The sign said, "Flamingoes and buzzards for rent." If that wasn't a sign from God and the fates, I don't know what was. I went in. There was as guy behind a counter reading the racing form.
“Help you?" he said.
"I need to rent a buzzard," I said.
"Okay. How long?"
"I don't know," I said. "I wonder if you'd have a recommendation."
"Well," said the man. He folded the racing from, stuck it under the counter, took out a laminated card, and turned it so I could read it. "These are the buzzards we've got. Different sizes, sexes, it all depends on what you need it for. What do you need it for?"
"Got a dead sheep on my property," I said. "It's been there a while."
"And the buzzards?" asked the man.
"I was hoping I could get a buzzard to eat it. So I don't have to haul it out of there. How long's it take a buzzard to eat a sheep?"
"Oh," said the buzzard man. "You'd want several buzzards, I'm afraid. Just one, that'd take way too long. You'd really save money by renting, say, a half-dozen buzzards for a week rather than one buzzard for a month. We've got a volume discount. Unless this sheep of yours is in a confined space. Is it in a confined space?"
"Well, I don't know—you mean like the trunk of a car?"
"Is it in the trunk of a car?"
"No… it's. Well, it's in the bedroom. I was hoping to get rid of it pretty quickly."
"Ah," said the buzzard man. "You'll be wanting a couple of indoor buzzards. I've got just the thing." He disappeared through a beaded curtain into the back room.
I had a look around the room while he was gone. The place looked like a rental car office, or maybe a shipping company. There was a large package scale on the counter, a couple of chairs in a waiting area, and a low table covered with magazines. I moved them around to have a look. There were a few reasonably current issues of Hawk and Handsaw. Carrion weekly. The Flamingo Times printed on pink paper. And, strangely, something called Slots and Spinners, with a picture of a shiny silver slot machine on the cover.
I picked it up and had a look inside. There, in the first article, was a picture of the buzzard guy standing in front of a row of neon-lit slot machines. He held a flamingo under one arm, Alice-in-Wonderland style. There was a man in a suit with slicked-back hair, smiling and holding up one of those giant checks they give you when you win the lottery. It was made out in the amount of $200,000.00.
"That was last year in Vegas," said the man. He was behind the counter again. "That's my lucky flamingo, Janice. I take her with me every time I go, and every time I win a couple hundred grand. She tells me which machines to play."
"Mm-hm," I said.
"She never misses," said the man. "Betcha can't guess where we stay when we're there."
I laughed. "Bet I can."
"How much?"
"How much you bet you can tell me where we stay?"
"What, for real?"
"Of course for real. I'm a gambling man. Couldn't you tell?"
"Well, I…"
"Tell you what—" He bent down behind the counter and came up with a pair of plastic pet carriers, each about the size you'd carry a beagle in. He set them on the counter. "We'll make it a contest. You guess where we stayed, and I'll give you the first day's rent for Frankie and Johnny here for free. Otherwise you pay full price. Deal?"
"Okay," I said, "give me a minute here."
The man stood behind the counter, smiling. Rustling noises came from the pet carriers. Sounds like claws on paper.
"Could it be," I said, "the Flamingo Hilton?"
"Damn," said the man. "You're good. Nobody else has gotten that." He pulled some papers out of a tray next to the cash register. "Well, looks like you got yourself a free day of buzzard rental.
"You know, we stayed at the Luxor once, but Janice got drunk on one of those drinks in an obelisk glass, and she made a spectacle of herself. They won't let us go back there."
"I was wondering," I said.
"Yes?"
"The flamingo rental…"
"You want to know if you can rent Janice, don't you?"
"Well, I thought maybe…"
"You could," he said, "but the luck doesn't seem to work if she's with anybody but me. Some kind of symbiosis, I think."
I shrugged. "It was worth a try."
"Sign here, then initial here and here," said the man. "We'll see you in a week."
He held the door for me as I left with Frankie and Johnny. Time to get home. That sheep wasn't getting any fresher.
Showing posts with label slot machines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label slot machines. Show all posts
Saturday, October 3, 2009
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