I knocked out my gym routine in record time, bolted into the locker room then prepped for the shower. As I headed for the communal pen that men shower in at gyms I looked back at my locker which was open with my pants hanging and my wallet in the back pocket clearly visible. The city I lived in hosted its share of criminal activity. Still yet, I was in a hurry so I decided to just leave my locker open even though the gym provided a means to secure it.
I chose a shower to the far corner. There was no one in the communal shower area so it didn't really matter where I went. Oddly a guy entered and chose the shower to my right on the adjacent wall. I thought this was odd and a bit of an intrusion. Let me explain a piece of unwritten bathroom etiquette to women who are collectively cursed with the inability to urinate standing up.
Upright Urinals |
I decided to fleetingly glance out of my peripheral vision to see what the guy next to me was doing. I wish I hadn't done that. Let's just say no one's equipment is that dirty. The minute he saw me look his way he took a step forward with his crank in his hand, bent over and put his free hand on the soap dispenser under my shower head. That was well inside my personal space. In fact my brain went into a class five proximity alert causing me to have the most intense flee response of my life. I snapped off the water then got the fuck out of there.
At the bar I recalled the story for my roommate and surrounding clientele. When it came time to pay the tab I pulled out my wallet to discover all my money was gone. That was just great. Someone stole all my cash. I immediately took the blame. After all I did leave my wallet accessible and in full view. It was a hard lesson. One I had coming.
The following Monday at the gym I noticed several signs posted throughout the facility that read,
"If you lost money at the gym on Friday night contact Detective Dan at (phone number)."
My volleyball roommate, Doug, went to the same gym. I ran into him there and asked about the signs. He encouraged me to report my loss.
"But it was my fault. I left my locker open."
"Yeah, but something happened Friday night. You better report it," Doug urged.
I found the owner's wife, a young woman who recently married the much older guy who started the gym. She was unusually cold. She was that way normally so I didn't take it personally. She reminded me of the attractive women in high school. You know, the ones that treated everyone like shit.
"Well, if you did lose money then you should call Detective Dan," She said smugly.
Instead of apologizing for a customer being ripped off in her establishment she scoffed at my inquiry as if I was bothering her or something. So I called Detective Dan from my desk at work on Tuesday morning.
"Hello, my name is Robert, and I got ripped off on Friday night at the gym."
"Oh really!" Detective Dan exclaimed.
"Someone stole $96 from my wallet."
"Oh really."
"Yeah."
"Well, why didn't you report it on Friday?" Detective Dan asked.
"Because it was my fault," I answered.
"How's that?" Detective Dan asked.
"I left my locker open with my wallet in plain sight," I offered.
"Oh really. Well, why did some people see you running out of the shower?" Detective Dan quizzed.
Great. Now I had to explain my uncomfortable men's room experience.
"Because some guy in the shower was working over his junk right next to me."
"Oh really. Some people saw you racing out of the parking lot."
"That's because some kids were throwing rocks at the cars in the lot."
"Oh really. Well, you're the only gym attendee who didn't report a theft on Friday night. How do you explain that?"
"What was I going to report? I left my wallet out, and someone stole all my money. I was taking responsibility for my own stupidity."
"You still should've reported it."
"I'm reporting it now."
"Maybe that's because you're our prime suspect."
"What! Me?'
"Yeah you!"
"Well, Detective Dan, you need to talk to the plain clothes cop I spoke to on Friday night."
"That was me," Detective Dan informed.
"Well, that was me talking to you."
"That was you?"
"Yeah, I called the cops on the kids throwing rocks."
"Oh. Good thing you called."
"How so?"
"We were going to pick you up for questioning?"
"Pick me up? For what?"
"I told you. You were the only one who didn't report a theft on Friday night."
"That's because I was taking responsibility for my own lapse in judgment."
"Who does that anymore?"
So it turned out that the theft was an inside job pulled off by an employee with a master key on a night that I just happened to leave my locker open with my wallet visible then was subjected to a dude yanking his crank in the shower and some kids throwing rocks at my car. You know, a typical night.
And that's how I became the prime suspect for the theft of my own money.
Editor's Note: Originally posted on April 6, 2017.
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