Once upon a time there were four wimmin. Actually there were (and still are) loads
more but we are going to concentrate on these particular four for the purpose
of this story. They all lived together
during their once upon a time in a rented house in Ranelagh, Dublin and had
great craic altogether. If you really want to know, it’s me I’m talking about
me, plus two of my sisters and a friend.
Late night Thursday shopping was a regular event and one evening, on the
return home, my friend and I saw a wondrous sight as we dawdled our way through
Ranelagh Park. Running towards us at
great speed was my sister and that alone was enough to set alarm bells ringing. She never ran. Never!
Something was afoot. Despite the
cloth laundry basket on a frame which had been bought earlier, getting in the
way, we set off on an awkward run to meet her. Breathlessly she told us our house had been
broken into earlier on that day and if that wasn’t bad enough, one of us had
caught the fucker in the act. She hadn’t
been able to gain access to the house and thought it was one of us playing a
trick on her. Something was blocking her
entry and then she realised the alarm that was screaming in her ears was our
own house alarm. The box had been pulled
from the wall and was blocking the door. (We played childish pranks on each
other up and down so she was well within her rights to think this.) She was halfway in the front door when she saw
the thieving little bollix making his way down the stairs. Both of them got an equal fright. He turned on his skanky little tail and ran
back up the stairs. Presumably to climb
out of the window from whence he came and she turned on hers and into our next
door neighbours who poured whiskey into her for the shock. To be honest, I think we were all a bit
excited underneath the initial upset. We
were burgled! We were officially a statistic! And one of us managed to get
a look at the perp! (We were big fans of
CSI and were down with the lingo) Also there was a finger printer person on the
way! We collected our shook and half cut sister from the Galwegians next door,
tiptoed over the once uselessly wailing but now pathetically beeping alarm box on
the hall floor and towards the kitchen. Where whoever was first in the line
came to an abrupt halt so we all collided into each other. The rent! The jayzus rent! Very unoriginally and stupidly kept in an
empty coffee jar in the kitchen press.
The best part of a thousand pounds. Two of us got jammed in the doorway such was
our haste to see if our precious money was still there. It was. Big huge massive sighs of relief all
round and then one of us peeled a twenty from the top and went to the off
licence on Ranelagh triangle to get some wine.
For the shock. We had been asked
not To Touch Anything before the finger printer person got to us. We were told he would be there within the
hour. Armed with a glass of wine each,
we crept up our own stairs, scared and silent.
Almost as if Skanky Boy might still be up there. We had since deduced that our unwelcome
visitor must have been on his way into the kitchen when my sister came home and
caught him. He had gotten in from
upstairs. Our house in Ranelagh had a nice back garden with a high wall. There was a little garage not worth talking
about with a flat roof and he had climbed onto this and in through an open
bedroom window. That bedroom was
trashed. I don’t care what anyone says,
but I reckon we all of us, without exception, stash some cash in our knicker
drawer. It might be twenty quid it might
be a bit more, but who doesn’t do this?
My sister was relieved of about a hundred in notes and her lovely
bronzing pearl ball things were scattered all over the floor. Because this was
the point of entry, he had a good rummage round. Then he made his way over to the double
bedroom across the hallway and had a good root round in my smalls drawer. Little
feky bollix! Nothing in there
anyway. Sniff. And where was yer man who was supposed to be
taking the finger prints. So much for
his “I’ll be there in the hour.” This
was cat altogether. How were we supposed
to go to bed Without Touching Anything? In
the wind-up he arrived when we were all the other side of a couple of bottles
of wine and in the process of getting nicely inebriated, we managed to destroy
some of “his” evidence. His
evidence! There were a few drunken
eyebrows raised at that. First off it
was our house and we could drink in
it if we wanted to. So, if he had arrived
at the scene on time, when he said he
would, in other words, about two hours before we got pissed, well, it was our
house and we could drink in it if we wanted to, okay? Men! In particular, detectives! They took
everything so seriously. We were still rolling our eyes and nearly
missed it when he said someone had been “picked up” earlier on and it was more
than likely our unwelcome intruder. But
by all accounts it was an opportunistic break in and his prints may not be “on
the system” but we weren’t to worry, they never broke into the same place
twice. “But someone else might, girls,
so keep all those windows and doors locked, okay?” Oh, great. Give us something to have
nightmares over, why dontcha? If memory serves me correctly we had a sleepover
in the double bedroom that night. We never did find out if Skanky Boy was the burglar
but the next day a proper bank account for our rent money was set up. It took my sister three weeks before she
stopped finding bronzing balls on the floor of her bedroom. The small mess in my bedroom was tidied up in
approximately ten minutes. The alarm box
was returned to its place on the wall but it never sounded quite the same
again. We hung on to the empty coffee
jar as a reminder of a lesson learned. And
we put a note in it that read: “do you really think we would be that stupid to
keep money in here?” It was childish but
so were we. Once upon a time.
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