400 Horsepower of the Apocalypse

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400 Horsepower of the Apocalypse Page 1

by Erica Lindquist




  Copyright © 2019

  Erica Lindquist & Aron Christensen

  and Loose Leaf Stories

  All rights reserved

  ISBN: 9781643190525

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  Find more books at LLStories.com

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  Cover by Bookfly Designs

  Edited by Amber Presley & Lacey Waymire

  This book is a work of fiction. All characters, organizations, places and events portrayed in this book are either the product of the authors’ imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Epilogue

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  For everyone out there

  riding the rough roads.

  Last night, I had the dream again. The two sides were still locked in endless battle – fighting over what, or for how long, I couldn’t even guess. Forever. Since before forever… This war was older than the concept of time, and had been fought through more iterations than there were numbers to express.

  How the hell did I know that? Dream logic, I guess.

  I hope.

  But I couldn’t tell if this eternal battle was a one-on-one duel or the epic clash of two vast armies. It was sure as hell the biggest fight I had ever seen, outshining the worst hair-pulling, face-scratching bar-room brawl. I couldn’t tell much more than that, though…

  The timeless war raged back and forth through a void so empty that it defied even twisted dream-logic. There was no­thing for scale as the two sides fought, and I could only vaguely sense the great blows being dealt with power and weapons in­comprehensible to my tiny mortal perceptions. I would have called the clashing factions forces of nature, except that these strange warriors went far beyond nature. Nature was a force of them…

  Or maybe I just had a few too many beers before bed.

  There was only one thing I knew for sure in all of the weirdness and confusion of my dream – nothing was more important than victory in this eternal war. It was a fight between darkness and light, of order against utter chaos, and I had no idea who would win.

  Dreams end, though, even the weird recurring ones. And now it was time to get my butt out of bed.

  My cell phone blared an endless loop of the most obnoxious ringtone I could find. It had to be one I hated – nothing else would wake me up at five o’clock in the morning day after day after day.

  I fumbled the phone out from under my pillow and groaned a few choice curses at it. The damned thing had already been going for nearly ten minutes and I hoped that I hadn’t woken anybody else. That late start probably should have come out of my shower or breakfast time – but I wasn’t willing to cut either one, so I grabbed a bottle of coffee from the fridge and chugged it while I waited for my shower to heat up.

  And waited… I was twenty-three years old, but my parents had bought that water heater long, long before I was born. So I waited some more.

  Once the shower was warm – hot was right out of the question – I gulped down the last mouthful of coffee, but it was bitter and gritty because I had forgotten to shake it first. I made a face at the empty bottle and left it on the bathroom counter.

  Welcome to the life of Jasmine O’Neil. Jaz to my friends, or people who think they’re my friends. Or anyone who is too lazy to just say my whole damned name.

  I showered and dried off quickly, then tied a bandana over the fluffy black curls of my damp hair. With a last-minute bagel clamped between my teeth, I climbed into my dad’s car and backed out of the garage. I drove across town while wolfing down my bagel in four huge bites.

  So why was I up before the sun? Well, people usually needed to stop by my work before they headed out to their job. I was a mechanic at Golden Touch Auto, one of those boring chain car garages where they change your oil, rotate your tires and upsell you on semi-useful and over-priced maintenance plans.

  And by they, I mean me. I was always the first GTA employee into the garage because nobody else wanted to be up that early. Neither did I, but I was the newest hire in years, the youngest and the only girl in a workplace that was otherwise an utter sausage fest. So I got stuck with all of the shit work.

  But I dutifully unlocked the GTA front door with my security code, turned on the lights and booted up the ancient computer system so that people could drop off their trucks and cars before heading out to their own jobs at a more reasonable hour.

  The day only went downhill from there. The guys came in around nine o’clock. By ten, Craig had made no less than three different comments about women having no brain for machines, including a snappy one-liner about how I should be spending more time in the back seat of cars rather than under their hoods.

  When I turned to tell Craig to shove it, I caught my coveralls on the corner of a bumper and tore the knee right open. Craig laughed at me.

  “Damn, Jaz,” he said. “I was going to suggest you get a job down the street waiting tables, but now I’m not even sure you can do that.”

  “No, I can’t,” I snapped at him. “Because I’m a mechanic, not a waitress.”

  I spun back to face the car that I was working on, hopefully before Craig said anything else. My cheeks were flaming and even with my dark brown skin, I was pretty certain that everyone could tell. Bob made some joke that I only half heard over the rush of blood in my ears, but I flipped him off anyway. When I returned to wrestling the bolts out of the old Ford’s transmission, though, my hands were shaking and the wrench slipped. I smashed my finger and cursed some more.

  The other mechanics were all laughing again. What the hell were they doing gathered around me, anyway? Didn’t they have their own jobs to do? Not that I trusted Craig to change a windshield wiper.

  An hour and a half later, though, it was finally and thankfully lunchtime. I didn’t get to leave the garage, of course, but everyone else went up the street to the bar. Lucky Jaz got to stay behind at GTA… New girl and all that.

  I’m not complaining – okay, I am – but I wouldn’t have gone out to lunch with Craig and the other guys, even if they invited me. Not just because they were all assholes, but because it was cheaper to eat a bagged lunch and I needed to save every last dollar if I was ever going to escape this place.

  This place was Crayhill, Kansas. Or as I tended to think of it, Craphole. Look, there are really nice places in Kansas. Beautiful, peaceful places – and for some people, maybe Crayhill was even one of them.

  Ugh, sorry. That made me throw up in my mouth a little.

  Crayhill was a tiny town, with a population of perhaps two thousand. It used to be larger, but that was back when there was a major motorcycle factory here. Both my parents had worked at that plant, met and fell in love there. I grew up playing with their socket wrenches and calipers. But then the economy crashed, the factory closed down and pretty much everyone in Crayhill lost their job.
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  Anyone who could afford to moved out of Crayhill, but that still left a shitty, broke little town full of people who had spent their entire professional lives designing, building and repairing motorcycles. I got the job at Golden Touch Auto because I’m a damned good mechanic… and because I was willing to come in at the ass-crack of dawn to work ten-hour days for minimum wage. I couldn’t afford to take my crappy job for granted, though. In Crayhill, I was all too easily replaceable. But I hadn’t gotten a raise in… ever, and most of what I earned went straight to helping my parents with the bills.

  I had my own plans, however. Once I was sure that Craig and the other guys were all safely gone for lunch, I went out to the cracked concrete pad behind the garage and pulled a tarp up off the motorcycle parked back there. It wasn’t a secret or anything, but I didn’t always have the time to work on the bike and Craig got cranky if I stored it inside.

  I ran my hand along the chrome handlebars of the Triumph Bonneville 790. The previous owner abandoned the motorcycle when he couldn’t afford the repairs and it took seven months of working on the side to get it running. And I managed it all with minimal parts, scavenging and machining every single little doodinkus all on my own because I’m twice the grease-monkey that any of the other GTA mechanics are.

  My Bonnie was still a rough ride, though… The bike badly needed new shock springs and a set of Ikons cost four hundred dollars that I didn’t have.

  I crouched down to inspect the wheel fork. It had been just this side of mangled when I started work on the Bonneville, but it was looking pretty damned good now. The motorcycle was a cruiser, not a racing bike, with a dark blue and purple body, and chrome highlights that I always kept brightly polished.

  Someday I would finally jump onto my Bonnie and ride the hell out of here. Hopefully before it was too late… There was a gravity to Crayhill and the last handful of eligible men in town were all eyeballing me expectantly. By the time I hit drinking age, I had already slept with the three or four guys worth taking to bed. Only two of them were worth doing the deed sober, and none of them merited a second go. But if I didn’t escape Crayhill, I would eventually give up and marry one of them, then likely drink myself into a slow, early death so that I wouldn’t realize how miserable I was.

  Nope. Not today, and not without a fight.

  I gave my Bonneville another loving pat and straightened. There was still a Corolla up on the lift, but I figured changing its transmission fluid could wait until I was done with lunch – and maybe a little daydreaming.

  There hadn’t been enough time to pack a sandwich or any­thing that morning, so I grabbed a candy bar from the half-full lobby vending machine and sat down in front of the reception computer to browse eBay for some new shock springs. It’s not really a part you can buy used, but maybe some bike shop had an old set sitting on a stock shelf and wanted to offload them for a few bucks.

  No dice. I put my chin in my hand and sighed. Oh, well. Just another frustrating day in Crayhill.

  Or was it…? I leaned over the counter and squinted out the lobby window. Something felt strange today – something in the air, like there was a storm coming. Whatever it was, the sensation crawled up my spine and seemed to grab on, pulling me with invisible hands in the direction of the approaching storm. A tornado, maybe?

  But the sky was still clear and a pale blue color scrubbed nearly white by the bright sun. I took another bite of candy bar, wondering if I should check the weather app on my phone. But I never got the chance.

  Last night’s dream of cosmic battle came suddenly rushing back over me with such force that I choked on chocolate and caramel. Light bloomed across my vision, colorless but blinding in its intensity. There were elemental forces battling for the soul of the entire universe and something incandescently hot raced through my body like a lightning strike.

  Holy shit, was I having a stroke? Can you get a stroke from frustration?

  But a second later, the light, the battle and everything else simply… vanished. The rush of blood in my ears was replaced by the loud roar of a motorcycle engine – something a lot bigger than my little Bonneville. I dropped the remains of my candy bar and jumped to my feet to get a look out into the parking lot.

  Any trace of morning coolness had long since dispersed and the asphalt shimmered in the midday heat as though the very air were trying to escape Crayhill. A big black motorcycle turned into the GTA parking lot and stopped just outside the front door. The bike’s rider pulled off his helmet and uncovered short, wavy brown hair. He peeled off a leather jacket, too, then stuffed it into one of the saddlebags slung over the back of his motorcycle. His arms were thick with muscles and tattoos.

  Damn, the guy was an eyeful – six foot something, with deep brown eyes and dusky skin. Neither his complexion or hair were as dark as mine, but he definitely had the look of a man who spent a lot of time outside, and probably somewhere way more exotic than Kansas.

  The bike was a fine specimen, too – a 2014 Packmaster CVB, if I was any judge. And I was. Black leather and chrome finish, with beautiful blood-red detailing. Both motorcycle and rider were well-crafted machines of barely-restrained power in sleek packaging.

  Alright, maybe I was letting my imagination run away… But hey, it was the only part of me that got to.

  The biker pulled a cell phone from the pocket of his jeans and dialed as he walked across the parking lot. I centered myself behind the counter, brushed any stray bits of chocolate off my shirt, and did my best to look professional as he pushed the door open. The automated doorbell let out a loud, sharp buzz meant to be heard all the way back through the garage and I winced, but my strange new customer didn’t even appear to notice the ruckus.

  “Yeah. See you soon,” he said into the phone. “Call me if you run into any trouble.”

  His voice was deep, with a trace of Mexico in his accent not quite overwhelmed by the strong Chicago vowels. He smiled as he spoke, but stepped quickly up to the counter like he was in a hurry. I straightened to my fullest five-and-a-half foot height, then checked the bandana that kept my hair out of both engines and my eyes while the tall biker stuffed his cell phone back into his pocket. It was too warm in the garage and I had unzipped the top of my coveralls to tie the arms around my waist. Not exactly club wear, so I put on what I hoped was my best and brightest smile to make up for it.

  Alright, Jaz, I told myself firmly. Say something smart, maybe a little flirty. First impressions are forever.

  “Hi, Jasmine,” I said, then felt my face go hot. “I mean, hello. I’m Jasmine. Jaz. Welcome to Golden Touch Auto. Do you need a jump?”

  Good job, Jaz.

  The biker’s expression became confused, but he nodded.

  “Leo,” he introduced himself. “Leo Valdis. Can you look at my bike? The steering is pulling and my engine keeps surging.”

  Points to Leo for not assuming I was a receptionist. A lot of guys who came into the garage did – despite the coveralls and grease stains up to my elbows. Leo might not be a sexist douche­bag, or maybe he was just slightly observant.

  “Sure, let’s go take a look,” I said.

  I came out from behind the front counter and gestured to the door, letting Leo lead the way back out to his motorcycle. Not so I could watch his ass – well, not just so I could watch his ass – but I had never seen the guy in Crayhill before, and I was otherwise alone in the garage until Craig and the others came back. I wasn’t about to turn my back on a strange man, no matter how sexy.

  We stepped out into the hot Kansas afternoon and I gagged, but then forgot all about the heat and my suspicions when we approached Leo’s bike. Wow, it really was a gorgeous machine… My initial assessment was right – 2014 Packmaster CVB.

  The Packmaster was based on the classic Harley-Davidson Softail design, but with an extended gas tank and a longer back end made for hauling larger saddlebags. The Packmasters were popular with bikers who spent a lot of time driving cross-country, who wanted fewer stops for gas and
some increased carrying capacity.

  But CVB meant that this motorcycle was a special release. The manufacturer only made a few of them each year, and they were both more expensive and more powerful than the standard models.

  Leo’s Packmaster made my half-finished Bonneville looked like a beater by comparison. Well, to be honest, it was a beater, but I would have been jealous even if the Bonnie were brand new. The big Packmaster had a flawless red and black paint job, with sturdy-looking custom leather saddlebags across the back. Hard cases produced less drag on the road, but lots of bikers preferred the look of the leather, and they were collapsible when empty. These bags were far from empty, though – they were stuffed with something and bulged liked bunched muscles.

  “Hmm, steering problems are usually tire problems,” I said, crouching down to inspect the tread. “But… I don’t see any un­even wear. Your fork doesn’t seem bent, either.”

  “Did I screw up the alignment?” Leo asked.

  I squinted. “Hmm… Maybe. Or the engine might be racked incorrectly. That’s usually more of a problem with the touring models than the Packmasters, especially a CVB. But let’s take it inside for a look.”

  I straightened and grabbed the handlebars to wheel Leo’s bike into the garage. But as soon as I touched the motorcycle, the blinding light came back. There was a hollow boom like a thunderclap and the world spun all around me. I staggered away, wheeling my arms wildly as I struggled to regain my balance.

 

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