Friday, November 7, 2014

Blue Streak





A twist of the fist. The choked scream below is awful to hear.

Forearms stretch ahead. Taut, veined as the hands strangle the blue motorcycle bars, bucking like hell.  

Street’s an incline, a stone corridor with carved-out chunks. Someone was careless, too fast, like this, like now. 

The cobblestones are murky brown and curved like rows of chocolates in a box. Rattling over them, below they melt with speed. There’s a hard jolt that could loosen my teeth. I force my eyes out of a squint.

PAHHHhhnnn, POHHHhhnnn… 
PAHHHhhnnn, POHHHhhnnn... 

Sirens are strange here. Not the howl I’m used to. French police sirens are nasal, they sneer and have distinct notes, like the language. Like an imperious bird.

The blue motorcycle’s pleas rip the air. They volley off the walls and slap your ears like flat hands. Gear changes chop up the old girl’s cries.

Jerky climb. Losing ground. Losing.

Seconds ago the sirens were distant, scolding. Now they’re fresh, they’re hungry.  Getting harder to hear the engine. Splitting the skull. They really mean it. And they don’t even have to try.

Speed flattens my clothes to me, rippling nervously on the ends. Sweat makes the t-shirt mould like chill paint on my chest. I want to sneak a glance back but don’t. I can hear their motor now. Their two front tires thudding into the cobblestones, sure and strong and right. 

Getting caught isn’t part of this story. Getting caught is their story.

The blue motorcycle roars through a mucousy cough to the top of the incline. I see now. My jaw clenches and pray it makes me look brave. The street forks, too hard in either way. A sharpened street corner cleaves like the bow of a ship. Dead ahead.

Handlebars almost wrenched off.

A black espadrilled foot shoots down at an angle to balance out the insane turn. Black cotton and a straw sole. All that shields the foot as it skitters on the paving. The rear wheel careens to line up with the front and there’s a wounded clang from the suspension. A warning not to try that too often.

And now? 

No more incline? 

Thank God! Straight shot, wide, almost a slalom, momentum will do most of the work.

Smells of the town rush at me, too much. I love it. Gutter water, cold and crystal-hard rinsing out the night's filth. Stone, dusty and dull and damp. Dog shit. That odor of a nestled town, coiled and drowsy. It's not a smell of cooking or of gardens. It's a smell of patient history and sun and remoteness. All in a wall of wind. Too much. I love it.

PAHHHhhnnn, POHHHhhnnn...
PAHHHhhnnn, POHHHhhnnn…

Oh, right. Them.

The gendarmes in the boxy squad car, still gaining. Only seconds stolen. Width makes their mimicked turn clumsy. I want them clumsy. I want to see shaking fists and mouthed curses through a receding windshield.

Focus. Not that clever by a mile. Not even by fifty metres.

Sneaking a look back. Didn’t dare before. Stomach hollows out.

A grimy trickle of exhaust. The trail isn’t dense enough to blind them and it pulls apart like spun sugar. Just enough to betray. The rude snout of the cop car rams through it.

Turn? Look left, right. Blocked. Storefronts and wooden doors and shutters are a tunnel of smears, all dirty cream and russet brown and grey. 

Lucky it’s midday, lucky it’s summer. Lucky that the shops are closed and people holed up with curtains drawn. Lucky it’s too hot for coffee and too early for drinks and the town is dead.

Straight shot, no swerves. Tires mushy. Not fast enough.

I feel the gnawing of the after, the ugly what-if.

Not fast enough.

Hate the after, glares at me. My palms go slick. I think of home. It's restful there, after lunch. It's assured there, they don't know. 

I'll fail them with this. Who'd scream, who'd cry, who'd be silent.

Jolts below, they hurt, the wheels whine. Rough paving. Like the Earth kicking me in the ass.

PAHHHhhnnn, POHHHhhnnn…
PAHHHhhnnn, POHHHhhnnn…

Turn! Left, a side street. Hook, coast, then hard push. Blue motorcycle belches, sour. Diesel fumes. Front tire shudders between cobblestones, like an abused animal snapping to. I feel the tug of force and tighten my fingers.

Narrow, high walls. A sliver street. Shadowy. Ash grey, cold purple. Streetlamp thorning out like brier.

The squad car lobs its rumble ahead. Made the turn, it says. Not too narrow for us.

I see the climb of bitter windows that overlook nothing. The sun doesn't know this street exists. Defeat is this place.

Know where you're going...? I imagine their laughter.

Maybe you can’t control it.

Maybe crashing is what you deserve. Grit of teeth, spasm, flinch, dead. You aren’t bigger than this.

Being caught, alive but caught… Is that worse…?

Wind rakes its claws over my ears.

Alive, but losing? No time. No time. Pull over?

Eyes tearing. Speed streaks the drops.

Through my bones, the angry tom-tom of the street thrashes. Can’t think.

THINK. What’s that saying…?

‘Sang froid’…?

‘…Cold blood’?

None of this feels cold.

It feels hot enough to scream.

But then. Quick right lean, skid. Quick left lean, clip a corner. Gash in blue paint. Keep on! I'm a flash, a wink with every zigzag. A fish's tail, that's what the cops see then don't! Silvery, slippery. Darting, neat little cuts.

But then. A miserly alley? Soot, quiet.

Hard stop.

...Hard stop?

Engine killed. Fist releases, done its job. Choking ends, spent. Blunt silence.

Nothing. Then more of it, thick slices of nothing. Still, keep still, don't drop the arms, clothes rustle.

Waiting, for...? 

PAHHHhhnnn, POHHHhhnnn…  
PAHHHhhnnn, POHHHhhnnn…  

The cop car wails, muffled around bends. Motor grumbles by, impotent, seeking. Fades, feebler, almost pitiable. Gone.

Unblinking, more nothing. Really gone.

The forearms stretching ahead, taut, veined, finally soften. Hands lay on knees, sweat wiped off on the pants. The espadrilled foot balancing the right side, the left foot drops to even out. A calming exhale bubbles out.

The foot nudges out the kickstand. The hands cup my ribcage and spin me around. The exhale turns into a lighthearted question. "Ça va?" 

I look up into a troublemaker's smirk, my uncle's calm face, lean and young and caring. The hands lift the helmet off my head and I can see and breathe easier. 

True I was four. But I remember his half-laugh. Sly, but not a braggart's.

Impossible. Defying the police! Unthinkable. We might as well have leaped over the cathedral.

Scofflaws, for a minute or two. Worth savoring. We’d gotten away with it!

I remember my uncle's closed-mouth grin, his chuckle at the idiocy of it. Our escape. I remember the crinkle of mischief around his eyes.

I remember we took the small streets back home.

  

"I remember the whole thing," I told my uncle a few weeks ago when I was in France. 

Nearly midnight, just he and I. The old family house. He'd dropped me off after dinner. We talked lightly but well on the drive back. We always did, and even when topics evaporated and thoughts knit in the air, it was just as good.

I'd walked him out to his car and was locking up after him. September, early flinches of cool. I wore a thin sweater, he wore a jacket. We stood at the end of my grandparents' courtyard, by the heavy iron gate with the spikes stabbing on top. It used to be forest green. It's red now. My grandparents used to live there, but they don't now. The white metal shutters clamped. The climbing roses a little wild. It felt quieter than sleeping neighbors, looked darker than the hour. Things change.

Others don't, though. That same crinkle of mischief around his eyes, only three decades deeper. "A four year old. Don't know what I was thinking."

"You were in your twenties. Harmless joyride," I said with a shrug.

“Illegal. A little boy on the bike, that's why they chased us."

"I wore a helmet!"

"I didn’t," he said with a happy, fraught headshake. 

"And," he looked up at me, a wry point firing his eye, "It was a blue moped. Old, beat up. Loud. Your grandfather never owned a motorcycle."

My grin broadened through the dark. "I know."

"Leather satchels on the sides. He rode it to his garden and loaded it full of what he'd grown. It wasn't a Harley or anything. We were probably carrying green beans."

I nodded. "Oh I know."

"The moped couldn't really go that fast! You stood on the board in the center. It was only supposed to be a trip around the block."

"Maybe. But we gave them the slip! That was your quick thinking. We got away," and I heard flecks of wonder in my voice.

My uncle stood there, hands deep in his jacket pockets, feet wide apart and head down, watching the ground as if it might crack. That closed-mouth grin creased his face. His ears slightly flared, silvering hair cropped short. His shadow craned away from him. Just then, and for the first time, I asked myself why the hell he hadn’t pulled over at the sirens? What silent dare had he laid down, what began in his gut and made him twist the accelerator? Playful? Pissed off? Impulse only? Why had he pushed his luck against those odds? I could have asked aloud. Instead I looked at an orderly man remembering mischief.

"Do you remember what you said?" he surprised me, without looking up.

I let him go on.

"When I asked if you were alright, you demanded that we not go home. That we ride over to the gendarmerie and knock on the door. Bait them into chasing us again."

I didn't know what to say, only laughed.    

"I was braver then," I said finally. My head tilted down now. I was amused, but oddly a little ashamed for something I'd said more than thirty years prior.

"It's been a good year for you, for your work I mean," my uncle said. "I'm very happy for you. You've got to carry on."

My turn to shrug too. "I've been very fortunate."

"No." Abrupt halt, clipped. "Not fortunate."

I looked up at him. My hand still gripped the iron gate.

"You've started to make it happen. Not just good fortune. You haven’t been able to visit in a few years, but you’ve worked hard and it’s brought you here. We have this time because of it. But it’s only the very beginning! Now you've got to find a way, always. It's never enough."

I stared. I was grateful for the dark. Not because I wept, but because my face must have been riddled with chaos. I never feel in control, or cunning when I must be. Losing. Alive, but losing. I feel as though luck and near misses keep me just out of grabbing range.

But then he gave me this. This breath that clears the head, that shimmers the humor, that might well win the day. Well, then and now. 

Knocking on the police's door, for Christ's sake. 

I should have thanked him. I wanted to. But maybe he knew.

Beyond there was the indifferent rattle of night traffic, a delivery truck. A dog barked at nothing.

"You'll find a way," my uncle said simply.

Hands still in his pockets, he broke away back to his car. His voice warmed and over his shoulder he told me to sleep well. I hinged the iron gate and felt it click, then spun the key three times and it bolted. I wished him the same.

At the driver's door though, he stopped, his head peeking above the roof for an instant. Streetlamp light seared the grey in his temples.

"You know," he hesitated. I waited. Surprise spun in his voice, a promising note I knew so well. This very precise man with a taste for disobedience, my uncle.

"Yeah?" I said.

"...That story, the cops, the bike..."

"Yeah."

"The way you tell it. You take some liberties with it, don't you? Here and there?" he asked. I couldn't see them, but I know those crinkles around his eyes were in place.

"We find a way," I said from the other side of those red iron bars, as lighthearted as after a joyride.

His single chuckle. “À demain,” as he ducked into the car.

“Sans faute,” I said to the car.

And my uncle drove off, and I turned away to unlock the front door, next to the little atelier where an old blue motorcycle was stashed away. 

Forgive me. 

A blue moped.



© Eric Yves Garcia 2014