DRIVEN
TO MURDER
by Judith Skillings
XXOne
XXIt could have been
a perfect New England autumn day. A childhood memory of Indian summer
painted in primary colors. Blazing red sugar maples. Titian blue skies.
Puffy white clouds pushed along by a breeze tinged with the hint of frost.
The day her mother—Pauline—had taken the three kids for an
outing to the Brookfield Orchards. Rebecca closed her eyes, raised her
face to the warmth of the sun. She imagined she could smell the tang
of fallen apples, hear the hum of yellowjackets lured by putrefying pulp.
Imagined that if she stretched out her arms, her fingertips would brush
the branches of gnarled trees laid out in rows by eighteenth-century
settlers.
XXRidiculous. The flashbacks were becoming
a nuisance.
XXIt was the twenty-first century. She was standing
on fresh blacktop opposite turn twelve of the road course at the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway. Gasoline fumes and the stench of burning brakes hung in the
air. The pervasive whine came not from insects, but from 3-Litre engines
accelerating hard onto the front straight at the most famous racetrack in
the world. She was playing mechanic, twisting wrenches to improve the performance
of a rich man’s toy.
XXAdmittedly, it was a teenage fantasy come to
life. The chance to be a part of Indy, to brush shoulders with the most famous
names in open-wheel racing, had enticed her away from home and business. Her
crush on racing was sophomoric and not easily explained to her pragmatic friends,
so she hadn’t tried. When she’d been offered the three-week stint,
she’d waved off their objections, packed her tools and flown west.
XXBehind her someone called out, “Rebecca.
Moore.” She sighed, opened her eyes and turned. The car’s owner,
Peyton Madison III, wagged his fingers for her to come closer.
XXIan Browning, their driver, was straightening
the shoulder harness before sliding into the cockpit of the Lotus 49C, touted
by race pundits as the most exquisitely designed race car ever. Peyton murmured
last-minute encouragements. Ian avoided eye contact. He was focused on the
race course, as if he were already strapped in, moving the car through the
gears, gliding around the turns. They barely had time for two more practice
laps before the track was turned over to the Formula One cars.
XXThe kid on the crew picked up a canister of
gas to top off the tank. When he grinned, acne scars formed a half moon on
his cheek. Rebecca watched him uncap the gas, then turned and braced Ian’s
arm as he raised his leg over the flexible housing and settled in. She lifted
the Plexiglas windshield into place and began tightening the bolts on her side.
XXUncomfortably close, Peyton pressed his thigh
against hers, picked at the corner of a Shell decal with his thumbnail. He
offered her a Southern smile, charming and as short-lived as a firefly passing
through. Then reminded her that he was counting on a lap under a minute, twenty.
Fast enough to put the Lotus on the front row during tomorrow’s qualifying
session. If it happened, she would be a hero. If not —
XXPeyton touched her arm. “Clouds are building.”
XXHer mouth twitched into a demi-smile as she
explained that clouds were good. They ensured cooler track temperatures. Peyton
nodded as if he understood. He didn’t. He knew less about racing than
she did. At least she’d arrived with a firm grasp of auto mechanics as
they applied to vintage cars. The variables of racing—track conditions,
down force, tire adhesion, driver fatigue—were challenges she enjoyed
mastering.
XXReaching into the cockpit she forced Peyton
to step back, out of her way. She tugged on the catch of the six-point safety
harness. It kept the driver securely in place; released with one flick in case
of fire. She waited bent over for the engine to light off. It rumbled. Seconds
later it smoothed. She gave Ian a thumbs-up and patted the cowling.
XXHalfway to standing, she heard the gunshot.
XXHeard the high pitched whine. The crack as Plexiglas
shattered. A thunk as the bullet impacted the asphalt.
XXThe crew kid shrieked as the gas can flew from
his grip, landing upright a few feet away. Her head jerked in response. She
saw the small round hole where the bullet entered the gas can; scattered flecks
of macadam where it bit into the tar after exiting. Twin streams of gasoline
spurted like cheap wine from a fountain on an Italian buffet.
XXShe felt her own scream—a low animal howl—begin
deep inside her belly, swell and explode. |
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