Random on Tour: Los Angeles (Random Series #7) (11 page)

Read Random on Tour: Los Angeles (Random Series #7) Online

Authors: Julia Kent

Tags: #genre fiction, #contemporary women, #Literature & Fiction, #Humor & Entertainment, #Fiction, #General Humor, #BBW Romance, #humor, #romantic comedy, #New Adult & College, #Humor & Satire, #General, #coming of age, #Women's Fiction, #Humorous, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporary Fiction, #new adult

“You seem—”

“I’m fine.” He closed his eyes.

And then a sound like a rusty gate creaking open came out of...him.

Being a polite midwestern woman, I ignored it. Maybe Tyler had some GI thing he was too embarrassed to talk about. We had more than enough tension between us; I wasn’t about to bring up his digestive issues. He continued his slow breathing and reached for a bottled water and a fistful of gummy bears.

For the next twenty minutes I watched him out of the corner of my eye as he fed one after the other at regular intervals into his mouth, little bears going to their gustatory deaths.

I kept eating them too. I couldn’t help myself. Sugar free, guilt free, and they tasted just as good as the real thing. Who knew?

And then that sound emerged, like a robot being crushed in the gates of hell.

His eyes flew open.

“I need a bathroom!” Panic bloomed in those normally closed-off eyes. It was an odd thing of beauty.

We passed a giant green highway sign. “Twenty-two miles to the next rest area,” I said sweetly.

“I can read.”

And then the car filled with the bad breath of Hades. I flinched and very, very slowly moved my hand to the window button. Tyler beat me to his, lowering the window fast but not saying a word, his jaw clenched. 

I bit my lip to make sure I didn’t laugh. Poor guy. Whatever he was going through was mortifying. I’d be embarrassed if I were him, and we were trapped in a car together. For whatever reason, I felt less self-conscious. It might be petty, but to see him vulnerable and in a predicament made me feel more secure.

I’m not above admitting that.

He winced, and a sheen of sweat broke on on his face. A dawning sense that not only was something very wrong with him, but it might be contagious, began to seep in to my bones. 

“Tyler, I think we need to get you to a doctor.”

“I’m fine.”

“But—”

“Just drive. I’m not missing this concert.”

Tyler

I was not going to have my bowels open up like this. Talk about vulnerability. Some kind of evil settled into my gut and was painstakingly turning a firehose against the lining of my intestines. 

I hadn’t experienced anything like this since I was thirteen and Dad got a bunch of bad canned chicken from the food pantry two blocks over. We’d been wiped out for three days.

This was worse.

Pockets of gas moved around inside me like Tetris pieces. Worse: we could both hear them, like groans from the sarlacc pit. 

Keeping a poker face through this was as hard as controlling the, uh...output.

If I just breathed in through my nose, and out through my mouth, I’d—

The sarlacc spoke.

“God, Tyler, I think you’ve got some kind of stomach bug and—”

Then Mordor spoke
back
.

Maggie looked down at her own belly in disbelief. “What? I don’t—” Her words cut off with a facial expression I knew all too well.

She pressed down hard on the accelerator.

How many miles before that next rest stop?

I didn’t think that anything could make this drive worse. I should have known better. In my life, just when you think nothing more can happen—it can. And does.

And it’s always worse than you’d imagined.

We dispensed with decorum and both rolled our windows down all the way. The stench was—

She farted.

I started giggling. Haven’t giggled since I was eleven.

Her face was as red as parts of her hair.

“I—uh—”

And then I farted, too.

“Oh, God,” she muttered.

You lose all pretense of social norms when you start farting uncontrollably in front of someone. It’s the kind of thing politeness can’t even cover up. It’s like my drunk Dad at a big family gathering. Everyone can ignore old Titus over there, but after a while you have to acknowledge that he pissed in your spider plant, stole your bottle of Percocets from the medicine chest in the back bathroom and left empty beer bottles in random bushes outside your house before passing out on your front lawn and waking up to the automatic sprinklers.

Farts in a small car are just like that.

“Sorry.”

“Quit giggling.”

“Can’t—” Gasp. Fart. “Help it.”

“Are we sick? What happened?” She began white knuckling it as her belly made a series of sounds like coal cars creaking along on train tracks so rusted they needed to be sand blasted.

“I don’t know.”

“Now we both have it.”

“You sure you have it?” I asked, snickering.

Her stomach answered for her, and then she broke out in a sweat.

“Sweet mother of God, what is this?” She hit eighty-two miles per hour and moved into the fast lane.

Pretty soon she was doing the meditative breathing, too.

Ten minutes later she pulled over and we both sprinted for our respective bathrooms. My butt cheeks opened up and the gates of Mordor were unleashed. I felt like I was sending hundreds of dwarves and hobbits to their deaths. I had the uncomfortable feeling that my ass was the Eye of Sauron for a few moments there.

The evil my body poured forth into that poor, innocent toilet was just cruel.

Wave after wave, cramp after cramp, and as I sat there, a prisoner to my bowels, I realized that there wasn’t exactly a wall of self-consciousness between us anymore.

We both wandered back to the car, shuffling like something out of a zombie movie. Maggie’s head was down, tapping away on her phone.

“You calling Lena?” I asked.

“Why would I call Lena?”

“Maybe her cookies did this?”

Maggie looked offended at the thought.

“I’ve eaten Lena’s cookies loads of times and they were fine.” 

My stomach
rawr-ed
in answer, the sound like thunder fading off in the distance. I sprinted back to the bathroom and left her hanging.

By the time I came back, she was leaning against the car, sucking on a bottle of water like a baby cow calf. She downed that bottle in seconds, then wiped her mouth, tossing the empty in a recycling bin.

“Lena says she ate more cookies than the two of us put together and she’s fine.”

“Huh.”

She glared at me. “So what could it be?”

“Can’t be the coffee. Or the cream. All I’ve eaten since then is cookies and those gummy bears.”

She frowned. “I’ve had coffee, cookies, gummy bears, eggs, and—”

“Let’s check out the gummy bears.”

Her stomach yawped like Mrs. Wilmer’s Labradoodle. 

“Go,” I said with a wave, trying not to laugh.

She took off for the bathroom and I grabbed the bag of gummy bears. Nothing weird. They were just a five pound bags of—

Sugar free
gummy bears.

Huh.

Maggie’s smartphone was in a drink holder. I grabbed it and did a quick search on Google. Came to a product page with—

Hold on.

One thousand, three hundred and ninety two reviews?

I opened the page.

By the time Maggie came back, I had solved the mystery of our rotgut.

“I know why we’re shitting water,” I said.

“So eloquent, Tyler. Really. You know how to sweet talk a girl.”

“Facts are facts. Sorry to offend your sensitive sensibilities.” 

“I live in a dorm with hundreds of eighteen and nineteen year olds, Tyler. You can’t offend me.”

“It’s the gummy bears.”

“The what?”

“The gummy bears. Evil little sweet gooey, sugar-free messengers of doom.”

“How do you...?”

I waved her smartphone. “Process of elimination.”

“Very funny.”

I frowned, caught off guard. What did she mean?

Then I got my accidental pun and smiled at her.

“Jesus,” I sighed.

“Yeah, I prayed to him a few times, too, back on the toilet.”

“This is a shitty situation.” 

“Caused by evil gummy bears. Tyler, that doesn’t make any sense.”

I shoved her smartphone in her face. “Read.”

Five minutes later she said, “I’m going to kill Darla.”

“Darla?”

“She’s the one who gave me the gummy bears. Gave me a bag, Charlotte a bag, Amy...oh, we have to call and warn them.”

“No, we don’t.” 

“Why not?” Her voice went high, and yet there was a hitch in it.

“You really want to tell them what’s happened? It’s kind of one of those ‘let’s never speak of it again’ things.” I sniffed, like a snobby British dame on a show.

“I think I can—”

Her phone buzzed in her back pocket just as Mordor’s fires flamed back up. I ran to the bathroom. This was turning into a game of shit tag.

When I came back feeling as hollowed out as a soft-boiled egg, Maggie was smiling.

Grinning from ear to ear. It was infectious, and I joined her.

She held up her phone. “That was Darla, telling me not to eat the gummy bears.”

I groaned. “Too little, too late.”

“It seems her hometown was struck with some mystery illness. She said the CDC was practically pulling their version of a Stephen King novel by putting the entire region under a dome when they figured out Darla had given her mom the sugar free gummy bears to use as a wedding party favor. Half the town was at the wedding and ate those little colonoscopy prep kits masquerading as candy.”

“Peters, Ohio?” I asked, remembering the news report.

“How did you know?” She looked shocked. When she frowned, the scar on her cheek stood out, making her look fierce. 

“It was on the radio earlier, when you weren’t talking to me.”

“I
was
talking to you!” Her face went tight with anger. “
You
were the one not talking to me!”

“Whatever.”

“No, Tyler, not ‘whatever’.
Whatever
means you don’t want to acknowledge I’m right.”

“No, Maggie, ‘whatever’ means I don’t want to keep talking about this.”

“You avoid talking about things when you get uncomfortable.”

“Who doesn’t?”

“Some people process their discomfort. Sit with it. Learn to coexist with it.”

“You’ve been to a lot of therapy.”

She was breathing hard, her face gone slack with surprise. With great intent, she caught my eyes and said, “I didn’t have a choice.”

“Everyone has a choice.”

“It was therapy or death.”

“Plenty of people go through the kind of shit you’ve been through and don’t get therapy.”

“And plenty don’t, and wind up dead from drugs, cutting, whatever.”

“Whatever. There’s that word again.”

“Your word, not mine.”

How did we go from joking to angry so fast?

And then—the telltale shift. We sprinted back to our respective bathrooms again.

It was time to relieve ourselves of all this toxic crap inside.

Chapter Seven

Maggie

We were at an impasse. It seemed impossible to have an actual conversation with this man. Ever. Even in the midst of shitting our brains out because we ate sugar free gummy bears that included a sugar substitute developed by North Korea and used as a biological weapon against people addicted to online shopping. 

And sweepstakes.

I finished in the bathroom and wondered how my body could hold so much, retrieved the half-eaten bag of gummy bears and tossed them in the trash, then returned to the car, pointedly walking to the passenger’s side. Tyler could take the next shift, and I would suffer in gut-cramp silence, waiting for this nightmare to end.

He came back and, wordlessly, opened the driver’s side door, sat down, then came to a deeply-disturbing halt.

“What?” I asked as he gaped at the gearshift.

“This is a stick.”

“Aren’t you Captain Obvious?” An alarm bell got louder in me. “Don’t tell me,” I groaned.

He winced, his fingers wrapping around the steering wheel, shoulder and neck muscles rising like muffins in an oven.

“I can’t drive stick.”

“Fuck!” I shouted. “Seriously? You seriously can’t drive stick? You expect me to drive twenty-nine hours the entire way while you just ride along in luxury and call me Princess and make fun of me and—”

“WOULD YOU JUST SHUT THE FUCK UP FOR A MINUTE!” he roared, turning to me in a kind of rageful agony that was as masterful as it was horrifying. The veins in his neck bulged, his hand whacked the dashboard, his thighs rose up off the seat as he dug his heels into the car’s floor and he went apoplectic.

A wall of pain came right at me, as if he’d unleashed a weapon made of nothing but pure emotion. The air crackled with electricity and made my skin flare, my hair stand on end, and my body became something otherworldly. Something detonated in my core and the nanoseconds of pause between his action and my reaction collapsed into nothing as I gave it all right back. 

You do not get to dump your rage on me.

“DON’T YOU DARE SCREAM AT ME!” I roared back, the impulse to meet him toe-to-toe kicking in before my own innate filter could catch me and make me not do it. My limbs throbbed with the race of blood to the fight, my mind completely emptied of any thought.

I was pure instinct.

A second wave of inner direction hit me and I scrambled out of the car, my legs pumping and taking me past the dog walking section into a thicket of woods. I stayed along the edge, blind with confusion and anger, nothing more than cortisol and adrenaline and a giant burning ball of very, very pissed off Maggie.

The feeling was so unfamiliar.

It felt like being reborn.

Tyler

See what happens when I say words? My throat thrummed and my body turned inside out, like I was nothing but road rash.

Maggie fled, her body rushing away from me like the wind pushed her. Like it was a mother protecting its child.

Or like I was a danger, and Maggie was carrying a newborn baby away from me to safety.

I stared dumbly at that fucking gear shift, wondering how I hadn’t noticed it before. Stupid manual transmission. Fucking stick shift. God damned world that made things I couldn’t do or couldn’t get and fuck the world for being this way.

Fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck.

Other books

Tea With Milk by Allen Say
Plunder of Gor by Norman, John;
Damia by Anne McCaffrey
The Wicked Wallflower by Maya Rodale
Rockets Versus Gravity by Richard Scarsbrook
Taming the Boss by Camryn Eyde
The Queen v. Karl Mullen by Michael Gilbert
A Forest Charm by Sue Bentley
About the Boy by Vita, Sharon De
Nine Lives by Sharon Sala