Adam and others in the company contingent here were also happy about Pierre's prospects, since in both races he would be driving Cars with their company's name.
Erica's feelings about Pierre were mixed, as she was reminded when they met briefly last night.
It had been at a crowded cocktail - supper party - one of many such affairs taking place around town, as always happened on the eve of any major auto race. Adam and Erica had been invited to six parties and dropped in on three. At the one where they met Pierre, the young race driver was a center of attention and surrounded by several glamorous but brassy girls - 'pit pussies', as they were sometimes known - of the type which auto racing and its drivers seemed always to attract.
Pierre had detached himself on seeing Erica, and made his way across the room to where she was standing alone, Adam having moved away to talk with someone else.
"Hi, Erica," Pierre said easily. He gave his boyish grin. "Wondered if you'd be around."
"Well, I am." She tried to be nonchalant, but unaccountably felt nervous. To cover up, she smiled and said, "I hope you win. I'll be cheering for you both days." Even to herself, however, her words sounded strained, and in part, Erica realized, it was because the physical presence of Pierre aroused her sensually, still.
They had gone on chatting, not saying very much, though while they were together Erica was aware of others in the room, including two from Adam's company, glancing their way covertly. No doubt some were remembering gossip they had heard, including the Detroit News item about Pierre and Erica, which distressed her at the time.
Adam had strolled over to join them briefly, and wished Pierre well.
Soon after, Adam moved away again, then Pierre excused himself, saying that because of the race tomorrow he must get to bed. "You know how it is, Erica," he said, grinning again, then winked to make sure she did not miss the unsubtle humor.
Even that reference to bed, clumsy as it was, had left an effect, and Erica knew she was far from being completely over her affair with Pierre.
Now, it was noon next day and the first of the two big races - the Canebreak 300 - would begin in half an hour.
Erica left the suite and went downstairs.
In the helicopter, Kathryn Hewitson observed, "This is rather ostentatious. But it beats sitting in traffic, I suppose."
The helicopter was a small one which could carry only two passengers at a time, and the first to be whirled from Anniston to the Talladega Speedway were the executive vice-president's wife and Erica. Kathryn Hewitson was a handsome, normally self-effacing woman in her early fifties, with a reputation as a devoted wife and mother, but also one who, on occasions, could handle her dynamic husband firmly, as no one else knowing him could or dared to. Today, as she often did, she had brought along her needlepoint which she worked on, even during their few minutes in the air.
Erica smiled an acknowledgment because the helicopter's noise as they were airborne precluded conversation.
Beneath the machine, the ochre-red earth of Alabama, framing lush meadowland, slid by. The sun was high, the sky unclouded, the air warm with a dry, fresh breeze. Though it would be September in a few days more, no sign of fall was yet apparent. Erica had chosen a light summer dress; so had most other women whom she saw.
They landed in the Speedway infield, already massed with parked vehicles and race fans, some of whom had camped here overnight. Even more cars were streaming in through two double-lane traffic tunnels beneath the track. At the helicopter landing pad, a car and driver were waiting for Kathryn Hewitson and Erica; briefly, traffic in one of the incoming tunnel lanes was halted, the lane control reversed, while they sped through to the grandstand side of the track.
The grandstands too - North, South, and Over Hill - were packed with humanity, waiting expectantly in the now hot sun along their milelong length. As the two women reached one of the several private boxes, a band near the starting line struck up "The Star-Spangled Banner." A singer's soprano voice floated over the p.a. Wherever they were, most spectators, contestants, and officials stood. The cacophony of speedway noises hushed.
A clergyman with a Deep South drawl intoned, "Oh God, watch over those in peril who will compete . . . We praise Thee for today's fine weather, and give our thanks for business Thou hast brought this area . . ."
"Damn right," Hub Hewitson asserted in the front row of his company's private box. "Lots of cash registers jingling, including ours, I hope. Must be a hundred thousand people." The phalanx of company men and wives surrounding the executive vice-president smiled dutifully.
Hewitson, a small man with close-cropped, jet black hair, whose energy seemed to radiate through his skin, leaned forward so he could better view the throngs which jammed the Speedway. He declared again, "Motor racing's come up to be the second most popular sport; soon it'll be the first. All of 'em out there are interested in power under the hood, thank God! - and never mind the sanctimonious sons-of-bitches who tell us people aren't."
Erica was two rows from the front, with Adam beside her. Kathryn Hewitson had gone to the rear of the box, which had tiered seats rising from front to rear, and was sheltered from the sun. Kathryn told Erica as they came in, "Hub likes me along, but I don't really care for racing. It makes me frightened at times, and sad at others, wondering what's the point of it all." Erica could see the older woman in the back row now, busy with her needlepoint.
The private box, like several others, was in the South grandstand and commanded a view of the entire Speedway. The start-finish line was immediately in front, banked turns to left and right, the backstretch visible beyond the infield. On the nearer side of the infield were the pits, now thronged with overalled mechanics. Pit row, as it was known, had ready access to and from the track.
In the company box, among other guests, was Smokey Stephensen, and Adam and Erica had spoken with him briefly. Ordinarily, a dealer would not make it in here with the high command, but Smokey enjoyed privileges at race meets, having once been a big star driver, with many older fans still revering his name.
Next to the company box was the press enclosure, with long tables and scores of typewriters, also ranged in tiers. The press reporters, alone among most others present today, self-importantly hadn't stood for the national anthem. Now, most were clattering on typewriters, and Erica, who could view them through a glass window at the side, wondered what they could be writing so much about when the race hadn't even started.
But starting time was close. The praying was done; clergy, parade marshals, drum majorettes, bands, and other nonessentials had removed themselves. Now the track was clear, and fifty competing cars were in starting positions - a long double line. Throughout the Speedway, as always in final moments before a race, tension grew.
Erica saw from her program that Pierre was on row four of the starting lineup. His car was number 29.
The control tower, high above the track, was the Speedway's nerve center.
From it, by radio, closed circuit TV, and telephone, were controlled the starters, track signal lights, pace cars, service and emergency vehicles.
A race director presided at a console; he was a relaxed and quietly spoken young man in a business suit. In a booth beside him sat a shirt-sleeved commentator whose voice would fill the p.a. system through the race. At a desk behind, two uniformed Alabama State Troopers directed traffic in the nontrack areas.
The race director was communicating with his forces: "Lights work all the way 'round? . . . okay . . . Track clear? . . . all set . . . Tower to pace car: Are you ready to go? All right, fire'em up!"
Over the Speedway p.a., voiced by a visiting fleet admiral on an infield dais, went the traditional command to drivers: "Gentlemen, start your engines!"
What followed was racing's most exciting sound: The roar of unmuffled engines, like fifty Wagnerian crescendos, which swamped the Speedway with sound and extended for miles beyond.
A pace car, pennants billowing, swung onto the track, its speed increasing swiftly. Behind the pace car, competing cars moved out, still two abreast, maintaining their starting lineup as they would for several preliminary, nonscoring laps.
Fifty cars were scheduled to begin the race. Forty-nine did.
The engine of a gleaming, vivid red sedan, its identifying number 06 painted in high visibility gold, wouldn't start. The car's pit crew rushed forward and worked frantically, to no avail. Eventually the car was pushed by hand behind the wall of pit row and, as it went, the disgusted driver flung his helmet after it.
"Poor guy," somebody in the tower said. "Was the best-looking car on the field."
The race director cracked, "He spent too much time polishing it."
During the second preliminary lap, with the field still bunched together, the director radioed the pace car, "Pick up the tempo."
The pace car driver responded. Speeds rose. The engines' thunder grew in intensity.
After a third lap the pace car, its job done, was signaled off the track. It swung into pit row.
At the start-finish line in front of the grandstand, the starter's green flag slashed the air.
The 300 mile race - 113 grueling laps - began.
From the outset the pace was sizzling, competition strong. Within the first five laps a driver named Doolittle, in number 12, charged through massed cars ahead to take the lead. Shooting up behind came car number 38, driven by a jut-jawed Mississippian known to fans as Cutthroat.