Narrative Essay
It was
2:30am on a Tuesday morning nearing the end of summer. I was driving home after
leaving a friend’s house on the south side of LaCrosse. There weren’t many
people on the road as I made my way to the north side. I remember listening to my favorite song,
Disclosure by Majestic. I had made it to
the intersection passing the Boys and Girls Club and I noticed a car stopped at
the red, blinking light. At first, I hadn’t
recognized what kind of car it was but then I looked in my rearview mirror and
saw the car was right on my bumper. It was a cop.
That
Monday night, I was with my friends at a party on the south side. We had all been drinking except for one
person, Mark. He had agreed to give us
rides home but when it came time to leave, he decided he didn’t want to drive
all the way to French Island. In a way, I
was relieved because I had to work in the morning and I needed my car to get
there. None of us were thinking straight
and that’s when I came up with the brilliant idea to drive myself home that
night.
I know that I had not been swerving
because I was paying extra attention to what I was doing. When I saw the flashing lights behind me I
immediately started panicking. My heart
began to race, hands and legs shaking, and my stomach dropped. I don’t like having cop cars behind for the
simple reason that cops scare me, especially since I had been drinking, so I
put on my left blinker. I turned down
Sill St. and noticed the cop had followed behind. I didn’t know what else to do so I turned
right onto Charles St., stopped at the stop sign, and pulled up to the curb and
parked. After turning my car off, I saw
the cop car stop at the stop sign behind me and wait about a minute or two. At this point, I was freaking out so I called
my friend Taylor. I briefly explained to
him what had just happened and he said, “Where are you? I’m coming to get you.”
It took Taylor five minutes or so to get to me and by the time he got there I
had already spoke to the police officer and he had asked me, “Where are you
coming from tonight? What were you and your friends doing? Why are you out
driving this late? Can I see your License? Have you been drinking tonight?” I answered all his questions but I had made up
a few lies because I thought it would help me out but, it didn’t. I said I had come from my house on French
Island and I was on the way to my friend’s house. He asked me if I was on my way to my friend’s
why I stopped and parked on a random street.
I began to tell him I had never been there before so I couldn’t find it
and that my friend was coming to get me, that’s where Taylor comes into play.
After
lying to the cop about what I had to drink he asked me to step out of the
car. Taylor pulls up at this time and
asks the officer if he can talk to me but the officer replies with a no. Getting out of the car, it hit me. “There’s a pretty good chance I would be
sitting in jail tonight.” I remember thinking to myself, I snap back to reality
and I’m standing on the sidewalk as neighbors come out of their houses to see
what’s going on. Embarrassed and nervous
I do the first test, walk in a straight line heel to toe and turn around. My
heart began to race even faster and I my stomach started to feel sick. Next the officer asks, “Have you graduated
high school?” I say, ”Yes.” and he goes on by asking if I know my ABC’s and to
begin saying them. Trying to regain my confidence, I complete the task without
trouble. Next test I had to do was stand
on my left foot, this is not my dominant side, and count… 1 1,000, 2 1,000 3
1,000… and so on. I reached 36 1,000 when he told me to stop. The last test was the Breathalyzer.
By this
time a second police officer has pulled up to help. Immediately after blowing a .076 I was patted
down, handcuffed, and put in the back of the SUV cop car. I told the cop I needed my purse and phone
which were on the passenger seat. He
grabbed both items, came back, and opened my car door to ask if he could secure
my car by locking my doors and rolling up my windows so I told him he
could. As I watch both officers go back
to my car, I see them start to search it.
I know some laws and I know it was against the law for them to search my
center counsel and front compartment but they did it anyway. They finished searching and both get into
their separate cars. It sank in, I’m not on my way home anymore, I’m on my way
to jail.
It took an hour and a half for the
police officer to give me three more Breathalyzers and fill out all the paper
work. Finally another officer comes in
and asks if I know who Taylor is because he’s here to get me. Before
responding, “Hallelujah! Hallelujah!” goes off in my head, Taylor saved me from
calling my sister or even worse, my mom.
I was released into Taylor’s custody and I instantly began to tell him
how thankful I was for him.
The days following my arrest, I came
to the conclusion that I really needed to do some growing up. I had turned 18 and now have expensive tickets,
classes, and licenses to pay for. This
was my responsibility and I wasn’t not being very responsible. It took me until a couple of days before my
court date to tell my mom and sister what I had done. If I could go back to August 27th
I would’ve just stayed home but it’s safe to say I learned my lesson.
I feel the fear when you were writting your essay. I am much older then 18 years old at this point in my life, but I think we have all done "stupid" thinks when we were young. These are the lessons that stick with us throughout the years. As a mother I try to instill the importance of being responsible and calling someone else that is sober to come and get you. This was a hard lesson to learn.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you learned your lesson! I've definitely been there, done that, so I can relate! Your story is very exciting and put you on the edge wondering if you were going to jail or just getting a ticket.
ReplyDeleteI can feel the edge that you are on. I went through this a few years back, except I was not drinking and they tried telling me that I was. I was the "DD" and had become sick through out the night. They are tough on you and try to pull things to get that arrest. I can say that the majority of officers are honest and are just doing their job. A few spelling errors but good work.
ReplyDelete