The Faint White Line
The starting line was just a faint, worn line of white paint on the cracked asphalt of the cancha. But for Lucas Chaves, it was the most beautiful place in the world. It was the line where he stopped being the quiet, new kid, the son of immigrants, and became simply a runner. Lucas, at sixteen, had legs that seemed too long for his body, built for eating up the dusty track around the communal soccer field in Bucaramanga. He had inherited them from his father, Alejandro, who had once dreamed of being a marathoner in Caracas, before the dream had been suffocated by the collapse of their country . His parents had brought him and his little sister, Elena, to Colombia five years ago, when Lucas was just ten. He remembered the four-day bus ride, the border crossing with just a few suitcases, and the strange, confusing feeling of leaving his abuela behind . Colombia was supposed to be the land of opportunity, a place where dreams could breathe. But for his parents, it had become a land o...