He had loved
cars ever since he was a boy. The smell of gasoline, the hum of the engines and
the smooth motion of the car attracted him like a moth to a flame. He
remembered that on his 18th birthday, his gift had been a second
hand Chevy Camaro. It was orange with white stripes vinyled on it. He loved
that car. He drove it to school, he drove his mother to work or to the grocer’s
and he drove his friends to their respective homes at the end of the school day.
When he
joined college, he found a new love- racing. It was the adrenaline rush that
made it so rewarding for him. He raced around the city at night, sometimes
getting chased by the cops; but never getting caught. Racing turned the purr of
the car to a roar, like a lion being released from it’s cage. He was a good
racer. He set impressive lap times on the road leading from the college to the
city. He had never lost a drag race in his life.
After
college, his love of racing made him take to the tracks. He participated in
rally races and again his lap times were superb. People started calling him the
next phenomenon. When he was not out amongst the racers burning rubber, he
would be inside tuning his car. Cars were always attractive to him as I said
earlier. He would tinker with the suspension, brake pads and even tweak the
engine from time to time. He made sure the coolant in his car was always there,
that it had adequate power steering fluid and he always kept his gas tank full.
We were not unsupportive of his desire to race and we would turn up at the
track from time to time to watch him race. He was good, weaving his way in
between cars, shifting at the right times and generally staying within the top
3 in every race.
My brother
was in a car on the day he died. He was out on the track, cruising at an even
80mph when it happened. He didn’t see a brick or some such object on the track
I’m told. He drove over it and his rear tire exploded. His car spun out of
control, did a backflip and rammed the divider. We dragged him out of the
wreck. He was still breathing, despite having sustained serious injuries. The
irony is that he died in our car on the way to the hospital.
You see,
though he loved racing; racing never loved him back. He was always a car
fanatic and it is only fitting that he died doing what he loved, in a machine
that he loved.
This is the
story of my brother and today he would have been 32.
The Bilge Master
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