The antagonist wasn't a rival team. It was a scout. A silver-tongued hustler named "Silk" from the Lincoln Square Spartans, a private school team with real uniforms, a real gym, and a real chance at a championship. Silk came with promises: a spotlight, college looks, a way out. But Silk also came with a needle in his pocket and a deadness behind his eyes that Tariq’s mother called "the devil’s quiet."
With ten seconds on the clock, Tariq stole the ball from Silk himself—a clean, righteous pick. He drove the lane, two Spartans closing in. He could take the shot. He could be the hero. The diary entry would read: Won it all. 27 pts. Game winner.
The summer of ’95 was a crucible. The city was baking under a heatwave that made the air feel like wet wool. Tariq’s crew—Preacher, a lanky sharp-shooter who quoted scripture before every foul shot; Diggy, a stocky bulldog of a point guard with eyes that saw three passes ahead; and Fat Jamal, who could box out a moving car—ruled the courts at Marcy Projects. They were kings of the summer league, a five-man tribe bound by sweat and the promise of escape.
Silk just smirked and drifted away, a shark smelling easier prey.
The crowd erupted. His team mobbed Diggy. Silk just walked away, disappearing into the dusk. Tariq stood at center court, looked down at his Spalding, and smiled. He didn't need to write a new entry. The story was already there, etched not in marker, but in the sweat, the pain, the choice, and the pass.
That night, Diggy didn't come home. He was found at dawn, slumped against a chain-link fence near the Flatbush junction, glassy-eyed and mumbling. Silk’s needle had found its mark. The team was shattered. Preacher prayed over Diggy in the hospital waiting room while Fat Jamal cried, his massive shoulders shaking. The summer league finals were in three days.