was out of cash and stay by her folks for a
while. But around when my grandpa died
and I asked her point-blank âCan I come live
with you?â she told me âNope no you canât.â
And that was that.â
In retrospect Tyra cut him a huge
break. At the time Mathieu was f ive and
living with his grandmother a God-fearing
woman whose chaotic household was the
refuge for many of her childrenâs cast-off
children. Marie Spellman-Mathieu and her
husbandLorenzohadraised11kidsthen
found themselves raising their grandkids.
Tyrann was one of dozens who spent part
of their childhoods in the coupleâs six-room
doubleshotgunonOrleansAvenuesleeping
on the f loor with everyone else and getting
up and wearing whatever clothes might f it
him and werenât frayed to bits. Marieâs house
was an Etch A Sketch of people coming and
going cousins and nieces and ex-cons and
crackheads all seeking the respite of her
affection. âThat woman was straight loveâ
says Mathieu tapping his heart. âShe was
sort of like our church â or halfway house.â
The week before I met him Mathieu
buried Marie at a massive funeral service in
New Orleans. (She succumbed at 75 after
pastor who approached Mathieu on Twit-
ter takes the stage to speak of âresurrection
peopleâ meaning those whoâve witnessed
hardship and survived. His sermon a long
homily on martyrdom and hope loses me
for good about halfway in but Mathieu nods
and grunts throughout the service. When
itâs over he sits there hunched in thought
jaw resting on the steeple of his hands.
âWhatwereyouthinking?âIaskhimin
the hall.
âThat he was talking directly to meâ he
mutters. âMy whole life Iâve seen things I
canât unsee.â
It started at birth when his mother
dumped him on her parents and ran off âto
chase dudesâ as he tartly puts it. Begin-
ning at 22 Tyra Mathieu birthed f ive kids
in seven years to two men she barely saw
again. Tyrann was her second with Darrin
Hayes a kid off the streets who killed a man
in cold blood when Mathieu was only two.
âFirst time I met him I was 10 years oldâ
says Mathieu. Hayes rarely wrote him or
evincedtheslightestinterestuntilMathieu
became a star at Louisiana State University.
As for Tyra â well motherhood was never
her strong suit. âSheâd come back when she
a number of strokes.) He was the only one
whospoketakingthepulpitfor30minutes
to consecrate the things sheâd tried to teach
him. âWith her it was always about âweâ not
âmeâ â he said âand that weâre put on Earth
to help out other people.â Those used to be
foggyconceptsforaneglectedchildwho
burned to be part of anything. Itâs taken him
decades to f inally trust the people he loves
and who love him. One of those people is his
uncle Tyrone who is also his adoptive father.
âI took Tyrann with me after his grand-
dad died â I could see how bad he wanted
what my kids hadâ says Tyrone Mathieu
49 a longtime driver for UPS who became
Tyrannâs guardian when the boy was f ive
and finalized the adoption 12 years later.
Tyrone and his wife Sheila a registered
nurseare themoralgirdersoftheMathieu
clan.Withthreekidsoftheirown they
raised Tyrann and Tyroneâs niece Keviah
then opened their door to Tyroneâs younger
brother Anthony. âWe loved âem like our
own. But Tyrann it took longer. He ques-
tioned if it was real till probably college.â
Tyrone owned a house in New Orleans
East in a neighborhood of parks and youth-
league sports and he enrolled his new
boarder in all of them. One night he went
down to pick up his kids and saw the other
parents standing and screaming. Tyrann
sixwasplayingshortcenterandturning
everything hit his way into a double play.
âHe didnât get the concept of throwing to
firstâ say Tyrone. âHe just ran down all the
runners and tagged âem out.â Several months
later he had another surprise. Tyrann a line-
backer in the novice league was bursting
through the line to rip the handoff from the
tailback and take it 40 yards to the house.
By nine or 10 he was going against teens
a 90-pound blur playing sandlot ball and
Mathieu
figures
80 percent
of the men
heâs covered
gave up
during
the game
then came
over after
and showed
him love.