Authors: Ashley Bartlett
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Romance, #Contemporary
“Gosh, we’re just like spies now,” Reese mocked Ryan.
“Why do you have to kill my buzz?” Ryan threw up his arms and
turned away. “You ready to go to your parents’?” he tossed over his
shoulder. We followed him out the door.
❖
My parents and sister were all home when we got there. It was
impossible to act normal. I didn’t want to leave my mommy and daddy.
Okay, I was a child. Reese and Ryan waited downstairs while I ran up.
Ryan explained that we’d decided to go on a road trip, but we’d be back
soon. No, we didn’t know where we were going. Ryan was a way better
liar than me.
I tossed a bunch of clothes into a duffle bag. What did people
bring when they ran away? I grabbed another bag and added a couple
books, my laptop, my iPod. Toothbrush, that was important. Where
was my passport? I definitely needed it for Mexico. And whatever the
hell country Reese would pick after that. I found the file folder in my
desk with my important documents and riffled through until I got to the
passport. With everything packed, I grabbed my bags and headed out. I
lingered on the stairs debating.
It wasn’t like I was moving out. I couldn’t go back to visit my
parents. Not for a while at least. I could let Reese and Ryan go on their
own. They would be fine. Except I couldn’t do that. The twins won over
my parents. It still felt shitty though.
I told my parents I loved them. I might have hugged my mom
longer than necessary, but so did Reese. After my parents’ house, Ryan
drove to my bank.
“This shouldn’t take too long,” I said before getting out.
“We’ll be here,” Ryan said.
It was surprisingly easy to pull the majority of the cash in my
account out. All I had to do was ask for it. Ten minutes later, I was
climbing into the back of the SUV.
“How much was in there?” Ryan drummed his fingers on the
steering wheel and leaned back to look at me.
• 101 •
AShley BArtlett
I tossed a bank envelope onto his lap. “Three thousand. It won’t
get us far.”
“Far enough.” He handed the envelope back. “Until we can sell
a bar at least.” He assumed we’d be able to sell them. If not, we were
fucked. We didn’t know how to move gold bars. You didn’t just walk
into your bank and ask to have your gold bar turned into cash. Or maybe
you did. How the hell would I know?
“So I was thinking. If we want to cover our tracks we should get
some fake IDs.”
“Totally,” Ryan said.
“God, you two are hopeless,” Reese said. “Too many movies.”
“Whatever. Ideas?” Ryan was practically vibrating at the mention
of falsified documents. What a loser.
“Remember Paulie Montrose?” Paulie’d had a monopoly on fake
IDs in El Dorado County until he moved away. The kid had some
serious skill.
“Oh, yeah. He’s in San Francisco now, right?” Ryan asked.
“I seriously doubt Paulie is still making fake IDs,” Reese said.
“No, he totally is. And I heard he’s gotten better. I bet he’d hook
us up,” I said.
“So we’ll detour to San Francisco before we leave?” Ryan asked.
“Can’t hurt. You can head straight down to Vegas,” I told Reese.
“We’ll hit up Paulie.”
“What’s your name going to be?” Ryan wanted to know.
“Anything you want, babe.” All that earned me was a loud sigh
from Reese and rolling eyes from Ryan.
❖
“We didn’t buy cigarettes.” Ryan started whining after ten minutes
on the freeway.
“You don’t smoke,” I reminded him.
“You wouldn’t let me bring any weed. I need something to smoke.”
“Too bad. We just started driving. You’ll just have to deal.” I leaned
back in the seat and studied cars opposite us on the freeway. I wondered
where all of them were going. Home, probably, to their normal lives
with a failed marriage and two point five brats. How unappealing.
• 102 •
Dirty Sex
“I’ll probably get withdrawal or something. I could die.” Ryan
was such a drama queen. That was probably why Reese had been okay
with driving alone. She didn’t want to deal with his shit.
“Fuckin’ come on, bro. We’re supposed to be under the radar now.
We can’t just keep going into gas stations and liquor stores.”
“We aren’t that far from home. Who cares if we go into a gas
station?” He was so annoying.
“Fine.” I said. “Pull off here. I’ll go in.”
“You rock.” Thanks, Ryan, I was aware of that.
Ryan pulled into a gas station. “Wait,” he said before I could get
out. He climbed into the backseat. “Wear this.” A baseball cap was
thrown over the seat. “You’ll be incognito.”
“Yes, I’m sure the hat will totally disguise my identity.” I pushed
my hair back and put the hat on anyway. “Too bad it’s dark or I could
wear sunglasses too.” A pair of aviators landed in my lap. I tossed them
back. “What kind do you want?”
“Camel Wides.”
“All right.” I hopped out of the 4Runner and went into the gas
station. “Can I get a pack of the Camel Wides?” I asked the kid behind
the counter.
“Wides?” He stood on his tiptoes to pull the pack down. “Anything
else?”
“Nope.”
I handed him some cash. When he gave me the change and handed
the packs over a, “Thank you, sir. Have a good night,” accompanied it.
I debated correcting him, but I didn’t care. Even though it wasn’t
a common occurrence, it still happened often enough. When I climbed
back into the SUV, I tossed Ryan his Wides.
“Did anybody recognize you?” Ryan played it up as if that were
even a possibility.
“Nope. The hat worked. Actually, he thought I was a guy.” He
started laughing. “Oh my God. I got it.” I realized how to fly under the
radar.
“Got what?” Ryan opened his pack and lit a cigarette.
“I know how to stay incognito.”
“Baseball hats?”
“Drag,” I answered.
• 103 •
• 104 •
Dirty Sex
Paulie’s loft in San Francisco was in the heart of what he called
SoMa. We just called it South of Market, but Paulie liked to
pretend he was in New York.
“Damn, Paulie, this place is amazing.” I hugged the guy I’d known
since childhood and stared openmouthed around his apartment.
“I know, right?” He grinned. “Come on. I’ll show you around.”
Showing around mostly entailed looking out from the balcony off the
twenty-third floor. The sun was beginning to set and it glinted off the
glass buildings surrounding us.
“I thought your mom cut you off.” Delicacy in speech wasn’t one
of my attributes. It was better to just ask.
“Yeah. Fags don’t get college money.” Paulie managed to say it
without crying. I would have cried.
“So how the fuck did you get this place?” Ryan prescribed to the
same social functions I did.
“I upgraded.”
“In boyfriends?” I picked up a framed black-and-white photo from
the counter. It was Paulie in his scruffy, muscled glory with a gorgeous
model type who had softly curling hair. They had matching shirts on. I
was going to puke from the domesticity of it.
“Isn’t he beautiful?” Paulie took the photo and gazed lovingly at
it. “He’s Canadian. And so fucking smart. I think I’ll have to marry him
to keep him here.”
“Good luck with that.”
• 105 •
AShley BArtlett
“Don’t worry; you guys will get to meet him. He should be home
soon. Anyway.” He sighed and put the photo down. “I mean, I upgraded
in illicit forms of identification.” What a geek. “You guys are going to
die. You said on the phone you wanted licenses, which are no problem.
We just need to take photos.” He waved a hand like it was nothing. “But
wait until you see what I’ve been working on. It’s an art form. I swear,
I wish I could put them in a gallery.”
“Paulie?” He looked up at Ryan. “What the hell are you talking
about?”
“Driver’s licenses, military IDs.” He ticked them off on his fingers.
“Those are easy. Birth certificates, passports, not so much.”
“Fuck, dude. You’re awesome,” I said.
“You guys want? I could cut you a deal.” He always was a
salesman.
“Are they any good?” Ryan should have known better. Paulie
wouldn’t sell them if they weren’t perfect.
“Good? Sweetie, no. Amazing, brilliant. Art, I’m telling you. I
do the birth certificates and my wonderful, sexy Marc—he works at
the embassy—he pushes the paperwork through for a passport. So it’s
fucking real.”
“You really are brilliant.” I congratulated him with only a hint of
surprise.
“I know.” He gloated. “I about had a heart attack when they
announced that they were going to do biometric passports.” Ryan
and I must have looked appropriately blank. “You know RFID?” Still
nothing. “Electronic ones.” That we could understand. “But as long
as we can fabricate the documentation, it’s no problem. That’s when I
started doing the birth certificates.”
“We didn’t really follow that, but it sounds cool.” I figured we
should give him some encouragement.
“How long does it take?” Why did Ryan have to kill the excitement?
“Depends on how much cash you have. I can get it done in two
weeks, but normally it takes about a month.”
“How much?” Ryan asked.
“For the two weeks,” I added.
He named an amount. We didn’t argue. “I’ll include any
manufactured documentation like the birth certificate. And that’s
fucking cheap so don’t tell anyone.” As if we would know who to tell.
• 106 •
Dirty Sex
“Done.” Ryan didn’t even ask me. “We need one for Reese too.”
“Great. You still want IDs?”
“Yep,” I said.
“So three Canadian passports and three California driver’s
licenses? Or you want Canadian licenses too?”
Ryan and I looked at each other. He raised an eyebrow.
“You want the British Columbia license,” Paulie said. “The
holograms are beautiful.”
“Paulie, are you as good as you say you are?” He always was a
cocky bastard. I just wanted to make sure.
He just laughed. “Come on. We need to take pictures. Do you have
the pictures of Reese?”
“Right here.” I gave him a flash drive with the pictures we took
before leaving.
“Did you use a plain background?”
“We did everything you said on the phone.”
“Perfect.” Paulie ran a finger down Ryan’s chest. “Just like you.”
He turned away smiling. “Follow me, boys and girls.”
❖
Five hours later, Ryan woke me up. It was just past midnight. The
pillow I had propped against the window fell between the seat and the
door.
“You want me to take over?” I asked all groggy.
“Yeah, I’m dead tired.”
We switched and Ryan was out in five minutes. We were somewhere
on I-5 between San Francisco and LA. The sporadic headlights on the
other side of the freeway lulled me into a half awake, half asleep state.
Periodically, I sipped from the Mountain Dew I’d pulled from the
cooler to keep myself alert.
When you’ve got a shitload of gold bars in the backseat, it tends
to slow you down so we were barely at the speed limit. I wondered how
long it took Reese to drive. We knew she was already there because
she’d called to tell us she checked into a hotel, but it was going to be
hours before we arrived.
• 107 •
AShley BArtlett
After I’d been on Highway 15 for a while, Ryan’s GPS said we
were about an hour outside the city. I pulled onto the shoulder.
“Ryan.” I shook him. “Hey, it’s time.”
“Shit.” He rubbed his face and shook his head. “All right. Let’s
do it.”
I took the 4Runner off the asphalt and drove straight out into the
desert for about ten minutes. Periodically, Ryan would consult the GPS
and tell me to go a little to the right or the left.
“How’s this?” I put on the emergency brake.
“Works for me.” Ryan hopped out and opened the back. I chugged
the rest of my Mountain Dew and joined him. Both shovels were
already on the ground. Ryan was strapping on his shoulder holster.
“What are you doing?”
He opened the side compartment and pulled out his Glock 21.
“Seventeen million,” he said as if that answered my question.
“You can’t dig a hole when you’re strapped.”
“Watch me.” He grinned his pretty boy grin and grabbed a shovel.
❖
My arms were going to fall off. Followed by my shoulders and
legs and neck, and then I was just going to die.
“I can’t dig anymore.” Both holes were about three feet deep and
four wide. They were separated by about six feet. “It’s three a.m. Why
is it so hot?”
Ryan tossed his shovel to the ground and sat with his feet in the
second hole. “It’s too hot to think.”
“Too hot to breathe.” I sat next to him
“To move.”
I dragged myself back to the 4Runner and pulled out two bottles
of water. “We haven’t been digging that long.”
“Thanks.” Ryan caught the bottle I tossed to him. “It’s the heat,
I’m telling you.” Or the fact that neither of us had slept more than a
couple hours since before the party.
“Should we get this shit over with?”