My Project: 365 Creative Writing Prompts.
Day 36: Hopes and dreams
Did you ever
think that your ship just came in, only to find out that it was a dinghy and it
was leaking? I had such hopes and dreams yesterday.
Around 11:00
a.m. I went out to buy a cup of coffee and noticed a zippered wallet laying on
the side of the road. An open wallet and it looked like it was stuffed with
banknotes. The wallet was actually bulging to the point that the zipper
couldn’t close.
I wanted to
pick the wallet up of course, but I exercised restraint as I’ve seen enough
YouTube videos of pranksters making ordinary people look like fools. So, a
looked to the left, and I looked to right, scanned the people across the street
and when all seemed okay, I ever so casually sashayed over to the wallet.
I stole a
sideways glance at it and tried to determine what type of banknotes it
held … 10-dollar bills? 20-dollar bills? Maybe an even higher denomination?
Whatever the value, I already had visions of a healthy addition to my savings
account. The way the wallet was bulging there could have been between $2,000 or
$5,000 or even more.
Once again, I
looked to my left, to my right and across the street. When I felt sure that no
eyes were on me, I bend to pick up the wallet. And oh, the disappointment.
There was no money in the wallet, only a deck of playing cards. So off I went
to buy my coffee with some lose change I had in my pocket and then it was back
to work.
Speaking of
finding money though … many years ago, my mom and I were shopping for school
supplies when she noticed a bag in a telephone booth. She retrieved the bag and
looked inside if there was a wallet. She found not one, but three wallets, all
stuffed with cash. The wallets belonged to a certain Helena Vermeer. There was
also an address and a telephone number.
Once home, mom took
the money out of each of the wallets and counted it. One wallet held 3,000
franks (the setting is Belgium), the second wallet held 1,350 franks, and the
third wallet held no less than 7,220 franks, altogether 11,570 franks. A considerable
amount back in those days.
Mom called the
given phone number and asked to speak to Helena Vermeer.
“Helena
Vermeer is my mother,” a woman said. “Or shall I say, was my mother, she died
two weeks ago.”
We were all
stunned into silence. It was highly unlikely that a dead woman took her bag
with her to go shopping.
To cut a long
story short, the daughter had taken her mom’s bag and in her state of grief (or
whatever) forgot the bag in the telephone booth.
She agreed to
come over to pick up the bag and once she had arrived had the audacity to ask
if all the money was still there. “I know exactly how much was in each of those
wallets,” she stated. Then she snatched the bag off the table, asked if that
was all, got up and left.
“Next time when
I find something,” mom said. “I’m keeping it.”
She got her
chance less than a month later. Mom, dad, my brother and myself had taken a
trip to Brussels to shop for clothes. A friend’s wedding was coming up and we
all needed a new outfit, a dress for mom and me, a new suit for dad and my
brother.
We visited
several stores in the city, but none had what mom was looking for.
“What are you
looking for?” dad asked, slightly exasperated as we left the fifth store.
“I don’t know,”
she said, “but I’ll know it when I see it.”
And she saw it
alright. When we passed a particular store, she pointed to a dress on one of
the window mannequins. The dress was expensive though. So expensive that dad peered at mom over his glasses with a look that said ... are you serious?
“I hope they’re
not closed,” mom said, glancing at her wristwatch. “It’s after six already.”
When she reached for the door, she found that the door was slightly open and when pushed a silver
bell tinkled overhead.
Right away we
all knew that something was wrong. Not only was there no staff behind the counter,
and were there no customers browsing the merchandise, all the lights were off.
Mom, never one
to give up easily, proceeded to call out. “Hello! Hello! Anybody here?!” Nobody
answered.
“Just my luck,”
she stated. “I finally find the dress I want, and now there’s nobody here.”
“We can come
back next weekend,” dad suggested.
“No way,” mom
said. “With my luck, that dress could be sold between now and then.”
Dad reasoned
that the store probably had more than one of those dresses, but mom was having
none of it.
“So what do you
want to do?” dad asked. “We can hardly stay here for the night.”
“There’s only
one thing to do,” she said.
To our surprise
she legged it to the mannequin, deftly removed the dress, folded it and placed
it on the counter along with her name, her phone number and the request to call
her.
The phone rang
shortly after nine o’clock on Monday morning. From what we could hear, mom had
a short conversation and then smiling put the phone down.
“That was the
store,” she informed us. “The manager promised to keep the dress for me. We go
back next weekend to pick it up.”
As soon as we
walked through the door of the store the next Saturday morning, it was as if
the manager (a lively Italian chap) recognized us. He came from behind the
counter, asked if we were indeed the XXX family and shook hands with us as if
we were long lost friends. The other customers in the store eyes us with
interest.
Mam was shown
to a luxurious dressing room to try on the dress that she had left on the counter
the previous week and not only did it fit like a glove, she looked fabulous in
it.
“And now for
the rest of the family,” the manager said, waving at a nearby hovering salesman,
who approached my dad and brother. Dad protested that we were only shopping for
a dress, but the man waved his objections away. He happily chatted, in a way
only Italians can, that my dad and brother must try on some of his suits.
As for me, I was
whisked away by yet another sales person to look at party dresses.
It all went so
fast, we hardly knew what was happening, but an hour later we were all kitted
out in outfits that would raise more than one eyebrow. I had already raised my
eyebrows when I saw the price of my dress. To say that it was expensive was
putting it (very) mildly. Add to that mam’s dress, dad’s suit and my brother’s
suit … the total would be astronomical!
Much to our
surprise though, the dresses and the suits were boxed, bagged and handed to us
without a stop at the cash register.
“We haven’t
paid yet,” mom reminded the manager.
“My dear signora,”
the man said. “I couldn’t possible charge you for your purchases. Everything is
on the house and you will notice that I have supplied you and the young
signorina with suitable handbags.”
Seeing how
stunned we were, the manager went on “You could have walked out with anything
you wanted last Saturday. But not only were so honest to leave the dress
behind, but you closed the door so nobody else could walk in. Such honesty has
to be rewarded.”
We left elated and happy that some people still appreciate honesty.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.