At the far end of Navaho Drive in Raleigh’s North Hills, where the road dead-ends inside The Pointe at Midtown apartment complex, residents of “Los Navaho” drift home in the late-day light.
Construction workers pull into parking spaces still in dusty boots. Children play on the sidewalks. Neighbors gather in stairwells to chat.
Around 5 p.m., many end up at “Las Delicias,” a Latin food truck parked near the end. From behind the register, José Rutilo Bautista Hernández, 30, watches the neighborhood where he also lives come together. When the phone rings, he rarely needs to ask who is ordering…