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Chapter Fifteen

Chapter 161,691 wordsCompleted

Elwood Curtis wakes early, reviews a newspaper clipping about the new restaurant Camille’s, and prepares for a date night that has already been canceled twice. His secretary Yvette leaves the office early to tend to her senile mother, leaving Elwood to juggle paperwork on a new health plan for Ace Moving. He catches the City College subway, walks uphill to the restaurant located at 141st and Amsterdam, and notes its “nouveau Southern” menu served by white staff in a hip‑pie dress. The hostess, tattooed and indifferent, offers him a seat but he declines, preferring to wait outside—a habit rooted in past humiliations. While waiting he chews nicotine gum and observes the surrounding Hamilton Heights neighborhood, recalling its transformation from a 1970s community center to a gentrifying area where white residents are moving back. He muses on the city’s decline, his gratitude for steady cash from Mr. Betts, and his role as a Black entrepreneur employing local workers. A woman from a book club promises to feature him in a newspaper “Enterprising Entrepreneurs” article, and Millie, his wife, arrives late for dinner, prompting his anxiety about normal domestic rituals such as buying flowers. He reflects on his past at Nickel reform school, fearing that its “White House” and endless oppression might haunt him to his death. Throughout the evening, Elwood navigates his internal conflict between his traumatic past and the desire for ordinary married life, while noting the presence of his friend Dorothy, who praises various cultural phenomena, and recalling the support and tension embodied in his relationship with Millie.

Running Summary
Cumulative summary through the selected chapter (not the full-book final summary).
Through chapter 16

University archaeology students uncover a hidden graveyard on the former Nickel reform school campus, revealing dozens of unmarked bodies, sparking a statewide investigation, national media coverage, and the emergence of survivor support networks. Elwood Curtis’s childhood is detailed: he receives a Martin Luther King Jr. record as a Christmas gift in 1962, listens to speeches that shape his early understanding of civil rights, lives with his grandmother Harriet in the Richmond Hotel, works in the hotel kitchen under manager Mr. Parker, participates in dish‑drying contests against coworkers such as Pete, Barney, Len, Cory and Harold, wins a set of supposedly valuable encyclopedias that turn out to be blank, and reflects on the deception, all forming the personal background that later influences his experience at Nickel reform school. Elwood leaves the Richmond Hotel kitchen, takes a job at Mr. Marconi’s tobacco shop on Macomb Street, and continues his private betting game about black patrons in the dining room. He reacts to the Brown v. Board of Education decision with his grandmother Harriet’s warning, begins reading Life magazines, and learns about civil‑rights protests. He is hired by Marconi after the former stock‑boy Vincent joins the army, splits his paycheck with Harriet for college, and works the store’s shelves, newspaper rack, and candy counter. Elwood meets Mrs. Thomas, a longtime family friend of his mother Evelyn, who buys sodas and chats with him. He confronts local boys Larry and Willie when they steal candy, which leads to a violent beating that leaves him with a bruised eye and broken confidence, prompting a personal resolve about dignity inspired by Dr. King’s speeches. Elwood and his Lincoln High classmates erase racist graffiti from second‑hand textbooks under the guidance of new history teacher Mr. Hill. He participates in the school’s Emancipation Day play, joins his first civil‑rights protest at the Florida Theatre, meets senior students and Cameron Parker, and is punished at home by Harriet’s silent‑treatment. Mr. Hill later offers Elwood a free spot in courses at Melvin Griggs Technical, and Mr. Marconi gifts him a fountain pen for his studies. Elwood rides with a driver named Rodney to the college, where a white deputy stops them. Elwood is taken by a court officer to Nickel reform school, meets Superintendent Spencer who explains the school’s rank system, is processed by Mr. Loomis for uniforms, and is assigned to the colored dormitory Cleveland under house father Blakeley, where he meets fellow dormmates Desmond and Pat. Elwood meets fellow inmate Turner and learns the brutal routine and rank system at Nickel; he endures communal showers, a hostile mess hall, and a lackluster classroom with Mr. Goodall. He befriends Desmond, learns about yard‑crew work under house father Blakeley, and tours the campus, seeing Boot Hill and the segregated facilities. New inmates Griff, Lonnie, and Black Mike assert dominance, while Jaimie experiences racial reassignment. Housemen Carter, Birdy (captain) and Phil enforce discipline, and Director Hardee and Superintendent Spencer are referenced as authorities. Elwood, Lonnie, Black Mike and newcomer Corey are taken in a night‑time beating at the school’s “White House” building, overseen by Superintendent Spencer and houseman Earl; the brutal punishment involves a loud industrial fan, a strap called Black Beauty, and unpredictable lash counts, revealing the extreme violence of Nickel reform school. Harriet’s husband Monty is killed while defending a Black dishwasher during a racially‑charged brawl; her son‑in‑law Percy, a decorated WWII GI who survived a near‑lynching in Milledgeville, leaves for California with Evelyn, abandoning Elwood. After the White House beating, Elwood is hospitalized, meets Turner, Nurse Wilma and Dr. Cooke, and endures painful dressings. While confined, he reads the school’s 1949 pamphlet, learning Nickel reform school’s founding in 1899, its self‑branding as a “reform school,” its industrial enterprises, and its renaming for Trevor Nickel. Elwood resolves to inform his activist teacher Mr. Hill and consider legal action. Elwood returns to the yard crew, discovers a hidden cache of British classics in the school basement and formulates a personal theory of Nickel’s cruelty. He sets a concrete goal to climb the merit ladder and graduate by June, planning to use Turner’s advice and his activist background. Elwood is assigned to a Community Service detail with Turner and a new white worker named Harper, delivering food supplies around the town of Eleanor and performing a paint‑job for Mrs. Davis, revealing how Nickel exploits labor for external contracts. Griff becomes the colored champion in the annual Nickel boxing match, defeating white contender Big Chet despite Superintendent Spencer’s order to take a dive. The fight is overseen by Director Hardee, board chairman Mr. Charles Grayson, and a biased referee. New characters appear: coach Max David who trains the colored team, former champion Terry “Doc” Burns, former title‑holder Axel Parks, and white challenger Big Chet. Harper is shown confirming the betting stakes. The chapter also reveals the school’s historic fixation on boxing, the manipulation of outcomes by staff, and the post‑fight rumor that Griff vanished after being taken “out back.” During the annual Christmas Fair, white students construct the large displays while black students handle painting and touch‑ups; vandalized reindeer heads are repaired under Miss Baker’s direction. The boys plot to poison staff member Earl with horse medicine, and Earl collapses, vomits blood, and is hospitalized during the Holiday Luncheon, though he survives. New characters appear: Miss Baker (young art‑room teacher), Jaimie’s mother Ellie, and a replacement supervisor Hennepin who takes over after Earl’s illness. Elwood lives in a 99th‑Street SRO in Manhattan, works for Horizon Moving, endures the 1968 garbage strike, suffers a back injury, earns his GED, and begins planning his own moving company, Ace Moving, to buy a 1967 Ford Econoline van. The chapter explains the four official ways to leave Nickel—serve a sentence, court intervention, death, or escape—then adds a vivid personal escape story of Clayton Smith, detailing his family background, his 1952 flight, and his ride with former mayor Mr. Simmons. It also follows Elwood’s present circumstances: visiting day with his ailing grandmother Harriet, the sudden disappearance of his lawyer Mr. Andrews after taking $200, and Elwood’s formulation of a “fifth way” out of Nickel by planning to dismantle the institution. Elwood, now operating Ace Moving in Manhattan, attends the November city marathon, meets former Nickel reform school inmate Chickie Pete who offers him work, and reflects on how Nickel’s trauma still haunts former inmates. Director Hardee suspends classes and orders a massive campus‑wide refurbishment to impress a surprise state inspection; repairs include painting dorms (especially the colored Cleveland dormitory), resurfacing the basketball court, fixing tractors, installing a new boiler, replacing urinals, and repainting the White House. The administration tightens accounting, ends student parole placements, and replaces the longtime dentist. Harper drops Elwood and Turner at former county supervisor Edward Childs’s house, where they clean a long‑unused basement and uncover decades‑old trunks and relics while Elwood records the school’s delivery logs for the inspectors. Elwood reflects on Dr. King’s teachings of love amid oppression. On inspection day the boys, divided into work crews, repaint bleachers and restore the football field while house fathers brief them. Elwood is sent to find farm overseer Mr. Gladwell; later Turner delivers a secret letter. The inspectors tour the white campus, then the colored campus, and the overhaul appears successful. Elwood, now operating Ace Moving in Manhattan, confronts marital tension with his wife Millie, manages his secretary Yvette’s caregiving responsibilities, visits the soul‑food restaurant Camille’s in the gentrifying Hamilton Heights, reflects on his lingering Nickel trauma, and weighs a local “Enterprising Entrepreneurs” profile.