Their eyes met and something passed between them. Lisa pushed a strand of stray hair behind her ear and crossed one leg over the other.

“That’s how the dealers pack it, right? The coffee grounds mask the smell from the dope dogs.”

“So I hear,” said Lucas. “Any of your neighbors mention seeing suspicious activity up here?”

“A few of them certainly would. If they saw someone stealing something off my front porch…”

“Like the old lady across the street?”

“Miss Woods? She’d be one, definitely. She’d probably try to stop the culprit, too.”

“Yeah, we met.”

“She’s sweet.”

“To you, maybe,” said Lucas. “How about Ernest Lindsay, next door?”

“Ernest and I are cool.”

“Good guy?”

“Yeah. He has some home issues. I let him hang here sometimes, watch TV and stuff, when he wants to get out. Ernest loves movies. He even watches the black-and-whites on TCM. He wants to be a director.” Lisa looked away, out toward the street. Perhaps she felt she had betrayed Ernest’s trust. “Ernest would have said something.”

“No doubt.”

“If I hear anything…”

“I’ll write my number down before I go. I appreciate you taking the time.”

Lisa Weitzman stood. Lucas did not. He was being presumptuous and somewhat childish. He didn’t want to go.

“Anything else?” she said.

“Nope.”

She stared at him and he said nothing.

“I’m going to have a beer,” she said. “Would you care to join me?”

“Absolutely,” said Lucas.

She had come out with a couple of Dogfish 90 Minute IPAs, candles, and matches. She told him about her work in copyright law, saying with sarcasm that it was “fascinating,” and he said that he did investigative work for a private-practice defense attorney who had an office down by Judiciary Square. He told her that he wasn’t the office type and that he liked working outside. He listened to reggae, ska, dub, and guitar-based rock and bar bands. He liked soul music when he heard it but was unfamiliar with the artists because they had come before his time. She too liked rock, and a good night out for her was a transcendent live show. She could tell she was going to get along with someone if they were into DBT.

“ Decoration Day’s the shit,” said Lucas.

Dark had come and the candle flames threw a pleasant light on the porch. The beer was good, heavy with malt and alcohol. They were on their second round.

“You’re supposed to drink this one out of snifters,” said Lisa.

“I wouldn’t,” said Lucas, and he tapped the neck of his bottle against hers. “Thanks.”

“My pleasure.” She swigged some beer and put the bottle on the table. “It’s Spero…”

“Lucas.”

“With a c or a k? ”

“With a c.”

“I was thinking it was Greek.”

“It is.”

“But there’s no c in the Greek alphabet.”

“My grandfather changed it. He thought it looked better when he wrote it out in cursive. More American. How did you know that? About the alphabet.”

“I took Greek in college.”

“Where was that?”

“Stanford.” She said, softly, almost apologetically.

“That where you got your law degree?”

“Yale.”

“Oh, just Yale.”

“How about you? Where did you go to school?”

“The University of Baghdad,” said Lucas, repeating a lame joke he had heard many times but had never made himself, up until now. “Stupid, man. I don’t know why I said that.”

“You’re blushing.”

“Fuck, I know.”

“Army?”

“Marines.”

She asked nothing else about the subject and said, “Welcome home.”

“Good to be here,” said Lucas, taking in the graceful curve of her neck.

“You don’t look Greek.”

“I’m adopted. I’ve got a brother, also adopted, who teaches at Cardozo, right there.” He pointed his bottle sloppily in the direction of the school. His head was up. The alcohol had given him a kiss.

“You ever wonder, you know, about your identity?”

“No. I know who my parents are.”

“That’s nice.”

“I was blessed. You?”

“I’m from California, a suburb north of San Francisco. Grew up in a nice Jewish home. Progressive parents…”

“Bedroom community.”

“Sounds idyllic, I know. Out there the folks like to say that they don’t have any racial problems. No black people, no problems.”

“Must have been a culture shock, moving here.”

“For my neighbors more than for me. They like me now. I think.”

“Doesn’t matter if the racial makeup changes. This is a black city, far as I’m concerned. Always will be.”

“My local friends tell me that it’s mostly out-of-town transplants who buy houses in neighborhoods like these. You all can’t forget what it was. I don’t remember the high crime or the Clifton Terrace apartments when they were HUD, and I sure don’t remember the riots, because I wasn’t even on the planet. I just saw an affordable house on the edge of downtown with middle-class homeowners tending to their own, and I scooped it up. It’s quiet here. I walk up to Thirteenth and Clifton some nights and I sit on the school wall and look down at the city, and I feel like I hit the lottery.”

“The million-dollar view,” said Lucas. “You walk up there alone?”

“Most times,” she said, looking right at him. “Yeah.”

She went inside and came out with a couple more beers and a half-smoked joint. Lucas lit the joint off one of the candles and they passed it back and forth.

After a long exhale, Lucas said, “This isn’t stuff from that package, is it?”

“Nope. I already told you, I had nothing to do with it.”

“Just checking.”

“Stop working, Spero.”

“You’re right, I should.”

Lisa said, “Relax.”

Her knee brushed against his and he felt an electric current run up his spine.

They talked some more. It was easy. Lisa roached the last of the joint in the pack of matches, blew out the candles, got up, and gathered the bottles off the table.

“You want another?” she said.

“I could.”

“It’s gotten a little chilly out here.” She moved toward the door and looked over her shoulder.

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