The Officer Planted a Lie. Then Maya’s Father Reached the Station-Cherry - Chainityai

The Officer Planted a Lie. Then Maya’s Father Reached the Station-Cherry

The first thing Maya Washington noticed was the sound of her own breathing inside the car.

It sounded too loud.

Both of her hands were on the steering wheel, exactly where she had been taught to keep them, and the blue lights behind her kept washing over the dashboard in hard pulses.

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Her license sat in the small slot of her wallet.

Her registration was in the glove box.

She knew where everything was.

That should have made the stop simple.

It did not.

Officer Brett Hatcher came up beside the driver’s window with his flashlight already lifted, and the beam hit her eyes before he said a word.

Maya blinked into the light and tried not to look away too fast.

She was nineteen, a Black second-year pre-med student at Georgetown, and she had spent the last two years learning how to keep her hands steady under pressure.

In anatomy lab, steady hands meant respect.

On the side of that Oak Creek road, steady hands seemed to make Hatcher angrier.

“Hatcher, please,” she said, recognizing him before she wanted to. “My registration is in the glove box. I’m telling you before I move.”

He did not answer right away.

His flashlight moved over her hoodie, the textbook near the passenger floor, the coffee cup in the center holder, the backpack strap caught under the seat.

Then he smiled.

“Funny. Girls like you always know the script.”

Maya felt something inside her tighten, but she did not argue.

She had been raised to survive the first minute by giving no one an excuse.

She had both hands visible.

She kept her voice low.

She waited for the instruction that should have come next.

Instead, Hatcher yanked the driver’s door open.

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