The young inspector demonstratively tore the woman’s driver’s license in half, mocked her, and openly hinted that everything could be “settled,” confident in his power—until she calmly pulled out another ID from the glove compartment 😨😱
The heat on the M-06 highway was so intense that the asphalt seemed to melt before one’s eyes. The air shimmered, a dusty, suffocating heat filled Liza’s new car, and even the air conditioner had long since given up. Liza was driving calmly, strictly following the rules, not exceeding the speed limit by even a single kilometer.
And at that very moment, a blue light flashed in the rearview mirror.
— Not this… — she whispered and pulled over to the shoulder.
The patrol car pulled up far too close, almost bumper to bumper. A door slammed, and a young inspector walked up to her window. His uniform fit perfectly, his face was well groomed, and an arrogant, bored smirk played on his lips.
— Documents, — he snapped, without even greeting her.
Liza rolled down the window and silently handed him her passport and driver’s license. The inspector took them and flipped through them slowly, as if deliberately dragging out the time. Then he looked up and smirked.
— A car like this at such a young age? — he drawled. — Where are you headed, to the bakery on official business?
— I’m on my way to take care of some matters, — Liza replied calmly. — And there were no violations.
He snorted, glanced back at the documents, and began making sharp remarks: about her age, about “women behind the wheel,” about how people like her should stay at home instead of driving on highways. Then he looked over the car.
— Or did someone give it to you as a gift? — he sneered. — A lover, perhaps. For a car like this, I imagine you had to try pretty hard.
Liza tightened her fingers on the steering wheel but remained silent.
The inspector began writing up violations that didn’t exist, hinting that “everything could be settled on the spot.” When she said plainly that she wasn’t going to pay, his expression changed abruptly.
— So you don’t understand the nice way, — he growled.
He pulled the driver’s license out of its plastic holder, held it up demonstratively, and suddenly tore it in two. A dry ripping sound echoed. Two pieces fell straight onto the scorching asphalt.
— That’s it, — he said smugly, laughing. — You’ll be going on foot.
The laughter was loud and self-satisfied. The inspector was enjoying the moment, certain that a broken, humiliated woman sat before him—one who would now cry or beg.
But Liza didn’t scream, and she didn’t cry.
She took a slow breath, looked away from the pieces on the road, and calmly reached toward the glove compartment.
— What are you doing? — he asked mockingly.
— You’ll see in a moment, — she replied softly.
Liza opened the glove compartment and took out another ID. 😨😱 The continuation of the story can be found in the first comment 👇👇
Liza slowly pulled a dark red ID card from the glove compartment and handed it to the inspector.
— What kind of circus is this? — he sneered, lazily taking the document.
But within a second, the smirk vanished from his face.
He reread the line with the last name. Then again—the rank. Then he looked once more, as if hoping he had made a mistake. His face turned pale, his eyes darted nervously.
— Senior… — he faltered and swallowed. — Senior rank… command staff…
He straightened abruptly, as if pulled up by a string.
— I… I’ll call the shift supervisor right now, — he muttered, all arrogance gone.
— You’re already looking at him, — Liza said calmly. — It’s me.
The highway suddenly fell silent. The laughter was gone. Only the heat and his heavy breathing remained.
Within minutes, another patrol car arrived, then a second. The inspector stood on the roadside, writing an explanation without lifting his eyes. His uniform no longer looked so impeccable.
Liza silently took back her ID, got into the car, and closed the door.
— Have a safe trip, — one of the senior officers said quietly.
She started the engine and drove off calmly, leaving behind the scorching asphalt, the torn license, and a man who, just that morning, had been certain that anything was allowed for him.