But that´s not what happened.
Like in any well-constructed plot line, there was some foreshadowing as to what was about to happen, but in the moment we were too negligent to notice. The first sign was that our taxi driver drove us a different route than we normally travel, one that lead us down a back alleyway in Barranco, which predictably like all alleyways, was dark and deserted. The second sign was that the end of the alleyway was gated and we had to wait for someone on the other end to open it. The third was that a man in a hooded sweatshirt riding a bicycle stopped to speak with the driver for a few minutes. In those moments, he must have realized how completely oblivious (naïve?) we all were—a cab full of girls riding with the windows down. He must have noticed the open window. And he must have noticed the purse sitting unattended on my lap, ripe for the snatching.
I remember that he circled around the cab one time before pulling up to the window next to where my friend and I were sitting. With one swift motion, he reached down inside, grabbed my purse, and pulled it the whole way out the window, leaving almost no time to react. Yet somehow in the moment, my usually sluggish reflexes became cat-like. I yanked the purse from his grasp and pulled it back inside the window just in time for the gate to open ahead of us. Crisis averted.
Bohemian Barranco by night. |
The point here is that, in my mind, I always thought I was safer riding in a taxi than walking or taking a bus. I have ridden in 99 taxis here in Lima with no problems, but it´s always that exception to the rule that gets you. Maybe next time I´ll learn my lesson and take the gas-guzzling mini-van nicknamed the ¨combi asesina¨ (killer combi). But more on that option later…
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