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Jury Snippets

by Hap

Chapter 5: Archer Collins, Competent Driver

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Archer Collins, Competent Driver


Archer Collins looked at his phone. He didn’t recognize the number, but that wasn’t unusual. For a long moment, he let the pale blue light wash over the car’s interior as he debated whether to answer. A horrifyingly simplistic midi of “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” almost drowned out the sound of fat raindrops pounding on the car’s roof and windshield.

With a heavy sigh, Archer flipped the phone open and held it up to his ear. “Hello?”

The voice was calm and spoke slowly. “Is this a competent driver?”

“Is this a joke?”

The voice remained emotionless. “This is a job. I need a competent driver. Are you available right now?”

Archer leaned over the dash and looked at the sky. A purely symbolic gesture, as the deluge obscured everything, and the sky was as black as, well, a storm at night. “You need something delivered in this thunderstorm?”

Archer wasn't sure, but he thought there was a hint of a chuckle on the other end. “Something like that, yeah.”

“Alright, then. Where should I be, and when?”

“I’ll text you the address as soon as I hang up. We're already waiting for you. Don’t google it, and don’t use gps to get there. Buy a paper map if you have to.”

Archer held the phone at arms length and looked at it with a raised eyebrow. “Ooooookay.”

“And you’re sure you’re competent?”

“Yeah.”

“We’ll discuss payment and details once you get here. Do you have any questions?”

Archer licked his lips. “Yeah. What’s your name?”

The other end was silent for a few seconds. “You can call me Ridayah.”

The line went silent. Archer flipped his phone closed, and waited for it to chime.



Archer pulled up to the address in question. It was an unremarkable apartment complex, especially in the rain. A man in glasses was standing under an awning smoking a cigarette. Even through the rain, Archer could see the smoke curling around the porch light.

As Archer threw the transmission into park, the man turned and went inside. Archer began composing a text, but heard a knock on his window before he could send it. The bespectacled man moved his umbrella to cover the window and door, then motioned for Archer to get out.

Archer opened his door, and the man stood uncomfortably close, keeping the umbrella over the two of them as he spoke. “Let’s go inside and disuss details.”

They half-walked, half-shuffled to the door. The man could easily have been described as barrel-chested, though he didn’t carry any of the weight in his face or arms, making his brown suit hang limply around his wrists.

The door opened as they approached, and the man folded his umbrella and dropped it as they walked through the door. Two other men were standing in the hallway, also wearing what looked like Salvation Army three-dollar suits.

The long-haired man spoke up. “You must be the competent driver.”

Archer nodded. “And you must be Ridayah. I’m Archer.”

“Nice to meet you.”

Archer waited, but nobody moved to go into any of the apartments lining the dim hallway. None of the men’s pants quite matched their jackets. Somewhere, a baby’s crying could be heard over the sound of a television turned up too loud. “Soooo… you need a competent driver?”

One of the men hiked up his pants. “Why was your phone number scrawled on a bathroom stall?”

Archer sighed. “Somewhere between job frustration and a half-joke. I mostly get drunk calls joking about bank robberies.”

Pants man snickered, but glasses rolled his eyes. Ridayah gave a half-smile. “Nothing so dramatic, I promise. We do, however, require a certain degree of discretion in addition to competence.”

Archer shrugged. “Hell, I’ve got nobody to talk to, anyway.”

Ridayah nodded. “Ever driven an Audi A8?”

Archer looked back at the 2001 Toyota he’d driven to the apartment. “Can’t say as I have.”

Ridayah tossed a plastic key to Archer. “Take it around the block a few times. Don’t be afraid to push the limits. We don’t want any surprises. When you’re done, just pull back into the same spot, and we’ll hop in.”

The Audi’s lights blinked through the downpour. It was in the driveway, much closer than the street where he had parked. Archer looked up. “How much does this job pay?”

“Well,” the man in glasses said, “how much do you think it’s worth?”

Archer looked from one of the men to another. None of them thought that glasses’ question was odd. Archer looked down at the Audi key, then back up. “I still don’t know what the job is.”

Glasses man idly ran his fingers across the hem of his jacket where his arm hung by his side. “After the job, you can tell us what you think is fair.” He fished inside his jacket and pulled out a fold of bills with a hair band around it. “Here’s a thousand in advance.”

Archer didn’t bother to count the thick stack of twenties. “You’re giving me the key to a new car, and a thousand dollars. You’re not worried that I’ll just… not come back?”

The three men looked at each other then back at Archer. Glasses man blinked. Archer licked his lips. “Oh.” He hit the unlock button on the key.



Archer didn’t recognize the part of town he was in, but it was nice. A gated community, the kind of neighborhood where state-level legislators and local television personalities lived. The kind of community where it must be difficult to get a keycode for the gate.

Two of the men, Ridayah and hitching-his-pants man, had left the car carrying heavy duffel bags. They didn’t have umbrellas, and didn’t seem to worry about the torrential downpour as they ducked under some towering and sprawling lilac bushes. It’s a shame they were out of bloom. Archer loved the smell of lilac.

Glasses sat in the front seat while Archer squinted at the map he’d laid out on the steering wheel. He tried not to notice that when glasses was sitting down, something popped up on both his shoulders, pushing the suit nearly up to his ears. He also tried not to imagine what was in the tennis racquet case by the other man’s knees.

Archer knew most of the streets on the map, but he concentrated on memorizing the different routes that glasses had highlighted on the paper. He visualized the streets, the landmarks, and each of the stoplights, trying to imagine what they would look like in a pitch-black downpour.

Glasses was getting antsy, if the whole car shaking from the way he bounced his leg was any indication. It was too wet to smoke outside, and he apparently didn’t want to light up in the car. Arch was glad that he didn't have to ask the guy not to smoke.

“So,” glasses said, checking his cheap flip phone for the hundredth time, “you drive a lot?”

Archer kept his eyes glued on the map. “Uh huh.”

“You seem kinda nervous.”

Archer looked up. He pinched his eyebrows together, but didn’t say a word. Rain fell in sheets as gust after gust rocked the car. Glasses checked his phone again. Archer cleared his throat. “So, you guys are on some sort of secret mission or whatever. None of my business. But I’d think you’d have your own driver. Did something happen to him?”

“Nah,” glasses said, rolling the phone in his hand as he draped his wrist over the back seat. “We needed someone familiar with the area, and a pizza delivery driver seemed like a good bet.”

“Wait,” Arch said. “I never told you that.”

Glasses man didn’t blink. “You came recommended.”

“By whom?” Archer couldn’t believe that anyone he knew would be connected with… whatever it was these guys did. Or think that he would be good for a getaway driver.

He didn’t respond. He was watching his phone even more intently than before. The slapping noise of fat raindrops faded into a background roar as Archer stared along with glasses. When it buzzed, Archer nearly jumped out of the seat, but glasses didn’t blink. He just stuffed the phone into his pocket, opening the door and grabbing his tennis racquet in one smooth motion.

Arch watched him disappear into the rain, then leaned over and closed the door, as quietly as he could.

The next few minutes passed slowly. It couldn’t have been more than three minutes, but the start of hail didn’t help Archer’s nerves. He kept his eyes peeled for his passengers, but he jumped when the rear door jerked open, and again when the passenger door jerked open.

Ridayah slid into the front seat, completely soaked and breathless. He dropped a small, heavy bag on the floor as glasses was half-tossed, half-helped into the back seat. He alternated between coughing and gulping air like a fish.

Archer twisted around and asked, “Is he going to be alright?”

Pants man slicked the sopping wet hair out of his eyes and nearly shouted, “Eyes front!”

Archer sat straight up, keeping his eyes glued to the hood of the car while a couple of heavy objects were dropped into the rear floorboard. Pants man slid into the seat and closed the door. He smelled vaguely familiar, like some kind of oil, mixed with smoke. Sort of like the time Arch had spilled some oil on the exhaust manifold while adding a quart at a gas station.

Pants slapped Arch on the shoulder and said, “Let’s go.”

Ridayah added, “Nice and slow. Same way we came in. Same as before, turn on the vent and get the windows fogged up before we get to the gate.”

Glasses continued to gasp and sputter in the back seat. Nobody seemed concerned about him.

Once they reached the subdivision’s gates, Archer chose a nice, slow side street from the list of routes. No stoplights, just a few stop signs that nobody would notice if he rolled through in the deserted dark. As he pulled onto the street, he wasn’t sure, but he thought he could see an orange glow through the rain in his rear view mirror.

Archer heard another generic ringtone, and saw Ridayah pull a phone out of his jacket and flip it open. After a moment of listening, he said, “Affirmative.” Another moment, and Archer felt Ridayah glance his way. “He does now.”

As slow as he was driving, Archer’s heart was racing. Whoever was on the phone was talking about him. Ridayah held the phone in the center of the cabin, water strill dripping from the cuffs of his suit. “You're on speaker now, Tee.”

The voice crackled through the phone’s cheap speakers, nearly drowned out by the echo of hailstones bouncing off the car’s roof. “Mister Collins, … enjoy working with colleagues …ciate your competence?”

Archer rolled up to a stop sign and looked both ways carefully. A large tree branch had fallen onto the sidewalk, and the branches still on the trees were whipping wildly around in the rapidly-changing wind. “Uh, it was certainly a new experience.”

Tee chuckled, a vaguely disturbing noise when combined with the crappy speakers and the storm’s howling. “Well, I ho… you’ve enjoyed.”

“Why don't we wait till everyone is home safe before we…” Archer trailed off as he let a dumpster run a stop sign in front of him.

“A wise choice. Floyd?”

Pants man spoke up. “Seems like a bad idea to keep that much bacon grease right next to the stove. Should keep them busy for a while.”

“And… about Hat?”

Archer raised an eyebrow as he looked in the rear view mirror. That guy’s name was “Hat?”

Glasses man nodded, still flapping his mouth like a fish. Floyd said, “He’s fine,” and thumped him on the chest with a soft metallic thunk. Hat slapped at Floyd’s arms and face with his left hand.

Tee crackled through the speakers again. “I’m sorry to hear there was trouble.”

Hat spoke in between shallow breaths. “Armed bodyguard… for a felon… a crime… knew what he was… getting in to.”

Ridayah spoke up. “We should have known about the bodyguard. Nick planted a bug in that whatsit he pulled off the brown truck.”

Archer saw Floyd nodding in the rear view mirror as a minivan pulled up behind them. Archer put on his left turn signal and inched through the intersection, splashing through a miniature river. The minivan followed.

As soon as Archer had straightened the Audi into his lane and reached a steady speed appropriate for the driving conditions, the minivan began flashing its brights.

“Fuck.”

Ridayah pulled the phone back up to his ear and said, “We’ve got company. Yeah. I’ll get back to you.” He flipped the phone closed and said, “What would you do if we were just normal people on our way somewhere normal?”

Archer pulled to the side of the road, but left the car in drive with his foot on the brake. He felt Floyd lean against the back of the seat as he picked up something from the floor. The minivan pulled up next to the Audi and rolled down its passenger window. Arch heard Floyd press something against the inside of his door. Arch rolled down his window a few inches despite the rain splashing its way inside.

“Hey buddy,” a woman in the passenger seat shouted, “your brake lights are out!”

Archer threw the Audi into park and made a show of looking into the rear view mirror as he tapped on the brake pedal. “No way!” he shouted back. “This thing is brand new! I guess I’m taking it to the dealership tomorrow. Thanks!”

The woman smiled and waved as she rolled the window back up. Arch followed suit as the minivan pulled away.

Floyd dropped something onto the floorboards and let out a breath. Ridayah slapped Arch on the shoulder and said, “Man, you are smooth.”

Archer shrugged. “That was the normalest part of my day.”

Ridayah leaned forward and opened the glove box, flipping a switch inside. The brake lights suddenly began reflecting off a million raindrops, rippling through the water that ran down the rear window.

Hat gasped, “Sorry,” from the back seat.

“It’s alright, man,” Ridayah said as he settled back into his seat. “You were distracted when we were getting back onto the road.”

As Archer signaled and pulled back onto the road, his pocket began playing “Take Me Out to the Ball Game.” He checked his mirrors before pulling the phone out and looking at the number. With a glance at the clock, he flipped the phone open. “Yeah?”

Floyd leaned between the seats and watched Archer. Archer held the phone against his shoulder and looked at his passengers. “You guys want some pizza?”




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