Throttled: Dirty Air (Book 1)(69)
“I could do this track in my sleep. It’s an easy one.”
“That’s great and all but I’d rather live to see tomorrow.” I take another deep breath.
He laughs as he checks me out. “Do you trust me yet?”
“I trust that you’re secretly a psycho. What kind of first date is this? Haven’t you ever seen an episode of The Bachelor? This date is not Chris Harrison approved!” I grip onto the side of the car for dear life. Those top handlebar things every car has? Yeah, I learn their true purpose, my knuckles whitening as I hold on with all my might.
Can he quit laughing at me?
“That’s not the answer I wanted to hear. I’ll have to step it up.”
That, friends, is exactly the type of thing no one asks for. It’s meme-worthy.
His hands turn nobs on the center console.
“Uh, what are you doing?” My stomach churns as my body bounces up and down, the car revolting against the high speeds Noah pushes it to. The death contraption continues to zoom past empty bleachers. Speakers sound off for the first time the entire trip, the robotic voice sending a chill down my spine.
Traction Control Disabled.
My head whips to face Noah, my helmet bouncing off the window. The movement jars me. Even I know the importance of traction control…it prevents the one thing Noah wants to do.
He shrugs, sealing our fate.
His hands turn the wheel, our car drifting across the road before spinning donuts. Tires squeal against the road. A cloud of smoke swirls around us from rubber burning, floating up into the sky along with my sanity.
“I trust you! I’ll never not trust you ever again. You’re the best driver ever. You’ll always keep me safe. Are you satisfied now?” I half laugh, half scream the words, sounding like someone who belongs in a psychotic thriller movie. There may even be a tear or two leaking from my eyes, but if Noah asks me, I’ll deny it.
He stops the donuts and we both end up breaking out in a fit of laughter. His hand grabs mine and brings it up to his lips for a kiss, my previous fear forgotten.
“To answer your question from before, yes I’ve seen The Bachelor. I took notes. This is the first of many for us, so I had to make it unforgettable.”
He hits me with a devilish grin before I flash him one of my own.
28
Noah
There are only two things that can suck the happiness straight out of me.
One is any type of news of someone dying.
And two is my dad.
The second reason sends me a deceitful grin that makes my stomach shrivel up. He stands next to my car in the pit area, his negative energy pulsing around him. Not exactly what I need before a practice session.
Over the years, I’ve become a pro at avoiding my dad, an easier task since I’ve never liked being around him when he gets angry. Now that I’ve outgrown him, he moves on from hitting me to verbal lashings. The time Maya saw him smack me…that was unlike him. He usually keeps calm nowadays, at least physically, choosing to flip out when I perform less than perfect on the track.
“Dad, what are you doing here?” What I really want to say is Dad, get the fuck out of here. I can’t stand you. But I don’t say what I wish to because I prefer professionalism. Unfortunately, my dad funded a lot of my career at the start, his name carrying weight at Bandini. It was his same racing team after all.
“After your poor display at the last couple of races, I wanted to check in.”
Sure you did.
But this is my life. Anything below first place might as well be last. The only thing keeping me calm is the sound of race cars zooming by while I breathe in the smell of fresh car wax.
“Right. Hopefully this one will go better.” I can win the Japanese Grand Prix since I’ve done it in the past.
“And here we are getting ready for the next practice session. Santiago, do you have anything to say to your fans?”
For fuck’s sake, Maya has the worst timing.
My dad ogles her as she spins around in the garage. Gross. She keeps going, asking Santiago questions.
My dad focuses back on me. “She’s a news reporter now? What’s she doing in the pit area? It’s no place for a woman.” He still lives in an era where women get married and live the rest of their sad lives in the four walls of their home. Times have changed, Pops.
“Nope. Santiago’s sister vlogs.” My girlfriend, I wish to say.
Maya and I haven’t talked about titles yet. We only hashed things out two weeks ago in Singapore. But everything about us feels title-worthy because we spend lots of time together whenever Santiago isn’t around. In my bed, in hers, in one of the private suites, and secret dates in the cities we visit. My sex drive with Maya rivals that of an eighteen-year-old.
I don’t like how my dad looks at her, pissing me off even more.
“Hmm. She shouldn’t be filming.” His growl of a voice does nothing to intimidate me.
“They already gave her the go-ahead for it. It’s been good publicity and nice for branding since she has a lot of followers.” Shit. Did my voice sound like I am proud of her?
My dad assesses me, giving me the fucking chills. His perceptiveness makes him cruel because he didn’t get where he is today by being stupid.
“I guess it’s fine,” he says.