Bucky’s judgement is good. Freddy’s more messed up and intense than his personable demeanor suggests, but it’s not a mask either. He’d been the good cop to suspects during interrogations, and the funny guy to his colleagues because he was desperate for them to like him. Would he ever want to be a cop again here? Probably not, but it’s also not like he knows much else.
“Aren’t there no laws here?” Cops without laws don’t make any sense to him.
Maybe it’s like cops will be cops no matter where, though. Take Adia’s story, for instance. Totally different universe, thousands of years in the future, everyone’s flying around in space, and the sentient robot cops still sound exactly the same as the cops in the LAPD.
“She could probably tell you were nervous,” he suggests. Something tells him Adia’s poker face isn’t all that great. “Cops think that anyone who shows anxiety’s got something to hide. But I bet they didn’t have shit on you, so as long as you didn’t crack, they had to let you go.” The last part’s just a guess. He has no way of knowing what happened to make the other guy, the Five, call her off since cops normally like to think they’re finally getting somewhere when a suspect starts acting like they're really scared.
no subject
Date: 2017-08-20 08:54 pm (UTC)“Aren’t there no laws here?” Cops without laws don’t make any sense to him.
Maybe it’s like cops will be cops no matter where, though. Take Adia’s story, for instance. Totally different universe, thousands of years in the future, everyone’s flying around in space, and the sentient robot cops still sound exactly the same as the cops in the LAPD.
“She could probably tell you were nervous,” he suggests. Something tells him Adia’s poker face isn’t all that great. “Cops think that anyone who shows anxiety’s got something to hide. But I bet they didn’t have shit on you, so as long as you didn’t crack, they had to let you go.” The last part’s just a guess. He has no way of knowing what happened to make the other guy, the Five, call her off since cops normally like to think they’re finally getting somewhere when a suspect starts acting like they're really scared.