know exactly what was said inside a barricade. But if the microphone was found, it might mean reprisals and would certainly damage the negotiator’s credibility—his only real asset at this stage of the situation.
“Henry?” Potter asked. “Your opinion. Could he find it?”
Henry LeBow tapped computer keys and called up Handy’s rapidly growing file. He scrolled through it. “Never went to college, got A’s in science and math in high school. Wait, here we go . . . . Studied electronics in the service for a while. He didn’t last long in the army. He knifed his sergeant. That’s neither here nor there . . . . No, I’d say don’t put the mike in. He could spot it. He excelled in engineering.”
Potter sighed. “Leave it out, Tobe.”
“Hurts.”
“Does.”
The phone buzzed and Potter took the call. Special Agent Angie Scapello had arrived in Wichita and was being choppered directly to the Laurent Clerc School in Hebron. She and the Hebron PD officer who’d be acting as interpreter would be arriving in a half-hour.
He relayed this information to LeBow, who typed it in. The intelligence officer added, “I’ll have CAD schematics of the interior in ten minutes.” LeBow had sent a field agent to dig up architectural or engineering drawings of the slaughterhouse. These would be transmitted to the command post and printed out through computer-assisted drafting software.
Potter said to Budd, “Charlie, I’m thinking we’ve got to consolidate them. The hostages. The takers’re going to want power in there but I don’t want to do that. I want to get them a single electric lantern. Battery powered. Weak. So they’ll all have to be in the same room.”
“Why?”
LeBow spoke. “Keep the takers and the hostages together. Let Handy talk to them, get to know them.”
“I don’t know, sir,” the captain said. “Those girls’re deaf. That’s gonna be a spooky place. If they’re in a room that’s lit with just one lantern, they’ll . . . well, the way my daughter’d say, they’ll freak.”
“We can’t be worried much about their feelings,” Potter said absently, watching LeBow transcribe notes into his electronic tablet of stone.
“I don’t really agree with you there, sir,” Budd said.
Silence.
Tobe was assembling the cellular phone, while hesimultaneously gazed at six TV stations on a single monitor, the screen split miraculously by Derek Elb. All the local news was about the incident. CBS was doing a special report, as was CNN. Sprayed-haired beauties, men and women, held microphones like ice cream cones and spoke into them fervently. Potter noticed that Tobe’d taken to the control panel of the command van as if he’d designed it himself, and then reflected that perhaps he had. He and red-haired Derek had become fast friends.
“Think about it, though,” Budd persisted. “That’s a scary place at high noon. At night? Brother, it’ll be awful.”
“Whatever happens,” Potter replied, “these next twenty-four hours aren’t going to be very pleasant for those girls. They’ll just have to live with it. We need to bunch them up. A single lantern’ll do that.”
Budd grimaced in frustration. “There’s a practical matter too. I’m thinking if it’s too dark they might panic. Try to run. And get hurt.”
Potter looked at the brick walls of the old processing plant, as dark as dried blood.
“You don’t want them to get shot, do you?” Budd asked in exasperation, drawing LeBow’s glance, though not Potter’s.
“But if we turn the power on,” the agent said, “they’ll have the whole slaughterhouse to hide themselves in. Handy could put them in ten different rooms.” Potter pressed his cupped hands together absently as if making a snowball. “We have to keep them together.”
Budd said, “What we could do is get a generator truck here. Feed in a line. Four or five auto repair lights—you know, those caged lights on hooks. Just enough current to