He was a kleptomaniac. Not
harmful or dangerous, really, actually kind of playful under most circumstances.
He had three large taped up cardboard boxes of inconsequential stolen loot
buried deep in his closet behind an outdated video gaming console with
corresponding game cartridges, a guitar with a couple missing strings, an old
pair of favored mid high-top basketballing shoes, two skateboards – both
lacking trucks and wheels, several packages of unopened and long forgotten
baseball cards, and a leather football – mostly deflated.
He was an architect by trade who
enjoyed skiing – except for the cold, fantasy football, intramural basketball
at his local community center, and competitive brisket barbecuing. He was a
founding member of the city’s unofficial Curling squad and they were hopelessly,
and errantly, convinced they had a chance to make the next Winter Olympics! He did
yoga thrice weekly, participated in marathons, rode his bicycle on weekends,
and blogged monthly. All that plus a thief with a compulsion that could not be
sated. There seemed,
yet, a meager level of respect, or gamesmanship, by which he attempted to
maintain. He would never steal from friends or family, but almost anyone
outside that tight concise off-limits circle was fair game.
It began
simply enough while vacationing as a youth with his family in La Jolla,
California. To his parents’ amusement he hoarded hand lotions, shampoos, and a
shoe mitt provided by the hotel. In his early teen years this escalated to a
Sports Illustrated magazine from the lobby of his dentist and plastic shoe horns
from retailers when trying on shoes. His pilferings were never anything
significant [car keys], destructive [asthma inhaler], useful [package of
batteries], resale merchandise [a store’s inventory], or expensive [except for
the antique crystal-handled letter opener with an image of an Arctic Fox which
he swiped from an office while at a client meeting - he thought it was a mass
produced glass-handled item from a Pier 1 retail chain store mocked up to look like an antique]. There was one
exception to this ‘useful’ thievings classification, aside from the hotel
lotions and soaps, the silly waif, writing instruments bearing the name of the
host from whence they’ve been nicked. A fine upscale hotel, of which he felt so
out of place, should they take an inventory after one of his infrequent visits,
would find themselves considerably lighter in the column of retractable pens,
especially the variety bearing blue ink.
He’d been operating marginally
astray of the law for so long that it no longer phased him when his hands reached
out seeking acquisition. When
dining out he regularly swiped a single unused utensil before the waiter could
remove the unneeded place settings. He even occasionally absconded from
restaurants with the bowl of after dinner mints from the reception area. He
didn’t even like after dinner mints, nor the bowls in which they were typically
housed! He’d get back to the car after dining to find that his hands couldn’t retrieve
the car keys from his pocket because there was something in them already. ‘Oh,’
he’d notice, ‘they’ve done it again’ as if his hands behaved of their own
volition.
The
culmination and turning point of his silliness was the 40th birthday
party of an acquaintance. Shortly before the mint chocolate chip ice cream cake
was presented the waif went into the kitchen and needlessly, without thinking,
slipped the wax candle shaped like a five from the kitchen table into his
pocket. The birthday boy’s age did not require the five and it sat in a Pick Up
Sticks pile with the eight unneeded numbers.
“Hey
mister, what are you doing,” asked a voice from behind.
Without
even turning to face the child, the voice of a young girl certainly less than
10, he unslipped the candle from his trousers pocket and replaced it amongst
the pile. He shortly thereafter departed the festivities, but not, of course,
before taking down a piece of ice cream cake.
The compulsion for his incidental heists faded as quickly as a bad dream from a sudden awakening. The retractable pens, though, proved a weakness not as easily tamed.
The compulsion for his incidental heists faded as quickly as a bad dream from a sudden awakening. The retractable pens, though, proved a weakness not as easily tamed.
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