"After, we'll meet back at the hideout and divvy up the loot."
"Yeah, those guy's will never know what hit 'em."
"Like takin' candy from a baby."
This is the kind of dialogue I imagine takes place during robberies. Taking things without asking is stealing, but this kind of talk is inexcusable. It's all too familiar and not up to the standards that their teachers taught them. Unless they were taking Forties Gangster Chat 101.
But in the real world, I continue to puzzle over the need for children at a public school to create any sort of elaborate scheme in which the only "loot" they end up with are bags of chips and some candy. They aren't looking for cash or jewelry, not even cell phones. They are after the junk that some teachers hand over as the tiniest recognition of being clever, polite, or simply able to follow the rules at school.
To be clear, the rules at our school do not encourage groups of boys to climb into an open window and ransack the office of our child therapist. The nice lady who comes and takes our troubled youth to that same office to give them a place to talk about the world they endure and how about a nice snack on the way out?
Unless the boys mentioned have burglarized the drawers and closets of that office and made off with all the snacks.
I have written in this space a number of times about the relative ease with which one could break and enter a public school. There is no armed security. The response time to alarms that go off range in the hour range to the next day. In the case of the purloined treats, the investigation was conducted entirely on site by our principal and her ability to pick the third grader who would break first, then going after the fourth and fifth graders he gave up.
Parents were called. Tears were shed. Not by all, but by some of the thieves. And that nagging thought that grownups have in these situations came ringing through once again: "If they would do this when they are nine and ten, what will they be doing once they hit middle school?"
Middle school has a way of hitting back. It's bigger. It's tougher. It's on the way to the big time. It would be a whole lot easier if the pretend world of being master thieves was an embarrassing memory of "when we was little."
What a relief that would be.