Copyright oggbashan November 2021
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
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I had just parked my car near my local convenience store. I was about to switch off the dashcam when I saw, in front of me, three men wearing balaclavas getting out of a battered white van. Two were carrying baseball bats and the third a shotgun. I left the dashcam running and had a thought.
I took out my mobile phone before repeatedly sounding my horn. As I hoped, all three men turned their faces towards me. They had covid masks around their necks but hadn't pulled them up. I had a beautiful high-resolution picture of all three faces. They turned towards the shop, but the door was locked shut. The man with the shotgun blasted it. The glass cracked but they couldn't get in. They rushed back to their van and drove off quickly, not before my dashcam clearly showed the number plate.
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I sat in my car until the police arrived. They went into to the shop to speak to the manager. I followed them.
"I heard a horn sounding, looked at the CCTV, and saw three men approaching," the manager said. "I hit the emergency locking button and the door was secure. One shot at the door, but as you can see, they didn't break it."
"I sounded my horn..." I started to say. A Police sergeant turned towards me.
"You were a witness, Sir?" He asked.
"More than that. I recorded everything on my dashcam and look..."
I held out my phone to show him the men's faces. I enlarged it for each of the three. The manager was looking over the sergeant's shoulder.
"That's brilliant, Raymond," the manager said. Clear and obvious."
"It is," the sergeant agreed. "Could you come to the police station with your phone and dashcam, sir?
"Yes," I said. "But could I buy the one item I came for first?"
"Yes," the sergeant said.
"And what did you want to buy?" The manager asked.
"A bottle of Chianti," I replied.
The manager pulled a bottle from the shelves behind the till.
"There you are, Raymond. With the management's compliments."
"You're sure? It's expensive," I said.
"Not as expensive as having an armed robbery. You gave me warning in time. Thank you, Raymond. Anyway, I can't use the tills for the next five minutes. When I hit the emergency button, they lock with a ten-minute time delay."
"Thank you, James." I replied.
"You know each other?" The sergeant asked.
"Yes," James replied. Raymond Dart is a regular customer, and we are both members of the Chamber of Commerce."
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Half an hour later I was in the police station. We were viewing my dashcam footage. My still photo had been printed, as one picture and as enlargements of all three men's faces.
"They are all nominals," the sergeant said.
"Nominals?" I queried.
"That means well known to the police as frequent offenders. We think they are responsible for at least six recent armed robberies of small shops. This was the first one in daylight and they usually cover their number plate with mud. As you can see, there is still some mud on their number plate, but most had dried and dropped off so your dashcam shows the number clearly."
"Can you trace the owner?"
"No. Not insured, not taxed, not registered. The last known owner sold it as scrap two years ago, but it was stolen from the scrapyard a month later. We assumed it had been taken for parts -- obviously not. Now its number is on our system it will be flagged up every time it passes a CCTV camera. We should get it soon. The three men? We know who they are, and their likely location. Thanks to you, I hope we arrest them within 24 hours."
I signed my typed statement and was able to leave the police station. I was pleased to be on my way home. I had invited my new girlfriend, Angela, to my house for a meal. It would be the first time she had come to my house, and I wanted everything to be just right. I would be preparing a basic Italian pasta meal and the Chianti should go well with that. She was due to arrive in an hour's time.
Angela arrived exactly when she said she would. That is one thing we like about each other. We are punctual. I don't mind if there are real reasons why people are late and if they use their mobile phones to tell me, but just turning up late with no warning I think is just rude. Angela is a supply teacher working at most of our local primary schools. She has applied for and hopes to get a permanent job at one of them next term, or if not then, next school year. But her supply duties mean she is working almost full time anyway.
We had met recently at a school governors' meeting which I was attending as a council-appointed financial expert. Angela and I had known each other as part of a group of friends since we started school. She was also a member, as was I, of the local Karate club. But I had been married and was now a widower, and Angela had divorced two years ago. We were both now single.
Angela gave me a full hug and kiss before saying:
"What have you been up to, Raymond? One of my neighbours saw you in earnest conversation with the police and you drove off following a police car."
"I'll tell you later. The meal is ready to serve now."
"OK. Later."
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We discussed other things while we ate and made inroads into the bottle of Chianti. After the meal we took our glasses and the Chianti into the living room. We sat on the settee facing the open fire I rarely lit. I started up my laptop.
"OK, Raymond, why the Police?" Angela asked.