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Squirrel Mafia

lesliet December 9, 2003
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Read Time:3 Minute, 52 Second

It was a warm

summer day in Cartersville. The sun glistened on the emerald leaves of the dogwood trees

lining my yard. A warm breeze lifted, making the trees wave and sing their summer song.

Next door, the neighbor was mowing his yard for the second time that week. I settled into

my favorite patio chair, a thick book tucked into the crook of my arm. I opened the book

and began to read, immediately becoming absorbed in the language of a story. Suddenly,

violence broke the serenity of the day. I looked up, searching for the source of the

commotion. My eyes were drawn into the top of an aging and twisted oak that grew mightily

at the side of my yard. I didn’t know it at the time, but I was watching the beginnings

of the Squirrel Mafia, a gang of rodents that will strike fear into the hearts of rodents

for generations to come.

As I watched, gangs of large squirrels scrambled

down the trunk of the oak. A much larger squirrel led them; a squirrel I can only assume

was the godfather. Suddenly a smaller squirrel climbed the tree and met with this vicious

gang. I could see its small, brown body tremble with fear as the gang slowly approached

him. Then all at once, the gang jumped on him and began beating the snot out of that

little squirrel. They all tumbled en masse to the ground, where they continued to abuse

the little squirrel. The godfather squirrel supervised the beating, his beady black eyes

gleaming brutally. Then the gang removed themselves from the little squirrel and joined

their godfather. The little squirrel staggered to his feet. The godfather made a loud

chattering sound and all the squirrels, including the little squirrel, ran back up the

tree. Ah, I thought, so this is the mafia initiation. The squirrel mafia initiated a few

more squirrels into their gang, and after that the real mayhem began.

The squirrel hit man was the first to become identifiable. He was a lean, ragged-looking

rodent, his tail short and droopy, his fur matted and patchy. He slunk from branch to

branch, seeking his mark. Once in awhile he would disappear into a leafy branch. Birds

would suddenly raise a racket, flying off in every direction. Then a blue jay would drop

to the grass with a dull thud, and lay there stunned for several moments. Soon after the

blue jay hit the ground, a nest would fall in wispy clumps followed by two or three eggs.

The eggs splattered hideously as they landed around their helpless parent. Eventually the

blue jay would get up, and let out a little birdie cry. Then it would be off, its home in

tatters.

Meanwhile, the heaveys began to stalk the chipmunks and finches.

They traveled in groups, and spent their time roaming across the yard and pouncing upon

hapless chipmunks and small birds. They collected tribute from these animals, and sent

smaller squirrels off towards the oak tree with their cheeks stuffed full of nuts and

various other stuff.

The Squirrel Mafia had a gambling racket too.

Acorns dropped from the oak tree, and a collection of chipmunks, birds and squirrels

chattered and chirped as a pair of scrawny mice ran for them as fast as they could. The

winning mouse would return to much celebration, while the looser was knocked to the

ground from the top of the oak tree.

I can only imagine what the

Squirrel Mafia has in store for the future. Surely the neighborhood will go bad. I expect

to see strung out chipmunk and blue jay prostitutes turning tricks on my front lawn.

Certainly thefts will become more frequent. There will be a day when I will come home to

find all my candy stolen from the dishes and my husband’s favorite mixed nuts heisted.

Kidnapping will have to be dealt with. After all, what’s to stop the Squirrel Mafia from

kidnapping my children’s beanie babies and holding them for a king’s ransom in

pistachios? What will I do when these conniving little rodents start flinging themselves

at my windows in an attempt to vandalize my home? How worried should I be on the day I

wake up to find a decapitated Eeyore head in my bed?

As the days pass,

the Squirrel Mafia’s power grows. My yard will never be the same. There is no happy

chatter between the birds. The chipmunks can no longer dig holes in the flowerbed without

fear. Above it all, high in the oak tree, the Squirrel godfather reigns supreme.

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lesliet

Distantstar30121@aol.com
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