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Highline Public Schools
15675 Ambaum Blvd. SW Burien, WA 98166

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Highline Public Schools
15675 Ambaum Blvd. SW Burien, WA 98166

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An older woman, Mrs. Alvarez, tapped him on the shoulder and handed him a styrofoam plate. “You remember when you used to run up and down these stairs?” she asked, smiling. Jalen laughed and nodded. He remembered being nineteen and convinced that his only way out was to be loud and fast. He had been wrong. The quieter route — the building, the mentoring, the slow account of savings — had coronated him in small increments.

Later that night, when the music thinned and the lanterns guttered, Jalen walked the block that had taught him how to survive and then how to build. He paused under the mural, his shadow long against painted teeth. Someone had scrawled a new line in black marker beneath the Victory Lap lettering: “For the long haul.”

The mural of Nipsey on the corner had been brightened the week before, colors sharpened as if someone had turned a light on inside the paint. Underneath the mural, local kids set up a small speaker and cued the opening drumline from Victory Lap. The song threaded through the morning fog and carried past the barbershop where old men argued about stats and legacy like it was the afternoon sermon.

He smiled. Victory hadn’t been a single lap around a track; it was a hundred small laps, taken by a hundred different people. Each one deposited into the same account: community. Each one compounded, quiet and constant, into a legacy that didn’t need a headline to be true.

A teenager named Keon climbed up onto a crate and grabbed the mic. He didn’t rap like he wanted to be a star; he rhymed about scholarships and afterschool programs and the small business incubator meeting next Tuesday. He thanked the neighborhood elders, then looked straight at Jalen. “We got a few people trying to turn the rec center into a recording spot,” he said. “We could use your help with a pitch.”

He worked the corner store now, stocking bottled water and those energy drinks kids swore by. Business was modest, but on Saturdays he opened early and left the door unlocked. People came in with questions about leases, small business loans, how to set up a company name with the county. Jalen didn’t have all the answers, but he had a stack of photocopied forms, the number for a nonprofit lawyer who volunteered afternoons, and the memory of a man on a stage saying build, don’t leave.

He turned and went home, already figuring what to say at Tuesday’s meeting. The city slept, but the block was awake — rooted, invested, and moving forward on its own steady timing.