“I’ll handle my dad,” said Chris. “You earned lunch.”
Ben adjusted his W cap on his head and slouched in the bucket. “I coulda bought a whole restaurant with what I left back there. I had what was in that bag, I could eat a hundred half-smokes every day for the rest of my life.”
“You’d get sick of half-smokes,” said Chris. “You’d shit like a horse.”
“In my gold bathroom.”
“Okay.”
“And I’d have a butler to wipe my ass.”
“Every man should have a dream,” said Chris. He pulled the van to the side of the road and locked it down.
They walked toward the diner on U.
“I don’t like wearing these things,” said Ben with petulance, fingering the short sleeve of his Flynn’s Floors polo shirt.
“Neither do I,” said Chris.
“You know what it reminds me of,” said Ben.
“I’ll talk to my dad.”
Ben Braswell pushed on the door of the eat house. He was hot and tired, and still thinking about the money. Chris was, too.
Ali Carter sat in a rickety chair behind an old metal desk, manufactured and used by federal government workers before he was born. On the other side of the desk, in a chair just as suspect as Ali’s, sat a young man named William Richards. He wore a Bulls cap, Guess jeans, a We R One T-shirt, and Nike boots. Richards was seventeen, full nosed, slightly bug-eyed, and annoyed.
“Mr. Masters said you been fighting him on the uniform shirt,” said Ali.
“That shirt stupid,” said William.
“It says you work for the company. It identifies you so when you do those events, the clients and the kids know who you are.”
“That shirt got a picture of a clown on it. And balloons. I can’t be walkin down the street wearin that mess.”
“The clown’s part of the logo,” said Ali with patience. “You work for a company that sets up parties for kids. That logo is what makes people remember the business.”
“The younguns where I stay at be laughin at me, Mr. Ali.”
“So put the Party Land shirt in a bag and wear another shirt to the job. When you get to the site, change up. That’ll work, right?”
William Richards nodded without conviction and looked away.
They were seated in a storefront office situated on a commercial stretch of Alabama Avenue, in the Garfield Heights section of Southeast. Ali was a junior staff member of Men Movin on Up, a nonprofit funded by the District, local charities, and private donors. Though there were many such organizations, set up in churches, rec centers, and storefronts, to help young men find their way and stay on track, Men Movin on Up was specifically designed to work with offenders, boys on parole or probation and boys awaiting trial. Its director, Coleman Wallace, was a career social worker and activist Christian who had grown up poor and fatherless in Ward 8. A lifelong Washingtonian, he stayed in contact with many locals from his generation, and he put his hand out to those who had made it and asked them without shame to donate their money and volunteer their time to help young men who, like them, had come up disadvantaged. This group occasionally brought the boys to their places of work, counseled them, coached them in rec basketball, and took them on day trips to ball games and amusement parks.
Occasionally they made a difference in the boys’ lives. There were many disappointments, failures, and setbacks, but Wallace and his friends had long ago stopped laboring under the illusion that they were going to save the collective youth of the city. If they could reach one kid, plant a seed that by example might grow into something right, they felt they had achieved success.
Ali was the sole staff member on the payroll. Coleman Wallace had hired him right out of Howard, where Ali had earned a bachelor’s degree at the age of twenty-five. Coleman was attracted to Ali’s intelligence and commitment, and also to the fact that Ali had done time at Pine Ridge and made the complete turnaround from incarcerated youth to productive member of society. He was smart and accomplished but also had the cachet of the real. His history bought him respect from the clients.
Also, Ali’s relative youth was an attraction. Coleman Wallace was well aware that many of the boys he counseled could not relate to him, a middle-aged man. Most of them didn’t even know that the organization’s name, Men Movin on Up, referred to the Curtis Mayfield lyric. Or that the hand-lettered lyrics framed and hung on the office wall were from Coleman’s favorite Curtis composition. Nine out of ten in this current crop didn’t even know who Mayfield was. To these young men, Ali Carter was go-go and hip-hop, and Coleman Wallace was slo-jam, tight basketball shorts, and way past old-school. Coleman needed an Ali Carter to help him connect.
Ali’s focus was on getting the young men jobs and making sure they held them. To do this he communicated with parole officers, defense attorneys and prosecutors, and the staff of Ken Young, the recently hired reform- minded director of the District’s Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services. He dealt with the members of the District’s Absconding Unit, who tracked down kids who had skipped supervision, and he reached out to potential employers throughout the area, in particular those who had seen some trouble in their own youth and were willing to give his kids a try.
Without realizing it or having it in mind, Ali Carter was becoming connected and making a name for himself in the city. He liked his work and tried to forget that he was earning little more than minimum wage, which left him close to the poverty line.
“Any other problems?” said Ali.
“That man just aggravate the shit out of me, man,” said William Richards.
“Mr. Masters?”
“Mr. Slave master. He al ways tryin to tell me what to do.”
“He’s paying you ten dollars an hour. It’s his right to tell you what to do.”
“I don’t need that job.”
“He’s trying to introduce you to the culture of work.”
“Huh?”
“Mr. Masters knows how hard it is to come back from jail time. He doesn’t want you to have to go through that. He’s trying to teach you how to work so that work becomes routine for you.”
“I don’t need him to teach me that. I know how to work and I damn sure can make some money. That’s one thing I can do.”
“Listen to me. It’s important that you have a legitimate job right now and keep it, so that when you go to your hearing, you can stand before the judge and say that you’re gainfully employed. Do you understand, William?”
“Yeah.” But his slack posture and lack of eye contact said that he did not.
“Did you get your paycheck?”
“Here in my pocket.”
“What are you going to do with it?”
“Take it that check-cash place round my way.”
“They charge you big for that, don’t they?”
“So?”
“I been tellin you, you should open a checking account at the bank. They charge much less than that store does. And they’ll give you an ATM card. You can manage your money better and get to it any time.”
“My mother got to take me to that bank, right?”
“To open the account? Yes.”
“She too busy.”
“You asked her?”
“No, but I’m about to. Next week.” William stood abruptly out of his chair. He drew his cell from his jeans, opened it, and checked it for text messages.
“We straight?” said Ali.