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Chapter 2 - Ch 2 Cartwheels

Chapter 2: Less Talk, More Cartwheels

The precinct coffee machine hissed like it was trying to die in peace. I'd offered to fix it—with duct tape, a paper clip, and a spoon—but Lopez physically removed me from the break room.

"Stanton, maybe don't touch anything before 8 a.m.," she said.

Bradford snorted. "He means well. He just wakes up on cartoon logic."

Chen handed me a cup. "Here. No sabotage required."

"Thanks," I said, sipping. "Mmm. Tastefully mediocre."

"Praise from you?" Lopez asked, amused.

I grinned. "Soma template says it's a miracle. Jackie says we boil it, hit it with a stick, then throw it at a wall."

They stared.

"I mean—thank you."

They thought I was an idiot. That was fine.

Better underestimated than feared.

---

Our first call of the day? A bird stuck in a liquor store.

Simple, right?

Until the bird—a parrot, no less—started dive-bombing anyone who came near the bourbon shelf.

"Why are we here again?" Jackson asked as I tightened a mop into a makeshift bo staff.

"Because no one else wants to be clawed to death by a drunk avian ninja."

The parrot screamed and flew at us.

I flipped over a checkout counter, caught the mop mid-spin, and—yes—ricocheted a broomstick off the store mirror. The parrot swerved, got stunned, and landed neatly in a bucket I kicked upright mid-roll.

Jackson stared, slack-jawed.

The store owner applauded.

The parrot swore at me.

---

Back at the precinct, Chen walked by shaking her head.

"You handled that like it was choreographed."

"Everything's choreography," I said, then promptly slipped on a mop bucket I hadn't seen and spun 270 degrees into the supply closet.

Bradford opened the door. "You alive?"

"Maybe concussed," I groaned. "But with flair."

---

Lunch was tacos. Or, more accurately, a taco-eating contest between Jackson and Bradford, while I tried to explain to Lopez that cilantro isn't a seasoning—it's a political divider.

"You're weird," she said, halfway through her second taco.

"Delightfully so," I replied.

She didn't argue.

---

Our afternoon shift took us to a backyard brawl. Two men with leaf blowers and an old dispute about property lines had escalated into a wind-blasting face-off.

Jackson started toward them, but I stopped him.

"No. Let me."

"Why?"

"Because I was born for this moment."

I ran in, yelling "GALE STRIKE!" and launched myself off a fence post, flipped midair, and landed perfectly between the two men as they staggered from their own wind tunnel.

I shut both blowers off with a synchronized unplug-and-toss.

"Peace is restored," I declared.

The neighbors clapped. One kid shouted "Do it again!"

---

Back at the precinct, Grey passed me in the hall. He paused.

"You're having an interesting week."

"Trying something new."

He looked at me for a long second. "Keep trying. It's working."

And just like that, I wasn't the joke anymore.

I was the wildcard with a mop bucket, a taco opinion, and really solid air flips.

And maybe, just maybe, they were starting to like me for it.

---

Officer Jackson West – Rookie POV

Stanton was… confusing.

He moved like a stunt double, cooked like a TV chef, and defused training bombs like a Looney Tunes character who'd read Sun Tzu.

But he never made me feel small. Not once.

Other TOs yelled. Stanton just performed. And somehow, I was learning more in 48 hours than I'd expected to in months.

When he backflipped over a Roomba in the break room during cleanup duty, Chen and I both screamed. He stuck the landing, pointed at the vacuum, and said, "It started it."

I couldn't breathe from laughing.

I think I lucked out.

---

TO Angela Lopez – POV

I didn't know what to make of Stanton at first.

He was all smiles and weird metaphors, bouncing off walls and accidentally making the best fried rice I'd ever tasted in a precinct microwave.

But damn if he didn't get results.

The rookies liked him. Hell, I liked him—though I'd never say it out loud.

He made people feel safe. Not just because he could handle a banana-suited thief or catch a bird with a mop, but because he didn't make it about ego.

Just energy.

Good energy.

---

TO Tim Bradford – POV

I thought he was an idiot.

Still might be.

But there's a difference between stupid and strange. Stanton's the second one.

The mop thing? Weird. The somersault disarm? Kinda awesome. The ghost vacuum case? I don't want to talk about it.

The guy's unpredictable. But he's not dangerous. He's just... having fun.

And that's not a bad thing for the rookies to see.

Makes the job a little lighter.

God help me—I might like the guy.

---

Back at the station, someone had hung a sign on my locker.

"STANTON'S RULE #1: DODGE FIRST, QUESTION LATER."

I looked around. No one confessed.

But Jackson winked.

And Lopez handed me a new broom with a ribbon tied around the handle.

"You're officially on mop duty."

"Honored," I said.

Then used it to trip Bradford in the hallway.

"Accidentally," of course.

---

The next day, morning PT brought everyone out to the training yard. Grey ordered laps, obstacle courses, and a "light" partner combat drill.

Lopez paired off with Chen. Jackson was stuck with a rookie who thought Krav Maga was a sandwich. I got Bradford.

"Let's keep it clean," Grey warned. "This isn't Fight Club."

"I've seen your footwork," Bradford said. "This'll be easy."

He swung. I ducked. I rolled backward onto my hands, flipped into a cartwheel, and somehow kicked his knee—not hard, but enough to unbalance him into a patch of wet grass.

He landed with a grunt.

Everyone stared.

"Reflex," I said, offering a hand.

He slapped it away, then laughed. "I hate how cool that looked."

---

After showers, I walked out to find my uniform shirt completely missing.

"I left it here," I said to no one in particular.

Lopez passed by, holding it up. "You mean this?"

My shirt was now covered in clothespins, each holding a Post-it note.

One said "Parrot Whisperer."

Another said "Mop Jedi."

A third just read "This man backflipped over a vacuum."

I read them all. Slowly. Then bowed.

"Thank you, my people."

---

That afternoon, a middle school invited officers for a safety day event.

Chen convinced me to do the Q&A portion. I agreed, on one condition: I bring props.

Twenty minutes later, I was on a cafeteria stage with a mop, two oranges, a plastic whistle, and a colander helmet.

I performed a one-man skit called "Don't Fight, Flip Right," involving dodge rolls, non-lethal disarming, and a deeply symbolic slow-motion scene where I argued with a vending machine.

The kids loved it.

So did the teachers.

Back at the precinct, Lopez tossed me an orange.

"You're still weird."

"You say that like it's a bad thing."

---

By the time we clocked out, Jackson looked more relaxed than I'd ever seen him.

"You know," he said as we loaded up the cruiser, "this job's not what I thought it'd be."

"Better or worse?"

He shrugged. "Weirder. Funnier. Lighter."

"That's the goal."

He gave me a look. "You ever gonna stop surprising people?"

"Hopefully not."

---

That night, Natasha and I sat on my apartment rooftop eating dumplings.

She leaned against me. "You're smiling more."

"People are smiling back," I said.

She smiled too. "Good. You were never meant to be alone."

And as the stars blinked overhead, I realized something:

Being the precinct clown wasn't so bad.

Especially when the mop had good balance.

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