again.â
McGuire turned the key of Coraâs Saab, its starter motor powered by jumper cables attached to the battery of an ancient Dodge truck with âCompton Auto Serviceâ painted on the door in fading white script.
âOkay, forget it.â The mechanic emerged from under the Saabâs hood, wiping his hands on a greasy towel. âYou got some serious problems here. Probably the fuel pump. Sheâs not getting any gas.â
He leaned on the passenger door and spoke through the open window at McGuire, an unlit cigarette in the corner of his mouth. âWhenâs the last time this thing was running?â
McGuire said he had no idea.
âI bet sheâs been a year anyway,â the mechanic said, patting the pockets of his coveralls, searching for matches. âBattery probably wonât hold a charge either. You want me to order a new fuel pump?â A white oval enclosing the name Bert was stitched to the coveralls over the manâs heart.
McGuire pulled the keys from the ignition and stepped out of the car. Through the open door, the rays of the morning sun cleaved the interior of the garage, shining out of another achingly blue sky. âMight as well,â he replied. âThe carâs not much good without it.â
âHow many miles has she got?â Bert had found his matches. He was small and wiry with tired, heavily lidded eyes and a dayâs growth of graying beard.
âLess than forty thousand.â
âSheâs worth fixinâ then.â
The two men walked out of the garage to the side garden where the mechanic lit his cigarette, drew an apparently exhilarating deep breath and exhaled, looking up at the sky with apparent approval. âSo, you want me to order a battery for her?â
McGuire nodded. âOnce itâs running, I plan to sell it.â
âYeah?â Bert looked back at the car with greater appreciation. âLet me know. I might have a buyer for it. Whatâre you askinâ?â
âWhatever the fair value is.â
âTake a day or two for the pump to come in. From Boston.â Boston, his tone suggested, was on the far side of the universe.
âIâll be here.â Bert turned to climb into his truck. âAny idea where I can rent a car?â McGuire asked.
âSure. I got loaners at the shop. Rent you one if you donât mind somethinâ with a few dents and scrapes. What dâyou need?â
âAnything that runs and I can charge to a credit card. How about a ride downtown?â
Parker Leedaleâs office was on the second floor of a daffodil-yellow frame building, above a gift shop called Calico & Ginger. A gilt-painted carved wooden sign, the only form of street advertising apparently permitted in Compton, was suspended from a black wrought-iron bracket over a weathered oak door on the side of the building. Hirons & Leedale, Attorneys-at-Law, the sign proclaimed.
The carpeted steps creaked beneath McGuireâs weight as he climbed the stairs to a surprisingly modern and airy reception room illuminated by two large skylights. The floors were wide-plank pine buffed by years of footsteps and paste wax, and the walls were covered in a hunter green fabric with a scattered pattern of wild flowers in yellow, white and pink.
âGood morning!â
The voice, high and happy like wind chimes, startled McGuire and he turned to see a small woman in her late twenties wearing a black sweater and tweed skirt enter the reception area from a supply room, a stack of file folders in her hand. She was barely five feet tall, McGuire estimated, with the near-excess of energy and joy that many small, attractive women display. Her eyes were large and deep brown, her hair thick and black, shaped in soft waves to frame her face.
âIsnât this another perfect day weâre having?â she smiled as she crossed the room to the scarred pine harvest table that served as a reception
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