A Stolen Platinum Card, a Paris Suite, and a Mother-in-Law’s Fall-eirian

The alert arrived at 2:15 on a Tuesday, and for a moment I remember feeling offended by how ordinary the world looked.

The west side of my office was full of hard afternoon light.

The river below moved like polished metal between the bridges.

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My coffee had gone bitter and cold beside a spreadsheet I no longer cared about.

Then my phone buzzed against the oak desk, and American Express showed me a red banner that made everything else in the room go silent.

Charge approved: $35,000.

Merchant: Hôtel de Crillon.

Paris, France.

I stared at it long enough for my eyes to start looking for mercy in the numbers.

Maybe it was a corporate travel mistake.

Maybe one of my finance guys had charged something through the wrong profile.

Maybe the app had confused my personal alerts with an expense account.

Then I saw the last four digits and felt the answer settle before I wanted it.

The card was mine.

More accurately, it was attached to mine, a secondary platinum card I kept in the nightstand drawer of the guest room in my Lincoln Park house.

It was there for emergencies, not vacations.

Burst pipes.

Hospital admissions.

A midnight flight if someone I loved was suddenly in trouble.

I had not touched it in months.

The only outsider who had been near that drawer recently was Patricia Harmon, my ex-wife’s mother, who had come over on a Saturday to collect Diane’s clothes, framed photos, jewelry cases, and what she called “a few sentimental things.”

That phrase should have warned me.

Patricia had a way of making theft sound like taste.

She had always treated boundaries as suggestions written by people with less money, and for five years she treated my success as if she had personally sponsored it.

She loved hotel lobbies, heavy perfume, soft cashmere, and introductions where she could say my company’s name before she said mine.

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