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Pink
Plastic Flamingos
by Michael Turner
Ronnie
Cole eyed the little white house
on the other side
of Twentieth Street in quiet
appraisal. It looked like a lot
of the houses up
here on the big hill between
Gaffey Street and Western Avenue.
A small white stucco
building with maybe two bedrooms
and a bath, an older house probably
built
in the late thirties that backed
onto a narrow alley. It stood out
from its
neighbors only by being both
better kept and more quaintly decorated.
It was better kept
up, Ronnie knew, because it was occupied
by the owner and not rented out like
so many places around this area. And
it was somewhat old fashioned because
the owner was a sweet little old lady
who hadn't changed the way the garden
was decorated since the start of the
Vietnam War. He'd seen her bundled into
a mini-van with disabled veterans plates
by an old man who was probably her son,
not half an hour ago.
Ronnie
walked to the corner and crossed
the street, heading
for the alley behind the house.
He didn't bother to count how many
houses
it was from the cross street, there
was no way
he could mistake it. Second
house down from one of those cheesy
tenement apartments.
Surrounded by flower beds full
of pink plastic flamingo statues.
Ronnie couldn't
remember if he'd ever seen
any other flamingos in San Pedro.
Maybe one or
two. This lady had over a dozen,
easy. He was amazed no one had
stolen them.
He'd
been at this trade for
more than a year now. B-n-E
he thought of it. The trick
was to do your homework,
and blend in. Ronnie knew
that he had and he did.
He was perfect for the
work, neither tall nor
short, looking either Caucasian
or Hispanic depending on
the witnesses prejudice.
His clothes were unremarkable,
jeans sagging enough to
suggest youth but not so
much as to impede climbing
or running, with pockets
made deep so he didn't
have to leave the job site
with his hands full. A
plain white t-shirt and
a thin flannel work shirt
many sizes too big that
he'd bought for a buck
at a Goodwill sale and
could drop in a chase to
change his appearance at
no loss. He looked like
a local high school kid,
though he was nearly twenty.
That
was on purpose, and Ronnie
had gone to high school
not eight blocks from here
with a couple of hundred
guys who looked just like
him. This time of day he
didn't worry about being
chased, the only people
around were kids and old
folk, everyone who had
a job was at it and everyone
who didn't was out looking.
Purposefully
he walked up the middle
of the alley. Look like
you have business and belong
somewhere, he reflected, and
no one really sees you
anyway. He drew up
behind the house. It was
perfect.
Though
it had no trees of its
own to obscure a neighbors
view, there was no view
because both neighbors
did. Two big avocado trees
stood between its yard
and the tenement two doors
down, plus a tall cinderblock
wall. The other neighbor
had low fruit trees as
well. The back of the house
was guarded by a white
wooden fence with a padlocked
gate. It was taller than
him, but he vaulted it
easily.
Past
a metal storage shed stood
lawn, flower beds with
their flamingos, and house.
Ronnie first checked the
tool shed. It was unlocked,
but all it had was garden
shit, mower, a bag of fertilizer,
and tools. Inside the house
he'd find better.
Old
people's houses were different.
Ronnie had noticed it right
at his start in this work.
They didn't always have
a lot of cool electronics,
no DVD players or X-boxes
in most of them. Sometimes
they didn't even have a
TV. That was OK, Ronnie
didn't fancy walking off
down the street with a
hot DVD player under his
arm, and getting money
out of that sort of stuff
was risky.
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What you did find in their houses
was cash. They'd put ten, twenty, fifty dollars in a
sugar bowl to pay the bakery truck, the milk man, the
paperboy. Lots would have a drawer with two, three hundred
or more somewhere in the house. In a house with five
rooms or less it didn't take long to find it.
Ronnie own grandmother, who'd lived
not far from here, had had a drawer in her dresser where
she'd put all her and grandpa's change every night. When
her grandchildren would visit she'd have them roll it
up. But she almost never took it in to her bank. When
she died there had been hundreds of dollars in that drawer,
in dimes and quarters. Some of it silver.
Ronnie had found more than one
other grandmother who did the same thing. If he was careful
and not rushed, a lot of them didn't realize he'd been
there, not for days or weeks at least. And cash didn't
connect him to a place once he got clear of it.
He checked the back door. Even
with all the warnings on TV these days, at least a third
of the time he just walked right in. But not today. He
slipped on a pair of latex surgical gloves from his pants
pockets. Thanks to the AIDS scare you could pick them
up almost anywhere. They came in handy, though Ronnie
had never been finger printed. But if he ever were he
didn't plan on getting popped for two dozen or more burglaries.
From his other pocket Ronnie took
the only other thing he needed for the job, a cheap pocket
multi-tool. With screwdriver, pliers, and three inch
knife blade there weren't many windows in these old houses
he couldn't open in a few seconds. He'd started out using
a lock blade knife, but that was a weapon and would add
at least half a year if he was ever caught.
Ronnie didn't plan to ever get
caught, but why take a chance? The multi-tool did a better
job anyway. He carefully stepped around the flowers as
he approached the window. Lots of these old ladies would
notice damaged flowers much sooner than missing cash.
Something caught his eye from the backyard. He turned
around and looked.
That's weird; I thought those
bird things were more spread out. The pink statues
in the flower bed by the wooden fence were clustered
by the gate. Ronnie could have sworn they had been
spread out across the bed, each several feet from the
others.
As he turned back to the window
he noticed the birds in this flower bed were all facing
him. Ronnie knew they'd all been facing the yard when
he'd come in past the shed. What the hell, they were
just plastic. He turned back to the window and opened
the knife blade of his multi-tool.
A reflection in the glass shown
in his eyes. A pink reflection. Ronnie turned around,
his back pressed to the wall beside the window. A dozen
pink flamingos surrounded him in the flower bed. A soft
scrapping sound came from the roof, and instinctively
Ronnie stepped to the side.
A pink plastic flamingo landed
upright in the spot he'd been standing in, its heavy
wire base sliding into the moist, turned earth of the
garden with a wet squinching sound, like a spear.
"Who's up there?" Ronnie's voice
cracked. Someone had to be up on the roof dropping these
things at him. He dashed through the plastic flock and
out on the lawn, knocking into several of the bright
birds. They were hard and unyielding and he felt as if
he'd run through a stand of trees.
Ronnie looked up, the roof was
clear. No one, no plastic bird statues. Back in the flower
bed a dozen pink plastic flamingos stood close together,
facing him. Stood? Didn't I just knock some down? There
were no birds on the ground, all were standing. He started
to back toward the gate. Turning to run Ronnie found
himself facing another dozen of the grotesque pink statues
clustered around the gate.
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"Too weird! You leave me alone you
stupid damn birds! Your just plastic and wire. You're
not real." You're not real! Squinch! A flamingo
landed in the grass next to him, barely missing his foot.
Ronnie turned around. The flock was larger still, silent
and swaying as if in a breeze. Except there was no breeze.
"Ok, ok, I get it! I'll leave.
It's your turf. My bad." Ronnie's knees started to shake, "You're
just FREAKING PLASTIC!" he screamed. Two more of the
birds slid into the ground with force, right in front
of him.
Ronnie turned and dashed for the
shed, arms around his head, expecting a barrage of wire
based birds to bombard him any second.
He made it into the shed, pulling
the thin metal doors closed behind him. Thwap! He
knew the sound was a plastic bird beak hammering on the
doors. Thwap! Thwap! He could feel the shock of
them pounding on it as he held the cheap steel bars that
slid into the slots that held the door closed. Ronnie
pushed up on the bar and felt it catch. The din of the
plastic birds pounding on the shed sounded like a hailstorm.
Chung! His head felt like
it'd been stabbed. A wire base stuck through the low
shed roof. His head had been stabbed! He crouched low
on the floor of the shed and clutched his hands to his
scalp and screamed.
"Let me go! Leave me alone! Go
away! Go away!"
The shed rang with the sounds of
heavy wire bases poking through its thin aluminum walls.
Ronnie cowered in the center of the little space left
between bags of fertilizer and the lawn mower, right
in the center of the shed, where the birds couldn't get
him. The shed was warm inside, filled with the sent of
humus and potting soil.
The tapping grew quieter, less
frequent. Almost it seemed distant. Ronnie lay curled
on the floor of the shed where it was safe. Safe and
warm. He huddled into the soft bags of fertilizer crying
softly. The shed seemed to understand, to comfort him.
He was safe here. He could hide here and be safe.
#
Patrol sergeant Theresa Dixon sighed
as she settled into the passenger side of her patrol
cruiser. Her partner, Officer John Wood, Jr. was adjusting
the seat and steering wheel for his turn to drive. They
always split the driving duties as evenly as they could
on patrol and it always took them a couple of minutes
to get everything adjusted when they did it. J.W., as
she called him, was nearly a foot taller and more than
a hundred pounds heavier than she was and they just couldn't
drive a car set for the other. J.W. couldn't even get
in the drivers side as she set it.
In another four days her transfer
to the crimes against children unit would go into effect,
and J.W. wouldn't have to worry about adjusting his seat
again for months while waiting for patrol to get another
partner for him. Theresa envied that partner.
J.W. was just buckling in when
the call came. "Squawk; all units in the vicinity
415, possible 459, in the alley between eighteenth and
nineteenth south of Alma Street."
"That's right up the street," J.W.
said.
"I'll call it in," Theresa reached
for the radio as J.W. put the car in gear. They climbed
the nineteenth street hill with lights but no siren and
turned into the alley in less than two minutes. A boy
and girl, maybe thirteen years old, waved at them from
halfway down the alley.
The girl was the talker.
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"We heard a lot of
noise from Mrs. Castro's backyard," she explained. "I
know Mrs. Castro's not home; she went to the hospital
today. She paid me to water the flowers and take care
of the garden while she was gone."
"Did you see anybody?" J.W. asked.
"No sir, but there
was a lot of banging in the shed. We heard it inside
my apartment." The girl pointed to the next door building,
which was obscured by a giant avocado tree. "We called
right away."
Theresa tried the gate. It was
locked. "Looks like we go over it."
J.W. turned toward
the kids. "You stay over there," he pointed to the back
of the apartment building with the trees. "While we check
this out."
J.W. check the yard, it was clear.
He boosted his partner over the gate then drew his Glock
to cover her while she fumbled with the latch. The gate
swung open. The shed near by was punctured and battered,
as if with a hammer or something. The lawn was springy
crabgrass of some sort, it didn't show much of any prints,
even when he walked on it.
Theresa pointed to the shed and
he nodded. He stood well off to the side to manipulate
the handle, Theresa stood back with her Glock covering
the entrance. He turned the lever and swung the door
open. His partner tensed . . . then relaxed.
#
As the shed doors swung open Theresa
thought she saw someone, lying on the floor. Then the
light shown better as the door fully opened and she saw
it was just old clothes sprawled across an open bin of
fertilizer.
"No one in there," Theresa said.
"Let's check the rest of the yard," JW
holstered his weapon, "see if he got into the house."
The two officers found only a pocket
multi-tool, a cheap one, lying in the flower bed.
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