Pending Review

Drama Fiction

Written in response to: "Center your story around an unexpected criminal or accidental lawbreaker." as part of Comic Relief.

Barnaby Q. Flinch was not a man built for high-stakes felony. He was a man built for spreadsheets, lukewarm chamomile tea, and the meticulous preservation of his collection of 19th-century buttonhooks. His most daring act to date had been returning a library book two days late in 2012, an event that had caused him a mild stress rash.

Yet there he was, standing in the middle of the most secure vault in the City National Bank, holding a sandwich baggie containing what appeared to be the Star of Azkaban diamond, while wearing a pair of neon-pink bunny ears.

How Barnaby reached this nadir of civic duty is a tale of architectural incompetence and a very poorly timed sneeze.

It began at 4:15 PM.

On a Tuesday.

Barnaby worked as a junior compliance officer for a firm located directly above the bank. His office was a cramped cubicle that shared a wall with the building’s main ventilation shaft. For years, Barnaby had complained about a rhythmic clinking sound behind his desk. He assumed it was a loose pipe.

In reality, it was the slow, tectonic shifting of a structural flaw that had been ignored since the building was renovated in the late eighties.

Barnaby had dropped his favorite ergonomic pen, the one with the specialized grip for people with sweaty palms and dived under his desk to retrieve it. As he reached into the dark corner, he felt a strange draft. He leaned forward, his nose twitching.

The dust in that particular corner hadn’t been disturbed since the Reagan administration. Barnaby, a man of sensitive sinuses, inhaled a lungful of grey history.

He didn’t just sneeze.

He detonated.

The force of the sneeze, combined with his hand braced against a specific, weakened section of the drywall, triggered a catastrophic, cartoonish chain reaction. The wall didn’t just crack; it vanished.

Barnaby tumbled forward—not onto the dusty carpet of Office Suite 402, but into a vertical abyss.

He slid down a hidden maintenance chute, originally designed for laundry during the building’s brief stint as a hotel, like a very frightened, middle-aged bobsledder. He gathered speed, his screams muffled by the sheer velocity of his descent, until he hit a canvas laundry bin in a service room with a muffled thud.

When the stars cleared from his vision, Barnaby realized three things:

He was in a room made entirely of reinforced steel.

The door had no handle on the inside.

He was not alone.

Sitting in the corner of a service room beside the vault—just outside the camera’s field of view—was a man named “Lefty” Miller.

Lefty was a professional thief who had spent three years digging a tunnel from the sewer system to the outer wall of the vault.

He was currently staring at Barnaby with an expression of profound existential crisis.

“Who are you?” Lefty whispered, clutching a laser cutter. “Are you the ghost of the bank’s founder?”

Barnaby adjusted his glasses, which were hanging off one ear.

“I’m Barnaby from Compliance. I’ve… I’ve had an accident with my allergies.”

Lefty looked at the hole in the ceiling, then at the man in the beige cardigan.

“You fell through the ceiling? I’ve been digging through three feet of granite for thirty-six months, and you just sneezed your way in?”

“I’d like to leave,” Barnaby said, standing up and brushing lint off his trousers.

“Can’t,” Lefty said, pointing toward the glass wall of the vault. “The moment I breach that glass, the silent alarm goes off. I was waiting for the guard rotation. But since you’re here, you’re an accomplice.”

“I most certainly am not!” Barnaby protested. “I have a clean record. I once reported myself for accidental double-coupon usage.”

“Doesn’t matter,” Lefty smirked.

“You’re in the vault. Cameras saw you fall out of the ceiling. Congratulations—you’re the inside man.”

He handed Barnaby the bag.

“Try to look competent.”

Lefty pointed to Barnaby’s head.

In his tumble through the maintenance chute, Barnaby had apparently passed through a storage level of the building’s Easter Charity Drive. A pair of oversized, sequined pink bunny ears had snagged onto his hair.

Barnaby reached up, felt the sequins, and let out a small, defeated whimper.

For the next ten minutes, Barnaby Q. Flinch became the world’s most reluctant heist participant.

Lefty forced him to hold the loot bag while he bypassed the lasers. Barnaby tried to explain that the Star of Azkaban was actually insured by a company his firm audited—which he felt was a massive conflict of interest—but Lefty told him to shut up and hold the diamonds.

Then the true disaster struck.

The bank’s automated security system, sensing the breach at the vault wall, didn’t just call the police.

It initiated Protocol X.

A total lockdown.

The vault began filling with a mild, non-toxic sleeping gas.

“Oh, for the love of…” Lefty started, before his eyes rolled back and he slumped to the floor.

Barnaby, however, was a lifelong sufferer of chronic asthma. He was currently wearing a heavy-duty N95 mask he kept in his pocket for smog days.

He was the only one still awake.

Panic, usually a hindrance, turned into a strange, frantic clarity.

Barnaby knew that if he were found here, with the baggie of diamonds and the bunny ears, his life was over. No one would believe the sneeze-and-chute story.

He had to get out.

He looked at the hole in the ceiling. Too high.

He looked at Lefty’s tunnel. A narrow, muddy pipe leading into the dark.

“Compliance,” Barnaby muttered to himself, “is about finding the path of least resistance.”

He grabbed the diamond bag (he couldn’t leave it on the floor, it was a tripping hazard), shouldered Lefty’s discarded tool bag, and dove into the tunnel.

The next hour was a blur of mud, claustrophobia, and the distant sound of police sirens.

Barnaby emerged two blocks away, popping out of a manhole cover directly in front of a high-end French bistro.

He climbed out, covered in sludge, still wearing the pink bunny ears, and holding a bag of priceless gems.

A valet parker stared at him.

“Late for a costume party,” Barnaby wheezed, then turned and bolted down the alley.

A short distance later, behind a locked service gate, he stripped off the bunny ears, scraped the worst of the sewer mud from his cardigan with a broken crate lid, and washed his hands and face under a leaking outdoor tap used by delivery staff.

It did not help much, but it turned him from a public emergency into a private one.

He didn’t know how much the cameras had seen, but he had no intention of being at home if the police decided to find out who he was.

Instead, he did the only thing a compliance officer could do.

He went to the one place where no one would look for a criminal.

He went back to the office.

He took the stairwell back to his own floor and spent the rest of the night meticulously repairing the drywall with a tub of spackle he found in the janitor’s closet and a stack of old “Employee of the Month” plaques to reinforce the backing.

He scrubbed the carpet.

He hid the diamonds inside an empty box of Urgent Tax Filings, 1994—a box he knew no human being would touch for at least another century.

Barnaby did not sleep.

At 02:13 AM, he retrieved a single diamond from the box, placed it on his desk, and opened a new document titled:

Incident Report: Unauthorized Asset Relocation (Unintentional).

He wrote three paragraphs, deleted two, and spent seven minutes debating whether “unauthorized” implied intent.

By 02:41, he had drafted a cover letter.

By 02:52, he had printed it, signed it, and placed both letter and diamond into a padded envelope labeled: Clerical Correction.

At 03:06, he was standing in front of a 24-hour postal kiosk, staring at the options.

“Return to Sender” did not apply.

“Declared Value” felt legally incriminating.

“Other” seemed vague to the point of dishonesty.

Barnaby cancelled the transaction twice.

On the third attempt, he selected “Documents.”

The machine asked: Are you sure?

Barnaby stared at the question for a long time.

“No,” he whispered.

He went back to the office, opened the box, and returned the diamond to its place.

Then, after a moment’s hesitation, he added a small handwritten label:

Pending Review.

The next morning, the news was full of the Bunny Ears Bandit.

The police found Lefty Miller unconscious in the vault. Lefty, confused and still groggy, kept telling them that a “sequined rabbit fell from the heavens and stole the jewels.”

He was promptly moved to a psychiatric ward.

Barnaby sat at his desk, his heart hammering against his ribs.

His boss walked by.

“Flinch! You look terrible. Did you stay late working on the Higgins account?”

“Yes, sir,” Barnaby squeaked.

“I… I really went down a rabbit hole with that one.”

Barnaby Q. Flinch was never charged.

The diamonds remained exactly where he had filed them:

Urgent Tax Filings, 1994.

Once a year, he opened the box, selected a stone at random, and prepared to return it.

He never quite managed to finish the process.

The forms were unclear.

The categories insufficient.

The liability… ambiguous.

Each year, the diamond went back into the box.

The label stayed the same.

Pending Review.

The police eventually stopped looking for the Bunny Ears Bandit.

Lefty Miller insisted, until the end, that the jewels had been taken by “a rabbit with compliance training.” His statement

was entered into evidence, then quietly ignored.

Barnaby received a promotion. No one knew why.

He still avoided the ventilation shaft.

He still kept the ears.

Not as a souvenir.

As per policy.

Posted Apr 14, 2026
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32 likes 48 comments

Hazel Swiger
19:07 Apr 14, 2026

Hi, Marjolein!

This one was very fun to read. I absolutely adored Barnaby's humor, and how he was so cautious about the law to the point where he turned himself in for double coupons. That got me, Majorlein.

The reluctance and the way you described Barnaby's inner thoughts and feelings are very lovely, and beautiful. Just all around kudos, I was picturing a middle-aged man in a bunny costume stealing some priceless jewels, and I laughed out loud.

I have one teensy little note that is mainly just a preference, but I would've liked the fear of getting in trouble to be a little more established in the dialogue or whatever, but otherwise no notes!

You and your sweet, beautiful endings! I loved it so much!

Overall, a really strong and curious piece. Great job & excellent work here, Marjolein! :)

Reply

Marjolein Greebe
19:19 Apr 14, 2026

Hi Hazel,
This genuinely made me smile — not just the laugh out loud (which I’m very happy Barnaby managed to earn 😄), but the way you read him. The reluctance, the overthinking, the… administrative panic. That’s exactly where he lives.
And thank you — really — for the time you put into reading and commenting like this. I don’t take that lightly. The fact that you notice patterns, endings, small choices… that means a lot more than a quick “nice story” ever could.
Your note about the fear is a good one. I did consider amplifying the “fear of getting caught,” but it tipped a bit too easily into trying to be funny, so I chose to keep it more under the surface. I like that you picked up on it though — it means it’s still there, just quieter.
Also: “a middle-aged man in bunny ears stealing jewels” is now officially how I’ll see him forever.

Reply

Hazel Swiger
21:15 Apr 14, 2026

Aw, you're so sweet!! I always love reading your pieces! :)

Reply

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