“I do.”

Baker jerked his chin toward the front door. They left the apartment.

James Monroe leaned on a shop rag draped over the lip of the Monte Carlo’s front quarter panel and unscrewed the wing nut atop its air filter. He dropped the nut onto the hat of the filter so he’d know where to find it later on, then pulled the filter up and free and set it aside without disconnecting it from its hose. The old Chevy’s carburetor was now in sight and serviceable.

“What you doing now, James?” said Raymond.

“Gonna adjust the air and fuel mix.”

“You already did the plugs and wires?”

“What do you think? Carb adjustment’s the last thing you do. I been telling you that for thirty-some-odd years.”

“James keeps my Pontiac correct,” said Raymond to Alex. “In exchange, I work on that hip of his.”

“You don’t work on it as good as I work on your vehicle.”

“This garage isn’t exactly the optimum place for man got a hip condition. You’re on your feet too much to begin with. Gavin ought to bring some heat in here, too.”

“I got that space heater,” said James, referring to a small unit, currently unplugged, sitting by the tool bench in the rear of the space.

“If it was worth a damn, you’d have it on.”

“Summer’s comin, anyway.”

“It ain’t here yet.”

Alex and Raymond were standing, as there was no room for chairs in the garage. Alex held a can of beer in hand, nursing it. Darkness had come, and with it the chill of a D.C. evening. It was mid-spring, but temperatures routinely dropped into the forties at night. Alex had erred in forgoing a jacket. He was cold and a bit dizzy. James had ignitioned the Chevy, and the smell of the exhaust was nauseating. Alex didn’t know how James could stand working here in these cramped and unhealthy conditions.

Alex stepped closer to the car. He watched as James attached a vacuum gauge to the intake manifold. His hands were raw and callused, with a dirty Band-Aid wrapped around one index finger.

“You see that Wizards game last night?” said James.

“West Coast games come on too late for me,” said Raymond. “But I read about it in the paper. Gilbert had forty-two. Sonics almost climbed back in it behind Chris Wilcox.”

“Yeah, but Agent Zero put the nail in the coffin with two seconds on the clock. They get Caron Butler back from that injury, they gonna go deep in the playoffs.’Cause when the defense double up on Gilbert, you gonna have two other weapons, Caron and Antawn, out on the perimeter, ready to score.”

“They ain’t going all that deep without a center,” said Raymond.

“Michael Jordan didn’t need an outstanding center to get the championship for the Bulls.”

“Gilbert ain’t Michael.”

“Hand me that ten-inch flat-head, Ray. It’s over there on the bench.”

Raymond went to the tool bench and retrieved a long-shafted flat-head screwdriver with a vinyl handle. James took it and fitted the head into the slot of one of two screws located on the lower face of the carburetor. He turned the screw clockwise until it was tight.

“Takes five outstanding players to win a championship,” said Raymond, intent on making his point.

“Not always,” said James, moving to the second screw and tightening it the same way he had the first. “Course, there was the old Knicks team, so there’s always an exception. The greatest starting five in the history of pro basketball.”

“Clyde Frazier and Earl Monroe,” said Raymond. “The Rolls-Royce backcourt.”

“Willis Reed,” said James, fitting the flat-head back into the slot of the first screw. “Dave DeBusschere.”

“Bill Bradley,” said Alex.

“Princeton boy,” said James, not turning away from his task. “Had that pretty jumper from the corner.”

“Frazier was the key, though,” said Raymond. “He won the ring with Dick Barnett beside him. He didn’t need Earl.”

“How about the seventy-three playoffs against the Lakers?” said James. “Jesus worked some miracles in that series.”

“Please,” said Raymond. “Clyde ran the offense and played tremendous D. He hawked that ball. You know this.”

“If you say,” said James. He began to reloosen the carburetor’s screws.

“Me and my brother been having this argument our whole lives,” said Raymond, smiling to himself. Alex saw his smile fade as they heard footsteps.

A security light came on outside, illuminating the alley. A short balding bantamweight with large ears under patches of kinky gray hair entered the garage. He quick-stepped past Raymond and Alex without acknowledging either of them, placed his hands on his hips, and stood next to the car. He looked like a child beside James.

“Is it done?” said the man.

“I’m close, Mr. Gavin,” said James. He was now slowly turning the screws counterclockwise.

“I told Mr. Court it would be ready by now.”

“Court said his gas mileage was off. New points and plugs alone are not gonna fix that. I gotta adjust the mix.”

“Just get it done, James. I’m not paying you to entertain company in here. Court’s on his way to pick up his car. I need it to be ready. Not tomorrow. Now.”

“It’ll be ready, Mr. Gavin.”

Gavin walked out without further comment. For several moments there was only the sound of the running car in the garage. Alex was embarrassed for James Monroe.

“Two and a half,” said Raymond, breaking the tension. “Right, James?”

“That’s right.” He had turned the screws back two and one half times, and was now adjusting them in quarter-turn increments while listening to the engine.

“Mighty Mouse was a little short and to the point, wasn’t he?” said Raymond.

“He short,” said James with a chuckle. “Ain’t nobody gonna dispute that.”

“He got no reason to talk to you like that, either.”

“That’s his nature,” said James. “God made him little, and now he’s angry at me. Anyway, it’s work. It isn’t supposed to be easy or fun.”

As James turned the carburetor screw, the engine sputtered.

“Too far,” said Raymond.

“Right,” said James. He readjusted the screw, and the engine began to run smoothly. He tinkered with it a little bit more, and it ran smoother still. “It’s singin now.”

“I don’t hear nothin,” said Raymond.

“Exactly,” said James.

James took a long swig of beer. He put the can down, removed the vacuum gauge from the intake manifold, and reached for the air filter. He began to fit it back atop the carb.

“You hear Luther Ingram passed?” said James.

“ ‘If loving you is wrong,’ ” said Raymond, “ ‘I don’t want to be right.’ ”

“ ‘If being right means being without you,’ ” said James, “ ‘I’d rather be wrong than right.’ ”

“Straight-up beautiful,” said Raymond. “Nineteen seventy-three.”

“It was seventy-two, stupid.”

“Why you always got to teach me?”

“I’m just sayin.”

“It was one of those cheatin-is-good songs that were popular back then. Remember?”

“ ‘Me and Mrs. Jones,’ ” said James.

“Billy Paul,” said Alex. “That was seventy-two as well.”

James was replacing the wing nut on the air filter. He stopped for a moment, turned his head slightly, and looked at Alex out of the corner of his eye.

“My father had a radio in the coffee shop when I was kid,” said Alex. “He kept the dial on WOL. For the

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