Chapter IV
Officer John Rodgers opened his eyes. It was 5:55. The sun was rising on the horizon in a rancid, filthy alley in Anacostia, a section of Southeast Washington, DC, known for its high incidence of violent crime. Rodgers was staring down at the teenager he had just subdued seconds ago at gun point. He was, to say the least, nonplused.
What in Hell just happened to me? he wondered desperately. All I did was blink, and suddenly I was off somewhere, passed out on a floor looking up at a total stranger. A totally gorgeous stranger, but a stranger nevertheless. And then speaking Spanish to a waiter? I don't even speak Spanish.
Rodgers realized that his hands were shaking and he was shivering all over. That's it, he thought, I'm getting the flu. I've had too many night shifts and too little sleep. Or maybe I'm so sleep deprived that I fell asleep on my feet. Or else I had an adrenaline hallucination. There has to be a logical explanation for what just happened. Otherwise I'm cracking up and that just can't be.
The teenager lying at his feet started to turn over. "Hey man." he complained, "I'm tired of layin on my face. We gonna stay like this all night or are you gonna do your cop thing?"
Rodgers shifted gears. "Thanks for telling me my job, boy" he said sarcastically. Then he called in the arrest and his whereabouts, and asked for transport for the juvenile. He could already hear sirens heading their way. Less than half an hour had passed since he and his partner had entered the juvenile's apartment on a domestic violence call. It felt like a year.
"Your welcome, but I ain't no boy," the kid replied with a scowl.
"You are to me if you're younger than my baby brother. You can roll over slowly and sit up."
The kid complied. "How old is your brother?"
"Thirty four."
"Shit, man, he's a grand daddy." And you be 'most old as God."
"That's the way I feel tonight," Rodgers agreed. "And for the record, you're under arrest. Anything you say can be used against you. You can have a lawyer if you want one and you don't have to talk to me or anyone else without a lawyer." Do you understand?"
"Sure."
"What's your name son?" Rodgers asked the boy, "and how old are you?"
"Are you interrogating me, or just being friendly?" the boy answered.
"Just being friendly. I'll know in a couple of minutes anyway, I figure. I'm sure your baby brother and sister have already given the information to my partner."
"Shit," the kid said. "That ain't fair."
"Life ain't always fair," Rodgers said.
"You got that right" the kid agreed without rancor. "My name's Devon, Devon James. I'm fourteen. What's your name?"
"John Rodgers. I'm forty six."
Rodgers suddenly realized that he still hadn't recovered the weapon the kid had been carrying. Very sloppy work, ace, Rodger chided himself. A little slip like that could cost me my badge if not my life.
It was fully light outside now. Rodgers looked around for the gun. A pleasant breeze drifted into the alley blowing away some of the stink.
John spotted the gun in a gutter not far from where Devon was sitting.
"Stay put son," Rodgers admonished the kid. I have to get the gun you were carrying before I arrested you."
Devon was young, but not totally ignorant of the rules regarding evidence seized at crime scenes. "What gun?" the kid asked with an innocent smile. "I don't know nothin 'bout no gun."
It's amazing," John thought, "how much street law a bright ghetto kid could absorb in 14 years.
"Give me a break, Devon," Rodgers said wearily. "Its just you and me here. Do you see any one else? I saw that gun leave your hand and I saw where it landed. I even saw you reach for it before you decided to freeze. It doesn't matter that I didn't pick it up the second you were arrested."
Rodgers decided to shake the kid up a bit for trying to be smart. "I might even say I had to struggle with you for the gun before I subdued you if you decide to play games with me. Who do you think a judge would believe?"
"Think about it, Devon, the officer urged. The gun has your prints all over it. Are you gonna try to convince a judge that it flew into the alley this evening under its own steam?"
The kid didn't say anything as Rodgers got up and headed over to where the gun was resting. Retrieving the gun took less than a minute. Devon sat still the whole time.
"See," Rodgers said with a smile. "There it was, right where you tossed it before you gave yourself up to me without a struggle."
Devon rolled his eyes.
Rodgers' backup and the transport vehicle pulled into the alley at about the same time.
Rodgers was soaked with sweat from the chase and crawling around in the alley He decided to sit himself down and watch the sky brighten while his colleagues worked. It was a warm and muggy morning, but not nearly as bad as summer in West Palm Beach where he had spent most of his early career. He had moved up here to DC to become what some people disparagingly call a "kiddy cop." He had come for reasons known only to himself. Rodgers knew that life as a DC Youth Division officer could be as dangerous, or more so as a homicide dick in West Palm Beach. This morning's activity had proved that in spades.
Now came the boring part of the job. He had to see to the kid's transfer and secure the chain of custody of the gun he recovered. He had reports to write at the Youth Division. After that he would have to wait in the office of Corporation Counsel until a prosecutor was ready to talk to him about the case. The prosecutor would grill him on the morning's events and decide whether or not to bring juvenile charges against the child.
If charges were filed, Rodgers would have to wait around in D.C Superior Court until a decision was made as to whether or not he would be needed to testify at an initial hearing. Rodgers figured he might get free of this case by 2:00 p.m. if he was lucky. Then maybe he could get some sleep before his next shift which began at midnight. The only good thing was the over time.