I got this text from my youngest son the other day, bringing me up to speed on his adventures in the police academy:
“Got punched in the face today. Failed to block a left hook. It was
awesome.”
That’s my
boy.
Of course, his mother wanted to know
the name and badge number of the recruit who hit her baby, but his words
brought a tear of nostalgia to my eye.
It doesn’t seem that long ago that I was in his boots,
attending a regional academy in Texas with officers from a dozen different
departments. At twenty-two I couldn’t grow the middle of my mustache, but I
tried anyway because cops had mustaches—and I was a dead ringer for Opie
Taylor without one.
When my son tells me about his day
of firearms training and shows me how he’s put so many rounds through his Glock
over a two-week period that he’s had to superglue the wound on his trigger
finger closed, I’m transported back to dirt berms in a rural pasture, avoiding
rattlesnakes and stepping over cow patties as we advanced on our targets.
When he
shows me a new move he’s learned in defensive tactics or a certain handcuffing
technique, I envision the ginormous dude who will spin on him someday and bark
(or slur or slobber or scream), “You’re just a @*%#& cop! I think I’ll take
your gun and…” Anyway, you get the idea.
Thankfully for the folks my son will have to arrest, this new generation
of lawdog has Tasers where we only had big honkin’ metal flashlights for the in-between times not covered by open hand or resorting to our sidearm.
When he
tells me about the naiveté of some new recruits, I remember a freshly graduated
Highway Patrolman and a Texas Ranger. The two of them walked behind my captain,
the Trooper sergeant, and me. It was daybreak and we were all on our way to
breakfast. Unbeknownst to us, the Ranger asked to see the new Trooper’s
revolver, saying something like: “Is that one of the new 586s they’re issuing at
the Academy?” Now, an old salt knows you don’t go handing your sidearm off to someone
else in the middle of town—but this kid was new, and it was a Texas Ranger doing
the asking. Innocent as a lamb, the young Trooper handed his revolver over so
the Ranger could take a look. The Ranger, always a joker, fired a round into
the grass, then, quick a wink, passed the gun back to the astonished Trooper.
When we all turned, we saw the flushed Trooper holding a smoking Smith and
Wesson, a big divot in the courthouse lawn, and a twinkle in the Ranger’s eye.
Poor kid. He learned an important lesson that day.
I just
returned from Bouchercon, a conference for Mystery and Thriller writers. Great
fun, it afforded me the opportunity to associate with incredibly talented and
successful authors. I could name drop here but the list is just too long. There were a handful of former law enforcement
officers in attendance, and oddly enough, we all tended to gravitate toward one
another, sometimes without even knowing each other’s background. Call it radar
for like-minded thinkers. All of us having either retired or quit to write
fulltime, we sat for hours telling tales, cussing the system, and reminiscing
about favorite partners who’d had our backs during the toughest of times.
Often, we’d each end up staring into space, locked in thought about some past adventure
or nightmare that would never make it into a war story.
You
certainly don’t have to have a law enforcement background to write about
gunfights, fistfights and evil men—but it doesn’t hurt.
As luck would have it, there was an
international motorcycle show next door to the conference. Since my characters are often found on the
back of a bike, I snuck away from the author panel discussions and
belly-up-to-the-bar chats long enough to walk around the show and do some research.
Along with the BMWs, Ducatis,
Triumphs and Harleys, there were, of course, hundreds of vendors. A college-age
kid pointed to the Maui Jim sunglasses resting on top of my head and asked if
he could demonstrate his lens-cleaning product.
Happy to get free stuff, I handed them over. He was a nice guy, chatting
about motorcycles and all the famous writers next door while he cleaned—one
lens. He gave back the glasses and let me look at the world as I had been
seeing it, along side the new world through the clean side. I handed the
glasses back to him for the rest of the cleaning and asked if he would please
take my money.
One of the most important things
they teach at any law enforcement academy is clarity—seeing things as they truly are rather than the way we wish they were. My son stopped by the other day to talk to me
about his officer survival class. When he parroted back that little truism, I knew
he was going to be okay.
It’s astonishing to watch the kid who used to
run around in those little baby gowns, pin on a badge and strap on a pistol. It
will be two years next month since I’ve hung up my own badge—and there’s not a
day that goes by that I don’t miss it. Don’t get me wrong. I love this writing
life. But the people I met in my former life—both heroic and heinous—all inform my writing to one level
or another. My knees are achier these
days, I need trifocals if I want to be able to see the computer and the front sight of my pistol, and
the ring finger of my right hand feels like someone attacked it with a ballpeen
hammer—but when my son regales me with stories about ground-fighting, arm bars
and shoot-and-move exercises, I forget about getting old, remember the way it
was—and put it in a story.
Marc Cameron is a retired Chief Deputy US Marshal and 29-year law enforcement veteran. His short stories have appeared in BOYS’ LIFE Magazine and the Saturday Evening Post. He's published eleven novels, six of them Westerns.
TIME OF ATTACK fourth in his USA Today Bestselling Jericho Quinn Thriller series, is the newest release from Kensington February of 2014. DAY ZERO will hit the shelves February 2015.
Marc lives in Alaska with his beautiful bride and BMW motorcycle.
Visit him at:
www.marccameronbooks.com
http://www.facebook.com/MarcCameronAuthor
You've had a fine life, Marc. Time now to remember. And write. And find other adventures.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing.
Good stuff, Marc. Waiting for that book to come out.
ReplyDeleteVery well said. Left me with a grin. Yes the next leo in the family will be a good one too!
ReplyDeleteMemories, although mine was working lock up. You are right, you do gravitate to those who have had similar experiences, and oh the stories. Thanks for sharing yours and bless your son. Not an easy road, but oh can it be so rewarding. Now on to the writing. Doris
ReplyDeleteMarc, I always look forward to your posts, and this one was no exception. You have a way of letting the rest of us have a peek into the life you've led that most of us can only speculate about. And I know you must be so proud of your son! You've done so much so well in your life, and though you've chosen to leave that "rougher" part of it behind and go on to the writing full bore, you've got so many wonderful experiences (both good and bad!) to incorporate into your stories.
ReplyDeleteCheryl
Thanks guys. I appreciate the comments. M
ReplyDelete