A Mayor’s Motorcade Stopped When A Homeless Stranger Smiled-myhoa

The mayor’s convoy rolled through downtown Chicago like it had been measured with a ruler.

Three black SUVs moved slowly along the rain-slick street, their headlights spreading white across the pavement, their tires hissing through the shallow water at the curb.

Behind the metal barricades, people leaned in with phones raised, paper coffee cups steaming in their hands, coat sleeves dark from the weather.

Image

The block smelled like rain, exhaust, wet wool, and the faint sweetness from a donut cart that had stayed open because crowds were good for business.

Cameras flashed from every direction.

Reporters stood shoulder to shoulder near the press rope, calling the mayor’s name over the low buzz of the crowd.

A City Hall aide stood under a clear plastic umbrella, one hand wrapped around a damp clipboard, her thumb holding the day’s schedule in place so the pages would not curl.

There was a speech coming later.

There were photographs planned at the front entrance.

There were donors waiting, staffers waiting, security officers waiting, and a whole line of people ready to applaud at the right moment.

Everything about the mayor’s arrival was supposed to look controlled.

That was the point of a motorcade.

Power did not rush.

Power rolled slowly past the crowd, waved behind glass, and let everyone watch it arrive.

Inside the center SUV, the mayor sat in the rear seat with one hand resting near the armrest and the other near his phone.

His coat was pressed.

His tie was straight.

His face had the calm, practiced look of a man who knew when cameras were pointed his way, even when the windows were dark enough that most people could not see him clearly.

On posters, that face looked steady.

On television, it looked warm.

In campaign ads, it had looked like the face of someone who understood family, work, faith, neighborhoods, loss, and second chances.

That was what people had voted for.

That was what people had believed.

At the barricade, a woman lifted her little boy higher so he could see over the shoulders in front of him.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *