“What are you doing?”
“Getting plates.”
“You’re burning the eggs. I can smell’m.”
She brought the plates to the stove, feeling the hard shape of the knife low on her belly, thinking that now if they turned their backs, she could kill them.
Across the house in the office, the telephone rang.
15
Friday, 11:02 P.M.
TALLEY
The Sheriffs had set up a dedicated phone for Maddox and Ellison. It was looped by a cell link from Maddox’s radio car to the command van, where it was hardwired into the Smith’s phone line beneath the street. It provided the negotiators with a cell phone’s freedom of movement while allowing all conversations to be recorded in the van. Martin, Hicks, and everyone else in the van would be listening to every word. Talley didn’t want that.
Talley took out his cell phone, but he had forgotten Smith’s number and had to ask for it.
Maddox, watching him, said, “We’ve got the hard line.”
Talley ignored him.
“I’m more comfortable with this. You got the number?”
Unless the Sheriffs had changed the phone block, the Smiths’ phone should still accept Talley’s calls. Ellison read off the number as Maddox watched Talley. Talley knew they thought this was odd, but he didn’t care.
“Why are you doing this?”
“What?”
“Out of the blue, you’re back, you’re calling the house. Every call has to have a point. Why?”
Talley stopped dialing the number and tried to order his thoughts. He had developed a certain amount of respect for Maddox and wanted to tell him the truth, but his fear wouldn’t allow it. He wanted Smith. That’s all he knew. Smith was his link to the people who had his wife and daughter. He considered the house and what might be on the other side of its door, then looked back at Maddox. He needed to say something that would bring Maddox onto his side.
“I’m scared that Smith is dead. I think I can push Rooney into telling us without tipping him off that the boy called.”
“If he’s dead, Rooney isn’t going to say shit and the boy would’ve told us.”
“So what do we do, Maddox? You want to breach the house?”
Maddox held his gaze, then looked back at the house and nodded.
“All right, then.”
Talley redialed the number, then waited for the ring. The front and sides of the house glowed from the banks of white lights that the Sheriffs had erected, the glare so hot that the house seemed washed out and pale. Exaggerated black shadows stretched across the lawn like grave markers. The phone rang four long times before Rooney picked up.
“That you, Talley? I saw you come back.”
For the space of three heartbeats, Talley said nothing. That had never happened before, but it took that time for Talley to push aside the anxiety that he knew would be in his voice. He could have nothing weak in his voice. Nothing that might warn Rooney or put him on guard.
“Talley?”
“Hello, Dennis. You there in the office, watching us?”
The shutters flicked open, then closed.
“I guess you are. Did you miss me?”
“I don’t like that new guy, Maddox. He thinks I’m stupid, calling every fifteen minutes, pretending he wants to make sure we’re all right, but it’s to keep us awake. I’m not stupid.”
Talley felt himself grow calm now that he was back on the phone. He had hated it earlier today, but now the familiarity of it strengthened him, just him and the phone and the subject, a small self-contained world where he played a game against the voice on the other end. It surprised him that he felt a confidence that he hadn’t known in years, a deep sense that he could control this world if not the larger one. He glanced up at the helicopters. Red and green angels.
“I came back tonight because we’ve got a big problem out here.”
Rooney hesitated as Talley knew he would, thinking. Talley knew that what he was about to say would surprise Maddox and Ellison, so he glanced at them and touched his lips. Then he filled the silence that Rooney left, firming his voice to show that he was serious and concerned.
“I need you to let me talk to Mr. Smith.”
“We been through that, Talley. Forget it.”
“I can’t forget it this time, Dennis. These people out here, the Sheriffs, they think you won’t let me talk to Mr. Smith or his children because they’re dead. They think you’ve murdered them.”
“That’s bullshit!”
Maddox and Ellison shifted next to him, staring. Talley felt the weight of their eyes but ignored them.
“If you don’t let me speak with Mr. Smith, they are going to assume that he is in fact dead, and they are going to breach the house.”
Rooney started cursing and shouting that everyone was going to die and that the house would burn. Talley expected his reaction and let him vent.
Maddox gripped Talley’s arm.
“What the hell are you saying? You can’t say somethin’ like that!”
Talley held up a hand, telling him to back off. He waited for a break in Dennis’s rant.
“Dennis? Dennis, I’m telling you right now that I believe you, but they don’t. This isn’t up to me, son. I believe you. But unless you give me something to convince them, they’re going in. Let me speak to him, Dennis.”
Talley was taking a big chance. If Smith was conscious and able to speak, Rooney might very well put him on the phone. If that happened, Talley would still try to get the information about the men in the car, but he knew the odds of that would be slim. Talley’s only hope was that Smith was still unconscious. If Rooney would admit his condition, Talley had a shot at getting Smith released.
Rooney said, “Fuck you and fuck them! If you try to come in here, these kids are gonna die!”
“Let me speak to him, Dennis. Please. They think he’s dead, and they are going to come in.”
Rooney screamed, “SHIT!”
Talley could hear the frustration in Rooney’s voice. He waited. Rooney was silent and that meant he was thinking; he couldn’t put Smith on the phone, but he was scared to admit that Smith was injured. Talley felt a surge of excitement, but hid it. He softened his voice, made it understanding and sympathetic. We’re both in this together, pal.
“Is something wrong in there, Dennis? Is there a reason you can’t put Smith on the phone?”
Rooney didn’t answer.
“Talk to me, Dennis.”
Rooney took almost a full minute before he finally answered.
“He got knocked out. He won’t wake up.”
Talley knew better than to ask how; it would put Rooney on the defensive, and Talley didn’t want to do that. He had Smith’s situation out in the open, so now he could try to get Smith. Maddox, still watching, raised his eyebrows in a question. Talley nodded, getting there; he repeated the admission for Maddox.
“So you’re saying that Mr. Smith is unconscious. Okay, okay, I’m glad you’re telling me this, Dennis. That explains things. Now we can deal with it.”
“They better not try to come in here.”
They, not you.
“I think we can work with this, Dennis. Are we talking about a head injury here? I’m not asking how this happened, but is that what’s wrong with him?”
“It was an accident.”
“Is he breathing?”
“Yeah, but he’s out cold. He can’t talk.”
Now Talley had to move it to the next level. Now he had to get in the house, or get Smith out.
“Dennis, now I understand why you couldn’t put him on, but you’ve got a guy in there who needs to be in the hospital. Let me come get him.”
“Fuck that! I know what you bastards will do, you’ll rush the house.”