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the time, growing impatient for Nick to make his exit. “Who undercut you?”

      I consider lying, but then I figure why lie to protect Nick? “Your boy,” I say.

      “Nick did that to you?” She sounds alarmed again, almost angry.

      “It happens,” I say. Out of the corner of my eye, I see a couple of the other players leaving and I don’t want to be caught talking to her.

      “Gotta bolt,” I say. “Peace.”

      “Take care,” she says. “Don’t go getting yourself hurt.”

      I swear she’s flirting as she says it. As I walk away, I think I see her wink, but the flurries are turning a little heavier now so I can’t be sure.

      I head up Central and I’m just about to 36th when I hear someone call out my name. I turn and see Moose, so I wait for him at the intersection.

      “Good practice,” he tells me when he arrives. “We gonna beat the hell out of Arlington.”

      “We better,” I say. “I’m so amped I can barely stand it.”

      We cut over toward College, our heads bent into the wind.

      “One thing, though,” Moose says.

      “What?”

      “You’re already about to take Nick’s starting spot. Don’t screw it up by trying to take his girl.”

      I play ignorant. “I’m not doing anything like that.”

      “I saw you,” Moose says. “Running game with her in the damn parking lot. I mean, come on, man.”

      I try to laugh it off. “Shit. I wish I had game to run. I was just talking.”

      Moose stops then, right there in the middle of the lane on 38th. “I know game when I see it,” he says. “Just stay clear of Jasmine.” We head on across the street. I tell him I’m meeting Wes for some eats so he decides to join us. Then, even though he was dead serious for me to stay away from Nick’s girlfriend, he pushes me on the back, messing around. “A freshman trying to get down with Jasmine Winters in the parking lot,” he says. “You a dawg, D-Bow.” We laugh then, and duck into the warmth of the burger joint, leaving Indy’s bluster outside.

      6.

      Game Day. Is there anything that gets the blood flowing more than those two words? Wes gives me a fist bump and wishes me luck as we bust out of final period and head down the hall. He’s off to practice with the band so I won’t see him until we hit the hardwood tonight. I stroll down the hall, give a quick smile to Jasmine as she waits on Starks, bounce down the Marion East stairs, put Kanye on headphone blast and start focusing on the game tonight.

      I only get about four steps before I see Uncle Kid waiting on me. He’s leaning against his dinged-up Nova, skinny as a lamp-post and a little disheveled. He’s got no coat on, just a dingy Nike sweatshirt that looks about as old as he is. He shivers in the wind. Still, when he sees me, he gives a big smile. “D-Bow!” he shouts, so loud I can hear it over my music. “You gotta be ready, son! Game day!”

      I wanted to retreat into my own world for an hour or two before reporting back to the gym, but Kid’s energy is infectious. It’s almost like it’s his game tonight. I slide my headphones down around my neck and walk over. I offer a handshake, but he pulls me in and gives me a half-hug. “You’re my man, D-Bow. It all starts tonight,” he says. We stand there in the chill for a few seconds. I can sense the other students looking at us as they file out of school. I love my uncle, but he does look out of place so when he asks me if I want to take a ride, I jump on in.

      That Nova of his is a sorry old bucket. Even as we climb in, I can hear the shocks squeak under our weight, and when the heater kicks on it sounds like somebody’s shuffling cards behind the dash. It smells like glue and stale food too.

      Instead of taking me back home, Kid goes down Central, hangs a right on 32nd, then another right on Fall Creek Parkway. I figure he just wants to cruise around a bit, but when we pass under the red bridge of the Monon Trail, he points up at it, and I realize he’s got some lesson in store for me.

      “See that?” Kid asks. “They connected that trail all the way from the North side to downtown, but they hit our neighborhood and they put it right over us, so all those people out biking and jogging with their dogs can pretend like we don’t even exist.”

      “Yeah,” I say. I’ve heard this story before from my dad, as if I’m supposed to be offended by that trail. But like my mom points out, they just followed along the old railroad line, so if we’re supposed to get pissed off, then she says we might as well look up who the hell originally designed the city and then go shout at their graves. It’s just as productive as bitching about people from Noblesville riding their bikes, she says.

      But there’s an edge to my uncle’s voice as he talks, and he grips the wheel a bit tighter with every block. His old sweatshirt hangs off his arm, and underneath it he looks thinner than usual. For as long as I can remember, Uncle Kid—Sidney, as my dad would stress—has been kind of a problem. I don’t mean he’s a bad guy. But there’s always been some kind of bad news swirling around him. He can never keep a job for long, he doesn’t get arrested, but he’s got friends in and out of jail, and he’s always got some scheme that’s going to turn things around that just makes my dad shake his head in disgust. And sure enough those schemes always lose money for Uncle Kid and he’s got to pound pavement to try to find someone who will hire him again.

      He guns it to beat the light at Keystone. The whole car rattles and squeaks as he bounces through the intersection. He slows down then and goes quiet, but he frowns as he stares ahead. All this frustration started for Uncle Kid before I was born, back when he came out of Marion East only to see his basketball career go nowhere—or at least not as far as people thought it would. So he shuffled around, a disappointment to everyone. And that’s the thing. Even now, I feel like he’d be okay except that the weight of everyone else’s disappointment presses on him until he lives down to what they think of him. The only time I don’t see all of it weighing on him is when he’s on that Fall Creek court, schooling guys.

      We roll north until Fall Creek becomes Binford. The houses on either side of us start to rise from more and more impressive lots. We go past a few commercial intersections—gas stations and fast food joints like anywhere else—but soon the lights get brighter and suddenly my uncle’s Nova appears out of place next to the luxury cars and new model SUVs.

      “This is where you want to be,” Kid says, almost to himself. “Up here with the beautiful people.” In his voice, though, I hear both my mom’s resentment and my dad’s desire.

      Then he hangs a right on some residential street and we wind back and forth through neighborhoods, some houses rising three stories up.

      “I could have lived in places like this,” he says. “Just needed a break here and there.”

      I don’t say anything. The truth? Hell yes, he could have lived in a mansion if things would have played out. But it seems rude to agree with someone who says something like that, like you’re calling attention to all the ways they screwed up. I’m not sure exactly where we are once we go under the interstate, but at some point I see us pass a sign that says we’ve crossed from Marion County into Hamilton County.

      Uncle Kid just stares straight ahead. “Not that I’d want to live like all these people, but, D-Bow, up here they look after each other. It’s impossible for people up here to fail.” Then he looks over at me. “But, my man, down where we are, you have to look out for yourself. I learned that the hard way.”

      He’s leading to something, and it doesn’t take me long to see what. We come down a hill past a country club, then hit a bigger intersection, and he turns onto 126th. Then there it is: Hamilton Academy, its lights up since their first game is tonight too.

      “If I’d have played ball at a place like this,” Kid says, “instead

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