the edge did so by choice, because they liked the life.
Music, bluesy and sad, trickled from an open balcony somewhere above him, from another the sounds of sex. Santos jogged past them, ducking down an alley, choosing the less-traveled streets, careful to avoid the paths his mother might choose, careful to avoid being seen by anyone who might report back to her.
From a corner restaurant came the clatter and clank of pots and pans, the enticing smell of boiling seafood. Santos passed behind the restaurant, then wrinkled his nose as he dodged a particularly ripe garbage bin. Nothing like a day or two in the heat to transform crabs and shrimp from enticing to sickening.
The school in sight now, he slowed his pace. It wouldnât do to be seen running in this neighborhoodâwith the amount of poverty and crime here, the cops were always cruising the area, always on the lookout for a young male fleeing the scene.
Santos circled around to the back of the school. After making sure nobody was watching, he ducked behind a row of wildly overgrown oleander and sweet olive bushes. There, as he knew he would, he found a window propped open with a brick. He hoisted himself up to the ledge and swung inside. From deep within the building he heard the sound of laughter; his buddies had already arrived. He dropped to his feet.
A match flared. Startled, Santos swung around. A kid called Scoutâso named because he was always on the lookout for cops, pushers, winos or anyone else who might intrude on the groupâstood in the corner, his amused expression illuminated by the matchâs flame.
âWhat gives?â Santos asked, frowning. âYou scared the shit out of me.â
Scout lit a cigarette, then tossed the match. âSorry, man. Youâre late tonight.â
âI got hung up with my mother.â
âDrag.â Scout pulled on his cigarette, then blew out a stream of the acrid smoke. He indicated the length of iron pipe propped against the wall beside him. âGlad it was you. For a minute, I thought I was going to war. Got to protect our turf.â
And he would have, Santos knew. Most of the kids Santos hung with, including Scout, lived on the street full-time. They were runaways, either from their families or the foster-care system. A few, like Santos, were neighborhood kids who didnât have adult supervision at night. They ranged in age from eleven to sixteen, and the group shrank and swelled in size on an almost daily basis. New runaways joined the group, others moved on or were caught and returned to whereverâor whomeverâthey had tried to escape. Santos and a handful of the others had been part of the group since its beginning.
âWhere is everybody?â Santos asked.
âHomeroom. Lenny and Tish lifted a bag of crawfish from the back of a truck. Theyâre still hot. They were thirty minutes ago, anyway.â
Santos nodded. âYou coming?â
âNah. Iâm going to stand watch for a while.â
Santos nodded again and started for the area they called homeroom. Because the school was so large, they had selected four rooms to be their regular meeting places and had given each a nameâdrama club, arts and crafts, sex ed. and homeroom.
Homeroom was located on the second floor at the end of the main hall. Santos made his way there, picking around rubble and weak spots in the flooring. As he expected, he found the group gathered around the bag of crawfish, laughing and talking as they shucked, sucked and generally made pigs of themselves on the stolen mud-bugs.
Razor, the oldest of the group, saw Santos first and motioned him in. Nicknamed Razor for obvious reasons, he had been on the street the longest of anyone in the group. He was a good guy, but he didnât take any crap from anybody. Living on the street did that to a kid. Toughened him. Santos figured Razor wouldnât be hanging out with them much longer. At sixteen, he was ready to move
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