"I don't know what to say to that. Is that... Did you just compliment me?" Richie asked, his brow raised in faux surprise.
"I wouldn't call it a compliment."
"You're hitting on me, aren't you?" he goaded Buddy, "I knew you had feelings for me, but I have to tell you, Buddy, that I don't play for your team."
"Well, if I had to pick a guy to get it on with..."
The laughter resonating from the center of Richie's mind stole him back from the memory. Elvis, or Richie's imagined presence of him, still had the loudest laugh on the vestiges of planet Earth. There wasn't much left for people to laugh at these days, but Richie, Buddy, and Elvis had always found some way to catch a grin. Where in the hell was Buddy, anyway?
Buddy said to stay but you left camp, Elvis reminded him, Shoulda' listened, Richie. Buddy was right.
"Do you want to hear the story, or not?" Richie asked with a sudden sharpness in his voice.
Silence from his dead friend. He took that as affirmation, and began to talk about something that happened before they’d found themselves hiding from the day like vampires in some cheesy book.
<><><>
Miami, FL
November 3, 2015
2:15 PM 95*
"I'm pretty sure that winter is never coming," Buddy said from the lawn chair to Richie's left.
"It's still hot," Elvis confirmed from the other chair as he fanned himself with a comic book that he'd been paging through, “It’s gotta cool off sometime, right?”
Richie said nothing, just kept his head leaned back and his eyes closed. His smirk was the usual cocky one held by most seventeen-year-old boys. If either of his friends were paying attention, they’d have known that he could hear them and was purposely ignoring their complaints. It was true that the warmth was an unseasonably intense wonder this late in the year and that the sun felt more concentrated than it had in the middle of summer, but it was better than being cold.
They were wearing trunks and flip-flops long after the garments should've been shoved into a closet and replaced by jeans and close-toed shoes. That, in itself, was a victory over the less loveable of seasons. Richie had always abhorred being chilly and if his parents would've allowed him to move even further south to stay warm all year, he would've taken them up on it. He would have had to find a way to bring Buddy and Elvis along, probably Benny too, but he was sure that such obstacles could have been surmounted.
"Getting a nice tan, are you, Richie?" Buddy asked with a soft punch to the arm, "The only guy I know who could smile in a frigging oven."
"I am looking very olive-skinned, aren't I?" Richie responded without changing his posture.
"You look like one of those old-school Romans. What do you think, Elvis?"
"I think he's gonna turn lobster," Elvis replied with a hard fought smile. He shifted in his seat to grab a soft drink out of the cooler they'd brought outside.
"Not me," Richie proclaimed, "I was born to live in the sun."
"Shit," Buddy said, his tone turning serious.
Richie finally opened his eyes. If Buddy was going to quit the jibing, then there must be something significant on his radar. He saw that Elvis was looking toward the direction in which their friend had thrown the curse word. He grinned as he located the source of Buddy’s duress.
"Something to be said for summer sticking around," Richie expressed as he stared at the sight before them.
The girl was much older than them, probably in her early twenties, and wore the same uniform that most of the Miami born Latinas donned when the sun was high in the sky. Tiny jean shorts, low slung on the waist, and a white bikini top were her only coverings. The tan skin was so tan that it made Richie's own pigment look like an albino coat in comparison. Her body was perfect, leading from painted toes to the luxuriant dark hair that swished back and forth as she walked.
The three boys gawked at her mercilessly, Elvis and Richie feeling truly fortunate to be wearing sunglasses, and therefore looking with complete discretion. Buddy, ever the conspicuous one with his clear-lensed, coke-bottle specs, didn't try to hide his admiration. It wouldn't have mattered if he had.
"Alejandra something?" Buddy asked in a low voice.
"Quevas," Richie added for him.
"Yeah," Elvis said, his mouth forming its charmingly dopey smile.
She waved to them, but didn’t stop to talk. The girl had lived on the same street as Elvis and his mother for the better part of a decade, and had grown used to the boys' stares as she'd grown into her body. All of them waved, Buddy being the most enthusiastic one of the group. He couldn't hide his interest if he'd tried, so he chose not to try.
"Why don't you go talk to her?" Richie asked his obviously enamored friend.
"Why don't you?" Buddy retorted, still holding the grin he'd given to Alejandra.
"I think I will," Richie answered his challenge, standing up from the lawn chair, the sound of wet skin coming away from a sticky surface barely registering.
"Right," Buddy said, "You're going to talk to her?"
Elvis watched in shock as Richie started toward the sight they'd been taking in at a near jog. He was trying to catch up to her, but having a hard time with the exertion in such heat. Buddy shook his head and turned to Elvis.
"You know he's about to get us into some shit, don't you?"
"What do you mean, Buddy?" Elvis asked, confused by the notion.
"She's got a boyfriend."
"So."
Buddy pointed to a Chevy that was parked half a block from where they sat. It was the boyfriend's car and if the guy was in it when Richie caught up to Alejandra, he'd be able to see the funny little white guy hitting on his girl.
Elvis' eyes widened and he nearly jumped out of his chair. Buddy grabbed his forearm, smiling up at him and squinting against the brightness of the day. Elvis was alarmed and badly wanted to warn their friend before he did something stupid.
"We'll go. You know we will, but let's just watch for a minute. This is gonna be good."
<><><>
Alejandra turned to Richie's call with an arched eyebrow. She looked quizzical and beautiful to the younger man and once he caught up to her, his words wouldn't come for a few hesitant seconds. His plan was easy to follow, however, so Richie was able to quickly regain the composure he’d misplaced. Still, it was nerve racking for him to speak with such a lovely woman.
"I'm not trying to hit on you or hold you up. I just want to have a little fun at my friends' expense, if you don't mind," he explained, completing his delivery with a beaming smile that was scant years away from the damage of a furious sun's rays.
She smiled back, was forced into the expression by the quality of Richie's innocent grin. The girl considered him from the depths of her aviator sunglasses for a short time, before nodding. When she spoke to him it was with slightly accented words that sounded, to Richie, like a kind of music. The words themselves weren't necessarily gentle, but the tone was enough to make up for what the verbiage lacked.
"Okay, but don't turn into a little creep about it. My man's not far away, you know?"
Richie looked around, noticing her boyfriend's car for the first time. He couldn’t recall the guy's name, but his reputation didn't require one.
He thought quickly, deciding on whether to continue this little joke or run back to the safety of Elvis' front yard. His solution to the problem was uncomplicated and obvious. He'd already started the thing, so finishing it was the best direction in which to proceed. Besides, the looks on his friends' faces would be enough to counter any beating he might receive.
"Nothing creepy, I promise," Richie said with his open palms raised to chest level, "Just normal stuff. We talk for a minute. You laugh like you actually think something I say is worth laughing at. We hug and I walk away smiling. The smile would be faked, but a hug from you might actually paste it to my face for a couple of years."
She laughed, abruptly, and he knew that it was genuine. Richie loved the sound of it ev
en more than he'd loved the accent of her speech.
He couldn't help staring at her from behind the lenses of his cheap sunglasses, the thought of drawing the lines of her face engulfing his mind. She would be beautiful forever, long after the struggles of her life took away the beauty that she currently possessed and replaced it with the lines of age, and Richie could not wait to put ink to paper.
It would be better if he could see her while he drew, but his mind would hold enough of her image to suffice. Alejandra's eyebrows peeked out from behind her own shades as if to ask what was next.
"That's the spirit. Now we hug and I run like hell," Richie said as the driver's side door of her boyfriend's Chevrolet swung open within his field of vision.
"Is that Jaimie getting out of his car?" Alejandra asked with a snicker as she leaned forward to embrace Richie.
"Yes it is. He doesn't look very happy, either."
Richie found himself quietly laughing with her as they hugged for a moment too long. The feeling of her body against his was one that he would always look back on, fondly. It wasn't the seventeen-year-old mentality that made it memorable. Richie just adored beauty in all of its incarnations and Alejandra was a prime example of that splendor. Her laugh was enough to make the entire situation he'd plunged himself into well past worth it. When their hug was over, Jaimie was within ten feet of them and looked ready to fight.
"The fuck are you doing?" the well-muscled man asked as his chest bumped hard against Richie's.
"Nothing, man. Just being friendly," he answered when his reverse stumbling act was over, adding the smile that had saved him from many physical altercations during his short career as a teenager.
The smile said, “Hey, we're all friends here. Let's just get along and enjoy the day without beating anyone up. What do you say?”
Jaimie, who seemed immune to even the most advanced of charming expressions, had chosen not to listen to the message. His fists were balled and ready in front of him as he advanced on Richie's position.
Richie’s “Let’s Be Friends” smile fell back to his usual grin, the one that helped him to get into trouble instead of the other way around. Richie's mouth opened to harass the guy some more, readying itself to give a little bit before the receiving started, but he was interrupted by Buddy's shouting voice.
<><><>
Valdez, AK
September 2, 2021
1:16 AM 74*
Richie coughed in the midst of his laughter. Amanda hadn't moved in quite some time, though he could still hear her breathing. He decided to take a break for a few minutes, as her weight was beginning to wear him down. She wasn't a heavy woman, by any means, but his strength was ebbing. He was becoming more familiar with the lack of food and rest that all of the inhabitants of their once great planet knew so well.
Richie stepped to the side of the road, knelt down as carefully as he could, and set Amanda onto the ground. He knew it couldn't have been very comfortable laying there, but if she didn't like the place she'd been put then she could just wake up and move. That would serve her right.
He sat without anything to lean on and soon gave in to his body’s constant screeching for rest. Richie laid back, playing the scene of that day. It was from a time when the world was still alive, and the brief respite from the reality he was facing couldn’t be all bad.
He snorted, again, remembering that Alejandra had smiled at him as her man walked toward them with violence on his mind, but didn't try to stop Jaimie from expressing that hostility. Richie, young and cocky in his ways, had shrugged lightheartedly and waited for the bruising that would soon come.
What happened then, Richie? Elvis asked from his grave in DeBolt, Alberta.
"Buddy came running up with you in tow. Don't you remember, little brother?"
Nope. I can't remember a thing about it.
"Buddy bellowed at the guy, calling him all sorts of names and ranking his mother out. It surprised me to death."
Buddy was crazy!
"Yeah, but he was fast, too. That guy started chasing him at a dead run, but Buddy stayed ahead without even trying. All you had to do was wait for Jaimie to come by and stick out your foot. He ate enough asphalt to feed him for a month and gave us all time to get out of there."
It was pretty funny. I remember now.
Richie kept beaming for a moment more. It was pleasant to smile, whether to himself or in the company of a dead man. He pushed the thought away, suddenly uneasy, and sat up to check on Amanda.
He didn't know what was wrong with her, or even how she'd been knocked unconscious, but his friend was still alive and that was plenty of reason for him to keep carrying her until they found camp again.
You remember how to get there? Elvis asked him.
"Yeah. I think I do."
He focused his eye on the road ahead of them. He had to check the dust for his footprints to make sure that he was looking in the right direction. There weren't any signs to follow, just yet, so Richie would have to take care to keep his bearings. He used one fingertip to draw an arrow in the dirt, just in case. It would be easy to get lost if he didn't keep his eye on their direction of travel.
Ha! Keeping your eye on it should be easy! Benny shouted from the depths of Richie's mind.
"Oh good. You're here too," Richie said to the new voice, a grimace taking his features.
Only sometimes, Elvis answered for him.
"Man," Richie breathed as his right hand reached for the pocket watch that wasn't around his neck anymore, "This is not good."
His fingertips touched skin that hadn't been free of the time piece in a long while. Richie couldn’t exactly remember what had happened to his talisman. The only sure thing was that he didn’t have it anymore. The ticker would likely silence the voices and keep him anchored in his tangible existence, but the option wasn’t a present one. Richie would have to suck things up and soldier through his mind's tricks, or embrace them, until Amanda woke.
In an instant of inspiration, Richie looked at her hair. The tresses were still fairly short, like his own, though none of them had been able to cut their hair recently. It was enough for Richie to know that he was still in the real world, though, not poking around the dream with his dead friends.
He observed the rise and fall of Amanda's chest, seeing that she hadn't joined them in the afterlife. Richie let out a sigh of relief. He was aware that the danger hadn't passed, but was also relieved that it hadn't already taken her away from them.
Where's Buddy?
"At camp, hopefully," Richie answered.
What if he came looking for you?
That was a new thought, one that had occurred in the first week of their being held prisoner, but hadn't come up in the last few days. Buddy wouldn't have stood a chance at finding them at the lair in which they'd been held, but he might now that Richie was on the road again.
He nodded, not seeing his dead friend on the side of the road, but knowing that Elvis was in his mind. It was a good point. They would have to be on the lookout for Buddy and whoever he might've gotten to come with him.
"The night is real," Richie whispered as he sat up, not really needing the words to keep him grounded, but feeling their comfort, anyway.
He struggled to pull Amanda's limp form from the dirt and back onto his shoulders. He tried the fireman's carry, draping her across his upper back to distribute the burden, and found it a bit more comfortable. Richie took a few experimental steps and chose to keep the form for at least a few miles.
"You guys ready?" Richie asked all of his companions.
Too many voices answered.
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The Dark Roads Page 23