THE
FUGITIVE
I am a lawyer in New Mexico. I was also a fugitive from
California.
I was still on the lam as I parked in a dirt parking lot
next to an abandoned white car and breezed through the metal detector in a
courthouse somewhere in New Mexico.
Little did the guards know that stashed in my pocket was a crumpled, but
active arrest warrant from a small town in California.
Ironically, I was in court to plead my client to a charge of
concealing identity. Unlike Harrison Ford in the film of the same name, I
wasn’t even a very good fugitive. I had
left the California
authorities with my forwarding address.
My rap sheet wasn’t very long or very cinematic. When I’d
lived in LA, I’d left town on a Friday afternoon to visit with an old
girlfriend up north. LA was a jealous mistress and wouldn’t let me leave;
traffic on the 101 seemed to stretch all the way to San Jose .
As I stared out, utterly impotent, at the belching exhaust of a shiny,
silver BMW, every beckoning cliché of the open road raced through my mind. As if it was fate I switched to a classic
rock station and heard a familiar refrain:
Get
your motor running,
Head
on out the highway,
Headed
for adventure,
Or
whatever comes my way.
"Born
to be wild," I sang along with the chorus.
A hundred miles out, the traffic finally thinned and I was
in open country at last. It was dark, but I could still make out the outlines
of the brown, barren hills. I felt the bounds of civilization loosen just a
little as Southern California ended and the Central Coast
officially began. A billboard proclaimed a restaurant was “famous for pea
soup.”
“I hate pea soup,” I muttered under my
breath.
As if he heard me, a California Highway Patrol squad car
edged out onto the road just in front of me.
He drove at a constant rate of fifty miles an hour. I had out-of-state license plates, so I
slowed and stayed right behind him for a few miles, always careful to stay
below the speed limit. I swear that I
gave him far more room than the Silver BMW back in LA. Suddenly he pulled off the road and let me
pass. I breathed a sigh of relief -- Too
soon.
A moment later his lights whirred and it all began.
“But I wasn’t speeding,” I protested when he came over.
“No one said you were speeding,” he said, handing me a
ticket to the tune of a hundred and fifteen dollars. “You were following too close, and that’s
even more dangerous.”
I was a lawyer after all. “I plead not guilty,” I said. “Set
a court date.”
He was polite and efficient and quickly let me back on the
road and I didn’t think anything more about it. I then moved back to New
Mexico.
Two months later, long after I had forgotten my visit to the
land of pea soup, I received an official-looking letter.
“Dear Sir/Madam:” it
began. “This department has a warrant
for your arrest . . . This letter does not preclude arrest on warrant at any
time.” The bail was 340 dollars. By the
way, did I mention that I had two hundred dollars in my checking account at the
time?
This was the real thing.
Given the advent of national computers, I could be thrown in jail
anywhere in the country and spend hard time with gangsters and serial killers.
Cool.
I called California immediately. If they wanted me,
they’d have to bring me in. Hopefully, the media would be there as I walked
defiantly into the jail, as vendors hawked Free
Jonathan Miller t-shirts as the cameras rolled.
Unfortunately,
they wouldn’t extradite me, the bastards.
They told me my only choices were to fly out there to fight the ticket
or pay it and be done with it.
By the time I had finished talking with the California authorities,
it was too late to go to the bank to get the check. I had to lay low for a
while until the heat died down, or I could still make a break for it. I called a few friends to see if they’d drive
around the back streets of America with me, eat frozen burritos at 7-11 and
sleep in stolen cars in old trailer parks. They all politely declined.
My mind quickly envisioned a screenplay. Given the recent
trend of movies about people on the lam from the law and America's fascination
with the dark side, I came up with Natural
Born Tailgaters. Two messed-up kids travel around the country, and follow
other cars too closely. You’ve heard
about the Fast and the Furious? How
about The Not Fast Enough and the
Following too Close?
I couldn’t pay the ticket the next morning either, since I
was stuck in court on that concealing identity plea. I could hardly ask the judge for a
postponement for my client on the legal grounds that I was an outlaw. I scanned the gallery and saw anxious
defendants waiting for the law to come down on them. I clenched my fist in solidarity.
As I waited with my client, I glanced
at a beautiful, sad-eyed woman with tall proud hair, who strained for glimpses
of her boyfriend as he was brought in from the jail.
“Why go for
local talent?” I almost said, reaching into my wallet to show her my warrant.
“I’m bad. I’m nationwide.”
Although no words were said, she looked at me strangely as
if she sensed that there was something different about me, something
dangerous. She smiled. I nodded at her.
I then hurried up to the bench as my client's case was called. After we did the plea, I explained to my
client the twenty-seven or so conditions of his probation, and the consequences
of even the most minor violation.
“One bad urine sample
and I’m sending you up,” his probation officer had said on the way out. By
paragraph seventeen of the probation agreement, a life of crime didn’t sound
like fun anymore -- especially if you got caught.
My client paid me the rest of the money he owed me. I felt a
sense of relief. I could finally pay off the debt. Who says crime doesn’t pay?
I left court and drove briskly to the bank, excruciatingly
careful not to drive too close, purchased a money order and sent it to California , certified
mail. And yet, I will always remember,
that for a short while I was a wanted man.
No comments:
Post a Comment