Publisher's Synopsis
At the ends of the world, where life revolves around anger and brutality, a young boy with a good heart must survive a world that is trying to mold him into submission, destroy his confidence, deny his happiness and put out the flame of hope that lives in him. Billy must enter a contest for a motorcycle that he has prayed to God for. He must overcome his fears and the dangers that surround him. In a land of wolves, only the wings embodied in a machine can save him from certain doom. He soon discovers that he is on a collision course with monsters that are determined to stop him at all cost. Yet hidden in his dreams are clues that can help him defeat the nightmares and enemies that follow. There are those who love him and are willing to sacrifice their lives to save him. These are the ones that give him hope, that, despite what he must face, he must endure and believe in himself. In his heart, Billy is not just a boy that sees the Milky Way in the night sky as just something to look at but rather an adventure of exploration where the mind meets a heart full of joyful expectation. The fireball in the sky that he sees early in this adventure is not just something that will soon disappear. It still burns deeply in his heart as he sees through his eyes of innocences as it streaks through the darkness of the night, etched deeply in the memories of his mind. Discover if he wins or loses in a city full of wolves, bullies and dangers. Will the wings of hope change his future forever embodied in a machine called the Bridgestone? Read about this boy who is determined to compete in a contest and facing attacks from those who want to stop him because of his ethnicity. He searches for support from a father who is more of a bully than a dad. There are numerous dreams that are trying to tell him something that he refuses to accept. There are two time lines where one is real and the other is not. Depending on what he chooses will decide his future. The problem is that this story is based on real events and some will hate me for it, yet in order to be free, the story must be told.