Due to a completely avoidable and thoroughly inopportune
sequence of mishaps, I found myself in the uncomfortable position of owing a
dead person 53 cents.
Ah, but I forget myself. Let me take you to the
beginning…
I arrived in France with roughly 43 euros and bag of assorted
change in my possession. I was not bothered by this circumstance since you get
the best exchange rate with credit card transactions anyhow. I figured if I
needed to, I’d be able to change some dollars after I’d settled in. I was unscrupulously
frivolous with those 43 euros, and soon found that I had only a fiver and a few
coins left. Again, not much of a problem, except that everywhere I have been
has a minimum requirement for credit cards purchases. My only daily expense is
espresso, and I have reservations about the prudence of consuming enough of it
to meet the minimum for a credit card transaction.
After my second cider at O’Cardinal’s – had to meet the
minimum, after all – I decided to visit the cathedral. O’Cardinal’s has become
my favorite bar. I know I’m in France, and maybe should be checking out all the
different brasseries available, but there’s something undeniably comforting
about an Irish pub. And it is adjacent to the cathedral, which makes it the
perfect place to wait on the bus after mass. I was wandering in the church, marveling
at the extensive work of tromp l’oeil, when I caught sight of a hand. It has
been some time since I’ve been in Europe, and I forgot about the proliferation
of incorruptibles in churches. Therefore, I was a bit surprised to see the quill-wielding
hand on display. Naturally, my reaction was something along the lines of, “Oh sweet,
whose is that?” Well, as it turns out, no one really knows. The sign says
simply, “hand of the exhumed saint of Annecy.”
I find this a bit perplexing. The only thing that makes
sense to me is that when the former Franciscan chapel was being converted into
the cathedral, the graves were dug up and the bodies moved. Someone must have
stumbled on the hand and thought the same thing I did, “Who does this belong
to? Eh, don’t know, but we should definitely keep it out.” Okay, it makes sense
so far; there have been other reports of only certain body parts being incorrupt,
like St. Vincent de Paul’s heart. Here’s the thing that really gets me though.
Who decided to put the quill in the hand? Why, having no idea who this person
was, do you assume writer? Why not confessor? That seems likely. Or cook? Well
on second thought, a hand holding a chef’s knife in a glass case might be
pushing the line. I digress, however.
Continuing my circuit, I decided to light a candle. Instead
of one collection box for buying the candles, the instructions say to drop payment in
the box beneath the statue in front of which you light the candle. Joan of Arc
doesn’t have a box, so I was saved having to choose between her and Thérèse. After
lighting my candle and saying a prayer, I put my hand in my pocket to pull out
the requisite euro. Which is when I remember I am a bit strapped. I pull
out all my coins – I have 47 cents. I realize I could have been magnanimous or
taken out a line of candle-credit and dropped in my five, but prudence urged
me to keep a hold of my last bill. “Alright Saint Thérèse,” I bargained, “I’m
getting more money tomorrow, I’ll pay you back then.” It seemed so simple. How
wrong I was.
The next day, I met with absolutely no success. There is no “Bureau
de Change” in Chambéry. All the banks turned me away. Some didn’t even let me
in. And nowhere online or in print can I find a clear answer about where to
change cash. Remember the sequence of avoidable mishaps? One of them was
forgetting my debit card. I can take a cash advance on my credit card, but that immediately starts accruing 25% interest. It would be cheaper to take the bus
to Geneva and change my money in Switzerland. It says right on their tourism
website, “exchange your money at any Swiss bank.” And let’s be real, who doesn’t
want a good excuse to go in a Swiss bank? So, after hours of walking, several extraordinarily
rude French bankers, and nothing for my trouble except for getting called “sir”
over the intercom, I still couldn't pay Saint Thérèse back.

The next day, however, I awoke with an unparalleled optimism. I had this crazy thought, “what if you don’t go to Geneva today? What if you go to the post office instead?” And I was somehow cheered by this. I can’t explain it. But it was the kind of morning where you believe the world is your oyster. After my morning calisthenics, I even decided to go for a run. I am unsure whether it was a moment of inspiration or a moment of vanity, but I laced up my shoes and was out the door, stretching my stride like a gazelle and breathing in the fresh mountain air. Or, rather, I was for the two minutes before my lungs decided that they wanted none of this running business and my weak ankle thought it would be a good idea to join the rebellion my lungs were fomenting.
What is the difference between a run and jog? Is there some
definitive speed that delineates the difference? Is it form and grace? Is it
the amount of physical exertion required? Because if we’re going by speed, I
was likely jogging. If we’re going by grace, then I think “shambling” would be
the proper verb. But if we’re going by physical exertion required, then I was
world class running, and that’s what it felt like. You know, besides the whole
crumbling apart and not breathing thing.
Before departing my subterranean lair, I remarked that it was an exceptional hair day. No “sirs” for me today, no way. Arriving
at Les Halles, I walked confidently to the post office. I was so certain it
would work, that I didn’t even pose it as a question. “Bonjour!” I said
brightly, “I’d like to exchange my money, please.”
“No,” at least she’s nice, not like the jerk bankers, “not
here, but you can at the big post office by the train station.”
Nailed it.
I imagine she must have been a bit confounded by my profuse
thanks, but I didn’t bother explaining what an ordeal it had been thus far.
Furthering my world-oyster-success, walking back from the main post office I
finally managed to find a place with good espresso. It’s a little cart attached
to a bike – the roast is good, the barista is competent, and it’s one euro. And
now that I have cash at hand, I don’t have to buy ten shots to meet the credit
card minimum.
Oh, and I should mention...
...I paid back St. Thérèse. With interest.
The Brevity Report:
- I changed dollars to euros



You are hilarious! I am sure Saint Therese didn't mind, but I am glad that you lived out such a story that I get to read about!! Miss you!
ReplyDeleteWhat in hell is that graphic (painted?) on the cement post? It looks like roast sirloin skewered on two spaghetti noodles sticking out of a blue bandana with glowing yellow eyes. Also, it's amazing to me just how many stories you can generate by being forgetful. Or underprepared. Or something like that. It's such a great story, this whole owing Saint Therese thing, but so many odd little things had to happen for this to be a thing. Also wtf dismemberment. On display.
ReplyDeleteI believe it is the black mage from final fantasy, that's what Google tells me anyway. I took the picture because of how incongruous it is, peeking around a corner in old town. I knew it was a nintendo something, if you will allow such a flippant use of nintendo. GK Chesterton said something along the lines of "An inconvenience is an adventure wrongly considered, and an adventure is an inconvenience rightly considered." Replace "adventure" with "story," and that's how I more or less get my ideas. Is it still dismemberment after someone is dead? I suppose so, unless of course the hand was the only thing left, but I'm struggling to find a word for that. You see, we Catholics like to keep relics, and sometimes you get lucky with something like an undecomposed hand showing up.
DeleteAh yes, I see it now. That totally is a final fantasy sprite. That's significantly more meaningful (to me at least) than what I said.
DeleteWell, who doesn't like a good roast sirloin? Besides vegetarians, I mean.
Delete