The Way Home
by elfin
“Maybe you’re not the good guy pretending to be the bad guy.
Maybe you’re the bad guy pretending to be the good guy. You ever
think about that?”
“Every day.”
- Mia & Brian, Fast and Furious
I'd know that engine anywhere.
And while seeing Brian should be a
surprise, it just isn't. The
Charger sure is, Mia is, Vince and Leon being anywhere near him.
Three great big fucking shocks. But then so is going from
imprisonment to freedom, from having no future to having the world at
my feet, in the time it takes me to drive a quarter mile. I
should yell at Brian for dragging Mia into this but she's a big girl
now, but I’m too happy, too stunned, and as much as I don’t want to
admit it if she wanted in no one could have stopped her. Not
me. Certainly not him.
They leave all the other prisoners still
chained inside the bus, leave
the guards restrained but unhurt. It's a neat job, no one gets more
than a bruised cheek and a black eye; Brian's planning no doubt.
The guy never stops flooring me; from that
morning five years ago,
leaping from a moving car to a moving truck to rescue Vince, blowing
his cover right in front of me to save the guy’s life, later handing me
the keys to the car and letting me escape to save mine. Five
years on there’s the thing with Braga - I’m not one hundred percent
certain, but I think he would have let me shoot the guy in that church
and not batted a pretty eyelid – and now this crazy ass stunt. He
threw his career to the wind for me once and somehow salvaged it.
Now he’s doing it again and this time I doubt there’s going to be any
second – third - chances. Like last time, he tried to make me run
this time too, and after I refused to leave he gave a testimonial in
court that should have earned me sainthood, never mind kept me out of
Lompoc. But the judge played hardass, gave me twenty-five to
life, and now Brian's showing the world what he thinks of that.
How the hell can I not feel anything for the guy? How the hell
can my car be here like this, in one piece?
I seriously thought my life was over, for
the last few weeks all I’ve
known for certain is that I’m going to jail, with chances of ever
getting out being slim to nil. But instead of being chained to
some murdering bastard I’m staring at the open road as Brian puts a lot
of mileage between us and the crime scene. It’s taking me a while
to catch up.
There’s the blast of a horn and a blur of
black as Leon and Vince take
the lead in a plain black Honda, leaving us in the middle, Mia bringing
up the rear in a blue and silver Skyline I haven't seen before.
From what I can see in the mirror’s it’s got enough mods to make
insurance a nightmare, looks like it might glow in the dark too, but
it’s not flashy enough on the outside to draw any unnecessary
attention. I wonder where it’s come from. Then I turn and
stare at Brian as he drives the Charger with all the confidence in the
world, like he belongs behind the wheel of my car.
“You’re the last person in the world
I expected to show up,” I
tell him, just to have something to say. He’s happy, beaming;
looks like a kid at Christmas, not an ex-cop on the run.
“Am not,” he throws back and now I can’t
wipe the smile off my own face.
Nothing phases him. Despite everything
we've been through the only time
I've seen fear in his eyes was out there by the side of the road that
morning, with Vince's blood all over us, making the call that saved
Vince's life and blowing his cover to do it. I could have killed
him with my bare hands at that moment and he knew it. But the
fear I saw wasn't of me, wasn't even for me. It was for Vince, a
guy who hated him, who'd beat the shit out of him as soon as look at
him; it was fear of what would happen to Vince if Brian died right
there and then with my hands around his throat. I didn't hurt
him, not then, and by the time I got my hands on a shotgun and he was
standing in front of me, I couldn't hurt him. God help me, the way I
felt about him, I couldn’t even threaten him.
He drives me crazy, because no one has
ever given so much for me and I
don’t get why he, of all people, does. No one else has ever thrown away
their life just to keep me out of jail. And why? Because
one night I told him I'd never go back, that I'd die first. And
man, did he take that to heart.
I look over at him, meaning to thank him,
but before I can get a word
out, he says, "Strip," and it takes me a moment to process.
"There's a change of clothes in the back." He's smiling, joy
radiating from him. "Orange isn't your colour, man."
Message received. We’re on an open
road and I’m sticking out like
a sore thumb. But a guy my size stripping in the front of a
muscle car built for racing isn't easy. He ducks my elbow a couple of
times, and I swear I can hear him fighting the urge to laugh. I'm
fighting the urge to elbow him in the balls even though I'm not sure I
can make it look accidental.
A white shirt and faded blue jeans are in
the back, neatly
folded. I reach over and grab them once I'm down to my briefs,
throwing the orange jumpsuit at Brian who winds down the window and
lets it fly in the slipstream. I guess the cops don't need the
extra clue that we're heading south, still it’s probably not the wisest
of ideas but Brian's grinning like a loon and it makes me feel
fearless, just like him. I experience a sudden need to snatch
back some balance here. So I wait until I've somehow got into my
jeans and let my eyes settle on him, wait until he glances over at me,
and say,
"You look so hot drivin' this car."
It takes a moment for the words to sink
in, and as his grin fades I
turn away, shrug on the shirt and gaze out of the window as I button
up, ignoring the question that’s written all over his face and his
slightly high-pitched, “What?”
I leave it for five miles and he just
drives. He’s quiet, and
that’s so unlike him it throws me so in the end I have to make
conversation.
“How long have we got?”
He looks at me. “Until they realise
something’s wrong. All
the buses are low-jacked, so normally they’d already know. But we
got some help hacking the signal, so now we’ve got until the guards
free themselves or until they realise the vehicle they think they’re
tracking hasn’t arrived in Lompoc when their GPS says it has.”
He’s got a real talent for this
stuff. “So where’re we goin’?”
“San Jose, Costa Rica. For
now. Further, maybe,
later.” That’s cool. I stopped in Costa Rica before, on my
way to Panama. I like the place, like the city. Hell,
anywhere will do. He holds out his hands, letting the wheel go
for just a second. He’s still smiling, like it’s plastered
permanently to his face. “However far we need to go to keep you
out of Lompoc.”
He’s gone pretty damn far already.
It’s blown my mind – this
seemingly unconditional devotion – I don’t know what to do with
it. I definitely don’t understand it. I wonder if there’s
anything he won’t do for me. It’s heavy stuff I’m not ready to
deal with, we’ve got a long drive and we definitely don’t need any more
tension between us. Time to change the subject. So I lean
across to glance in the rear view and I ask who the Skyline belongs
to. I don’t need a verbal answer; it’s there in his eyes when he
glances in the mirror.
I nod. “Nice.”
“I practically built it from scratch,
raced it in Miami. I’ve
taken some of the more... ostentatious mods off, but it’s a good
car. It’ll do us proud, you know, if we need spare cash.”
I nod, catching his meaning. He
didn’t say much about Miami in
the short time we had back in L.A. I know it’s where the Feds
finally caught up with him after chasing him across the entire
country. I know it’s where he finally joined up again – another
short-lived relationship. So I know about the ‘what’ and I know
about the ‘why’. But all I know about the ‘how’ is something
about drugs and money and a guy – Roman Pearce. I don’t know who
he is and I don’t want to know. Brian hasn’t said much – just
that he’s an old friend and they have history. I remember him
telling us over dinner. I remember saying something like, ‘you
and I have history too’. I remember Mia’s expression. Mom
used to look at me like that when I was acting particularly childish.
I definitely don’t want to ask him about
that now. Like I said,
there’s enough tension in this car as it is. And I can tease him
about the colour of the Skyline later. There’s all this stuff
between us and the deepest conversation we’ve had since he threw his
life away for me the first time around was about the benefits of
electronic fuel injection or maybe it wasn’t. Still, this doesn’t seem
to be the time for a meaningful chat. I could ask him if he won
in Miami, but it’s pointless. Of course he won, every single
time. Bet the Florida scene didn’t know what hit it. So for
the next hundred miles or so, neither of us talks. It’s not
awkward, it’s comfortable. It feels right.
Several miles before the Mexican border at
Heroica Nogales, Brian leans
over into the back with one hand on the wheel and his big toe still on
the gas and pulls a large envelope from behind my seat.
“I’d have done that,” I point out as he
drops the envelope in my
lap. He just smiles. Show off. I open it up and let
the contents fall into my lap. Currency, permits, passports,
insurance, drivers’ licences; all in the names of Brian Connolly and
Dominic Santos.
“Mia, Leon and Vince have theirs, along
with vehicle permits and
insurance for the cars. Borders shouldn’t be a problem, but
there’s enough cash, just in case.”
It’s a minute or two before I can
speak. “You’re a natural at
working the other side of the law, Brian.”
He laughs. “When you’re a cop you
mix with the crème of
society.”
At the border crossing we blend in with
the tourists, put a few cars
between our own and get lucky, get across. No problem.
Ten miles into Mexico, Vince and Leon pull
into a gas station and Brian
follows, Mia close behind us. It's the first chance I've had to thank
them. I hug Mia. Leon and Vince hug me. Vince mutters
that maybe the narc cop isn't so bad after all. Nice of him to admit it
after Brian not only saved his life but kept him, kept all of us, out
of jail. Still I know how much it cost him to say it - there's more to
his wariness of Brian than just the obvious - and I nod my agreement
but add, "I don't think he's a cop anymore."
We refuel then hit the store for water and
snacks. Mia corners me as
I'm lifting a six pack of Corona from the fridge and asks me seriously
if I want to ride with her. I thought women were supposed to be more
attuned to these things, whatever these things are. All I say is,
"Nah, we're good," and she looks at me in a way that makes me wonder if
she's given Brian the same 'break his heart, I'll break your neck'
speech that I did. The thought makes me cringe.
It’s not like I’m not about to ask the guy
out on a date, although I
can see us sitting in some bar in San Jose sharing tapas, drinking cold
beer, talking about something other than car engines. Don't know
what he'd think about that, don't know how he feels about me, don't
know what he wants. Don’t know what I’m willing to offer.
He's never asked anything of me, given me everything and never asked
for anything in return. Given everything he's done, it’s a fair
bet he feels something but whether it's kinship, lust or anything in
between, I have no idea. It isn't news that Brian's capable of
taking me for a ride, but I think – I know - it's been real for the
most part.
And this isn't getting me anywhere.
I dump the beer on the counter and Leon
dumps a pile of unhealthy crap
on top, looking pleased with himself. Mia adds in the water and
Brian pays for everything, making me wonder if they hit an armoured
truck on their way to get me. I try to let it go, but once we get
on the road again I can't help myself. I wouldn't be surprised if
Brian told me to butt out of his business, but instead he tells me that
he and his friend stole a ton of cash from the bust in Miami.
"Rome bought a garage," he says, "I stuck
it in the bank for a rainy
day." Apparently a rainy day in Brian’s life is one where he
needs to bust a friend off a prison transport.
“Feds didn’t miss it?”
“Feds never knew how much we were
transporting.”
I can’t help but laugh. “Were you
ever actually a cop, Brian?” I
get serious, reach over, tap his chest with my knuckles as he drives,
“in here?”
He glances down at my hand, over at me,
then back at the road.
And he shrugs. “Maybe once.” Then his face lights up and he
looks back at me. “No room anymore.”
That’s a line I’m not going near.
It’s like walking through a
minefield, talking to him, which is why we spent the last hundred miles
in silence and why we’ll be spending the next hundred miles the same
way if I don’t give him something. It’s not that he hasn’t earned
it, that he doesn’t deserve it or that I don’t have it to give.
It’s just that if I start, I don’t know how I’ll stop.
“Thanks.” It’s not much. It’s
nothing. I said it when
I first saw him, first saw the car – my car, my Dad’s car – rescued and
restored in a matter of weeks; the time it took the Feds to process and
prosecute my ass. He must have fuckin’ lived and breathed engine
parts and body work because I saw it hit that wall in the tunnel.
I saw the explosion in my rear view. There can’t have been that
much left of her. I realise he’s been planning this long before I
was sentenced – contingency - just in case things went the way they
did. I owe him my life and my freedom. Whatever debts he
racked up first time around have been paid in full.
He shrugs it off like it’s nothing, says,
“you’re welcome,” and I know
I am. Like it’s the least he can do. But it isn’t nothing
and sitting here, watching the road disappear beneath the car, I
finally need him to acknowledge that.
“Why are you doing all this?" I want
to know but he shakes his
head. "Brian... please.”
I almost regret it when his face clouds
over. His smile’s like
the sun; too long in his company and I start to feel like I need it
just to breathe. It’s what got me hooked in the first
place. When we met up again in L.A. I thought he’d be a different
guy to the Brian I knew and he is, in a way, but it’s just skin
deep. Underneath he’s the same. He looks harder but his
heart is the same. A lot’s happened to both of us over the last
five years, I’ve no idea what’s been going on with him, not really, but
I’ll get it out of him sooner or later – I’ve got time now.
“Brian?”
“Letty.” He blurts it out and it’s
nothing I didn’t expect even
though it's not the answer I'm looking for. “I got her killed.
The woman you love.” His voice starts to break and just for a
split-second he sounds frightened, the way he did in the desert, making
the call to save a life when for all he knew it was gonna cost him his
own.
Reaching across I squeeze his
shoulder. “Not your fault,
Brian. Once she got it in her mind to do something, she’d have
done it no matter what. If not you, some other Fed, some other
cop. She did it for me. And I got the guy who killed
her. Mourn her, but don’t beat yourself up over it.”
I’ve beaten myself up over it – beaten him
up over it too. I was
so angry, so fucking angry when I found out about him running
Letty. And it had been a long time coming; we were due a fight,
something physical to break the tension. I’m not angry now, but I
am pissed off. Because even now he’s still lyin’ to me and I want
to know why. Or maybe I don’t. Maybe I already know why,
deep down.
When I let my hand drop he’s smiling
again, only slightly but it won’t
take long to get the rest of the way so I relax, dig into a bag of
Cheetos and just let him drive, offering them to him. He reaches
in, takes a handful and stuffs them into his mouth.
Sitting watching him munching his way
through a mouthful of cheesy
snacks probably isn’t the best time for an epiphany, and it’s not
really an epiphany. I remember back when he used to just come to
the store for tuna sandwiches every lunchtime, I noticed him.
Hard not to. Kept catching myself on his eyes; two-tone blue,
shining like fuckin’ sapphires. Getting to know him, he kinda
lost that shine. But it didn’t stop me wanting him around, at the
garage, at the house. I wanted him showing up after he finished
his shift at Harry’s. Maybe he’d say he was just playing a part,
but I know when someone’s playing me and he just wasn’t, not all the
time. It was his first undercover gig, he went in heart and
soul. I don’t know if he got out with either intact.
This time around, he was the one in
control. When I first laid
eyes on him again after five years, I thought I didn’t know him.
But as angry as I wanted to be with him, as cool as I played it, one of
those looks, one of those smiles and it all crumbled away; I was
smilin’ right back at him before I knew what I was doing. When it
all went to shit, I knew he’d match my play, knew he had my back.
It felt good to be able to trust him, to know without a shadow of a
doubt that I could trust him. Even though he was working for the
Feds. He protected me at every turn. And in the garage, the
night before we went for Braga, when he told me he was coming with me,
something between us shifted. He wasn’t the buster any longer; he
wasn’t looking for my approval or my respect. He was my friend,
was becoming my partner. Then he went after Mia when she got back
from the store, and the sudden spike of jealousy was a surprise and a
shock when I guess it shouldn’t have been.
“Can’t believe you’re still lying to me,
Brian,” I tell him gently and
he shoots a look at me before thrusting his hand back into the bag of
Cheetos to fill his mouth. “You threw your life away five years
ago for me. You’re throwing it away again now. Why?”
He doesn’t speak again until he’s finished
crunching. Then he
asks, “Why does it matter, Dom?”
It’s an easy answer. I thought about
it while I was waiting for
the conviction hearing because it was easier to think about that than
about where I was headed. “Because no one’s ever shown me the
kind of loyalty you do. Not Vince, not Leon. And I don’t
know what to do with that, not when there isn’t a bad guy to be
chasing.” Brian smiles but doesn’t speak. “I’ll get it out
of you eventually,” I promise, lightening the mood.
He glances at me. “We’re driving to
Costa Rica; a week on the
road, five nights in shitty motel rooms. Should give you plenty
of time to try.”
I give it up for the time being.
Like he says, there’s
time. Instead, I ask Brian how the hell he rescued my Dad’s
Charger from the smoking ruins I left it in and he spends the next two
hundred miles telling me, every detail, talking until we pull into the
dusty parking lot of a motel just outside Chihuahua.
Brian gets three rooms – two twins and a
double – handing Mia the key
to the double. I assume he’s sharing with her until he grabs two
holdalls from the back of the Skyline and hands one to me, leading the
way into one of the twin rooms. Mia doesn’t seem to bat an
eyelid, so she obviously wasn’t expecting them to share. I’ve no
idea what’s happened because before we left for Mexico and for Braga
they fucked on the kitchen table while I tuned the Charger’s new
engine. Part of me wants to ask her what’s going on, another part
is telling me to leave it alone. So I leave it alone, for
now.
The pathetic, luke-warm shower feels like
bliss and when I get out, the
room’s door is open and Brian’s outside, leaning against the wall, a
lit cigarette hanging between his fingers. I didn’t even know he
smoked.
There’s a bar down the road and we walk
the short distance to sink a
few. It’s not busy and there’s no competition as Brian racks up
the balls on the pool table. He beats Leon while I chat to Vince
and Mia, then beats Vince while Leon chats Mia up. I take the cue
from Vince as soon as he’s defeated. Might as well play if I’m
going to sit and watch Brian's ass anyway. At least this way I
have an excuse. I remember walking into Braga’s club, seeing him
bent over the pool table to take his shot, his head turning, eyes
meeting mine. At that moment five years of vague late-night
fantasies, blurry lunchtime day-dreams and casual early morning
imaginings solidified into one inevitable fact. One I only
finally accepted on the road this afternoon.
Brian plays like a pro. He wiped
Leon out in nine minutes, Vince
in six. I have ideas of making my game last, but he keeps looking
up at me as he lines up his shots, and there's heat in his eyes when he
catches me looking right back at him each and every time. I don't
know what he wants, but I'm starting to get an inkling of what he's
feelin'.
He clears the table in four minutes. I
take three shots and barely
notice I’m supposed to be playing pool. What I do notice is that
when he bends over the table, my blood tends to run south. I want
him so badly during the game it's starting to hurt. I want to be
inside him, buried in him, my body flush to his, surrounded by the heat
of him, breathing him in. I’ve been with exactly two guys outside
of Lompoc; Chris, a speed crazy kid I knew when I was a horny teenager
looking for sex anywhere I could get it, and Han, a guy from way back,
someone I hooked up with again after running from L.A. With both
of them it was easy. We knew what we wanted and we took it.
I have no idea, despite everything he’s done for me and my team, what
Brian wants from me. The way he looks at me is all challenge and
heat and longing. I might be looking at him the same way.
But he’s never made the slightest move. Maybe because he thinks
I’ll punch his lights out if he does.
It’s an almost overwhelming temptation to
take a couple of steps
forward, put one foot between his legs, my hands on his hips, just hook
my thumbs in the waistband of his jeans and pull him back towards
me. I doubt being in public would stop him from taking something
he wants if he knows it’s available, so I can imagine his mouth finding
mine – open and wet – eager hands reaching for me.
“Dom!”
Brian’s waving another Corona under my
nose as Mia’s racking up the
balls on the table. I grab it from him like it’s his fault I
didn’t hear the first however many times he said my name. But he
just smiles and reaches for his cue.
Mia beats him in three minutes dead.
He gets on the table
once. My sister the hustler. He’s a gracious loser, buying
another round before we head back to the motel. I think maybe
he’ll peel off with Mia but although they do hug goodnight, he follows
me into the room where we left our bags, closes and locks the door
behind us. He offers me the bathroom and I take him up on it
before climbing fully clothed onto the bed. I listen to Brian
take a shower and let my imagination run wild until the water
stops. I’ve turned the light off, but if he suspects anything’s
wrong when he steps out of the bathroom, butt naked, towelling his hair
dry, he doesn’t show it. I can’t help but stare at him in the
neon-lit gloom as he digs out a pair of clean shorts from his bag and
pulls them on, dropping the towel to the floor as he makes himself
comfortable on the second bed. If he’s a messy shit normally, I
don’t have a clue. I didn’t know he smoked, didn’t know he was
great at pool. I don’t know anything about the guy.
Turning to look at him, watching his
silhouette scratching its chest,
it’s a minute before I can find my voice.
“Brian?”
“Yeah?”
“Who are you?”
He laughs softly at the ceiling.
“I’m the man keeping your ass
out of jail, Toretto.” He says it almost like he’s kidding around
when it’s the God honest truth.
“Yeah, and I don’t get why.” I can
hear him sighing. “I
don’t know anything about you.”
“You know I love cars. You know I
can drive. You know you
can trust me.” He says the last part really quietly.
“I know I can.”
“What else do you need?”
My turn to sigh in frustration.
"Answers, bro!"
"Start with the easy questions then."
“Okay... where did you grow up?”
He laughs again but plays the game.
“Barstow.”
Barstow?! How the hell does a guy
like Brian grow up in
Barstow? I totally bought the Arizona story.
“Brothers? Sisters?”
“Nope. Just me.”
I kinda feel sorry for him. “First
love?”
There’s a smile in his voice when he says,
“A black 1969 Chevy
Impala. Friend of my Dad’s owned it – kept it in beautiful
condition, not a scratch. The engine made this incredible
guttural sound. I couldn’t keep my eyes off her.” He’s
teasing me, I can hear it but I don’t make anything of it. He’s
got good taste.
“First time?”
There’s a long pause, and I’m not sure
he’s going to answer. But
maybe he’s just been remembering, because he’s not hesitating when he
replies, “First kiss was Joanne Parker, I was nine, she was
twelve. Behind the bins at school.” Charming. “First
fuck... Sara Torres, in her parents’ bed while they were at a
funeral. First blow job... Tom Garcia, in the showers after
football practice."
Strange, but I was kinda expecting that
last one. Even if it
wasn’t true I thought he’d throw in a curve ball just to wind me
up. No point in not responding. “You let a guy blow you?”
I can see him shrug, lifting his shoulders
off the bed. “He’d
wanted me all year. He was good at it too.” He turns his
head towards me and I swear I can see his eyes twinkling with
mischief. “You said it, Dom – a guy can appreciate a fine body no
matter what the make.”
I start to wonder how he knew about that,
then stop. It was
something I said to Gisele in the garage at Braga’s club and Brian was
all over the place that night, acting so much like a cop I’m
stunned they didn’t see right through him. But then again, I
didn’t. The beer is settling heavy on top of stress and
exhaustion and my eyes start to close of their own accord. “Why
did you let me go, Brian?” I try again, one final time today.
He replies, “I couldn’t let them lock you
up. I won’t let them.
I’ll die before I’ll let you go back.”
Fuck.
I want to respond but I don’t know what to
say and I’m too exhausted to
think of anything. It’s the last thing I remember before waking
up alone at sunrise. It’s not something I’m ever going to forget.
#
For a moment, I panic. But it only
takes a glance out of the
window to see the cars still parked where we left them. I take a
shower and change clothes before Brian gets back with coffee. We
hit the road just after seven, Leon and Vince again asking if I’m okay
travelling with Brian. I don’t even bother answering, just take
the keys Brian’s silently offering, and climb into the driver’s seat of
the Charger. He walks around the front of the car, looking a
little unsure, so I say his name just once and he doesn’t need a second
invite, just opens the door and slides into the passenger seat. I
notice my sister’s expression as he does and really hope that didn’t
sound like me calling him like he’s some fucking dog.
I didn’t ask about him and Mia last night,
but then I figure he might
be more comfortable telling me if both my hands are on the wheel and
half my attention is on the road. So once we’re on our way, I ask.
He drops his head back against the car
seat and I’m thinking he isn’t
going to answer like he hasn’t answered the other big questions.
But eventually he spills.
“We talked about it, about what we’re
doing, where we were going.
And we decided to do it as friends, not lovers.”
I don’t get it. “If you love her....”
“I do love her, Dom.” He says it
like he needs to convince
me. I was convinced five years ago. Then he says something
which completely blows my mind. “I love you both.”
I know. I mean, I know he loves
Mia. And the devotion, the
loyalty he’s showing me, has to be based on some deep feelings of some
kind. I shouldn’t ask but I can’t keep my mouth shut. “How,
Brian?”
Brian turns and he looks at me, genuinely
confused. “How...?”
I scraped together the courage to ask
once, I can’t do it again, like I
can’t ask what he wants from me. Shaking my head, I give the road
and the car my full attention. The Charger feels fantastic,
sounds perfect: deep like thunder. I lose myself in it for a
while until Brian turns toward me and starts asking questions of his
own.
“Dom... you knew the Feds wouldn’t let you
walk, so why didn’t you
run? Why did you stay just to let them take you in?”
I bite back my first answer: because I
couldn’t leave him, couldn’t
walk away again, not knowing if it was going to be another five years
until I next saw him or if I’d ever see him. I still don’t know
whether he quit the FBI or whether they kicked his ass outta there, but
I knew he’d be in trouble. Okay, so we delivered Braga alive, but
we left a trail of destruction in our wake. I don’t think they’d
have patted him on the back and sent him home with a full paycheck and
a ‘thank you’.
“Couldn’t let you take the rap for
everything.” It’s a casual
throw-away comment he isn’t buying but he is smiling, rolling his eyes
when I glance across at him.
“Right. So instead we have to bust
you off a prison bus and I
lose my job again!” There’s absolutely no bitterness to back up
his words, he’s teasing.
“Were you still a Fed when you busted me
off the bus?”
He shakes his head. “Not since the
day they sent you down.
I left my badge and gun on my desk on my way out.”
“Just like that, huh?”
“I got it when you asked me if I left
cookies out for Santa.”
There’s humour lacing what otherwise is self-disgust over falling for
their bullshit, believing in it because he likes to trust people.
“I’d made my mind up when I went with you to Mexico. Then you
started doing the right thing and fucked everything up....” He’s
grinning again.
“Sorry, man.”
“Should think so.” Another shrug of
those narrow shoulders and
long arms. He’s all limbs, like a living, breathing rag doll in
the seat. “Hell, we’d still be in the same situation if we’d shot
Braga in Mexico.” Situation not mess. We not you.
“Only I wouldn’t have had to spend a hundred grand rebuilding your
car.” A hundred grand?!
“Fuck, Brian, how much did you and your
friend steal down in Miami?”
“Five hundred grand between us.” I’m
stunned at how much he’s
given me and I’m not just talkin’ about the money he’s sunk into my
car. Although, I guess now it’s our car.
He falls quiet and now I really need to
know so I ask, “Who was he,
Bri?” Shortening his name, it’s proprietary, possessive. I
do it on purpose. “Your friend in Miami.”
Of all the possible reactions, I didn’t
expect him to laugh. It’s
not in a cruel way, but more like he’s known all along that the
question’s been coming, that I’ve been waiting to ask. “Man,
that’s really clawing at you, isn’t it? I remember what you said
about history, when I mentioned him that night over dinner.” He’s
not laughing any more but he’s beaming, like this has really tickled
him. I’m embarrassed as hell but I’ve asked now, and I want an
answer. “Rome and I grew up together. Then he was an idiot,
got himself arrested. Even though there was nothin’ I could have
done about it he got it into his head that I hadn’t wanted to.
When the Feds caught up with me in Miami I needed a driver to back me
up. They said they’d clear his record. It was something I
could do for him, finally. I’d fucked up my life but at least I
could fix his.”
It was a lot to take in. “Is that
how you feel? That doing
what you did for me... fucked up your life?”
He glances at me, and there’s a serious
look in his eyes I haven’t seen
before. “Not what I did for you. That’s about the only
thing I did right. The rest of it – Tran, Jesse, Mia, Vince –
hell, Dom, I didn’t even know if you’d made it. I knew the cops
didn’t have you but you were pretty banged up after the crash, I didn’t
know if you were still alive until Letty made contact and she wasn’t
exactly forthcoming with information, you know? So yeah, five
years ago I felt like I’d fucked up everything. I Miami, I
started to put some things back together.”
“With Rome’s help.” Shit, I sound
like a jealous twelve year
old. I can’t help it. I’ve never met the guy. But
Brian’s made one hell of an impact on me, my life. The way he
makes me feel is unlike anything I’ve ever felt before. It’s kind
of overwhelming. And I’ve only known him for what? Six
weeks collectively? Two months at most? This guy in Miami’s
known him all his life – probably knows he smokes, undoubtedly knows
he’s a crack shot with a pool cue.
“If it’s any consolation,” Brian says
gently, and I glance his way to
see the truth in his eyes and the naked expression on his face, “I
never told him about Tom blowing me in the showers.” Finally,
he’s given me something. I feel like fucking singing.
“Dom....” He says it like he means to follow it with something
deep and meaningful, but in the end he just shakes his head and turns
to look out of the window. We drive the next hundred miles in
silence.
We stop in a dusty town for lunch.
There’s a roadside diner where
we and eat quesadillas and drink cold beer. While Brian’s been
fixing up the Charger and sourcing fake documents, Mia’s been busy on
the Internet and she’s found a place to rent in the San Sebastian
district of San Jose. For a moment I’m struck by what Mia, Vince
and Leon are giving up for me. Okay, Mia’s my sister and I’ve
known Leon and Vince since school. Still, they don’t owe me
anything. They definitely don’t owe me this. But all Leon
will say is that he could do with a change of scenery. Vince has
always wanted to go to South America, he claims, and I know Mia’s
missed me these last five years. Besides, they were careful when
they hit the prison transport. Mia, Brian’s assured me, can go
home, back to LA, whenever she wants. There’s no evidence to link
her to the bust. Vince and Leon could maybe be identified by the
security guards on the bus but he doubts it. Brian, on the other
hand, knew one of them by name. Just his shitty luck holding.
Mia pays and on the short walk back to
parking lot, Mia tells me to
ride with her to the next motel stop. It isn’t a suggestion, so
it’s with an apology to Brian that I do as she says. She puts us
out in front and Brian tucks the Charger in behind so I can still see
it in the Skyline’s mirrors.
This is an impressive car, built for
racing. It’s Brian’s car, so
I get nosey, opening up the glove compartment and rifling through what
I find in there; driver’s licence, in his own name - Brian Earl
O’Connor – half a melted Hershey’s bar in a faded orange wrapper, a
couple of receipts for engine parts and a canister of NOS, a pair of
sunglasses. Nothing that should be of interest. But it’s a
peek into Brian’s life and I’ll take what I can get.
“You’ve got it bad, Dom,” Mia says, out of
the blue. Or maybe it
isn’t. Maybe this is why I’m in riding with her. I tell her
I’m just being nosey and she rolls her eyes. “If you say so.”
I know exactly what she’s talking about
but I’m not going to make it
easy for her. “What, Mia? What have I ‘got bad’?”
“He’s just as bad as you are, you
know.” I assume she’s
talking about Brian. “He’s been obsessed with that fucking car,
with getting it back, fixing it up. He spent every waking moment
on it and when he slept, he slept at the garage. We barely saw
him from the moment he got back to LA. When we did see him, after
the sentencing, all he talked about was the plan; how they’d move you,
where to hit the bus, how to do it.”
It’s strange because I’d imagined he and
Mia had been spending their
nights fucking like bunny rabbits. I wasn’t sure what it meant
that she’d barely seen him.
“Why did you come along, Mia? Why
didn’t you stay in L.A.?”
“Because there’s nothing there for me
anymore, Dom.” She puts the
emphasis on my name. “At least this way I get to be with my
brother.”
“And with Brian,” I remind her, still
convinced the fire between them
isn’t completely out. But she just laughs. So maybe
it is.
“Why are men so totally inept when it
comes to seeing what’s right in
front of them?” Her tone softens. “Brian loves me,
yes. But he loves you too, Dom. More.” I lean
sideways to look in the rear view, see my guardian angel in the devil
car behind us. I turn in my seat so I can see him out the back
window of the Skyline. “He’s given up everything for you.
Don’t you think that means something? Haven’t you ever thought
that what he did just the first time went above and beyond
friendship? Never mind this time around.”
Rubbing my hands over my face, I breathe
out a sigh that’s dragged up
from my soul. “Yeah, I’ve thought about it. I just don’t
know what it means. And I don’t think he knows what it means
either. If he doesn’t know what he wants, I can’t give it to him.”
“Dom, you really are dumb.” She taps
her hands against the
wheel. “Brian knows exactly what he wants. What he doesn’t
know is if you’re prepared to give it to him.”
#
The sun’s set by the time we pull up in
San Luis Potosi. The
motel looks slightly less shitty than the last one we stayed at.
Not that I’m complaining. By rights I should be bunking up in a
six by eight prison cell. Climbing out of the confines of the
Skyline and while I stretch, I watch Brian park the Charger and extract
his long limbs from the car. He grins at me and I grin right
back.
“I’m riding with him tomorrow,” I tell Mia
quietly, and she nods like
the long-suffering sister she is.
“Fine.” She opens the back and dumps
our bags unceremoniously
onto the ground while Brian goes to get our rooms. When he comes
back and hands out the keys, Mia doesn’t snatch hers from him exactly,
but he obviously isn’t feeling the warmth he did yesterday, and he
looks at me like I’m to blame. Which I am. The question’s
in his eyes but he doesn’t give it voice until we’re in the room,
sitting on the twin beds, looking at one another.
“What did you two talk about?” he asks
eventually, not angry, more
amused.
“You and me.” As I sit there looking
at him, it starts to dawn on
me that I can have him. I just have to be as courageous as he’s
been ever since I met him.
“There’s a ‘you and me’?” he’s making a
joke out of it but I’m not
willing to let him laugh this one off.
“Sure there’s a ‘you and me’. You
know there is. There has
been from the moment our eyes met in the store. What was it you
said the night of the street race? ‘I almost had you’? You
did have me. I couldn’t see passed you to the truth Vince was
telling me. I wanted to believe every word you said. Last
five years I’ve asked myself why. You asked me why I didn’t leave
when you told me to this time. It was because I’d finally figured
it out.”
Brian takes a deep breath. “I gave
you the car... because I
respect you. I care about you. Can we just leave it at
that? Please?”
“No.” Shaking my head I rise to my
feet and stand over him,
forcing him to tip his head back to look at up me. “How much do
you care? How far would you go for me? How far would you
follow?”
For a long time he looks at me, saying
nothing. But this time I
don’t back down, I’m not letting him run from this, not again.
Finally he speaks and it’s as if the words are being pulled out of him,
so quiet I have to lean forward just to hear him. “More than
anything. All the way. And to the ends of the earth.”
He looks like it cost him his soul to say it. “Can we please drop
it now?”
Mia was right. We’re both as bad –
as dumb – as each other.
“No.” I sit down next to him. Easier to say this if I’m not
facing him or pretendin’ I’m trying to intimidate him, which is
pointless anyway. “Are you even listening? You had me,
Brian, from the very start. You don’t get it. I’ve known Vince
and Leon... Jesse and Letty... all my life. I’ve never invited
anyone new in to the family. Never. They didn’t get why
suddenly I didn’t want you outta my sight. You were everywhere
and while I think Letty got it and I know now Mia got it, Vince and
Leon definitely didn’t.”
He looks down at his hands, at anything
but me. “Mia told me,
that first night, you usually didn’t like anyone. But you liked
me.” I smile, imagining Mia saying that. But he looks
sad. “I lied to her.”
It’s not something I want to talk about
now. “You lied to us
all.” I wave it off but he’s shaking his head.
“No. Well, yeah, but... that’s not
what I’m talking about.
I told her you were incidental, that being with you was just a
bonus. I lied.”
That really shouldn’t make me feel what
I’m feeling right now. I
should be angry, furious, but I’m not. “I kept you around, kept
you close, because you weren’t Vince and you weren’t Leon and I
couldn’t understand what you were, couldn’t even begin to fathom what I
was feeling, what I was even doing. I left you in L.A. because
everything had gone to shit, because you gave me an out and I took
it. I spent five years wondering where you’d gone, what you were
doing. At the border, I wasn’t about to make the same mistake
twice.”
“You said you’d rather die than go back.”
I love that he’s held onto that like some
kind of mantra he’s living
his life by. How could I not love this guy?
“I’d rather die than lose you
again.” If I’d known way back that
it was the way to shut him up, I’d have said it five years ago.
Although to be fair I didn’t know it was in me to say it back
then. Now I know it’s the absolute truth. He’s still not
quite looking at me, and the expression on his face is as close to fear
as I’ve seen him come. I know that feeling. One thing to
get a blow job from a guy at school, or a mutual hand job with a
friend, neither mean anything. But this is different, this is
strong. “You gave me the car because you fell in love.”
He blinks like he’s crying but when he
looks at me his eyes are dry and
clear, vivid. “If we get into this, it’s for the long-haul.
I’ve given up everything but even that wasn’t much. I won’t ever
ask you for anything, especially not this.”
I’ve never been hesitant about anything,
ever. But as I reach to
put my hand on his shoulder I feel like I’m walking blind through a
minefield. “But you want it.” It’s not a question.
He nods once. “Yeah. I just
can’t believe you do.”
I can’t help but chuckle. “We
seriously don’t know each other,
Brian.” I run my thumb along the line of his ear. “It’s
time we changed that.” My hand moves to curl around his neck and
I am so relieved when he turns into my palm, head dropping to kiss the
pulse point in my wrist almost reverently and I’m so not having
that. Lifting my other hand to his other shoulder, I push.
Slipping the buttons of his shirt isn’t
easy, he’s a mass of pent up
energy and I’m tryin’ to harness it. Holding him down means I
lose the use of one hand and I want to touch. He’s already got my
shirt undone and my jeans open. His hands are obscene, are
everywhere. But in counterpoint, he kisses like he drives; wild
but controlled and with total focus.
I get my mouth on his throat and he tastes
of cheap soap, sweat and
motor oil. Like he spent so long working on my car it got under
his skin. Spreading his shirt I kiss around the fading bruises,
the raw scar that’s taking longer to mend than the Charger took.
I get my hand between us and unzip,
lifting my head to look down at
him. When my fingers touch his dick he surges up, lips parted,
getting his tongue in my mouth. I take that as encouragement,
close my hand around him. He shifts under me, gets one leg hooked
over mine, long fingers finally wrapping around an erection so
sensitive it feels like I’ve had it for five years.
It’s a bloody long time. I come
painfully hard the second he
touches me, whole body shaking with the power of it, so intense I don’t
notice Brian’s orgasm until it’s drying on my hand and stomach.
“Fuck.” I don’t know which one of us says it but I can’t keep
from laughing as I roll off him, onto the bed beside him, leaving my
sticky hand lying in the crease of his thigh.
“We’ll get better with practice,” he
assures me.
“Hey! I thought that was pretty damn
good.”
He turns his head, those incredible eyes
looking straight through me,
through the bullshit, to the good inside me. I love him, so much
it terrifies me. “Best I’ve ever had,” he says, and he’s deadly
serious, like he’s saying a hell of a lot more.
A sudden banging on the door makes us both
jump. I’ve forgotten
the rest of the world exists, forgotten Vince and Leon and Mia are
waiting for us, getting hungrier by the minute. Brian starts
laughing. “Shit.” It’s a shared sentiment. I know the
moment he’s gonna make a break for the bathroom, and feeling playful I
tackle him halfway, taking him down easily because he’s not expecting
it, bolting over him, slamming the door behind me, making the walls of
the motel room shake.
“Bastard!” he yells good-naturedly, and I
feel so fucking happy there’s
no way the others aren’t going to work out that something’s happened,
something’s changed.
He’s waiting outside the door when I open
it, his hand plasters itself
around the back of my head and he pulls me into an open, wet
kiss. I get him in my arms, hold him so tight it’s gotta hurt but
he doesn’t even flinch, just gets his other arm around me and brings us
impossibly closer.
“Dom!” Vince. Shit. I’m
sorely tempted to shout at
him to get lost, but chances are that would lead to him breaking the
door down in case I’m finally giving Brian a beating and he’s missing
out on the chance to get a sneaky boot in. Not that he hates
Brian. Not now. Just because. If he catches us like
this, he might try to beat the shit out of us both.
Brian backs off, gives me a look like this
could have definitely gone
somewhere interesting if it hadn’t been for Vince, and slips past me
into the bathroom with a grin.
My dick’s giving me pointed instructions
to check out what else is on
offer, but Vince yells for me again and I give it up, not bothering to
check if my jeans are containing the situation when I throw open the
door and yell, “What?” in his face.
#
Mia’s smirking. She sees through us
the moment we step out of the
motel room. It doesn’t help that I can’t keep the joy from my
face and I can’t keep my eyes off Brian. He’s less obvious but
the tension’s gone from his shoulders and he’s smiling all the time
like he used to.
Leon definitely picks up that something’s
different in the time it
takes us to walk to the bar and Leon makes Vince suspicious. Mia
distracts them for a while, playing pool, letting them win every other
game while Brian and I sit at the table out on the veranda and talk
about what we’re gonna do when we reach Costa Rica. I tell him
all about the time I spent in Panama City, the garage I worked in for
two years, the shitty rooms I lived in above a hardware store. We
could open our own garage. Brian’s incredible with his
hands. He can rebuild any car he sets his mind to and turn it
into a winner; the Charger’s proof of that. And what he did to me
earlier was pretty damn fantastic. He was wasted as a cop.
I’ve heard that the street racing scene in
San Jose is small but it
could be lucrative. With the right car, Brian and I could own
every race. I suspect the Honda would be sufficient, the Skyline
would decimate.
“Is Vince going to turn me into road kill
when he eventually works it
out?” Brian asks eventually, when the conversation lulls and I’m
watching Mia rack up a new game through the window. “Or Leon?”
“No.” I’ve got my hands wrapped
around my beer bottle to stop
from touching him. “Leon’ll get over it. Vince... you saved
his life. He might not like you but he won’t forget that.
Not saying he’d walk over broken glass for you, but he’s sure as hell
got your back.”
Eventually the other three rejoin
us. Leon’s carrying a tray of
beers and shots and I know the night’s about to go downhill. Five
rounds make us all a bit looser, a bit more relaxed. Brian’s
sitting next to me on the bench and sometime between shots three and
four he accidentally nudges me with this shoulder as he laughs at one
of Leon’s crappy jokes. When he turns to apologise our eyes catch
and the humour is burned away by heat. The sudden urge to kiss
him takes my breath away; I let my gaze slide off him, reach for my
beer and down it in one swallow. He turns back to whatever
rubbish Leon’s spouting, but under the table he’s got his knee pressed
into my leg, I can feel the heat of his thigh alongside mine.
It’s me who gets up to get the fourth round in, just to give my
erection some breathing space.
When I get back the conversation’s turned
back to San Jose, Mia’s
talking about the place she’s rented for us on the edge of the
city; a four bedroom place with a back yard and a double garage.
Vince too brings up the possibility of buying a legit business, a
garage with a real rep, with us as a bunch of mechanics and that starts
Leon off again with jokes about overalls and butt cracks. I swear
he’s been smoking something tonight, but I’m distracted by the thought
of Brian wearing nothing but blue overalls, of closing up early and
taking him over the hood of a muscle car; pulling the straps off his
shoulders, licking a line down his spine, biting gently, one vertebrae
at a time, peeling his overalls down slowly, revealing tanned skin that
tastes of a day’s sweat, motor oil and grease. I’m imagining my
fingers spreading out, movin’ down his sides to the flare of his hips,
thumbs following the thick material of his overalls as they drop the
rest of the way, over the swell of his ass, sliding my thumbs along the
creases of his thighs, stepping between his legs, lifting him further
up on to the hood, leaning over to kiss the small of his back, catching
the blissed out expression on his face....
The fifth round is down to me too.
#
Amazingly, we make it back to the motel
before midnight. If I had
any worries about things getting awkward between Brian and I, they’re
fumes within a second of the door closing. Brian’s in my face,
backing me up until my knees hit the first bed and I’m falling, Brian
straddling me, trapping my dick between us. I’ve been half-hard
all night and his immediate, intimate proximity sends my blood south in
a single heartbeat.
“What were you thinking about, back there
before you shot off to buy
the last round?” For a moment I honestly have no idea what he’s
talking about. “You left the table like it was on fire,
dude.” Oh, yeah, that.
His hands are on me, thumbs hitching my
T-shirt up, doubling over to
kiss my stomach. I have to think about the internal workings of
fuckin’ motorbikes just to stop from coming as fast and as
embarrassingly as I did earlier.
“Was thinking about you,” I tell him, “in
overalls and nothin’
else. Taking you over the hood of a car.”
He lifts his head, eyes flashing.
“’Taking me’?” There’s a
smile playing across his lips. “Fucking me?”
The answer catches in my throat but who
the hell am I kidding?
Not like I haven’t done it before and yeah, I want to be inside
him. He’s amazing. He’s beautiful. The last guy I
fucked I didn’t even know his full name, didn’t look into his
face. I don’t want it to be anything like that with Brian.
I reach up, wrapping my hand around the back of his neck to pull him
down to me, to whisper into his ear,
“Making love to you, Bri.”
It’s the right thing to say. He
flushes red and covers my mouth
with his, tongue reaching back for my tonsils. I get a hold of
his T-shirt and he breaks the kiss, lifts up to get it off over his
head.
“You know this place Mia’s rented,”
he starts, assisting me in
getting my own T off, “only has four rooms.”
I get his jeans unfastened, get my fingers
around his hips in a vice
grip. “We only need four.”
#
We’re up and out just after sunrise.
We’re heading down to Oaxaca
today and I gather from a short-lived argument I only half hear that
Brian wants to do the trip in one push, without a stop except for the
basic fuel and toilet breaks. He wins against whatever opposition
Leon’s putting up and it doesn’t seem to be a big thing, because just
before we leave, Brian offers a conciliatory bag of Cheetos from our
car and Leon accepts it with a grin.
It’s a long-ass day, hard drivin’, and we
take it in turns, swapping at
stops and just once out on the road when Brian suddenly tells me to
take the wheel and I don’t question him until we’ve swapped seats at
seventy miles an hour with just a tiny swerve and a lot of body
contact. When I do ask why he grins and shrugs and tells me he
just wanted to see if we could.
I’m too stunned to be angry. And by
the time the surprise fades,
anger isn’t foremost in my mind. At the next stop I wait until
Leon and Vince have finished in the bathroom then drag Brian into a
semi-clean stall and jerk him off, ringing a muted cry out of him as he
comes, swallowing the sound in an open-mouthed kiss.
It doesn’t take long and the others are
still buying a pile of
unhealthy crap at the store, they haven’t even noticed we’ve been
missing. Brian takes sex in a toilet cubicle in his stride the
same as he does everything else that happens to him. It’s that
crazy, fearless streak in him that drew me to him and that’s gonna keep
me with him.
“One day,” I tell him as I slip into the
driver’s seat, “it’ll be a
five star hotel with Egyptian cotton sheets and wall to wall room
service.”
He gets what I’m talking about immediately
and shakes his head,
replying seriously, “As long as it’s you, Dom, I don’t care where we
are.” He’s a walking, talking ego boost; I’m amazed there’s room
for the three of us in the car.
It’s built up most of the way until we
reach Tehuacan. Then the
road opens out and there’s nothing but desert on each side for the
final hundred miles of the day.
“Vince’s idea about a legit business was a
good one,” Brian declares
out of nowhere.
I nod. “Yeah. If everyone’s
gonna stick around it’ll be a
way of keeping ourselves busy.”
“You want everyone to stick around?”
I can hear the sudden uncertainty in his
voice and it touches me the
way he’s so confident in some things and so unsure in others. “I
want you to stick around. Leon and Vince might get restless; for
a while back there our lives contained a lot of regular adrenaline
highs.”
It strikes me that I’m not sure what
they’ve been doing while I’ve been
hiding out in Panama City, but I’m not ashamed to admit the whole thing
with Braga fired my passion for danger again. Eking out a living
as a mechanic doesn’t provide the thrill ride that jacking trucks on
Californian highways did, or chasing down bastards like Braga across
the Mexican border.
I knew if I went back to L.A. my chances
of getting arrested were
pretty high. I knew too that there was a chance of running into
Brian. For me, finding the guy who killed Letty was worth both
risks. I didn’t know if Brian was still around, still a
cop. He’s already told me sometime during the fifteen hundred
miles we’ve travelled that he knew I was at Letty’s funeral, didn’t see
me but still knew I was there, up in the hills overlooking the
cemetery. I didn’t spot him, wasn’t looking for him. It
would have been good to have been able to stand shoulder to shoulder
with him at her graveside but life’s too short for wishes.
“Have faith in them,” Brian recommends,
looking out of the passenger
window at the setting sun.
“Like I had faith in you?”
He glances over. “Think you were
wrong to?”
I don’t hesitate, shaking my head
once. “No.”
It brings a smile to his lips and he turns
away again. I let
memories seep into my head: one hot afternoon, a truck carrying a wreck
pulling up in front of the garage, Brian jumping down from the cab
telling me to pop the hood, accusing me of not having faith in him, me
assuring him that I did, based on nothing but strength of feeling,
Jesse opening the hood of the wrecked Supra, blown away by the
possibilities that were offered by what we found beneath. I’ve
replayed that afternoon over and over in my head over the last five
years, asking myself why I said that, where that faith had come from in
the course of one night, knowing the police at the street race had been
orchestrated, just like Vince had said, but still knowing I was
right. Brian might have lied to us all, but he never betrayed us.
“I let the Feds re-instate me because I
wanted to get back to L.A,” he
says, “no way were you ever going to rock up in Miami. Then Letty
came to me and I tried to talk her out of it but she knew about Braga
from the street racing crowd and she was going to do it no matter what
I said.” He’s talking about her reverently, as if he isn’t sure
he should even be mentioning her name. “Everyone the Feds had
managed to get next to Braga had turned up dead. I told her
that. After they killed her, I went all in.” He laces his
fingers together. I know he’s sorry, I know now how much it must
have cost him to agree to be her handler because of how he feels about
me. Like he said, being responsible for the death of the woman I
loved was never going to win him a place in my good graces.
“You weren’t responsible for her death.”
He doesn’t respond to that, just carries
on, “I was going to be
next. I was going in and either I’d get the guy who killed her or
I’d die trying. I didn’t care. I was living in a vacuum, I
had no idea who I was or what the hell I was trying to
accomplish. Then I find you dangling David Parke out of a fourth
story window and suddenly everything changes.”
This is gettin’ real heavy real fast, but
then I guess we have to do
this, talk through this stuff, and out on the road is the best place to
do it because we can’t get our hands on each other, not safely.
“You sayin’ I give you purpose?”
He drops his head back to the seat and
laughs. “Yeah, Dom.
Keeping your sorry ass out of jail.”
I laugh too. “Not exactly a purpose
to live by, Bri.”
“You know, the one person I lied to more
than you guys is myself.
I didn’t want to be in Miami, it was just where I ended up. I
didn’t want to settle down running a garage with Rome so I took the
Feds up on their offer. But I didn’t want to be a Fed
anymore. I just wanted what other people had; family, friends,
something stable, something I can rely on to be there when everything
turns to shit.”
“The only person you can ever rely on is
yourself, Bri.”
“Not true.” He’s shaking his head
emphatically. “You can
rely on Mia, on Vince and Leon. Hell, you can rely on me, Dom.”
He’s proved that, over and over
again. “Think you can rely on
them too?”
“God, no. Not yet anyways.
Maybe one day.” He
shrugs. “I don’t know how Costa Rica’s going to pan out. I
just wanted you to know, in case it means anything... I’m never going
to regret what I’ve done.”
It’s a while before I can get words around
the lump in my throat.
“Yeah. It means something.”
There follows yet another hundred miles of
silence. More or less.
#
Oaxaca’s the biggest place we’ve stopped,
so Leon and Vince take full
advantage of the city’s nightlife. They’re wired, despite having
done more driving than Brian or I because they’ve been alternating with
Mia as well as with each other. I think they’ve had several too
many Red Bulls but the tequila and beer will undoubtedly combat that
eventually. Mia by comparison is exhausted and turns in
early. Brian and I find a quiet bar not far from the hotel and
sink a few shots. I finally ask him what’s been on my mind since
they got me off that bus in California: how safe we really are, how far
the Feds are likely to go to catch us. I wish I hadn’t, because
his answer scares the shit outta me.
“Chances are they’d be looking for me
harder than they’re looking for
you.”
“Why?”
He looks at me over the tiny round table
and the tight collection of
glasses and bottles like the answer’s obvious. “I’m supposed to
be one of them. I’ve busted a convicted criminal off a prison
transport which will have made them look stupid so I’d bet they’ve
tried to keep that part quiet. Finding you would just put another
career criminal behind bars; you’re nothing special to them.
Finding me would give them a chance to make an example to anyone else
thinking about turning to the darkside. Think you’d have a tough
time of it in jail? I’m an ex-cop, an ex-Federal agent.
Think about what kinda time I’d have.”
I don’t want to think about it.
Vince, Leon, Mia; they’re
family. Brian’s the guy I’m in love with. I feel my
protective streak kick in, about a mile wide, and I know if anyone lays
a finger on him I’ll break it off. Then I’ll stick it where the
sun don’t shine.
“No one’s gonna touch you. You’re a
part of the team now.
You’ve given me everything, it’s time I started paying you back.”
He erupts in a heartbeat. “That’s
not why –“
“- I know.” Hand palm-down over our
drinks, I placate him.
“I know it’s not. I couldn’t protect Jesse, from Tran but mostly
from himself.” I can’t help the smile. “I’m not even going
to try to protect you from yourself – that would be like standing in
front of a speeding train.” I get serious again. “But I got
your back, Brian. We all have. Not gonna let you go to
jail.”
Brian nods, and there’s a sparkle in his
eyes when he says,
“Good. Cos I think I’d die first.”
We have a few too many shots after
that. I’ve been opening up to
Brian since I met the guy, so a deep and meaningful conversation isn’t
all that alien to us. Still it’s always easier with tequila
lubrication.
By the time we get back to the motel room,
we’re both drunk and
exhausted. By the time I make it out of the bathroom, Brian’s
crashed out on his back on the bed nearest to the door, fast asleep,
snoring loudly. I strip down to my shorts before shoving him
over, tipping him on to his side which shuts him up, getting an arm
around him and closing my eyes, feeling him the length of me.
Before I fall asleep, I lift my head slightly and bite his neck
gently. He hums softly but doesn’t wake. If we weren’t
driving five hundred miles a day I’d wake him, but we are, so my dick’s
gonna have to wait.
#
Both of us wake up hard, limbs
tangled. There isn’t time to do
more than jerk each other off and grab a shower before Mia’s knocking
on the door offering coffee and pastries from a bakery in town.
The journey from Oaxaca to Tonala is a
smooth one. There’s a
rusty sign, a gas station and diner and not much else. We refuel
then pull up to grab beers and burgers, which turn out to be
surprisingly good for a place that really can’t get much passing
traffic. Vince mutters something about Tonala’s resemblance to a
film he once saw and Brian says he’s seen it, and wasn’t it called
‘Zombie Town’? It’s banal chat but at least he and Vince are
managing to be at the same table as one another without the need for a
referee.
As we head back out the cars, Leon
casually asks if I want to ride with
him. This afternoon will take us over the Guatemala border at
Tapachula. Brian says it’s probably a good idea if he and I split
up and although I seriously don’t want to let him out of my sight I
understand what he’s saying. We’re not expecting trouble but it
won’t do any harm to take precautions. I grudgingly agree just so
long as I can drive and I’m about to reluctantly slide into the Honda
when Brian stops me. He presses the keys of the Charger into my
hand and pushes me towards the other car, sliding into the Honda
himself with a smile.
Leon climbs in with me and I watch Vince
join Mia. He doesn’t
speak until we’re under way, Brian up front, Mia behind us.
Then he says, “He’s done a fine job.”
I can feel the perfection of Brian’s work
all around me; the handling
and balance of the car, the response and sound the engine.
“Yeah.” I assume he’s talking about the car.
“Listen, Dom, you know I’m not gonna judge
you, whatever you do.
It’s your life, Dawg.”
Right. Brian and I aren’t exactly
being coy, but we’re not
holding hands or necking in public either. So I’m expecting
questions, I’m expecting comments. But there’s going to be a
fucking fist fight if anyone dares to suggest it’s wrong, or Brian
isn’t worthy, or some such crap. Leon falls silent and it’s a
mile before I realise he’s actually waiting for me to say
something. Looking at him, I just widen my eyes and he laughs.
“Okay. Is that how it’s going to be?”
“Don’t feel the need to explain myself to
you, bro.” It comes out
a little bit like a warning. I don’t think they ever caught on to
me and Han, back in the Dominion Republic. Nothing to catch on to
really. It was just a couple of nights, a couple of one-offs,
mutual attraction being satisfied. With Brian it’s serious,
long-term. They don’t have to like it but if we’re all living
together under one roof, for however short a time it might turn out to
be, they do need to accept it.
“Hey, listen, live and let live I
say. Just... we’ve known you
since Grade School, Dom, and you’ve never, you know....”
“Leon? No offence, but this really
isn’t your business.”
He holds up his hands. “Okay,
man.” He shuts the fuck up
for no more than ten miles. “You know, we like Brian.”
“Leon....”
“I’m just sayin’! He’s straight
up. Busting you off that
bus, it was all he talked about, I think it was all he thought about.”
There’s nothing I can say to that.
It’s nothing I don’t already
know. “Leon.”
The cars swallow another ten or fifteen
miles before he speaks
again. I occupy myself with watching the back of the Honda,
following the pace Brian’s setting, just a couple of MPH over the
limit.
“He’s cool, dude.”
“Leon! “ With a sigh, I say, “Tell
me about Vince and Brian –
they gonna be okay under the same roof or are we going to get a new
patio?”
He shakes his head. “Vince won’t
hurt him.”
No, he really won’t. “Not Brian I’m
worried about.”
The road we’re on – the CA2 - follows
Guatemala’s West coast and weaves
through a town every five miles. It’s slow going and after three
hours we’ve only covered about a hundred miles. In Escuintla,
Brian surprises us by taking a right hand turn onto the CA9 – not the
route the rest of us had on our maps and definitely not the way to the
border. Still, I follow him and Vince and Mia follow us.
Twelve miles of smooth tarmac and green countryside later he pulls up
in the coastal town of San Jose.
It’s mid-afternoon on a Thursday and the
place is busy, there are cars
of every make and model trying to push through the busy main road, or
parked up in ways that’d get them towed away in L.A. All of them
are as dusty and dirty as ours are and it helps our attempts to blend
in as we find spaces and reconvene in front of a cafe on the
beach. I’ve been to better places, cleaner places for sure.
But it’s nice to be somewhere just for the hell of it and while Leon
gets the beers in, Mia goes to look for a half-decent hotel.
“I’m happy just sleeping out here,” Brian
declares, holding out his
arms as if to embrace the glorious scenery and I’d agree with him if
the place didn’t smell so bad.
“Why the stopover, bro?” Leon asks and
typically, Brian shrugs.
“Shame not to do some sight-seeing on the
way.”
We sit in the sun and drink for a
while. Mia returns after twenty
minutes. She’s found a place just up the town’s main
street. It’s cheap, the kind of place American backpackers stay
at, but it has rooms available, all doubles. We head up there
after another round, ask for four rooms, and the proprietor doesn’t
blink an eye. It’s handy having Mia with us because people assume
she must be dating at least one of us, leaving Brian and I free not to
correct them. I give our room a perfunctory once-over, to check
there are no cockroaches in the bathroom big enough to have my dick off
in the middle of the night, before we head back out.
San Jose is a colourful place. There
are tiny bars with tables
outside, pumping tinny Spanish music into the air. We stop at the
first one with a free table, order a round of Gallo beers, a round of
tequila shots and a plate of tortillas. The conversation revolves
around the usual things – where we’ve been, where we’re going, what the
hell we do when we get there. We’re high enough up that we can
watch the sun set over roofs of the buildings between us and the
beach. The beer’s good, the tequila’s particularly strong, and
the food’s plentiful. We’re all mellowing, even Vince.
Brian’s touching me more, leaning into me, brushing against me when he
reaches for something, and I like it. He turns his head to say
something to me and I get my hand around the back of his neck, thumb
brushing into the short hairs at his nape.
For a second he lets his forehead touch
mine, but just for a second,
like he doesn’t want to make anyone uncomfortable.
“We drive through El Salvador tomorrow and
stop in Choluteca close to
the Nicaraguan border. It’s a small town, should be okay.
On Saturday we go through Nicaragua straight down to San Jose.”
“You worried about El Salvador?”
He shrugs slightly. “Think we need
to be?”
I roll my half-empty beer bottle between
my hands, remembering my own
drive up from Panama City, the reverse of what we’re doing now; through
Costa Rica, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico into California,
setting many alarm bells ringing no doubt. I don’t remember any
trouble along the way, but I was distracted and I was exhausted.
“Nah. It’ll be fine.”
Brian’s knuckles graze my own when he
reaches for his own beer, it
could have been accidental but it wasn’t. I don’t realise I’ve
been lost in memory until he asks, “Okay?”
“Yeah.” I am. Not sure Letty
would have understood this but
I’m exactly where I want to be. Or maybe she would, maybe she
did. I don’t think she and Brian exchanged more than a couple of
sentences back five years ago. They tended to stay out of each
other’s way. She was a smart woman; it was part of what I loved
about her.
I take a deep breath and change the
subject in my own head. When
we get to San Jose I need to check on the cash flow situation.
I’ve got money stashed; Mia and I were always careful with the proceeds
from the racing and the jackings. Brian got it right all that
time ago when he said the shit under the hood of our cars cost more
than the garage and the store made. Of course he was right.
He was pushing, he was stressed, desperate. I’ve often wondered
what would have happened if I’d found out about him when Vince’s life
wasn’t hanging in the balance. Didn’t I know he was a cop when we
found him sneaking around Hector’s place that night? Didn’t I
know, in my heart, that Vince was right? I’ve gone over it a
hundred times and I don’t have an answer. I just know I couldn’t
let Vince shoot him as sure as I knew I wasn’t going to hurt him.
Even out in the desert I don’t think I’d have done more than punch him
a couple of times. Like when I found out about him running Letty
and got into that wrestling match with him; rollin’ around like a
couple of girls, a fight that was more about getting physical than
getting even. He’s completely safe with me, always has
been. Not that he can’t take care of himself. I know he
can.
Without thinking, I reach up, stroke my
hand over the back of his head,
exerting enough pressure so that he has to push back into my palm just
to keep upright. His eyes lock with mine and for a second there’s
no one, nothing, but the two of us.
Then Vince groans, and Mia makes this
‘aww’ sound that makes Leon
laugh. Brian tries to duck out from under my touch but he’s
earned his place, and hell, he’s my lover, my partner. So I lean
in and bite his neck, into the muscle just below his ear. He
literally growls. Leon laughs louder and harder. Mia falls
quiet and some part of me feels guilty about rubbing her face in this
but we’re all about to move in together, I need them all to know I’m
serious about him. When we break apart, Brian picks up his beer
and turns back into his conversation with Leon, who to his credit picks
up the thread without hesitation. Although maybe he’s smirking a
little more, and maybe Brian is too. I risk a glance in Vince’s
direction and watch him deliberately put down his beer and push his
chair back.
“Vince....”
But he’s off, heading in the direction of
the hotel. So maybe I
have gone too far.
“Vince!” I go after him. I
need to, because if I don’t I’m
not sure he’ll still be around in the morning. “Vince!” I’m
not chasing him, but he’s walking slow, I’m walking fast and I get
within reach of him about halfway to the hotel. “Vince.”
Grabbing his arm non-too-gently, I pull
him around and he bunches his
fist like he’s ready to land a punch. I let go, hands up in
surrender.
He drops his hands to his side. “I
don’t know you anymore, Dom.”
I can’t help the eye-roll. “I
haven’t changed.”
“You just bit a guy in public, bro!
You’re... shit, I don’t even
want to imagine what you two are doin’....”
“Then don’t! But my sex life isn’t
your business. Brian
saved your life, Vince! Saved mine too.”
“That doesn’t mean you have to... to fuck
the guy!”
I really want to hit him, but that would
lead to a full on fight in the
middle of the road, and that would probably get us both arrested at
best. “I don’t know what you want to hear.”
“That you’re still you! That we’re
gonna land in Costa Rica and
hit the clubs. That it’s gonna be how it always was.”
“Nothing’s how it was! We’ve all
changed! I changed when I
spent two years holed up in Panama while you guys went back to L.A.”
“So we’ve got some catching up to do,
brother. We can do that
over Coronas and shots, yeah? You, me and Leon? Hit the
bars, hit the clubs, pick up some beautiful Senoritas.” He’s
grinning hopefully.
“Vince.”
“Sure Brian won’t mind staying home....”
It’s his insinuation, it’s the flat-out
insult, it’s that Brian saved
his fucking life. I take a step towards him, feet planted, I can
feel my fists tightening. “Vince. You need to listen to
me. You need to accept that Brian and I are together. Or
you need to leave.”
His eyes widen. “You would choose
him over me?!”
“I’m not sleeping with you!” It
comes out louder than I mean it
to.
A look of something that isn’t actually
disgust crosses his face and I
start to think maybe this isn’t about Brian being a guy, maybe it’s
about Brian being Brian. “We’re family, Dom,” he says seriously,
“family comes first.”
I back off slightly. If that’s what
this is about there’s a way
through it. “Brian’s family too, Vince. Me and him, it’s
serious, bro. I won’t leave him behind, not again.”
“You’d rather leave me behind.”
“Don’t make me choose.”
I half-expect him to walk away but he
doesn’t. He stands there
for a long time, then he half-shrugs and nods. “Just do me a
favour, yeah? Keep the physical stuff to a minimum until we get
used to the idea?”
I snort. Then I laugh and nod.
“Yeah. No
problem. Come and have another beer.”
Back at the table he sends a muted
apologetic look Brian’s way and
picks up his half-empty bottle as he sits back down. Brian smiles
like it’s nothing, and there’s not even a break in the conversation, so
it’s forgotten as quickly as it started.
At some stage during the night Mia corners
me too – this time in the
tight confines of the bar. She pushes her hair back from her
face, behind her ear. And smiles at me. And all I can feel
is relief. “So...”
“Sorry.” She can make me feel about
a foot tall with just a
look. “I wasn’t trying to upset Vince. And I wasn’t trying
to stake a claim.”
“You don’t have to, Dom.” He’s
always belonged to me. She
doesn’t need to say it. For a moment she looks sad but it passes
quickly, and she kisses my cheek before giving the bartender her
undivided attention. It’s an easier discussion than the one I had
with Vince, but I suspect it’s not the last.
It’s late when we head back to the
hotel. The others turn in but
I persuade Brian to take a walk with me down on the beach. It
doesn’t look as dirty in the dark and there’s no one else around.
My own unpredictable psyche offers up the image of Brian bare foot,
sand sliding between his toes, and my dick takes a distinct
interest. But no one in the right minds would walk barefoot on
this beach and luckily neither would Brian. I squeeze the back of
his neck gently.
“None of this bother you, does it?”
“Running from the Feds? Nah,
man. It’s worth it.”
Despite not being what I was talking
about, his answer floods me with
warmth. “I meant you and me.”
“Oh! No. Why? Should it?”
“You’re truly amazing. I think most
straight blokes would be at
least a little freaked out.”
“Are you?”
Good question. “Apparently not.”
“Not so amazing then. Not so
straight either.”
I slide my arm across his shoulders and
pull him into my side.
His arm crosses my back, fingers lifting my shirt, finding skin and
spreading out across it. We walk like that, sliding about in the
sand, rocking into one another as we try to keep upright. His
shoulder bumps against mine and turning my head I press my lips to the
side of his head, murmuring, “Amazing.”
We walk a few more unsteady steps.
“Is Vince okay?”
“No. But he’ll deal. No
choice.”
Up ahead the sand dusts a low pile of
large rocks. Brian
untangles himself from me and steps up onto the lowest one, climbing
upwards until he finds a flat surface we can both sit on. We’ve
lost the light from the various beachfront bars but the sky’s clear and
the moon’s bright. Clambering up, I get behind him, one leg
either side of him, both arms around him, pulling him back against
me. I like holding him this way, like that he lets me. He’s
a strong guy, it’s different from holding a woman. If I push,
he’ll push right back. If we fight, he’ll give as good as I
give. I nip the back of his neck with my front teeth as his
fingers curl around my arms, drawing his nails through the tiny
hairs. I kinda long for blond curls.
“Vince doesn’t like the idea of you
banging another guy, huh?”
“I doubt it. But I don’t think
that’s the problem.”
“So what is the problem?”
“The same thing that’s been the problem
since you first showed up at
the street race that night and lost your car to me. You’ve taken
his place.”
He cranes his head around to look at
me. “Dom, you know that’s
not –“ I don’t need to hear it, so I effectively shut him up by
sticking my tongue in his mouth. He turns in my arms, gets up
onto his knees and kisses back with a ferocity that surprises me.
His hands settle on my face, mine at his waist and I sit back, lick my
lips and look at him in the darkness his shadow’s casting between
us.
“I know it isn’t.”
Sliding one hand around to the front of
his jeans, I stroke firmly
between his legs. Gotta get him back to the hotel so I can test
the commitment of the mattress and the bed springs. Getting to my
feet, I hold out my hand and he grabs it, rising gracefully.
“Come on. Bed time for ex-cops and robbers.”
I have no idea where that came from.
#
We get breakfast at a cafe on the beach
before leaving.
Apparently Brian and I were noisy last night and the walls at the hotel
are thinner than newspaper. They know for damn sure now that
we’re not kidding around with this. I remember yellin’ his name
as I came in his mouth, his fingers in my ass, him chanting my name as
I sucked him off. That’s seriously more than I wanted my two best
friends and my sister to ever know about my sex life, but I guess if
we’re all gonna be under one roof for a while it was inevitable
somewhere down the line.
Brian doesn’t have an embarrassed bone in
his body, but he is chugging
back espressos like there’s a national storage of coffee and there are
dark lines under his eyes from not getting enough sleep. It’s
enough to suggest I kept him up last night without them having heard
every groan. I sink a couple of espressos myself.
We’re sixty miles from the El Salvador
border. It’s a hundred and
sixty, give or take, to the opposite border with Hondoras.
Another fifty will put us in Choluteca for the final overnight
stop. Politically, El Salvador makes Nicaragua look like Disney
Land, but as long as we drive straight through, we don’t stop, we
should be fine. I was, last time I drove through.
I know Brian wants us to split up, but I
make it perfectly clear that
isn’t going to happen and I put us up front, Vince in the Skyline with
Mia as his passenger, Leon bringing up the rear in the Honda. At
the border we do what we did coming into Guatemala – put other cars
between the three of ours, hang back and regroup on the other side,
just taking it easy until we’re back in convoy. Then we gun
it. We cover the mileage in two hours, no trouble, and Brian
starts to worry about the second border crossing. It’s my turn to
reassure him and I’m right – they don’t bother that we’ve been in the
country for less time than most. They just care that we’re
leaving.
The hotel’s on Choluteca’s main
road. We park out front and Mia
speaks to the guy at the desk, insisting in Spanish that we get back
rooms, away from the street. The rooms are basic but clean.
This is our last hotel, last night on the
road. Tomorrow it’s
straight through Nicaragua and on to our own place in Costa Rica’s
capital city. Until we’re there, none of this is going to seem
real. And once it is real, I hope to God I can keep these silent
promises I’ve been making to Brian, because he’s kept all of his.
In the room, Brian changes his T for a
blue shirt, buttoning it
half-way before I stop him, fingers brushing the backs of his
hands. He looks right at me, tips his head and kisses me; all
open mouth, wet lips and tongue. I’ve got his shirt off him as
fast as he’s got my T-shirt up around my chin. Yanking his head
back, he lifts the T off and drops his hands to my pants, springing up
into my arms the moment his jeans hit the deck, legs wrapping around my
waist. I get my hands under his ass but he’s too tall, too heavy
and we unbalance, laughing like kids as we hit the mattress which
protests with a rusty screech. He’s a critical mass of energy,
hands everywhere, and I sink my teeth into the muscle in his neck
making him growl. It’s one of the sexiest fucking sounds I’ve
ever heard and I get my tongue back in his mouth like I can’t taste
enough. I’ve never felt so possessive about anyone or anything
ever. Spreading my fingers, I stroke one hand along his side,
thumb bumping over his ribs, into the hollow of his hip, over the
pelvic bone, the swell of his ass, down the hard muscle of his thigh,
following his left leg where it’s hooked up over me, his ankle on my
butt. When I touch the sole of his foot, he twitches and the idea
that he’s ticklish just makes me want to do absolutely everything I can
think of to him.
I want to fuck him so badly it’s an aching
need; it’s getting tough to
hold on to my resolve not to do it in one of these shitty motel
rooms. But it’s like he’s reading my mind because his hands
settle either side of my face and he says, “First time has to be in a
garage, Dom, over the hood of a car because that’s all I’ve fantasised
about for the last five years.”
How we can be so alike when we’re
outwardly so different, I have no
idea. Before I get to ask him if his fantasy involves overalls,
one of his hands insinuates itself between us and he slides our dicks
together, setting sparks off behind my eyeballs. I last all of
sixty seconds and it feels like it’s been weeks, not hours since we
were last like this.
This time I let Brian finish
dressing. By the time we leave our
room the others have already given up waiting and gone but it’s not
difficult to find them. A short walk along the main road brings
us to a tiny cafe, no more than a couple of shaky tables and some
rickety metal chairs out on the uneven street, a yellow door and a
rotting wooden bar with an old coffee machine and a fridge filled with
unlabelled green bottles. Whatever’s in them must be strong,
because Vince and Leon start wolf-whistling the moment they set eyes on
us.
Mia’s got a gin or something, because her
eyes are clear and all she
says is, “Nice of you to join us.”
I get a round in to apologise. So
does Brian. Two turns
into four. This time tomorrow we’ll be in San Jose. If we
have to run further, I won’t ask everyone to uproot themselves
again. Not that there’d be any point in telling Brian that.
I know he’ll be with me as long as I want him, without question,
without reservation. He’s already given me everything he is,
given up everything he has – probably more than I know about.
When we first met up again back in L.A. he told me lots had
changed. That night, in Braga’s club, I felt the attraction like
a magnet and knew that whatever had changed, it wasn’t what was between
us.
I’m sure of him now, more sure than I’ve
ever been. The love of
my life. Fucking strange, the way things turn out.
#
Nicaragua’s beautiful. With Brian
driving I get a chance to enjoy
the scenery; lots of lush green and volcanic hills. It’s tempting
to stop in Masaya but it’s also more of a risk than we’re willing to
take. Stick to the plan because when we don’t, things tend to go
wrong.
So we drive straight and reach to the
final border crossing to get into
Costa Rica. We’re the last ones through, Mia and Vince having
gone through first, Leon in the middle. It’s supposed to be the
same drill as with all the others, only something’s off this time and
one of the guards orders Brian out of the car. I can feel my
heart start to hammer against my ribcage as I watch him disappear into
the little white hut next to the barrier along with two armed
men. The door closes and my imagination goes into overdrive,
picturing Brian with his hands behind his head, forced to his knees,
one of the uniforms rubbing his stinking crotch against Brian’s face,
the sick jibes, the filthy threats....
My fingers are around the door handle and
I’m almost getting out when
the door of the hut opens and I see Brian coming back, the guards
behind him all smiles and salutes. He slides into the car, starts
the engine and we’re free and clear.
He doesn’t say a word, glances at me with
a smile, then looks again,
presumably having seen the expression on my face. “What?”
“What happened?”
He shrugs. “We just agreed a price,
that’s all.”
“Was it a lot?”
I try to keep it nonchalant and light but
he must pick up on something
because the look on his face changes as he shakes his head. “Nah,
man. Nothing we hadn’t prepared for. What is it, Dom?”
“I was worried about you back there.”
He looks like he doesn’t know how to take
that and it takes him half a
mile or so to formulate an answer. “You don’t have to worry about
me. I can take care of myself.”
“I know that. In my head. But
you’re crazy, Bri, you tend
to do some crazy shit. In my heart, I’m gonna worry now and
again.”
It’s two hundred and fifty miles from the
border crossing to San
Jose. We regroup just ten miles in, refuel and grab some
food. I guess the momentary glitch at the border is still showing
on my face, ‘cause Mia asks me if I’m okay, asks me what happened, and
I tell her nothing happened, everything’s fine.
After lunch, I settle the check and take a
piss. Brian’s already
at the car, leaning against the passenger side door. He throws
the keys at me as soon as I get close enough, saying, “All yours,
Dom.” I kinda think I’ve already laid claim to both of them, but
I’m touched by the sentiment.
Mia’s got the exact directions to the
house in San Sebastian, so
they’re taking point. I’ve got the driver’s side door open and
Brian’s already half in when I pause, one hand on the roof, to ask him,
“That afternoon, in Mexico, would you have
let me kill Braga?”
He nods. “Course.”
“So when did you stop being a cop, really?”
He laughs. “Five years ago, when I
fell in love with a convicted
criminal.”
Cool. Next stop, home sweet home.
end (for now)
elfin
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