Trading Paint (Racing on the Edge) (4 page)

BOOK: Trading Paint (Racing on the Edge)
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When he guided the car low in four, on impulse, I went high letting my right rear bounce off the cushion. This gave me the extra boost needed to slingshot past him coming out of four.

I knew I wouldn’t pull a slide job on my dad without him coming back for more.

I was schooled.

He shot back down on the inside and slipped past me going into one. This went on for about ten laps, every time I slid past him, he came right back, when the caution came out for a car that flipped on the front stretch.

This left two laps to go when the green dropped. With Bucky and Shey back in the mix, the greatest drivers in sprint car racing surrounded me.

Taking a deep breath, I told myself this was time to make my move. Don’t second-guess yourself.

When the green dropped, I came off turn four strong and went high into one and two. Dad didn’t get as good of a jump on the restart as I did so this put me in line with him coming into three and four. I went low, he went high and I pushed against him taking his line.

If you could have seen my face under the helmet, you would have seen me grinning ear-to-ear.

I outsmarted the champion.

He didn’t let me go far, he stayed right beside me, taunting me in each turn.

On the last lap, we took three and four again, neck and neck. When we came down the front stretch, my wheels came across the line not more than two inches in from of his.

I smiled looking over at him and he raised his arm as much as he could, with the arm straps on, pumping his fist in the air.

I laughed.

Bloomington Speedway was essentially my dad’s home track. He was born in this small mid-west suburb in 1956 and raced here as a kid.

And his kid beat him.

This was pretty fucking cool. Not only would I have some serious bragging rights but I won my first Outlaw race.

Being fourteen, this was the coolest race I’d ever won. I’d won track championships, national and regional championships but to win a World of Outlaws A-Feature event in a 410-sprint car against your legendary
father, that
was cool.

When we pulled back into the pits, dad was out of his car as quickly as he could, Sway was jumping up and down with Tommy while Spencer offered a head nod, trying to remain cool about it. Being seventeen now, he thought he was a badass but I could see he was proud of me. Returning the head nod, I turned to
Sway
running to congratulate me.

“You were awesome out there!” she yelled launching herself at me.

“Fuck yeah!” I screamed pumping my fist in the air when dad sprayed beer all over us.

He was all smiles.

“Did you let me win?” I asked hesitantly when he pulled me in for a hug.

He pulled back ruffling my beer soaked hair. “Do you honestly think I’d let my overconfident fourteen-year old son beat me?”

He had a good point.

“No.”

“You earned that one. Remember it.”

And I would remember it. Of all the races I’d ever raced in, all the championships I’d won
that
win at that quarter mile clay track in Bloomington Speedway stands out.

It was the day I grasped the meaning of the bigger picture and what I was capable of.

That was also the night I had my first beer—a well-deserved beer. Underage yes, but it was a cause for celebration and that we did.

Throwing back beers with my idols was humbling even for a cocky kid like me.

My dad started racing when he was old enough to reach the pedals of his custom mini sprint grandpa designed for him.

My grandpa, Casten Riley, began racing with the moonshiners and rebels of the sport but never had a chance to race in any sanctioned race. When he was twenty-six he wrapped his car around a tree nearly paralyzing him and he never raced again.

Instead, he focused on building sprint cars where his real passion was and once my dad was born grandpa had him racing the cars as soon as he could reach the pedals.

Now, CST Engines is one of leading engine manufacturers in the mid-west for sprint cars.

While grandpa built the cars from the ground up, dad raced them.

In 1978, he began racing the World of Outlaws series in Knoxville, Ohio. He’d won more championships and races than any other driver in the series had.

I was surrounded by renowned greats.

Sitting next to me, Sway smiled while dad and Bucky swapped stories about their early days in the series.

“You’re eating this up, aren’t you?”

I smiled back at her nudging her shoulder with my own. “You have no idea.”

I knew she had an idea of how I felt. She always did.

 

 

During the winter was the only time of year that our family was together and it was usually only for about two weeks before dad headed off to Tulsa for the Chili Bowl Midget Nationals.

I, for one, was in favor of the off-season this year. You don’t realize how unending these seasons can be until November rolls around and you start counting down the time until you get a break.

A few weeks into the off-season and I was ready for more.

This last year I’d raced in nineteen sprint car races, four World of Outlaw feature events, and twenty-three midget races. I also ran the Clay Cup Nationals, Turkey Night, and managed to pull off a track championship at Elma and placed third in the Night before the 500 at Indianapolis.

I was exhausted.

The winter of ‘95, my parents planned a trip to Jacksonville Beach in Florida so we spent Thanksgiving there.

Sway usually went on family vacations with us because she was part of the Riley family. Her mother, Rachel, died of breast cancer when she was only six and she had no brothers or sisters. Her dad was raising her and managing a track on his own so she needed us.

Between ganging up on Spencer and Emma, my parents had basically told us to get out of the room. That landed us at the hotel.

Wading around, Sway asked, “Do you ever think about what it will be like?”

“What?” My eyes caught a glimpse of girls walking in before I turned to Sway.

“Racing
...
for a living
...
do you ever think about it? I mean, you’re good enough. You know that, right?”

“I know and I think about it all the time,” I sighed leaning my chin against the concrete edge of the pool we were swimming in; my fingers traced the cracks watching the water seep into them. “I know I can do it
...
that’s not a problem but getting everyone, sponsors included, looking at me as Jameson Riley and not Jimi Riley’s son is what’s hard. Every track they constantly compare me to him. You saw how hard it was for me at the Dirt Cup this year.”

Once a year, Skagit Speedway held The Dirt Cup. It wasn’t a point race but a play date but a chance to prove what you had.

I did.

I won the 360-sprint division
and
the midget main events. After the race, another racer that was on the same circuit as my dad approached me.

It wasn’t unusual for the Outlaw or NASCAR drivers to hang around these events. This year they had dad, Bucky Miers, Skip Miller, Shey Evans and Langley O’Neil from the Outlaw division. NASCAR rookie Tate Harris showed up along with Doug Dunham and Austin Yale; all great drivers.

I’d met Skip Miller once, with my dad, before at a race in Eldora, but I had yet to speak to him. I wasn’t impressed once I did.

The conversation started fairly well with him congratulating me and like always, I appreciated the praise from the drivers I looked up to but Skip had a different approach when he said, “I don’t know that you’ll ever live up to Jimi but you did good.”

I wanted to say, “Hey, thanks asshole,” but I wasn’t raised that way and dad would beat my ass if I disrespected a veteran driver. And one thing was certain; you don’t piss off Jimi Riley.

The entire night was filled with comments like,
“Hey there’s Jimi’s son,”
or
“Did you see Jimi Riley’s kid in the last heat?”
I wanted to say, “I have a name you know.”

I moved from my place against the side of the pool, kicking my legs out when I kicked Sway by accident, and like I expected, she smacked me.

“Is that such a bad thing?” she asked pushing her hair out of her face. She swam closer resting against the same ledge where I was.

“No
...
dad
is an amazing racer
...
but I don’t want to try to live up to him. He’s a legend in sprint car racing. He’s won more races than any other driver has on the circuit and won more championships than most people can ever dream about. It’s not about being better than him—it’s about making my own name.”

“That’s understandable.”

I glanced over at her. “It doesn’t sound dumb?”

“No,” she ran her fingers along the dark grouted line in the tile. “I don’t think it sounds dumb. Jimi is good but so are you. It’s natural to want to be your own person.”

I knew how good my dad was.

I came from a long line of racing blood so it was believed that Spencer and I would want to race. It was never expected.

When I took to it, I saw the excitement in their eyes, especially since grandpa’s career had ended so suddenly.

 

As I said, it was never expected that I would race so when I decided that’s what I wanted, they were pleased. In turn, I wanted to please them and be the best I could but I also wanted to have my own name in racing history. I didn’t want to be another Riley in racing. I wanted to be Jameson Riley.

 

Riding the Wheel – Sway

 

I’ve been on a number of vacations with the Riley family and they all include the same series of events: Emma packs way too much; Spencer fucks with everyone; and Jameson pouts because he’s not racing and tries to find a racetrack. I end up sneaking alcohol to keep from going crazy.

At some point, Jameson and I would stay up eating Oreo cookies, our drug of choice, until three in the morning.

I’ve always welcomed the time spent with the Riley family if not for the entertainment value but for the chance to drink. I was only fifteen and drinking was unacceptable but it was something I enjoyed.

Who wouldn’t?

I never went for the hard stuff, just beer. This somehow made me feel better about the choice.

“Jesus Sway,” Emma balked peering down at my legs. “Put some lotion on those lizard legs. They look like sand paper!”

“It’s just dry skin.” I defended examining them. They did appear a little dry but I hardly thought comparing them to a lizard was necessary.

“It’s disgusting.”

“Not everyone is obsessed with lotion
Em
.” Jameson defended stepping from the pool to join us in the lounge chairs. “Her legs look fine.” He glanced down at them and then averted his eyes. “I’ll be right back.”

Girls had been following him all day and now wasn’t any different. He had a constant following of pit lizards on and off the track. A tall brunette without lizard legs walked up to Emma and I when he sauntered to the bathroom.

“Is he your boyfriend?” she gestured to Jameson walking into the men’s restroom.

“He’s my brother.” Emma said making a retching sound in the back of her throat.

The girl’s eyes focused on me.

“Me?” I pointed to myself. “No, he’s not my boyfriend.”

Not that I would be opposed to that with him but he was my best friend. I didn’t see him in that light.

He was also a moody perfectionist asshole so how anyone could stand him was beyond me but he was my best friend. If I needed a shoulder to cry on, he was there. He may be working on his race car at the same time but he made sure I had company.

The girl, who looked about sixteen, maybe even seventeen smiled and strutted toward Jameson, who was now approaching us, his shirt slung over his shoulder.

Manhandling sprint cars around a track for years provided him with a honed physique that most men would kill for let alone fifteen-year old boys.

Jameson smiled at her but his smile faded when she began to speak. I had a feeling the dim-witted brunette didn’t have much going for her besides looks.

It took all of two minutes for him to finally get away from her and when he did, he glared at me. “Do me a favor,” he huffed throwing himself into the lounge chair next to me. “Tell them you’re my girlfriend.” He kicked his long legs up. “That was ridiculous.”

“So
...
no date for you tonight?”
I snickered.

“No, it’s hard to believe some guys fall for girls like that.” He sighed looking back at her. “She should be embarrassed for herself.”

He ended up laughing with me after a few minutes but it took some convincing. This wasn’t the first time this happened to him and wouldn’t be the last. He’d never showed interest in girls but I also knew he had other priorities.

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