Zebra to Sturgis Part I


From left to right: Bandit, Mad Myron and Special Agent Zebra, Spearfish, South Dakota, Sturgis 2000

MIAMI, FLORIDA

“What you’re trying to do is a felony,” the DMV cunt behind thecounter told me bluntly. A rule-crazy jackass, practiced at spouting outby-the-book bull crap, the sorry bitch was clearly taking delight in being able to turn down yet another applicant in a string of many.

“How is it a felony to try and register a motorcycle?” I asked,tired, mad as hell and on the verge of reaching across the counter, dragging her uniformed ass over it and pistol whipping her to death with my H&K .45.This chick needed it in the ass, in the ear, in the eye and down thethroat.

She was in worse need of a stiff drink and a stiffer dick than any broad I’d come across in a long time. Angry, bitter, gray about the eyes, herpussy a dead clam on a tideless sea of fouled estrogen long gone sour, hersingle claim to life was the trickle charge she received in her numb spinewhen she could utter the governmental word “no”.

“Well,” she continued, “you have to have about 10 morepieces of paper that you don’t have and you have to register in Dade County, not Broward. And you need an appointment. That will take at least two weeks.”

I had all the fuckin’ paperwork a man could get, MSOs foreverything, receipts for everything, you name it.

“Oh fuck it,” I said, reaching over and taking back my huge pack ofpapers.

“What are you doing?” the DMV grunt demanded.

“I’m going to Sturgis,” I snarled.

“You can’t ride that motorcycle until you’ve registered it with theFlorida DMV.”

“Watch me, sugar tits,” I said as I slammed the door open andstormed out.

“YOU’LL GO TO JAIL!” she cried.

“State-sponsored bed and breakfast, baby!” I roared back. “Bringit on!”

Most bikers have at least one fuckup on a run as far as Miami Beach,Fla., to Sturgis, S.D., and back. But mine had already startedand I hadn’t even set off for the far north country.

“Fuck that cunt,” Eddie Trotta barked when I got back to ThunderCycles in Fort Lauderdale. “That bitch changes the goddamned rules every fuckin’ time we go in there. I swear to God, no matter what we bring in, it’s never right and there’s always some new fuckin’ thing these cocksuckers want.”

Eddie grabbed a dealer tag, filled out a bunch of phony numbers andjammed it into the plate holder on the Zebra Great Northern Steamer.

“Get your ass on the road. You’re gonna get beat by Bandit. He’sgot a 500-mile head start on you just from living farther north. If you getcaught, you’re going to jail. If you don’t, you’re going to Sturgis,”Eddie said.

I agreed. When the goddamned law makes it impossible to get the jobdone, that’s when you get American and stomp the law.

The Great Northern Steamer, my entry into the Bikernet ChopOff2000, had about 100 yards worth of break-in on it when I rolled out of Thunder Cycles in Fort Lauderdale. I had to ride 40 miles south, back to the Bikernet.com East headquarters in Miami Beach, to get my gear. The extra 80 miles would also help me nail any potential landmines that might be hiding in the brand new scoot before roaring off into the great unknown.

Of course the minute I got on I-95 and headed back to the beach Ihit very heavy traffic and rain. If you’ve ever driven around Cubans and SouthAmericans, you know what it’s like to be a pinball. There are no rules andpeople drive like suicidal maniacs. Every day there’s at least onefatal wreck and a lot of non-fatal crashes that mangle three or four carsat a pop. Add to that a tropical rainstorm and a taillight the size of amatch head and you’ve got a recipe for doom. Twice I could have reachedback and touched the car behind me before it got slowed down enough to keepfrom ramming me under the vehicle in front of me. It was a great moodsetter for a 3,000-mile run north on an outlaw scoot.

I got back to the house and strapped on a good amount of gear,tools and firepower. As I strapped on my Bandit’s bedroll, I spotted the firstproblem. The primary case was leaking new oil everywhere from a dud seal.When I hooked up the gear on the back fender, I spotted the second problem.The lower hex nut on the back brake caliper had not been properly tightenedand to do so would require sliding the rear axle forward about 4 inches.I loaded up and blasted back north to Eddie’s place in Fort Lauderdale.

Eddie’s crack mechanics jumped on the primary case and knocked thebad seal in the head in a matter of minutes. They noticed the headlight was coming loose and quickly created a custom bracket to hold it. Then they moved the speedo because it was blocked by the slant of the custom handlebars. This machine was so new that we had no bugs worked out whatsoever.

I hit the road at about 7 p.m., hoping to get to Daytona Beachbefore shutting down.

All the gear was strapped on wrong and I had to stop twice before Igot the Bandit’s Bedroll positioned so that it threw the wind up over me properly, which it’s designed to do and do well.

I rolled 350 miles, to Cocoa, Fla., before wearingout. I was pushing hard because part of the ChopOff 2000 was to see who would get to Sturgis first. Bandit had left a day earlier but I knew he would have to stay a day in Arizona, where he was picking up Mad Myron. The downside to this was, when those two former 1%ers get together, they ride wide open.

Beat and mentally spent after a two-month breakdown with the GermanFeminine, I pulled over and got an over-priced shithole room at a grungyhotel on the north side of a nothing Florida coastal town called Cocoa. Iwas taking 95 all the way through Florida to 10, then east a bit to 75,then north into Georgia and Tennessee, then west through Kentucky, Illinois,Missouri and Kansas, north and west through Nebraska and into South Dakota.

As I unpacked the Great Northern Steamer and flung gear into thedirty hotel room, a local horse thief sidled up and eyed the gleaming newchopper, now with just over 400 miles on the odometer.

“Say, that’s a nice bike. What would a bike like that be worth?”he asked through rotted teeth and a dirty beard.

“It’s worth a life,” I said coldly.

The local eyed me warily as I bent over to pick up a bungee cordand my H&K .45 stood up under my Bikernet vest.

“Oh,” the local replied.

I whipped a Krypto chain around a small palm tree and through thefront tire to give me enough slow-down time to get a clear shot when the localand his 10 friends returned with a van and a need for a custom chopper.

That night, I slept with the window open and the H&K on the bed.South Florida is notorious for bike theft. Bikes vanish like fog and I wasn’t about to let horse thieves pick off my new scoot. It was insured, but it wasn’t the monetary loss I was interested in avoiding. It was a pride thing. Getting a bike stolen is a real punch in the nuts. I was tired and in an ugly head after the last month and wasn’t in the mood for much nut punchin’. I gladly would have shot any man who so much as touched the fender that night. I’ve been inToo many gunfights in my life, some a fluke of bad timing, some just becausethere are folks out there who don’t understand things like don’t steal themotorcycle with the “Z” on it. I’ve never liked the sport, too hard on thenerves, but I had gone to the trouble to get serious training from the bestcombat shooters on earth and I wasn’t about to play games with horsethieves. Apparently the old boy got the message and the evening passedsilently.

I hit the deck at 6 and ate a huge breakfast. Then I broke out thetools and torqued the entire bike. The covers on the rear pushrods were loose as hell and I cranked them down tight, knowing I was in for a very longrun and would need that engine oil all the way. I found about 15 loose bolts and hex screws and applied some blue stick-um to each. Theywouldn’t be coming loose again.

I’d gotten five hours of light sleep and wasn’t planning on stopping forlunch. I had about eight hours to make up for and was determined to winthe race part of the ChopOff if for no other reason than I hadn’t won lately inlife and was in a pretty competitive mood. Bandit’s bike was prettier thanmine, no doubt about it. So if I was going to extract any sense of victoryout of the ChopOff, it’d probably have to be winning the run.

Plus, there’s a certain cleansing to be had by throwing the spursto a big custom chopper and letting a new RevTech 88 moan for 15 hours at apop, streaking across America, free, illegal, feeling the leather crack.

I was leaving behind a messy relationship breakup. I hadn’t taken avacation in over two years. I was feeling hooky and getting out of townwould prevent me from messing up a certain South Florida local who’dstepped over the line and was in desperate need of a crash course on class.

I lit the fuse on the new RevTech, dumped the resulting torque into my beloved Baker 6 and cooked some dinosaur oil.

Rolling, rolling, rolling, passing trees by the thousands. Bugshit you like raindrops in Florida. Big, juicy, bitter to taste. For anyone who’s claustrophobic, Florida is no place to ride. The interstates, highways and deer paths are all entirely walled off by heavy vegetation. The occasional dead gator lies by the side of the road, blasted by a passing vehicle in the night.

Zombies of all breeds swirled in my head. Bad women, Marko theDestroyer offering to help clean up a mess, film projects for 1%er movies, cops, studio suits with smiles and promises, loose hex nuts and enough stress toblow the lid off a boiler. I screwed the gas a little tighter.

Day 2
GEORGIA

South Georgia. Warm weather, clear skies, fast asphalt. Georgia has perfect highways.

I passed several “last chance peaches” roadside stands until I couldresist the temptation of a native-grown Georgia peach no more.

Rolling over, I stopped and got off, my back popping like automaticweapon fire after 11 hours of non-stop running.

“How many ya want, sonny?” the old man asked from behind the counter,which was a door thrown over two sawhorses.

“One.”

“Just one? You sure? It’s been a good year and these here peachesis mighty fine.”

“OK, two.”

“Just two? You sure? It’s been a good year and …”

“One,” I said, not caring for his hard-sell tactics.

“Two it is,” the man said, grinning as he wrapped up two hugepeaches.

“How much?” I asked, pulling out a roll of cash.

“Nothing,” the man said, smiling again.

“Nothing?”

“Nothing.”

“You sure?”

“Don’t I look sure?” he asked.

I shrugged and took the peaches. They were incredible.

The old man’s daughter of about 20 watched me as I ate the juicypeaches. She was trashy, dumb and very well built.

“You build that bike?” she asked, lust in her eyes.

“Bro in California built it,” I said, watching her, wondering whatshe would look like in her essence.

“You ride that from Florida?” she asked.

“Miami Beach.”

“Ain’t never been to Miami Beach.”

“It’s nice.”

“You like my peaches?” she asked coyly.

“Sure do,” I said. The old man’s smile faded.

“They got a beach in Miami Beach?” she asked.

“Got a good one.”

“Lots of girls there in bikinis?”

“Lots of girls there in bikini bottoms. South Beach is topless.”

“My goodness,” the old man mumbled.

“Really?” the girl asked with interest.

“Yep,” I said, biting into the new peach, peach juice running downmy chin and dripping into my leather vest.

“Bet that’s pretty nice for you,” she said, smiling, revealingdueling rows of perfect southern belle teeth.

“Pretty decent,” I said.

“If I come down there, could I go without my top?” she asked.

“If you come down,” I said.

“We need more peaches,” the old man growled to his daughter.

The gal got up and reluctantly walked out the back door to get morebaskets of peaches.

“Much obliged,” I said.

“You come back sometime, sonny,” the old man said, smiling, happyonce again now that his virgin was safely out of harm’s way.

To Continue

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