The following is the "sequel" to my novel The Dad With a Flamethrower. Sitting in the warm sun on this balmy Easter morning it was hard to imagine that six months ago I killed three burglars, winged a fourth, and set three guys on fire with my homemade flamethrower. The last three guys the law didn’t know about, officially. My wife and kids never returned to that house. No, they stayed with my brother as I expeditiously sold the house, paying a premium on the new one far, far away. Raylene and the girls were over at the HOA park playing on the swing set in the glorious spring sunshine as I sipped flat champagne. Since today was a day of thanks commemorating the resurrection of the Easter bunny, as our three year old Remy explained, it felt appropriate to express my appreciation for us being alive. And me not in jail. I couldn’t say that the world was perfect now, but my family was safe and our corner of the world—one far calmer than we lived in back during the election and Jack-o-Lantern season. So with a toast of my nearly empty glass, I said my thanks. Filed away in my study (and with my attorney) was a notice from the DA in our former county clearing me of any charges. That meant, under the laws of the state of Fremont, I got off scot-free. State law had been changed so that a self-defense shooting found to be just that inhibited any future prosecution. Because of a history of politically-motivated murder charges stemming from self-defense in the 2020 riots, the Legislature had deemed it necessary. In most states, even a completely righteous self-defense killing could be charged as murder and there was no statute of limitations on that. The flamethrower was a stickier thing, but the cops who responded to the looting gang that arrived on our cul-de-sac believed the fire was from a dropped Molotov cocktail. Of course, when the burn victims showed up at the hospital ranting about a guy with a flamethrower the charge nurse called the police. Not a single neighbor talked and my DIY human incinerator was long since torn apart and sent off to different landfills. Only the psychological scars remained. Now I was Ross Porter, gunfighter. Going into that disaster I never thought I would have been capable of doing what I did. I suppose that’s why we can’t see what tomorrow would bring; too few of us would have the courage to do what’s necessary. I was an entirely different man now. Still a little flabby (working on that), but definitely no longer The Guy Who Didn’t Get The Memo. A door slammed. “That’s mine!” a girlish yell exclaimed angrily. The ladies were home. “Reya, give that back to your sister, she found it,” Raylene admonished. Remy, our three year old, slid open the back screen door and ran out with a purple plastic egg in her outstretched hand. “Daddy lookit I found.” “Leftover from the egg hunt this morning?” She nodded vigorously. “See, it had dis.” It was a small plastic dinosaur. “Very nice.” “I haffa wash my hands now.” She ran off and was replaced by her older sister, who seemed upset. “Let your sister have her toy. She’s little and it means a lot to her,” I said. “It’s not that,” Reya replied, before disappearing back inside. Raylene appeared last. She lifted the champagne bottle and swished it. “Empty, huh? I thought we finished it at breakfast.” “Nope. It was flat, but why not?” I smiled at her as she leaned against the patio cover post. “You look good in yellow.” “Oh this?” Raylene plucked at her dress with two fingers. “It matches my hair,” she said with an affected coquettishness before flipping her locks with one hand. She knew what she was doing. Despite her moments of self-doubt, my wife knew she was hot. I got up and put my arm around her. “You know what that does to me.” She giggled in response. “What was Reya’s problem? Upset over the toy?” “No, that was just the girls being kids.” She paused and dramatically drew a deep breath. “Some homeless guy came out of the bushes and started yelling. He got pretty aggressive and all the kids got scared, especially Reya.” Reya was old enough to understand that last fall we were in actual danger from the burglars and looters. She never quite bought her mother’s lie of Dad-scaring-off-the-bad-guys-with-his-gun though she hadn’t said as much to her children’s therapist yet. “What?” I squeezed her more tightly. “It’s okay. He never got into the playground or close to the girls and I got them out of there. One of the other moms yelled at him and threatened him with her pepper spray.” “Did you have your gun?” She pushed me away. “Ross, did I have my gun? No, I didn’t because I didn’t expect anything like that to happen in our upper class gated housing development in freakin’ Red Rock City.” Being hours away from the major cities made being homeless here very unattractive, consequently our population of raving derelicts was quite small. “What was I gonna do, shoot him for yelling?” she said defensively. “What if he had a knife? What if he wanted to kidnap a kid?” “But nothing happened.” “That’s not the point.” I opened my mouth to give her The Speech but she put her finger on my lips. “Next time I’ll take my purse, I promise.” “Your purse?” I might be late to joining the concealed carry community but women shouldn’t be carrying guns in their purses. Too easy for the whole thing to be stolen, too hard to retrieve the gun, and the kids could get at it. “Ross, where do I put it in a dress?” She struck a pose again, probably to distract me from the barrage of questions I had and a potential unnecessary lecture. Her attempts at using feminine charm failed to deter my interrogation. Some crusty homeless dude, who according to one of the other moms lived in the adjoining brushy gully (aka “the green spot”), was wandering around the community center parking lot yelling and talking to himself. When he started off towards the playground cussing out his invisible enemies, some Karen began to bitch him out, which was entirely appropriate. Yet because Fruit Loops was firing on faulty cylinders he decided that Karen must be his enemy too and got louder while throwing karate poses. The guy cleared off far enough that it was safe for everyone to get in their cars. Nevertheless, little kids don’t like being yelled at by an adult male who hadn’t bathed since the Superbowl and was accusing them of being demons in skin suits. “So she called the cops, right?” I asked. “That’s what she said,” Raylene replied, annoyed I was still asking questions. I got up out of my chair. “I’m going over there to talk to them.” “Don’t do anything stupid,” she cautioned. “I just want to have a chat with the officers, that’s all.” Actually, I wanted to go over there, find the crazy fucker, hit him with my car, then bash his teeth in with a tire iron. Blood spattered in my mind’s eye. No, that would be, as the courts like to call it, malice aforethought. If I came upon the guy, I could just stop and have a few words with him. Ask him politely to leave the kids alone and go away, never to return. Should he get aggressive and put his hands on me, which he would according to the way I was phrasing my words in my head, I’d pull out my pistol and shoot him. Nah, bad idea. You’ve killed three people already. The detectives might think it was more than a coincidence. This wasn’t the first time something like this had happened. A few weeks ago, officers were called because a homeless man, possibly the same one, was walking in circles on the tennis courts yelling at someone who wasn’t there. Nothing happened—the local rumor mill would have blown up if the cops had so much as cuffed him up—but a few kids from the after school program the HOA put on were scared by it. Come to think of it, the condoms found in the play structure probably weren’t from some randy teens. The burglary of the (empty) snack bar was probably a bum too. The infestation had finally arrived here. When our marriage was brand new and we were dumb enough to live in my condo in River City (back before we moved across the river to the island), the national homeless crisis had already begun. We found needles in the city park that we took baby Reya too; sorta like finding rat turds in the pantry. Raylene didn’t particularly enjoy wondering if the raving derelicts on the jogging path were arguing with their hallucinations or about to turn their wrath on her. Back then, she didn’t carry a gun. Three minutes later I was over at the park and saw no sign of anyone. The only motion was the pastel balloons bobbing on their strings tied to the fence and some crepe paper from the morning’s festivities blowing in the wind. The douchebag scared off the kids who were having fun on a freakin’ holiday. I did a loop down to the gatehouse and didn’t see any cops, but to be fair they could have responded to the reporting party’s house. Damn it. I felt betrayed. We felt safe here. It seems the decadence of the 21st century was at our doorstep again. Our new place was a comfortable house in the center of the development, in the middle of the block, with no “littoral” space like a drainage ditch or walking path behind it. Unlike our last house in West River City, this one did not back up to a golf course. The whole development was built on a bluff that sat undeveloped since the area was founded. Until the housing boom started the only thing the owner used the rocky, grassy land for was grazing sheep. The sale of our old house on the island was surprisingly easy and we didn’t take a bath on the price either. The buyer was a middle-aged couple with kids who endured the hellish few weeks across the river and wanted out of the city. To them and to us, “getting out of the city” were different things. Having a bridge and a hundred yards of water between them and River City was enough. For Raylene and me, it meant a house in a gated community in an exurb in the high desert two hours away. While our new neighborhood wasn’t impregnable, it certainly was formidable. Cliffs and hillsides ringed the perimeter so anyone trying to make unauthorized access would need to negotiate a barbed wire fence before climbing the rocky slopes. A few gullies intruded into this natural palisade but these were so choked with thick, thorny brush only determined attackers would use them. Easy enough to surveille those. There was one major point of concern, a small but broad canyon that formed the drainage for the bluff. The community’s clubhouse, swimming pool, and tennis courts sat next to it. The little bit of greenery there made the area feel more remote and natural than it was, which led to the one house for sale overlooking it selling for a premium price. The green spot’s runoff connected with a creek at the bottom and the undeveloped area around it formed part of the city’s park and greenbelt system. Anyone taking the walking/biking trail along the creek could duck through the fence into the gully. Use trails cut through the brush where teenagers and the homeless over the years penetrated it. Do teens still sneak off to hide in the bushes so they can drink without getting caught? I wondered. Both Raylene and I had been teens in the late ‘90s and both of us knew all the hiding places our peers used for getting “faded” or for awkward, sticky juvenile trysts. What the hell were bums doing in there? Getting high, I bet. For a homeless camp, it was a rather remote place. Usually they’re closer to running water, stores, and services. The nearest shopping center was at least two miles’ walk from here. They’re using the clubhouse, I realized. The bathrooms were unlocked and camera coverage of the pool area was minimal. One of them might even have a sillcock key for the hose bibs. Police interference would be minimal if they kept a low profile. The area was inaccessible by road except through the complex. Our development served on one side as a buffer for them and the vegetated area of the creek-side preserve below as another. It was too far for curious kids to hike to from the nearby housing tracts, even though there was a bridge across to the multiuse trail. The junkies could sneak away from better policed camps and do their drugs here without intervention. I stared at that bit of green. It was no longer a preserved bit of the natural, desert environment that survived the onslaught of the unrestrained housing booms of the past two decades. Today the canyon was nothing but a gash right through to the heart of our rocky bastion. Who knows what the tangle of scrubby brush held in that two acre triangle? Chill out. I realized I was staring at the gully the way a terrified little kid assumed a closet held monsters. Easter Fifteen minutes after I left on my patrol, I was back at home. I forced myself to relax. No real harm had been done, the guy left or the cops ran him off, and if I got in serious trouble at least two ex-soldiers, one of whom was a credentialed federal agent, could be here in ten minutes armed to the teeth. Still, Red Rock was supposed to be the city where we could get away from all the failings of western civilization as embodied by the modern American city, or “blue hive” as they called it here. I cracked a beer—because why not?—and went in to the living room, plopping down next to Raylene on the couch. Some Technicolor musical was playing on the TV. “What are you watching?” “Easter Parade. Judy Garland and Fred Astaire.” “Ugh, I hate campy musicals. So sappy.” “Hey, I like this. It reminds me of my grandma. She used to watch this every Easter.” Raylene’s grandmother raised her after her parents split when her dad walked out. He had been schizo like the junkie too. Her grandma died not long after she flew to California for college. Yeah, I just took a big, fat dump on one of my wife’s fondest memories. I’m a jerk like that sometimes. “Sorry.” I kissed her on the cheek. She kissed me back. “Where are the girls?” “Napping.” “Napping?” “They were on the tail end of a major sugar high. It was inevitable. It’s why they were so crabby, apart from meeting the real life Oscar the Grouch.” “Oscar lives in a trash can, not a tent in the bushes.” She ignored me. “Why did you let them have so much candy? “Oh please, if it was solely up to you they’d barely finish their Easter candy in time for Halloween.” One piece of candy a day was no way for a child to live. She clucked her tongue in protest. “I’m not a monster, besides, you let Remy eat an entire package of Peeps right before church. I was so embarrassed.” We had to leave church early because after running around during worship, Remy threw a tantrum and started that screaming-crying thing three year olds do right before communion. It was kinda embarrassing but we were far from the only family with kids hopped up on sugar. “What time do we eat?” “Grant said to be there by three.” Easter was late this year and consequently it would be a warm one. The mercury was set to push over 80° so my brother decided to throw a barbecue. “Heather cooks better than I do,” Raylene said of my sister-in-law. “That’s not true. You both cook very well. It’s just that you both excel at different things.” Raylene tended to use more vegetables in her dishes whereas Heather considered cheese to be its own food group. “And Sadie bakes better than I do.” “If Sadie isn’t careful, all those cakes and cookies are gonna go straight to her ass.” Raylene busted up laughing at that one. My wife was a petite thing and the fattest she ever got was when she had babies inside her. This woman could hoover up everything in sight and not gain a pound. “Yeah, but no one is ever ‘Wow Raylene, this is the best garlic parmesan zucchini I’ve ever had.’ All the roasted, sweetened carrot medallions might get eaten but they all praise Heather’s diabetes casserole.” She changed the tone of her voice to imitate a conversation between two women. “‘So Raylene, what are you bringing?’ Honey butter carrots, grilled asparagus, bacon sautéed Brussel sprouts, and a Caesar salad.” Her voice dropped an octave below normal. “Vegetable side dishes, everyone’s favorite,” she said, slightly discouraged. “Just make sure everyone sees you eat a lot of meat so they don’t think you’ve gone vegan,” I said. “Oh, real reassuring Ross, thank you.” “Do I detect a note of sarcasm?” What was I supposed to do, validate her insecurities? “If sarcasm was oil you just discovered Saudi Arabia,” she replied. I leaned over and kissed her. How could you not love a woman with a wit like that? Despite Raylene’s fondness for organic foods and serving us vegetables instead of grain-based carbohydrates, she wasn’t a vegetarian. This chick loved meat and I’m not talking in the bedroom. If steak and bourbon was on the table, it wasn’t at my place setting. I loved these little particulars about her from her penchant for USDA prime beef, good booze, and old films. Sitting and watching a sentimental movie with her was like being shown into a secret place. Eventually, Judy Garland and Fred Astaire strolled down Fifth Avenue in their Easter bonnets and it was time to go. Raylene woke the girls. They were both groggy, but more tired than ornery and compliantly climbed into their car seats. In the kitchen, Raylene thrust a foil-covered baking tray towards me. “Here, take the hot cross buns.” “Should I have a towel or oven mitts or something?” “They’re cool.” “Then how are they hot cross buns?” “I’ll pop them in Heather’s oven before dessert and then pipe the cream cheese frosting on before serving.” My brother and his wife lived a few minutes across town. The “for sale” sign that had been on the front lawn was gone now that the house was in escrow. After most of a decade, they’d be moving on. Ethan was taking a Department of Defense contractor job out at the arsenal a ways from the city and moving into the adjoining small town. Following the riots that engulfed Red Rock City last fall, I was surprised that anyone would want to buy a house in a place that went through a literal communist revolution (well, a failed one), but the market forces that brought a buyer to our house downstate brought buyers up here. I mean we moved here, didn’t we? By the time we parked our girls were fully awake and cheerfully ran into the house to see what treats awaited them. “Do you like my dress, Aunt Heather?” Reya said, spinning in a circle. Remy attempted to imitate the spin but bumped into the china hutch. “Your dresses are lovely, my dears. Why don’t you and your sister go watch TV with your cousin Ella?” “Okay!” I left the women to it and went outside where Grant was at the grill. “Hot dogs; isn’t that more of a Memorial Day kinda thing?” I cracked open a beer. “It’s a barbecue. Do you really think the girls are going to get excited over smoked ham and brisket?” I shrugged. “Dunno. I’m excited.” He started chuckling. “Only adults would go ‘Oh boy, smoked meats!’” We both laughed. I told him about what happened to Raylene and the girls at the park. As the story went on, he grimaced and gritted his teeth in vicarious anger. “Did you break his teeth in?” he asked when I finished. “I went looking for him, but no dice.” “What are you gonna do about it?” His question was not exploratory. He did not want to know what my feelings or inclinations were. Grant was asking what my plan was. “Haven’t decided yet. I need to talk to your other two guests first.” “Good idea.” Those other two guests, Ethan and Sadie, were the last to the party. Ethan was a federal agent with some obscure agency and Sadie was a cop for the city police department. As a student resource officer, she seemed hardly older than the high school students she dealt with but was a decade older than the seniors. Both Sadie and Raylene were athletic and attractive. Sadie was curvy and muscular, “stacked” as the kids these days would say, while Raylene was slim and had a runner’s physique. I wondered which one would be faster on her feet. Probably a bad idea to race wives, I thought. “Ethan burned himself,” Saide announced loudly from the kitchen. “Do you have any ice?” she asked Heather. “Dumbass,” Grant said without looking up from the grill. I stepped away and filled up a plate with hors d’oeuvres. I mean not the kind that you get at a fancy catered dinner or five-star restaurant, but standard American middle-class fare. Deviled eggs, chips and dip, veggies and ranch, cream cheese pinwheels, and the like. Yeah, I’m built like Homer Simpson and probably should just be eating raw carrot and celery sticks, but you know what, it’s a holiday and my wife likes stocky guys for some reason. “Glad to see you like those, Ross,” a voice said behind me. I turned. “Huh,” I mumbled to Sadie with a mouthful of her deviled egg. I held up one finger while I finished chewing and swallowing. “Good eggs. Very tangy.” “The secret is lots of dill and relish.” “Nice touch. Where’s Ethan?” “Thanks. He’s icing his arm. I told him to wrap a towel around the Spinach dip but no, he had to manhandle it and got burned. Serves him right.” “No way a man is going to make two trips if he can help it.” She thought that was funny. “Say, can I ask you a legal question?” “No segue, clever.” She was used to people coming up to her in public and asking questions at inopportune times like having just taken a bite of a sandwich, so why not me? “What’s up? Want a carry permit for your flamethrower?” Light up looters just once with a modified weed torch and a 20lb propane canister and you become the butt of jokes. When it went down, my shotgun was in evidence and my pistol upstairs with Raylene. In probably the most inopportune week of my life, I had no long arm to defend myself with and all the gun stores were either sold out or closed on account of a combination disaster and mass rioting. So with a little creativity in the garage, and some teenager on YouTube as my tutor (seriously), I turned myself into a dragon. That thing was seriously sketchy. An ex-Army friend-of-a-friend suggested his solution, an electric pressure washer filled with diesel, but at the time electricity and diesel was in short supply. Had I owned a damn rifle then, I’d never would have had to resort to MacGyvering my self-defense. “So what can be done about the homeless people living in the bushes near our neighborhood?” I asked. “Practically speaking nothing. We don’t have enough cops to shake the bushes and scare them out.” In the aftermath of the riots last fall, Red Rock PD suffered catastrophic retention losses and could barely respond to normal calls for service. A public service task force was so 2019. “Legally speaking, depending on the area, trespassing. Anytime you contact the homeless you’ve got a pretty good chance of coming across one who’s on probation, has a warrant, or has drugs on them. Those incidental violations aren’t bad. Pop ‘em for possession of a controlled substance. Maybe a camping violation.” “So what, I call and you guys come and write them a citation?” “If you’re lucky. To be honest with you Ross the dispatcher might just reject the call if they aren’t causing some sort of imminent danger.” “What about yelling at the kids?” I told her about the scumbag yelling at Reya. “Did he make actionable statements of imminent harm?” “I see your point.” “Look, if one of them gets pissy with you or the kids, give me a call. If I’m free I’ll swing by and do whatever I can, but we simply don’t have the manpower or the will anymore to comb the bushes and clean them out.” “Thanks.” I sank desultorily into the lounge chair and watched my brother poke at the meat on the grill. Gee, Ross, we’d love to help you, but the police department is so dysfunctional you’re lucky that 9-1-1 gets answered. I couldn’t be bitter at Sadie. We all knew her mind on the topic and she wasn’t a member of the fake-it-‘til-you-get-your-pension squad. A few minutes later Ethan emerged with a Ziploc bag full of ice cubes pressed to his forearm. He and my brother had served in the Army together and was in fact family at this point. “Afternoon, gents,” Ethan said, grabbing a beer with his free hand and taking a seat at the patio table. “So, find a house yet?” Grant looked up from the meat he was putting on a platter. “Sorta. Bought five acres that back up right to Army property so nothing is ever getting built behind us. There’s no house on it, but we found a real nice place to rent in town for a few months until we can move in.” Now that the meat was done, the women began to bring out the side dishes for the meal. The entree was smoked ham, brisket, and hot dogs for the kids. The sides were potatoes au gratin, macaroni and cheese, Raylene's bacon sautéed miso Brussels sprouts, honey butter carrots, and grilled asparagus. Caesar salad too. For dessert Sadie's carrot cake and Raylene's hot cross buns with raisins and cream cheese frosting were waiting. After the blessing, Ethan asked “Hey, anyone else find it strange that ham is like an Easter staple? I mean Jesus was Jewish.” Grant forked himself over a slice of ham. “Dude, it’s not like we’re eating lamb.” “I don’t like lamb,” Sadie said. “Too gamey.” “That’s because it’s mostly Australian or New Zealand sourced meat,” Heather explained. “There they feed the animals grass, which gives it that flavor. American lamb is fed on grain so it tastes more like beef. You know, sweeter.” “Well, lamb is pretty popular in the Middle East,” Raylene said. “So is goat but they aren’t eating the goats they’re—” Ethan was cut off by the audible sound of Sadie slapping her new husband. “There’s children around,” she admonished. Ethan looked guilty for a second and began eating. “Custom house, huh?” Sadie asked, picking up the earlier conversation, eager to hear the details about the other Porters’ new home. “It’s a modular home,” Heather said. “A real nice one. 2,500 square feet. Four beds, three and a half baths.” “You’d never know from the pictures that they truck it in,” Grant said. “Don’t say it, don’t say it,” Heather said to him while doing that thing where women didn’t make eye contact. “It’s a triple wide,” Grant said with a grin. “I told you not to say it.” “It was the cheapest and fastest option to get a house. The design we picked has pretty much everything we want and we’re having a large garage/shop built next to it. We’ll end up having more room than we’ll possibly need.” He turned around and continued taking the meat from the smoker. “Ross, I told you, rather than spend hundreds of thousands moving into another city, you shoulda built a compound with us.” “I need reliable ultra-high speed Internet to do my job,” I said defensively. I am a senior executive for a very high grossing IT company and work remotely. DSL or Starlink in the sticks wouldn’t cut it. “Tell you what, we’ll build a little cabin in the back next to Ethan’s shack.” “It’s not a shack, it’s a tiny home,” Ethan said. He was still a little self-conscious that I made at least triple what he did. His savings had gone into paying off Sadie’s mortgage in exchange for getting his name added to the deed and her changing her last name. Rural properties were selling like crazy in Fremont. After the floods and riots of last year, plus the fact we were in the early stages of a real civil war, no one wanted to be in the cities. Those in the metros, like Raylene and me, were moving to the exurbs, and those in exurban cities were moving to the sticks. The further from desperate people, the better. Desperate people like the crazy homeless guy. My wife told the story to the whole table. Ethan and Heather hadn’t heard it yet. Raylene added in new details she hadn’t told me, like how the douchebag was cussing so the kids could hear it and even making grabbing motions, though it was on the other side of the fence. I took my building rage out on my meat, which I cut into unsatisfyingly small portions. Finally, I couldn’t handle it anymore. “You know what? Screw these people. They make a choice not to take their meds, then they act like animals, and them I’m expected to show sympathy for them? No. These same moms that are up in arms about this guy are probably the same ones that got mad when the camp under the Interstate got cleared out a few weeks ago and the state threw away all their stuff in dumpsters. If this was a feral pitbull that bit some kid, they’d want the dog destroyed. Okay? We don’t treat stray animals like this.” I was primed to say more, but my wife grabbed my arm and shot me a look that could freeze water in the Sahara. “Isn’t there a shelter they can go to?” Raylene asked. She was our California-educated crunchy granola hippie family member after all. Sadie answered. “Yes, but it’s small and can only handle a large influx in winter or summer when it’s triple digits. That’s when they open the overflow hall, but honestly, few of them want to go there. Shelters have rules, like ‘Sir, please don’t shoot up Fentanyl on your cot.’ Or some don’t like that they can’t drink malt liquor in there. They’d prefer to camp out where they can do whatever they want, even if they go hungry.” “Really?” Raylene asked. “Yeah, really,” Sadie said, aggressively stabbing at her salad. “I know everybody thinks that homeless people are just down on their luck and need a helping hand, but that’s crap. Those kind live in their cars and the only time we have trouble with them is a parking complaint. Then they apologize to the traffic cadets and move somewhere else. Our last survey showed about a hundred regular homeless people here and most of them are mentally ill drug addicts.” “Both?” Heather asked in surprise. “Yep. Some of the strong psych meds can have really nasty side effects so they prefer to just get high or stay drunk to deal with the voices or whatever. Being strung out is better than feeling like a zombie or whatever on what the docs give them.” “Can’t they be forced into therapy or a hospital or something?” “What hospitals? They closed most of those in the ‘80s. You gotta be really sick to get institutionalized for good now. For addiction? Forget it. The laws are getting slightly better, but there simply is no infrastructure in this country to house the mentally ill or drug addicts. The best we can do is take a problem character off the street for a few hours or days until he calms down.” I mumbled something about liberals and do-gooders and forked some food in my mouth. Ideas were brewing in my head and it would be best to let the topic drop. Deliberation On Easter Monday I did a little reconnaissance. Fences could be climbed and cut and ours were. The perimeter chain link fence had a human-sized hole in it and the bottom strand of the city’s barbed wire had been snipped. I already saw a work order created for it on the HOA maintenance webpage so we were good in the short term. Still, that was no guarantee the fence would stay uncut. Grant’s voice echoed in my head: “An obstacle not enforced by fire is not an obstacle.” All it would take was a junkie who wanted to use the park toilets or break into cars and the perimeter would be breached again. Something more drastic was needed; something that would also send a message. I thought about electrifying the fence where they were making entry. There was always the legitimate option of talking to the HOA to see if they would do it. Given the panic over the riots last year, I’m sure some outraged mom would be bloodthirsty enough to second the motion. Scare yuppies badly enough and they’ll flip all the way to “Get off my lawn” in no time flat. One of the bleeding hearts who couldn’t handle the change in attitude around here actually sold us our house, but I digress. Challenges involved cost, signage, maintenance, and the inevitable question of “Who’s gonna pay for that?” And although the tolerance towards anti-social behavior in Red Rock was extremely low, there would be at least one lawyer that would nix the idea. Were electric fences even legal in this state? I had no clue. Now I could do it myself on the sly. The DIY solution of jumper cables and a car battery seemed like a great way to electrocute myself. For a couple hundred bucks more at Tractor Supply Co. and I’d be in business with less of widowing my wife. Either way, it wouldn’t be a long-lasting solution once the bums obtained some insulated wire cutters or found and destroyed the charger. So without bug-zapping our unwanted guests, I needed another solution. Whatever it was, it had to be deniable if it carried even the slightest hint of criminal or civil liability. No sense getting sued by an ambulance chaser because the mountain lion I released ate a homeless guy’s leg. My criteria was:
Canned durian fruit was a creative option. While the flesh of the brown, Asian spike-covered fruit tastes good, like a custard, it absolutely stinks. The smell is so rank that Singapore’s metro system has “no durian” signs like American businesses plaster “no smoking” signs at the entrance. Unfortunately, Amazon only had freeze-dried stuff available and I doubted that leaving what was, after all, food outside would last long. I’m sure something would eat it or it would rapidly decay and lose efficacy. What I needed was something far more persistent. Going the fertilizer route, I could do a lot with an aqueous solution of bone meal dissolved in water combined with ammonia and applied with a pump sprayer. No, the water would evaporate and/or saturate into the soil too quickly. That left chemicals. Stink bombs were just noxious chemicals, after all. In bulk, I could pour these on the ground in the areas where the tents were and other areas “suitable” for camping. The scent would be awful in the immediate area but would disperse with distance so none of us residents would have to smell it. The easiest homemade stink bomb recipe that I knew, my brother and I tried as a kid involved dumping match heads in a bottle of ammonia for a couple days to produce ammonium sulfide gas. I’m not sure how long the odor would last in that state if I went splashing the results around. This would be easier if I simply created a “corporate” account with a chemical supplier and charged everything to a personal credit card. The problem with that was I worked remotely from home and it would create a paper trail. Massive data companies don’t usually order organosulfuric compounds to residential addresses. You’re dealing with people who don’t bathe, live among their own garbage, and go to the bathroom feet away from their camps. Assuming they noticed something was off, they would quickly go nose blind. But what was stronger, irritating, and persistent? What would Walter White do? For kicks, I started reading the Wikipedia entry for poison gas and entertained a daydream of sending a cloud of mustard gas into the gully. One thing led to another and finally a semi-reasonable answer came to me. I went ahead and bought four Mark 9 16-ounce pepper spray, or “OC,” canisters. These were the riot sized models that had a pistol grip and could be confused for a tiny fire extinguisher. There was nothing special about these other than the quantity and I chose a wider cone spray pattern rather than a tight stream or a gel. 1.33% major capsaicin content was apparently maximum strength for humans. That should do. The delivery would come courtesy of Amazon. I created a fake account using a VPN to obscure my computer’s IP address just in case the purchase set off some red flags. By subpoenaing my Internet service provider my identity could be ascertained. With the VPN, all any investigator would get is a knot that my offshore proxy provider wouldn’t help untangle. The account itself was setup in the name of “Ann Hall,” a completely unmemorable and common name with several women of that appellation in this city. Since I was only committing misdemeanors, should I be investigated I wanted to make the trail too thin for a detective to follow. Again, the goal was to make any investigator really work to figure out who I was and connect the dots. He’d need at least three subpoenas, which might not even give him anything. Funding came from a virtual credit card, though while linked to one of my bank accounts, the card could be used without providing my real information. Normally to prevent fraud a credit card processor will verify the billing/shipping address against the account address, but this virtual provider just says “Yes, that’s correct!” to any charge, assuming the charge was within the parameters I set up. I could have said my name was Biggus Dickus of 222B Baker Street and the charge would go through. So as far as Amazon knew, Ann Hall was a real human with a valid credit card. Lastly, the package would be delivered to an Amazon locker that I could anonymously access while wearing an N95 mask and hoodie for the security cameras. All I had to do was wait two days for Amazon Prime to do its thing and then tell the wife I was going for some exercise. When picking the delivery up, I left my cellphone at home. The Amazon account wouldn’t point back to me unless the NSA got involved, I could claim my bank info was stolen to setup the virtual card, and there would be no pings off a cell tower placing me at the pickup lockers on the edge of town. This would last as long as they let you scan a printed barcode instead of your phone. I rode my bike and chained it up at a park a few blocks away and walked the rest of the distance, sticking to routes that weren’t likely to have security cameras. This was a bit of paranoia in that again, short of murder, no one was going to canvas a whole neighborhood for cameras to backtrack my path. While not a totally foolproof way of avoiding identification, no local cop was going to have an FBI digital forensic team get involved. Had I been buying these for self-defense, I would have put more thought into the process, like buying the triple-action kind with real CS “tear gas” added. Heck, had I thought about it before doing all the work to conceal the purchase I could have just paid cash over the counter for bear spray at any sporting goods store in the next county. Bear spray would work just as good and was like 2% strength versus one-point-something for humans. Oh well, live and learn. What I didn’t count on was the heat. This warm April was quite a change from our cold winter. I was half dead—unable to stop and buy water—when I arrived at the Amazon kiosk. The locker itself unlocked by scanning a barcode. The printed confirmation email worked as well as holding my phone screen under the scanner. All I had to do was remove the package from the correct locker, which I did wearing gloves of course. The only trace left would be an indistinct video of a sweaty guy in a hoodie or perhaps my corpse, dead of heat exhaustion. OC The next day, I waited until Raylene and the girls were gone to test out the spray pattern of the pepper spray I bought. My package was hidden in the garage behind some paint cans. It would take a year or two for someone to discover it. Anyhow, I broke open one of the plastic packs and looked over the canister. “Maximum strength” apparently meant 2.2 million Scoville heat units, like five or six hundred times more powerful than hot sauce. Oleoresin capsicum (OC), the stuff that makes peppers hot, is an oily substance contained in the seeds and veins of hot peppers. Using chemistry, the manufacturers in their evil scientist’s lab, distilled it down to make the active ingredient. Unlike chemical Mace and tear gas, OC was entirely natural. It’s organic! I laughed. That was the last laugh of the day. I took aim, my finger poised on the trigger like a tyro taking his first shot under the watchful eye of an experienced gunman. A bright orange spray shot out like the devil's Lysol, and I couldn't help but let out a low whistle. Holy crap, this thing was powerful! I let off the trigger and looked in to see that I had spray painted the inside of the can with a vibrant orange coating. A hose out was due for sure. I inadvertently leaned in for some reason. You ever get a snoot full of Tabasco sauce and the smell makes you sneeze? Well, it was worse than that. There wasn’t even a pungent aroma filling the air, yet I felt a sneeze building up, like a volcano about to erupt. Springing back and dropping the lid was my second mistake, one of epic proportions. The aerosol of liquid fire was already wafting upwards and out of the can, so the falling lid displaced the spicy air directly into my face. It wasn't so bad at first. I just coughed hard and felt the sensation of heat. "This isn't so bad," I muttered, trying to convince myself despite rapidly escalating panic. My hands went to my face and found it to be slightly damp. I sneezed and blew snot all over the top of the trash can. I just slimed myself, was my final thought as the full fury of the oleoresin capsicum hit. Oh fuck! My eyes clamped shut, and I cursed my bad luck for not wearing my glasses. With the sensation of burning beach sand being ground into my eyeballs, I pulled off my shirt and used it to wipe the excess liquid off my face. Seemed like a prudent idea, but it felt like I was smearing burning hot oil into my skin. There wasn't much overspray on me to begin with, so perhaps this was a bad idea, although that thought was not nearly so consciously formulated. Shirtless, I blindly groped my way in through the garage door and to the sink. I burned the whole way, like a sunburn mixed with a hot sauce burn on my tongue. Okay, it wasn’t so much a burning sensation as such violent, incapacitating pain that so overloaded the pain receptors that all they could report was “heat” as in Someone is blowtorching your face! It hurt worse than the time I sunburned myself redder than a lobster and my older brother kept slapping my back to be a prick. Whoever built our house was a genius because the garage sink was a deep farm style one with a tall faucet that had one of those pull down hose things. I plunged my head under the cold water and rubbed it all over my face. Oil and water don’t mix, dumbass! I swore at myself and pulled my eyelids apart. Involuntary muscle contractions from the pain and the water hitting my eyeballs fought my fingers. There was a bit of pleasure of the coolness flushing away the spray. But that didn’t last long. I felt like I was drowning and pulled away, hyperventilating above the sink, dripping snot and spitting out saliva. After about ten minutes of repeating the flushing, drowning, and gasping routine, I felt well enough to turn on the water and open my eyes. My skin only burned as badly as that time my junk did that one time I cut up Jalapeños and then took a whizz without washing my hands. The coughing was mostly reflexive. Next I washed everything from my neck up with bar soap to remove excess oil. Then, more mistakes were made. Hot water will open the pores and release any trapped oil, right? Yeah, no. I was on fire again. Screaming like a bitch, I turned the tap back to cold and spent the next few minutes recovering from that mistake. Finally, I collapsed on the floor against a pile of dirty clothes for Goodwill. If that was a minor exposure, what the hell is a full blast like? When I felt functional again, I stumbled to my feet and found a trashed shirt from the donation bag to put on. The trash can still needed to be hosed out, remember? If Raylene or Reya got a face full of that crap taking out the garbage I’d be divorced. Having learned from the flash burns from my flamethrower (sadly I did not apply the lesson a few minutes ago), I donned full PPE. Disposable N95 mask and goggles, then a plastic grocery bag with a hole cut into it which I tucked under the face straps to make a kind-of balaclava. I hope the neighbors can’t see me. With the can on its “stomach,” I lifted the lid from behind the same way a game warden lets a bear out of a cage. I gave it about fifteen minutes of hosing and letting the water run into the rock ground cover. For good measure, I tossed some dirt inside and deliberately let it coat the wet sides. I stripped again and hid the evidence in the decontaminated can under two trash bags. I had really good timing because I heard the garage door open just as I stepped back inside the house. Running back upstairs, I stripped down again and ducked into the bathroom. Oh shit, I thought when I saw myself in the mirror looking like the victim of a drive-by spray tanning. A quick, cold shower was the order of the day. Always a cold shower. Ethan told me about how he took a hot shower after his exposure to OC at the federal academy in Georgia and how that was a huge blunder. I wish I remembered that half an hour ago. When I was finished, Raylene was in the bathroom. “Get a little sunburn?” she asked. “Maybe. A reaction to some disinfectant I sprayed in the trash can earlier. You and the kids should let me take out the trash just in case.” This was a horrible lie. A nurse might hear that and start asking questions about what kind of chemical you were using that would turn one’s skin colors. There were a million inconvenient questions this extremely smart woman could ask right now that could derail everything. If she conducted a thorough examination of me and the garbage she would see right through my lie. But she didn’t. “Mmm, okay.” She kissed me on the cheek. “Take a Benadryl.” Please God, don’t let her lips start burning. If that happened, I’d be done. Camp The beautiful thing about drones is that I could reconnoiter my objective without going near it and get a much better perspective than in person. At three hundred feet above ground level, the drone was practically invisible and silent to anyone below it. Humans didn’t like to look up. Using the pan-tilt-zoom camera, I didn’t even have to get close. I hovered vicariously overhead like a ghost. No wonder all those Russians got killed so easily in Ukraine. They had no idea they were so visible. Beneath “me” the bright blue tarp strung up over a tent stood out almost offensively. The colors of everything were so much different than I expected. Google Earth showed a brown and dark green mass from space. Closer in, I could tell apart each green juniper bush from the mesquite trees and even see the texture of the ground. It was just a touch too far to see what had been in the pot on the junkie’s stove but I was able to see in detail that he was cooking. Manmade details really stood out from up here whereas the mostly horizontal angular view I’d get from the rim of the gully would be blocked by the foliage. I had walked along the back of the houses and knew that none of the camp was visible from at least the inhabited part of the rim. The homeless down there knew that too. Yet they could not hide from something directly overhead. In fact, straight up was something that they hadn’t considered judging from all the incongruous colors and the amount of garbage that littered the place. Even if their tents had been camouflaged their “spoil” would clue someone in to look closer. The good news was there were only three camps. I couldn’t quite see under one tarp, so I couldn’t tell if one campsite was more than just a single tent or not. Any way you cut it, I had a good idea of who was down there. Three sites with probably one person each. I counted three chairs, none duplicated, so that had to mean no more than four, or at most five, people. Nothing moved except the fabric fluttering in the light breeze; even after I took the chance to descend low and buzz the tents to see if I could startle anybody out of the tents. Nobody stirred. Today was homeless day at the food bank, so now was my best shot at finding all camps unoccupied at the same time. This kind of crap ruined Reno and San Francisco, two cities that were near and dear to my wife’s and my hearts and I’ll be damned if I was going to let it happen here. Most men aren’t quite cowards but are willing to trade a life of minor discomforts and annoyances rather than take risks like this. This time last year I'd be among them, but killing those burglars exorcised that right out of me. I landed the drone and packed it away. The day was growing later and warmer, which meant people would be enjoying the nice weather. Witnesses were not something I wanted. Besides, the homeless wouldn’t be away from camp all morning. The longer I waited, the more likely I was to make excuses and not do anything. Procrastination was just a way of masking anxiety, wasn’t it? * * * Stealthy infiltration to the target objective was made from a southerly vector across a water feature from foreign territory and—yeah, I walked up the gully from the creek-side trail and I parked my bike on the other side of the bridge leading from another neighborhood. As the vegetation that filled the green spot was seemingly impenetrable from this direction, I followed the existing paths that had been hacked into it. These low, stooping trails that cut through the mesquite, juniper, salt cedar, and lots of other plants I couldn’t identify reminded me of game trails. Had this been bear country instead of the high desert I’d be worried I was walking into a den. A bear was just what this place needed. Or maybe a mountain lion. I knew neither of these dwelt here because nothing was eating the homeless people. I was thinking ridiculous thoughts like a frightened man whistling in the dark. Stop it. There was a flash of bright blue Nylon between the trees. The hobo jungle. Get your head in the game, Ross. With all my senses on full alert, I moved deeper into the woods. Whatever the opposite of buck fever was, I had it. At least when my dad and I went hunting I’d get to—possibly—kill something. Today, I might be killed (though the chance was low) or arrested (much better odds). Either way, at least the cops would finally do something about this festering sore in our city even if at my expense. The first campsite lay before me in a clearing. I held my breath, scared I might make too much noise exhaling and miss a subtle sound that could tell me someone was home. “Hello?” I said at the foot of the tent. No answer. I hesitated a moment longer and then just decided to nut up and get it over with. I unzipped the tent, half expecting to find something like that half-man/half-dog from Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Nope. Just some flies and quilts. I hesitated. Of course I hesitated. Only pure sociopaths and really pissed off people would open fire with an OC canister without hesitation. But wasn’t I really pissed off? Sorta. The problem with psychologically healthy people like me is that if we don’t snap in the heat of the moment, we very rarely go off and do rash things like this. This moment was mine to back down. Ross Porter could back out now, go home, and be a respectable upper-class executive who let the police deal with problems like this (or just ignore it when they didn’t). Like every asshole who let the big cities crumble because they were too weak to take action themselves. I didn’t come this far to puss out. That guy couldn’t win. My fingers seemed to clench around the trigger almost of their own accord. A yellow-orange coating of droplets started appearing on everything, the quilts, the pillow, the pack in the corner, and the Nylon walls. The canister ran dry just as drops started to fall from the back fabric tent panel. Finished, I zipped up the door and promptly sneezed. So much for the N95 mask protecting me. I looked around me nervously before bagging the spent canister in a plastic bag. The warm spring morning was still and quiet. A few birds chirped far away. Did you know that birds are immune to capsaicin? They can eat the hottest chili peppers with no effect. I moved to the next campsite and repeated the procedure. This time, I used a stick to move around the blankets and clothing to ensure that everything was soaked. There was a bike in this camp so I also punctured the tires. No way to prove it wasn’t from road debris, right? With two out of three tents down, I felt pretty excited. It had been so easy! This was just a walk in the brush. Exposure to the OC was my only real risk. What had I been worried about? As quickly as the feeling of elation came, my spirits collapsed. It had also been so unsatisfying. I didn’t get to see any of these people writhing in agony, swearing to shake the dust of our town off their feet. There was no satisfaction, no catharsis of destruction in the slashing of tent walls, breaking of property, and of burning things. The only sign of success that I would see would be the absence of crazy homeless people harassing children. Perhaps if I considered this lack of emotional payoff, I wouldn’t have done a thing. You had to be crazy to sustain that kind of bent inner fire. Well, no, not if Tom Clancy taught me anything. Some guys burned with cold passion to see their mission through to the end. One more, Ross. I maneuvered my way through the thicket to the final camp. Thorns tore at my clothes as I made it through. The spinose structures of many of the plants did serve a purpose in keeping curious kids away. Had the plant life been friendlier, this woulda been a fun place to play as a kid. I remember screwing around in a pine wood like this when I was a boy, though that was on a military base with a homeless population of exactly zero. This next camp was strewn with junk. Not just the trash of the other camps, but the resident here was clearly picking stuff out of trash cans on garbage day. A broken chair, the leaf of a dining room table, a floor lamp; you get the idea. Tendrils of smoke from a cooking fire rose from a ring of rocks. Today would be the last day of that fire hazard if I had anything to do about it. With confidence, I approached the last tent and reached for the zipper. In one swift motion I zipped the door open only to see a startled face turn towards me. “Hey, what the fuck!” the occupant said to the masked and gloved intruder (me). I was just as shocked as he was. To say I did anything other than panic would be a lie. I leveled the canister at his face—the pistol grip made it point naturally just like my Glock—and squeezed the trigger. With my heart thumping faster than in an adrenaline-fueled sprint, I pulled the trigger again. The man's bewildered expression vanished, replaced by a squinting wince as his eyes reflexively shut, bracing for the impending onslaught of the yellow-orange spray. For a fraction of a second, he froze, caught in a half-seated lean, like a coiled cat on the verge of pouncing. After an interminable moment, the searing effect of the capsicum took hold, and he let out a blood-curdling scream. Startled by the savagery of his cry, I jumped back. The urge to flee clawed at my conscience, but I couldn't turn tail now. I hadn't ventured into this act of petty terrorism just to torment a bum. I had to keep going for the greater good. Almost feeling a twinge of remorse, I sprayed him again, systematically coating his head, hands, and chest with the noxious mist. He lurched forward, and I sidestepped, expecting him to come tearing out of the tent door. That's what I'd do in his shoes—instinct takes over when you're on fire, even if that fire is made of pepper spray. But no, instead he dropped to all fours, frantically tugging his sleeping bag over his face. I continued spraying, methodically drenching the bag, the nylon walls of the tent, and his scattered belongings. When the canister sputtered dry, I tossed it into a plastic bag with the others. "Get the hell out of here, and don't come back! Do you hear me? You and your friends too!" Without waiting for his response, I bolted. The clock was ticking, and all he needed to do was recover enough to find his phone and dial 9-1-1. He probably believed he was dying, and the fire station was only five minutes away, minus the walk in. It wouldn't do to be caught coming out of the brush just as the rescue squad arrived. At the edge of the copse, I halted to shed my incriminating protective attire. Gloves, hoodie, basketball pants, mask, hat, and goggles—all got stashed in my backpack alongside the empty OC canisters. Now, I was nothing more than an overweight jogger, gasping for breath as I made my way down the trail. In the five minutes it took me to reach the pedestrian bridge over the creek, I'd transformed into a convincing act. Sweat dripped from my forehead and into my eyes, the ballcap's already sodden brim offered no help, but I pressed on. My lungs heaved as I slowed to a walk coming into the cul-de-sac. To my relief, no police cars lay in wait. I didn’t even hear sirens. Well, sirens or no, as breathless and sweaty as I might be, I had to get out of there and fast. Hitting the bike, I pedaled with every ounce of strength left in me, propelling myself toward the arterial road. No cars passed, and not a soul ventured outside, but in my mind's eye, a handful of hidden faces watched me from the shadows of their windows. As soon as I hit the four-lane road beyond the housing tract, I released a pent-up sigh of relief. If a cop happened to spot me, I could claim I was coming from anywhere—just another unremarkable bicyclist. Of course as soon as the adrenaline began to wear off I had some major problems. The sweat dripping into my eyes and blinding me was bad enough, but I was starting to feel dizzy. It was already in the mid-eighties and I did make the other leg of this trip swaddled like an Eskimo baby. Two and half miles goes pretty fast on a bike, but it’s hell when you’re fighting heat stroke. I was already kinda wobbling when I came in the gate of the development, a bad sign. By the time I got to the house, I was starting to swoon. In fact, I think I blacked out a bit because I can’t remember unlocking the front door, only struggling up the stairs. Despite all this, I made it up the stairs to the bathroom. As I sat on the shower bench letting the cold water wash over me, I realized I brought the contaminated backpack upstairs. Something about that seemed bad. A half-hour later, I recovered sufficiently that I no longer felt like I was gonna puke or lose consciousness. That meant I could now wash myself to remove any trace of OC residue. Screw shampooing, I wanted to lie down. Finally clean and dry, I trooped down to the kitchen and guzzled a whole quart, or what passed for one in these shrinkflation days, of Gatorade. If those missing electrolytes didn’t get replaced pronto, I’d be laid up with an insufferable headache for the rest of the day. With a second bottle in hand, I went back upstairs, grabbed the backpack, and brought it down to the patio. Everything I wore, anything that might have any skin cells or hairs on it, went on the grill. About ten minutes on “warm” should do it. All I had to do was heat the cells up over about 120° F and the structure of my DNA should be destroyed (without burning the clothes; that would be too suspicious). After the clothes cooled down, I’d soak them in bucket of bleach. Googling the necessary scientific information made me feel like a creeper with a dead hooker in his bathtub. I wasn’t trying to get away with murder or anything, nor did I think it was likely that my DNA would be collected and eventually traced for some misdemeanor, but I wanted to take no chances. You see, pepper spraying a homeless person and their tents would be big news if it got out, the kind that would tug the heartstrings of easily emotionally manipulated people all over. I didn’t want the NextDoor moms brigade to pressure the police chief into the kind of intensive manhunt that might find my clothes. In this day and age, enough uproar could make that kind of thing happen. By the time Raylene came home, I was finally done with my evidence destruction and lying on the couch. The bleach soaked clothes? Oh, those were drying on the garage roof. Where else was I going to hide slightly charred, bleached clothing from my wife? Conclusion Despite obsessively checking NextDoor and the local news websites, I saw no reports involving my nefarious deeds. It was actually agonizing. By bedtime, there wasn’t even a whisper of news. On one hand, I wanted to see success reported along the lines of “officers removed the ‘victims’ to a homeless shelter” and to see what info the cops might have. Calling Sadie if she heard anything about ‘something’ happening in the green spot would go way beyond innocent curiosity. Sleep came easy enough, but my phone alarm chimed softly at 4 AM the following morning. Raylene didn’t even stir. I thought she would have lots of questions about why I was suddenly interested in biking, but my explanation of yesterday’s overheating was apparently enough to quell any suspicion about a pre-dawn ride in the cooler temperatures. It was only a couple miles to the part of town where it was garbage day. I worked my way through the neighborhoods tossing one item each into random trash cans. The incriminating evidence would be comingled and dispersed across at least three trucks. For a misdemeanor, no one was going to hand-sort through a landfill. I was home by sunrise. The only evidence of me would be isolated home security camera footage spread across three housing tracts. With no reason to review the footage, I was effectively anonymous behind my paper COVID mask and ballcap. Another day passed without the cops knocking on my door. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t nervous, but this kind of thing was very out of character for me. Only fools and criminals at heart were inured to the fear of apprehension. On the following Monday, the weekly police blotter column in the paper reported that a homeless man was taken to the hospital for evaluation following exposure to pepper spray. Police were investigating the assault and vandalism, that they believed, stemmed from a dispute in a homeless camp near the creek trail. The suspect was thought to be another homeless person. I smiled. For all intents and purposes, I had gotten away with it. What a dangerous precedent; it was almost like fate was encouraging me. Read more about Ross' transformation in The Dad With a Flamethrower: A novel that looks at fatherhood and modern suburban masculinity through the post-apocalyptic genre.
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Author Don ShiftDon Shift is a veteran of the Ventura County Sheriff's Office and avid fan of post-apocalyptic literature and film who has pushed a black and white for a mile or two. He is a student of disasters, history, and current events. Archives
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