The Last Race
I need money, point blank. I exhale
and wait trying not to think of all the friends and family who would
scream at me for what I am about to do but the truth is I need money.
People are gathering with anticipation of what is about to happen but
it doesn't matter, either way they're promised to get a show. Money
is being collected and handed to the biggest, most buff, black guy
I've ever seen. The roar of engines are deafening and they're only
getting louder.
The biggest, most buff black guy I've
ever seen points to four others before pointing to me. I'm anxious,
nervous, perspiring but that's only because I've not been in this
situation in a year maybe two. I slide my car out of park and into
D4, driving my car past the crowds to the predetermined line. I look
to my left and see a black BMW 3 series with a white boy with blond
dreads behind the wheel trying to act thuggish with a silver grill.
On the other side of the BMW is a car that I've had history with in
the past, a 1995 mercury marauder, driven by a heavy set black guy.
To my right is a man I know only as Jones. He's a pimp. A pimp. A
real pimp with a hat a fur coat, cane...the works.
Jones is driving his personal car, a
'76 burgundy Cadillac with a white rag top. We lock eyes and
instantly I can tell we both recall the day we first met. He knows
that I know that he doesn't like me just as much as I know he knows
but none of that matters. What does matter is that he and I know each
others style of driving and that is a problem. On the other side of
Jones is a gold mustang with tints so dark I only see my reflection.
Engine noises fill the air, muffling the sounds of cheering people
and that's a problem too.
The longer we wait, the more likely
someone will call the police. With Mayor Emmanuel in charge there are
no room for mistakes, no margins for error. Not that there ever was
in this world. I hear music, loud sloppy bass music, coming from
nearly everywhere and I know why. The most unattractive woman I have
ever seen is walking fifteen feet ahead of us. Her rolls of fat
jiggling out of the clothes that are already three sizes too small
for her size. In her hand she twirls, what initially I think is an
off white napkin. I'm disgusted to see that it's actually her thong.
What happened to this world I was so
accustomed to? I feel old now but only because in my day the hottest
woman in the area would be where this mess of a woman is now. But in
retrospect I wouldn't be racing on the south side of Chicago with a
pimp either. I long for those days when I raced men and women who
knew what a real race was. The days when people knew who I was and
feared whatever car I got in. Now, among these people, I was no one.
A stranger. A joke.
The sloppy woman turns around and
leans forward placing one hand on her knee. Her cleavage is so
disgusting I want to vomit. The idea of hitting her with the car
brings a smile to my face until I see her swing the thongs above her
head. I quickly get serious and raise my windows. The loud fast pace
music is annoying, it's making me anxious and I won't win that way.
Turning on my radio and selecting CD my car is filled with the soft
instrumental music of Beethoven. Amateur racers would laugh, ignorant
people would shake their heads but a real racer would either nod or
smile with confidence as to the outcome of this race.
The thongs are still in the air when I
realize my rear view mirror is still up. With a quick swipe of my
hand I pull it from the windshield and toss it into my back seat. I
can't have it and I don't need it. Real street racers only move
forward. Side to side...maybe, but we never look back. Something that
these others beside me don't realize. They're most likely hyped from
watching too many Fast and Furious movies. They all want to be Vin or
Paul, turning tricks in cars with fine women riding shotgun. Not me.
A girl would just add more weight to my car. Can't have that, not for
this.
The thongs come down and for the first
time since I can remember I feel a part of me that I thought died
years ago. As my hands grip my steering wheel and my foot presses the
gas pedal I am not a loving husband and father of two. My best friend
is not Maryam or Brandon. I do not hear Vince's prayers or hear my
mother's disapproving voice. I do not see Eric crying for me to stop
while he secretly cheers me forward. The person I project is now
locked away and all that is left is someone who has been screaming in
the back of my head for what seems like an eternity.
Everything is now on the line. The
first few seconds are the most crucial, not because you have to take
the lead or find your rhythm. Now is when most people make their
mistakes so I ease off the gas and let them. Bringing up the rear I'm
behind the gold mustang with the tinted windows. He's being sure not
to let me pass and I let him think he's doing a good job. We're north
bound on Cicero during a shift change at the local police station.
The lanes are wide open with the exception for a truck here or there.
I start making wide swerves and the
mustang tries to anticipate my moves. He does this easily and I smile
because he thinks he's in control when in fact I now control his car.
When I accelerate, he dips in front and slams on his breaks. When I
swerve into the next lane he counters so I swing my car into the on
coming lane as we are about to drive under an underpass. The light is
red, I know this but he doesn't. A truck is coming off I-55 and it
has the right of way. I know this, he doesn't. And why doesn't he?
Because he's looking at me in the rear view mirror, at night.
I swerve back into my lane. My timing
has to be perfect, it has to be precise, there is no room for error
or I've literally given the death it's wish. The Gold Mustang sees me
slowing down drastically, by now his face is looking to see what I
already know is happening. The truck coming from the I-55 off ramp
sees the mustang and is slamming on it's breaks but it's far too
late. The two collide and the mustang is no doubt sent into the air.
I don't know because I'm far too busy avoiding the same fate.
My car is drifting sideways toward the
back of the moving semi. I try to remember if there were any cars in
the on coming lane as my front bumper narrowly misses the back of the
semi's trailer. As the truck keeps moving my car is now sliding
through the intersection. I see the mustang dancing around in the
distance, windows busted, frame bent and I catch a glimpse of the man
inside. It's a woman most likely younger than me. Not that it
matters, though many will say it does. Although my eyes are fixed on
her my hands are one with the car and I already know I've slammed the
car into reverse. Throwing my arm behind the seat I turn the wheel
around so I'm facing the right way, throw the car back into drive,
taking advantage of my momentum. and continue on my way without
loosing time.
The woman in the car is an after
thought now. I lost distance playing with her and soon there will be
police, ambulances and worst of all...questions. Pushing forward I
fall into the “Racer's Daze”. The car is moving in a straight
line. Fast. The music is suddenly softer then usual. Faster. The lamp
posts that whiz past are moving faster, so fast that they begin
making a humming noise. Fastest. The lights from the street lights
are blurs and the objects I now fly past are colors of a spectrum
unknown to me. A lost feeling washes over me as I feel like I'm
falling in love all over again. I want share this with someone, see
their face as they experience this drug I have come to know. Some
know this but most only pretend to realize what I'm experiencing, the
way I'm experiencing it.
The image of my wife betrays my
thoughts. My projected self is trying to come through and it angers
me. I angers me to great lengths because I can not do this as me. My
Racer's Daze dissipates and with much surprise I'm directly next to a
BMW with a white boy sporting dreads behind the wheel. The first
thing I notice is his car looks to be in pristine condition. A smile
etches across my face as I realize where I am. The turn onto North
Avenue is coming up. The driver of the BMW looks pissed and I can
guess why.
Jones or the Marauder must have
attempted to do to him what I did to the gold mustang. He'll be more
cautious. As North Avenue creeps upon us I'm taking the lead but I'm
going to fast to reach the Apex. A word only a real racer would
understand. I slam on my breaks and the BMW takes the lead but he too
is going too fast. I pop my E-break and spin the wheel, my foot tense
with what it must do. As my car drifts around from Cicero onto North
Avenue the BMW drifts with me. The driver is determined to make the
turn and he thinks he's going to make it but he looses control. The
BMW leans too far and begins to flip.
I see the car turning around as I
straighten my car out and pass the smoking BMW before it can come to
a stop. It's another long stretch and I'm positive the police in
Cicero have alerted Chicago. I'm not sure if the guy driving the
Marauder knows the way Chicago police work but I know Jones does. As
I speed past Laramie I bring the car to the speed limit and cruise
past Central avenue. The police station is near by and the shift
change had been altered since the last time I raced this route.
Now the clock is racing against me for
real. The longer I cruise the further my competition gets from me. I
play the odds in my head for a moment...and just before I can throw
caution to the wind a barrage of squad cars are flying past me. They
know. They know the street racers are attempting to regain the
streets they lost when the new mayor stepped into office. Now the
night has gone from a scene from Fast and Furious to a level in Need
for Speed: hot pursuit.
I ask myself quickly what would Tony
do? What would Joe do? The only two men I know that would watch my
back and tell me to throw caution to the wind at the same time. I
love those guys more then I'd ever admit. So I do it. I accelerate
keeping the police within sight but not gaining too far ahead where
they notice me on their 6. This in itself is an art but most times
police drivers don't look back and I wonder if they're taught not to
look back also or are they just that confident? The police quickly
swarm around the intersection of North and Oak Park. As I drive
around the madness I see the police tasering the driver of the
Marauder.
I laugh because I know Jones is nearby
and most likely he knows I'm coming. This is the most dangerous part
because if I beat him and he looses face in front of someone he
respects he'll come after me and I can't have that. To win I have to
play a game of chess while racing a sixteen ton missile. I accelerate
and as I past Harlem Avenue I notice the Elmwood Park Police in the
area. They know my car all too well so I am forced to slow down to a
crawl. Slamming my fist on the steering wheel I let out a multitude
of sure words and racial slurs. Common sense has gone from knocking
to screaming and my mind's door.
The music has lost its effect and I
refer to my secondary music choice. I turn my Zune one and move to my
Need for Speed soundtracks. Maryam is in my thoughts every time I
pick my Zune up. Her scolding eyes fixed on me as she prepares to rip
my head off with her bare hands, if she knew what I was doing. But
she doesn't...I look up after putting the Zune down and smile. The
police in the area had also slowed Jones down. Time was short though,
soon he'd be passing Thacher and that meant a new police
jurisdiction. With his car I could loose him if he passed that road
but the police were still driving lazily around us.
“Fuck it.” I say out loud. The
greatest phrase in all the history of man. When in doubt, when in
despair, when in utter need of anything that is just outside your
grasp... “FUCK IT!” I scream. My car roars to life becoming the
beast only I know exists. Her tires grab the hair of the road and
pulls back so hard its neck would snap, if it had one. My hand grips
the automatic shifter, as if it could do more then what it was
already doing and I soar.
Blue lights ignite all around me as I
willingly tell the police that I am the one they are looking for. No,
not just telling, screaming HERE I AM, and FUCK ALL OF YOU!!! I lower
my passenger side window as I gain on Jones. Matching his speed I
turn to him and openly dare him to call my bluff.
“You ain't got enough!” I scream
at him before slamming down on the gas. Angered by my disrespect his
car comes alive too and now he is accelerating. The police cross into
Melrose Park and I shake my head. They'll be in contact with the
local police and give away our description. A helicopter will be
dispatched and a real chase will begin. We do not have minutes, we
barely have seconds. I have to trick Jones into giving himself up.
His car and mine are neck and neck but
he knows that I know he has more juice under the hood. I notice the
lack of blue flashing lights because the bright white light on the
passing streetlights have gone off. They know where we are heading,
someone has snitched. I know this because the police do not change
their pursuit methods unless they know something. I open my moon roof
and lower my radio. I think I hear a chopper. The turn off to get
onto Mannheim is coming. There's a truck in the on coming lane. I
have an opportunity here but the odds are slim and I know it. I turn
by car toward Jones' Cadillac but he's unfazed by the move and he
knows I know it but he doesn't know I know. I throw my car into the
oncoming lane and lock eyes with the truck driver who is on is CB
radio. Maybe giving off our position to the police? The driver is
spooked enough to turn the truck into what was once my lane. He
doesn't get close to Jones but the sudden maneuver from the truck
driver has spooked him.
Jones turns onto the Mannheim on ramp.
I throw my hand up and stick out my middle finger. I don't know if he
sees it but I pretend he does. As I go under the Mannheim over pass
I hear a car crash and I am sorely tempted to look back but I don't
and you know why. I quickly slow my car down and make a U turn.
Heading back east I take a sharp right onto 40th street.
Going beyond the car's manufactured specifications I make another
sharp right onto west Lake street and follow that into the
expressway.
It's easy sailing from here on out. My
car arrives at Woodfield mall and I see a crowd of people attempting
to disperse as I pull in front of the Jamaba juice. I jump out my car
and everyone ignores me and with good reason. The people here know
the rules, the police are in the crowd and they're expecting a white
car to arrive and here I am. There isn't any time to put my real
plates on the car or cool the engine down. The opportunity to make
money is gone, the need for survival takes precedence.
Eyes are on me and for a second I'm
frozen looking guilty as hell. I pop my trunk and step out the car.
Two guys on bikes are looking at me, no doubt laughing at my
misfortune on the inside. I smile back and motion my hands for them
to rev their bikes up. My heart is pounding because if they' don't do
this for me then I need another distraction. One of the bikers nods
and revs his bike and I make my move.
“Fuck the police!” the other racer
shouts as he revs his bike too. Inside the trunk I remove my drill
gun and take off the back license plate. I then put my actual plate
on and slide the fake under the car parked beside mine. On my hands
and knees I bolt to the front of the car and repeat the process
before getting into the car through the passenger side and shutting
the door. I break the drill gun down and throw it under the seat. I
grab my rear view mirror from the back seat when I hear a knock on my
window and my heart stops.
Turning my head slowly I see a police
woman standing outside my window. Opening the door I look up at her,
the rear view mirror in my hand.
“Ma'am?” I say but the officer
looks to be about my age and she...is..FOINE!
“Sir, could you tell me why you're
in the mall parking lot after hours?” she asks and my heart leaps
into my throat.
“Honestly?” I ask, my mind racing
though believable lies. She rolls her eyes and motions for me to step
out the car. I get out and already I feel caught.
“Why are you here?” she asks with
an attitude. I notice her partner writing down my licensee plate and
walking away.
“Research.” I answer not knowing
where I was going with this and instantly I can tell she knows I am
giving her the biggest bullshit lie she's ever heard. “I'm a
writer. I heard there was a race happening and I was hoping to get
some inside knowledge on street races.”
“May I see your license and proof of
insurance?” she asks. As I retrieve them from the glove box she
asks me what I write. I quickly throw out my most popular and she
shakes her head.
“Really?”she says with the same
attitude. She looks at my Id's and tells me to get back in the car
and wait. I'm caught. I'm busted. My wife is going to be pissed that
I took one last race. I've failed as a father and a husband. I am a
horrible friend and a menace to society. I would cry if I could but I
didn't want to look bad for my jail picture. I watch as the crowds of
people are pushed away from the mall parking lot and then after what
seemed like an eternity the police woman comes back with my ID's.
“Okay, Mr. Santiago.” she says
with a smile. She's smiling because she gets to take me in. Her big
collar.
“Are you in this are often?” she asks and I quickly shake
my head.
“No.” I answer back and she nods
her head.
“That sucks. My brothers kids are
fans of your book Rogue Accord. They'd love a sign copy if you
could.” and when she says that I nod my head and smile back.
“It would be my pleasure.” I
answer back.
“Okay, get out of here.” She says
and I quickly start up my car while thanking her. “Oh, one more
thing.” she says and I freeze. Is there a catch? What did I miss?
“Yes?” I ask.
“The Rake was awesome.” she
whispers and I can feel my ears blush.
“Thanks.” I say avoiding capture.