Savage Lover: Chapter 6
Savage Lover: A Dark Mafia Romance (Brutal Birthright Book 3)
I wasnât planning on going down to Wacker Drive. Racing is stupid, I know that. But it draws me back again and again. Itâs that scent of high octane fuel, and the way the engines snarl like a beast under the hood. A car wants to race just like a horse does.
And I want to be the one behind the wheel.
Time slows down. You can live an entire year in the space of fourteen seconds. I can see everythingâevery pebble on the pavement, every drop of moisture on the windshield. I can feel the whole operation of the engine through the vibration of the gearshift under my palm.
I crashed my Bel Air here. That was a bad night. I was in a fucking fury. In one of those states where I feel like I want to see the whole city burn down around me. I donât know why I get like that. Thereâs something wrong with me.
If I feel something painful, I want more pain, more rage, more violence.
Maybe itâs because you canât get rid of pain. All you can do is try to burn it out.
Anyway, Masonâs racing tonight and I want to see it.
Heâs got his Supra up against Vinnyâs Impreza. Itâs a friendly raceâ$2K on the line.
As the cars are lining up, I see a familiar red Trans Am pulling in under the covered road. Camille Rivera slides out of the driverâs seat. Sheâs dressed in normal clothes for onceâwell, normal compared to her usual coveralls. Sheâs talking to Masonâs ex-girlfriend.
Itâs weird. I hadnât seen Camille in years. Now sheâs come out twice in a week.
Bella Page is here, too, with Grisha Lukin. Heâs Russianâborn here, but his fatherâs an old-school oligarch with Bratva ties. My familyâs on shaky footing with the Bratva right now. The Russians havenât picked a new boss yet, after the Griffins killed the old one.
Anyway, Iâve known Grisha a long time. So we should be cool. Or at least, cool enough to keep it civil.
He gives me a curt nod when we lock eyes. I do the same. Iâm sitting on the hood of my Mustang, drinking a forty of Olde English. Itâs absolute piss, but it gives a nice buzz. Thatâs all they had at the bodega on Quincy Street.
Mason and Vinny peel off the line, racing down the covered roadway. The Impreza has more kick to start with, but the Supra catches up in the end, and Mason edges him out.
Watching them race makes me want to do it, too. I get that itch, where my head starts to feel muddled and my thoughts are all mashed up together, and I know that the one thing that will give me clarity is speeding down the road at a hundred and sixty miles an hour.
âPut me on the lineup,â I say to Carlo. Heâs running the races tonight.
âWho with?â he says.
âI donât care.â
Iâll race anybody. Itâs not about the money. Itâs the challenge.
I notice Camille is talking to Levi Cargill. She looks irritated. No surprise thereâCamille is as prickly as a hedgehog, even under the best of circumstances. But I havenât seen it turned on Levi before. Maybe Camille found out heâs been using her brother to move Molly.
Sheâd better watch it. Levi might look like a total poser, but heâs got a nasty temper. Sometimes the rich boys are the worst thugs of all. They want to prove theyâre hard-asses.
I can feel myself tensing up. My eyes are fixed on the two of them, on Levi in particular. Just waiting for him to reach in his pocket or raise a hand to her.
I donât know why I should care. Camille and I arenât even friends.
But I guess I do respect her, a little. Sheâs not vapid, like Bellaâs friends, or reeking of desperation like Bella herself. Camille is . . . real. She is who she is, and she doesnât apologize. Thereâs honesty in that.
Maybe thatâs the real reason Bella hates her. Because Bella is trying so hard to be the most beautiful, the most desirable, and the most fascinating person around, and it never really works, and she knows it. And then hereâs this other girl whoâs not trying to be any of those things. And itâs like an insult to Bella. Because Camille wonât even play the game, so how can Bella win it?
Or maybe Iâm drunk.
I donât know what the fuck goes on in Bellaâs head. All I know is that sheâs squaring up with Camille again, starting another skirmish in their endless war.
I slide off the hood of the car, ambling over so I can hear it.
âWell, itâs too bad all youâve got is that rolling trash heap,â Bella is saying, âor you could participate, too. But youâd rather just watch, anyway, wouldnât you? Thatâs what creepy losers do. They stand on the sidelines watching more interesting people living their lives.â
âYou might be surprised,â Camille says calmly.
âAbout what?â Bella says.
âHow fast that beat-up rust-bucket can go. And also, how few people would consider you interesting.â
Bella flushes. Sheâs always doing this to herself, trying to dominate Camille, and never getting what she wants out of it. Youâd think she would have given up a long time ago.
âI doubt your car could make it over the finish line in the same night as mine,â Bella says.
âOnly one way to know,â Camille replies.
Bella laughs, disbelieving.
âWhatâs the bet? Donât tell me your carâI wouldnât take that tin can if you paid me.â
âIâve got six hundred,â Camille says. She pulls the folded bills out of her pocket.
I snort. Thatâs my fucking money I paid her this afternoon. Sheâs going to blow it on a race with Bella?
Itâs completely stupid. But Iâm sort of enjoying this reckless Camille. Her chin is stubborn, and her dark eyes are fierce.
âAre we doing it or not?â Camille says.
âI want to,â Bella sneers. âIâll just feel so bad taking your whole lifeâs savings . . .â
âYeah, I bet.â
Camille stalks over to the Trans Am, climbing into the driverâs seat.
Bellaâs G-Wagon is not at all built for racing. Still, sheâs got the newest model, a 4.0-liter twin-turbo V-8. It is quick, for a six-thousand-pound tank.
On the opposite side youâve got Camilleâs Trans Am, which maybe sheâs juiced up, or maybe is held together with string. I guess weâll find out.
When they pull up to the line, Camille looks ahead down the stretch, cool as a cucumber. Maybe sheâs nervous, but she wonât show it, out of pure stubbornness. Bellaâs trying to look tough, but she doesnât pull it off as well as Camille. She blows a kiss to Grisha. He grins, amused at this whole thing.
Carlo stands between the cars, raising his arms over his head. He counts downââThree . . . two . . . ONE!â
His arms swing down, and the cars peel off the line.
Camille had the quicker reflexes. Still, the G-Wagon pulls away first. Camille has to shift gears manually, which means she has a slower start. But as she expertly moves from second to third to fourth gear, the car leaps forward in bursts, as if itâs a locomotive and sheâs shoveling in load after load of coal.
Itâs only a quarter-mile race. Less than fifteen seconds long. Maybe sixteen, with these two cars.
I can see Mason standing at the end of the line, watching to see which vehicle passes first.
Camille edges up. Her car is more than roaringâitâs bellowing. A wisp of smoke comes out from under the hood. She keeps pushing anyway.
I canât help admiring her driving. Camilleâs got balls. And she knows how to get the most out of her car.
Meanwhile, the G-Wagon wobbles unsteadily on its base. Itâs top-heavy, and Bella probably has the gas pedal floored. Camille deliberately crowds the SUV. Bella jerks the wheel too hard to correct. The wobble turns into a fishtail. Camille flies past, crossing the finish line.
They circle back around, Bella driving recklessly fast as if she can still win, Camille moving cautiously, because thereâs a steady stream of dark gray smoke coming out from the corner of her hood.
Before Bellaâs even gotten out of the car, sheâs already shrieking that Camille cheated. âThat was horseshit! You tried to run me off the road!â she yells.
âI didnât touch you,â Camille says.
â âCause you donât care if you scratch up your piece of shit car!â Bella shouts, furiously. She turns and boots the side of Camilleâs Trans Am, putting a dent in the driverâs side panel.
This is a big no-no in street racing. You do not fuck with anybodyâs car.
Camille launches herself at Bella, only held back by Patricia and Carlo, who has thrown himself between the girls.
âHey, hey, relax!â he says, stiff-arming them both in opposite directions.
âThat is fucking IT!â Camille is shouting.
âLooks the same as it did before,â Bella sneers back at her.
âHere,â Grisha stuffs a bundle of bills in Camilleâs hand. âYou won. Thereâs some extra for the car.â
Bella smirks, pleased to have her boyfriend pay for her mistakes.
Camille takes the money, but sheâs so pissed off that sheâs shaking. Sheâs mad that Bella didnât even pay her bet, let alone the damage. It looks like Camille has to silently count to ten before she can turn away from Bella, popping the hood of her car, and releasing a cloud of smoke-tinged with oil.
âFucking garbage,â Bella hisses, not specifying whether sheâs talking about Camille or her car.
Camille ignores her, focused solely on her ride.
Mason, Carlo, and I all circle around her, irresistibly drawn by our curiosity to see what went wrong. I stand next to Camille, peering over her shoulder. Itâs exactly the position we took when she was looking at my car earlier today.
âHere we are again,â I say.
She gives me an annoyed look, not seeing the humor in it.
âYikes,â Mason says. âThat doesnât look good â¦â
âCOPS!â somebody shouts.
The effect is instant. The word is like a grenade thrown into the center of the group. Everybody scatters.
Itâs not that I care so much about a ticket. It wouldnât be my first. But I donât fancy spending the rest of the night in an interrogation room, if the cops get the bright idea to try to put the screws to me while they have the chance.
Iâm about to take off, until I see Camille standing helplessly next to her car.
âCome on!â Patricia calls to her. âCome with us!â
Patricia is climbing into Masonâs Supra. She gestures frantically for Camille to join them.
âI canât leave my car!â Camille calls back.
I hear sirens closing in on two sides.
I should just leave.
If Camille wants to get arrested, thatâs her dumb choice.
Camille rests her palm on her car, her expression anguished. Like it would kill her to leave the Trans Am. Like itâs her baby.
âForget the car,â I bark to Camille. âYou can come back for it tomorrow.â
She casts a frightened look in the direction of the cop cars, but sheâs still glued to the smoking Trans Am. I hear racers speeding off in all directions, while Iâm still standing here like a fool.
Propelled by annoyance, I scoop Camille up and throw her over my shoulder.
âHEY!â she shrieks. âPut me down! What are youââ
âShut up,â I snarl, jogging over to my car.
Iâm jostling Camille but I could care less. I wrench open the passenger door and throw her inside.
âI donât need you toââ
I slam the door in her face and run around to the driverâs side.
A squad car is heading right for us. Weâre the only idiots still parked along the main drag. Mason already peeled off as soon as he saw me grab Camille.
The cop has his siren blaring and his lights on. Over the speaker, he barks, âStay right where you are!â
Instead, I set my foot on the gas pedal and press it all the way down to the floor.