This story is a standalone for "Sharing is Caring." I wasn't sure how this one was going to go and I wasn't entirely happy with what I originally started. A road trip and a bored waitress put me on the right path, I think. Unlike most of my work, there is graphic sex in this storyline. Thanks to blackrandi, sbrooks103x, Bebop03 and stev2244 for the beta reads and editing. This would be unreadable without them. There are others who prefer not to be named; you know who you are and you know you are appreciated.
The Last Ride of Iceman and Gypsy Jane
Jenny was already sitting on the edge of the bed staring down at me when I woke up. As soon as I saw her expression, I knew what she was thinking about.
I blinked the sleep out of my eyes. "This is crazy, Jenny. This doesn't have to happen."
She smiled a bit sadly, then leaned over and gave me a soft kiss. "This isn't about 'having to' do anything, Terry. This is about promises. Promises you made to me and promises I made. Promises I need and want to keep."
I sat up and shook my head. "Still..."
She cut me off. "Terry Eisner. This is important to me. It's a small gift I want to give in return for being given the most wonderful thing I could have ever imagined. This is going to happen."
From the set of her jaw I knew she meant it and would never back down. I knew it from near forty years of marriage. I swung my legs out and felt the plush carpet under my feet. I'd put in that carpet: I'd built this whole house, this whole home, just for Jenny. Leaving it, leaving her, just to go to work had always been hard. Leaving it today seemed almost impossible, unbearable. She slid off the bed, eyeing me cautiously.
"I'm sorry, Terry, but you knew this was coming; I told you from the beginning that I made those promises, and you swore you would be okay with this."
I looked over at the wingback chair in the corner of the room, a chair she'd never even let a cat sit in. My jeans, black T-shirt and boots sat neatly piled in it where she'd set them. She left to fix breakfast while I showered and changed.
I glanced in the mirror; a grey bearded hard-case stared coldly back at me. Forty years of construction, tossing bags of cement and carrying cinderblocks, had left me with a catalog of aches and pains, but it had also left me lean and hard. I'd usually had to do paperwork in the office every day. The owner of a company has to do that, but I'd made a point of getting out and working with the crews every day. It cut down on bullshit and I could tell would-be clients that I personally helped build everything we ever put up.
Jenny had coffee, hash browns, eggs, bacon and sausage on the table for me in the kitchen. We ate slowly, wordlessly, while she watched me intently.
When I was unable to put it off any longer, I finished eating and we pushed away from the table. She took my hand and walked me to the front door, stopping to kiss me for the last time.
"I don't want this to hurt us, Jenny. I don't want to ruin this."
She looked up at me and smiled, a lopsided smile, but a real one. "This won't hurt us, Terry. It can't. Not at all." She gently pulled my left hand up to her chest and started to slide my wedding band off. I tried to curl my fingers to stop her but she shook her head and straightened them out.
She let go just long enough to put the ring on her thumb. "It will be right here for you."
I just stared at her wordlessly.
"It will be, Terry, I swear."
She reached up on the coat rack next to the door and pulled down my vest, a vest I hadn't worn in forty years, and handed it to me. "Whatever happens between Iceman and Gypsy isn't a problem for us, Terry. It never was and it never will be."
She gave me a long hard kiss, then a soft gentle one. "The first one's for you Terry. You give that second one to Jane and you tell her I love her."
*****
My bike was out on the driveway, a 1977 Harley Lowrider, paniers already packed and the whole thing polished to a mirror finish. She'd done that herself. Months ago, when this whole insanity started, she'd pulled my bike out of storage and had it restored to top condition. The grinning fanged horror that stared at me from the tank had been faded almost to oblivion. She'd had it carefully touched up. Everything had been re-chromed. She'd run like a dream, and I'd taken her on longer and longer rides; Jenny had gone along on every one, clinging dreamily to me for hours on end. It would have been wonderful except for the looming shadow of the future.
The only change Jenny had made had been to have them add a low bitch bar in the back, one she certainly didn't need. She was right to do it, but the unspoken reason for it was enough to turn me grim and sober for weeks.
I slid on my vest on and the weight of it was far more than the leather and cloth of it.
My bike started on the first kick, just like she always had. Eager to get on the way, hungry to go where I had no wish to go. Slate grey skies hung over me as I headed along the ridge road, miles passing under me with that unreal sense of floating to nowhere.
It took nearly two hours to reach the odd little house on the outskirts of the city. A small yard jammed with a mass of bushes and flowers, all starting to look weedy and slightly brown in the late summer heat.
As I rolled up I could see her standing by the gate, hipshot. A vision of skintight jeans, a tiny vest; her brilliantly colored scarf tied on her head. She was holding an elaborately embroidered bag and an open bottle of whiskey.
She hadn't changed a bit.
*****
*****
She'd stood just that way at Sturgis, over forty years ago. Jeans so tight they laced up the sides, just like her vest, leaving a two inch wide strip of bare tanned skin showing all the way up from the ankle. My first impression was all full wine-dark lips and a mane of wild hair kept barely in check by a blazing bright yellow and crimson scarf, ends trailing down over her shoulder. One look in her kohl-rimmed eyes told me all I needed to know.
That woman was the Devil herself.
She watched me unabashedly, drinking me in as she took a long slow sip from her whiskey bottle. I couldn't help glancing back as I passed her and turned a corner. She tracked me, and even at that distance I could see the hungry smile on her face.
I tried to put her out of my mind. I'd come to Sturgis to do a job, cut a deal for the club. We were moving hash cross-country for a bigger club, a cash deal. We made most of our cash running China White and Black Tar, but the hash deal had been too good, too easy to pass up. They'd missed two meets, though, and I needed assurances we were still in business. When the Wandering Sons sent me, they meant business. The "Nomad" rocker under my patch was a hint; I wasn't assigned to a territory and I might be an enforcer. The eight crimson skulls embroidered on my vest were a clear fucking warning.
The meeting went well, though; they'd had five guys rolled up in a police raid and were being cautious.
Two days later, that Devil stalked up to me, staring straight into my eyes all the way up the block.
"Give a girl a ride?"
I put my beer down. "Not leaving for a couple days."
Her teeth bared in a too-wide smile. "Wasn't talking about that kinda ride."
"Who do I have to kill?"
Her eyes glittered. "Nobody. The asshole's in the hospital. He got stabbed."
"They must not've done it right or he'd be on a slab."