High Noon
few minutes to talk to her, to show he wasn’t going to be intimidated. That’s all. I only called his number, let the phone ring twice. That was the signal. It’s all I did. I didn’t know.”
“But you know now. You’re going to have to get dressed and come with me.”
“Are you arresting me? Oh God, am I under arrest?”
“Not yet. If you get dressed and come in now, give a true statement—tell the truth, Annie—I’ll talk to the DA for you. He lied to you. I believe you when you said he lied.”
“So do I.” Phoebe kept her fury banked and spoke soothingly. “I believe you, Annie.”
“I’m so sorry, Lieutenant. I’m really sorry.”
“Yes, I’m sure you are.”
Liz looked over at Phoebe. “I’ll drop you back home and take it from here.”
10
“I want to be there. I need to be there.”
Dave leaned back in his desk chair, continued to scan Phoebe’s face. “First, it’s not my call. Second, this is Liz Alberta’s case. You’re the victim. If you have trouble remembering that, I can have a mirror brought in.”
She knew how she looked. A couple of days meant some of the bruising was turning from black to sickly yellow and storm-cloud purple. Her jaw and eye were angry watercolors. Still, the worst of it was decently hidden under her clothes.
“The victim needs it. I need to sit in that room, look Arnold Meeks in the eye so he knows I’m not afraid of him.”
“Aren’t you?”
“Enough that I need to show him, and myself, that I’m not going to be. You and I know how the pathology works. How it is for someone who’s held against their will, threatened or injured in a situation beyond their control.”
“This isn’t identifying an attacker in a lineup, Phoebe. Or facing the attacker in court.”
“It’s just more proactive. My mother faced Reuben in court. She got up on the stand to testify while he was only feet away from her, and I know that was nearly as terrifying for her as being trapped in that house with him all those hours. But she did it, and still she’s trapped.”
All the affection and understanding he felt was there to read on his face. “You’re not your mother.”
“No, but…” Phoebe fisted a hand on her heart. “I feel her fear, and I don’t want it living inside me. How can I do what I need to do if it finds a place to live in me? So this victim needs it.”
“Observation,” he began, though they both knew he was losing ground.
“Isn’t enough.” She shook her head. “Face-to-face, and this time I know he won’t be controlling the situation. The cop wants to be in that room with him because I may be able to help Liz get a confession out of him. I was there. Victim, witness, police officer. Makes me a triple threat.”
“And still doesn’t make it my call. It’s up to Detective Alberta, her captain and the DA. The DA,” Dave continued before she could speak, “who fishes with Arnie’s daddy.”
“Whoever he fishes with, Parnell’s always struck me as solid. Do you really think he’ll ease off an investigation of an attack on a police officer because he’s buddied up with the father of a suspect?”
“It’s a lot of who-you-know in Savannah, Phoebe, just like anywhere else. But I’ll agree, Parnell’s solid. Meeks is bringing his delegate and a lawyer in with him. Annie Utz is lawyered, too.”
“All the more reason for me to give Liz—Detective Alberta—some backup—someone well invested who doesn’t give a damn who Arnie’s daddy drowns worms with. And I’ll tell you something else. Having two women question him, put pressure on him?”
She wandered the office as she spoke now, because she could feel it, she could see it. She could all but taste it. “Oh, Arnie’s not going to like that one little bit. He’ll make a mistake. He’ll end up leading with his ego, especially if I’m in there. Not your call, Captain, but you could make one. You could reach out to Detective Alberta’s captain or her lieutenant, ask that I get a seat.”
“I’ll make a call, but I’m not making any promises.”
“Any worthwhile negotiator’s careful with his promises.” She touched a hand to his shoulder. “The call’s enough. Thank you.”
“If you buy a ticket into the interrogation, have to deal with him that way, I might not have done you any favor. How’s your family handling this?”
“It shook them up. My mother…you know how it is.”
“I do. Would me coming by help things or add to
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