STREETWISE





Early morning on Rainbow Bridge, Rat leaps eighty feet into the water.

Rat (Voice over)

I love to fly. It's just you're alone, there's peace and quiet, nothing 
around you but clear blue sky. No one to hassle you. No one to tell you 
where to go or what to do. The only bad part about flying is having to 
come back down to the fuckin' world.



Afternoon on Pike Street, Dewayne and Rat panhandle the crowd.

Dewayne Spare some change, ma'am, so me and my father could get 
something to eat?

Woman No, I don't, son.

Dewayne Alright. (To Buddha.) Why not say you're my father?

Budda No. I'm not hungry.

Dewayne Alright. Then get lost. I gotta make some money.

Dewayne (voice over)

Living downtown, a typical day was ... I'd get up at twelve, take a 
shower, get something to eat. Three o'clock I was on my robbin' streak, 
start robbin' people 'til six, seven o'clock. Then I'd go get my drugs, 
get my food, get my ... whoever I was going to sleep with that night. 
Party until twelve. Then everybody would turn in and stuff.

Dewayne So what's up?

Chrissie Not much.

Dewayne Spare some change?

Chrissie Hell no.

Dewayne How 'bout a kiss?

Chrissie Hell no.

Dewayne Oh well. Life's hard.

Rat Sir, you wouldn't be able to help me out with a little change, 
would you?

Man NO.

Rat Not at all, huh. Ya know, you're a fuckin' dick.

Rat (voice over)

I wasn't even thinking about running away or nothin'. But my dad told 
me that if I ever got caught selling pot, never come home 'cause he'd 
kill me. So when it all came down, I just said, 'oh, well.'

Dewayne (voice over)

I never miss my mom and dad. They're part of my past now, the way I 
look at it.

Dewayne Where you be livin' at?

Rat (singing) I be living at the YMCA...



An old abandoned hotel. The windows and doors are boarded up. Inside, 
Rat roller skates through the empty corridors.

Rat (voice over)

There's this old abandoned hotel and we took all the furniture we could 
find in all the different rooms and put it into this one room. And we'd 
carry water up in these gallon jugs, 'cause it didn't have no water or 
electricity. And we'd just shower down at this place called The Compass 
on Washington Avenue for fifty cents. And do our laundry in the 
laundromat and whatever it took. It was pretty easy actually.



Rat and his friend Jack in the railroad yard.

Rat (voice over)

And then me and Jack just started hanging out together. We're real good 
friends. He'll treat you right. He won't rip you off. When your back is 
turned, he ain't gonna stab you. I would never even have thought about 
catching a train if it weren't for Jack. He showed me the ways of the 
trains, how they run, where they go. And Jack taught us you can tell 
the main track 'cause they got a gravel mound and it sets higher than 
all the other tracks. And then you just look north and that's the north 
yard. Then you just count three tracks over to your right. And then 
we'd just jump on a train and be on our way.



Tiny on Pike Street.

Tiny (voice over)

I wanna be really rich ... and live on a farm with a bunch of horses, 
which is my main best animal ... and have three yachts or more ... and 
diamonds and jewels and all that stuff.



Tiny goes to the Adolescent Free Clinic for a gynecological 
examination.

Medical Counselor So you don't have any symptoms right now, but you do 
have some concern that you might have a sexually transmitted disease?

Tiny Nothing serious. It just might be trichomonas again.

Medical Counselor Did you ever have one before?

Tiny Yes.

Medical Counselor What did you have?

Tiny I've had chlamydia, trichomonas and gonorrhea.

Tiny (voice over)

I think it is very strange that older men like little girls. They're 
perverts is what they is. I like the money, but I don't like them.

Medical Counselor You've been sexually active since the time that you 
were treated?

Tiny What do you mean by that?

Medical Counselor Oh, good question. Have you had sex with anyone since 
you were treated in Portland?

Tiny No. Just dates. The first date I turned was about two Thursdays 
ago. Then I turned another one on Friday.

Tiny (voice over)

Some dates are nice. And some of them, the young ones are really cute, 
but I don't want to be interested in them, 'cept for the money, that's 
it. I used to least bring in $300 or $400. For a blowjob it would be 
$30 on up and for a lay it would be $40 on up. Most of these 
veterinarian 'hos would charge more than us little kids do.

Tiny Isn't it after every two weeks you can get pregnant, after your 
period, every two weeks?

Medical Counselor You can get pregnant any time during your cycle. A 
person can even get pregnant when she's having her period. It's not as 
likely.

Tiny I pulled a date and didn't use a rubber, because he said he didn't 
use them.

Medical Counselor How often do you usually have your periods?

Tiny Every three or four weeks.

Medical Counselor And they come pretty regular?

Tiny Well, I just started in August.

Medical Counselor So you'd only had the one in August?

Tiny And the one in September.

Medical Counselor So you've barely begun. Did you ever have periods 
before then?

Tiny No.

Medical Counselor You're how old?

Tiny Fourteen.

Medical Counselor And how would you feel about being pregnant?

Tiny I want a baby. But not by a new trick though.

Medical Counselor What's your feeling about being pregnant now, if the 
trick is the father?

Tiny Well, I'm not getting an abortion.

Medical Counselor You might ...

Tiny No, I would not. I don't believe in them.

Medical Counselor Tell me about that. What's your feeling about 
abortion?

Tiny It's like you're murdering somebody. Murd ... I can't pronounce 
the word. But, it's like there's a little baby inside you and you're 
just killing it. It's not fair to the baby. I mean it's not the baby's 
fault.

Medical Counselor So, that would not be a choice for you?

Tiny No.



Near Pike Street, Tiny gets into the car of an old man.

Tiny (voice over)

I used to turn dates lots and lots of times. Just about every day I'd 
be turning dates day and night, day and night. Then I got busted five 
times. So, now I don't pull dates I don't know.



Rat and Jack in the abandoned hotel.

Rat (voice over)

When we'd get real low on money, I'd take Mike's .45, because I'd sold 
my .38, and I'd go roll a queer.

Rat (smoking a joint) Tastes like Colombian to me.

Jack Ain't that bud that's been going around, is it?

Rat Ah, no way. You've got to buy that stuff in grams. I think it went 
out.

Jack What did?

Rat Oh, I guess not. You know Alan and that guy he was running around 
with? He had us walking around Mount Vernon for two days looking for 
this queer that turned him onto all this procaine. We was gonna live in 
his house for a day. And then when he went to bed we was gonna tie him 
up and take all his money he had in his wall safe--all this procaine 
and all this marijuana stuff he had. We walked around Mount Vernon for 
two days looking for this guy. I finally told Alan and his friend, man, 
I told him 'fuck off, man.' Me and Mike got on the freeway and 
hitchhiked all the way up to Bellingham.

Jack That's when you had all of them fuckin' keys and the cops were 
asking you where you got them. Whatever happened to that Burlington 
Northern key?

Rat My mom's got all my keys.



Tiny and Kim talk on Pike Street.

Kim My mom, before they went on vacation about four o'clock Friday, she 
wakes me up and she goes 'We're leaving now.' And I go 'yeah, yeah.' 
It's four o'clock in the morning. And she goes, 'I know that you're a 
prostitute and I know what you've been doing and I know that you've got 
money.' And I jumped up and said, 'Did you look in my purse?' And she 
goes, 'No.' And I go 'Mom, I am not. just leave.' And she goes 'Fine. 
Thanks alot. All week long I'm going to remember this. All week I'm 
going to be thinking about how much you love me.' I don't care. She 
doesn't care about me. She never did. She doesn't. Oh well.

Tiny My mom cares about me a lot.

Kim Where is she? Where does she live?

Tiny She went to Eastern Washington, I think, for the weekend.

Kim That isn't even my real mom. I was adopted. I don't even know who 
my real parents are. I don't know if they're dead or alive. I'm going 
to find out though. When I'm eighteen I'm going through the courts to 
find out. I don't know. Sometimes it seems like a waste of time. If 
they didn't care enough to keep me, why should I care enough to find 
out who they are?

Tiny Well, they could be rich right now. You know what I'm saying, 
really rich. Or they could be bums.



Tiny on the street looking for a date.

Tiny (voice over)

My real dad I've never known. He could be the guy that's really rich, 
driving a Mercedes. Or he could be one of these bums on the street. I 
don't know. I really want to meet him. He could be one of these dates 
rolling around. I could have dated him for all I know.



Dewayne and Rat talk in an alley off Pike Street.

Rat And your mom is where?

Dewayne I don't know, San Diego somewhere. And my dad's in jail.

Rat That sucks.

Dewayne Life's a bitch, ain't it?

Rat Are you originally from Seattle?

Dewayne Nope. Port Orchard. Well, Washington, yeah. Been in New York 
once. I hitchhiked there--was there for an hour and left.

Rat What jail's your dad in?

Dewayne King County, going up to Walla Walla State Penitentiary for 
burglary and attempted arson. So where you been living, before you 
lived in that ... wherever you live at?

Rat In that hotel?

Dewayne Yeah. Is it seriously deserted? How long you been living there?

Rat Shit, since a month after I got to Seattle.

Dewayne Where're you from originally?

Rat California.

Dewayne What part?

Rat Sacramento.

Dewayne I went through there one time. It was bunk.

Rat I don't like Sacramento. I lived right on the outside of

Sacramento.

Dewayne I went through there and some faggot was tryin' to pick me up, 
but I robbed him of $150.

Rat Take his car too?

Dewayne Hell no. I hitchhike. I love hitchhikin'. Not in Seattle 
though, 'cause the only ones that'll pick you up are hippies, stoners 
or fine girls. I like the fine girls to pick me up. (They laugh.)



On Pike Street, Kim and Tiny talk.

Kim I just started doing this stuff. I never even thought of 'hoing 
'til I got down here. You know Tracy? She used to live with me when she 
was a home girl, because her parents kicked her out. And she 
disappeared. She went downtown with Lorna. You know Lorna? And then 
Lorna came back and said that Tracy's a 'ho now. And then I got really 
worried about her. I said, 'I can't let her do that stuff.' 'Cause I 
always heard bad things like white slavery, that she's gonna get beat 
up and everything. That's what scared me. So I thought, I gotta come 
down and get her out of there, whether I gotta kidnap her or what. Then 
I come down here and I see her and she says, 'It's great, man.' So I'm 
just sittin' there going 'What? I heard that you don't like it down 
here, that you're getting beat up and raped and everything.' She said, 
'I'm making so much money and it's so easy, the money comes so easy. 
It's great. You gotta do it.' And I sat there and I go, 'How much money 
do you make?' and she started naming off and I go, 'Wow! I think I'd 
better.'



Kim at a pay telephone on Pike Street.

Kim Hi, Sam. This is Kimberly again. So have you decided? Do you want a 
date tonight?



Pimps on Pike Street; fragments of a conversation.

Patrice Juan always be lettin' those broads wear his coats and shit. 
That bitch ain't gonna listen to him for long. She only break $30 wops.

A Pimp Floyd hit me so goddamn hard, when I woke up, man, it was dark. 
I had to ask people around me what had happened.

Patrice What're you talking about? I don't do nothin' for free. I'm a 
pimp. I'm goin' out to those high schools and get me some fresh ones.



In a parking lot near Pike Street, Kim talks to Tiny, Erica, and Kevin 
about choosing a pimp.

Kim He said, 'If anybody comes to beat you up and I come and save you, 
that means you gotta work for me.' I hope he doesn't get somebody to 
come beat me up.

Kevin No, he isn't. I'll tell you the truth and this is the honest 
truth. With me, you'll be safer, happier and richer.

Erica He'll kill you, OK? He'll ass-fuck you, fuck you in the ear or 
anything. I'm serious, don't mess with Patrice.

Kevin I don't know about all that, but I know you're making a serious 
mistake.

Tiny Did Patrice try to do anything with you last night?

Kim No.

Erica He shoots up. He's a drug fiend.

Tiny Well, what do you want to do? Who do you want to be with?

Kim I don't know. I'm confused. I don't know who's the right person. I 
just don't know.

Tiny He raped me last year, when I first came downtown ...

Erica He raped me too. And he took my money. Up in that hotel, he came 
and said he was gonna rob this dude ...

Tiny He took a fucking coat-hanger and heated it up on the gas heater 
and said he was gonna beat me if I didn't take off my clothes. I said, 
'I ain't takin' off my clothes.'

Erica We're scaring her.

Tiny We don't mean to scare you. We're just telling you the truth. You 
get beat up and some of these girls end up gettin' killed.



Tiny and Erica leave. Kim and Kevin continue to talk.

Kevin People get killed down here, they go to jail down here. 
Everything happens down here and none of it's good.

Kim I haven't seen nobody get killed.

Kevin I saw a guy get the shit kicked out of him by three niggers over 
in front of T.J.'s just this morning and get hauled off in the 
ambulance. He got the shit kicked out of him because he pulled a big 
ole steak knife out on 'em. You missed that one, dear, but that was 
just this morning.

Kim So who cares. I don't really care. Whatever happens, happens.



Late afternoon on Pike Street, Chrissie taunts Lillie.

Chrissie I should pass the word around. You're a snitch.

Lillie Chris, just leave me alone.

Chrissie Whacha gonna do about it? Huh? Tramp!

Lillie I'm gonna quit. Sorry, but I ain't a tramp and I ain't a fucking 
snitch either.

Chrissie Come here and say it to my face, you little tramp.



In a parking lot near Pike Street at night.

Lulu I want to call your man and tell your man I want to beat you up, 
but I want to talk to him first, to let him know what's goin' on. 
'Cause he's streetwise like a mother-fucker. If you wanna be downtown, 
you gotta be cool. You better learn the ways of the streets before you 
start hangin' down here and doin' shit like you're doin'.

Blond I didn't know I was doin' anything.



Pike Street, at night. Patrice gets arrested. A group of born-again 
Christians sing hymns. Three boys and a girl have a fist fight in the 
street, stopping traffic.



Morning comes to an alley lined with garbage dumpsters.

Rat Shit, what is all this shit?

Jack I dunno, come on.

Rat Wanna jacket, a leather jacket?

Jack It's full of grape jelly, man.



Rat and Jack come upon a familiar dumpster and start digging in.

Rat and Jack (in unison) It's the Chinese Dumpster!

Rat (Voice over)

When you get regular dumpsters, we call 'em regs, you go there every 
night. You check all these dumpsters all these different places. And 
you can tell because they're regs what's been there since last week and 
what was put in there that night. 'Cause alot of people say, 'Shit, 
that shit could be a week old and you can't even tell,' but you can 
because it's your reg, your regular dumpster.



Rat samples some fried chicken.

Rat I think I hit the jackpot.



On Pike Street. Lulu tries to persuade Lillie and her boyfriend to 
leave.

Lulu I told her I'd even get her bus fare, really. I don't want to see 
her get beat up, she's too young.

Lillie I'm fifteen.

Lulu You ain't even fifteen. Don't give me that.

Lillie By next year I'll be ...

Lulu Bullshit. You're talking shit. How come you can't say it to my 
face. You ain't fifteen. (To Lillie's boyfriend.) She's gonna get you 
in trouble. Thirteen'll get you twenty.

Lulu (voice over)

I help a lot of people out. I've talked kids into going home. I ain't 
got to prove myself to show that I'm a girl. I've thought about not 
being a lesbian, but then every guy I've ever been with has screwed me 
over anyway. I get along with straight people too. Just, most of them 
think that because I'm gay that I'm trying to pick up on their 
girlfriends. To tell you the truth, I got to like somebody alot to even 
kiss 'em. See, I'm my own type of person, I am. I protect alot of 
people. This bum was trying to feel on this friend of mine's chest. I 
literally walked up and made him come back and apologize to the girl. 
(Lulu forces the bum to his knees and slaps him across his face.) 
Because she's not public property. I could understand if it was a 
telephone pole or something, he could touch it then. It's just the way 
I am. I've been like that since I've been down here. 'Cause nobody did 
nothin' for me. So, I made him come back and apologize and sent him on 
his way. I just told him, 'Go on, man, get out of here.' He left. (Lulu 
pushes him into the traffic.)



Tiny visits her mother Pat who works as a waitress at the Coffee Hut.

Pat (Voice over)

She has grown up quite a bit since she's been on these streets. She's 
fourteen going on twenty-one.

Tiny Extra pickles too, mom, please.

Pat (to the cook) Put extra pickles on that.

Pat (voice over)

Oh, when I was drinkin', Erin and I used to get in some bad arguments. 
I could see it in her mind, she's thinkin', 'Oh no, not again.'

Tiny (getting the hamburger) Mmmmmm. Thank you, mom.

Pat (voice over)

I don't know why I started drinkin'. Just cause of boredom half the 
time. I don't know.

Tiny (shouting to the cook) Too much juice.

Pat Come on, two more bites.

Tiny One more. I don't like the bread.

Pat (voice over)

See, I've had Erin all my life. I've had to bring her up myself.

And then one day I suddenly get married. I think she likes Tom.

She just doesn't want to admit it.

Tiny (holding her full stomach) I feel like I'm pregnant.

Pat (yawning) Oh, goodness. (She serves Tiny some pie.)

Tiny (sniffing the pie suspiciously) Don't you have no whipping cream?

Pat No.

Pat (voice over)

My fear is that some day I'm going to get a phone call or a knock at my 
door ... and she's not going to be there any more.



Tiny and Pat walk to their bungalow.

Tiny (voice over)

We started living at Larry's a couple of months ago, because my mom and 
my dad got kicked out of their apartment. And Larry offered them a 
place to stay. Naturally you call somebody who marries your mother a 
'dad.' Sometimes he's an asshole. But he's in the (alcoholic) treatment 
center. He's going to stay there for two months.



Tiny climbs in the window to open the door from the inside.

Pat Oh, for cryin' out loud. Damn dog. (Dog yelps.)

Tiny Quit pissin' on the floor now. Look at this mess.

Pat Damn that dog.

Tiny You should have left her out...What happened to this house? I 
cleaned it. I'm going to spray some deodorant around here, some Right 
Guard.

Pat Right Guard? Well, you wanted a dog, Erin, I didn't want her.



They sit down at the kitchen table. Pat does a crossword puzzle and 
drinks a beer. Tiny goes through the Avon cosmetic book:

Tiny I need more make-up, Mom. I want "Cloudy Blue" and "Meadow 
Violets" and ...

Pat (voice over)

She's always wantin' this and wantin' that. When you're a waitress you 
just don't make that much. One day she came home and told me she'd made 
$200. I 'bout fell off my chair.

Tiny ... then I want these three frosts, the blue, the lavender, and 
"The Best of Bronze."

Pat That costs too much. Look at the price on that!

Tiny Two for $4.99.

Pat Oh, two.



Tiny moves to the bedroom and their conversation continues from 
separate rooms.

Pat (voice over)

When Erin first told me about this, she thought I would be really angry 
with her and hate her, but I don't. It's just a phase she's going 
through right now. I can't stop her from doing this. She's just going 
to do it anyway.

Tiny Do you think I'd be gettin' that make-up by the end of this month?

Pat Probably about the seventeenth.

Tiny Isn't that the day you got married?

Pat Oh, yeah. How 'bout that?

Tiny I betcha Dad's goin' start bitchin' at ya.

Pat No. 'Bout what?

Tiny Probably wondering if you was sleeping with Larry or not.

Pat Oh, Erin. For heaven's sake.

Tiny I'm not saying you did. But that's what he's gonna start bitchin' 
at you about.

Tiny (voice over)

He beats up on my mom. He broke her leg once. He doesn't work. He 
depends on my mom alot, which is not right. I think the man should 
support the woman. He says, 'She doesn't have any money.' And I say, 
'It's because of you. You spend her money on beer. So she doesn't have 
time for me.' Now my mom's in a mess she can't get out of. I feel 
really sorry for her.

Tiny It'll be a year since you were married. A year has gone by fast, 
hasn't it? Huh? Mom?

Pat Yes. Don't bug me ... I'm drinkin'.



Rat does his laundry in a laundromat.

Rat (voice over)

When I first ran away and came here to Seattle, I was tired of being 
the middleman between my mom and my dad's divorce. I told my mom when I 
called her about two weeks after I got here that I was in trouble with 
the law. She understood it. She said, 'Alright, I'll see you when 
you're eighteen.' And I said, 'Alright.' And then about a month later I 
called her again and I said, 'Hey mom, how's it goin?' And she said, 
'It's awful. I'm broke. He's trying to drain me, trying to make my life 
miserable.' And she started crying alot, asking me to come home. And I 
just said, 'Mom, I gotta go' and I hung up on her.



Rat goes outside to panhandle.

Rat Excuse me, sir. Could you spare a dime, so I could finish drying my 
laundry?

Man Here you go, son.

Rat Thank you, sir. You have a nice day.

Rat (voice over)

And then I never called her again. I never wrote her a letter or 
nothin'. Fuck it, ya know. Let her think what she wants, that I'm dead, 
whatever she wants to think. But I don't want to listen to her cry ... 
makin' me feel bad. 



Reverend Tom Robinson of the Emerald City Mission solicits money on 
Pike Street. His group sings "If You Want Joy You Must Jump For It." 

Reverend Tom (shouting) That building at 1420 Second Avenue, by the 
grace of God, will be the new shelter that will sleep two hundred men 
and fifteen women and two families. And all we asked from you is one 
dollar. We don't ask for tens, twenties and hundreds, but you let God 
move on you and you give one dollar and God will bless you. For 
fourteen years I believed that God was dead. But I do not believe that 
anymore. Billy Graham convicted me when he pointed his finger right at 
me and said, GOD wants YOU to serve HIM!



A crowd of street kids gather.

Patrice When you leave here whachu gonna do? You gonna go home. Right, 
brother?

Reverend Tom Sure I am.

Patrice Yeah, you're gonna go home. And you're gonna go into your big 
house, and get into your big bed and sleep with your big wife, and all 
that there, brother.

Reverend Tom I'm gonna go home and pack food for tomorrow's food bank.



Patrice OK. What religion are you?

Reverend Tom I'm Pentecostal. Full Gospel.

Patrice That's what I was raised as, a Pentecostal. But I don't believe 
that shit. (To the crowd.) You want to know how they're working us? 
Remember how when you was in school, once a year they'd tell you to 
bring your canned goods and give 'em to us? That's what they're doing. 
They say bring your canned goods and give 'em to us. Then they turn 
around and give them back to you. (Laughter.) And then they say 'We're 
doin' something for ya' all.' That's how they're workin' us. I could 
stand out here and say, 'Yes, Lord. Thank you, Jesus. Gimme a dollar.' 
I could do that.

Reverend Tom You could.

Patrice Yeah, I could. And probably get a dollar.

Reverend Tom It's your privilege.

Patrice See, all this is nothin'.

Reverend Tom But I'm not standing here for me. See, you would be 
standing here for you.

Patrice Who are you standing there for?

Reverend Tom I'm standing here for you.

Patrice You're standing here for me? Ain't that nothin'!

Reverend Tom 'Cause you might be hungry this winter.

Patrice We're wise out here. We're streetwise. You know that? 
Everybody's scammin'. You're scammin'. I'm scammin'.

Reverend Tom Well, you and I'll have to sit down and talk about this. 
Maybe you can wise me up.

Patrice Yeah, 'cause you need alot of wisin' if you think you're gonna 
get rich standing out here. What gives you the audacity to think that 
we're gonna come off our street life and into your program?

Reverend Tom I don't wancha in my program.

Patrice Ah, just a second ago you said ...

Reverend Tom All I want to do is give you a good night's sleep.

Patrice And then I can wake up in the morning, go downstairs and eat 
some Cabin Crunch ...

Reverend Tom Cookies and coffee or whatever we got.

Patrice Can I bring my girlfriend there if I want to?

Reverend Tom Nooo. If you do, she'll have to stay in a different place.

Patrice No, brother. It don't work like that.

Reverend Tom Yeah, it works that way. But I like you, brother.

Patrice I like you, too. (They shake hands.) What's your name? Let me 
have a card?

Reverend Tom Tom Robinson. Here's a card.



Rat and Jack scam for dinner.

Rat (voice over)

There's many different scams. There's 'Eat and Run.' That's where you 
go into a restaurant. You order something. Usually they'll set you 
right by the cash register if you look young and like you don't have 
any money so they can see you. But right by the cash register is right 
by the door, so that works out even better. There's also 'Dumpster 
Diving.' You call Shakeys' Pizza. You can do it right out in front of 
the restaurant. They got a pay phone right outside. (Rat enters phone 
booth.) You call and order these Hawaiian style pizzas with Canadian 
bacon and pineapple. They ask your name and your number. You hang up. 
They call you right back. You say, 'Yeah, I ordered this and this' and 
they say 'Alright' and you hang up. And then in about an hour, nobody 
comes to claim the pizza and they set 'em out in the dumpster in the 
boxes. You go over there and you got six or seven free pizzas. It's 
easy to survive without pulling tricks or dates on the street.



Patrice shows his own scam to the guys on Pike Street.

Patrice There it is. (He opens the bottom of a pack of cigarettes.) 
Blotter acid. You get two hits out of every pack, man. Five dollars a 
hit. It sells like pancakes. Me and Junior made a hundred bucks selling 
nothing but bunk at a concert. Then we went and bought some good 
cocaine and psshhook. (Laughing.)



James goes to a blood bank.

Rat (voice over)

You gotta be over eighteen to sell blood, so most of the kids on the 
street can't sell it, so they can't make money that way. But, if you 
get a fake ID and you look eighteen, then you can go there and sell 
blood.

Nurse (to James) The first one you do, the last two we do. But you make 
sure that we do them. It's your responsibility to make sure that you 
walk out of here alive...OK, make a fist for me.



In the corner of Second and Pike Streets, William takes Lulu on. A 
crowd gathers.

William If you're a goddamn woman, Lulu, why don't you act like one?

Lulu Fuck you. I don't have to act like all these bitches down here.

William I'm not talking about acting like a bitch. I'm talking about 
acting like a woman, Lulu. You don't do that.

Lulu You ain't my man. You don't tell me shit.

William I wouldn't be your man even if you liked men.

Lulu You can't tell me shit.

William Bitch, I'm tellin' you all kinds of things.

Lulu Fuck you, punk.



William Bitch.



Lulu Punk.



William 'Ho.



Lulu Punk.



William Tramp.

Lulu What about your K.C.? The one with the burning goddamn gonorrhea.

Lulu (voice over)

I ain't putting on a dress for nobody. I haven't done it since I was 
sixteen. I've had my nose broke five times. I've had both sets of my 
eye bones broke, top and bottom. I've had my jaw cracked three times. 
I'll tell people now, they can beat the shit out of me, but they're not 
getting me away from down here.



On Pike Street, Dewayne comes on to Kim.

Kim Calvin and Erica been down here?

Dewayne Erica was.

Kim This girl told me they're after my ass. I gotta keep it cool.

Dewayne Man, I wouldn't even worry about them.

Kim There are alot of people after my ass 'cause I'm not working any 
more.

Dewayne Well, be with me and you wouldn't have to work.

Kim (laughing) Naw.

Dewayne I'm serious. No mother-fucker's gonna fuck with you.

Kim I'm just not going to come down here any more.

Dewayne Then let me get your phone number, so I can call you, so we can 
go out for pizza or somethin'.

Kim I don't have a phone right now.

Dewayne Well, let me give you my number and you can call me.

Kim OK, whatever.

Dewayne Anybody got a pen? I don't got no pen. There's a pen, thank you 
sir. Now, anybody got a piece of paper?

Dewayne goes to the Adolescent Free Clinic to find out why he is so 
small for his age.

Dr. Deisher Well, you gained about 3 inches in height, since we last 
saw you almost a year and a half ago. You haven't gained much weight. 
You're about the same weight as you were.

Dewayne I eat all the time, but I don't gain no weight or nothin'. I 
think there's a worm inside me or somethin'.

Dr. Deisher Think you got worms, huh?

Dewayne I dunno. I want to get it checked out.

Dr. Deisher Sure. Can you straighten up? (Dewayne uncurls his spine 
from its usual slouch.) Do you spend alot of time on the streets?

Dewayne Yup.

Dr. Deisher What do you do down there?

Dewayne Panhandle. Just hang around. Hug all the girls.

Dr. Deisher You got alot of girlfriends?

Dewayne Yup.

Dr. Deisher Hummmm. Let's see those tonsils. (He slips a tongue 
depresser into Dewayne's mouth.)

Dewayne Awgh.

Dr. Deisher Take it easy. When did you have tonsillitis last?

Dewayne Awwgh. When I was locked up in Echo Glen, that was maybe two 
months ago.

Dr. Deisher Did you go to school last year?

Dewayne Nope. For two years I haven't been to school.

Dr. Deisher So you haven't been to school since you were twelve?

Dewayne No. I'm sixteen.

Dr. Deisher (feeling the glands in Dewayne's neck) Does it hurt when I 
do this?

Dewayne Nope. It feels good.

Dr. Deisher What do you think you'd like to do someday?

Dewayne I dunno.

Dr. Deisher Anything interest you at all?

Dewayne Nope.

Dr. Deisher You got lots of big glands in your neck. You got 
chronically infected tonsils, which certainly don't help your growth 
and your nutrition any.

Dewayne I might join the Navy, if the world lasts that long.

Reagan's sending all them Marines, shootin' everybody. All them Marines 
get to shootin', cuttin' out Russia and Russia's probably gonna bomb us 
or somethin'. Ow, that hurts right there.

Dr. Deisher That hurts, huh? Does it hurt bad or just a little?

Dewayne Just a little. Ow, right there. Oh, yeah.

Rat, Jack, and Shadow look at knives in a pawn shop window.

Rat You mean you ain't got fifty cents? Why don't you just walk up to 
some guy and ask him for fifty cents to catch the bus?

Shadow 'Cause I don't have a face like yours.

Rat Aw, it'll work.



Shadow leaves.

Rat (to Jack) He's the worst one on Pike Street. He'll be your buddy 
when you're face to face. As soon as you turn around, you got a knife 
in your back. It ain't worth it.



Shadow sits alone on Pike Street.

Shadow (Voice Over)

You learn how to fight, one way or another. Or you disappear. I know 
how to fight, but I like disappearing. My mother and father got a 
divorce when I was about a year old. My mother decided I should go to a 
foster home. About five years ago, my father said, 'I want you to come 
over.' So, I spent six months with my father. Six months were up, 
nobody could find my mother. A year went up, nobody could find my 
mother. My father got tired of me and my sister. He told me to leave. I 
left.



Shellie uses a pay telephone on Pike Street to phone home.

Shellie Hi. Is mom there? Howya doin'? ... Nothing, just called to tell 
you I'm OK and shit ... Where am I? None of your business ... No. Call 
me a prostitute. Come on, I dare you to ... No, that's not what I'm 
doing but that's what you called me last time I was gone ... Yes you 
did ... I called to tell you I'm OK, to see how you were doin' and now 
I'm going to hang up ... and I hope you have fun with your stupid-ass 
husband. (To Shadow.) Ooooo, she pisses me off.



Shadow and Shellie go to the amusement park together.

Shadow (voice over)

Shellie's a real sweet girl. The streets is nothing for a girl that 
young. I mean, fourteen years old and on the streets ... I've taken 
care of her a little, made sure she's eaten. She's like a little sister 
... I like women for the simple reason they're sweet, they're caring, 
they need care.

Shellie One thing I don't do is fall in love in two or three days.

I've made many mistakes ...

Shadow You've never lived on the streets.

Shellie I have so lived on the streets before.

Shadow Not like this. Not like I have.

Shellie I don't want to live on the streets like you have. I'm not 
going to either, man.

Shadow Are you going to help me dye my hair?

Shellie Hell, no. I can't dye hair, man.

Shadow I'll do it myself then. I don't know how I'm going to do it, but 
I'm going to do it myself.

Shellie Why do you want your hair dyed? To change?

Shadow Not actually to change, to get away from everything.

Shellie That ain't gonna get you away from jack-shit, honey.

Shadow It will, considering I'm gonna dye my hair.

Shellie (voice over)

My mom's got seven kids. She's thirty-two. My wishes would be to have a 
small family that was happy. Just my older brother, my real dad and me 
and my mom. Nobody else.



Shellie at home with her mother.

Shellie's Mother I can't have you livin' out on the streets.

Shellie So, I can't have me living here.

Mother I'm trying to get some input from you Shellie. Anything but 
sarcasm.

Shellie That's all I get around here. That's all I ever hear from 
Larry.

Mother That's his way of dealing with people.

Shellie Right. He makes me sick ... from when I was little and he was a 
pervert and shit. Every time I remember what he did to me, when he took 
advantage of me and shit.

Mother I didn't know and you didn't tell me.

Shellie I DIDN'T KNOW IT. Until you started asking me.

Mother But you wouldn't tell me then.

Shellie When you asked me if he did a certain thing, I said, 'yeah.' 
And then you went and told him. Ever since then he's hated me.

Mother Yeah, but he didn't do it any more.

Shellie So. I still hate him for doing it to begin with.



Shellie sitting on a bench on Pike Street eating a pizza with Patti and 
Munchkin.

Shellie (voice over)

Shadow asked me if he found a place for me to stay, a permanent place, 
would I stay there. I said, 'Yeah, probably.' He said, 'Well, Patti and 
Munchkin say you can stay with them.' They needed the money for rent.

Shadow (voice over)

I grew up with Munchkin. For a long time I ran around with him. And 
Patti, I met her down here about three years ago beatin' the heck out 
of some old dude 'cause he said somethin' wrong to her.



Patti and Munchkin kissing on Pike Street.

Shadow (voice over)

Patti and Munchkin are very ... they were, in my eyes, made for each 
other. They argue, but doesn't all love affairs argue? Patti and 
Munchkin are a team. That's the way they work the best. A street couple 
that are struggling to survive.



Rat and Jack shower at the Lutheran Compass Center.

Rat (voice over)

Every person, no matter how big or tough they are, should always have a 
partner. You never want to go on the streets alone. It's a mistake. 
It's just you'll get lonely, you'll get upset, you'll get beat up. 
Because, you never can tell if someone's gonna come up from the front 
of you and start to get your attention, and this other dude is gonna 
walk up behind you and bust your fuckin' head. Partners are always 
better.



Shadow takes a motel room for the night to dye his hair. He kneels on 
the bathroom floor reading the instructions on the package.

Shadow Mix all mixture and thoroughly saturate hair. Loosely pile hair 
on top of head. Leaves your hair silky, shiny, and free of tangles.



Looking at himself in the mirror, Shadow massages the dye into his 
hair.

Shadow (voice over)

I consider myself a playboy. As a boyfriend, you're obligated to one 
girl. I considered myself dependent upon a couple of girls supporting 
me. But as far as being a pimp, I never pushed them out onto the 
streets. You can't be a boyfriend and have three girlfriends. But you 
can be a playboy. A playboy is what I consider myself.



Tiny and Shellie in a video arcade.

Shellie Now she's married again. That's why I'm not at home. 'Cause I 
can't stand my step-dad.

Tiny Nobody can stand their step-dads.

Shellie Some people get along fine with them. My first stepdad was OK.



Dewayne visits his father in prison. Lee is behind a glass partition. 
They speak using telephones.

Lee I got an idea that's fantastic. We'll make some money and we'll put 
it in 'Lee &;Sons Thrift Shop.' We're gonna open up our own store, like 
that thrift store I had. When I get out, as soon as I'm out a little 
while, I want you to come with me 'cause I've already talked to some 
people about a building in maybe Redland. Look around out there. See if 
there's any good thrift shops out there.

Dewayne Alright.

Lee I was supposed to get out this Friday, but I won't because I've got 
to wait for the damn parole board. If it'd just been that burglary it'd 
be alright, but it was that stupid arson thing. So the board wants to 
talk to me. And like everybody says, I've done thirty years--what the 
hell good is it going to do to make me do a couple more years. I've 
only got three years left on my 'max.'

Dewayne Are you in a cell by yourself?

Lee No, I'm in the 'mean tank.' That's for guys who've done time and 
everything before.

Dewayne For a felony and stuff?

Lee Yeah.

Dewayne Is a bunch of The Jokers in there?

Lee Two of 'em are, yeah.

Dewayne Is one Stubbs?

Lee Yeah.

Dewayne Tell him I said 'hi.'

Lee Yeah, yeah. What's this? You're gonna have to take your tonsils 
out?

Dewayne They say it's always infected and stuff, so I don't know. They 
think that's why I'm so small and stuff.

Lee You know that's funny. I was that way, too.

Dewayne Were you small like this?

Lee Yeah. They took them out and about a year after that I got almost 
as big as I am now.

Dewayne I eat all the time but I don't gain no weight. So you think 
it's just ... whadaya call it?

Lee Tonsils and adenoids.

Dewayne Yeah, but ...

Lee Hed ... heditary ... hereditary.

Dewayne Yeah.

Lee How much are you smoking?

Dewayne I'm cutting down to maybe four cigarettes a day. Four or five.

Lee That's good. (He lights a cigarette.) Don't smoke too much 'cause 
that's bad too. Still messin' with that weed?

Dewayne A little.

Lee How 'bout anything else?

Dewayne Nope.

Lee Let me see your arms.

Dewayne My arms? Why?

Lee Undo your sleeve.

Dewayne Naw, I haven't been doing none of that. Here I'll even show 
you. See. Nothin'.

Lee What are you messin' with?

Dewayne Nothin'.

Lee You're a smart kid. You're a good-looking kid. You've got 
intelligence. You've got my brain. (Laughs.) But you're like me. You're 
a con man, Dewayne. Whadaya wanna be? A little punk on the street? A 
little smart-ass little punk. That's all you think you are. You're 
going to wind up just like I am. Look at me when I talk at you. That's 
the dang trouble, you haven't paid any attention to me. There's a guy 
in our tank, twenty-four years old. They just gave him four life 
sentences. Twenty-four years old. It won't be too many damn years 
they'll be doing that to you. They're not going to slap your little 
hand and send you off to Echo Glen or some damn place. Is that what you 
want?

Dewayne No.

Lee You say that now 'cause you're sittin' here talking to me. Get your 
hands out of your mouth! Let me see your fingers. Still biting your 
damn nails, ain't you? When are you gonna stop doin' that? Huh? You're 
out there, tough guy on the street. Bigtime tough little punk is all 
you are. Can't even quit biting your fingernails. You're too goddamn 
little to be tough, kid ... I'm serious. I love you very, very much, 
even though I get mad and want to kill you. I love you. You're all I 
got. And unfortunately, I'm all you've got. I'm gonna make it up to you 
... for all the stuff we didn't do. I know I have to talk rough to you 
sometimes, Dewayne, but you know that I love you a whole big, big 
bunch. If I get out this time, I'll keep you straight and you keep me 
straight. Is that a deal? Just remember, you and I is all we got. 
Together ain't nobody can whip us, ain't nobody can do anything to us. 
I love you.

Dewayne Bye-bye.



Dewayne leaves. His father waves goodbye through the glass partition.



Patrice runs into his mother and her friend by accident in a parking 
lot near Pike Street.

Mother Look at you. All beat up and cut up and scarred up and drugged 
up. I haven't seen you in two months. You didn't even call me. I can't 
get over that. After I sent for you all the way from California, down 
there stranded. And you didn't even thank me. You ought to thank me 
now.

Patrice Thank you, mom. (They kiss.)

Mother's friend Call her up. You can call her up. Nikita and them calls 
me and Todd calls me. Do you love your mother?

Patrice Yes.

Mother When are you gonna show me? When are you gonna make me proud?

Mother's friend So that's what you should do, you should stop and see 
mom, you know what I mean. 'Cause she is the only one gotta guide map 
to your life. 'Cause you can't go nowhere unless you ask your mother 
advices and things, you know that?

Mother He don't want no advice right now. He thinks he's doin' it.

Mother's friend That's why he's gettin' knocked around and beat around, 
too.

Mother You think you're doin' it? I love you, Patrice. You wanna go eat 
somethin'? I'm not gonna just give you my money, now. If you wanna go 
eat somethin', I'll feed you.

Patrice I'm not hungry, ma.

Mother Yes, ya are.

Mother's friend What did you eat today?

Patrice Some cookies and ah ...

Mother's friend junk food.

Patrice ... and some juice.

Mother You want something hot in your stomach? That's what you need. If 
I give you some of my money, whacha gonna do with it?

Patrice Save it.

Mother Oh, yeah. How're you gonna save it out here? You'll just tell me 
anything just to shut me up.

Mother's friend I'm tellin' ya. He gonna save it. (Laughing.)

Mother (to her friend) You got some money?

Mother's friend Just a little change.

Mother If I think you're buying a pack of cigarettes, next time I see 
you I won't give you a dollar.

Patrice OK.

Mother's friend Or some weed.

Mother You'd better not! You know that's hard-work money. I worked for 
that money. You spend it wisely, OK? When you get straight, you know 
where your house is.

Patrice OK.

Mother's friend And the only way you can really get straight is to stay 
in touch with mom, because you can't straighten yourself. 



Lulu on Pike Street. 

Lulu (voice over)

I have seven brothers and sisters. I lost one seven months ago from 
cirrhosis of the liver. She was twenty-six. I loved her alot. It made 
me sort of loony for about a month. People thought I was going crazy. I 
wasn't going crazy, I just couldn't handle it.



Lulu fights with a cop.

Lulu (shouting) I just got out of jail not even a month ago. I ain't 
gettin' in no trouble, punk. I bet you I got a bruise on my arm, 
guaranteed. And I'm pressing charges on your ass. Punk. 'Cause I hate 
you and I'm gonna git you for that.



Another cop arrives in a squad car.

Second cop What's the trouble here, young man?

Lulu I'm not a him. I'm a her. I'm pressing charges ...

Second cop Will you please calm down?

Lulu I'm pressing charges on him. I want you to know that right now.

Second cop Alright, you do that.

Lulu Are you a sergeant?

Second cop I'm asking you to please calm down.

Lulu I'm calm.

Second cop Now will you please leave because we have quite a crowd 
here?

Lulu (walking off, screaming at the first cop) YOU'RE A PUNK! PUNK!



Shadow gets a dragon tattooed on his forearm.

Shadow (voice over)

Giving blood, there's pain. Falling in love, there's pain. All you feel 
is the first initial needle. The rest is lingering pain from when the 
needle pulled out.



Patti gives Munchkin a permanent.

Patti Honey, come and help me figure this out. Now hold this.

Right here. Bring your head back up here.

Munchkin The shit burns my eyes, I'm telling you.

Patti Not supposed to have your eyes open.

Munchkin Yeow, you poked me in the eye now.

Patti Stop being a jerk.

Munchkin Thanks. You just wiped it right across my fuckin' eye. God, 
man.

Patti Why doncha do your own fuckin' permanent.



Jerry Esterly, Patti's probation officer, pays a can on Patti and 
Munchkin at their boarding house.

Jerry(voice over)

I probably have about a hundred kids on my case load. 'Course Patti is 
Patti. She's an individualist. She'll go along with you if you're doin' 
what she wants, but she ain't gonna do a damn thing she doesn't want to 
do.

Jerry I knocked on the door and I was just worried about you.

Patti (in a towel and shower cap) I don't care how worried you're 
gettin' about me. All I gotta say is that you don't got no right 
walkin' in my house.

Jerry But this morning, we've got job therapy ...

Patti We know that, Jerry. But you gotta understand that you can't just 
be walking into my house. You might get shot as far as you know.

Jerry Well, I took the chance on ya wouldn't shoot me. And then I 
banged on the door.

Patti Well, the next time you're gettin' shot, OK?

Jerry OK ... So the rent's due today, right?

Patti No ...

Jerry And if you're gonna stay here ...

Munchkin Not from what Bob says. I told Bob I'd give him $20 and the 
rest on Friday.

Jerry This is the deal. If you're gonna stay here, you gotta go out to 
job therapy.

Patti You can't tell me what to do.

Jerry Patti, we've been together ...

Patti You and me ain't been together.

Jerry We have. We've been working together, Patti. And I'm concerned 
about you. I don't want you guys to have to hit the bricks again. I 
don't want you to have to get back into some crap that you shouldn't be 
involved in to pay your rent. You've got a chance to make it a good 
way, OK? Now this guy has got some ideas that can help you get a job. 
That's a better life for you than having to be hustling on the streets 
or be down there pushing ...

Patti Who says we're hustling down on the streets, huh jerry?

Jerry Oh, come on. How else you gonna make your money?



On Pike Street, kids are hanging out. Girls are looking for dates, 
including Patti.

Rat (voice over)

Most of the kids on the street, that's how they survive. They feel like 
if they don't do the dates, that they're gonna be broke, they're gonna 
have to dumpster dive, they're gonna have to beg for money. And that's 
gonna make them feel, 'cause they're girls, like 'Oh, I'm no good. I'm 
dirty, I'm rotten, I'm a scum, I'm living in this rat-hole, no water, 
no electricity, no nothing, I'm beggin' for money.' I guess they feel 
that's worse than pullin' dates. I don't know what their problem is.



Tiny and Shellie talk in a parking lot near Pike Street.

Shellie Munchkin's the one that wants us out there 'hoing and shit, and 
I don't want to do it. The only reason I'm out there is, like I said, 
Patti's out there and she has to have somebody with her. And when I 
moved in with them, I said, 'Patti, I don't wanna be 'hoing or 
anything.' She said, 'You won't be. Munchkin's not gonna pimp you or 
nothin'



Tiny Do you turn dates now?

Shellie Hell, yeah. Me and Patti do. I try to tell Patti I don't want 
to and she'll start bitchin' at me saying that I just missed a hundred 
dollar date. Every time I fuck up she says it was a hundred dollar 
date.

Tiny When you do make money, do you give it to Munchkin?

Shellie I give it to Patti and Patti gives it to Munchkin.

Tiny And you haven't got nothin' out of it, huh?



Shellie Me and Patti are both mad right now, because he's sending both 
of us out there to get him a suit! All he wants is a whole bunch of 
clothes and shit. Get this, Patti hasn't pulled any dates today and I 
did two. Forty bucks each. Well, I told her I can't handle this. I'm 
gonna take off and shit. Last night she says 'you ain't goin' nowhere.' 
And I said, 'Yes I am.' This morning she was even talking all this shit 
about how she was gonna sock me if I even tried to go up there and 
stuff. I mean I was just trippin' out. How the hell can these people 
think they own me. Nobody does.

Tiny You can end up with the wrong people down here.

Shellie You wanna know who set me up with the wrong people?

Tiny Who?

Shellie A person by the name of Shadow.



Shellie and Shadow talk in a parking lot.

Shadow You changed too. When I first ran into you, you were real sweet 
...

Shellie I still am.

Shadow Oh, yeah. When you ended up at George's you were a real pain in 
the ass. Now you're even worse.

Shellie I was a real pain in the ass, because you fuckin' bullshitted 
me. You don't bull-shit me!

Shadow But I keep wantin' to. I don't know why. Probably because I like 
you.

Shellie (laughing, embarrassed) Drop that cigarette!



Shadow It's not done ... Now it's done.



A bum serenades Rat and Tiny on the pier.

Bum (fortissimo) America, America. God shed His life on ya'll.



Rat (voice over)

I like alot of the girls on the street. Tiny, I like her especially. 
She's a sweet girl.

Rat Wanna go swimmin'?

Tiny Ya think I'm crazy or somethin'? Right, let's just jump in.

Rat Alright ... How about a back flip?



Rat does a back flip into the water. He swims back toward Tiny.

Tiny (voice over)

The reason why I think Rat is cute, and the reason why I love

him so much, is because he's got pretty eyes. I think they're brown or 
blue, one or the other.



Rat and Tiny go to the abandoned hotel. Tiny runs down the corridor and 
into Rat's room. Rat skates after her.

Rat I gotta go back to school someday. 'Cause I need a diploma, so I 
can get into the Air Force. But right now it's the Open Road, USA for 
me.

Tiny Check you out!

Rat (voice over)

I didn't talk to her much about being a prostitute. She hadn't done it 
that often from what she told me.

Rat Now where's my kiss, honey-bunch?

Tiny Not with braces.



Dewayne, in Juvenile Detention, gets a visit from Jerry Esterly.

Dewayne I'm the smallest guy in the unit.

Jerry Yeah, for a while I thought you might be in the other unit.

Dewayne Junior boys? Naw, because of my age. So when will I be 
released?

Jerry OK, here's the deal. I got a phone call from Kim yesterday, and I 
wasn't in. Then I phoned Kim this morning 'cause I needed to talk to 
her before you get out of here. So all I can do is just keep trying. 
And as soon as I get a hold of her, I've given permission for her to 
come down and get you. Kim, with that new baby, she doesn't need these 
problems. You're in a really touchy situation anyway. You're living 
with an 18-year old who used to be real active on the streets herself.

Dewayne Kim's twenty.

Jerry Is she twenty now? OK, legally, she's not a foster parent. I 
think it's really good, you guys are working out like a family. And I 
think it's a good arrangement for you. But I don't want you getting 
busted and messing that up. OK?

Dewayne Alright.

Jerry Right now you're charged with selling pot. So as far as you 
staying away from downtown, I don't care if you stay away from downtown 
or not. You've got a lot of friends down there. I think that you have 
to use your own judgment on that. OK? You know the things you'd better 
not be doing downtown. I mean, the police, everybody knows you down 
there. If you're dealing dope, they're gonna bust you again. And if you 
get busted again, then you're not going to get out of here until after 
your hearing.



Rat and Tiny sitting on Rat's bed in the abandoned hotel.

Rat (voice over)

She'll start talking about 'Oh, I wanna have a kid' and all this shit. 
She just wants to get too serious at too young of an age. She's only 
fourteen years old and she makes it sound like she's ready to get 
married.

Tiny Well, then don't leave.

Rat I got to.

Tiny No you don't.

Rat Yeah, I gotta get Mike out of Juvenile Hall.

Tiny Why?

Rat Because. I can't have my best friend locked up. I gotta go break 
him out.

Tiny (Laughs.) Check you out.

Rat I'm serious. I'm gonna go break him out. Then we're gonna go to 
Florida.

Tiny And what if you get caught?

Rat Well, I'll still be with him. (Laughs.) They'll throw me in jail 
right along with him.

Tiny Then take me with you.

Rat Women are a pain in the ass on the road.



Tiny's mother goes to an alcoholic treatment center.

Tiny (voice over)

We got into a fight. She was drunk that night. She was slappin' on me 
and I was slappin' back on her, because she hit me and I hit her back. 
The next day she felt really bad.

Pat (voice over)

Finally one day I woke up and said 'I'm an alcoholic.' I'd better do 
something about it.

Tiny Good-bye, mama.

Pat Good-bye, honey. I love you. I'll be back.



On Pike Street at night, Lulu finds a girl crying.

Lulu What's your name? Did somebody hurt you? What did they do to you? 
Really, I won't hurt you. (To the arriving paramedic.) Looks like her 
jaw is broke.

Paramedic Her jaw is broken?

Lulu She's been bangin' her head against the wall.

Paramedic (to the girl) Look up for a second. We want to look at your 
eyes.



Lulu Her eyes are rolling.

Paramedic Did anybody see what happened? What has she been taking?

Lulu I don't know.

Paramedic Open your eyes.

Lulu Her tongue was stickin' out.

Paramedic Come on now. Open your eyes. We're here to help you.

Lulu I asked her if she wanted me to call a doctor and she said 'Yeah.' 
I think somebody assaulted her to tell you the truth.

Paramedic Does anybody know her here?

Lulu No.



Rat visits Tiny in Juvenile Detention.

Matron You have a half an hour for visiting. (She leaves.)

Tiny A half hour.

Rat You're stupid!

Tiny I am not. It wasn't my fault.

Rat Well, if you wouldn't have been in that next room hangin' your 
fuckin' head out the window yelling, 'Hey guys, I'm over here. Look.'



Tiny I didn't say that!



Rat Can't ever keep your fucking head in, can you? Like Brian says, you 
can take the 'ho off the street, but not the street off the 'ho. Oh, 
well. I guess it doesn't matter to me. I didn't get arrested.



Tiny You're lucky. You're really lucky.

Rat You just gotta stay one step ahead.

Tiny You left me there!



Rat That's right. I sure did. You didn't say, 'Hey Rat, where're you 
going? Hey Rat, take me with you.'



Tiny I woulda never got caught. I wouldn't be in here 'til Monday.



Rat I'll be gone by Monday.



Tiny I don't want you to leave. Why can't you wait 'til next Sunday.



Rat 'Cause, I got places to go and things to do.

Tiny Wait 'til next Sunday. Come on. This is the last time you get to 
see me.

Rat Well, well ... You missed a good fight. Lulu kicked this one 
whore's ass. She said, 'You bitch' and she fuckin' smashed her right in 
the face. She didn't smack her, she punched her. The broad fell down 
and jumped up and took off running all the way up to Pike Street and 
then ran ...

Tiny Who was this girl?

Rat She's sort of tall. She's real skinny, like you. And she's got real 
dark, short hair, black hair. I'd show her to you but you ain't getting 
out 'til Monday, and I'm leaving Sunday.

Tiny Why? Why do you have to leave a day before I get out?

Rat Why? Because Monday, Mike gets out. I'm going to break him out 
Monday. Thump, take their cuff keys. Open the door, take Mike's cuffs 
off and off to Alaska we go. It's that simple. Maybe we'll stop through 
here and pick you up. Doubt it, but maybe. Oh, well, so long ... Tiny 
... Hey Tiny. What's the matter?



Tiny Nothing.

Rat If nothing's the matter, then why're you crying?

Tiny You should have figured it out by now.

Rat Well, I gotta go.

Tiny Go, then.

Rat Don't I at least get a hug good-bye?



They hug for a long moment and Rat leaves. Tiny sits down on the bed 
and sobs.



Rat goes down to the pier and watches a ferry come in. A freight train 
moves off, leaving Seattle. Rat hops on and disappears between the 
cars.

An empty funeral parlor with a closed casket.

Jerry (voice over)

I found out in the morning that there'd been a suicide. I didn't know 
who it was and I didn't think of Dewayne, even though I knew he was in 
that institution. Dewayne hung himself. The one thing that Dewayne 
wanted was a family. And he wanted to grow up as what he saw as just a 
regular kid. I think he sort of had that dream of a mother and a father 
and a house in the country, maybe a horse or a bicycle to ride on. He 
just wanted what every kid has a right to have, I think.



At the funeral home, Dewayne's father, handcuffed to a prison guard, 
comes in and sits down. Three more people follow.

Jerry (voice over)

At the funeral home, there was his father. There were prison guards 
because of his dad's status. Three other people, all three who worked 
with Dewayne in one way or another as part of the Social Service 
Agencies. And that was it. So it was pretty much as his life had been. 
A pretty lonely, pretty skimpy affair.

Minister Lord, in our lives, we are often confused and we often ask 
'why?' But it is times like these when our 'why' becomes our strongest 
cry.



Flashback of Dewayne on Pike Street.

Dewayne (voice over)

Get a girl friend, have a house or a car or somethin'. Have a little 
money in the bank, get a job. That's what I expect out of life. Not 
much.



Lee sits handcuffed to a guard beside the coffin.

Lee "I love you. And I'm sorry. But I'll see you."



A small boat moves slowly across Puget Sound in the morning mist.

Jerry (voice over)

It's my understanding that Dewayne will be cremated and his ashes 
spread on Puget Sound. Dewayne was a street kid. Dewayne drifted all 
his life. And it seemed better for me than just putting him in the 
ground in a box where's he's got to be there. He's free. He's never 
been that way before.





Take Care of All of My Children Copyright © 1984 Jalma Music

Words and music by Tom Waits

Take care of all of my children

Don't let them wander and roam.

Take care of all of my children

For I don't know when I'm coming back home.

You can put all of my possessions here in Jesus' name

And nail a sign on the door.

Bright and early Sunday morning with my walking cane,

I'm going up to see my Lord.

Keep them together at the sundown

Safe from the devil's hand.

You got to make them a pillow on the hard ground.

I'll be going up to Beulah land.

You can put all of my possessions here in Jesus' name

And nail a sign on the door.

Bright and early Sunday morning with my walking cane,

I'm going up to see my Lord.

Remember you never trust the devil,

Stay clear of Lucifer's hand.

Don't let them wander in the meadow,

Or you'll wind up in the frying pan.

You can put all of my possessions here in Jesus' name

And nail a sign on the door,

Bright and early Sunday morning with my walking cane,

I'm going up to see my Lord.