head out the door. "Hey!" she yelled. "Hey, you guys in the car . . . there's something burning behind you!"
Mitchell rolled the window down. "What?"
"There's something on fire behind your car!"
Mitchell and Habib got out to take a look and we all hustled through the door to join them.
"It's just some trash," Mitchell said to Habib. "Kick it out of the way so it don't damage the car."
"It is flaming," Habib said. "I do not want to touch a flaming bag with my shoe."
"This is what happens when you hire a fucking camel jockey," Mitchell said. "You people have no work ethic."
"This is not true. I work very hard in Pakistan. In my village in Pakistan we have a rug factory, and my job is to beat the unruly children who work there. It is a very good job."
"Wow," Mitchell said. "You beat the little kids who work in the factory?"
"Yes. With a stick. It is a highly skilled position. You must be careful when beating the children not to crush their little fingers or they will not be able to tie the very fine knots."
"That's disgusting," I said.
"Oh no," Habib said. "The children like it, and they make much money for their families." He turned to Mitchell and shook his finger at him. "And I work very hard beating the little children, so you should not say such things about me."
"Sorry," Mitchell said. "Guess I was wrong about you." He gave the bag a kick. The bag broke and some of the debris stuck to his shoe.
"What the hell?" Mitchell shook his foot, and flaming dog shit flew everywhere. A big glob landed on the carpet on the car; there was the hiss of ignition, and flames spread everywhere.
"Holy crap," Mitchell said, grabbing Habib, falling backward over the curb.
The fire popped and crackled, and the interior went conflagration. There was a small explosion when the gas tank caught and the car was engulfed in black smoke and flame.
"Guess they didn't use one of them flame-retardant carpets," Lula said.
Habib and Mitchell were pressed flat to the building, mouths open.
"You could probably go now," Lula said. "I don't think they're gonna follow you."
By the time the fire trucks arrived, the carpet car was mostly carcass, and the fire had settled down to wienie-roast size. My Buick was about ten feet in front of the carpet car, but Big Blue was untouched. The Buick's paint wasn't even blistered. The only noticeable difference was a slightly warmer than usual door handle.
"I've got to go now," I said to Mitchell. "Too bad about your car. And I wouldn't worry about your eyebrows. They're a little singed right now, but they'll probably grow back. I had this happen to me once and everything turned out okay."
"What . . . How . . . ?" Mitchell said.
I loaded Bob into the Buick and eased away from the curb, winding my way around the police cars and fire trucks.
Carl Costanza was in uniform, directing traffic. "Looks like you're on a roll," he said. "This is the second car you've toasted this week."
"It wasn't my fault! It wasn't even my car!"
"I heard someone pulled the old bag-full-of-crapola gag on Arturo Stolle's two stooges."
"No kidding? I don't suppose you know who did it?"
"Funny thing, I was just going to ask if you knew who did it."
"I asked you first."
Costanza did a small grimace. "No. I don't know who did it."
"Me either," I said.
"You're a pip," Constanza said. "I can't believe you got suckered into taking Simon's dog."
"I kind of like him."
"Just don't leave him alone in your car."
"You mean because it's against the law?"
"No. Because he ate Simon's front seat. Only thing left was some scraps of foam rubber and a few springs."
"Thanks for sharing that with me."
Costanza grinned. "I thought you'd want to know."
I cruised off, thinking that if Bob ate Big Blue's seat it would probably regenerate. At the risk of sounding like Grandma, I was beginning to wonder about Big Blue. It was as if the darn thing was impervious to damage. It was almost fifty years old and the original paint was in perfect condition. All around it cars got dented and torched and smushed flat as a pancake, but nothing ever happened to Big Blue.
"It's downright creepy," I said to Bob.
Bob had his nose pressed to the window and didn't look like he cared a whole lot.
I was still on Hamilton when my cell phone rang.
"Hey, babe," Ranger said. "What have you got