MackInTheMargins
Los Angeles, California. 1996.
Marlon Wallace's world has always moved to its own rhythm-chaotic, cracked, and just loud enough to drown out what hurts. He knows how to keep his head down, how to crack jokes when the world's falling apart, and how to make it through the day with a Walkman in his jacket and his heart zipped up beneath it. But everything shifts when a baby shows up on his doorstep without warning. No note, no name-just a pair of wide eyes and a silence that won't let him sleep.
And then Charmaine Devereaux disappears.
She was the girl who laughed with her hand over her mouth. The girl who hummed when she thought no one was listening. The girl who knew how to make a hallway feel like a movie scene. Nobody knows where she went. Nobody knows why. But Marlon knows it doesn't feel right. Not just because he misses her-but because something about her absence feels unfinished.
Now Marlon's carrying a weight that doesn't belong to him but somehow feels like it always did. He's trying to hold it together in a foster home full of boys with scars of their own, in a school that talks more than it listens, in a neighborhood where people go missing and nobody looks twice. The only clues he has are the whispers, the changes in the air, and a cassette tape she left behind- unlabeled, unfinished, and haunting. A lullaby with a note missing.
Set in the raw, sun-drenched streets of 1990s Los Angeles, Missing Notes from a Ghetto Lullaby is a slow-burning, emotionally rich story of love that lingers, pain that echoes, and the unspoken ways Black youth learn to survive-together or alone. It's about growing up too soon and holding on too long. About found family, fractured trust, and the mystery of a girl who left behind more than questions. She left behind music.
And if Marlon can follow the song...
he just might find the truth.