Alice and Bernie: By Death Bemused V

Alice and Bernie: By Death Bemused

A Brief Conversational Narrative by David L. Haase

 

Episode 5: In which the police step in.

“Sarge, it looks like a kidnapping. Do we call in the FBI?”

Detective Phil Glans of the Fairfield Police Department started briefing his old partner, Charlie Reid, now a detective sergeant and mostly a desk squatter. Only a slow Saturday would get him out of the office.

“Fill me in,” the sergeant said.

“This is some kind of church camp that mixes old people and young Asian kids. It gives the geezers a break from the old folk’s home and it helps new Asian immigrants get used to the country. Win-win.”

“Where do they get the geezers?”

“Local old folk’s homes. The camp pays their expenses. The homes are glad reduce patient loads for a weekend. Like I said, win-win all around.”

“And the Hispanic kidnapper?”

“Works for a local lawn service.”

“Illegal?”

“No. He’s got a work permit, but he doesn’t speak any English.”

“Why would he kidnap two old ladies?”

“No idea. Figuring out motives is above my pay grade.”

Det. Glans was more than happy to speculate, but he thought it wouldn’t hurt old Charlie to take a dig about his new exalted status now and then.

“Do we have a line on which way they’re heading?”

“Bunch of high school kids, like escorts for the old folks, saw them leave and said he turned south toward the interstate. We’ve got an APB out. Shouldn’t be that many school buses on the I-5 on a Saturday.”

“All right. Stay on it. Who’s in charge of the camp?”

“Worried looking Asian guy over there. A Mr. Hu.”

“Who?”

“Come on, sarge. Not that old joke.”

“No sense of humor. You used to have a sense of humor when you rode with me.”

“No, I just put up with your dumb jokes.”
”He does look worried, doesn’t he?”

“Yeah. I would be, too, if I lost two old ladies. Media types are going to descend like vultures any minute. Missing school bus. Slow news day.”

“Yeah. Why don’t you call public affairs? Let them know what’s shaking. I’ll go see Mr. Hu. While you’re at it, just run a check on Hu and this camp. Touch all the bases.”

“What about FBI?”

“Let’s work it a little before we call them. If it looks like it’s going to get messy or end unhappily, we can let the glory hogs take over. But how hard can it be to find a school bus?”

“You’re the boss,” the detective said. Under his breath he added, “And it scares me to death.”

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Up Next: Episode 6 – In which Bernie gets breakfast and the police get stumped.

Alice and Bernie: By Death Bemused IV

Alice and Bernie: By Death Bemused

A Brief Conversational Narrative by David L. Haase

 

Episode 4: In which a kidnapping takes place.

“Are you clear on the plan?”

“Well, yes, you’ve told me three times, but I don’t know why we can’t have breakfast first. And why do I have to approach the gardener? Why can’t you do it, and I’ll be the lookout?”

“For pity’s sakes, Bernie, is that all you think about? Food?”

“Well, it’s almost seven, and we usually have breakfast at 6:15 at St. Gertrude’s.”

“Well, we’re not at St. Gertrude’s, and we won’t be anywhere but in that mortuary down the street if you don’t follow the plan.”

“Alice, did you say there’s a mortuary down the street? You didn’t mention that in the plan.”

“It’s not in the plan. I didn’t want to worry you. Pretty convenient, don’t you think. And it’s Korean. The sign out front has two languages, and one of them has those flat circles and stick figures all over it.”

“Oh, Alice. You may be right about all this.”

“Of course, I’m right about this. Now you go get Pablo there. We have to get going before they miss us.”

Bernie toddled off toward a shadowy figure at the edge of the parking lot and well beyond her normal line of vision. The outline grew sharper as she neared him, but never completely came into focus.

“Excuse me, young man.”

Bernie’s voice startled the Salvadoran, and he bolted upright and faced the voice. She was so close to him he stepped back into the bush he had been mulching and tumbled over backwards.

The old woman stepped around the bush and reached down to help the man up.

“Are you all right, young man?”

“Si. Si. Yes,” he said.

“Oh, good. Come along then. My friend Alice wants to have a word with you.”

“Que?” he said.

Bernie spoke no Spanish and knew it was pointless to converse with the man. If Alice was going to be the brains, she could do the talking.

She took the man by the arm. He looked back at his mulch as the crazy old woman dragged him away.

“Bernie, what are you doing?” Alice looked furtively about. “We’re supposed to meet at the bus.”

“He doesn’t speak English. You need to talk to him,” Bernie said.

“Oh, for gosh sakes, Bernie. … Say, you. You speak English?”

Manuel Estaban Barca smiled, as his friends had counseled him to do when confronted with an Anglo who does not speak Spanish.

“English? English,” Alice said, her voice rising above its normal shout. “Do you speak English?” She enunciated slowly.

“Alice, he’s not deaf. The whole motel will hear you.”

“Bernie, back off. That’s how you talk to these people. You have to talk slow and loud and let it sink in.”

“I don’t think he speaks English.”

“You’re probably right.”

“You drive?” Alice faced Manuel and made turning motions with an invisible steering wheel.

“Si. Si. Yes,” he said, nodding.

“Good. Come along.” Alice grabbed Manuel and Bernie by their elbows and steered them toward the yellow school bus parked at the door to the motel.

“All right, Bernie. You first. And you, mister, you help her up. She doesn’t see well.”

Bernie held out her arm to the perplexed Salvadoran.

“Up, up.” Alice said. “Help her up. … You’re as big a ninny as she is. We’ll be lucky if all three of us don’t end up in a hole six feet under by supper time.”

“I heard that, Alice.”

“Bernie, keep moving. … You, up, up. Come on before someone notices.”

Alice tried lifting her leg onto the first step of the bus. It was too high.

“Hey, senor, help me up.”

“Can I help you, ma’am?” It was one of the fresh-faced volunteers coming out the hotel door. “It’s very early to be boarding the bus. We won’t leave for at least half an hour.”

“Oh, that’s all right. We want to get good seats.” Alice lied.

“Well, if you insist, but the bus ride only takes about 10 minutes.”

“That’s all right. We want to get window seats. We don’t get out much.”

“Who’s that in there with you?”

“That’s just my friend. Now you go back in there and get a good breakfast. I imagine you have a busy day planned.”

“Oh, yeah. It’s going to be great. The kids are so excited. … Can I help you up?”

“No, I can make it myself. You run along.”

“All right. See you later.”

The teen-ager wandered back into the motel, wondering what his mother had gotten him into.

“Dumb bunny,” Alice said under her breath, which meant the teen heard her and looked back at the old lady hitching her knee up and down like she was trying to start a motor cycle.

She finally hauled herself into the bus with a helping hand from Manuel, who led her to the seat immediately behind the driver. He bowed to the ladies and started for the bus door, happy to have helped two old people.

“Hold on. Where do you think you’re going?” Alice said.

She pointed at the driver’s seat. “You drive.”

Manuel Estaban Barca shook his head – “No. No. No.” – and poured out a stream of Spanish, pointing to the bushes he had been mulching.

“You can do that later,” Alice said, pointing fiercely toward the driver’s seat. She reached past him and pulled the lever that closed the school bus door, trapping Manuel inside. “Drive.”

He sat, staring fearfully at Alice. This was how you lose a job, he thought.

“Buckle up,” she said, pointing to the seat belt.

He fastened the seat belt and looked to Alice.

“Drive. San Lorenzo. You know San Lorenzo?”

He pointed to the ignition lock and launched into an explanation Alice could not understand.

She reached into her purse and pulled out a key attached to a yellow tag shaped like a bus.

“Here. Now drive.”

“Alice, where did you get that key?” Bernie asked.

“Front desk. I told one of those kids the director wanted me to get it for him. Kids these days will believe anything.”

“Alice, that was wrong.”

“Wrong? Wrong is getting sent to a euthanasia camp by your own children. That’s wrong. … Come on, you, drive.”

She made steering motions again. Manuel tried to object, but Alice put a firm hand on his shoulder. “Drive.”

Manuel started the engine and the bus jerked forward. Alice was prepared for the rough start. She held tight to the hand rail between Manuel and her. Even experts seemed to have trouble getting these yellow giants moving smoothly, and Manuel had the look of a person who did more mulching than driving.

“San Lorenzo. We go to San Lorenzo,” she said, slowly and loudly.

“San Lorenzo, si. Si. Yes. San Lorenzo.” Manuel jabbered on as he pulled out of the parking lot and onto the street, heading toward the interstate. Behind him, young people poured out of the old motel, yelling and waving their hands.

He shifted into a higher gear, wondering why two old ladies were forcing him to take them to southern Mexico. It would take two or three days to reach, and he had no idea how they would get across the border. Maybe the Mexican authorities would seize him and free him from the old ladies.

“Alice, should we call Gracie now?”

“No. We’ll wait till we get closer to San Lorenzo. I don’t want her to alert her Dad.”

“You said she would help us.”

“She will, but she might be conflicted. If we just show up, she won’t have time to think about it.”

“Do you know the way to her house?”

“No, but I figure we can stop somewhere and have her come meet us. Then we can send Pablo here back, and we make our escape. When we’re safe, we can call the cops. They can rescue the others.”

“Alice, can we stop somewhere and get breakfast?”

“Bernie, all you think about is food. Here, I brought you some crackers. You can nibble on those until we get to Gracie’s house. San Lorenzo is just north of here, only two or three hours away.”

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Next Up: Episode 5 – In which the police step in.

 

Alice and Bernie: By Death Bemused III

Alice and Bernie: By Death Bemused

A Brief Conversational Narrative by David L. Haase

 

Episode 3: In which Alice hatches a plan.

Bernie hated it when Alice had a plan. It always ended in the Administrator’s office at St. Gertrude the Great’s Residential Living for Seniors with Sister Maria Theresa looking over her glasses and saying things like, “Tsk. Tsk. Tsk. I can’t believe you let Alice talk you into that.”

So here it was, another invitation into Sister Maria Theresa’s office.

“You see that gardener over there?” Alice asked. “No, don’t look.”

“Well, you asked, and I can’t see if I don’t look.”

“There’s a gardener over there. He’s putting mulch around the bushes.”

“I thought I smelled new mulch. I think mulch just tidies up a garden so nicely, don’t you, Alice?”

“Bernie, this is not about the garden. It’s about the gardener.”

“What about the gardener?”

“He’s an illegal alien.”

“Really? How can you tell?”

“Bernie, sometimes I wonder about you. Eleven million Hispanics in America are illegal. Have you ever seen a legal one?”

“Well, Alice, I don’t know how to tell a legal one from an illegal one. They all seem very nice to me.”

“The illegal ones are shifty, Bernie, and this guy looks shifty.”

“But, Alice, if people think all the Hispanics are illegal, wouldn’t a legal Hispanic have reason to look shifty, too?”

“Bernice, I don’t know how a dingbat like you ever got the vote.”

“What does my vote have to do with your plan? And you know I don’t like that name.”

Bernie looked offended and disappointed at the same time.

“I’m sorry, Bernie, it just slipped out. Now here’s my plan.”

“Do I have to listen to your plan now? Couldn’t we discuss it later, after dinner perhaps?”

“Well, I suppose we could. Is it five o’clock yet?”

“I don’t know, but my stomach tells me it’s past supper time.”

Thanks goodness, Bernie thought. I can count on Alice being punctual about her meals. But what if they put the poison in the meatloaf tonight?

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Up Next: Episode 4 – In which a kidnapping takes place.