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Authors: Terry Trueman

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BOOK: No Right Turn
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After that ride in Don's 'Vette, after I drove the car, whenever I get home from school, and he's out cleaning or tinkering with it, I always stop by and we b.s. I ask about the car, but not too much; I don't want him to get suspicious. Mostly we talk about nothing: the weather, neighborhood gossip, nothing important. He never asks anything personal about me, and I don't ask about him either. We don't talk about my mom too much, even though they've gone out a few more times—movies, dinners, rides in his car. The only personal thing he's mentioned is that he was divorced years ago, before he moved into our neighborhood.

If Don knows about my dad dying, and he must know something just by knowing Mom, he's never said anything about it to me. The more time we spend together, the more he seems to relax. He swears a lot, not like an old guy wanting to show me how hip he is, more like he just always talks that way. He's funny and smart, my dad's age, but
totally
different from Dad. I'm starting to think of Don, a little bit, like he's kind of a friend, not a
real
friend, of course, I mean the guy's like fifty or something, but kind of a friend—yeah, right, a friend whose car I'm going to rip off.

Knowing all along that I have to drive the 'Vette again, I've planned how to do it. Don works in insurance, sells it, I think. He goes to appointments most days, and
every
Wednesday night he is out of town for the whole night, working with his customers in Wenatchee, 150 miles away.

I watched him punch in the code to his garage door, seeing the numbers—53773—so I can get into where he parks the 'Vette. He has a double-car garage and his other car is an almost-new Pontiac, his daily driver and his “work car.” So he's gone, every Wednesday night, and the 'Vette's just sitting there.

Mom works late too. Before Dad died, he and I would be home together, but now, Monday through Thursday, I'm always home alone. Mom usually gets back a little after midnight.

My school nights are always the same. I eat some dinner, then watch TV or listen to music or play video games. If absolutely all else fails, maybe I'll finally do a little homework. I try not to think about my dad and all the crap he used to say to me: “Strike while the iron's hot,” “A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush,” “Safety first.” He'd been a true master of clichés and worthless advice. And at the end what did he leave me with? “Bullshit.” Great, Dad, big help! So just how boring is my life? Totally and completely. And what, exactly, do I stand to lose by stealing Don Lugar's Corvette? Not much. Maybe my dad always dreamed of doing wild stuff, taking risks, having fun. Maybe Dad dreamed about it, but he never did anything!

I don't want to be him!

I'm not him!

So it's Wednesday night. I dress in dark clothes and walk quietly from my house over to Don's place. From looking around at his garage during earlier visits, I know that there's lots of junk—not junk, but
stuff
all over the place: an expensive ten-speed bike hanging from hooks in the ceiling; some sports gear, like basketballs and volleyballs in a mesh bag; a workbench crowded with tools. I've made mental notes about the layout of the place so that I can move around in the dark. On the right side of the two-car garage is the Stingray.

The only light in Don's driveway comes from a streetlight. I don't want to draw the attention of any neighbors by turning on the garage light once I get inside, but this plan is instantly messed up. When I punch in the code and the garage door goes up, a light automatically comes on too. I'm standing here like an idiot, basking in what feels like about ten billion watts; I hurry into the garage and hide myself against the wall.

After a few minutes the light finally goes off. It's dark again. Even though the night is kind of cold, I'm sweating like crazy. I find the door handle of the car and quietly open it. Instantly, the scent of the car—leather and cleaning polish and air freshener—remind me of my first ride, and I calm down.

I know that once I start the car, I'll be past the point of no return—who am I kidding? I've already broken into this guy's garage, so that's breaking and entering. Now I'm going to take his car out without his permission. Like I said, grand theft auto.

I take another slow, deep breath and reach down on the steering column and find the keys. At least I'm smart enough not to start the car and let it run inside the garage, where I'd get killed by carbon monoxide.

“Smart?” I can hear my dad's voice playing in my head. “Do you really think that
anything
you're doing shows any intelligence? Are you nuts? What are you trying to prove?”

“Up yours, Dad, you're not even alive,” I say softly to myself. “And I'm not doing this to
prove
anything—I'm just
doing
it.”

A few more deep breaths and I turn the ignition key. The car starts instantly. I sit frozen, waiting for the FBI or SWAT or somebody to blow me away. But there's nothing—just the loud purr of the 'Vette as it echoes out of the garage into the darkness.

I back out and, as soon as I'm clear, push the button on the remote control hanging on the sun visor to close the garage door.

In the street I leave the headlights off and try to will myself to be invisible. I super-gently slip the car into drive, like if I shift quietly enough, no one will look out and realize that Don Lugar's beautiful Corvette Stingray is moving up our street with no headlights on.

I drive the long block up Northridge Road as the engine rumbles. At the stop sign I pull on the head-lights and glance at the dash, noticing that my high beams are on. I try to find the lever on the steering column to dim them. Nothing works until I realize that the dimmer switch is on the floor of the car, under my left foot.

Pulling out onto Cedar Road, I head south, down the hill, afraid to try to negotiate the sharp right turn that Don made that day of our ride. I barely touch the gas; the steepness of the hill pulls me along. Cedar winds around in sharp curves, a fun place for going fast if it weren't for the deer that sometimes jump into the road from the trees and heavy brush growing there.

At the bottom of Cedar I stop at the stop sign and find myself in the left-hand turn lane. The only traffic on the road, the
only
other car within sight at the intersection at this exact moment, is a green-and-white county sheriff's car waiting on my right to turn onto Cedar.

I freeze. Everything I'm doing rushes through my brain. My heart pounds wildly; my palms become instantly sweaty; for half a second I actually think I might piss my pants, throw up, or faint, all at the same moment. How could this happen? I haven't seen a single other car since I left Don's driveway, not
one
! But here's a sheriff.

I stare straight ahead.

He turns slowly, agonizingly slowly, right in front of me and rolls by, heading up Cedar Road toward the prairie.

With no other traffic in sight, and sitting here in the left-turn lane, I have to go, so I ease away from the stop sign and slowly accelerate down Country Homes Boulevard. The 'Vette rumbles softly. I glance up to my left and see the flickering of the cop's headlights as he moves past the trees and away from me. God, I feel great!

Not wanting to push my luck, I just make a quick loop, going only a few miles down Country Homes to Wall, where I take a left and then up Five Mile Road, a long winding hill that leads back up to the prairie. Because both Cedar Road and Five Mile Road go to the same place, and that cop just went up Cedar only a few minutes ago, I take it real easy, obeying the speed limit except for one short stretch, a hundred yards of sharp curves, where I give the 'Vette a little more juice. Don has fixed the speedometer. I jump from thirty-five to sixty in about two seconds. After gliding through the sharp turns, I back off the gas again and take it slow the rest of the way. I notice that I'm breathing really hard. My heart is beating about ten million times per minute.

Before I know it, I'm turning back onto Northridge Road again. All told, I've been out in the car for only ten minutes, fifteen at the most. I ease back toward Don's driveway. As I get closer, I get scared again. What if Don came home unexpectedly? He could be calling the cops at this very second! What if my mom is home, too, and somehow knows that I'm out committing all these felonies?

But when I reach Don's driveway, his house is dark.

I hit the garage door opener, and I pull the Corvette in, easing slowly forward.

I turn off the ignition and double-check everything—the position of the seat; the little sliding cover over the ashtray and cigarette lighter that I noticed flew open when I gunned it; the headlights, making sure the bug eyes have closed properly. As anxious as I am to get out of here, I force myself to stay calm, not wanting to screw up. Once everything looks right, I climb out of the car.

As I walk away, I glance back one more time at the 'Vette. I know I'm crazy to think it, but I can almost feel the car smiling at me, can almost hear it whispering, “Until next time.”

I think to myself, and even say out loud, “No way.”

But then I get back home and walk through the door and yell, “Mom!” and get no answer. I go up to my bedroom and look out at Don's house, so quiet in the dark, the garage door closed, everything so still and normal. I look around my room and see the framed picture of my dad on my chest of drawers. He's looking back at me in the only way that I can remember him
ever
looking now—that is, disapproving. But I think, So what, he's dead: All his rules, all his “wise” sayings are meaningless; he's nothing anymore. I stare at Dad's face in the picture and feel a familiar feeling rising up in me again—a weird kind of numbness. But I also feel something else, too, something I haven't really felt for a long time—anger.

What would you think of what I've just done, Dad?

What would you say?

Ask somebody who gives a damn!

And now I know that the 'Vette is right....

I'll be back.

FIVE

At school the next day I tell Wally what I've done.

“You're nuts!” he says. Then, “How was it?”

I admit, “Totally incredible.”

Wally asks, “What if you'd gotten caught?”

“I didn't, though.”

“Yeah, but what if you had?”

“I didn't.”

“Yeah, but—”

I interrupt. “I was careful, Wal.”

He shakes his head, laughing, and mutters, “Is that why you almost ran into a cop?”

“I didn't ‘almost run into' anybody. I saw a cop, that's all.”

“You're an idiot.”

I laugh at this, and Wally gets a weird expression on his face.

“What?” I ask.

“What was that sound you just made?”

I ask, “What do you mean?”

Wally says, “Was that a laugh? Did you actually just laugh then? I've known you for two years now and I've never heard you laugh before.... I've never even seen you
smile
!”

“Up yours,” I say, laughing again, but I have to admit he has a point.

A few days later, when I get off the bus from school, Don's out working on the Corvette in his driveway. I hope he won't say anything to me. I'm nervous that somehow he knows what I've done.

“Hey, Jordan,” he calls out.

Damn. Concerned, but trying not to show it, I force myself to look up at him, smile, and say, “Hi, Don.”

He looks okay, not suspicious or mad, just normal.

“How you doin'?” he asks.

“Great,” I answer, and walk over to him.

Suddenly I have this weird feeling, something different from just nerves, kind of a sick, guilty thing. Standing next to Don reminds me of one time in eighth grade, just a few months before Dad died. My best friend back then had been Will Nicholson, and he had a crush on Patti Martin. Will talked about her
all
the time. I listened and pretended that I cared. One day, when Will wasn't around, Patti asked
me
if I'd take her to the school dance that Friday. She kind of stared at her shoes part of the time and into my eyes the rest. I could tell she liked me. Of course, I told her no; after all, she was Will's girlfriend whether she knew it or not. I avoided her for several days, after which she started going out with Alan Mender, breaking Will's heart (it took Will several hours to fall in love with Suzie Spangle). Anyway, standing next to Don and his car, I feel the same way I felt when I first saw Will after Patti asked me to the dance; guilty and bad, trapped by an unwanted secret.

Don has the hood up on the 'Vette, and for the first time I see the engine.

“Wow,” I say, staring at it shining in the sunlight. The glare off the chrome is almost blinding. “Is that … normal? I mean, are all Corvettes' motors like that?”

Don laughs. “No. The chrome is all custom: K&N air filter and Edelbrock valve covers. This plate here”—he points at a flat chrome piece at the back of the engine compartment—“I had to order this from over on the coast; it's an ignition shield.”

BOOK: No Right Turn
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