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work but she also didnā€™t cook meals, help me with my homework, or care where I was. As a teen, it seemed cool but now I knew better. I had no one to help meā€”guide meā€”to tell me that there was more to life than causing trouble on the streets. Who knows what I could have accomplished had someone guided me to finish high school, go to college, get a job. I wanted Zach to see what I didnā€™tā€”that there was more to life than the street.

Even if Iā€™d come a long way since I was a kid, I never forgot how people saw meā€”someone with a criminal record. No matter how much I accomplished, that conviction would always be part of me. And as soon as Taylor found out, any respect she had for me would be gone. Not that Iā€™d given her any reason to respect me. Iā€™d refused to talk to her. But I saw the way she reacted to my bodyā€”her eyes flared and her breath hitched when I was stocking the glasses over the bar. I was the bad boy good girls like her were attracted to.

Iā€™d dated her type beforeā€”rich, smart, with her fancy tastes and expectations. As attracted as I was to this woman, I couldnā€™t forget that women like that didnā€™t go for men like meā€”they never did. I was a brief distraction in their livesā€”not the end goal. Iā€™d learned that lesson the hard way when I was younger. And Iā€™d done the dumbest thing I could have doneā€”Iā€™d agreed to let her work in the bar.

Each afternoon for the past six months, Iā€™d gone home between shifts to ensure Zach ate. There was always that worry in the back of my mind that he wouldnā€™t be able to resist the peer pressure, that heā€™d get arrested, or heā€™d be caught in the middle of someone elseā€™s fight and get hurt. I pulled the door open to my building, bounding up the stairs two at a time, only letting out a breath when I saw Zach, his brown hair pulled back in a ponytail, in his worn T-shirt, ripped jeans, and untied high-tops leaning against the door.

Zach pushed off my door when I approached. ā€œHey.ā€

I kept my face a careful mask around Zach. I didnā€™t want him to think I cared too much or heā€™d be gone. ā€œYou hungry?ā€

ā€œThatā€™s why Iā€™m here.ā€ He shifted away from the door so I could unlock it.

Iā€™d discovered he qualified for free breakfast and lunch at school so the only meal he missed was dinner. ā€œIā€™m making tacos. Get out your homework. We can work on it while I brown the meat.ā€ I held the door open for him as he walked in, his shoulders slumped as he dropped his bag on a stool.

ā€œDo I have to?ā€ he asked, his face pinched.

ā€œThatā€™s the deal we made. You do your homeworkā€”I cook.ā€ He didnā€™t do any homework when I met him, and I made it a condition of providing dinner. Thankfully, he never called me on it because I was going to feed him whether we did homework or not.

ā€œYeah, yeah.ā€ But he got out books and spread them on the counter.

I liked how comfortable heā€™d gotten coming here. He lived with his mother who was never home, so I think he enjoyed having male attention. Not that heā€™d ever admit it.

ā€œWhat do we have tonight?ā€ I asked, getting out a large pot to brown the beef.

ā€œAlgebra I. I donā€™t know why I let you talk me into it. Itā€™s too hard. I could have taken a remedial math class.ā€

I opened the package of ground beef and placed it into the pot and turned on the heat. ā€œWe talked about this. Remedial math isnā€™t good enough.ā€

ā€œGood enough for what? You think Iā€™m going to college?ā€ He flipped open his book to his homework.

ā€œWhy not?ā€ I braced my hands on the counter, ready for the same argument we had almost every day. He didnā€™t think he was good enough and the irony wasnā€™t lost on me. I struggled with the same issue all my life. But it wasnā€™t too late for him. He could graduate from high school with a diploma not a GED. He could go to college or technical school. He could get a job. He could go through life without a record.

ā€œKids like me donā€™t go to college.ā€ His lips were set in a stubborn line.

ā€œGet that out of your head right now. Anyone can go to college if you put in the effort and try hard.ā€

ā€œIā€™m not smart enough.ā€ He kept his eyes fixed on his textbook.

ā€œNot true. Your grades have improved since I started helping you. Itā€™ll get easier as it becomes a habit.ā€ Heā€™d neglected schoolwork for years, so it would take awhile to get caught up, but I couldnā€™t think of a better lesson to learn than hard work. The challenge was teaching a kid whoā€™d been told he was nothing to believe he could be anything. I was told and believed I was ā€˜less than,ā€™ and it was a difficult thing to get out of your head once it was there. I wanted to place the idea in his head that there was more for him.

ā€œWhatever.ā€ He bent his head over his algebra worksheet, so I turned back to the stove to brown the meat. When it was simmering in spicy taco seasoning, I turned to find Zach stuffing an official-looking paper under his textbook. ā€œWhatā€™s that?ā€

ā€œNothing.ā€

ā€œIt didnā€™t look like nothing.ā€

He finally sighed and slid the paper out, placing it into my outstretched hand. It was a reminder that no one had signed up for parent-teacher conferences. ā€œMy mom ignored the email so now I need to sign it.ā€

ā€œYou shouldnā€™t forge your motherā€™s signature.ā€ I didnā€™t blame him for not wanting the teacher to know his mother didnā€™t care enough to sign or come to his conference. I was sure he wanted to avoid the teacher learning the extent

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