Cocaine and Cowardice

I was a coward once. A teenager with a fake ID I made myself, in a pony car I raced windows down that perfect Long Island summer night. The club had closed, I was dropping off Joey, and the breeze tugged my permed hair. Joey was a good guy. Everyone liked him and he was my friend, but you never really know people.

We wore parachute pants, and Rick Springfield pined away for Jessie’s Girl. It was a good night. We had some laughs, met a few girls, and I was still feeling all warm and rosy. Mostly over a petite brunette whose number I could feel crumpled in a zippered pocket.

I stopped. Joey said, “Later dude.” Then he was ripped from the car. It happened fast and it took a few heartbeats to register. We were joking, then he was gone.

I was out after him, but a guy with Grateful Dead hair stopped me. He reeked of onions and stuck what looked like a cannon in my face.

He growled, “Get the hell gone. Now.”

My friend was on his knees, arms locked behind him by a heavy-lifter who made Joey look like a toddler, and Joey croaked out, “Bill, just go.”

I was pushed back, the gun barrel deep in my cheek. “Listen to your friend Bill. We got business with him, don’t make it business with you.”

I did what I was told. Big pistol-guy slammed the door, and I raced away, overcompensating and shaking. Glancing back, they were laughing and dragging Joey away. But I was gone, still quaking, too scared to even piss my pants. I didn’t know what to do, so I drove. I left my friend and I ran away.

Another mile away

I felt like shit, but that was an improvement. It felt better to be angry than scared. Another block and I spun the car around.

I screamed back into that parking lot, Joey was a pile of twitching something, and they were still laughing as they walked away. They tried to run and jump away, but I was on them with a thud and shudder. The big silver gun went flying. I fishtailed and spun around.

I expected to get one of them. Both going over my fenders was a surprise.
I expected to get shot, but I got lucky, they were down, and I stopped where the big gun had landed.

They got up bleeding and cursing. But now I had a gun.

It was heavy, and they lurched at me.

I lined up the shot, they stopped, then I had a better idea.

I tossed the gun into the car and locked myself in. I looked at the apartment and started revving the engine like I was trying to rip it apart. I figured I could hit them again if I dropped it in gear.

Lights came on all over the apartment, angry people shouted out windows. Onion-man and heavy-lifter spit and yelled. I couldn’t hear them. I didn’t stop, and people came out of the apartment swinging bats and hockey sticks.

While everyone else yelled at me and smacked my car. Heavy-lifter and his pal limped away. When they drove off, I stopped. Then his neighbors saw Joey.

It was over just like that. I was behind the wheel, ignoring everyone, shaking and gasping and soaked in sweat. When they picked Joey up, I raced away again. I didn’t feel like a coward anymore, but I still didn’t know what to do. I ran two guys down with my car, maybe I was a criminal, but it felt better than having a gun in my face and running away.

I parked by a playground in Patchogue, sat my ass on a cold pier, and stared at the bay. Breathing salt air, my heart hammering my chest, still wondering why he didn’t shoot.

The sun came up

I waited for the police to come, but they didn’t, and I couldn’t understand why.

I should have been relieved, but what could I tell the cops? I ran two guys down. They’d say if I’d just kept running, it would have turned out just the same.

When I caught myself thinking it was only a matter of time before those guys came after me, and I had a gun, and I should figure out how to shoot it, eight fat bullets went down a sewer, and the cannon parts went to the bottom of the Long Island Sound. I’d figure out a better way.

There were police in the hospital ward when I visited Joey. I walked straight into them, sure this time I’d really piss myself, but all they wanted to do was check my bag. I brought Joey a bunch of Zagnut and Zero candy bars, because they were his favorite. And after the cops went through it, they tossed the bag to Joey a few bars short.

I glared, they laughed and said they’d give us some time.

Joey grinned and called me a crazy bastard. Then he unwrapped a Zagnut and said, sometimes it’s good to be a little fish.

Turns out the guys I hit didn’t make it far. Heavy-lifter banged his head too hard when I hit him and rolled his car a couple of miles away. When the police responded they were covered in coke, on parole, with other weapons and a lot more cocaine in the trunk.

They were in Jail, and the police attributed their injuries to the roll. Maybe Karma called. All I know is I got lucky again.

I think I did the right thing, but doing the right thing is complicated.
Since then I have been afraid, and even terrified, but I’ve never felt like a coward again.

I learned how to pound dents out of fenders and parts of my hood. A few months later, Joey got on a Greyhound bus, I left for Air Force Basic Training, and we never saw each other again.

Posted in Bill Riley Author, Growing Up and tagged , , , , , .

4 Comments

  1. Wonderful!! I liked the story you have woven with what-27short paragraphs.. perhaps,a book of short stories is on the horizon? –P/

    • Thank you, Patty! I won’t rule that out in the future, but I’m loving a Fantasy Thriller series that I’m hoping to get out late 2020/early 2021 and that will take me through at least three books. The first book is done and I’m getting ready to start the second. Well, I’m looking at the rough plot on the corkboard next to my desk and I’m hoping to have that, and the series editor I really want to work with, locked in by the end of Feb. Thank you for having faith in my short game! I’m migrating a ton of content from social media posts to my blog this month, so with a little luck, I’ll have a few more surprises for you. Thank you again for your note. Bill

    • Aimee, Thank You! Most of the reason I’m a writer now is, despite my best efforts, I lived to tell the tale 🙂
      I’ve been buried in working out the second book in my new series and I really appreciate your feedback. I’m standing up a private Facebook group next month that will have a lot of first looks, some reader swag, and special events. If you’re interested message me at facebook.com/billrileyauthor I’d love to have you in the group and I’ll give you a shout when it’s up. Bill

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