“You sure you have ta go?” She draped arms over his shoulders, pulled him in for a languid kiss.
“I got someone in the car. He’s the impatient type, Japanese. I’ll take care of business and get back quick as I can.”
“You do that.” She reached between his legs, grabbed his crotch and squeezed. Pleasure rippled through him. “Sure you don’t want a toke?”
“What the hell.” He took the joint, sucked in deep. It had been years, but he still knew how. He took a second toke as she lowered herself to her knees and pulled down his zipper and a third as she took him into her mouth. He held the joint in one hand, with the other on her head for balance. He sucked in deep, held his breath and let go, shaking on quivering legs as she swallowed.
“That’s a reminder, so you come back quick.” She wiped her mouth with the back of her hand. The look in her eyes told of a thousand more delights.
“I’ll be as quick as I can.” He zipped up, glad he’d insisted on taking his car and not the Jap’s. And doubly glad he’d made the asshole wait outside while he came inside to swap keys. The fucker didn’t want to come by Sadie’s. He wanted to go straight to the Shore and get the faggot, but Horace had put his foot down. He’d wanted his van. It was souped up and built for speed. Besides, you had to show his kind who was boss or you never got any respect.
“I parked your van ’round back. You can drive mine around and park next to it.” Sadie was still on her knees, hadn’t bothered to get up.
“Thanks, Sadie,” Horace said, then he was out the door.
Maggie came over the fence after Gay to the sound of automatic gunfire drowning out the yapping dogs four yards back. Whoever lived in this house-the corner house and the last yard the women had to cross-was playing some kind of war movie through a mega sound system with the volume cranked up loud.
Gay put her mouth to Maggie’s ear. “Only one more fence.”
“Okay, let’s get out of here.” Maggie sprinted across the yard, attacked the side fence, pulled herself over it as if she’d been doing it all her life.
A wet wind blew her hair as she hit the grass. It was going to rain again. She sighed when she saw Jonas’ red Volkswagen parked across the street where they’d left it.
Gay came over, squatted on the ground next to her, huffing like she was out of breath.
“You okay?” Maggie was breathing hard herself, but the adrenaline sparking through her made her high. Even her arm didn’t hurt any more.
“Yeah.” The rain came down, sheeting cold. “We’re safe now.”
“No we’re not. Nighthyde and that Scarface character are on their way to Jonas’. They’re going to kill the girls, Jonas and Gordon, too. Then Scarface is gonna shoot Nighthyde in the head and make it look like suicide.”
“How do you know this?” Gay sounded stunned.
“It’s what they were talking about when they didn’t think I understood them.” Maggie shivered.
“You speak Japanese?”
“Yeah.” Maggie wiped water from her eyes.
“Let’s go!” Gay got up and started for the car, went to the passenger side.
Maggie fished the key out of her pocket, had it in the driver’s door when a Sheriff’s cruiser came around the corner, tires hissing. It stopped as Maggie was getting in the car. A window came down.
“What are you ladies doing out in the rain?” The deputy was young, maybe twenty-two or three.
“Going for pizza,” Maggie said.
“In this?” The deputy pointed to the sky.
“Kids don’t care about the rain,” Maggie said. “Not when they can send the moms out for the pepperoni and Pepsi.”
“Where are these kids?” the cop said.
“There.” Maggie pointed to the corner house, the one they’d just walked away from. “You can go annoy my husband if you want,” she said. “My kids would love that, but we’re getting wet, so we’re outta here.” Maggie started to get in the car.
“You know about the trouble up the street?”
“Mister,” Maggie said, “the only reason I’m talking to you is because I thought the neighbors called because the kids got the TV up in the stratosphere. If you have other business, I’d appreciate it if you’d go about it and let us be on our way.”
“Kinda late for kids to be eating pizza,” the deputy said.
“And they’re gonna get it a lot later if you don’t stop hassling us.”
The cop looked to the house. Saw the flickering light from the television. He couldn’t help but hear the sounds of movie gunfire. It sounded like a war was going on over there. “Okay, sorry to have bothered you.” He rolled up his window and drove away, turning left onto Daneland, Nighthyde’s street.
“That was close,” Gay said.
“Yeah.” Maggie pulled away from the curb.
“Uh oh,” Gay said. The Sheriff’s car turned its lights on, pulled into a driveway, backed out again. “Guy with that German Shepherd must have seen us, told the cops about the two woman in his backyard.”
“Could they have got it over their radio that quick?”
“Only takes a second once they know,” Gay said.
Maggie jerked the wheel to the right and the VW climbed up the curb.
“What are you doing?”
“No way can this thing out run that cop car.” Maggie felt the bump as the rear tires thumped over.
“So, we should pull over and tell them what’s going on.”
“Like they’re gonna believe us.” Maggie shifted into second, pushed the accelerator to the floor. The rear wheels spun on the park’s wet grass, the car slipped to the left, Maggie, in her element now, turned into the slide as the wheels found traction and the little red car scooted forward as the police cruiser turned on its siren.
“I can’t see anything,” Gay said.
“We’re driving blind.” Maggie hadn’t turned on the lights and the rain was sheeting down now.
“But he’s not!” Gay was looking out the back window. “He jumped the curb. He’s gonna be on us in a second.”
“I see him in the rearview.” Maggie turned on the lights, hit the brights. Ahead she saw manicured grass. She shifted up into third. She didn’t know how far the grassy savannah went, she couldn’t see beyond it.
“Oh shit!” Gay screamed. “He’s gonna run right over us.”
The siren was deafening as the Sheriff’s cruiser climbed up onto their tail. Red and blue lights flashing on the cruiser, coupled with its bright lights, lit up the inside of the VW. Blinding white coming out of her mirror fought with the eerie glow from the Christmas tree on top of the cruiser. Red, blue, blinding white. Red, blue, blinding white. Like no Christmas Maggie ever knew. A Christmas from Hell, maybe.
All of a sudden the VW shook and went into a long slide to the right.
“Bastard rammed us,” Maggie said. This time, instead of turning into the slide, she turned away from it, felt the Gs as the VW’s rear end whipped around.
The kid cop in the cruiser slammed on his brakes as the VW spun through a one-eighty.
“Holy shit,” Gay screamed as Maggie popped it down into first, stomped on the gas and let out a whoop as the little car’s tires dug in again.
Caught by surprise, the deputies could only watch as the VW sped by them, engine screaming against the abuse Maggie was inflicting upon it. But their surprise was short lived. In seconds the cruiser was wheeling around, digging up the grass as its powerful engine roared, cutting off the whine of the VW’s.
“Look out!” Gay yelled.
“See it.” Maggie jerked the wheel just in time to avoid hitting a baseball backstop.
“You went the wrong way, turn, turn, turn!”
Maggie pulled the wheel back, but not in time, and the Volkswagen scraped along the bleachers. The sound sent shivers screeching up Maggie’s spine as she struggled with the wheel. Finally, she got control again. She pulled the wheel to the right, away from the stands. The VW shot toward the pitcher’s mound, past it and continued on