fatherâs car, and he was driving his motherâs car. We had driven to the Wabasha Caves down by the river one night and had drunk some beer, me and Scottie and Bobby Dunston and six or seven others. When we were driving home, Scottie took a hard right turn off Fairview onto Marshall. An old man dressed all in black was crossing the street in front of us. Scottie didnât see him until he hit him. Guy flew over his hood, over his car. I was driving behind Scottie. I almost hit the man myself. We stopped. Someone, Bobby, I think, ran to one of the housesââI gestured toward the homes on the far side of the streetââand called the police.
âThis was before Mothers Against Drunk Driving, before driving while intoxicated was considered such a horrendous crime. This was before the term âdesignated driverâ even entered our collective vocabulary. So when they came to investigate, the cops didnât bother asking Scottie to blow into a PBT to see if his breath could change the color of the crystals. There was no blood test. Instead, they asked him to touch his nose and walk in a straight line, and Scottie did. Then they measured his skid marks and decided that he hadnât been speeding. The next day an investigator from the county attorneyâs office questioned me because I had been driving the other car, because I had seen everything. He asked if Scottie had been drinking. I said no. I said the other kids had been drinking but Scottie and I hadnât because our parents would have killed us if they caught us drinking and driving. That was good enough for the investigator. They let Scottie go. No charges were ever filed.â
âYou lied,â Karen said.
âYes, I did.â
âTo protect Scottie.â
âTo protect myself. My father was sitting there when the investigator questioned me. If I had said Scottie was drinking, I would have had to admit that I had been drinking, too, and I was far too frightened of my father to do it. It was an act of cowardice thatâs haunted me on and off ever since. But at the time, Scottie thanked me profusely. So did his mother. Now heâs kidnapped a young girl that I love from her mother and father that I love and has demanded one million dollars of my money for her safe return.â
âThatâs why youâre so angry?â
âThatâs it.â
âI understand,â she said. I doubted that she did.
I checked the traffic, pulled onto Marshall, and hung a right at the next intersection. A couple of turns later I was parked in front of the house where Scottie Thomforde had once lived.
âI forgive you, McKenzie,â Karen said.
âForgive me? For what?â
âFor being rude to my friends, Mr. Cousin and Roger. For being rude to me.â
That slowed me down. There was no question, I had been rude, even insulting. Still, I figured I had just cause. Besides, who asked her?
âGee, thanks a lot,â I said.
âI forgive you for being sarcastic, too.â
Â
We never reached the entrance. Tommy Thomforde intercepted us before we were halfway up the walk, bursting through the front door, crossing his arms over his chest, and demanding to know, âWhat did Scottie do now?â
âGood evening, Mr. Thomforde,â Karen said.
They had recognized each other by the light of the streetlamps.
âYou wouldnât be here if Scottie wasnât in trouble,â Tommy insisted.
âWhat?â I said. âNo polite greeting? No chitchat?â
Tommy glared over Karenâs shoulder. His expression quickly changed to surprise and then to genuine pleasure.
âMcKenzie?â he said. âRushmore McKenzie? It is you. How are you, man?â
Tommy brushed past Karen, took my hand, and we hugged, our hands clasped between us so onlookers wouldnât think we were gay. I could feel hard muscles through his shirt. âMan, itâs been years. How you
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