When you leave the shoe-rehabilitation establishment run by one Robert Napoleon Steele the Third, you will walk a bit taller, stride a bit quicker. You're guaranteed to be well-shod and shiny, for you've just visited the Lazarus of Leather. The man who can bring the most battered, hopeless, despairing shoe back to its showroom state.
You might say he did the same for himself. Ask Napoleon about his life story and he might ask which part you want — the stand-up comedian days, or the 19 years on the street, homeless?
"I remember when I was homeless, sleeping in an alley on a stinking mattress, didn't matter, when you're homeless, you don't care how it is," he said.
"I saw this family coming back from church. I was praying — God, get me off crack. Get me off drugs. And I did! And now I got kids, and it's 'Sit down! Boy, leave your brother alone! Don't set the cat on fire!' And I think, 'God, get me back on crack.' "
He grins. Got you. Of course, he wouldn't trade fatherhood for anything. He has one son entering the military this year, and three young sons with his wife, who's a teacher. For seven months, he's been running Napoleon's Shoe Shine at 88 S. 6th Street, on the skyway level in downtown Minneapolis near a Starbucks. It's more than a place to buff your brogans — he'll fix anything leather, and restore jackets, coats, bags to spiffy new condition.
You get your shoes back and think: how did he do that?
Practice.
"I used to buy lots of shoes at the Goodwill and work on them, and if you mess up it's OK, because no one's going to say, 'Hey, those were my shoes I gave away.' "