was there, as she was most evenings, crocheting.
âGot an order for a christening gown,â Essie said, looking up with a smile as her fingers continued to ply thread and hook.
Phoebe moved over, sat in the pretty little tapestry chair that matched the one her mother used. âYou do such beautiful work.â
âI enjoy it. Satisfying. I know it doesnât bring in a lot of money, Phoebe, butââ
âSatisfyingâs most important. The people who buy your work, why, theyâre buying heirlooms. Theyâre lucky. Mama, Carly asked about Roy.â
âOh?â Essieâs hands stilled now. âIs she upset?â
âNo. Not at all. She wanted to know if I miss him. I told her the truth, that I donât, and I have to hope that was the right thing.â
âI think it was, if youâre asking me.â Concern filled Essieâs eyes. âWeâve had us some lousy luck with men, havenât we, baby girl?â
âOh yeah.â Leaning back, Phoebe let her gaze wander to the ceiling, the beautiful plaster work of an old, grand home. âIâm wondering if I shouldnât cancel this sort-of date Iâve got tomorrow.â
âWhy would you do that?â
âWeâre doing all right, arenât we? Carlyâs happy. Youâve got your satisfying work, Iâve got mine. Avaâs contentâthough I do wish she and Dave would stop pretending, now that theyâre both single, that theyâre not attracted to each other. So, why mix anything else in with having drinks in some pub with a man I donât even know?â
âBecause youâre a lovely young woman, with so much of her life ahead of her. Youâve got to step out of this henhouse sometimes. Which may sound silly, coming from me, but itâs true.â Essieâs hands started moving again. âThe last thing I want is for you to start boxing yourself in, holing up in this place weâve made here. You have that drink and that conversation tomorrow with this good-looking man. Thatâs an order.â
Amused, Phoebe angled her head. âSo itâs do what you say, not what you do?â
âExactly. Motherâs privilege.â
âI guess I will, then.â She rose, walked to the door, turned back. âMama? No online shopping for Carly this weekend.â
âOh?â The single syllable resounded disappointment.
âMotherâs privilege,â Phoebe echoed, then headed off to work.
3
Phoebe took her place at the front of the room. She had twenty-five cops in this training session, a mix of uniforms and plainclothes of varying ranks.
A good portion of them, she knew, didnât want to be there.
âToday, Iâm going to talk about the tactical role of the negotiator in a crisis or hostage situation. First, are there any questions regarding yesterdayâs session?â
A hand shot up. Phoebe swallowed her instinctive annoyance. Officer Arnold Meeks, third-generation cop. Bullheaded, belligerent and bigoted, in Phoebeâs opinion, with a thick layer of macho over it.
âOfficer Meeks?â
âYes, maâam.â His smile usually started out as a smirk, and often stayed there. âYou talked down a jumper the other day, St. Patrickâs Day?â
âThatâs correct.â
âWell, maâam, I was interested in some of the particulars, seeing as weâre in this training session with you. Now, I was curious, as it appears you broke some of the rules of negotiation during this incident. Unless being FBI-trained, as you are, things are different for you. Is that the case?â
Her early federal training would always rub some of the rank and file the wrong way. Theyâd just have to live with it. âWhich rules did I break, Officer Meeks?â
âWell, maâamââ
âYou can use my rank, Officer, as I do yours.â
She watched annoyance flicker over
Emily Carmichael, PATRICIA POTTER, Maureen McKade, Jodi Thomas