Dave checked his watch as he pulled into the bank's last remaining parking spot. He didn't have the time to stop, but all he had was pocket change. He would never be caught unprepared without cash. He didn't want to draw attention to himself, which he was about to do by walking into the bank wearing a tuxedo, but it couldn't be helped. Giving himself a mental kick for his lack of planning, Dave sucked in a deep breath and slid out of the car. He hit the button twice to make sure the beep he heard was his own car, and jogged across the lot to the bank's main door. As he reached forward to grasp the door handle, the clicking of heels echoed behind him. A blonde woman stepped through the door he pulled open, ahead of him.
"Thanks," she muttered. "I'm kind of in a hurry." "Yeah, I know the feeling. I'm kind of in a hurry, too." Her cheeks turned an adorable shade of pink. "Sorry," she said, then she froze and scanned him from head to toe, taking in every inch of him, including the bow tie that suddenly seemed tighter and more uncomfortable. "Please, go ahead of me." He couldn't help but tug at the bow tie, but it still felt like a noose around his neck.
"Don't worry about it." One more person in front of him wasn't going to make any difference. In unison, they both looked at the number of people waiting to use the ATM, then the lineup to the tellers. "I think there are fewer people for the tellers," the woman said. "What do you think?" "I agree. Only one ATM is working, and there are three tellers, so that line will probably go faster." Side by side they hurried to the end of the line, which was only three people. His mother had always raised him to be a gentleman, so even though the clock was ticking he stepped aside and motioned for the woman to go ahead of him.
As if he had to justify to himself that he'd made the right decision, Dave turned to count the people at the ATM. As he made eye contact with an elderly woman who was first in line there, she grinned from ear to ear, winked, then whistled at him. A number of women in the building turned their heads and stared at him. Feeling the heat in his ears, he knew he was blushing. Worse than being embarrassed, though, he couldn't be the center of attention. To quickly put an end to it, he smiled widely at the elderly lady, and winked. She giggled, blew him a kiss, then stepped forward to use the ATM. When she continued her business, everyone else turned their attention back to what they were originally doing.
The line moved forward. The woman ahead of him took the step, then turned around to face him. "You look like you're on your way to either a wedding or a fancy party." Dave struggled not to check his watch. "A wedding." "Yours?" "No. I'm the best man." A wedding for himself was never going to happen.
On days like today, that reality hit poignantly close to home. Since he didn't elaborate, the woman once again turned to the front and stepped forward as the person at the front of the line moved to go to one of the tellers. Within seconds two people at other tellers left at the same time, so the next person went to a teller, as well as the woman ahead of him, leaving him now first in line. Automatically, Dave watched the man at the other teller, because that man would be done next, giving him his turn. The man slid a piece of paper to the teller, but instead of reaching into his back pocket for his wallet, the man's hand disappeared into his jacket pocket. The woman gasped and grasped the edge of the counter. Just like in the movies, metal flashed in the bright lights before Dave's brain registered what it was. A gun.
"Back up!" the man shouted, waving the gun at the three tellers as he pressed what was obviously a phoney beard closer to his face with his free hand. Reaching into his jacket pocket, he then tossed a few bags onto the counter. The second his hand was free, he stepped sideways and grabbed the woman at the counter beside him-the woman Dave had entered with. The man yanked her arm, causing her to stumble. When she thumped against him he wrapped his hand around her neck and pointed the gun at her head. "Put everything from the tills into the bags, or she's dead! Everyone lay on the floor face down, hands above your heads. Everyone in the offices, get out here now, and get on the floor! Anyone makes one move for a cell phone, she's dead, and you'll be dead too." Within seconds, everyone in the building was flat on the floor, including Dave.
With his hands above his head, he turned his head sideways to watch and memorize details. The teller's face paled. "We don't have a lot of money in the tills. All the big bills are in the vault." "Shut up! Do as I say!" As the man yelled, he pressed the nozzle of the gun directly into his hostage's temple. "Fast! And don't be hitting no switches to call the cops." Dave's heart pounded as he stared at the woman. He hadn't said more than a few words to her, but it was enough to have made a small connection.
The gunman could never have planned in advance whom he would use as his prisoner, but he probably couldn't have picked anyone better, at least from a robber's perspective. The woman was small, both in stature and build. She looked on the thin side and below average height. To add to the image of fragility, she was blonde and fine-featured and wore shoes he didn't know how a human could walk in, much less run. Not that she could run, even if she were wearing track shoes. Her skirt narrowed at her knees, and would not only prevent her from running, he doubted if she could even take large steps. Her only defense would be to whack the gunman unconscious with her large purse. Except as the man pressed the gun to her head, she whimpered and dropped it, which left her empty-handed.
"Move it!" the man yelled, while at the same time he shook the woman, pressing the gun harder to her head. She gagged from the pressure of the hand around her neck, then winced as she gasped for air. Dave knew what it was like to be on the wrong end of a loaded gun. His heart pounded for the poor woman, who was, like he'd once been, simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. Dave cleared his throat and raised his head, looking straight at the gunman, making sure his arms remained over his head with his palms flat on the floor. "Please. There isn't going to be enough money to make this worth the risk. Let her go.
If you run out the door right now, you won't get caught." The gunman glared at Dave, still pointing the gun at the terrified teller. "I won't get caught." He turned back to the teller. "Give me the bags. Now." He pressed the barrel of the gun against his hostage's head, rotating it back and forth, causing her eyes to widen. His voice lowered to a menacing drawl.
"Now take the bags. Slowly." Dave felt his own throat tighten. He prayed that nothing would go horribly wrong. That everyone would get out, no harm done, except for a little missing money. The woman's face paled. With shaking arms, she reached forward and took the bags from the teller. "If anyone moves, she gets it!" The robber lowered his voice.
"We're going to walk to the door, you're going to kick the handicapped button with your foot, and-" A flash of red and blue lights halted the gunman's words. He muttered a curse. By the way the woman stiffened, Dave could tell the man had tightened his grip around her neck. "You! Behind the counter! Turn out the lights! Fast!" don't know where the switch is." the teller choked out. "I'm.I'm new." "Find it! Fast!" "I know where the switches are.
I'm the manager," a trembling voice drifted from behind a desk. "You have ten seconds to kill the lights." It took more than ten seconds for all the lights to go off, but nothing happened except it got darker in the building. With the lower level of light, the flash of the red and blue lights outside became more vivid, and more a reminder that the police were outside, no doubt with guns drawn. From somewhere in the middle of the building came the sounds of a few women crying. The blare of a man's voice from a bullhorn echoed through the plate glass windows. "We have your partner. The building is surrounded.
Come out with your hands up and no one will get hurt." "You! Pretty boy, stand up. Slowly, and keep your hands above your head." For a few tense seconds silence hung in the air, until Dave realized that the gunman was speaking to him. As Dave stood, the man pulled a roll of duct tape out of his pocket and tossed in on the floor at Dave's feet, all the while keeping the gun on the woman's temple. "One at a time, tape everyone's hands together, and sit them over there, against the wall." Dave knew better than to attempt to reason with the nervous man. At this critical time, the gunman would be scrambling for ideas for escape, which meant taking full control with no possibility that something unpredictable would happen.
For now, Dave had no choice. One at a time, counting everyone as he secured the.