The sign said Welcome to Tuscaloosa.
Chief didn't feel welcome anywhere.
He pressed his forehead against the cold truck window and watched the pine trees blur past. His backpack was stuffed between his feet. His basketball sat in the back seat. Everything else they owned was in the trailer behind them.
This was the fourth time Chief had moved in five years.
He was done trying to make it feel okay.
"Almost there," his mom said from the front seat.
Chief didn't answer.
His grandfather, Poppa Loosa, rode in the passenger seat. He was the only one who didn't say a word during the whole drive. But when the sign came into view, Chief noticed something strange.
Poppa Loosa smiled.
Not a regular smile. A deep one. Like he recognized the place. Like he'd been waiting to come back.
"Poppa," Chief said. "You been here before?"
The old man looked out the window at the river below the bridge. The water was wide and dark and moved slow.
"In a way," Poppa Loosa said. "In a way."
Chief didn't know what that meant. He turned back to the window and watched the city come into view.
He told himself what he always told himself when they moved somewhere new.
Don't unpack your heart. You won't be here long.