Authors: Layce Gardner
Table of Contents
Copyright © 2011 by Layce Gardner
Bella Books, Inc.
P.O. Box 10543
Tallahassee, FL 32302
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, without permission in writing from the publisher.
First published 2011
Editor: Katherine V. Forrest
Cover Designer: Linda Callaghan
ISBN 13: 978-1-59493-247-2
For my mom–who taught me how to laugh.
Acknowledgments
I am blessed to have a mother who’s also my best friend. She’s the funniest person I’ve ever met and she taught me how to laugh. My daughter, Emma, is the second funniest person I’ve ever met, and thanks to her I never stop laughing.
A big heartfelt thanks to my UberAgent and lawyer, Joan Timberlake. She’s an agent, a lawyer, an editor, a mother, a pit bull and a friend all rolled into one.
And how lucky am I to get The Katherine V. Forrest as my editor?
Much big love to my cocoon of girlfriends who inspire me on a daily basis: Angie Bliss, Vicki Cheatwood, Saxon Bennett, Jeanne Magill, Laurie Salzler, Sherri Marler Jones Roper, Cherokee Lowe, Trica Farley and Erin Short. And Joey Pohl.
About The Author
Layce Gardner lives on the furthermost edge of the fourth corner of the world with Emma, Stanley, Darla Sue, Honey Bear, Beetlejuice and Asscat. Layce collects motorcycles, tattoos, I Love
Lucy
dolls, cows and female action figures. She loves pie and cheese and conspiracy theories. You can visit her website at Laycegardner.com or her blog at Laycegardner.wordpress.com
Chapter One
I’m a sucker for a nice pair of tits. And this pair ranks right up there with some of the nicest I’ve ever had in my face.
The stripper teases me a minute longer before pulling her tits away. I tuck another twenty in her g-string and she gives them back to me. Her long black hair blankets my head and shoulders and I use my teeth to tug on her nipple ring.
She jerks away, surprised, and offers me her ass instead. It takes a couple more twenties to get her tits back this time.
She’s no fool. She plays keep-away from me for the next three songs. Three songs is how long it takes to empty my pockets.
Two grand, every cent I have, gone in the space of fifteen minutes. Did I mention I’m a sucker for a nice pair of tits?
“What’s your name?” I ask when she bends down near me again.
“Ginger,” she whispers.
“Ginger, what time you get off?”
“I’ll get off right after you take me home,” she answers with a bump and grind aimed right at my face.
I’m sure the bump and grind seems like a good idea. What Ginger doesn’t know is that her answer gets me so excited I lean forward. Just enough that my nose smashes into her bump and her grind makes sure it’s broken but good.
I gush blood all over me, all over her and all over the dance floor. I guess the smell of blood gets her all excited, because the next thing I know, she’s pulling me by the collar out the back door.
I stand in the employee parking lot like a fool with two tissues shoved up my nose while she yanks on jeans and a T-shirt. She throws a leg over the back of a Harley Fatboy, fires up the engine and yells over the pipes, “Get on! You’re riding bitch!”
Ginger makes me ride bitch for the next six months. I clean the house, do the laundry, mow the lawn, wash the dishes, I even re-shingle the roof. If I’m good, she lets me ride her Harley. If I’m really good, she lets me ride her.
I haven’t been so good lately.
This morning Ginger finally drags home about ten o’clock. She’s wearing her favorite T-shirt. It’s red with big letters across her tits that read ‘I like to fuck.’ Talk about your red flags.
“Where you been?” I ask.
“Last time you stuck your nose in my business I broke it,” she says, crawling into bed and turning her back to me.
I catch sight of that little birthmark on the inside of her thigh and my thinking gets all cloudy. I get in bed, reach over and caress her ass just the tiniest bit and she turns and slaps the shit out of me.
“What the hell?!”
“I’m tired of being touched,” she snaps. “Everybody’s always got their hands on me.”
“Am I the only one who finds your T-shirt ironic?” I mumble.
She whips the shirt off over her head, wads it up, and throws it in my face. “You like to fuck so much, you wear it,” she says, burying her face in the pillow.
“I think your idea of much and my idea of much are two different things,” I say, crawling out of bed. I slip my jeans on over my boxers and a T-shirt over my wife-beater. I throw on my leather jacket and my boots. I have my trusty pocketknife in my front pocket, forty bucks in cash and my driver’s license. I pat my jacket pockets because I don’t go anywhere without my journal and my well-worn paperback,
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.
I’m walking out of the room when Ginger leans up on one elbow and says, “If you’re going riding, bring her back with a full tank.”
I nod goodbye to her nipple rings and walk out the door.
There’s just something about the vibration and rumble of a motorcycle that lifts my spirits no matter how low they are. I’m flying down the highway at eighty miles per hour with my feet only three inches off the ground, the rising sun on my back, and chasing my own shadow. Ain’t nothin’ sweeter.
I check over my left shoulder and swing into the passing lane. I open the throttle to ninety plus and breeze right by the semi-truck in the right lane. He honks at me as I whip by and I toss him a small wave before I edge back in his lane.
I’m not a speed-aholic, I just like to go fast. I laugh a little at that thought. I’ve met many a drunk who says, “I’m not an alcoholic, I just like to drink.” Who knows, maybe I am a speed-aholic. Speed jolts me full of adrenaline and when I hear my heart pounding in my ears, I know I’m for sure alive. Besides, speed limits are just that—limits. Me and limits, we don’t get along so good.
I like that ad that tells you to think outside the box. Life is too full of boxes as is. You watch TV, it’s a box. You go on the computer, it’s a box. Phones are boxes. A car is a box on four wheels. People go to work and sit in little cubicle boxes. Houses and offices and stores are just big boxes. When you die they stuff you in another box. A motorcycle is not a box. That’s what I like about them. Riding a motorcycle is life outside the box.
I work on and rebuild old motorcycles. I find old pieces of junk and restore them. I don’t just put them back the way they were, I make them better. It’s not a great living, but it’s living the way I want. And how many people can say that?
I have a car, too. It’s a necessity of life. You have to haul something somewhere or it’s raining, you have to drive a car. I own a 1976 black El Camino. I named her Hell Camino. She looks like a beater, but I rebuilt every little piece of her engine myself and she’s pristine.
Two drops of cold rain splatter me in the face. I dump the throttle to sixty-five and scan the streets for any familiar landmarks. I really have no idea where I am. I’m not lost as far as general directions go, but still I don’t know exactly where I am. I take the next exit and plan on working my way back on surface streets and that’s when the rain blasts me from about three different directions all at once.
That’s Oklahoma for you. If you don’t like the weather just wait a minute ’cause it’ll change. Right now half of Tulsa’s sunny, but the half I’m unlucky enough to be in is like being under a waterfall. And when you’re on a bike going sixty mph, it feels like a swarm of bees stinging you all at once.
I notch down the gas even more and the wind blows me three feet to the left. I lean into the wind, guide the bike back over and hug the white stripe before it throws me back to the middle of the road. I must look that toy, the Weebles. I keep wobbling, but I don’t fall down.
I scour the road ahead looking for a way to get out of this battering. I slide into the nearest parking lot and, of course, it turns out to be a Walmart.
I kick the bike down right near the front in one of those spots where you’re only supposed to park if you have a sick kid and you’re getting them medicine, but who’s going to argue with me over whether I have a sick kid or not? I unzip my jacket and hold the sides up, scrunch my head down like a turtle and run right through the double doors of Big Blue. I stand over by the carts and shake myself off like a dog.
Huddled directly across from me is a troop of green-clad Girl Scouts behind a folding table that’s loaded down with boxes of cookies. All their little faces are shut down and miserable- looking. They all stare at me with their little lifeless eyes and this one Girl Scout, the biggest, boldest one, waddles over to me, looks me up and down and asks in a dead voice, “You a woman or you a man?”
I hold out the sides of my jacket, showing her my boobs, but she has the gall to look at my chest and make a face like she considers my wares negligible. Okay, so my boobs aren’t even big enough to be called tits, but being insulted by a ten-year-old still pisses me off.
“Buy some Girl Scout cookies,” she orders.
Now it’s my turn to look her up and down and wonder when did little kids start getting so fat? If you ask me, she’s not a very good advertisement for cookie sales. “Looks to me like you’ve been eating all the profits,” I say low.
She sticks the toe of her brown loafer in the puddle around my feet and smears a streak across the floor. She cocks her head up at me and orders again, “I said, buy some Girl Scout cookies.”
“Do you all take credit cards?” I ask, feeling guilty about my earlier remark.
She snaps her head back real sassy-like and does that neck roll thing that black women are so good at and says, “What’m I gonna do with a credit card? Swipe it in my ass-crack?” She snaps her fingers at me for emphasis.
I laugh. Good for her. She may be as wide as she is tall, but ain’t nobody going to push her around.
I buy forty dollars worth of thin mints.
Ten minutes later the sun is beating down bright and I’m back on my way, forty dollars poorer, but cookie rich. I’ve no more than ridden a couple of miles before the floodgates open back up and water is gushing out of the sky. I’m in the middle of open country on the outskirts of town and there’s nowhere to hide. Even the cows are circled together with their back ends pointing to the storm. Finally, I see a scraggly stand of trees alongside the road and figure I may as well hunker down there until the storm passes.
I ease the bike over under the trees, cut the engine and slip the key in my front pocket. I un-ass and peer through the sheets of water. Damn. I’m in the middle of a cemetery. I don’t like cemeteries. Probably because there’s always dead people in them.