"Hildy, I'm getting that coffee you asked for," Mary Beth said.
"Taking long enough," Hildy said.
"We had to send someone down the street for it."
"That was an hour ago."
"No, only ten minutes, Hildy."
"Don't argue with her," Brady whispered.
"Should be here any second now," Mary Beth said.
"Who's that with you?" Hildy asked.
Voice touched with suspicion.
Mary Beth looked at Brady. Eyes questioning. What do I tell her, Boss?
Brady shook his head. Touched his index finger to his lips. Shook his head again.
"Nobody," Mary Beth said. "I'm all alone here."
"I thought I heard somebody talking to you."
Brady shook his head again.
"No, it's just me here," Mary Beth said.
Why is he asking her to lie? Eileen wondered.
"But there are cops out there, I know there are."
"Yes, there are."
"But not near the door, is that what you're saying?"
"That's it, Hildy. I'm all alone here at the door."
Brady nodded, pleased.
"Why don't you open the door just a little?" Mary Beth said.
This surprised Brady. His eyes popped open. As blue and as crisp as Mary Beth's, but clearly puzzled now. What was she doing? He shook his head.
72
"Then you can see I'm alone here," Mary Beth said, and waved Brady away with the back of her hand.
Brady was shaking his head more vigorously now. Standing just to Mary Beth's left, bald head gleaming in the sunshine, hawk nose cleaving the stiflingly hot air, head shaking No, no no, what the hell are you doing?
Mary Beth shooed him away again.
"Open the door, Hildy. You'll see . . ."
Brady shook his head angrily.
". . . I'm alone here."
She lifted her head to Brady, shot him an angry glance. Their eyes locked. Blue on blue, flashing, clashing. Brady stomped off. Michael Goodman was standing with the trainees. Brady went directly to him. "I want her off that door," he said.
"Inspector ..."
"She'll open the door when the coffee comes, Mulhaney's moving too fast."
"Maybe she senses something you don't," Goodman said. "She's the one talking, Inspector. Maybe she ..."
"I was standing right there all along," Brady said. "I heard everything they said to each other. I'm telling you she's trying to get that door open too damn soon. The woman in there'll open it and start shooting, that's what'll happen."
He doesn't trust her, Eileen thought.
"Let's give her another few minutes," Goodman said.
"I think we should ease in another talker. Wait till the coffee comes, and then ..."
"Look," Eileen said.
They turned to follow her gaze.
The door was opening. Just a crack, but it was opening.
"See?" Mary Beth said. "I'm all alone here."
They could not hear Hildy's reply. But whatever she'd said, it seemed to encourage Mary Beth.
"Why don't you leave it open?" she said. "I like to see who I'm talking to, don't you?"
73
Again, they could not hear her reply. But she did not close the door.
"Be careful with that gun now," Mary Beth said, and smiled. "I don't want to get hurt out here."
This time they heard Hildy's voice:
"Where's your gun?"
"I don't have one," Mary Beth said.
"You're a cop, aren't you?"
"Yes, I am. I told you that. I'm a Police Department negotiator. But I haven't got a gun. You can see for yourself, now that the door is open," Mary Beth said, and spread her hands wide. "No gun. Nothing. See?"
"How do I know you haven't got one under your shirt?"
"Well, here, I'll open the shirt, you can see for yourself."
Mary Beth opened the blue shirt wide, like a flasher, showing Hildy the yellow T-shirt under it.
"See?" she said.
"How about your pockets?"
"Would you like to put your hand in my pockets? Make sure I haven't got a gun?"
"No. You'll try something funny."
"Why would I do that? You think I want to get hurt?"
"No, but. . ."
"I don't want to hurt you, and I don't want to get hurt, either. I have a three-year-old son, Hildy. I don't think he'd want me getting shot out here."
"Do you really?"
"I really do, his name is Dennis," she said.
"Dennis the Menace, huh?"
"You said it," Mary Beth said, and laughed.
From inside the shop, they could hear the woman laughing, too.
"You got any children?" Mary Beth asked.
"I think she'll be all right," Goodman said.
"So the sexist bastard fires her," Eileen said. "Not from the police department, even that dictatorial son of a bitch couldn't
74
swing that. But he kicked her off the team, sent her back full time to the Three-One. And you know why?"
"Why?" Karin asked.
They were in her office on the fifth floor of the building. Dr Karin Lefkowitz. Five o'clock that afternoon, her last appointment of the day. A big-city Jewish girl who looked like Barbra Streisand, people told her, only much prettier. Brown hair cut in a flying wedge. Sharp intelligence in her blue eyes, something like anger in them, too, as she listened to Eileen's atrocity story about Inspector William Cullen Brady, commander of the hostage negotiating team. Good legs, crossed now, wearing her signature dark blue business suit and Ree-boks, leaning forward intently, wanting to know why the son-of-a-bitch sexist bastard had fired Mary Beth Mulhaney.
"Because she wasn't doing it exactly his way," Eileen said. "You do it exactly his way, or so long, sister, it was nice knowing you. But Mary Beth's way was working, it did work, she got the hostage and the taker out of there without anyone getting hurt. You know what this is?"
"What is it?" Karin asked.
"It's the old-guard mentality of the police department," Eileen said. "They can say what they want about the gun on the hip making us all equal, but when push comes to shove, the old-timers still think of us as girls. And us girls need a lot of help, don't we? Otherwise we might endanger all those hairy-chested men out there who are doing their best to maintain law and order. I say fuck law and order and fuck all thick-headed Irishmen like Brady who think sweet little Irish girls like me and Mary Beth should be in church saying novenas for all the brave men out there in the streets!"
"Wow," Karin said.
"Damn right," Eileen said.
"I've never seen you so angry."
"Yeah."
"Tell me why."
"Why do you think? If Brady can do that to Mary Beth, who was with the team for six months and who was doing an
75
absolutely great job, then what's he going to do to me the first time / screw up?"
"Are you worried about screwing up?"
"I've never even worked the door yet, I'm just saying ..."
"Do you want to work the door?"
"Well, that's the whole idea, isn't it? I mean, I'm in training as a hostage negotiator, that's what negotiators do. We work the door, we try to get the taker and the hostages ..."
"Yes, but do you want to work the door? Are you looking forward to working the door?"
"I think I've learned enough now to give it a shot."
"You feel you're prepared now to ..."
"Yes. We've simulated it dozens of times already, different kinds of takers, different kinds of situations. So, yes, I feel I'm prepared."
"Are you looking forward to your first time?"
"Yes."
"Your first real situation?"
"Yes. I'm a little nervous about it, of course, but there'll be supervision. Even if I was alone at the door, there'd be other people nearby."
"Nervous how?"
"Well, this isn't a game, you know. There are lives at stake."