Crime fiction and crime fact by Bill Kirton
I moved the blog I’d previously
scheduled for today to make way for what I thought was going to be a merry,
envy-provoking account of a weekend in Paris
with my daughter and her daughter on the occasion of the former’s 50th
birthday. It was a lovely weekend and Paris
delivered up all the ‘April in it’ clichés. The only problem occurred after an
afternoon sitting in the sun in the Place des Vosges .
We got to the Gare du Nord in plenty of time for our Eurostar. Just as well
because, while it’s always a busy place, I’ve never seen it quite as jammed as
it was then. Taxis, cars, buses, all nose to tail, with hundreds of people
squeezing between them.
We sat at a terrasse but, as I
searched for my wallet to pay the bill, I found nothing. It was in a zipped up
pocket of a light jacket thing I’d been intermittently wearing and carrying. Except
that it wasn’t. We went through the ‘when did you last use it?’ routines, and I
knew it had been in my pocket all the time because I’d kept checking for
reassurance.
It had about 70 quid and 30 Euros
in it, along with credit cards, driver’s licence, etc. I supposed I’d lost it
so went to find a policeman to tell him about it in case someone handed it in.
I found a group of three and, as I was explaining it all to them, one made an
unfolding gesture with his hands and said ‘Did it open like this?’ He then said
he was sure one like that had been handed in. A terrific piece of luck, eh?
Well, no. He thought the story was that
someone had seen a man running away with it, chased him but he’d thrown it
away. The chaser had picked it up but the thief had escaped. We went to the
police office on the station and, sure enough, it was my wallet, sans (of
course) the money and credit cards.
And this is where Sod’s Law began
to operate. I managed to phone my wife, explain it all
and asked her to put
stops on the bank cards. But then I had to get through security to board the
train. (A wee aside, anyone contemplating taking the Eurostar to avoid
airport-style queues, think again. Yes, it drops you in the middle of
I asked the credit card person
whether it was somehow encoded on the card and he’d used electronic stuff to
get it but she hurried past the question and said there’d be a fraud
investigation. I won’t be responsible for the money he ‘spent’, which is
reassuring, but it’s set my (crime-writer) mind going. If the thief had somehow
acquired my number, it must have been at one of the 2 places I used it.
Impossible for it to be anywhere else. But then, what did he do? Follow us into
the Marais district? Get on the same Métro, change to the same RER, and get off
with us at the Gare du Nord. Had he been following us for 4-5 hours? All great material
for a short crime story but not when it happens to you.
I know it’s only money, but the
experience generates that feeling of having your privacy intruded upon. I
wanted to use the word violated, but that has to be reserved for the far
greater problems of assault and rape. It’s really made me think of crimes like
that. We read of them and naturally sympathise with and are horrified on behalf
of the (mostly) women who are subjected to them. What I’ve just described is
nothing, pickpockets have been around for centuries and they’ve become very good
at it. It’s a trivial thing and shouldn’t be mentioned in the same breath as
those far greater crimes. But it bites and, because you obsess with it for a
couple of days, you begin to sense just how deep the hurt must go. Tiny little
things I’m doing ever since then have brought the memory and the puzzlement
(and, yes, the anger) about it all back. You mistrust strangers, assume
hostility everywhere. It’s miles away from sitting at a computer glibly
committing murders and confidently assuming you know how your characters are
feeling.
Fortunately, I’m not a worrier, but
if that’s how it’s affected me, it makes me realise that I’ve never before
fully appreciated how devastating it must be for rape and assault victims and
all the other crimes in which the word violation is justified.
For me, normal service will be
resumed very quickly. For them…?
Comments
The smile. The kind word. Sorry for your loss and the sense of violation.
I've had something similar happen twice.
The first time myself and him-in-doors were in South Africa and he received a call from his bank and asked if we'd tried to purchase tickets in the US. We obviously hand't. The thing was we'd only used the card in one place, a 4 star hotel. So as with you it got me thinking about the who, what etc.
The second time I had a savings account drained using a card that was still sitting in the envelope at home, I hadn't even activated it. An inside job? No. It turned out someone very clever had managed to do something exceptionally clever with their app (which they withdrew very quickly, so I assume I wasn't the only person) to access my account.
Thankfully the banks were great at sorting it out.
Pity I'm not a crime writer otherwise I'm sure these experiences would get used at some point.
Also, sorry about thr white boxes around some of the text. No idea why it happened. I posted it all in the usual way. Sod's Law still operating, I guess.
Dennis, we disagree on the Eurostar experience but not on the relative attractions of the London and Psris terminals. I'm a Francophile but St Pancras is way ahead of the Gare du Nord.
Enid, if you solve the conundrum, please let me know.
Julia, the moment the word occurred to me, it was obvious how inappropriate it was for my little adventure.