From `Jigsaw Puzzle’
The police called about a week later. They’d found her in a vacant building owned by the town hospital, with her skinhead boyfriend and a case of beer.
`I want to see that man charged with statutory rape,’ I said, picturing this scene.
`Well, ma’am, she’s fourteen.” The officer paused, then added, `Which is the age of consent.’
`Consent? Since when? Fourteen is still a child! She hasn’t got a clue about what it means to give consent!’
I began to cry, feeling the ground shake under me. The age of consent was sixteen when I was a kid, and most of our parents had considered it too young to start seeing boys.
`How can you call it consent, even when he’s plying her with alcohol? This is insane. It’s against the law to provide alcohol to a minor. She is a minor at fourteen. Surely you can charge him with that?’
The officer was placating. `I understand, ma’am,’ he began, and I could see that he was already backing out of that option.
`Well, if you can’t charge him, can you at least bring her home? I registered her as a missing person.’
`I would bring her home,’ he said, `but her street friends have already clued her in. She told me she’ll just walk away from your door, if I bring her to you. I know you reported her missing, but even with us still sitting in the cruiser to write up the report, we’d need a brand-new order to stop her from leaving again.’
Straight talking. This was his best attempt to be helpful. At the time, I couldn’t get past the thought that I’d already lost her, still unsure whether she was blaming me for too little or too much attention.
`What can I do?’ I sighed, hearing the note of desperation that crept into my own voice.
`Well, ma’am, I hate to say it like this, but we know the people she’s running with pretty well. They have a long history.’ He drops his next point like a bomb. It was worse than I feared. `This guy she’s with is one of the ring leaders. I think you just have to hope that your daughter gets hurt bad enough that she decides to come home, but not so bad that she can’t come home.’
My heart stopped for a moment, I swear. I had no options as her parent then, except prayer. After I hung up, I fell to my knees, crying and praying to whatever greater power there was guiding the universe to save her.