Rules of the Road ©2016 by Geron Kees. All rights reserved.
This story is a work of fiction and depicts sexual activities between minors. All characters and situations are imaginary. No real people were harmed in the creation of this presentation. Please observe the laws of your jurisdiction with reference to reading this material.
If you're not 18, you shouldn't be reading this at all. Go find a boyfriend and talk stuff over with him.
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Address story comments/criticism to: Geron Kees at <geronkees@runbox.com>______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Chapter 3 --
The next day was made of memory stuff. Brian's dad took the morning off
from work, ran him down to the DMV, and they got the Bee's title
switched over and acquired a new set of tags. After that, they stopped
by his father's insurance agent and got insurance for the car, and Brian
wrote his first check from his new checking account to pay for it. Up to
then he'd just been a savings account guy; his dad told him straight up
to get a checking account now that he had the car, because he was going
to need it, for sure.
Just before noon they were back home, in the driveway, his dad smiling
and standing by while Brian mounted the tags in the car's brackets.
"Feel good, Brian?"
Brian grinned, tightening the last screw. "You know it, dad. I can't
wait to show the guys at school."
His dad looked at his watch, nodded. "I have to get in to work. Do me a
favor and be careful out there, okay? That damn Mopar is not your mom's
car, by a long way from Tuesday. It's a rocket disguised as
transportation."
But his dad grinned when he said it, and Brian wasn't offended. "Admit
it - you kinda like this car, don't you, dad?"
His father nodded. "It's okay, I guess." His eyes were fond as he came
over and put his arm around Brian's shoulder. "Promise me you'll be
careful in it."
"I will, dad."
His father squeezed him. "I was thinking, son, that you kind of jumped
the gun on me on this. I'll say now that I intended to buy you your
first car as a graduation present next year. I kind of thought you'd be
okay driving mom's car until then."
Brian wasn't totally surprised to hear this. His dad had bought Brian's
older sister her first car - it was kind of family tradition among the
Temples. A couple of his cousins had also gotten their first cars that
way.
"It's okay, dad. I just really wanted this car."
"I know. But since you paid for it yourself, I was thinking that if you
decided to build it a little, I'd pay for that instead."
Brian grinned. "You just told me to be careful in it, and now you want
to make it faster?"
His dad laughed. "It's what its all about, Brian. It's always about
being quicker than the other guy. You'll see. This car runs well for
stock, but the first time you run it against something with some extra
toys in the engine block, you're going to see it's not as quick as you
think it its."
"Yeah. I kind of knew that already." Brian shrugged. "I've ridden in
Colin's car. He got it to run a thirteen-four in the quarter at the
track."
Brian's dad looked at him. "That's not too shabby, but it's not going to
make him king of the road, either."
"Yeah. I know." He looked up at his father. "But I just got it, dad. I
want to drive it some before I pull the engine and then not have a car
for awhile."
His dad shook his head. "No, we won't do it that way. I'll buy you
another 383, and we can put it on the stand in the basement and build it
together. You know - take our time about it. Then, when it's ready, we
can swap the motors in a single afternoon. You won't be without a car at
all."
Brian was thrilled. "Dad, that sounds really cool. I think I could get
along with that idea. When do you want to start?"
His dad squeezed his shoulder again. "Let's talk about it at dinner. I
need to go, and so do you. Your fifth period class starts in about
thirty minutes."
Brian felt excited as he got into the car to go to school. It was the
first time he'd driven it by himself, and the first time he'd be driving
it into the lot at school. Everyone was at lunch right now - a lot of
people would be outside the building, enjoying the warm late-Spring day.
It was a seven-minute drive to school, which meant five minutes in the
Bee. It was hard to keep the car under sixty, and for an essentially
boxy vehicle it handled the narrow and twisty back roads Brian had to
travel to get to the main road with surprising agility.
When he pulled into the school parking lot he drove around the side of
the building to the rear lot where the guys with cars hung out. Lunch
was still out, and people milled around the dozen or so hot cars parked
along the back row. One of the cars was Colin's 'runner, and there was
an open spot next to it. Brian arrowed the Bee slowly across the lot,
conscious of the heads turning to watch him come.
Colin was standing in front of his car with Ed, and Dave Routh, the boy
who'd gotten his car dented up at the Kennedy faction's Burger King.
They all turned to watch him drive up, and Ed beamed and waved.
"I was wonderin' if you were gonna make it, dude," he said, coming to
the window as Brian pulled the car to a stop and shut off the engine.
"We all gotta go back in in like ten minutes."
"I'm here," Brian said simply, opening the door to get out.
Several of the guys were making their way towards the Bee, and Colin was
busy making a slow circuit of the car, his expression neutral. He paused
to look at the Bee logo on the tail of one rear quarter-panel, did a
little shrug, then came up and grinned.
"It's clean as shit, Brian. Sorry I didn't get over to your place see
it. Just busy."
"It's okay," Brian said, smiling. "You can see it now."
"How's it run?"
Brian shrugged. "It's stock. But it runs pretty good for that."
Colin grinned. He had curly light brown hair and green eyes, and the
girls all liked him, though he was kind of awkward with all of them
except Marianne Davis, who'd had a crush on him for the past two years.
Colin got along with her because he wasn't interested in her, and
therefore wasn't nervous about her. Marianne was cute as could be, but a
little bit of a tomboy, and Brian had thought more than once that if the
girl had some sort of magic happen to her that turned her into a guy, he
wouldn't be able to keep his hands to himself.
"Are you ready to try me?" Colin asked, already knowing the answer.
"Nah." Brian shrugged. "I already know you'd take me. For now."
Colin, squinted at him. "What's that mean?"
"Well, my dad wants to help me build an engine for it. I'm thinking
about doing it."
That didn't make Colin happy. Brian's dad was no one to fool around
with, car-wise, and most of his friends knew it.
"Hmm. That's cool." But Colin didn't sound like he really thought it was
cool. He sounded like he didn't like the idea at all.
Behind him, Ed made a huge grin and then silently laughed. Ed had a
slightly evil streak in him at times, and he often let it out when Colin
was around. Brian understood that Colin brought most of it on himself.
The other boy was highly competitive as long as he was sure he could
win; much less so if he thought he'd lose face. That Colin suffered from
a fragile ego was something that Brian understood all too well; the why
of it was a mystery, though. Colin had everything going for him, and
little reason to feel uncomfortable about it.
"You going out cruisn' Friday night?" Colin asked, changing the subject.
"Fuckin' right." Brian grinned. "I can't wait for it."
Colin nodded, looking a little brighter. "We could hook up, maybe cruise
together. If you want."
Brian understood that one. Colin wanted to make Brian chase him all over
creation and have a difficult time doing it, which would make Colin feel
he was one up, and put Brian in his place as second best.
"Maybe. I have to see who wants to ride with me, and shit like that."
"Well, let me know." Colin gave the Bee a last look, and then managed a
genuine smile. "It's a pretty car, man. Hope you're proud of it, 'cause
you should be."
When Colin wanted to be nice, he did it all the way.
"Thanks," Brian said, grinning. "I am."
Colin headed back around to his own car, to where Marianne Davis was now
standing at the driver's door, waiting to talk to him.
Ed came up." Man, Colin was dripping some envy there, dude."
Brian laughed. "Be nice, Ed."
"Hey - I could see it. You should have heard him while you were coming
across the lot."
Brian looked interested. "Yeah? What'd he say?"
Ed laughed. "He said, 'man, it doesn't even have wheels on it'. Told ya
he'd say that."
Brian just sighed. Colin was the least of his worries right now.
Dave Routh walked over and clapped Brian on the shoulder. "Man, it's
really a pretty car, Brian. I'm jealous as shit."
Now, that was more like it. It was okay to be envious if you owned up to
it a little bit.
Brian looked over at Dave's Nova, noticed the gray spots where Dave had
been fixing dings. "Looks like you got most of them, Dave."
"Yeah, there's a couple left. When I'm done I'm gonna get it painted. My
dad said he'd loan me the money."
"Same color?" Brian asked.
"Hell, no. I don't want those Kennedy assholes to even know it's the
same car. I thought about painting it red."
That was a far cry from the car's current sea-green color. But Brian
nodded. "Novas look good red."
Eventually, they all went in to classes. Brian locked the Bee, looked
back over his shoulder at it before he went inside. The car looked right
at home in the company it was keeping there in the lot, in no way a poor
showing. The dark inlets of the dual hood scoops looked like squinty,
sinister eyes, and the stocky stance of the car made it seemed poised
for a leap into space.
Yep. The Bee was gonna be quite at home in the car part of the lot. So
was Brian, it seemed.
After school, Brian couldn't wait to get to the parking lot. Ed was
already there, standing by the Bee liked he owned it, proudly showing it
off to a couple of Chevy guys from the other end of the row, Wade
Tomlinson and Mike Zurka. They all turned as he came up, with the two
new guys giving Brian the nod.
"Nice car, Brian," Wade said, and Brian could see he meant it. "Mind me
asking what you paid?"
"Fifteen," Brian said, grinning.
Mike made a noise. "Damn. You stole this motherfucker, Brian."
Brian liked both guys, but especially Mike. He was blonde and blue-eyed,
cute in a boyish way, and Brian knew he'd jump into bed with him in a
heartbeat if the opportunity was offered.
But Brian also knew that Mike was straight. He had a girlfriend of
sorts, Molly Stanburn, and the two of them had been caught fucking by
Molly's dad one warm night on their screen porch. The ruckus had been
noisy and unpleasant; but in the end, the Stanburn's had allowed Mike to
keep seeing their daughter, and Brian wondered if they were allowing him
to stick around so they would know where the father was if something
surprising happened.
Brian nodded. "I'm starting to realize that."
Ed came over and nudged him. "Look."
Colin was driving out of the parking lot, and Marianne Davis was running
after him. Colin had to see her in the rearview mirror, but he didn't
stop. He got his 'runner out to the road, turned right, and laid on it,
burning rubber straight into third gear.
"Fucking asshole," Ed said. "I heard him say earlier he would give
Marianne a ride home."
Marianne was walking back now. By this point she would have missed her
bus; Brian waved at her. She saw him, but it took her full minute to get
to where they stood.
"Hey," Brian said, matter-of-factly, as she came up to them. "I saw you
missed Colin. Need a ride?"
She smiled. "Thanks, Brian. Yes, I could use one."
"Come on, Ed. Let's take Marianne home. See you, guys." He waved at Wade
and Mike, who nodded and headed back to Wade's car, a brown '69 Chevelle
SS. Wade turned at the last moment, waved at Brian to get his attention
again.
"You gonna be at the shopping center later?"
The car crowd at Proctor hung out in the back corner of the parking lot
at the little strip mall in Alna, the closest thing around that
resembled a town until you got to Utica. They could often be found there
after school, and in the evenings - especially on and off during the
weekend. That Wade expected him to show there just confirmed that the
other guys had already accepted the Bee as one of their own.
"Maybe later. I will if I can."
Wade nodded, waved again, and ran to catch up with Mike.
Marianne lived a short distance from Brian's house. She slid into the
front seat between Brian and Ed. Brian was immediately aware of the
softness and warmth of her against him, and wished again that Marianne
was a guy.
"You gotta do a burn out in front of the school," Ed said, as Brian
started the car. "Come on, man. It's tradition."
Brian didn't like the idea of jumping on the Bee cold. So he sat there,
engine idling, until it warmed up a bit.
"This is a pretty car, Brian," Marianne said, giving him a bump with her
arm. "It looks a lot like Colin's car on the inside."
"They're both b-bodies," Brian said. "The outsides are different but a
lot of the guts are the same. The interior dimensions are identical,
pretty much. The Roadrunner's dash is different, but the seats and stuff
are the same."
Marianne grinned.
"What?" he said, unable to suppress a smile as he looked at her. Yeah,
Marianne was really cute. For a girl.
She shrugged, also in an appealing way. "Nothing. Guys are all cute when
you get them to talk about their cars."
"Yeah?" Brian grinned.
"Uh huh. Colin is the same way."
Brian looked over at Ed, but neither of them said anything. That
Marianne could still say something nice about Colin after the way he had
just treated her only showed she was stupid in love with the guy.
"We're warmed up now," Ed said, looking at the temp gauge. "Can this
thing light 'em up?"
Brian laughed. "Let's go and see."
The road in front of the school was two-lane blacktop, straight and
smooth, the lines on it freshly repainted by the county. They needed to
turn right to go home; but tradition was you turned left and then jumped
on it, so that you would roar by the front of the school where the buses
stood to pick up the kids. That way you got maximum exposure, maximum
word of mouth.
Brian had been planning just to turn right and head on home; but when he
got to the road and looked left, he was surprised to see that five or
six buses were still there, along with maybe a hundred kids, still
loading. That was enough of an audience to make a small detour
worthwhile.
He waited until traffic had vanished on the road, then pulled out,
tromping on the gas pedal before he was entirely straightened out just
to ensure that the sticky Goodyears would break loose.
Oh, and that happened. Brian was a little shocked when the Bee roared,
the back end broke loose and went sideways, and as he whipped the wheel
to straighten her she caught the road and leaped ahead, still burning
rubber; he hit second and the tires gave forth an enormous chirruup!
against the pavement, the car surged forward, and then the school was
gone, left behind in a cloud of tire smoke.
Fuck. That was way better than he'd expected.
"Awesome", Ed breathed, grinning over at him. "Anybody that didn't catch
that had to have had their head straight the fuck up their ass."
Marianne patted his arm. "There's no seatbelt in the middle," she
whispered.
Brian laughed, let off the gas, and backed the Bee back down to the
speed limit. "Sorry. Did it scare you?"
"A little. It's fun, though."
To his unending surprise, Marianne stretched out a little and kissed his
cheek. "Thanks for the thrill."
Brian looked at her, caught Ed grinning ear-to-ear on the other side of
her.
"Uh - sure."
They went "around the block", taking a left at Blackcastle Road and
making the circuit back towards their neck of the woods. Marianne seemed
to be having fun, favoring both Brian and Ed with smiles and the
occasional pat. By the time they got her to her house Brian was
seriously wishing he could be attracted to her sexually, because he
could feel her there, next to him, and feel also the way she touched
against him.
It was relaxed and it was comforting and it was friendly, and Brian
could feel a little bit of magnetism there, the girl like a cute memo
holder pinching a sheet of paper to his refrigerator door. Brian was
sure he'd have enjoyed kissing her, even though she didn't have a dick.
Sadly, that was as far as it was likely to go, though, so...why try?
Ed slid out and let her out, then crawled back in, and they waved to her
as they drove off.
"Fuck. Colin's a stupid shit," Ed said. "Marianne's as cute a little
package as you'll find in that hick school, and she has more personality
then the whole cheerleading squad put together." He shook his head.
"Some guys get all the luck, and then they just toss it away. Stupid."
Brian laughed. "I've known her a few years. She's always been cute."
Ed grinned. "Yeah, I saw that little kiss. Sweet. Think she might be
interested in some of that boxer bone you're carrying?"
Brian felt his face grow a little warm. "Nah. She's in love with Colin.
I've also known that for a few years, too."
Ed shook his head again. "What a waste of perfectly good girl."
Brian had planned to head home from there, but Ed was feeling
adventurous, and soon talked Brian into a little cruising before winding
up the ride.
"Where do you wanna go?" Brian asked, pausing at the stop sign at Route
5.
"Maple Hill would be nice," Ed said, looking innocent.
Brian sighed, looked at his watch. It was a quarter after three. There
was time. Brian knew his mom wouldn't expect him for dinner until six.
"Nobody will be there this time of day, will they?"
Ed gave a him a look. "Shit. They go to their hangout after school just
like our guys go the Twin Center in Alna. Broad daylight is a good time
to check out the competition, too." He leaned closer, offered Brian a
knowing look. "They won't all be drunk, either, so it's probably safer,
too."
Brian had to grin at that. "True shit."
It was a fifteen minute trip. On the way, two guys in a Chevelle tried
to run them from a stop light; but the car they were in was stock,
probably the driver's mother's car, and it wasn't up to taking on the
Bee by any means. They left the other vehicle in the dust, and Ed
reached over and patted Brian on the shoulder.
"One down, a million to go."
The shopping center at Maple Hill was considerably larger than the one
in Alna. The Burger King sat out front, by the road, with its own small
parking lot cordoned off from the larger mall lot by sidewalks and
curbs. But the place was surrounded by acres of pavement, most of it
covered with cars.
They pulled in, and Brian drifted the Bee to one side and stopped so
they could check the place out.
"Mopars over there," Ed said immediately, pointing to a few cars parked
together by one of the lot's tall light poles.
The guys there were already looking out of their wondows at Brian's car.
Sighing, he let off the brake and began to coast towards them. The cars
looked to be a '70 GTX, a '70 'Cuda, a '69 Charger, and a '71
Challenger. The drivers were seated in all of them, and a couple of the
cars looked to have passengers as well.
As Brian started to circle the group, the driver of the Challenger - a
purplish-blue ride with a black vinyl top and aluminum slots - stuck his
arm out of the window and waved. Brian stopped, backed up, and turned
the Bee so that he could pull up to the guy's window.
Brian positioned their windows so they could talk, and shut off the
car's engine. The other driver was blonde and green-eyed, smiling in a
way that was fairly striking, and, Brian thought, not short on cute in
any way. His passenger was a black dude, energetically handsome, and
looked like he could twist the lug nuts off the car's wheel studs by
hand. He also was smiling and seemed cool.
"Nice," the other driver said right off. "Haven't seen a Super Bee
around here in a couple of years."
"Thanks," Brian said, grinning. "I like your Challenger, too. Even if
it's a little hard on the eyes."
The other boy laughed. "It is, I admit it. It's called Plum Crazy. It's
an original color, though. What about yours? Most of the Bees I've seen
are blue, yellow, or green. Never saw one that color before. It's pretty
cool."
Brian shrugged. "Someone special ordered it, I guess. It's the original
paint, though."
The other boy squinted at him. "I've seen you someplace before. You go
to Kennedy?"
Brian looked at Ed a moment before looking back. "Nope. We're from
Proctor."
The Challenger guy laughed, and so did his passenger. "Hey, you don't
have to say it that way. You can't help where you live."
Brian relaxed a bit. This wasn't so bad.
He nodded. "Yeah, we're not looking for trouble. You got a baseball bat
in there?"
Blondie grinned. "You heard about that? I wasn't there, but I heard
about it, too. That was some of our football-heads in action."
The black dude leaned over and pushed the driver. "Hey, I'm sitting
right here, man."
Blondie held up his hands. "Present company excepted. You weren't there,
Deke. You're not an idiot like Dave Mahowsky and his bunch."
Deke nodded. "I'd get mad, but happens I agrees with ya." He grinned.
"So I won't tell Dave you said that."
Blondie turned back to Brian. "I heard your guy was coming through a lot
and eyeballing some of the Budweiser crowd. They don't like that - guys
from your school driving through and eye-hustling shit."
Brian nodded. "I know the guy. He didn't mean any harm. He's a car nut,
and he was just looking."
"Shit," Blondie said suddenly. "I know who you are. You're the guy that
put Frank Owens on the mat at the intramurals the other week."
Deke leaned forward, looking at Brian. "Fuck if it ain't. Hey, Swiftie.
That's a nice right you got there, buddy."
Brian was a little shocked to be recognized. He tried not to grin,
didn't quite manage to pull it off. "I got lucky."
Deke laughed. "The hell you did. That's a bullet you got attached to
that right wrist, man."
Ed gave Brian a slight push. "You're famous, dude."
Brian felt a little light-headed. This was the first time anyone had
ever recognized him just from his boxing. It felt weird - but good.
Blondie stuck a hand across to Brian's window. "I'm Alan. This is Deke.
Otherwise known as Deke Gonna Getcha on the field. He's an offensive
lineman for the Colts."
The Colts were Kennedy's football team. Brian had probably seen Deke
before at a game, but it was hard to recognize guys with helmets on.
"Cool," Brian said, grinning at Deke. "You guys got us last year. We're
looking forward to the rematch."
Deke grinned. "I was a junior then. Not this time, though. Bring it on,
man."
Brian nodded. "I'm Brian. This is Ed beside me."
Ed waved a finger in salute, and Alan nodded. "Hey, man. Nice hair."
Ed laughed. "It's paid for."
Alan grinned, patted the Bee's door. "What's under the hood?"
"Three-eighty-three."
"Cool. Me, too. It's a good engine. Yours stock?"
Brian grinned. "So far."
Alan nodded. "Yeah. I got plans, too. Just have to save up the cash."
The GTX's driver's door opened, and a guy got out and came around to
slide between the Bee and the Challenger. He was careful not to rub too
hard against either car.
"You guys are having too much fun over here," he said, smiling. He
looked at Brian. "Hey. Nice car. We need a Super Bee around here to
liven the place up."
Alan shook his head. "Back off, jack. These are Proctor guys."
The new boy sighed, looked disappointed. "Well, the car's still pretty."
Brian laughed. "Thanks." He stuck out his hand. "Brian, and that's Ed."
"Tim. The car really is pretty nice. Too nice to be sitting in the lot
at Proctor. You should get a transfer, man."
"Don't piss him off, Tim," Alan said, grinning. "This is the boxer who
said bye-bye to Frank a couple of weeks back."
Tim looked at Brian all over again. "No shit. That was a helleva match.
You're faster than my sister is with guys, man."
Everyone laughed.
He and Tim traded engine info. The GTX was a 440, and had run
mid-thirteens at the track. Brian was impressed, and said so.
"It's a rebuild," Tim said. "I put in a better cam and put on headers,
and changed the intake to an Edelbrock Torker. Also traded the Carter
AFB for a Holley carb. Made a hell of a difference."
"I guess so," Brian said. "Remind me to stay away from you on the road.
I -"
He broke off, as something rumbled by behind them. All heads turned to
look.
In the rearview mirror, Brian saw the car. It was a dark green Chevy
Camaro SS, a '69, with black stripes on either side of the low snorkel
scoop squatting on the center of the hood, and a trunk-mounted
mini-spoiler on the rear. The car wore chrome Cragars on her feet, and
the paint glowed with a deep shine that reeked of money-spent.
Brian could feel the vibration from the sound emitted by the car's dual
exhausts. The Camaro wound its way slowly among parked cars and pulled
up beside a small knot of GM muscle cars parked closer to the Burger
King.
"Sounds good," Brian said, once the newcomer had shut down his
powerplant.
"It should," Alan said. "That's Jeff Breakman. That's a 427 you were
hearing, and it runs. Twelve-two, just the other day at Cicero, and in
street trim."
Brian felt his eyebrows go up. "Damn. That's pretty good."
"Quickest car at Kennedy," Tim said. "Beat Mahowsky's goat without much
trouble."
Brian was impressed. "So what's this guy Breakman like?"
Alan and Tim looked at each other. "His old man's a lawyer," Tim said.
"Jeff is kinda quiet. I don't really know him that well."
"Who does?" Alan added. "He's cool enough, he's just not a joiner. When
he comes through here he stops and talks to the Chevy crowd for a few
minutes, but he never comes over here. He's cool in school, though. Just
quiet."
"Boy loves that car, though," Deke put in. "You get too close to it, he
gets hyper."
Alan and Tim both nodded at that. "He's got a lot of money in it," Alan
said. "I don't blame him."
Brian watched the Camaro in his rearview mirror. The driver wasn't
visible - too much light reflecting from the car's windshield. He was
pulled up next to another Camaro - a red '70. Both drivers had their
side windows down, and both drivers had their arms resting atop the
doors. Brian could see their arms move now and then as the two
Chevyheads traded talk.
Alan tapped on Brian's door. "Don't get any ideas. Your Bee couldn't
take that car with me and Tim here both pushing you."
Brian looked over, grinned. "I wasn't thinking about running him. I was
just wondering what it was like to drive something like that every day."
Tim made a sound. "My buddy Billy ran his Harley against it. He lost. He
said that car could make you cream your jeans just pulling away from a
stoplight." He looked at his watch. "Shit. I gotta go to work. You guys
be cool."
Brian and Ed both waved.
They listened as Tim got into his car, started it. It sounded good, but
didn't have quite the rock-and-roll sound of the Camaro. Tim pulled out
slowly enough, glided over to the exit onto Route 5. When he pulled out
he goosed the GTX, and the wheels spun and the car took off. They could
hear Tim banging his way through the gears as the car vanished down the
road.
Alan smiled. "Tim plays that four-speed like my mom plays the piano. Got
talent, but doesn't know when to stop."
Brian grinned. "I wanted a clutch originally. I liked this car so much I
bought it even though it was an automatic."
"I'm an auto over here, too. Hey, you can't outshift an automatic. Good
thing, because I was never much good with a clutch."
Brian looked at his watch. "Well, we'd better get moving. Nice to meet
you fellas. Stay outta trouble, huh? No more baseball bats, okay?"
Deke gave him a mock angry look. "Don't make me come over there."
Alan laughed at that. "I'd actually like to see that, Deke. You trying
to crush the guy with your bare hands while he's busy knocking your
teeth out with his."
Deke's mouth dropped open. "Oh, no. I can't have that. I need my smile
for the ladies."
Brian grinned, waved, and started the Bee.
"You guys stay cool, okay?" Ed called.
Alan nodded. "You, too."
They pulled out. Brian looked in his rearview mirror for a second, and
saw the Camaro guys across the lot with their heads out the windows,
looking. But they were too far away, and their faces were just blobs of
white.
"Told ya it would be cool to stop here," Ed said. "Those guys were okay,
huh?"
Brian nodded. It hadn't been the fiasco he'd been expecting, at all.
They crossed the lot, went around the entire shopping center and back
out to the far exit onto Route 5. Brian considered a squirrelly
take-off, but then sat on the idea while it was still in formation. No
telling if there were any cops around, and to be pulled over in front of
the Kennedy car crowd would be about the worst thing imaginable.
So he simply pulled out when traffic allowed, crossed to the gap in the
median strip, and eased the Bee into an open slot in the oncoming flow.
Ed grinned. "I wondered if you were gonna put on a show or not."
Brian looked over at him and smiled. "Shit. My luck, there'd be a State
boy parked right there someplace, and I'd have to go home and tell my
dad I got my first ticket. Not this guy."
Ed sighed. "Man, I can't wait for Friday night." He patted his front
pocket. "You're gonna toke up with me a little, aren't ya?"
"Sure," Brian said. "You know I always take a few hits. I just don't
want to get so stoned we just sit in one place and stare at some trees
or something. I wanna drive the Bee, not use it as a living room couch."
"I don't have any change for beer this time," Ed said. "You treating?"
Brian nodded. "I'll go a six pack. You think we need more than that?"
Ed grinned. "Depends on if it's just you and me. I talked to Annabelle
in Biology class today. She heard you got your new ride. She said to
tell you if you needed a back seat for cruising on Friday, she and Missy
would be available."
Brian considered that. He liked Annabelle, and considered Missy okay -
she was kind of necessary baggage if you took Annabelle anyplace, as the
two girls went everywhere together. That Annabelle liked him Brian was
aware of; that she had only watched him from a distance had also made an
impression upon him. Annabelle was a cool partyer, and she was just fun
to be around, too. And that she liked him without throwing herself at
him was something that made her company easy to deal with.
He looked at Ed. "I was really just thinking of you and me for the first
cruise. I wanna do some running, maybe, and two extra people in the back
seat is an extra two-hundred and fifty pounds, at least."
"Cool," Ed said. He nodded. "That's what we'll be out there for, no
shit. I gotcha. Just thought I'd put that in there."
Brian grinned. "What - you hoping Missy might put out, or something?"
Ed smiled. "Shit. Wouldn't hurt you to polish that thing a little. You
don't wanna be a virgin all your life, man."
Brian laughed. "I'm not a virgin."
Ed looked interested. "Get the fuck out. You never told me."
"I didn't know you then. I was fourteen."
He was referring to Chris, of course; but he had no intention of telling
Ed that. But sex was sex in that respect; once you'd had it with
anybody, you no longer could be considered a virgin.
"What was she like?" Ed asked.
Brian could only sigh, remembering Chris's beautiful face, his beautiful
smile.
"Special, man. Really, really special."
Ed looked at him, his grin slipping. "Little hurt there?" he asked
quietly. "Sorry, man. Just tell me to shut the fuck up next time."
Brian shrugged. "It's okay. I don't really want to talk about it,
though."
They were silent for a few minutes.
Then Ed looked over at him. "You're lucky, dude. I don't even have a
memory that hurts."
Brian just nodded.
Ed realized he needed to change the subject. "So. Friday night, just the
boys. Smoke a little, drink one maybe, and then tear up some road?"
Brian nodded. "Sounds like a plan."
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