Fatherless Fire – Detroit, Michigan
Malik Thompson The clang of a steel gate still echoed in Malik Thompson’s chest every morning, even after he walked free. Six months had passed since his release, but some sounds stayed welded into memory. Detroit had its own rhythm: buses groaning down Woodward Avenue, horns snapping at traffic, voices sharp on the corners. Malik pushed through it all on his way to the warehouse, trying to focus on the paycheck waiting at the end of the week. This job was his path to redemption, a second chance that carried the weight of faith and freedom. Malik’s anger had been building since childhood. His father vanished before he could form a single memory of him. There were no Saturday ball games, no lessons on how to turn a wrench, no steady voice telling him how to cool down when rage rose up. What he got instead was silence, a hole at the kitchen table, and a mother stretched thin from two jobs. She loved him, but her exhaustion showed in her eyes, in the way she fell asleep sitting upright on the couch with a uniform still on. By the time Malik hit middle school, anger had become his second…
