High Noon
pointed to another uniformed cop as she pulled a log sheet out of her ready kit. “Everything gets written down. Time, activity, who says what and when.” She took out a notebook.
Arnie grabbed her arm. “You can’t just walk in here and take over.”
“Yes, I can.” She wrenched free. “The captain’s on his way, and Commander Harrison is in charge of Tactical. Meanwhile, I’m in charge here, as negotiator. Get the hostage-taker on the phone,” she ordered the cop she’d drafted as second negotiator.
“I’m the one keeping this from blowing up.”
“Is that so?” She whipped around to Arnie. “Have you spoken to either hostage? Have you ascertained that they’re still alive? If they’ve been harmed? If anyone requires medical attention? Where is your situation board? Your log? What progress have you made toward ending this situation without loss of life in the damn near two hours before you deigned to call this in?”
She grabbed the phone, checked her notebook where she’d already written down names.
“I don’t want to talk to you!” The voice that answered screamed with emotion and fury. “I said I’m through talking to you.”
“Mr. Gradey? This is Phoebe Mac Namara. I’m a negotiator with the police department. You’ll be talking to me now. You sound upset. Is everyone all right in there, Mr. Gradey? Does anyone have medical problems I should know about?”
“Everything’s gone to hell. It’s all gone to hell.”
“Let’s try to work all this out. Is it all right if I call you William? Is that what people call you?”
“I’m through talking!”
“I’m here to help.” She heard it in his voice, he was through talking and poised to act. “Does anyone need anything in there? Medical attention? Water? Maybe something to eat.”
“I needed my money.”
“You need your money. Why don’t you tell me about that, Mr. Gradey? Let me see if I can help you with that.” She wrote down used past tense.
“I said it all already. Nobody listened.”
“Nobody listened to you. You sound angry about that. I understand, and I apologize if you feel your problem wasn’t given attention. But I’m listening, Mr. Gradey, I’m listening to you now. I want to help you resolve all this.”
“It’s too late. It’s over.”
She heard the gunshot in her head a second before it blasted the air. She’d heard it in his voice.
The lawyer had a mild concussion, some bumps and bruises. The secretary was hysterical but unharmed. William Gradey was dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.
“Nice negotiating,” Arnie said from behind her.
She turned, very slowly, until her eyes burned into his. “You arrogant son of a bitch.”
“He took himself out while you were on the line. Not me.” With his trademark smirk in place, Arnie swaggered off.
She forced herself not to go after him, not now, not now when her rage was so full and sharp and deep she could—would—do something she’d regret later.
It would wait for later. She promised herself that later she would deal with Officer Arnold Meeks. For now, Phoebe stood and watched Crime Scene walk in and out of the building. A hand dropped on her shoulder.
“Nothing more for you to do here,” Dave said to her.
“I never had a chance with him. A minute, maybe two. It was over before I got here. I couldn’t bring it back.”
“Phoebe.”
She shook her head. “Not now, please. I want to debrief the hostages, and take statements from any witnesses.” She turned around. “I want all debriefing and statements recorded, and I want you to witness them.”
“You and I both know sometimes things go south.”
“What I don’t know is if this one had to.” The rage wanted to make her tremble. She refused. “I’m going to find out. The hostages are en route to the hospital, but the woman didn’t seem to be hurt. She can talk. I’d like you to go with me, now, talk to her.”
“All right. You may want to talk to the counselor. When you lose one—”
“I didn’t lose him, and that I know.” She bit off the words, so they both knew how close she was to snapping. “I never had him.”
She didn’t speak on the way to the hospital, and Dave didn’t push. In the silence, she stared out the window and outlined the questions she’d ask, the tone she would take, to build the foundation for what she needed to prove.
Tracey Percell rested on a gurney in the ER’s exam room. She was young, Phoebe noted,
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