God, but it hurt!
I’d always wondered
what it’d be like to get shot in the arm.
I mean – I know that sounds bizarre, but you know what I mean, don’t
you? In a
But always finding the exit in the end – bursting out into sunlight and
into the arms of the rescue force.
Cynical cops would cheer; my co-star would gasp, having been the last person
to hold out only the faintest of hope for my survival, and exclaim at my
incredible and indomitable ability to beat the odds.
My co-star. Right….
All I knew was that,
in reality, it hurt. It hurt one huge
great hell of a lot, and I couldn’t seem to stop the bleeding. I sat slumped down against the wall, and I
didn’t seem to have a lot of energy in my superbly athletic, masculine legs to
get me up and running again. And I
really did think I should be doing that.
Running away. Even in the best films, the villain didn’t
stop at one shot, did he? I didn’t know how the rest of the team was
faring – let’s face it, I didn’t know if I was in at the end of the story, or
just opening up the whole can of blood-spattered worms. I hadn’t given it sufficient thought in the
first place.
“But you’re so
brave,” my co-star would say. “Jeez, Bailey,
we’d given you up for dead! I never
thought you’d talk him around – I never thought you’d get out before he let
loose the whole damned arsenal and blew up the bank!”
“It’s my job,” I’d
modestly say. “As a negotiator, we have
to be trained to go into potentially dangerous situations. For God’s sake, don’t make a fuss! Let me set off for home with just your
handkerchief as a bandage, and maybe you’ll have supper with me later on…”
Right.
I nearly laughed
aloud, but luckily I thought better of it.
It looked like I was hallucinating now.
Okay, so negotiation was my
job, but I was pretty new to the whole thing.
I had a few more months to complete in training, even on the fast track
– as I was - and I was only meant to be back-up for the main negotiator, the infamous
and impressive Drew Fletcher. I wasn’t
sure what had made me follow him in, against the advice of the police cordon
outside the bank. I just thought the guy
inside didn’t look that dangerous – he looked mad, and he looked hungry, and I
could sort of remember a time I felt like that too. I thought I could probably find some common
ground there; talk him out in a while.