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‘The Dog House’
In These Parts Sidebar 2: Three Men Speak of Wild Times: 12/25/23
© 2023 James LaFond
JUL/15/24
As I was seated with these five big men, the conversation advanced to a story about a leather jacket which Kelley will have to tell again, and from thence to a tale of Mike and Jim’s father collecting some money in a menacing fashion, and thence to his not forging someone for not taking proper care of a piece of property. The Leather Jacket story will be related in The Devil’s Point.
Kelley: Whatever happened to Jack and Dianne?
Mike: Fuggin’ dead, I think, died in prison.
Jim: Dianne died in prison. She went up on federal charges, because she had her name on all six houses. He didn’t sign for shit.
Mike: That was some cold shit there.
Kelley: But she was a knowing partner—in up up her elbows.
Jim: He went up on state charges. She died doing time. He got released and retired for a few years in Tennessee before he passed.
Kelley: They got me to haul weed for them a couple times. But when I saw what they were doing, how big their operation was, I said, “Fuck you. You people are gonna get busted.” They had all these hydroponic systems. It was too much, were buying cars…
Author: Wouldn’t the energy consumption get them targeted?
Mike: Not so much back in the day. Things weren’t all computerized. Besides, they had the plastic caps on the meters. They eventually replaced them with glass.
Jim: Jack used to get into the gas meter and use a paper clip to stall the gear, but only long enough so that the reading would indicate normal monthly consumption instead of what they were using.
Kelley: Fuckers were into it, that’s for sure!
Jim: So, the one grow house, he paid us [author forgets the dollar amount] a month, each, to live their like a regular family, to never go downstairs.
Kelley: Like that ain’t fuggin’ suspicious!
Mike: Really, it was some Adams Family shit!
[laughter]
Jim: [Rises forward on the edge of his seat, eyes bright, talking with his hands.] Law enforcement didn’t have the satellite capability and the computerized energy records. It would only be one house in a neighborhood, and like I said, he was adjusting the meter reading, which not only throws that angle of investigation, but reduces the gas bill!
[spreads arms] He has a Big Dog lived in the yard. You could lift the dog house, which was on a wooden platform, and there was a staircase leading down to a tunnel into the basement. Only one time he had us get into a bucket for him.
Mike: And the buds were that big! [makes a circle with his hands as large as a baseball] It wasn’t gonna last—gettin’ too big.
Kelley: When he started buying cars you knew it was only a matter of time. It’s like senior skip day every day, you’ll eventually get caught.
Author: What is senior skip day?
Mike: You mean you never been in high school?
Kelley: He’s from Baltimore. They probably have head hunting day instead.
[laughter]
Author: I flunked out in high school.
Jim: So, it would be a Friday, towards the end of the year. No senior’s who skipped school would be listed as absent, unless they got caught. The teachers would try and catch us. This one teacher [name searched for and found but forgotten by author] he would stake out the parks where we liked to party, park across the entrance and call the cops—total prick. So I would scope out where the bulk of the seniors would go to party and get myself a vantage above that, so that’s we’d have plenty of time to pack up and clear out.
Kelley: So movin’ weed for years, especially when you’re growin’ and distributing in an urban area, it’s like senior skip day every day.
Mike: Just couldn’t last.
Jim: But The Dog House, that was genius!
To be concluded in On TV.
‘A Beast’
in these parts
‘On TV’
eBook
predation
eBook
'in these goings down'
eBook
into leviathan’s maw
eBook
the fighting edge
eBook
taboo you
eBook
crag mouth
eBook
cracker-boy
eBook
the gods of boxing
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