At nine years old, before he was worth anything, before his company had a board or a valuation or a tower with his name on a lease, Isaiah had been the skinny white boy standing outside the chain-link fence at Lincoln Elementary on Chicago’s South Side.
His mother, Colleen, had been working two temporary cleaning jobs after they were evicted from a one-bedroom apartment they could no longer afford.
For a stretch of months, life was held together by bus transfers, borrowed couches, and one duffel bag with a broken zipper.
He was not enrolled at Lincoln.
They had no stable address, no final paperwork, and no way to keep up with the requirements schools asked from people whose lives were already slipping.
Some afternoons Colleen left him near the schoolyard because it was safer than leaving him alone at the shelter during intake hours, and because she believed children were less lonely near the noise of other children.
Isaiah stood at the fence and watched a world that seemed organized, predictable, and fed.
Hehad learned not to stare at food, but hunger turns the eyes before pride can stop it.
Victoria Hayes saw him on a windy Tuesday in October.
She was nine, Black, and small for her age, with neat braids tied back by a red ribbon that had once been bright enough to stand out from half a playground.
Her family lived three bus stops away in a narrow apartment above a laundromat.
Her mother stretched every dollar until it felt insulting.
There were nights when dinner was toast, or canned beans, or whatever could be coaxed out of a nearly empty pantry with salt and hope.
School lunch was not a convenience for Victoria.
It was security.
That day she sat on a low concrete ledge during lunch and unwrapped a sandwich from wax paper.
When she looked up, the boy at the fence was watching her hand, not her face.
That was what she remembered years later.
He was trying very hard to be polite about starving.
Victoria stood, walked over, and pushed the sandwich through an opening near the bottom of the fence.
He blinked at her as if kindness had taken him by surprise.
‘Take it,’ she said.
He did.
He ate too fast at first, then slower, like he was embarrassed by what hunger was making him do.
She gave him the apple too.
He mumbled thank you without lifting his head.
The bell rang.