Note: This is my story, I wrote it, stealing is lame. If you don't like it, don't read it. Feel free to e-mail me with any mistakes you find. I will feel free to delete it and call you an asshole, out loud. Hope you enjoy the ending (no peeking!), reading it twice is also fun.
Now the Disclaimer: This has been re-submitted with tweaks, all feedback and votes may have been valid at the time of their posting. This story is stupid long, the whole story at once -- three parts. I apologize to anyone named Jennifer and Allison in advance, because I know the Tara's, Laura's, and Lisa's would never forgive me.
Do not be stupid with this information
This is not a true story.
Do Not Try Most Of This Stuff At Home.
!! Period!!
Shout out to all the motor heads and to Constitutional free speech.
Short Stories, Stereotypes, and Superlatives:
*** Superlatives
It was funny, it was not meant to be, but it was. It was not necessarily the gesture that made it comedic, and not necessarily the execution of the maneuver that caused them all to giggle lewdly. No, it was just a funny thing to do, if you did it. The ends justified Wyatt's means, though Guinevere couldn't help but
think
of the similarity to Burt Reynolds ditching a cop and smiling at the camera.
Why wouldn't she? Guinevere's father actually was a racecar driver, nothing famous mind you, just a great driver on a hometown dirt track. It was his hobby, and her best memories were of her family together on race day.
Her mother was always worried at the start, and relieved at the finish, with something entirely different in between. "Oh just be careful, honey," was what her mother would always say to her father once his helmet was on, following the phrase with a kiss to the clean and used surface.
"Don't worry, lover," he would always say to her mother, he only said 'lover' on race day, calling her nothing else for the duration. "It'll be fine. I'm the best, right sweetheart?" He always replied to his wife, easing her grief, by bringing their young child into the conversation. They always went out as a family, even as spectators, it was their hobby as well.
"Right!" That was always Guinevere's reply to her father. She looked exactly like both parents with their attributes spaced evenly; her mother's strawberry kissed light brown hair, her father's brown, green spotted eyes. The exception was her freckles, freckles neither parent had. Freckles she did, in abundance, with extra.
She would have her empty one of the pair of her hands up, thumb extended, and her father had an 'ok' sign made with his, in return to her thumb up. To her, no man bested her daddy, even if her father lost a race early on. She knew the best driver did not always win, even at that age. It was always the same for the Hodges Family Performance team, at the start of every race.
Her father, as best he could, tried to instill in her his passion for internal combustion, racing, and engineering, in small intervals, in his spare time. From top to bottom, in and out he assembled, fabricated, and combined pieces to make the whole as one (ha). This offered him a chance to relax and spend quality time with his daughter after a full work week.
Always she had a toy car in one hand, even while she watched him work, slowly rolling herself on a wheeled dolly or stool, or holding a 'drop' light to aid him. Guinevere wanted to know each part he was wrenching, always asking why with how, the answers often confusing to her young mind. She was bright, but as he went into full detail he would see her get confused. Instead of droning on, he would just smile at her and, steer the conversation back to his little girl.
This is how they spent all of their time together. Whenever life allowed.
"I know she's a girl, honey," her father was saying in her memory, "but it's what she likes, and I just want her to be happy." She could always remember her father shrugging off her mother's warnings, Guinevere not understanding what the connotations of the conversation were until later in her life.
"Guinny only loves them because you do, dear." Her mother, even back then, was a perceptive woman. "I'll let you take her to the garage to watch you work and help, if that's what she wants. But you have to promise she stays sort of clean and uninjured, ok? I don't want to see any oil on anything, and I mean it," her mother was not a mean woman, though she was looking stern. She knew children would be children, especially her own. Guinevere's mother also knew her husband was right about her happiness.
"There's an 'and' dear, so slow down..." Guinevere had been pulling her father's hand towards the door with one of her own, a matchbox car clasp in her other - as always - when her mother stopped them.
"...
And
, you swear you won't let her go racing." Her mother knew she would have problems with her child when she got her license, if not before then, dreading horrors to come while remembering her own early driving days full of the same.
"I swear, my beautiful wife," Guinevere's father said to his beautiful wife, "that she will not lose any toys out there in the shop." He had his fingers crossed, in the air, for all to see, with a broad smile on his face as the pair headed out to wrench on the car.
His garage was very organized, spotless really, yet his daughter always came back with a smeared black nose where her father grabbed it. Despite unsuccessful attempts at being offered dolls, she instantly selected wings and costumes as daily outfits during her early days. Guinevere was the conundrum of a tom-boy, and a joy to her parents's life.
So, why not Burt Reynolds? This guy moved with the same style of cockiness and ownership, though this man's hair looked just like Steve McQueen's. Just like it; same style, though longer and mostly untrimmed. Soft, dirty blonde was blowing around on his head in the windy, spotlessly clean, black interior of the car. All possible windows were open, with the sunroof ajar and mimicking a spoiler.
This guy also had that same 'dreamy' look on his face that Lightning did, with different attributes; even, short stubble grown across his face and neck. The sunglasses on top of head were surfaced in silver mirror. There were thin strips of cloth netted into the window openings.
He was piloting his shabbily painted road machine in the passing lane parallel to the cute foreign job (you know the one) with the four bikini clad women in it, driving down the long, straight, flat, near speed-trap-less two lane roadway - no other cars in sight. They could all feel the vibration of their tiny, brightly colored, stock foreign car out of tempo with the beat from their own far too loud stereo. It was his vehicle making their blaring Top 40 selection more irrelevant and ten times as unintelligible.
"What a
loooo
-ser." It was Jennifer, the infamous L-shaped hand on her forehead.
Guinevere, instead of teasing, was noting the five-point-harness being stretched by his shirtless chest, not the other way around, and his soft light body hair. He was wearing the black leather seat all wrong though, large in build but just above average in height. He was making himself fit into the seat by force, tightly, as the constrains of the car's size would barely allow.
Guinevere also spied the multitude of speakers visible on the back deck panel, behind the back seat, underneath of the rear window. There were gauges on and in the dash in front of him. There was a small square screen molded into the dash, in a car that shouldn't have one, pixels and instrument arms moving in a dance.
In his left hand, hanging in front of the steering wheel and over the smooth dash, was definitely not a burning cigarette. His left wrist was on the steering wheel. His right arm was disappearing, mid bicep, below the horizon of the passenger's side exterior metal, resting on somewhere in the area of the center console, and leaning on the right arm. There were unique tattoos and he was almost too big for the mid-sized car, head almost touching the grey headliner; some of his shaggier hair occasionally flicking out of the open sunroof, geniously (you read it) staying out of his eyes via the sunglasses.
"Yeah, that is stupid. Just dumb, how does he drive that piece of crap?" Melissa was agreeing with Jennifer - who was of the attitude to treat her seat like some sort of couch. All the while, Guinevere was trying to figure out how a thing could be so low and not scrape the ground and tear itself apart.
"How did he do that?" She was thinking to herself. It hovered valiantly without efforts, always the same height from the Earth, despite the dirty tricks of wheelbase and the lands surface. The movements seemed abrupt, spastic, totally at random.
"Or potholes... ugh, look at him, fucking stoners..." Melissa was shaking her head now in mock disgust, still laughing. "You should have let me call the cops," she was giving Guinevere a 'death to you' gaze that was totally ignored in return, her attention elsewhere. Allison honked the horn to no response, but left the windows up; the hums, vibrations, and sounds of his car still droning through and trying to steal the thought processes of the untrained.
Occasionally, out of time with its unwavering vertical travel, Guinevere would watch the car bounce, and go even lower. It took her a few moments to realize it was not his car, but the car
she
was in, that was moving. His vehicle had not moved from level the entire time, only the wheels and tires. One machine was following an altogether different path than the other, seeming in more ways than one.
Guinevere Hodges was not quite the only one of the four college girls aboard to swoon in her cloth seat at his silent and most definitely cheesy 'what's up, pretty ladies in a car, how