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HE FIXED the Luxury Car Not Knowing Who He Was — Until Elvis SHOCKED Him With an UNEXPECTED Move

The car that came around the corner onto Beale Extension was a 1956 Lincoln Continental Mark II. Elijah had seen one only in photographs, a car so far above the economic register of the neighborhood it was moving through that it had the quality of something from a different world, a different Memphis entirely.

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Dark blue or had been dark blue before the road’s mud had applied itself to the lower third of the body. Moving at the reduced speed of a driver who knows his car is in trouble and is not making it worse. The specific caution of someone nursing a machine toward the nearest possible help. The car pulled to the curb in front of the garage.

The engine continued for a moment after the driver turned it off. A series of irregular sounds that told Elijah several things about the vehicle’s condition before he had seen anything under the hood. The door opened. The young man who got out was perhaps 20, 21. Tall with dark hair swept back from his face.

Wearing a winter coat that had not been bought at any store in this neighborhood. He looked at the garage and at Elijah the doorway and then back at the car with the expression of someone who has been accompanied by a problem long enough to be genuinely worried about it. Evening, Elvis said. Evening, Elijah said. Elvis looked at the garage sign, Curtis Automotive EST 1941.

You still open? Elijah looked at the sky, at the storm building in the southwest, at the car at the curb with its engine ticking as it cooled, at the young man. Pop the hood, he said. The engine was a Lincoln Y block V8, one of the more complex engines being installed in American automobiles and one that presented specific challenges when it malfunctioned.

Elijah had seen one before, worked on one briefly two years ago, and he stood over this one in the gathering dark with the overhead light extended on its cord and took his time with what was in front of him. Elijah stood beside him watching with the expression of someone who cares deeply about the machine being assessed and is paying attention to every signal from the person assessing it.

Tell me what it was doing, Elijah said. Elvis told him. The hesitation on acceleration. The rough idle, the sound which he approximated with his voice in a way that told Elijah he had been listening carefully and could communicate what he had heard. “Timing chain,” Elijah said, “and something with the carburetor.

” He straightened. “You drove from where?” “East Memphis,” Elvis said. That was a significant distance in a car making that sound. “You’re lucky it made it,” Elijah said. “I know,” Elvis said. “I was talking to it the whole way.” Elijah looked at him. “Did it listen?” Elvis smiled. “Mostly.” The parts Elijah needed were not in the garage.

The suppliers were closed for the night. He looked at the engine and then at his watch and then at the storm settling over the street outside and he thought about what his father would have done. His father would not have sent a car into the night with an engine that sounded like that. “Come inside,” Elijah said. It took until 11:45. The work was the work of a man with the wrong parts and improvised equipment, fabricating what he couldn’t find, modifying what didn’t quite fit, solving each problem in sequence with what he had rather than what he needed.

Elijah worked with the complete concentration of someone who has given a problem his full attention and intends to keep giving it that attention until the problem is resolved. Elvis stayed. This was not what Elijah had expected. He had expected the young man to call someone, a friend, a family member, anyone who could retrieve him from a garage on the south side of Memphis while the work was done.

Instead, Elvis had sat on the upturned oil drum near the back of the garage and watched and occasionally held things when holding things was useful and talked. They talked about cars first, about the Lincoln’s engine, about what Elijah was doing and why, about the specific qualities of the V8 that made it both powerful and temperamental.

Elvis asked questions that came from genuine interest, and Elijah answered with the directness he used when someone was actually asking rather than making conversation. Then, they talked about music. Elijah had heard the name Elvis Presley on WDIA, had heard That’s All Right come through the radio while he was working, had registered it as part of the general landscape of Memphis music without attaching it to a specific face.

He did not make the connection now. He was talking to a customer who sat on an oil drum and asking about music the way someone asks about something they actually care about. And Elijah was answering the way he answered things he actually cared about. He had opinions about Memphis music, about what produced it, about where it came from, about the clubs on Beale Street and the churches two blocks over, and how those two things were not as separate as people outside Memphis assumed, how the same people moved between them, how the

music that came out of one carried the music of the other in it whether anyone acknowledged that or not. Elvis listened with the quality of attention Elijah had come to associate with him across the course of the evening, complete, genuinely engaged, the listening of someone building an understanding rather than waiting for his turn to speak.

The storm settled over the neighborhood around 8:00, and the rain on the garage roof provided a steady rhythm to the work. The single light held the space in its circle. The city outside was wet and dark and quiet. At 11:45, Elijah looked at what he had done and told Elvis to get in and try the engine. The engine turned over on the first attempt.

It ran with the specific quality of something that has been returned to itself, smooth, even, the V8 producing the sound it was built to produce, the timing correct, everything in proper relationship. Elvis sat in the car for a moment with the engine running. Then he got out and his expression was the unguarded expression of someone whose relief has outrun his composure, the genuine, unperformed response of a person who was worried about something important and has just received good news about it.

“You did it,” he said. “The car did it,” Elijah said. “I got it back to where it wanted to be.” Elvis reached into his coat and produced money, more money than the job was worth, the amount of someone who was genuinely grateful and wants to express that gratitude in the most available form. Elijah looked at it.

He thought about the roof, about the rust-colored stain on the concrete, about the equipment he needed and had been needing for years, about the specific arithmetic of a small garage on the south side of Memphis trying to remain operational. He pushed most of it back. He took what the job was worth, what the hours and materials and expertise required, the fair amount of fair man charges for honest work, no more.

Elvis looked at him. “That’s more than enough,” Elijah said. “After what you did tonight I did what I’m here for. Not a performance of principle, simply a statement of something that was obvious to him. This garage fixes cars. Your car needed fixing. That is the transaction. A pause.

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