A Morning for Flamingos

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Authors: James Lee Burke
Tags: Fiction, Mystery
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grown up in a shotgun farmhouse outside of Abbeville, but I always suspected that inside his cynicism he had a jaded reverence for the ways of late-nineteenth-century southern gentility.
    We sat on cushioned wood lawn chairs in his backyard and drank lemonade amid the golden light and the leaves that scratched across the flagstones, or floated in an old stone well that he had turned into a goldfish pond.
    “You already talked to the sheriff?” he asked.
    “He says it’s between me and you. I’ll be on lend-lease to the Presidential Task Force, but my salary will still come from the department. Evidently everybody thinks this task force is big stuff right now.”
    “You’re not impressed?”
    “Who cares what I think?”
    “Come on, you don’t believe we’re winning the war on drugs?” He was smiling. He had to squint against the yellow orb of sun that shone through the oak limbs overhead.
    “The head of the DEA says the contras deal cocaine. Reagan and the Congress give them guns and money. It’s hard to put all that in the same basket and be serious about it,” I said.
    He stopped smiling.
    “But there’s one difference,” he said. “No matter what those guys in Washington do, we still send the lowlifes up the road and we trash their operation everywhere we can.”
    “All right.”
    “I’m not making my point very well,, though.”
    “Yes, you are. Look, I respect your agency, I appreciate its problems.”
    “Respect’s not enough. When you work for the federal government, you have to obey its rules. There’s no area there for negotiation.”
    “This whole business was your idea, Minos.”
    “It’s a good idea, too. But let’s look at your odometer again. Sometimes you’ve had a way of doing things on your own.”
    “Maybe that’s a matter of perception.”
    “You remember that guy you busted with a pool cue in Breaux Bridge? They had to use a mop to clean up the blood. And the guy you cut in half through an attic floor in New Orleans? I won’t mention a couple of other incidents.”
    “I never dealt the play. You know that.”
    “I can see you’ve had a lot of regret about it, too.”
    “I’m just not interested in the past anymore.”
    “There are some people who aren’t as confident in you as I am.”
    “Then let them do it.”
    He smiled again.
    “That happens to be what I told them,” he said. “It didn’t light up the room with goodwill. But seriously, Dave, we can’t have Wyatt Earp on the payroll.”
    “You’re the skipper. If I do something that causes problems for your office, you cut me loose. What’s the big deal?”
    “You know, I think you have another potential. Maybe in scholarship. Like reducing the encyclopedia to a simple declarative sentence.”
    I set my empty glass on a table. The wafer of sun was low in the sky now, the air cooler, the leaves in the goldfish pond dark and sodden. A neighbor was barbecuing, and smoke drifted over the garden wall into the yard. I leaned forward in the chair, one hand pinched around my wrist.
    “I think your concern is misplaced,” I said. “When I got hurt the second time in Vietnam, it was a million-dollar wound. I was out of it. I didn’t have to prove anything, because there was no place to prove it. This one’s different. It’s ongoing, and I don’t know if I’ll measure up. I don’t know if you have the right man.”
    I saw his eyes move over my face.
    “You’re going to do fine,” he said.
    I didn’t answer.
    “Like I said, it’s not much more complicated than a simple sting,” he continued. “We take it a step at a time and see where it leads. If it starts to get nasty, we pull you out. That has nothing to do with you. We don’t want any of our people hurt. It’s not worth it. We figure the shitbags all take a fall sooner or later.
    “Look, this is the way it’s going to work. We’ve got an apartment for you on Ursulines in the Quarter, and the word’s going to be out on the street that

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