I think back to that confrontation with Nate so long ago, when he showed up at Cory’s house, threatening to expose me. I didn’t sneak away in the night or try to deny his accusations. Instead, I leaned in, escalating and making things too big for him to handle.
I check the time again. In my rearview mirror, the single car separating us changes lanes, putting Scott’s directly behind mine. As if the decision has been made for me.
I slam on my brakes, my car screeching to a halt in the left lane. Cars on the right veer wide, and I brace myself for impact. Scott doesn’t have time to react. He slams into the back of my Range Rover, and my car pitches forward, the impact vibrating through me.
I use the adrenaline of the moment, shoving my door open and stepping out, oncoming cars slowing down to see it all unfold. “What the fuck?” I yell, approaching Scott’s car. As I pass my bumper, I note my fender bent inward, but overall intact. Scott’s car, however, is a mess. The hood has crumpled inward, and his airbag has deployed, though thankfully he appears uninjured. The last thing I need is a lawsuit.
He steps out of his car, clearly rattled, and I suppress the urge to smile. Instead, I pull out my cell phone and start taking pictures. Of my bumper, of Scott’s car, his license plate, and even Scott himself. “I want to make sure all of this is documented,” I say. “My lawyers are going to tear you apart.”
“What are you talking about?” he says. “You had no reason to stop.”
“There was a dog. Didn’t you see him?”
Scott looks confused.
Someone has pulled over to the side of the road and calls, “Are you guys okay? Do you need me to call 911?”
“No,” Scott says.
But I say, “Yes. I want a police report that says this man was following too closely. He’s at fault.”
The good Samaritan hops on the phone, and within ten minutes, the police have arrived.
Scott looks jittery, as if he’s unsure what role to play. Does he reveal that he’s a detective following a suspect? Or does he play the private citizen card? I’m pretty sure the LAPD doesn’t issue shitty Toyota compacts to their detectives, so I’m guessing he wasn’t following me in an official capacity.
The officer approaches. “You folks okay? Think we can move the cars to the side and open up traffic again?”
When we’re parked on the shoulder, I go in hard. “This man plowed into me. He wasn’t looking where he was going. Every other car on the road saw that dog dart across four lanes of traffic. But this guy was probably on his phone.”
Scott shakes his head. “Not true,” he argues. “She slammed on her brakes for no reason.”
I wheel around, my voice rising. “Why would I do that?”
I wait, wondering how Scott will answer the question. Instead, he looks at the officer and says, “Can I speak to you privately?”
“Hell no,” I say, my voice close to hysterical. “You’re not going to have some bro convo behind my back.” I point at Scott, stepping closer to him. “I fucking see you. I know what guys like you try to do. You’re going to put your heads together and make this my fault. ‘Female drivers,’” I say, putting the words in air quotes. “I don’t think so. Not today.”
The officer holds up his hands. “Ma’am, please calm down. Let’s lower the temperature a little bit.”
I turn to face him. “Don’t tell me to calm down. Write up the report. Please make sure your badge number is on it as well.” I start taking pictures again. Of my bumper, of the officer, and more of Scott.
As I circle his car, I see a duffel bag in the backseat. A pillow. Crumpled food wrappers on the floor. A stainless-steel toaster oven tucked behind the driver’s seat, and a toothbrush sticking out of the seat’s side pocket.