I've always had a tenuous relationship with criminal
behaviour.
Twice I've been the victim of bicycle theft, both occasions
leaving me stamping off home wishing death on the light-fingered
ne'er-do-wells.
The first time was the racing bike I bought with one of my
very first pay packets, which was taken from the racks at Twyford station by a
criminal armed with a set of bolt-cutters, the universal key of bicycle thieves
the world over. I stamped off home wishing death on those concerned, but did
nothing of the sort. After several months borrowing my mother's Raleigh
Shopper, I was shamed into buying myself a replacement, but the luggage box on
the back was never as good.
My second occasion as a victim of crime was the cycle I used
to get to and from the station on my long rail commute between Weymouth
and Reading.
Leaving it chained to a road sign, it didn't occur to me that thieves possessed
the wit and the imagination to lift it fifteen feet up the pole and ride off
with the thing. Not bolt-cutters, just an improbable feat of strength. Two
weeks later, I saw baseball-capped villain who had done the deed, riding around
Caversham on my bike. But the insurance had already paid out, and I already had
a far better machine, and –by then – a car, making the rail commute a thing of
the past.
While I am quick to condemn criminals and criminal
behaviour, I remain haunted by my own past life as a thief. One incident weighs
heavily on my mind, that being the day – as an impoverished student – I walked
around and around WH Smith in Bracknell
clutching a 35p packet of rub-down lettering, before walking out of the door
"forgetting" they were still in my hand. Various attempts to pay back
my ill-gotten gains have ended in naught, as till operators in Smiths get
awfully confused when you say "keep the change", as it messes up
their balances.
So, when crime rears its ugly head near me, I'm often torn
on what to do. Yes, it's my duty to report it, do something about it; but on
the other hand, I'm a renegade before the law myself, and who knows how things
might end. In most cases, I will defer instead to the measured use of sarcasm,
which I believe works very effectively in the field of crime prevention.
Our road, contrary to what our local police say, is a hotbed
of very minor crime, for every now and then, somebody craps into a plastic bag
and leaves it at the side of our street. This has got me so angry I've almost
nearly done something about it, and I'm tempted to join those people who are
photographed pointing at things in local newspapers because they think it does
any good. All it does is gets you labelled as "that bloke from page nine
of Thursday's paper, pointing at the bag of turds", and it's not a good
name to have.
So, at 11pm the other night, as I was exercising the hound
and looking out for the Phantom Crapper, I couldn't help noticing the car of
youths pulling up by the entrance to the Bummy Woods. It was clearly obvious
that they were between pub and nightclub, and looking for somewhere to take a
few puffs of illegal substances. And knowing our one local nite spot, they'd
need some sort of narcotic to dull the forthcoming terror.
In trying not to make it obvious, they were probably the
most obvious drug takers I'd ever seen. They might as well have parked in the
special drug-takers' parking bay, holding up a sign saying, "Hey! We're
taking drugs, us!" while posting an update on Facebook saying "In the
Bummy Woods, having a bit of puff".
They staggered into the dark, where fireflies of dodgy
cigarettes could be seen bobbing about. From the safety of many yards away, I
called out "Don't make it too, obvious, eh?" because sarcasm always
works on this kind of person (for eg, those many yards away). However, any
reply was drowned out by one of their number calling out "O God! I've sat
in shit!", that being a religious calling clearly not in the scriptures.
Not wishing to find out more, I took Falstaff's advice about discretion and
valour, and left the scene.
The next morning revealed that the Phantom Crapper had
indeed struck that evening, sneaking in and out like the Banksy of faeces, and
it took one committed dope-head to uncover his latest work. I was so cross I
didn't even do anything.
1 comment:
I used to get through loads of those WH Smiths letter transfers.
All the while waiting for the home computer with a decent printer to be invented...
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