I.
Corbin
Knopf, age fourteen, had tried his best not to think of the peacocks—the
swaying stalks of their coruscating blue necks, the spray of their brush-tipped
crowns, the convex pivot of their meters-wide, fanned trains, with elongated
coverts flashing arrays of their painted eyes.
His
parents had brought him to a psychiatrist after he had been caught trespassing a third
time into the gated neighborhood of Peacock Grove. He had been stalking after
the peafowl there that strut between the citrus trees in the Grove’s central roundabout and drag their trains along the lawns, shedding their precious covert
stems. It began one afternoon when Corbin had slithered on his belly through a
gap between the iron gate’s lower lip and the gully running along the shady
gravel road to the Grove. He was seeking the source of the spectral ululations he
had heard from a nearby artery and identified at once as the cry of his
favorite bird.
Security
Officer Mandy Nutate, sitting in the logo-stamped microcar parked catawampus to the Gatehouse,
had watched with languid amusement upon first spotting Corbin. He was crawling
on hands and knees to position himself among the peafowl. It seemed he wished
to inch as close as possible to them without drawing their attention. This was
as much to be among them in their unconscious meanderings as to avoid spooking
them.
With his
palm-sized camera, Corbin began snapping apparently hundreds of shots of the dozen
or so peafowl. He crouched to frame the birds among the encompassing crescent
of waxy trunks. The peacocks turned elliptically to the dull gray peahens in
the center of their group and shivered out their trains’ fans at them. The
larger peacocks would now and then jerk their iridescent displays and dip their
beaks threateningly toward the other males who edged too close to their intended
mates. Corbin held his finger depressed on the autofocusing camera’s shutter release,
filling its memory card; his eyes were as wide and glassy as the camera’s lens.
Officer
Mandy was content to watch Corbin without interfering while she sat draining her bodega-purchased
Suplex-Soda. Her wage was too pathetic to inspire in her any special jealousy
over her ambit. Besides, the looping cobblestone lanes and yawning front yards had
lain vacant in the sloping sun all afternoon. The only entities in Officer
Mandy’s sight were a dragonfly twitching on the microcar’s windshield, the
peafowl, and Corbin.
Then she
noticed Corbin collecting the stray coverts left in the wake of the peacocks’ spurts;
he carefully coiled them to stow in his red tote bag. She feared questions from
the residents. Specifically, the twin girls from the hacienda-style manse just
above the roundabout who often harvested these feathers upon returning from aerial
contortion practice would ask if the gardener had composted them. She imagined the
twins’ mother, if she were to learn what happened, peppering the neighbors with
portents of an insidious feather snatcher economy plaguing the Grove. Officer
Mandy snorted and resigned herself to cautioning the boy.
She jammed
her Suplex-Soda in the cup-holder and heaved out of the microcar. When she scanned
the roundabout again, though, Corbin was gone. She threw herself back into the
driver’s seat and flipped the ignition switch. The electric engine sang in a high-pitched
glissando as she swung the microcar onto the cobbled lane in pursuit. After
triggering the front gate remotely, she found Corbin half-way down the gravel
road. She pulled into the shoulder ahead of him and got out. He stopped short
and looked down at his sneaker, drawing an S in the dust with its toe.
“Hi, excuse
me! Hi. Let me see what you got in your bag there,” Officer Mandy demanded, marching
at him, her hand reaching forward.
“No, why?”
Corbin asked defensively, tightening his hold on the tote bag’s handles.
“I saw
you take those feathers,” Officer Mandy stated, frowning. He was not budging. She
sighed. “Well—you can’t just go in there uninvited. Did you know you were
trespassing?”
Corbin
nodded, his face etiolated.
“Uh huh.
Don’t let me catch you in there again.”
Corbin
nodded vigorously. He started off sprinting toward the freeway. Officer Mandy turned
back to the microcar. She felt confident that would be the last of him.
The following afternoon, however, Corbin
shimmied back in.
9.15.2017 (c)
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