Marked

Norah McClintock

orca currents

To the boys cleaning up graffiti at Main and Gerrard.

chapter one

It all started when I ran into Dave Marsh, a youth worker who was assigned to me the last time I was in trouble. I kind of got the shakes when I saw him. He is one of those dead-serious guys who can look you in the eye and know that you’re hiding something from him. He can also tell what it is you don’t want him to know. I saw him coming out of a store down the block, and I immediately turned to walk in the other direction. I wasn’t afraid of him or anything. It’s just that, well, I didn’t want to talk to him, given how most of our conversations had gone in the past.

I was half-turned around when I heard his booming voice call my name, “Colin Watson.”

It was as if he had called out “Freeze!” Because that’s what I did. I froze. Then I took a deep breath and turned to face him.

The next thing I knew, he was looking me over like he was a drill sergeant and I was some messed-up grunt recruit. Or maybe he was checking me out for stolen goods. But all I had in my hand was a small bag from an art supply store.

“Are you trying to avoid me, Colin?” he said.

See what I mean? He nailed it just like that.

“No, I just—” I didn’t know what to say. I never know what to say when I get surprised like that. Dave used to tell me that this was my saving grace—the fact that I’m not quick on my feet. I’m not a bad liar—it’s more like I can’t come up with a lie in the first place. Dave said that meant I wasn’t cut out to be a bad guy. Maybe that was supposed to make me feel better. But, mostly, it made me feel like an idiot.

“Still drawing, I see,” he said, looking at the bag from the art supply store and at the pencil sticking out of my shirt pocket. He never missed a thing.

“A little sketching, yeah,” I said with a shrug. I like to draw. I like it a lot. The past year I’d even had a half-decent art teacher who said nice things about my stuff and gave me lots of tips and pointers. She said I had a good eye. It was the best compliment I’d ever received.

“You got a job lined up for the summer?” Every youth worker I ever met was big on kids having jobs. Jobs teach responsibility. They’re a positive way to spend your spare time. They give you money so maybe you won’t go out and shoplift like I used to.

“I’m looking,” I said. It was sort of true. I was looking. But I hadn’t put in any applications yet. I didn’t want to work at a fast-food joint or be a clerk in some stupid store. I wanted to do something interesting. Preferably something outdoors.

His sharp eyes drilled into me. Here it comes, I thought. He’s going to give me a lecture about getting out there with my résumé.

But guess what? He didn’t.

“I heard about someone who is hiring kids for the summer. It made me think of you. In fact, I was planning to look up your phone number on Monday when I got into the office so that I could call you and tell you about it.”

I was so surprised that I almost fell over. I mean, I hadn’t seen this guy in eight or nine months. And it wasn’t like we were friends or anything. I was just another screwed-up kid, and it had been his job to straighten me out. But here he was, telling me that he had been thinking of calling me and doing me a favor, when he wasn’t being paid to help me anymore.

“It’s sort of in your interest area,” he said. “It’s art-related—although not everyone would agree. A couple of the utility companies have been hiring kids to clean up graffiti on utility poles. It pays minimum wage, but it’s an outside job. The thing is—”

Here it comes, I thought. The catch.

“There’s minimum supervision involved,” he said. “Which means it isn’t right for most of the kids I work with.”

And this is where he surprised me again—big-time.

“That’s why I thought of you, Colin. I’ve been hearing good things about you.”

He had?

“If you want, I can get you the information and even put in a good word for you. You can earn some money and study the urban-art landscape at the same time.”

I was so stunned that all I could say was, “Uh, sure.”

“Great,” he said. “I’ll call you on Monday with the details.”

Monday morning I woke up to the sound of the phone. It was Dave Marsh. He told me where to take my résumé, who to talk to, even what to say. He said he’d already talked to the man in charge.

“He’s expecting your call, Colin,” he said. “He’s looking for reliable kids, and he’s definitely interested in meeting you.”

Then he scared me a little.

“As far as I can tell, this job is yours, Colin—unless you do something to mess it up.”

chapter two

The man in charge was named Ray Mehivic. He was sitting behind a big metal desk. His office was at the back of what looked like a huge garage in one of those industrial parks that’s filled with warehouses and small factories. He was talking on the phone when I arrived, but he waved me in. I stood in front of his desk while he finished his phone call.

“You’re Colin, right?” he said, hanging up the phone. “Keeping your act clean these days, I hope.”

What?

He laughed.

I didn’t.

He grinned. “Relax, kid,” he said. “I’m not going to give you a hard time. I’m a big believer in second chances. I know how hard they are to come by. So I try to provide them. I try to help out, you know what I mean? And Dave Marsh thinks you’re an okay kid. When he heard I was hiring, he put in a good word for you.” He looked me over. “He said you were fourteen.”

“I’ll be fifteen at the end of the summer,” I said.

“Everybody makes mistakes,” Ray said, leaning back in his swivel chair. “But people can change, am I right?” He stuck out a beefy hand. “Show me what you’ve got.”

It took me a moment to realize that he wanted to see my résumé. I never thought I would say this, but I was glad we had to write a résumé in careers class at school. I handed it to him. It took him forever to read it.

“You got a bike, something to get around?” he said at last.

I nodded.

“You know what the job is?”

I nodded again, but he explained it to me in detail anyway.

“So,” he said when he had finished, “are you interested?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Sir,” he said, smiling like I’d made a joke. “Okay, Colin. You’re on. Be here tomorrow morning, six thirty, to pick up your supplies and get your route.”

Six thirty?

“In the morning?” I said.

“Yeah, in the morning,” Ray said. “The route you’re on, it’s a nice neighborhood— lots of doctors and lawyers. Plus a lot of aggressive tagging. We like to get that cleaned up before the residents roll their Beamers out of their garages, you hear what I’m saying?”

I sure did. People who live in big houses don’t want to start their day looking at graffiti. I bet graffiti in their neighborhoods made them nervous. It probably made them think of gangs.