A mother's
nightmare turned all too real
By Maureen
Faulkner and Michael Smerconish
December
4, 2007
The
following are excerpts from a forthcoming book by Maureen Faulkner and Michael
Smerconish titled "Murdered by Mumia: A Life Sentence of Pain, Loss and
Injustice. " In it, Maureen Faulkner retells the death of her husband,
Daniel; the trial of Mumia Abu-Jamal, accused and later convicted of his
murder; and the long succession of trials and hearings in the years since. She
also recounts her horrified reaction to the rise of the international
"Free Mumia" movement.
Chapter 1:
The Premonition
We were both excited about
the weekend, even though it would be the first in roughly a year of marriage
that we would not be together. Danny was happy about his long-planned annual
hunting trip; I was anxious to entertain my mother in our home. Every year,
Danny would travel about two hundred miles north of Philadelphia via the
Pennsylvania Turnpike to reach Sullivan County. He loved to hunt and to spend
time with friends, mostly fellow cops like Hugh Gallagher. Hugh's father had a
small cabin where he loved to go for a few days at a time. They'd track the
deer, probably have a beer or two, and, knowing Danny, I'm sure they'd spend
lots of time swapping stories while trekking in the cold mountain air. Danny
loved to tell stories. Stories about his work as a cop. Stories about growing
up in Philadelphia. Stories about his family. And stories about life in
general. I knew I'd miss his company for two nights, but I was also looking
forward to my mother's company. My mother was going to make the
forty-five-minute drive from where my parents were living in the historic
Valley Forge area into the city and, although she had visited our home before,
this time she was going to spend the night. I was hoping it would be time spent
together doing the things that moms and daughters don't often get to do when a
husband enters the picture.
I was content with my life
at that time and wanted very much for my mother to see and experience my
surroundings. She was a consummate worrier and I was anxious for her to see
that, at age twenty-five and married, I was getting along just fine in the
world. I was very proud of the modest, comfortable little house Danny and I
called home and I spent time before her arrival making sure everything looked
just right. My mother was disappointed that Danny was leaving on his trip
before she would arrive. They had a terrific relationship. At first, Mom had
been wary of him as my choice of a spouse, not because of who Danny was but,
rather, what he did for a living. Police work was dangerous, she often warned,
as if telling me something new. But her concerns about his profession soon
succumbed to her fondness for the tall, personable, handsome young man with the
shy smile I had fallen in love with. Both my parents loved Danny like another
son.
It was the early 1980s.
Stamps were 20 cents; Luke had finally married Laura on General Hospital;
Olivia Newton-John's "Physical" was atop the charts. President Reagan
was nearing the end of his first year in office. CDs, pagers, fax machines,
laptop computers, and cell phones did not exist yet. MTV was in its infancy and
rap music almost unheard-of. Danny spent his Sunday afternoons watching another
Dan - Dan Fouts - throw touchdowns for the team in San Diego. And I,
contentedly nestled in my small house in southwest Philadelphia, was confident
that bloody shoot-'em-ups and tragedy were merely the stuff of TV dramas like
Magnum, P.I. as I vacuumed the living room and excitedly prepared to entertain
my mom that December day.
My mom said goodbye to my
father out in the suburbs and drove down the treacherous Schuylkill Expressway
to our home. We had a terrific time together doing things that would seem
inconsequential to an outsider. I remember we sewed curtains for my windows.
The small house was cozy, nothing extravagant about it, but it was the kind of
place where both Danny's and my families and all our friends always felt
welcome.
Saturday and Saturday night
were all that I had hoped they would be. The conversations with my mother were
nothing short of hilarious; we joked and reminisced, had fun, and stayed up
late. But things changed on Sunday morning. When Mom woke up, there was a
marked change in her demeanor that she refused to discuss. As we had coffee in
the kitchen, I could sense her uneasiness. But despite my prodding, she just
wouldn't share what was troubling her.
By Sunday afternoon, she was
ready to spill. She told me she had not slept well the night before. When I
asked why, she finally said that she'd had a horrible nightmare that frightened
and depressed her. Her peaceful slumber was disturbed by a vision of one of her
boys on the pavement, bleeding. "One of my boys" is how she put it,
meaning to me, and to her, one of my four brothers: Jim, Mike, Lawrence, or
Francis.
The nightmare continued to
gnaw at my mother's sense of ease as the cheerful tenor of the weekend was
transformed by her looming anxiety. She was uncomfortable until the time she
left for home. I remember that when a neighbor's dog started howling late that
afternoon, she was frightened enough to say, "Maureen, I don't like this
feeling of doom - I'm sure something terrible is going to happen to one of the
boys. " My mom was so concerned about my brothers that she called each one
of them from my house and told them to be very careful because of what she had
dreamt.
Mom's premonition was
half-right. My brothers remained healthy and fine, but her dread and anxiety
were founded. One week after her nightmare, I experienced my own when my
husband, Danny, was found dead, murdered in the line of duty. Mom's divination
of doom was transformed into a sad still frame of reality when, on the night of
December 9, 1981, the innocent blood of the man I loved soaked the cold
pavement of a frozen Philadelphia street.
Michael
Smerconish's column appears Thursdays in the Daily News and Sundays in
Currents. He can be heard from 5:30 to 9 a.m. weekdays on "The Big
Talker," WPHT-AM (1210). Contact him via the
Web at
http://www.mastalk.com.
Coming
tomorrow: Celebs for Mumia.
Maureen
Faulkner is the widow of Daniel Faulkner, a Philadelphia police officer who
died in the line of duty in 1981.
Michael
Smerconish is a radio talk-show host and columnist for The Inquirer's Sunday
Currents section.