A Good Deed
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weeks ago I left the office early. It was pouring rain, and I was
about to get on my scooter home to pick up my car, wife and three-year
old, and then head off to the clinic where Son Number Two would be born
shortly.
My ring finger had swollen a bit recently, so I was
wearing my wedding ring on my pinky. As I was juggling my briefcase,
helmet, rain suit and keys, all of a sudden the ring popped off and
rolled somewhere down Avenue Kleber. And it was dark out.
I
hunted around for 15 minutes, hearing my wife calling three times on
the portable, but not wanting to pick up and tell her what as delaying
me.
I spotted a security guard at a nearby Gap store, and
explained to him that I had a huge problem: I could keep hunting for
the ring, or I could take my wife to the hospital. I chose the latter,
and asked him if he would please keep an eye out for anybody turning it
in. Pas de probleme, Monsieur. He said he would be there the next day,
and I told him I would come by and hunt for the ring.
So I went
off to get my son and my justifiably stressed wife and drove off to the
clinic in the rain, all the while covering up my ring finger whenever I
remembered, so that my wife wouldn’t spot anything wrong. I told my
wife that something really important had delayed me, and that I would
try and get it sorted out in the next couple of days. I assume that the
ring was gone for good, and so was setting things in place for the
explanation later.
Marcus was born at 7:21 in the morning (his
brother had been born at 7:21pm) on 12/12. At least with a birthday
like this he won’t have to remember if it is the month that comes first
(on his US passport) or the day (on his European passport).
My
wife still hadn’t spotted the missing ring, but asked me what in the
world had been so important to delay me. I told her I would tell her
the next day if I hadn’t fixed it.
Off to the Gap that
afternoon, Alain was there, spotted me coming in, and gave me a big
thumbs-up sign. He handed me the ring much worse for wear. Quite a few
cars must have rolled over it, but there it was, engraved 12 September
1997, Vallery, France. I got the impression that Alain must have hunted
around quite a bit to find the ring, although he denied it. I showed
him a picture of the newborn, and he gave me a big smile and a
congratulations. Later, I went returned to give him an early Christmas
present, and then went back to the clinic to see my own.
Ciaran
Quinn, originally from the San Francisco Bay Area, has lived in Paris
and worked in Europe for the past 11 years. He is currently VP & GM
Europe for Entriq, inc. and is married to Nair Senghor-Quinn. Thomas
and Marcus’ parents and grandparents were each born in a different
country (Brazil, USA, Ireland, England, Senegal, France), giving them a
truly international flavor and, their parents hope, an international
outlook on life.