Author's Note:
See! I promised the next [longer] chapter soon on the heels of CH1. Here it is! If you haven't read it already, you might want to do that first, so this one makes sense. It's short, I promise!
And now, on with the story. Enjoy!
Text copyright Β© 2016 Eris Adderly (AKA DeathandTaxes)
Part II: Silver Tongue
2015
Taylor sat in her ancient, army green Jeep, thumbing through her emails on her phone, baking in the dry oven of June near the Texas-New Mexico border. The most recent one was from her mother, asking for help with moving in a couple of weeks. Again. What else was new?
She shifted on the seat and made a little noise over having to wear jeans and socks
and
tennis shoes in this weather. Summer called for shorts, but that would be a dumb move today.
A dull, metallic
pung pung pung
made her glance up. Ian was lumping down the stairs from his apartment, pocketing his keys as he went, and shouldering a backpack. Taylor made a face as he hopped into the Jeep.
"Would it kill you to put on pants for one day?"
"It's hot," he said, slinging the backpack into the bed behind them. The Jeep was bare bones. A '53. Doors and a roof were a nice wish. At least Ian had the good sense to bring some bungee cords to tie up their packs, which he did before climbing into the passenger seat.
"You're gonna regret it," she warned, firing up the flathead and punching it into first.
"Yeah, yeah, yeah." He brushed off her nagging about his cargo shorts and wrestled with the stubborn lap belt instead. "Let's get on with it, Batgirl. I got shit to do later."
Taylor rolled her eyes at the newest nickname this project had earned her. Documenting bat behavior for her bio sciences master's had brought the cheesy jokes out of her friends like a good rain brought out earthworms.
Her nitpicking aside, at least she could count on Ian to show up when he said he would. There was something to be said for that. He might be the most helpful guy she knew. A body had to do no more than whisper about having trouble getting something done, and he'd come leaping out of the woodwork, sleeves rolled up and demanding to be pointed in the direction of maximum assistance. Sometimes this came as a blessing, but other times a person who'd accepted Ian's help would find themselves ready for him to go be uber-efficient somewhere else.
But what good are friends,
Taylor thought,
if they don't make you at least a little crazy half the time, right?
Some navigation out of the city limits later, they found themselves growling north on Highway 54 at about sixty miles per hourβabout as fast as old Walt would do, and still behave himself.
Hot desert air flapped loose bits of her dark, coppery hair in every direction and Ian tapped at his thighs to some beat only he could hear.
"We could have taken my car," he hollered over the road noise.
"No, we could not."
"It has a stereo, though. And AC. And doors." She saw him glance down at the gray blur of the highway streaking by under the tires.
"Yeah, I'll bet it does. But it can't go where
we're
going." Taylor smirked. "I could sing some songs for you, if you want."
"No, thank you."
They both laughed. Wise men avoided her singing.
"I was gonna get you a bottle of your poison," he said, "but I ran out of time."
Taylor pulled her ever-present bottle of purple Gatorade out from where she'd wedged it between the seat and the side panel of the Jeep.
"That's cute you thought I didn't already have one," she said, raising it in a solo toast. "Thank you, though."
Her 'poison'. She chuckled to herself as they sped over sun-bleached blacktop. Taylor had never seen Ian drink anything other than water. Between that and the miniature pharmacy of vitamins he kept in his bathroom, The Good Apothecary Killbourne was set to outlive them all.
"Hey," she said, a few miles further into New Mexico, "if you need to call or text anyone, you better do it now. There ain't jack for reception at the mine. You won't be talking to anybody until we get back. Muahahaha!"
He ignored the cornball villain laugh she tacked on, but gave his phone a cursory check anyway before tucking it back into a pocket.
"So how long do you think this'll take?"
"Umm"βTaylor tried to guesstimate in her headβ"an hour? Maybe? From the time we get there, I mean. I don't know, I've never done this before."
"Well how many cameras are there?" The entire conversation banged along at a yell.
"Three. One at the side entrance, and two near roosting areas. It shouldn't be that bad." She eyed him. "Why you in such a hurry?"
"They hired a new guy at the office, and I'm supposed to go in and start training him later."
"On a Saturday?"
"Don't get me started."
After Ian graduated, he'd taken a job at some company that made sales software. Taylor imagined a job like that to be pretty much a Monday through Friday situation, but they always had Ian working some nutty hours.
Still, he was the only one of her friends she trusted to help her out with this excursion. Chelsea was too busy and Nick was kind of a bull in a china shop. And Amy ... well, Amy didn't do dirt.
"Just tell them you can't come in," she said. "Tell them you fell down a mine shaft. Seems legit, right?" She looked over at him, waiting for a reaction.
"Heh. You said 'shaft'."
Yup. Immature. They both were. It was one of the reasons they were friends.
"You're goddam right I did."
He favored her with that lopsided grin of his and, for a few seconds, she let her mind drift.
Crushing on her best friend was one of those occasional and pointless pastimes she allowed herself, the same way people fantasize about what they would do if they won the lottery or how they would answer questions if Barbara Walters was interviewing them. The implausible scenarios were never going to play out in real life, but from time to time the mind turns them over the same way we examine an expensive watch in a store thoroughly and repeatedly, even though we never have any intention of buying.
If she'd never kissed him at that New Year's Eve party back in her freshman year, the thoughts wouldn't even exist. But the thunderclap of lust she'd felt that night had a way of echoing around in her psyche every now and then, seducing her into asking the dreaded
What If?
Oh ... don't be dumb, Taylor.
There was no
What If
. Ian and Amy had been together more than four years. They were practically an institution. Everyone expected them to move to Dallas any minute now and have six or seven hundred babies and adopt a team of golden retrievers to pull all the strollers.
Taylor maneuvered a swig of her Gatorade and wedged the bottle back alongside her seat as Walt ate up the highway under the flat bake of the sun. There were things to do and she needed to pay attention to real life, not daydreams. She'd get to be as bad as her folks if she didn't watch.
* * * *
The Jeep lurched and jigged over the rocks in what remained of the dirt road up to the mine. Taylor's grip held the wild steering wheel in check and Ian bounced and swore from the passenger seat. A lesser vehicle would have thrown up a white flag half an hour ago, but Walt survived from a time when people built things to take a beating.
"Shit, Taylor!"
An unavoidable washed-out fissure in the road made the Jeep drop down and then jut back up, clacking their teeth. The lap belts yanked back on their hips and Taylor shifted down into the climbing gears.
"Can't we just park it and walk from here?" Ian asked, white knuckling the oh-shit handle on the dash in front of him.