The Laughing Policemen of London

 banjo confiscated (disturbing the peace)

banjo confiscated (disturbing the peace)

Air travel is a blast once you’re on the plane:

See……Our planet melting right below you at the Arctic Circle!

Hear……A dozen babies crying……out of unison!
Smell.………The curiously strong reek of recycled “air” (gaseous amalgam comprising oxygen, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, methane, ozone, even more methane and countless unidentified vapors).

But most of all, GO!

Before it’s too late!!!

Savor that window-sitter’s view of all those patterns below: The vein-mountains on the back of your hand. The rivers in your palm. The colorful irrigation circles like all the green eyes you have ever looked into.

Et cetera.

Getting ON the plane?

Emphatically less fun. Procedures… lots of separate crucial steps–best done in the Correct Order.

The following took place recently in a large international airport (name withheld; rhymes with “Free Throw“).

There I was, still perky after an hour’s ride from Brixton… marching up and down hallway after hallway carrying…re-directed contents of the Edinburgh land fill (reference to Mother Lode of Dumpsters). There was a fifty pound brown duffle for under the plane, a string bag with a couple kilos of organic pin-head oats, chocolate from Switzerland, Germany and Scotland the rest (banjo…backpack…messynger bag. ..drawstring laundry bag crammed with finery) would come on the plane. …Don’t forget:

Ach, what a refugee.

As I waited for my daypack and messynger bag to emerge from the xray machine, I noticed the uniformed security staff talking in a huddle.

“Will you help us look through your luggage?”

First the messynger bag: out came the battered journal, an old sketch book of Bruce Cunningham’s . Pages of sloppy script, sketches by me, buildings, statues, etc…oh, and a few outlines of knife blades I hadn’t the heart to discard. Bruce was a superb crafter of knives when he was in his prime..The security guard lingered over them a couple of seconds. Then the ’suspicious cannister’: a carefully packed wool-lined metal clad ceramic tea pot. Too precious to put under the plane.

Then the rummaging through my green day pack (20 lbs) with its six over-taxed zipper pockets.

Chocolate, oatcakes, cheese, and silverware. A bazaar in the security line.

The diminutive woman in uniform gasped.

A large kitchen knife lay inside one of the flat outer pockets.

Point facing up.

( Stage directions: cut to Edvard Munch’s The Scream)

Oh, shitshitshit. FORGOT ABOUT THAT!!
I shoved it in the backpack and ….forgot about it. Musta packed it a week earlier, the day I scored all that kitchen plunder from Mrs. Magdala’s bin.

The woman who discovered the blade ushered me aside. She carried the knife like it was poisonous, by the extreme tip of the blade. . We got a few stares.

Headlines played through my head. “Village Idiot apprehended with dull blade, attempts sharp rebuttal“.

Blade runner stumbles“.

Yada, yada, yada.

Henceforth my (former) kitchen tool was referred to as The Item.

Perhaps you can’t just go off and say “knife” because…well…maybe widespread panic? Yah, that’s it.

“Wait here, please”.

I slide down the wall to allow the jello in my legs to harden up.

Finally, while plucking my banjo (to keep from chewing my nails) two black shoes appeared in front of me.

I stood up and looked into the kind face of a policeman who apologized for the inconvenience, that normally this would be taken care of with a stern warning, but in light of recent spate of knife violence, every detail of the protocol would have to be followed…Did I want the advice of a free solicitor?

“Uh, no. I am guilty of first-degree foolishness. I forgot that knife was in there, and now I’ll deal with the consequences.”

Did he just wince?

Another policemen arrived: young, maybe a little out-of-shape. Together they inquired—gently—about my reasons for having this knife in my carrion (sorry ) luggage.

I thought: there is a huge difference between coptalk in the states and here in the UK.

Either that, or I am a sucker for the accent.

Any chance Marin’s finest could get some coaching in English accentmanship?

The conveyor belt of justice groaned along.

They pronounced me under arrest, and walked me (uncuffed, gottseidank) out to the curb and into the paddy wagon (after putting my junk up front).

A sign above the hard metal seat: “Have you swallowed drugs? If you don’t want to tell the police, please just ask for a doctor to see you immediately. Your life might depend upon it”.

My flight was still two hours off. MAYBE this could be cleared up by then.

Off to the pleece station Couldn’t see out the back, and a loud roar of forced-air cooling muted any identifying noises.

Inside the tired, gray, heavily armored building I heard moaning and weeping from downstairs.

I felt strong and healthy, and very out of place.

The desk sarge pulled up a new file on the computer. I recited all my information. “My” guys took me downstairs for a taped questioning session.

I hinted that I might swoon without food if more hours went by. A sandwich appeared immediately.

Toilet? Right here, ma’am.

With no available cells, I was a bit of a hot potato. I was passed from one officer to the next for constant surveil…er, supervision.
Another hour went by, the papers were faxed into uh…Scotland Yard? I don’t know.

One of the officers told me Naomi Campbell stood right where I was standing, only she was hissing mad, behaving ubelievably poorly.

“That’s because she’s a poseur. I am a real queen.” I said flatly.

The lone woman cop giggled.

Finally!

Throughout this ordeal, I overheard the easy banter and good humor of the guys in bulletproof vests. I watched them wrestle–Keystone clumsily–with stubborn ancient cabinet doors, adding a slapstick fumble for good measure…But I wasn’t included in the fun.

I had already reconciled myself to life imprisonment for incurable “flake-ritude” (Charlie word). With zen stoicness, was half-enjoying the vibe of this inefficient, crowded workplace. Plus, I was getting in lots of barely-perceptible-yoga practice.

It is not news that laughter is a terrific de-stressor.

Nor that police work can be stressful.

But I’d never seen cops laugh in uniform. Maybe they only laugh out of public view, around other cops.

As is my wont, I bonded (my banjo teacher Jody Stecher put it this way: “your glue dries fast”).

Bonding? With a police squad? A bit of a surprise for a chick with authority issues.

“No, seriously, one of my best friends is a cop.”

Just a by-product of watching the workings of a busy jail/police station. After all, this WAS was a “novel experience”. I crave novelty.

I have led a ..hmmmm…. un-punished life of crime.

OK, OK, I’m getting my karmic come-uppance….There were signs everywhere (“keep cabinet tidy”), inspirational posters proliferated on the dingy walls. One resembled a hand holding a beer aloft, but it was actually clutching an eraser…and the message went: ‘why not start over with a clean slate, and tell us any other things you ‘ve been up to in the past. It would greatly simplify our job and shorten your sentence”..

I wanted to confess to banjo misdemeanors … but….nah...

On the wall around the corner from the control desk, a Let’s Go Green poster pontificated: …”COPY on both sides of every sheet of paper. Use ONLY recycled scrap paper. Double up on vehicle trips”…on and on, in a sort of spiral design, with the very inner circle proclaiming “Drive Less“. In nine-point type.

I can’t help my reflexes. When the word ‘bicycle’ is NOWHERE TO BE SEEN, my irritability chakra flashes like the roof lights on a squad car.
“May I borrow your biro?” I inquired casually.

The nearest fellow to me reached in his pocket and handed over a pen.

I leaned around the corner, with my lower half planted where I’d been standing for the last half hour.

And reader, I very swiftly penned a bicycle wheel, complete with two-cross spoke pattern and true-to-scale knobbies (slightly worn). And scribbled “RIDE YR BIKE!”.

Swiveling back into the room, I handed the pen back, he said “Thanks”

And then: “What did you do with that?”

“I just improved your poster”.

Sincerity cannot be faked.

He looked around the corner, and began to laugh. The others rushed to see.
My officers sternly marched me into another interror-gation room and told me now I’d re-e-ally done it, I just undermined my case, and would be held indefinitely…

I felt my face go red.
That’s strange… I’m not a blusher.

But maybe I had gone a bit far, defacing public property.

“But not mentioning bikes is criminal negligence!” I blurted.

“We are pulling your chain. But PLEASE don’t decorate our walls” cautioned the sweet-tempered-officer-whose-last-name-is-the-same-as-my-husband’s.

“We have just gotten word that No Further Action will be required” he continued.
N.F.A

And with that, they let me go.

~ by jacquiephelan on July 12, 2008.

7 Responses to “The Laughing Policemen of London”

  1. hahaha…. I feel like I just watched you performing in a classic episode of Monty Python.

  2. “Oh, shitshitshit” – that just said it all!

    But beautifully narrated all the same.

  3. Actually, what I love most about this post is the way you picked up on the way the men in uniform ALWAYS pronounce “police”. It really is “pleece”!

  4. Some of us get to have all of the fun. And those would be you. Thanks for letting the rest of us in on the party!

  5. When I tell my friends HERE about this blunder, they often interject, “I’m surprised you didn’t get sent to Guantanamo”
    or “Did they waterboard you?”.
    Well, no. They served me tea and were very kind.

  6. Gotta love N.F.A.s they’re like a slap on the wrist but you get a cup of tea as well.

  7. OMG Jacquie… I haven’t laughed out loud that much while reading in a long time. My son kept saying “daddy, laugh like that again!” as he though my laughing was as funny as your article. I love the drawing… too bad you didn’t get a photo of THAT! I will look for it if I’m ever in London at the police station. :)

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