Living in a large city like L. A. you come to expect a dollop
of criminal activity. I had a car, the
same car, stolen twice. Husband was
mugged on the subway. Living skid-row
adjacent Husband and I were privy to lots of shenanigans. Husband's computer was stolen from our living
room while he was out on a ten minute errand.
One morning at around six am, I glanced out our window to see an
impressive act of multi-tasking in the parking lot below; a gentleman with a
prostitute and a crack pipe; using both simultaneously. Police cars raced down our street
frequently and helicopters hovered overhead. Houses have alarms and bars. Some people
have guns tucked away under their beds.
No Shortage of Police |
We purchase our eggs from a stand by a house in plain view
of chickens pecking contentedly in rich soil across the road. We took our half dozen, and went to drop our
one pound twenty in the ceramic bowl that acts as the 'till', instead we found
a note. Our money dish has been stolen, it said, please deposit your payment directly into our mailbox.
Husband and I looked at each other aghast. Theft!
Here? We couldn't believe it. We felt violated. We put our money into the mail slot and hurried
home through the fields, crestfallen.
Scene of the Crime |
Suddenly our verdant outpost was not the pristine paradise I believed it to be. A by-product of urban dwelling is a vague alertness to potential danger, a little inner antenna that prevents total relaxation. I'd released that defense mechanism here. One swiped money dish and I was back on high alert.
Droves of Danger |
In my mind, ramblers on otherwise empty lanes and droves became potential muggers. It didn't matter that they were pensioners dragged along by corgis. A non-descript windowless van became the transport for kidnappers, though who would want to kidnap us and why is a mystery.
"Maybe we need a guard dog," I suggest to Husband, "We could borrow our friend's vicious hound, Beastly."
Beastly and Bits of Burgler |
Kidnappers? No, it's just the neighbours. |
I shake my head at the foolishness of unlocked bikes leaned
against a fence by the cricket field, left with the expectation they'll still be
there when the school bus dislodges children at the end of the day. In a nearby village a woman bakes cakes and puts
them in a giant red and white polka-dotted cupboard. Customers pick a treat, and drop coins in
a plastic container. "You'd have
thought she knew better," I say to Husband, recalling the egg dish caper. The sound of kids playing up by the Hood
Monument on a sunny Sunday become vandals screaming.
The Cakehole |
Trouble at the Hood? No, Just Husband. |
We find dog poop outside our front gate. "That was no accident," I search our hedge-lined country lane for the culprit. I become obsessive about locking the door. Two boys stand on the road trying to cajole Penny the Peahen down the drive to the gate. I go out, hands on hips, a warning to these pint-sized Pea-nappers. "You've got to be vigilant," I tell Husband, "You're crackers," Husband says.
We're in town one day picking up provisions and I spot it...
my vindication. I grab a copy of the Central Somerset Gazette from a nearby stack.
"Ha!" I announce to Husband.
"What?" Husband sighs. I
point to an article. "See... "
I hold it up for him to read. A
headline states in bold letters; THIEF HID HOT FOOD DOWN PANTS.
http://www.centralsomersetgazette.co.uk/Glastonbury-shoplifter-caught-stuffing-hot-food/story-20829060-detail/story.html
Seems a drunk twenty-five year old staggered into a grocery store, and stole oven fresh piping hot pasties and sausage rolls, then stuffed them down his trousers for safe keeping. He might have gotten away with it, but two bottles of wine he stuffed down there to accompany his meal smashed on the ground. Two weeks later the same felon was caught putting a pair of bolt croppers down his pants; surely even a drunk man must realize the potentially life-altering repercussions of this act.
"See, it's a crime wave," I tell Husband.
Hot Pasty |
Seems a drunk twenty-five year old staggered into a grocery store, and stole oven fresh piping hot pasties and sausage rolls, then stuffed them down his trousers for safe keeping. He might have gotten away with it, but two bottles of wine he stuffed down there to accompany his meal smashed on the ground. Two weeks later the same felon was caught putting a pair of bolt croppers down his pants; surely even a drunk man must realize the potentially life-altering repercussions of this act.
"See, it's a crime wave," I tell Husband.
"Darling, I
think you're losing the plot," Husband says.
Diana,
ReplyDeleteLove your particular and peculiar brand of paranoia. ha-ha! (BTW, I thought the pay-off of the literal "hot pocket" caper was going to be that the thief began dancing round the grocery store in distress, revealing his hot pants/hot pastry mistake.
Oh, and I want a polka-dot cake cupboard in my neck of the woods. Not gonna happen... but one can dream.