Thursday, August 04, 2011

one policeman, one car, and one $200 ticket


In Beyond Purgatory I try to relate stories of not settling for the status quo. However, I (unfortunately) realize that I rarely share stories of OTHERS who go beyond their call of duty or what is handed to them. Well, this is a real person. And this is his story.

Thursday morning is garbage morning on Kosciusko (my street; see picture above of how it looked during Snowmageddon 2010). The 100 or so residents who live in this "two way, one at a time" street are required to move their cars for the sake of our garbage men, fearless men who brave the smells and slopes of our humble roads. I've lived on this street for more than a year, and I know the drill. But usually I work in the morning and therefore can leave before the clock strikes 8am and I turn into a pumpkin. However, this was my week off. That, coupled with being sick for the last 3 days, resulted in me forgetting what day it was.

So I left my car on the street.

This Thursday morning, I awoke to the terrible sound of a truck backing up. Beep...beep...beep. That could have been my heart monitor. I jumped out of bed, hair a blaze, tie dye shirt unkempt, and rushed to the stairwell. In the window I saw him: our traffic cop, who had been pounding away at our door...all so I would not get the $200 ticket and towing fee.

Let me elaborate on the hurdles that this man crossed to save a poor young married couple from an unfortunate financial burden. The garbage men (with no mercy, but quite understandably) had argued from the start to call the ticketing police and have my car towed. A $200 fee. This policeman was actually our traffic cop, because construction is now taking up a full block and a half of our lower street where we usually park on garbage day. But he left his post to see if he could do something. Our neighbor happened to be outside, and assured the policeman that I was home because she saw our 2 bikes in the backyard. So the policemen rang the doorbell...9x. Little did he know that we had unplugged the doorbell because we had cooked a day prior (it usually has to be unplugged with only 2 outlets in the kitchen). So he resorted to knocking....HARD. But with an air conditioner and fan, the likelihood of us hearing someone knocking on the first floor door of our 2nd floor apartment is (and was) nadda. But he persisted, while the garbage men taunted him to give up and teach me a lesson. And then, when I did rush downstairs (wakened by the beeps, mind you, not the knocking), he was not rude or condescending at all, but almost as relieved as I was. And I was relieved.

I personally think this man went above the call of duty. Not in a "staring death in the face" way that we often associate with the term, but in a way that genuinely looked out for the residents of Pittsburgh (which I'm sad to say is not often the reputation we have of Pittsburgh cops, especially on the South Side). I am thankful, to him, to our neighbor, to the beeps, and to the Lord for seeing us in favor this morning. *sigh of relief*

And Chris just did the dishes. It's going to be a great day.

3 comments:

Caitlin said...

Love this story! You should send it in to the Pgh Post Gazette for their Random Act of Kindness section. (Send to page2@post-gazette.com)

Elise said...

Thanks for the idea, Caitlin! I took your advice and sent the story. We'll see what they say! Hopefully if posted, the policeman won't get in trouble for leaving his post to come to my rescue!

Elise said...

my memory has just reminded me that in addition to dreaming that a lizard was hell bent on biting me, I dreamed that my car had been disassembled by a group of people standing on the street, and that they graciously put it back together when they realized how upset I was, but in kindness assured them I would not press charges as long as they put my car back together in one piece. prophetic?