Chapter Thirteen

Chapter 142,687 wordsCompleted

Elwood Curtis finishes watching the annual New York marathon, describing the runners, crowds, and the city’s chaotic atmosphere. As the race ends, he is approached by a familiar voice—Chickie Pete, a former Nickel boy now in a faded green Jets sweatshirt and oversized red track pants. The two exchange greetings; Chickie, who spent twelve years in the military, sold stereos in Baltimore, and has been drifting between jobs, invites Elwood to a drink at a neighborhood bar. Over beers, Chickie recounts his own Nickel experience, mentions other alumni like Sammy, Nelson, and Lonnie, and describes how the school ruined lives. He offers Elwood a job helping with moving work, writing his sister’s phone number on a napkin, but Elwood declines to hand out his Ace Moving business card. The conversation drifts to Chickie’s past musical talent (trumpet in a colored band), his military discharge, and his recent legal trouble that sent him to a program instead of jail. Elwood reflects on how Nickel’s legacy persists, how former inmates are mythologized, and how the city offers anonymity that both comforts and unsettles him. He leaves the bar, walks through post‑marathon streets, observes the city returning to normal, and decides to take a cab home, tossing the napkin with Chickie’s number out the window and contemplating his future.