, but I couldnāt see Brother Orenās car coming.
āDustin Lee! Get back in here and wash your hands!ā
I did like she said. My auntās kind of high-strung at all times, but for sure I didnāt want to cross her right then because Uncle Terry got called in to work the night before and he hadnāt got home yet. Aunt Sweet wanted to go with us to see Grandpa but she canāt leave Mr. Bledsoe by himself on account of one time he rolled his wheelchair out the door and straight across the highway to the E-Z Mart and everybodyās afraid heāll get hit by a BP truck or something. I thought to ask her how come she didnāt make Carl Albert stay home so she could go, but I was afraid she might take the notion for me to be the one to babysit the old man instead. Heās all right but I canāt stand to watch him eat, and anyhow I wasnāt about to take a chance on missing out on seeing my grandpa. When I came back in the kitchen, Aunt Sweet was still trying to get Mr. Bledsoe to open his mouth.
āAw, hell,ā she said, and jammed the spoon back in the prunes. I donāt know where she got the name Sweet. It donāt exactly fit her. Anyhow, her real name is Georgia. She reached up over the sink and got down a different jar. āLook here, Dad. Peach cobbler, your favorite.ā Mr. Bledsoe isnāt her real dadāmy grandpa is. Mr. Bledsoe belongs to Uncle Terry, and heās not even his dad, either. Heās his stepgrandfather. āCarl Albert,ā Aunt Sweet said, āif you donāt hurry up with that mess, Iām going to take it away from you.ā
My cousin licked faster. I donāt know how come he canāt eat a sandwich like a normal person but he canāt. I popped him in the back of the head on my way to the sink. He swiped at me and missed, but he didnāt say nothing. He didnāt want to get any more of his momās attention. He gave me the look, though, like Donāt worry, Dustbucket, Iāll get you back. We been fighting more since Grandpa and Brother Jesus wound up in jail. Thatās Brother Jesus Garcia, from over around Heavener. They locked him up with Grandpa, but they took all the other Mexicans someplace else. Aunt Sweet donāt like us calling him Brother Jesus. She says itās a sacrilege to call somebody after Our Lord and Savior. She donāt even like to hear us call him Brother Hey-soos, and thatās his real name. Carl Albert says Grandpaās going to get sent to the state pen and there wonāt be no place for me to live except in town with them, and if heās got to share his bedroom with a dweeb, heās going to make the dweeb pay. He says they aim to throw the book at Grandpa for transporting illegals and our only hope now is the Supreme Court of America on appeal, and that could take years. I said having Mexicans in your barn donāt mean youāre transporting themāthis was in the bedroom that first night when we were getting ready for bedāand Carl Albert said, āUse your brain, Dustface, they had to get there some way.ā I punched him then, and he jumped me and got me down with my arm twisted till I hollered, āOkay, okay, I give!ā But really I didnāt. I aimed to get him back. That pop on the head at the table was just a reminder.
In the kitchen I dried my hands on the dishtowel and told Aunt Sweet I was going to go watch for the preacher. āHoller when he gets here,ā she said, pressing the spoon against Mr. Bledsoeās shut mouth. āCome on, Dad,ā she said. āOpen up.ā I hurried to the front room and squinted along Main Street past the closed video store and the boarded-up bank building with its caved-in roof from the straight-line winds last April until I seen Brother Orenās car backing out of his driveway. I yelled toward the kitchen, āHeās here!ā
When the preacherās rattly old Toyota pulled in, Aunt Sweet was waiting with me on the porch in her pink rodeo boots and her bluest jeans, which goes to show how much she still thought sheād be going to the jail with us when she got dressed that morning. She was shivering because she didnāt have on a jacket. I had on my black hoodie with the hood pulled up, not because I was cold. I just like my hood up. Carl Albert came racing out the front door in just a T-shirt and still zipping his britches. He squeezed past the preacher coming up the steps and ran out to the car so he could grab the shotgun seat. I tried to lag back, but Aunt Sweet told me to go on. She had her arms crossed and her mouth set, so I did like she said. I took the long way around, though, by Mr. Bledsoeās ramp. Carl Albert leaned up for me to flip the seat forward, and when I climbed past him, he knuckled me a good one, but I didnāt do nothing, just settled into the backseat. I was still biding my time.
I felt kind of bad that none of us had made it to church that morning, especially with Brother Oren giving us a ride to Wilburton and all. I was kind of hoping Aunt Sweet might be explaining about Uncle Tee getting called in to work, but it appeared more like she was bossing him by how Brother Oren just stood on the porch in his brown suit, looking down at the concrete and nodding and frowning. He kept reaching up with his fingers to rake his skinny hair across the top of his head. Come on! I was saying in my mind, come on, come on, come on. When the preacher got in the car, he gave us a big grin. āTell you what, boys, weāll stop at Sonic on the way home and pick up a sack of burgers.ā He said it like that was what Aunt Sweet had been telling him, though I was pretty sure it wasnāt. The preacher laid his arm across the top of Carl Albertās seat and twisted half around so he could see how to back out of the driveway. I looked at my Iron Man watch. It said 12:42. Wilburtonās thirteen miles from Cedar, so traveling sixty miles an hour I figured weād actually be three minutes early. But then east of Panola we got slowed down behind a semi hauling a giant piece of drilling equipment that took up half the road. We were practically crawling. I was about to go out of my skull. āCanāt you go around him?ā I said.
Brother Oren glanced back at me. āWe donāt want to be breaking any more laws, do we, boys? Itās illegal to pass on a yellow line.ā
āYeah, Dustball,ā Carl Albert said. āDonāt you know nothing? Quit bouncing. Youāre making my seat rock.ā
āWeāre going to be late!ā I said. āThey might not let us in.ā
āTheyāre not going to keep you from seeing your grandpa, Dustin. Just relax.ā
But I couldnāt. I counted every gas rig and dead armadillo and roadside grave marker from Panola to Lutie until finally, finally, we got to Wilburton, and the preacher turned off Main Street and drove to the courthouse and stopped next to the little cinder-block building with the chain-link fence out back. Thereās no sign saying itās the Latimer County Jail, but you could maybe guess by the barbed wire strung crossways along the fence top. I leaned around Carl Albert for the door handle, but the preacher said, āHold on, Dusty. Weāll wait here till they bring your grandpa out.ā
āBring him out?ā I said. āHeās coming home?ā
āNot exactly.ā
Right then the back door of the jail opened and out into the fenced yard came five ladies in orange coveralls like the guys at the Poteau Jiffy Lube wear. They were blinking a little, looking around, but they all went pretty fast over to one side of the fence and lined up.
āShoot,ā the preacher said. āI was afraid of that.ā
āWhat?ā I said.
āWhat?ā Carl Albert said.
āOh, itās womenās visitation first. I get the times mixed up. Itās been a while since Iāve been up here.ā
People were getting out of their vehicles all around us, and that was the first I noticed other cars and pickups parked in the alley and next door in the VFW lot. Mostly it was guys getting out of their trucks, but there were also a few little kids and one gray-headed couple in church clothes climbing out of a Mercury Grand Marquis. They must have all been from Wilburton or someplace, I didnāt know any of them. Inside the fence a deputy sat in a tall chair next to the building keeping an eye on everything while the families came and stood in front of whichever prisoner was theirs. Well, that part was kind of sad, how the lady prisoners would reach through the fence to touch their little kidsā hands.
āWeāre not going in?ā I said.
āThereās no room inside for all the visitors they get now.ā
āWhat about when itās raining?ā Carl Albert said.
āEverybody gets wet.ā
āMan,ā Carl Albert said.
āWhen womenās hour is over, theyāll bring out the men. Then you can see your grandpa.ā
āYou mean we got to sit here an hour?ā Carl Albert said.
āHalf hour,ā the preacher said. āYāall want to go to Sonic now and come back?ā
āNo,ā I said.
āI do,ā Carl Albert said.
āYou just ate,ā I said.
āWell, I donāt want to just sit here. Itās boring.ā
āYāall could go take a walk. You could walk around Main Street.ā
āNothingās open,ā Carl Albert said. āItās too cold.ā
āIām sorry, boys. I shouldāve called to check which was which. But itāll be time before you know it. Here, Iāll turn on the radio.ā
But the station he put on had church music, which didnāt really help anything. Carl Albert kept messing with the glove box, opening and shutting it and twisting the lock. I guess the preacher felt bad about getting the times mixed up because he didnāt tell Carl Albert to quit, so I had to do it. Not that he paid me any mind. Carl Albertās only a year older than me but he acts like heās the boss of everything. He found a Swiss Army knife buried under all the papers in the glove box and that kept him busy a while, pulling out the little scissors and nail file and stuff. I watched the people by the fence. It wasnāt that cold out, just sort of chilly, and the sun was shining, but the lady prisoners looked cold anyway in their orange outfits with their arms wrapped around themselves. Everybody was smoking except the little kids and the old couple. Carl Albert was right though, it was boring, because you couldnāt hear what anybody was saying, and plus it was weird how the lady prisoners kept smiling with their bad teeth and you knew they didnāt mean it. I mean, how could you be really smiling if the only way you could touch your little kidās hand was through a chain-link fence?
After a while Brother Oren turned the radio off and started saying things that made me nervous, like for me not to worry, theyād had the prayer chain going since they got the news about Grandpa being arrested Friday night. He was talking to me, not Carl Albert, because Iām the one that lives with Grandpa. Iāve lived with him practically my whole life, or anyway as far back as I can remember, and if he gets sent to prison like Carl Albert says, thatāll be the second time everything has gone from bad to worse. Brother Oren said he was going to speak to the deacons about whether the church might want to take up a special offering. I was scared to ask what for.
āTheyāre going to throw the book at him,ā Carl Albert said. āYou watch.ā
āQuit saying that!ā I punched my cousin in the neck. He turned around and went to whacking at me across the seatback, but I scrambled over ...
Table of contents
- Cover
- About the Author
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Dedication page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
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Yes, you can access Kind of Kin by Rilla Askew in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literature General. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
