Lauren took the twisting curves of the Ortega too fast in her silver convertible. A lot of people wrecked along this road. Some people dropped busted safes and other sundry evidence of crime, petty and grand, over the steep embankments into the granite canyons of the Santa Anas.
People dumped bodies here.
But the day was sunny and dry and racing in the heat was fun. Ethan had mounted grippy tires and welded a steel cage into the Miata for his mother shortly after Blue Oasis had moved their headquarters to the Southwest. He knew her penchant for risk-taking too well. So well that he'd practically run a one-man intervention last year to get her into therapy with Bethany Gallegos, who'd assessed her attraction to unnecessary danger as an unhealthy channeling of anxiety.
Doctor Gallegos was the good kind of therapist, the kind who offered hope but gave you the bad news straight up. She and Lauren agreed that the impulse-control project was not going too well so far.
She made it to the valley in record time this afternoon, and all in one piece. Just past the Mexican take-out place she used as a landmark, she swung the car left up the unmarked gravel road that cut through fallow, dusty fields to stop at the converted aircraft hangar her son called home.
No one answered at the apartment entrance on the side of the steel building. Walking around to the big open sliding doors in front, she found Ethan flat on his back on a creeper working under what she understood to be a 1951 Schuman coupe. Emil Schuman, her son had explained, had been a genius of sorts--one of those eccentric postwar inventor-slash-entrepreneurs, a tinkerer who'd fled the basin and moved out here with a scheme to beat Studebaker and GM at their own game. Available options on your custom-built Schuman had included a bar in the console, alligator seats, and a built-in 45 rpm phonograph.
Yet another visionary.
Ethan never said what had become of Schuman the man. But this hangar had been one of his warehouses and the kid had bought the place complete with a few hundred crates of not-so-labeled parts. So far he'd assembled two cars and was working on a third.
Lauren looked down through a hoodless and empty engine compartment at Ethan's upturned, grease-smudged face. "You going to try to fit a battery pack in here, or you just gonna Fred Flintstone it downhill?"
"Schuman didn't build engines. He bought Y-blocks from Ford. I'll probably just drop in an LS."
She held up her hand. "Whoa, there. I noticed your engine was missing. That's the sum total of my automotive acumen."
Ethan chuckled and rolled out from under the car, grabbed a towel that hung over one fender, and wiped grease from his forehead. He wore only torn jeans and steel-toed boots and his bare skin was caked with what looked like half an inch of mingled sweat and oil and wind-blown dust from the barren land outside. "So, what's up?"
"Drive me up to San Bernardino? I'm taking the 3:45 out to New Derby. The vert's got that weird wobble going on again, and I thought maybe you could take a look at it while I'm gone."
"Sure thing. I told you, though, it's the short nose crank. It's a problem in the older MX-5s. What did you pay that garage in Beaumont for last month, anyway?"
"Lord only knows. Lew Bradley recommended the place. He swears they're the best."
"That should have been your first clue, right there. Buy a new one. You can sure afford it."
"And who would love my baby? She'd go straight to the junkyard."
"You need something with modern safety features. Don't be so sentimental. It's a machine."
"Hush. She can hear you. Gimme." Lauren took the damp towel from her son and wiped off the grime he'd missed on his chin, and his throat. She rubbed briskly at his bare brown shoulders and chest. He covered her hand with his to stop her.
"That's enough. I'm not a kid, Mom," he said with a quizzical look.
Ethan had his mother's strawberry hair and upturned, Icelandic gray eyes--now pale blue, now mist green depending on the light. He was tall and slim and strong and unconscious of his gifts, both physical and mental, which made him all the more attractive to her.
"Yeah. Sorry."
What the hell am I doing?
It was becoming an old question, one that came up regularly in therapy. Dr. Gallegos regarded Lauren's working through her sexual feelings for her son as the key to resolving her anxiety.
That project wasn't going well, either. After forty-five minutes of video chat with the doctor, she usually spent an hour masturbating in the bath. It was the most relief she got from the whole exercise.
"Coffee?"
"Hmm? Oh, absolutely." To get to the apartment that Ethan had built into one back corner of the hangar, they wended their way past his rotating assortment of classic cars and motorcycles. He always had six or seven in the place at a time, with only a couple of them running. Most were in various stages of disassembly and restoration, their parts strewn across the concrete floor.
"What are you holding?" he asked, setting a Moka pot on the stainless steel stovetop and adjusting the flame.
"What do you--Oh, God." Lauren fished in her purse and tossed him a small stoppered bottle with two joints in it. "Wait, it's legal now. Isn't it?"
"It is, here. Where you're going, not so much. TSA don't usually care, but catch the wrong inspector on a bad day..." He shrugged. "Dad's been calling, looking for you."
"I muted his number. Then I ran over to Redlands to get in a workout before I head out. Anger management."
"It's great that you're keeping up the kickboxing."
"You kidding? My ass would be down to my knees if I let up. Thanks for turning me on to it. Kid, at this point I damn near owe you my life."
"Drama-mama. You don't need to drop by the house, before the airport?"
"That place is 10,000 square feet on two gorgeous mountainside acres of not big enough for your father and me to share." She studied her hands. "I need a manicure. And a pedicure. Jesus, look at me: I'm forty-five, and I'm flying cross-country with my purse and the clothes on my back and what's in my purse, all to play footsie with a snake oil salesman who dates movie stars."
"Breathe. Here. Cup's hot."
"Thanks." She sipped her coffee. "That's good. Ethan, we've all worked our asses off to get where we are. But your father acts like someone gave me the cheat codes."
"Because you're beautiful."
"Ethan--"