Philadelphia Story – Part III
Now part III of my Philly story. To start at part I, click here.
An unmarked police car, a blue, American-made four-door, pulled up in a matter of minutes. Two plain-clothes officers sat in the front seats. “Get in,” on of them said with urgency.
Ryan and I jumped into the back seat. Hank struggled with his guitar and gear, and asked the officers if they could open the car’s trunk. But there was no time for that. We sped away and left Hank standing at the curb.
“Where did it happen?” the driver asked. He had his window down and appeared to have a wad of chewing tobacco tucked behind his bottom lip. He spat brown tobacco juice out the open window.
“I don’t know,” Ryan said. “Somewhere down this street. I lost my sandals.”
Moments later we stopped in the middle of the street. Ryan jumped out and grabbed his sandals from the spot where we were mugged.
“Did they have a gun?” the other officer asked as we continued on.
Before I could say anything, Ryan said, “No, they didn’t.”
How could he be so sure? I added, “Well, they said they had a gun.” Ryan gave me a look.
“But they said they had a gun, right?” one officer said.
Ryan conceded that one of the muggers had said he had a gun.
We sped through streets and alleys. Other marked police cars showed up, criss-crossing paths with our car, sirens wailing, trying to close in on any of the guys that had attacked us.
But too much time had passed. This was soon clear to all of us in the car. We soon slowed our pursuit. We now meandered through the streets at the speed limit, and the cops chatted with one another. At one point, the officers stopped by a nearby park. A young couple were seated on a bench, hugging. The driving officer shined his light on them and told them the park was closed.
The muggers had gotten away; it was painfully obvious at this point. The cops didn’t seem too surprised, though, and, frankly, neither were Ryan or I.
We drove back to our starting point, picked up Hank, who had been chatting it up with the two guys who called the police, and then made our way to the police station. Our long night still wasn’t over.
To be continued…
Related posts:
Recent Comments
@Ben Thanks for the comment, Ben. Couldn't have said it better myself.
Excellent thoughts. The modern American view of suffering as the ultimate evil, something to be avoided at all costs, ...
What kind of a jerk would carve his name in a violin. Sheesh... And to think, it might ...
@Ben Yeah, any sat on card is a worthless card. Speaking of worthless junk, I found a violin ...
I once sat on a card. The guy's name was Honus something or other. I promptly threw it ...