Bobby Wade pulled his SUV into a parking lot on the 50th Street side of Washburn High School around 2 p.m. Tuesday. There was a long wheelchair ramp leading to the nearest entrance.
Wade, a Vikings receiver, stepped into a freezing drizzle that was lightly falling. He opened the vehicle's boot, took out a wheelchair, went to the passenger's door and talked briefly with his older brother James.
A moment later, Bobby lifted James, placed him in the wheelchair and then started pushing the chair toward the ramp and the Minneapolis public school's side entrance.
The Wade brothers had made a presentation at Washburn a year earlier. They were back again to dramatize this truth: That young people have choices, and the decisions they make when faced with those choices carry either good or bad consequences.
James Wade made terrible decisions as a teenager and now, at 33, he has spent half of his life in a wheelchair. Bobby Wade, 27, took advantage of his possibilities and now is in his sixth NFL season.
There were a couple of hundred students in the Washburn auditorium. The program was late getting started and this led to a premature conclusion.
James Wade still was in the process of describing the details of the night of Oct. 8, 1991, when the final hour bell sounded, meaning the students had only a few minutes to get to the busses.
Amid the scurrying, a student asked James, a Phoenix resident, if he could come back to finish his story.