“You climb down from those gates
right now!” they would yell. The children would only clamber
higher, arranging themselves like acrobats across the bars. The men
worked in pairs, one to operate the gate, the other to
check incoming vehicles. The mechanism man would shrug and hunker
down in his chair, saved from confrontation by his role at the
controls. The other fellow had to stand up, shifting his wide leather
belt and its assorted tools as he stood, then march outside to try
and catch the little monkeys as the scrambled out of reach.
The security firm sent a memo to the
members of the community and the parents gave stern lectures to their
children, but everyone knew it was pointless. The guards had no real
authority over the people inside the walls – the badges were for
the riff-raff outside. The children were privileged and knew their
parents laughed off their hijinks. The only people who cared were the
guards.
Some of the guards were fathers
themselves, and they worried. The gates were fifteen feet high, with
sharpened points at the top. They occasionally jerked or stalled when
opening, and the kids would be tossed about, barely hanging on. A few
got stuck and had their feet scraped rather badly, and others came
close to having their hands crushed when the two gates came together.
Of course the parents blamed the operators for not being more
careful. It was a tough position to be in.
The guard shack was barely comfortable,
but most of the guys would rather be inside nursing the coffee maker
through another pot than outside in the weather. It was always a
little too hot or a little too wet or a little too cold. Zeke was
different. He took inspection shift without complaining, skipping the
rounds of rock-paper-scissors that the other guards played to get out
of duty. Between cars he'd lean against the shack in the shade,
waiting and watching. He was particularly intent on the kids. Unlike
the others he didn't yell or chase. He collected their names when
they shouted at each other, and didn't seem bothered by their
taunting. The kids elaborated on the game, developing complex rules
about who was King of the Iron. Zeke sussed out the rules, and
gradually took on the role of arbitrater when there was a dispute
about who had earned the most points.
“You're gonna get hurt one of these
days.” Zeke quietly warned the children one day. They'd been
especially rambunctious that day, leaping from higher and higher
positions on the railings. The previous day a boy had sprained his wrist
jumping, and after the news spread there was another round of
lectures by the parents. The kids didn't care. It was an easy way to
defy the supposed authority of the HOA, their parents, and the
hapless guards in the shack.
A week later a six year old was injured
when the heavy gate struck her, then dragged her across the pavement
until it reached the closed position. Her abrasions sent her to the
hospital, and the parent network lit up with worry. Threats were made
to take away privileges or to confine children to their quarters. It
didn't work. As the pressure from the adults grew, the need to rebel
rose, and the following day even more children were hanging and
swinging on the gates. The guards shouted and yelled, but they
couldn't reach the climbers. Reinforcements were called in. Without names the children couldn't be identified and they were far
too fast to catch. Nothing could be done. Beneath the trees they laughed in triumph and planned an even larger rebellion for
the next day.
The investigation took weeks and never
did have a satisfactory answer as to what happened. An electrical
short, possibly caused by the weight of more than thirty children
hanging on the gates. It didn't matter. The children melted to the
rails, twisting in agony, unable to scream. They shook as their flesh
burned. They corpses hung from the bars like abstract art and when
the coroners came – five in all – they were forced to use steel tools to scrape and pry the tiny bodies from the bars.
Inspired by Nightmare Fuel
Inspired by Nightmare Fuel
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