Reality
...continued
A few days later Mike, the same friend, and I jumped aboard our bikes for a new adventure. Our intention was to meet up, go to what we considered downtown at the time, and ride on a few pieces of curb and street by the vacant Murphy's Mart Parking lot. We had discussed things that had previously happened and all decided that the cop was just being a "pest". Probably the same thing he thought of us by associating us with other kids that might have been. We didn't care though, we wanted treated with the respect of the individuals we were. Why should we be treated like crap because of others? It didn't make any sense either.
We headed out and were by the same parking lot by Roseland Park Southern Baptist Church. Our friend all of a sudden had a problem with his bike as we rode in front of the church, by the street mind you, clearly away from the church. His handle bar stem had become lose and the handle bars could not easily be used to steer the bike. This was a dangerous thing to try to do, ride a bike with this problem, when we were about to go across the old Highway 11 Bridge toward downtown with traffic. The Highway 11 Bridge was an old style bridge with no sidewalk, and absolutely zero way for anything other than cars and truck to cross. So we stopped and tried to see what we could do, pending either getting it fixed or returning to our friends house to find some tools to fix the problem.
With dust kicking up from the tires as the car pulled off of Highway 11 toward us, the same harassing Picayune Police Office drove toward us. Now mind you, he drove at us, straight at us. We immediately felt threatened, and in our youthful pride and already determined minds that this guy was a prick and we tensed up prepared for impact. He at the last minute pulled parallel to us and immediately in a gruff voice stated, "I told you boys to not come around here!" I said, "we're trying to leave, we aren't riding in the lot or near the church but our friends bike is busted". He didn't care and immediately grunted, "I don't care if his leg is broke get out of here, I told you kids before!" At this point our pride was close to hurt, and me being the one to not stand for injustice, bulked up and stepped toward his car. I believe, this might have been my first use of this term publicly, but it felt right and it was what I meant, "Quit being an asshole dude!" The officer looked startled and leaned toward me since I had approached his passenger side window. He chirped, without the grunt of before, "I told you kids to leave and I want you out of here in a minute or I'm taking you in and your parents can come pick you up." I was sickened by his lack of patience, his bully attitude, and simple stupidity in this situation. I told him, knowing I was in the right, "We'll leave when we can get our friends bike working, he can't ride it right now. You can just wait."
Yeah, I didn't like injustice and this was when I learned that justice didn't matter one bit if the other guy was bigger. No matter what though, I was going to do everything I could reasonably do to enforce some semblance of honor and justice. Then the officer stepped out of his car, slamming his door and looking perturbed. I backed up in fear at this point, not knowing what this guy was going to do. He walked up and grabbed my upper arm, I squirmed a bit but didn't break free. Mike asked, "What's your problem man?" or something akin to that. The officer spouted something about, "Ya'll are!" and I knew we were in trouble. That's when I lost it, all of 13 and now pissed that justice was being spit on, desecrated in a way that was just unbearable to me. I had my bike handle bar cross bar in one hand, my other arm grasped by the officer, and I turned my head. I stated again, "Let me go." Mike and our friend both said, "Let him go, he didn't do anything!" I then instantaneously thought that I was going to just have to do it. I was going to do something super stupid. I was going to either hit the cop with my bike or spit on him or something, he more than deserved. I had at that moment lost all respect for this Police Officer. I said to Mike and our friend, "You guys run, run and we'll meet up later." I added, "Go tell your mom Mike, tell your dad and tell them to call the police station." They looked at me oddly and I stated again in an almost scream, "RUN!" The cop said, "shut up" and as he turned his head I lobbed spit at his face, missing miserably and getting it all over his uniform. But that did it, he let go to wipe the spit off and I took off like a bat out of hell. The officer yelled, "Hey, get back here". But I rode, with Mike and our other friend in the distance peddling away, hard as all of us could.
I'm not sure what that cop did, or were Mike and our buddy ended up that day, but I went straight home. I told my parents and they tried to apply logic and reason to the situation again, asking what I had done. The simple and only answer was, "nothing".
This was my awakening that just because someone is in uniform, or supposed to uphold the law and be a respectful, honorable, noble person, doesn't mean a damn thing. It all boils down to how the individual is going to behave, not the ideal of what they're upholding.
To be continued...