grabbed her ready box and headed for the first on scene. She was already unhappy knowing it was Arnie Meeks.
âSituation.â
Arnie wore dark glasses, but she could feel the derision in his eyes as he stared down at her. âGuyâs got two hostages. Witnesses heard gunfire. When I arrived, the subject yelled out that if anybody tried to come in, heâd kill them both.â
Phoebe waited a beat. âThatâs it?â
Arnie shrugged. âSubject claims the lawyer cheated him out of six thousand dollars and he wants it back.â
âWhereâs the log, Officer?â
The way his lips curled, Phoebe wondered if he practiced the sarcastic look in the mirror.
âIâve been trying to keep this asshole from killing two people. I havenât had time for a log.â
âAt what time was gunfire heard?â
âApproximately nine a.m. â
âNine?â She could feel both temper and fear knot up inside her. âNearly two hours ago, and youâve just decided to send for a negotiator?â
âI have the situation under control.â
âYouâre relieved. Youââ She pointed to another uniformed cop as she pulled a log sheet out of her ready kit. âEverything gets written down. Time, activity, who says what and when.â She took out a notebook.
Arnie grabbed her arm. âYou canât just walk in here and take over.â
âYes, I can.â She wrenched free. âThe captainâs on his way, and Commander Harrison is in charge of Tactical. Meanwhile, Iâm in charge here, as negotiator. Get the hostage-taker on the phone,â she ordered the cop sheâd drafted as second negotiator.
âIâm the one keeping this from blowing up.â
âIs that so?â She whipped around to Arnie. âHave you spoken to either hostage? Have you ascertained that theyâre still alive? If theyâve 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?â
She grabbed the phone, checked her notebook where sheâd already written down names.
âI donât want to talk to you!â The voice that answered screamed with emotion and fury. âI said Iâm through talking to you.â
âMr. Gradey? This is Phoebe Mac Namara. Iâm a negotiator with the police department. Youâll 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?â
âEverythingâs gone to hell. Itâs all gone to hell.â
âLetâs try to work all this out. Is it all right if I call you William? Is that what people call you?â
âIâm through talking!â
âIâm here to help.â She heard it in his voice, he was through talking and poised to act. âDoes anyone need anything in there? Medical attention? Water? Maybe something to eat.â
âI needed my money.â
âYou need your money. Why donât you tell me about that, Mr. Gradey? Let me see if I can help you with that.â She wrote down used past tense.
âI said it all already. Nobody listened.â
âNobody listened to you. You sound angry about that. I understand, and I apologize if you feel your problem wasnât given attention. But Iâm listening, Mr. Gradey, Iâm listening to you now. I want to help you resolve all this.â
âItâs too late. Itâs over.â
She heard the gunshot in her head a second before it blasted the air. Sheâd heard it in his voice.
Â
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.
âNice negotiating,â Arnie said from behind