03/16/04 08:41 - ID#26628
NY 69174JE
So I’m sitting in my Nissan at the Hertel-Commonwealth intersection, nodding my head to the latest Son Volt album and waiting for the light to turn green, when out of nowhere I hear a roar which blows me forward towards the windshield, shooting a dull pain up my spine, and then pulls me back again. I’m silent and still. People watch from the sidewalk; drivers pass by in the other lane. I’m silent and still, until…
“Fuck, what goddamn luck” seeps through my teeth.
I click off the music, unclasp my seatbelt, and step out of the car. A silver Ford Ranger drones behind me, having just taken off my rear bumper. I motion to the dazed driver to pull over to the side of the street. After we move our cars, he gets out of his and stumbles over to me.
“How’re doing,” he slurs.
He’s wearing a clover pin, celebrating St. Patrick’s Day three days in advance, eyes bloodshot on a Sunday at 4:50 pm. He rocks back and forth, moving to his own rhythm.
“I’m ok, a little sore, though,” I say through the haze.
Turning, I go to my car, trying to remember what comes after a collision—phone calls, information exchanges, police reports—but once inside my car again, I see in the rearview mirror that Mr. Ford Ranger is sitting in the driver’s seat, revving his engine, and turning his steering wheel sharply towards the lane. He’s off again, and in that moment I grasp for whatever I can reach.
“Well,” the operator say,” You can either wait there for the officer to show up or drive to the nearest station, which is just a few blocks away on Hertel.”
I turn my car west and drive to the station. Walking into the building, I see a woman in her mid-40s sitting at a desk behind a glass window. I wait and wait some more, leaning on a chair, on the counter, against the wall, as she finishes a phone call, shuffles papers back and forth, eats some chips. Finally, she slowly gets up and saunters over to the counter, switches on a speaker, and asks in an overwrought tone “Can I help you”?
“A guy just hit me; he ran. I got his license plate though,” I tell her breathlessly. I fill out an accident report, showing her my license, insurance, registration.
“That’s all,” she tells me.
“But, but you don’t want his license”? I ask.
Doesn’t he get a ticket,” I whisper puzzled.
She replies with “Honey, that’s just your word against his. We’re done.”
“Fuck, what goddamn luck” seeps through my teeth.
I click off the music, unclasp my seatbelt, and step out of the car. A silver Ford Ranger drones behind me, having just taken off my rear bumper. I motion to the dazed driver to pull over to the side of the street. After we move our cars, he gets out of his and stumbles over to me.
“How’re doing,” he slurs.
He’s wearing a clover pin, celebrating St. Patrick’s Day three days in advance, eyes bloodshot on a Sunday at 4:50 pm. He rocks back and forth, moving to his own rhythm.
“I’m ok, a little sore, though,” I say through the haze.
Turning, I go to my car, trying to remember what comes after a collision—phone calls, information exchanges, police reports—but once inside my car again, I see in the rearview mirror that Mr. Ford Ranger is sitting in the driver’s seat, revving his engine, and turning his steering wheel sharply towards the lane. He’s off again, and in that moment I grasp for whatever I can reach.
“Well,” the operator say,” You can either wait there for the officer to show up or drive to the nearest station, which is just a few blocks away on Hertel.”
I turn my car west and drive to the station. Walking into the building, I see a woman in her mid-40s sitting at a desk behind a glass window. I wait and wait some more, leaning on a chair, on the counter, against the wall, as she finishes a phone call, shuffles papers back and forth, eats some chips. Finally, she slowly gets up and saunters over to the counter, switches on a speaker, and asks in an overwrought tone “Can I help you”?
“A guy just hit me; he ran. I got his license plate though,” I tell her breathlessly. I fill out an accident report, showing her my license, insurance, registration.
“That’s all,” she tells me.
“But, but you don’t want his license”? I ask.
Doesn’t he get a ticket,” I whisper puzzled.
She replies with “Honey, that’s just your word against his. We’re done.”
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