I watch the white-haired man at the pedestal. He's crying. But the people at these things are always crying. Grown men and women, transformed by the bottle, and too broken to find their way back again. (The paragraph above jumps around a little too much for me. It's good as far as the descriptions go but it talks about the old man, then to other people, then in the next paragraph it goes back to the old man. I also get the impression that this is a church or somewhere that people go to atone for their sins.)
"My wife, she... She took the kids and left," the white-haired man says, "Told me I'd never see em' again... And all I can think about is where I'll get the money for my next drink."
(We are back to the old man again, but who is he talking to? Is he talking to the main character or himself? Is the dialog overheard or direct? I can also tell that he is distressed and could use some showing at this point to re-enforce that feeling of distress.)
This man won't do. None of these people will do.
(I like it, to me the verbage is perfect. I’m not sure what it means yet and it makes me want to read more. Is the MC thinking this? Maybe some italics or a "he thought" dialog tag.)
I picture my father up on the pedestal, flask in hand, my mother in the crowd. What would he have said? Why would she have listened?
(I get lost here, I understand the emotions the story is trying to convey with the flashback but where I was hooked before my attention starts to wane here. I'm looking for more descriptions of why these people just won't do.)
Overall I'm interested by the "won't do" comment the mysterious MC who to me seems to be lurking, but I can't say I'm totally hooked yet. I think some more focus on just one or two subjects in the first 13 would go a long way to holding my attention. Right now it seems a little busy to me.
Hope this helps,
Jeff