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Allegedly
Allegedly
Allegedly
Ebook336 pages5 hours

Allegedly

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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4 starred reviews!

Orange Is the New Black meets Walter Dean Myer’s Monster in this gritty, twisty, and haunting debut by Tiffany D. Jackson about a girl convicted of murder seeking the truth while surviving life in a group home.

Mary B. Addison killed a baby.

Allegedly. She didn’t say much in that first interview with detectives, and the media filled in the only blanks that mattered: a white baby had died while under the care of a churchgoing black woman and her nine-year-old daughter. The public convicted Mary and the jury made it official. But did she do it?

There wasn’t a point to setting the record straight before, but now she’s got Ted—and their unborn child—to think about. When the state threatens to take her baby, Mary’s fate now lies in the hands of the one person she distrusts the most: her Momma. No one knows the real Momma. But does anyone know the real Mary?

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateJan 24, 2017
ISBN9780062422668
Author

Tiffany D. Jackson

Tiffany D. Jackson is the New York Times bestselling author of Allegedly, Monday's Not Coming, Let Me Hear a Rhyme, Grown, White Smoke, The Weight of Blood, and coauthor of Blackout and Whiteout. A Walter Dean Myers Honor Book and Coretta Scott King–John Steptoe New Talent Award winner, she received her bachelor of arts in film from Howard University, earned her master of arts in media studies from the New School, and has over a decade of TV and film experience. The Brooklyn native still resides in the borough she loves. You can visit her at www.writeinbk.com.

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Reviews for Allegedly

Rating: 4.182186465587045 out of 5 stars
4/5

247 ratings31 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Wow! A sophisticated twist-y murder story, with Mary B. Addison, now 16, convicted baby killer when only 9 yrs old, narrating her own journey to freedom... interspersed with court documents, observations from the clinical pyschologist(s) assigned to Mary's case, & original transcript excerpts when the Alyssa Richardson, 3 mo old baby died. In spite of the complexities of the original case, the group home dynamics with its crew of teen girls who are alternately young & ignorant, and then menacing & cruel, the two slovenly caregivers, the casually negligent social worker, and the weirdness that is "Momma", Mary's mother who continues to visit her every other week- it moves at a rapid pace. Mary dreams of completing high school, passing the SATs, encouraged & supported by Ted, her 18 yr old boyfriend, a "juvie" himself, working w/her in a nursing home. Things get complicated when Mary discovers she is pregnant, and she/Ted decide to accelerate their plans to get out from under the state, ditch their ankle bracelets, and start over again together somewhere new. Then the "new girl" to the group home introduces Mary to a lawyer with the Absolution Project & Mary has the chance to exonerate herself once and for all. Fascinating, with tantalizing details of the night of Alyssa's death slowly revealed through questioning by the authorities, the lawyers, tense conversations between Mary and "Momma", and Mary's rememberings... couldn't put it down til the end, and then -ooh boy the end.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was different than I anticipated. I've come to realize I have a bad habit of just reading a few lines of a synopsis and reading purely off of that. All I knew about this book prior to going in was that Mary had allegedly murdered a baby when she was younger. I also assumed it was a mystery. I guess you can say there were mysterious elements but I would not classify this as a mystery so I don't know what I was thinking. I completely missed the part of the synopsis where she got pregnant with her own baby until I had the physical book in my hands. All of that being said, I really enjoyed this. This books deals with some very serious topics and they were communicated quite well. Well enough that you completely understood what was happening or being talked about, but it didn't completely pull you into the darkness of those situations. I'm not sure if I like or dislike that. It's just a facet of the book for me. I enjoyed Mary as a character and I was invested in both of her main pursuits throughout the novel. The atmosphere and the cast of the group home was very interesting to read about. It was emotional and frightening. Each time any of the guardians from the group home was focused on, I could feel my stomach turn at nearly everything they were saying. I had a similar experience with Mary's mother but not as deeply. I think the relationship between Mary and her mother was written beautifully and contained the depth that actual real life relationships do. In the very beginning, I didn't mind Ted as a character and found him rather nice but after something very serious was revealed and never brought up again, I ceased all positive emotion towards him and was very uncomfortable when he was present in the story. We had a few more characters who all played central parts in the story and I enjoyed each of them. Regardless of my opinions on everyone, each character was complex. The ending was a TRIP. I didn't expect that whatsoever. I enjoyed it but the more I think about it, I'm not really sure what it does to the end of entire theme of the story. It seems to contradict some very important themes that were woven throughout the entire book and it's bizarre. I've decided to not think too much about it because hey, I liked it. I don't feel like analyzing it beyond that. I really enjoyed Allegedly. This was my second read from Tiffany D. Jackson and I'm looking forward to picking up what she writes in the future.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Well, this book certainly messed with my head and it was difficult deciding who was lying and who was telling the truth. The characters were all unlikeable except for Ms Cora, Mary's lawyer, and Ms Claire, her SATs tutor. As for Mary herself, despite being a complex character, I found her annoying and was often frustrated with her.The book did not portray the criminal justice system, nor social works, in a positive light. They were shown as being racist, lethargic and unprofessional. One thing that really confused me was the likelihood of a nine-year-old child being incarcerated for the murder of a baby when that baby was left in an adult's care. Surely the police should have done more than just base their decisions on the mother's testimony! Despite her hospitalisation for mental issues and the constant acts of neglect and abuse towards Mary, not once was she made accountable to anyone. I would have thought that the school or social services would have been involved long before the death of baby Alyssa ever took place.Then there was the end . . . really??!!!! What a cop-out! I had a feeling "Allegedly" was going to end this way, but I still felt cheated. I can understand why this book is getting good reviews, but it didn't enthrall me the way it has other readers.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    2017 is the year of amazing books! I don't think I've read one published this year that I didn't enjoy. (I'll have to check my notes) But... This book is top 3 best YA books of the year for me.

    The narrator has such a horrible life that I hope no one can relate to and yet I know there are people out there that will. Just the fact that she's pregnant while living in a group home that she is worried about aging out of in a few years, while working a crappy hospital job and attempting to go to school, makes her existence miserable enough. Then add the fact that she's been in jail most of her life for the murder of an infant and you have the driving action of this book.

    I won't give away the details, but if any of the above appeals to you then you should read this book.
    Oh and there are some unexpected twists and turns along the way... while also being a well written and compelling story. So read it. *thumbs up*
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Booktalk draft: "When Mary Addison was 9 years old, she killed a white baby girl. The outcry in the media and society condemned Mary to a reputation as a psychopathic baby killer. Now Mary is 16. She's spent time in 'baby jail' and lives in a group home with other girls who are criminal offenders. They bully and harass her constantly. On top of all that, Mary is pregnant by her boyfriend. With Mary's reputation, no one is going to let her keep her baby. But Mary knows she didn't kill that white baby. She loved that baby like a sister. And she's going to find a way to keep her own baby, whatever it takes." There is a constant foreboding throughout this book that will keep readers hanging on the edges of their seats. Add to that Mary as unreliable narrator and it becomes a twisted, slack-jawed reading experience.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Well, that was not the ending I expected.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Sigh... this book. There was so much potential for this to be a really great book and for the most part the first third of the story was really great. The author's writing as far as dialogue, sentence structure and style goes, was well done throughout the novel. The plot is where the author runs into trouble. One of my personal reading pet peeves is an author who writes realistic fiction but doesn't bother to make the details of their plot realistically credible. Honestly I'm not even the harsh with my peeve I can over look an unlikely occurrence here or there but this story is starts out requiring the reader to overlook one or two real life implausibilities then increasingly escalates the plot into a as a statistically impossible clusterfuck of events. The author could have so easily fixed some of this story's inaccuracies or kept out certain details that did more to create plot holes than help carry the story. Then there's the ending... it was just ridiculous and inconsistent and just f-ng ridiculous.

    *** 'Spoiler' is subjective. Read at your own risk. ***

    Plot Flaws That Annoyed the Hell Out of Me.
    1. Fact: In the state of NY it is entirely legal for an 18 yr old to sleep with a 15yr old. Nothing about that circumstance qualifies as statutory rape.

    2. the likelihood of a 9 yr old being incarcerated rather than sent to a long-term psychiatric facility is almost non-existent.

    3. With her age and the significant amount media attention her case gained nationwide there is absolutely no way the main character (Mary) would have been left unaware of her right to an appeal. Her lawyer would likely be disbarred and if he was a public defender she could bring a suit against the city

    4. & in the unlikely event a 9 yr old was actually incarcerated there is no way she would be made to spend years in solitary confinement for no better reason than because the detention center "didn't know what else to do with her. The psychological consequences from long time solitary confinement is well documented and is considered a severe form of punishment. To use it on a young child not as a punishment but a permanent accommodation would be grounds for a suit against the city.

    5. THE MOTHER. throughout the entire length of this book the mother never stops committing serious acts of neglect and abuse and yet never once is held accountable by anyone. I mean come on now. The mother's behavior clearly infers that she has bipolar disorder which severe enough to eventually lead to hospitalization. No child services. School calls child services. nothing happens. Baby #1 dies while left home alone with a SIX YEAR OLD!!! No problemo. Obviously just a case SIDS. Still zero suspicion. No police involvement. Mom's boyfriend drops dead on the street.Then baby number 2 dies!! Still no one thinks that the neglectful mother with a severe mood disorder could possibly be responsible. Nope, first logical assumption... the 9 yr old did it. The child who was allowed to handle handle Ritalin and Clonidine (blood pressure med also used for pediatric adhd.) Still no one holding the adult member of this family accountable Moms allowed police questioning without a lawyer present which is not suspicious at all or a conflict of interest. Then the last mind-blowing kicker the mom casually mentions to the police one day that her 16 yr old child is not actually her biological daughter. Someone just gave a baby to her and she refuses to say who. STILL NO ARREST!!! Hell the police don't even bother with dna test until weeks later.

    5. Next there's her attorney from the exoneration project a woman who is just so taken in by Mary's case and has always been so convinced that proper procedure was not taken which is why she never bother making any contact with Mary to offer assistance. okay.....???? also casually ignores all the above reasons for suing the govt. She also flip flops all over the place one day claiming she's going to go back to jail for her brothers death and days later saying that wouldn't ever happen. WHAT?!?!

    6. Then there's... THE END. WTF IS THIS ENDING?!??! I completely understand the idea of an unreliable narrator and i also understand the concept of a plot twist. That is not what went down here. What we have here is a reader investing time getting through 95% of the books only to have the main character to do a complete 180 based on the 2 minute rant from an under educated teenage criminal who also lives in the same group home. Then there's the final chapter in which Mary's spends a car ride describing what really happened that night only nothing she says is consistent and suddenly her internal dialogue is all bat shit crazy. Nope, never would have guessed that ending not due to skillful writing trickery but because she didn't have crazy talk going on in her head at all till it became convenient for the final climax.

    Any of the above flaws on their own might have been allowed for a believably realistic story but all of that in one story just results in a ridiculous mess that was too annoying to be enjoyable.

    Moral of this story: most everyone everywhere is super horrible, sadistic, and/or psychotic. yay, life is beautiful!!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very dark and disturbing inside view of what life can be like in group homes. When Mary was eight an infant her mother was caring for died. Mary is blamed and is sent away. The story begins eight years later when Mary is still on probation but living in a group home. She becomes pregnant and realises her conviction means she will not be allowed to keep her baby. For the most part I was rooting for Mary to prove her innocence as well as cheering on her attempts to further her education. It seemed like this story was headed for a happy ending but the last chapter gives us a twist that had my head spinning.
    Life in the group home is challenging and the action gets a bit rough which was ok for me but could be a trigger for sensitive readers.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It took me a second to get into this book but once I did, I was all in. Mary has been in "baby jail" since she "allegedly" killed a six month old baby while babysitting when she nine. While she never admitted she did, she also never denied she did it either. She just didn't talk. For seven years she just passed the time but when she finds herself pregnant she is finally ready to talk about what happened. It's gripping and full of twists and turns and has an insane twist at the end. If teens can get through the first few chapters they will find themselves addicted. A fun and unique read!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Wow! What a story! Definitely a page-turner, I couldn't leave this book alone from the second I started reading it. The voice Jackson uses for the narration of her main character, Mary, will just suck you right in. So will Mary's situation and the rest of the cast of characters, and their situations and how they affect Mary and the story itself. Nobody is uninteresting, even the characters that don't get a lot of page-time.This book will definitely make you think about so many different things. And I definitely didn't see that ending coming, that's all I'll say about that because I don't want a spoil a thing. Just be ready for a fast, epic train ride.And trust me, you won't want to get off that train when it finally does come to a stop. Don't get me wrong, it isn't one of those books that feels unfinished when it's done. At least, I didn't get that feeling. But, the ride was so interesting and had you on the edge of your seat for pretty much the entirety of the story (despite the book being 387 pages long, there doesn't really feel like there was any true filler in it, everything that happened drove the story, the plot. No character was unimportant. Even the ones that got literally no page-time were important to the ones that did and informed those characters and rounded them out further) that I wouldn't blame anyone for flipping right back to page one and starting to reread it immediately after reading the last word.And now the characters. I think this novel has some of the most fleshed out characters I've read, especially in a YA book, in awhile. Everyone's got a voice, a personality, a story. And they all sound like real people instead of the generic novel-voices that we often get (and that's not just in YA books, but in adult novels too).I also think that people who don't usually like YA books would still enjoy this novel. It doesn't mince its words about anything and the situations the characters in, and even the characters themselves, are not sugar coated. This is almost like reading someone's nonfiction memoir.I absolutely recommend this to...pretty much anyone. Whoever you are, put your other books on the backburner, find this book and read it!!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Sigh... this book. There was so much potential for this to be a really great book and for the most part the first third of the story was really great. The author's writing as far as dialogue, sentence structure and style goes, was well done throughout the novel. The plot is where the author runs into trouble. One of my personal reading pet peeves is an author who writes realistic fiction but doesn't bother to make the details of their plot realistically credible. Honestly I'm not even the harsh with my peeve I can over look an unlikely occurrence here or there but this story is starts out requiring the reader to overlook one or two real life implausibilities then increasingly escalates the plot into a as a statistically impossible clusterfuck of events. The author could have so easily fixed some of this story's inaccuracies or kept out certain details that did more to create plot holes than help carry the story. Then there's the ending... it was just ridiculous and inconsistent and just f-ng ridiculous.

    *** 'Spoiler' is subjective. Read at your own risk. ***

    Plot Flaws That Annoyed the Hell Out of Me.
    1. Fact: In the state of NY it is entirely legal for an 18 yr old to sleep with a 15yr old. Nothing about that circumstance qualifies as statutory rape.

    2. the likelihood of a 9 yr old being incarcerated rather than sent to a long-term psychiatric facility is almost non-existent.

    3. With her age and the significant amount media attention her case gained nationwide there is absolutely no way the main character (Mary) would have been left unaware of her right to an appeal. Her lawyer would likely be disbarred and if he was a public defender she could bring a suit against the city

    4. & in the unlikely event a 9 yr old was actually incarcerated there is no way she would be made to spend years in solitary confinement for no better reason than because the detention center "didn't know what else to do with her. The psychological consequences from long time solitary confinement is well documented and is considered a severe form of punishment. To use it on a young child not as a punishment but a permanent accommodation would be grounds for a suit against the city.

    5. THE MOTHER. throughout the entire length of this book the mother never stops committing serious acts of neglect and abuse and yet never once is held accountable by anyone. I mean come on now. The mother's behavior clearly infers that she has bipolar disorder which severe enough to eventually lead to hospitalization. No child services. School calls child services. nothing happens. Baby #1 dies while left home alone with a SIX YEAR OLD!!! No problemo. Obviously just a case SIDS. Still zero suspicion. No police involvement. Mom's boyfriend drops dead on the street.Then baby number 2 dies!! Still no one thinks that the neglectful mother with a severe mood disorder could possibly be responsible. Nope, first logical assumption... the 9 yr old did it. The child who was allowed to handle handle Ritalin and Clonidine (blood pressure med also used for pediatric adhd.) Still no one holding the adult member of this family accountable Moms allowed police questioning without a lawyer present which is not suspicious at all or a conflict of interest. Then the last mind-blowing kicker the mom casually mentions to the police one day that her 16 yr old child is not actually her biological daughter. Someone just gave a baby to her and she refuses to say who. STILL NO ARREST!!! Hell the police don't even bother with dna test until weeks later.

    5. Next there's her attorney from the exoneration project a woman who is just so taken in by Mary's case and has always been so convinced that proper procedure was not taken which is why she never bother making any contact with Mary to offer assistance. okay.....???? also casually ignores all the above reasons for suing the govt. She also flip flops all over the place one day claiming she's going to go back to jail for her brothers death and days later saying that wouldn't ever happen. WHAT?!?!

    6. Then there's... THE END. WTF IS THIS ENDING?!??! I completely understand the idea of an unreliable narrator and i also understand the concept of a plot twist. That is not what went down here. What we have here is a reader investing time getting through 95% of the books only to have the main character to do a complete 180 based on the 2 minute rant from an under educated teenage criminal who also lives in the same group home. Then there's the final chapter in which Mary's spends a car ride describing what really happened that night only nothing she says is consistent and suddenly her internal dialogue is all bat shit crazy. Nope, never would have guessed that ending not due to skillful writing trickery but because she didn't have crazy talk going on in her head at all till it became convenient for the final climax.

    Any of the above flaws on their own might have been allowed for a believably realistic story but all of that in one story just results in a ridiculous mess that was too annoying to be enjoyable.

    Moral of this story: most everyone everywhere is super horrible, sadistic, and/or psychotic. yay, life is beautiful!!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    When she was 9 years old, Mary killed a baby...allegedly. She didn't say much in her interview with police and never confessed to the crime. She spent 6 years in "baby jail" before moving in to a group home. Now, she is 16, pregnant and fears for her safety. When Mary realizes her baby will likely be taken away after it's born, she is torn in half by the thought of losing another baby she loves. She starts to open up about what really happened the night baby Alyssa was killed while in the care of her mother. She opens up about what her mother was really like. She begs for another chance to tell her story.Allegedly speaks to the power of the love a mother has for her child...and also the danger when parenting respsonsibilities are thrust on a child. It is an honest and powerful commentary on the justice system. An extremely impressive debut novel by Tiffany Jackson, Allegedly will haunt you long after you finish reading!I recommend this book for grades 9-12. Fans of books about tough topics will eat it up. It's got elements of a murder mystery, a legal drama, and urban fiction. So good!!! -EC
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I read this book in less than two days, so tangled up in the story that I had to find out what happens to Mary, the girl in the group home serving time for a murder of a baby - allegedly. When I reached the end, it was a huge WOW moment for me. And I'm still thinking that, WOW. This is a book that I'll be thinking about for a long time to come. Tiffany has a long career ahead of her and I can't wait to read her next book!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    amazing book, great pacing, hooked the whole time, tiffinay creates a world compelling and to realistic it hurts
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Oh my.
    Unreliable narrator.
    Dead baby killed by another child...allegedly.
    Difficult to read at times.
    Horrible treatment of accused child.
    I had to finish this one to see if there was hope.
    Once I book talk this one--I'll not see it until the end of the school year.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This made me think of Orange is the New Black, it has really great snippets of people's stories, and also small reveals of Mary's story as the book goes on. Initially I had a little trouble getting into the feel of the book, so I put it down about 1/3 into the story, but when I came back it only took a couple sittings to finish the rest!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Plenty of speed to the plot while having a slow burn subplot. The audiobook was pretty fantastic.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    OMG THIS WAS JUST -- UUUUUUUUUGH So many twists and turns and heart ache and rage I just can't.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book just blew my mind and heart to smithereens. This is such a powerful book on every single level and the author doesn't shy away from the dark realities of the justice system and mental health care. ALLEGEDLY holds its own with every adult thriller and like any thriller worth its salt makes you re-think the narrative you think you know every few chapters. Jackson's writing and Mary's voice are remarkable and pulled me to pieces.

    And then THAT ENDING. This is going to make a wonderful discussion book. I'm still unpacking my feelings. Holy cow.

    Is this seriously a debut????
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Tragic and sad. So awful what mental illness, neglect, poverty, abuse and grief can do to people. Our entire criminal system sucks. Our social system sucks. The way we "take care" of  kids, the elderly, and the mentally ill sucks. This book brings all that to life in the story of a 16-yo black girl who has been locked up since she was 9 for killing a 3-month old white baby. 
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Each page kept you wanting more and more. I love how it kept you interested and also how it wasn't predictable like most books. It definitely kept you on the edge of your seat wondering what's gonna happen next. I loved the plot, the characters, everything. Truly a great read
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really enjoyed reading your book. I read enthusiastically and understood the story. ... If you have some great stories like this one, you can publish it on Novel Star, just submit your story to hardy@novelstar.top or joye@novelstar.top
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was recommended as one that will stick with you and it certainly will. Reading this book puts you into the place of so many troubled kids who, because of their struggles, are abused and mistreated and then fall into the system. From there, the journey into a normal life seems almost impossible and often times becomes almost impossible as things continue to pile on and pile on while also not being treated for the initial problem that got them into the situation. This is one of those stories, and it becomes increasingly unclear if the accused is actually guilty, yet increasingly clear that her situation isn't going to be improving greatly in the long run. A very well written story that captures the sadness of a tale that is far too often a reality in this world.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I Loved it so much, that I couldn’t stop reading
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I was reading this for my book club at school. I didn’t expect much at first, long chapters about a girl who supposedly killed a baby. But I read basically the entire book in a day! I couldn’t put it down! It’s a great novel to read for a good life lesson or just for fun like I did!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    It's alright, most of the book is gripping only to find the end...is no surprise. It leaves you feeling the build-up was all for nothing.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Wonderfully wild ride. I could not put the book down.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Back in January I was in Miami, Florida for a wedding celebration. This also happened to be the same weekend that some crazy and awful shit was going down in this country constitution wise (though this could really mean anything at this point, so I’m specifically referring to the travel ban). During one of the days my husband and I were cooling our heels after family time, I was getting ramped up in an anxiety spiral, so he suggested that we try and find a book store so that I could calm my nerves a bit. We found one in walking distance from our hotel, and I went on a spree. One of the books I picked up was “Allegedly”, as I’d heard some buzz on it and was solidly intrigued by the concept. As bleak and dark as it may be. So I took it on the plane with me and tore threw a lot of it in one sitting.I liked how unflinchingly honest and real this book was about a great deal of things. Jackson pulls no punches when describing how our criminal justice system treats those who are inside of it, and how it is especially biased against POC offenders. Mary was accused of and convicted of killing a baby, which is, yes, absolutely horrible. But it is made pretty clear from the get go that the attention and rage that is directed at her is based on a deep seated racism in our society. Mary is black, and baby Alyssa was white. Reading about crowds mobbing a NINE YEAR OLD outside a courthouse, demanding the death penalty was gut wrenching, and I was glad that it was put forth multiple times that had the races been reversed between perpetrator and victim, the media wouldn’t have caused such a storm around it. And there on Mary, a child herself, was from then on treated like an adult, an thrown into a legal system that especially punishes people who look like her. I had no doubt that Jackson is taking influence from real life instances, from a nine year old girl being held in solitary to the absolutely abysmal conditions at the group home Mary ends up at.Not only did I feel that the portrayal of the criminal justice system was accurate, I really liked how Jackson tried to be accurate and fair to portrayals of mental illness in this book. Mary is pretty clearly suffering from some form of PTSD, as her time in prison/solitary confinement as a child has done irreparable damage to her psyche. Instead of going the route of stereotypical symptoms like flashbacks or uncontrollable rage, Mary is skittish, quick to anxiety attacks, and has a heightened sense of flight instead of fight. It’s a side of PTSD that not many people may know about, and I really appreciated that Jackson took such care in her portrayal of it. So, too, is Mary’s Momma portrayed in a pretty realistic way, as a narcissist who may be suffering from bi-polar disorder. We only get to see Momma through Mary’s eyes, but the hints and clues are there that there is definitely something off about her.Mary herself is a wonderfully created and portrayed narrator (side note: I gotta shout out to the sly aside that one of Mary’s nicknames was Mary Bell… who was also a notorious child aged murderer in England). This book is in the first person, and since Mary has so clearly been stunted from her time in prison there are lots of bits of information that we don’t quite get. The mystery slowly starts to unfold, but you always kind of know that there are things that you are never really going to know about Mary, or her Momma, or the things that happened between them before, after, and even on the night that Alyssa died. You only get to see the various clues to this and the things going on with Ted and at the group home through this lens of a very unreliable narrator. While a lot of the time I think that sometimes this makes some things kind of obvious when it comes to twists, that by hiding certain things you make it obvious that these things are there, Jackson actually surprised me when it really counted. True, I was able to figure out a couple of things, but I feel like it was all one big magic trick that distracted me from the actual solution, so when the actual answers came I was totally knocked off my seat. To the point where I actually said “WAIT….. WHAT?!”“Allegedly” is a fabulous book that I cannot recommend enough, both for the societal themes and for the well crafted mystery. Fans of YA should definitely read it, but I think that this is a GREAT example of how YA shouldn’t be dismissed. Go and get your hands on it ASAP.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I don’t even know where to start with Allegedly by Tiffany D. Jackson. This may well be my best read of 2022. It is a haunting and disturbing story about the after effects of a murder case. The media hype was intense as nine year old Mary B. Addison was convicted of killing a 3 month old baby called Alissa. The fact that Mary is black and the baby was white had a lot to do with why Mary was sent to prison.The book actually opens when Mary is 15 and is now living in a group home with a bunch of other young female offenders. Mary is picked on, ridiculed and beaten. She does work at a senior care centre and there she meets Ted. He gives her the attention and love that she has been craving and all too soon she is pregnant. Mary is overjoyed to be having a baby, until she is informed that social services will be taking the baby away from her. She realizes that she has to finally speak her truth about what really happened to baby Alissa even if in doing so she puts her Mother in the firing line.I listened to an audio version of the story and narrator Bahni Turpin did an excellent job. Her skilful reading raises this book to another level. The story draws you in and stirs your emotions to the boiling point. Through Mary’s thoughts you learn about her childhood, or lack of one, and her challenging relationship with her mother, and always, skirting around in the background, are details of Mary’s alleged crime. Mary is very intelligent and she comes up with a plan for her and Ted to be together, to get herself to college, and to be able to keep her baby. The adults that have been assigned to look after Mary are negligent at best and the juvenile justice system appears to be one of hopeless desperation and failure. This chilling and dark story so draws one in that I found myself having to remind myself that it is a fictional story. I highly recommend this twisted and powerful novel.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The story of a now sixteen year old girl who was convicted of killing a baby at the age of nine. Did she do it or did she not? Is she a victim of a rigged system? Was her mother trying her best or literally the devil? This book because one of those can’t-put-down must-keep-reading books. I hated characters so much that I wanted to climb through the pages and throttle them. All the characters were so well threshed out. Also, the ending did not disappoint!

Book preview

Allegedly - Tiffany D. Jackson

9780062422668_Cover.jpg

dedication

For my Mother and my Grandmother

who never let me feel an ounce of pain.

contents

Dedication

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Acknowledgments

Back Ad

About the Author

Credits

Copyright

About the Publisher

chapter one

Excerpt from Babies Killing Babies:

Profiles of Preteen and Teen Murderers

by Jane E. Woods (pg. 10)

Some children are just born bad, plain and simple. These are the children that don’t live up to the statistics. One cannot blame their surroundings or upbringings for their behavior. It’s not a scientifically proven inheritable trait. These children are sociological phenomena.

This type of child is perfectly depicted in the classic 1950s film The Bad Seed, based on the novel by William March. It is the story of an eight-year-old girl, sweet and seemingly innocent, the prize of her picture-perfect family, who her mother suspects is a murderer. The adorable Rhoda, a blue-eyed, blond-haired princess, skips around the film in pigtails and baby doll dresses, killing anyone who won’t let her have her way.

The film was horrific for its time, a villain played by a young girl, appearing as innocent as any other. People couldn’t conceive of a child being capable of murder. Even in present day, the act is unfathomable.

This is how Mary B. Addison became a household name. Mary is Rhoda’s story, personified, begging the question: was there something that made her snap, or was the evil dormant all along?

A fly got in the house on Monday. It’s Sunday and he’s still around, bouncing from room to room like he’s the family pet. I never had a pet before. They don’t let convicted murderers have pets in the group home.

I named him Herbert. He’s a baby fly, not one of those noisy horseflies, so no one notices him until he zooms in front of your face and lands near your orange juice. I’m surprised in a houseful of delinquents, no one has killed him yet. I guess he has survival skills, like me. Keeps a low profile, never begging for unnecessary attention. Just like me, he wants to live a quiet life, nibble on some scraps, and be left alone. But just like me, someone is always coming up behind him, shooing him away with the back of a hand. I feel for Herbert. Being a chronic unwanted guest can really suck.

At night, Herbert sleeps on top of the crooked molding that frames my closet, home to the few items of clothing I own. Three pairs of jeans, one pair of black pants, five summer shirts, five winter shirts, one sweater, and a hoodie. No jewelry. Just one of those ankle bracelets given by the state so they can follow me around like the sun.

Mary! Mary! What in the hell are you doing? Get down here now!

That’s Ms. Stein, my . . . well, I don’t know what you’d call her, and hopefully you’ll never need to. I climb off the top bunk and Herbert wakes, following me into the bathroom. I’m the youngest, so of course I get the top bunk. That’s the rules of the game. In one month I’ll be sixteen. I wonder if they’ll do anything to celebrate. That’s what you’re supposed to do, right? Celebrate birthdays, especially milestones like sixteen. I was still in baby jail on my last milestone, my thirteenth birthday. They didn’t throw me a party then either. My birthday gift, a black eye and a bruised rib from Shantell in the cafeteria, just for breathing in her direction. That chick was mad crazy, but I’m the one with words like rage tendencies all over my file.

Anyways, I’ve been in this home of seven girls for the past three months and not one birthday has ever been mentioned. Guess birthdays don’t mean nothing in a group home. I mean, it kind of makes sense. Hard to celebrate the day you were born when everybody seems to wish you were never born at all. Especially after you come into this world and fuck it all up.

I can name several people who wish I was never born.

Some chocolate cake and ice cream, maybe even some balloons would be cool. But that’s what the stupid girl I used to be wishes for. I keep reminding myself she’s dead. Just like Alyssa.

Mary! Mary! Where the hell are you?

The showerhead is a slow drizzling rain cloud. I hate showers. In baby jail, I only got to take one five-minute shower every other day, the water like a fire hose, whipping my skin like towel snaps. I never took showers before, always baths, playing in bubbles made from lemon dish soap in white porcelain tubs.

Mary! Goddammit!

I swear that woman can drown out water. Herbert buzzes around my wet hair, drawn to the gel that helps slick my brown ’fro back into a curly ponytail. Wish I was a fly. Like be a real fly on the wall, staring with kaleidoscope eyes at particles floating in the air, trash blowing in the wind, singling out snowflakes and raindrops. I do that now anyways. I can spend hours entertained by my own fascination of nothingness. It’s a trick I learned in the crazy house, to look like I was stone-cold dead to the world so they would stop asking me so many damn questions.

But I can’t be a fly, not today. I have to prepare. Be on high alert and focused. Because in a few hours, the most dangerous, most diabolical, most conniving woman in the world is visiting me:

My mother.

Transcript from the December 12th Interview with Mary B. Addison, Age 9

Detective: Hi, Mary. My name is Jose. I’m a detective.

Mary: Hi.

Detective: Now, don’t be afraid. Your mom said it was okay for us to talk to you. Can I get you anything? You hungry? Would you like something to eat? What about a cheeseburger?

Mary: Uhhh . . . cheeseburger.

Detective: Okay! Great, I love cheeseburgers too. Now, don’t be scared. Just want to ask you a couple of questions about what happened last night. You’ll be really helping us out.

Mary: Okay.

Detective: Great! So now, Mary, how old are you?

Mary: Nine.

Detective: Nine! Wow, such a big girl. Do you know how old Alyssa was?

Mary: Momma said she was three months old.

Detective: That’s right. She was a very tiny baby. What did you do when you helped your mommy take care of her?

Mary: Umm . . . I fed her and burped her . . . and stuff.

Detective: Okay, so now, Mary, can you tell me what happened last night?

Mary: I don’t know.

Detective: Your mommy said you were alone in the room with Alyssa. That she was sleeping in the room with you.

Mary: Ummm . . . I don’t know.

Detective: You sure? Your mommy said she was crying.

Mary: She wouldn’t stop crying . . . I couldn’t sleep.

Detective: Did you try to make her stop crying?

Mary: I don’t remember.

I’m on kitchen duty today. That means I have to scrub and wash until Ms. Stein can see her fat white face in every pot and pan. Ms. Stein doesn’t know how to clean but she sure knows how to criticize.

Mary, does this look clean to your dumb ass? Clean it again!

It took the state six long years to realize I wasn’t a threat to society before they ripped me out of baby jail and put me with Ms. Stein. From one prison to another, that’s all it was. Understand, there’s a big difference between baby jail and juvie, where the rest of the girls in the house come from. Juvie is for badass kids who do stuff like rob bodegas, steal cars, maybe stupidly try to kill someone. Baby jail is for kids who’ve done way worse, like me.

Anyways, some social worker dropped me off and said, This is Ms. Stein, and left right before I met the real Ms. Stein. Most of my life, no one has bothered to explain anything to me. It’s been one ’cause I said so scenario after another. I stopped asking questions and in six years I have not run into one adult who would do me the common courtesy of explaining why something is happening to me. I guess killers don’t deserve respect, so I’ve stopped expecting it.

Ms. Stein limps into the kitchen, her bowlegs fat and swollen. You’d think someone would change their diet after they reach over two hundred pounds. But not Ms. Stein. She still eats an entire box of Entenmann’s crumb topped donuts a day.

Mary! You move as slow as molasses. Why does it take you so long to wash some damn dishes?

I don’t know why God sent me to Ms. Stein. I don’t know why God does a lot of things. But Momma always told me not to ask questions and to keep praying. Even for fat, mean white ladies like Ms. Stein.

I still see grease on that counter! If I can see it, why can’t you?

That is the only advice Momma ever really gave me. Keep praying. God will work everything out. It never occurred to her that maybe she should try to work some things out for herself. Sometimes I wanted to shout, God’s a little busy, Momma! He can’t find your keys for you all the time! She was always lazy like that, expecting everyone else to do everything for her.

God and I share the same problem.

Tara, one of my roommates, drops more breakfast dishes in the sink. She’s big, and black as tar, so I call her Tar-ra. But only in my head, because I don’t talk to anyone. Talk gets you into trouble and these girls are looking for trigger words to be set off. As far as everyone is concerned, I’m a mute.

Clean it up, psycho, she grunts and bumps into me with the hardest part of her hunchback shoulder. Tara tried to kill her boyfriend. Stabbed him ten times with a pen Scotch taped to a ruler. When asked why she didn’t just use a knife, she said, Knives are too dangerous. Seventeen but has the mental capacity of a five-year-old. She, no lie, still colors in coloring books and counts on her fingers, using her knuckles when the number goes above ten.

Kisha comes stomping, slippers scratching against the floor, with her nail file in one hand and curlers still all up in her hair.

Oh my God, this place is so wack! I’m mad bored! Ain’t nothin’ out here! You know that’s why they got us here, right? To keep us all trapped and shit.

She isn’t really talking to me. She’s just talking out loud with an audience. Kisha is from some projects in East New York. I’ve never been there. I’ve never been to a lot of places in Brooklyn. Momma said everywhere else outside our home was too dangerous. Kinda funny how our home wound up being just that.

Dumb bitches won’t catch me slipping, Kisha mumbles, checking her eyebrows in the microwave. This is a girl who threw a desk at her math teacher, paralyzing her from the waist down, just because she didn’t answer a question right. Most of the crimes the other girls in the house committed are like that. Crimes of passion, snapped moments, and good ole-fashioned wrong place–wrong time situations. My crime was more psychotic. I was the nine-year-old who killed a baby.

Allegedly. That’s the word they always used.

Everyone in the house knows what I did. Or thinks they know what I did. No one asks though, because no one really wants to hear how I killed a baby. They don’t even want to know why I killed a baby. They just want to pretend they know for knowing’s sake.

Excerpt from People magazine article "Girl, 9, Charged with Manslaughter in Baby’s Death.’’

An unnamed nine-year-old girl faces manslaughter charges in the death of little Alyssa Richardson. The case is generating controversy and tough questions about blame. Who should decide the outcome—the criminal courts or mental health experts—and can such a young defendant be judged competent to stand trial?

The girl, who is the daughter of the babysitter charged with Alyssa’s care, is currently in state custody, due in court at the end of March. If found guilty as a juvenile, she could face the maximum eleven-year sentence, locked in a state penitentiary until she is twenty-one years of age. A second option would be to keep the child in a juvenile facility until she is twenty-one, at which point a judge could consider sentencing her to an adult prison for the maximum term.

The group home is always muggy, like we live in an old shoe, smelling like corn chips mixed with roach spray. I never call the group home home. It’s not a home. No house where you fear for your life can be considered a home. It’s in Flatlands, by absolutely nothing. From the outside, it looks like a two-story brick-face house. There are four bedrooms, two bathrooms, a living room/dining room, kitchen, office, and a half-finished basement. The sitting room looks like a doctor’s waiting area. It’s for visitors like family, social workers, or parole officers.

Mary! Quit your goddamn daydreaming and mop them floors! Here, make ’em shine.

The mop. A stringy black wig attached to a faded yellow pole. She pours a mixture of bleach and Pine-Sol on the warped floor, the burning stench inching down my throat like a knife forcing me to gag, eyes leaking.

What’s wrong with you! You pregnant or something? You better not be pregnant!

The yellow linoleum becomes blacker, years of dirt bleeding back into the floor. I wonder how many girls used this same mop before me. Stupid, because no matter how much she makes us clean, it doesn’t stop the army of mice and the swarm of roaches from visiting us in our rooms at night. Dust covering our lungs like plastic, sitting in cat-piss-soaked furniture, with dark panel walls leaving the house in a constant shadow. Let’s just say I’ve lived in better conditions. Then again, I’ve also lived in worse.

The doorbell buzzes. It’s not a friendly buzz, more like an angry dryer finishing its load.

Reba! Get the door! Ms. Stein hollers next to my ear.

Ms. Reba is security, Ms. Stein’s second in command, also known as her sister. She’s the taller, thinner version of Ms. Stein, with greasy gray hair and giant breasts, wrapped flat so she can pretend she doesn’t have them.

Alright. Alright, she hollers from her post on the living room sofa. She wears black wrist guards and one of those weight belts that sits right below her bulging gut, yet I’ve never seen her work out or lift anything but food to her mouth.

The front door has seven bolt locks, one key lock, and a bar that takes her at least five minutes to open. It’s for safety, they say. But it’s really to make sure we don’t run away in the middle of the night. Not that I’ve ever thought of it.

You can hear her whimpering before the door even opens. It’s the new girl.

I shuffle by the kitchen doorway to get the first look at her. Mousy-looking white girl with dark pink lips and long, tangled brown hair, clutching a familiar state-issued bag of new clothes. Winters, my parole officer, escorts her in.

Morning, Judy. Reba. Meet your new guest, Sarah Young.

He passes her file off, then pats her on the back as if to say good luck. New Girl is crying. Real sobbing, snot-nosed tears. I’m jealous; I haven’t cried in six years. The tears are frozen inside with the rest of my emotions. She probably doesn’t think she did anything wrong. I was that girl too once.

Thanks, boss! We getting any more? Ms. Reba asks, pressed for more minions to rule over. Ms. Stein signs his clipboard like he’s a UPS driver delivering a package.

Not sure, can’t say.

Well, come on, child. Let me show you your room, Ms. Stein says before hobbling down the hall, the mousy girl following behind her.

Thanks, boss. We won’t let you down, Ms. Reba says.

He nods and adjusts his belt. From what I heard, he used to be in the army until he got shot in the leg or something, so he always walks with a limp.

Any problems?

Not on my watch. No sir. She tucks her thumbs into her pockets and stands like Superman, smiling with teeth the color of corn, sharp enough to eat through rock.

Winters smirks then glances down the hall in my direction and nods.

Addison.

I nod back.

Winters had zero patience for me from the moment we met. You’re gonna give me problems, Addison, I can tell, he’d said. I’d wanted to ask why, but he’d looked like he wasn’t in the business of explaining himself to anybody, especially not to teenage girls.

Staying out of trouble? he asks.

I nod.

Any problems? His eyes dart to Ms. Reba then back at me. Ms. Reba turns, giving me a sharp look, a warning. One wrong answer could land me on bathroom duty for months. I shrug.

Humph. Alright then, I’ll leave y’all to it. Social services here tomorrow, yeah?

Yup, yup! I’ll walk you out, boss!

I go back in the kitchen, finish mopping, and head to my room. My bedsheets are piled on the floor in the hallway, sneaker footprints like tire tracks. The usual. I dust them off, remake my bed, and grab the Harry Potter book off my dresser. That joke of a bookshelf downstairs has the same crap they had in baby jail I’ve inhaled three times over and I’d kill for something—anything—new to read. But I’d never say that out loud. I’m a killer after all; they’d probably think I’d really do it. Figures of speech are luxuries convicted murderers are not allowed to have.

I sit and read about magic spells, waiting for the demon I was spawned from to arrive.

Excerpt from The Devil Inside:

The Mary B. Addison Story

by Jude Mitchell (pg. 21)

Dawn Marie Cooper was born in Richmond, Virginia, in 1952. The oldest of five children, she was forced to drop out of school at age fifteen to take care of her growing brothers and sisters.

I was always taking care of babies. All my life.

Her youngest brother, Anthony, died as an infant. The coroner ruled the cause of death as sudden infant death syndrome. Her brother’s passing inspired Dawn to become a registered nurse. It is unclear where she received her training, but she worked exclusively in a neonatal care unit for many years.

Dawn moved to Brooklyn, New York, with her youngest sister Margaret Cooper. Margaret wanted to pursue a career in the fashion industry and Dawn was worried about her living in a big city alone. Dawn found work as an elderly caretaker. She met her first husband, Marc Addison, at a bus stop on Flatbush Avenue. Although Marc was twenty years her junior, they fell in love and were married within three months. Marc was killed on his way home from work by a drunk driver. Shortly after, Margaret died of HIV-related complications. A devastated Dawn went into hiding.

Mary Beth Addison was born in October. Dawn testified that she had given birth at home, only bringing Mary to the hospital to get a birth certificate. She was forty-one.

When describing what happened that day, she stated, It was a cruel and painful birth. I knew something was wrong with her from day one.

Yo, I can’t believe this dumb shit. There ain’t no trains, no White Castles, no corner stores. Some bullshit!

Kisha complains about the group home every single day. She could go out, but chooses to stay inside, combing and straightening her hair every ten minutes like she’s about to see someone new. Momma is like that too. Hair always has to look right, permed and hot-combed perfect. She would get all dressed up in heels to go to the corner store and never left the house without her lipstick, cranberry brown. Smells like crayons.

And it fucking stinks in here, she says, trying to open a window to let out the stench of rotting food. Ms. Reba pokes her head in our room.

Mary, your mom’s here.

Like clockwork, Momma arrives at 2:35 p.m. every other Sunday, right after church. This has been her commitment to me ever since I was locked up. I’ll always remember what she said in the courtroom. I’ll come see you every week. Well . . . on second thought, maybe every other week. Every week may be a bit too much for my pressure.

And sure enough, every other Sunday, she would be in the visitors’ center at baby jail, cheerful and bright as cotton candy. One of the officers working my cell block said she deserved mother of the year, for all the love she showed a little psychopathic killer like me.

Mother of the year? Hilarious.

Baby! she squeals in the sitting room, arms extended wide, waiting for her hug. Her hot-pink skirt suit is paired with a matching bag and shoes that could almost blind you. Her cream church hat is centered, a regal crown. Momma is all about appearances.

I walk into her hug and she wraps her arms around me as tight as she can, kissing my face like always. I pull away, the remnants of her burgundy lipstick burning my cheek. She smells like my childhood: pepper, pomade grease, and laundry detergent mixed with that purple lotion from Victoria’s Secret one of her boyfriends gave her.

How’s my baby girl doing?

I have to give it to the woman. She puts on a show, through and through. Even when no one’s watching.

I’m fine, I croak out. My voice is scratchy and feels funny from not talking for so long. I can’t keep up the silent treatment with Momma. She’d nag me to death until I spoke at least five words.

Well, come on, baby, let’s sit. Talk with your momma for a while.

We sit on the old blue couch. Everything in the room is a hand-me-down, thrift store finds. It’s like me and Momma’s first apartment, except warmer. Momma wraps her arm around my shoulder, smiling ear to ear. She was always so happy. All my life, she was the happiest person I’d ever met. Inside her bubble, nothing or no one could get her down. She smiled during evictions, smiled after Ray would beat the shit out of her, smiled when we were dead broke, and even smiled during my manslaughter sentencing (See, baby, it’s not so bad. At least it’s not murder!). She’s the most optimistic person on earth. Even when she’s visiting her daughter in a group home.

Baby, your hair is getting so long, she says, looping her finger into my kinky curls, pulling at the ends like a bouncing spring. You may need a trim soon.

It’s fine, I snap, shooing her fingers out of my hair.

She folds her hands in her lap with a closed-mouth smile, glancing around the room, bobbing to some mystery music in her head. She is waiting for me to ask about her. I’m an irrelevant factor to these visits, she’s here to make herself feel good.

So . . . Momma, how are you?

Her eyes light up and sparkle big like stars, as if she was waiting her whole life for someone to ask her that question.

Oh, I am so blessed, baby girl. Just so blessed! I wish you’d been at church today. Boy, pastor had an amazing service for our truly awesome God. Oh, and last week, we had . . .

I stop listening and stare, counting the wrinkles on her face, trying to find pieces of myself in her. She has dark skin, small brown eyes, big lips, a wide nose, and a sharp pointy chin. Her black hair never grew past her ears. I have light skin, big hazel eyes, a narrow nose, and a round face. My dark brown hair has always been long and curly, lightened in the sun. She says I’m the spitting image of my father, but I’ve never seen a single picture of him to prove it. And while I rarely do it, when I smile, I see her smile. That has always scared me.

. . . And the youth ministry is putting on a play next week for the church’s fiftieth anniversary. Oh, and baby girl, they’re so excited! They asked me to make the refreshments and I told them only if they behave ’cause they just about fought over my banana pudding at the . . .

The day after they locked me up, Momma jumped into the deep end of the Baptist church and was born again. The devil tried to get to me through my daughter and I wouldn’t have it! The church took pity on her, of course. No good decent woman like her would ever be responsible for raising such a monster. That devil must have came from her daddy’s side.

So, young lady? Aren’t you gonna ask about Mr. Worthington?

Mr. Troy Worthington, my new stepdaddy, owner of a soul food restaurant and apartments in Brooklyn. They met at church of course; he’s one of the deacons. She married this one only six months after my sentencing. They honeymooned in Hawaii. She brought me back a seashell. I’ve never met him and don’t really need to either.

So how is—

Sit up straight, baby. You always look better when you sit up straight.

SO MOMMA, how is Troy?

"Mr. Worthington. And yes, baby, he’s doing just fine. We went

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