One The man with the rubber boots stepped into the elevator behind me, but I didn't   see him at first. I smelled him though--the pungent odor of smoke and cheap wine   and life on the street without soap. We were alone as we moved upward, and when I   finally glanced over I saw the boots, black and dirty and much too large. A frayed   and tattered trench coat fell to his knees. Under it, layers of foul clothing bunched   around his midsection, so that he appeared stocky, almost fat. But it wasn't from   being well fed; in the wintertime in D.C., the street people wear everything they   own, or so it seems.
 He was black and aging--his beard and hair were half-gray and   hadn't been washed or cut in years. He looked straight ahead through thick sunglasses,   thoroughly ignoring me, and making me wonder for a second why, exactly, I was inspecting   him.
 He didn't belong. It was not his building, not his elevator, not a place he   could afford. The lawyers on all eight floors worked for my firm at hourly rates   that still seemed obscene to me, even after seven years.
 Just another street bum   in from the cold. Happened all the time in downtown Washington. But we had security   guards to deal with the riffraff.
 We stopped at six, and I noticed for the first   time that he had not pushed a button, had not selected a floor. He was following   me. I made a quick exit, and as I stepped into the splendid marble foyer of Drake   & Sweeney I glanced over my shoulder just long enough to see him standing in the   elevator, looking at nothing, still ignoring me.
 Madam Devier, one of our very resilient   receptionists, greeted me with her typical look of disdain. "Watch the elevator,"   I said.
 "Why?"
 "Street bum. You may want to call security."
 "Those people," she   said in her affected French accent.
 "Get some disinfectant too."
 I walked away,   wrestling my overcoat off my shoulders, forgetting the man with the rubber boots.   I had nonstop meetings throughout the afternoon, important conferences with important   people. I turned the corner and was about to say something to Polly, my secretary,   when I heard the first shot.
 Madam Devier was standing behind her desk, petrified,   staring into the barrel of an awfully long handgun held by our pal the street bum.   Since I was the first one to come to her aid, he politely aimed it at me, and I too   became rigid.
 "Don't shoot," I said, hands in the air. I'd seen enough movies to   know precisely what to do.
 "Shut up," he mumbled, with a great deal of composure.
 There were voices in the hallway behind me. Someone yelled, "He's got a gun!" And   then the voices disappeared into the background, growing fainter and fainter as my   colleagues hit the back door. I could almost see them jumping out the windows.
 To   my immediate left was a heavy wooden door that led to a large conference room, which   at that moment happened to be filled with eight lawyers from our litigation section.   Eight hard-nosed and fearless litigators who spent their hours chewing up people.   The toughest was a scrappy little torpedo named Rafter, and as he yanked open the   door saying "What the hell?" the barrel swung from me to him, and the man with the   rubber boots had exactly what he wanted.
 "Put that gun down," Rafter ordered from   the doorway, and a split second later another shot rang through the reception area,   a shot that went into the ceiling somewhere well above Rafter's head and reduced   him to a mere mortal. Turning the gun back to me, he nodded, and I complied, entering   the conference room behind Rafter. The last thing I saw on the outside was Madam   Devier shaking at her desk, terror-stricken, headset around her neck, high heels   parked neatly next to her wastebasket.
 The man with the rubber boots slammed the   door behind me, and slowly waved the gun through the air so that all eight litigators   could admire it. It seemed to be working fine; the smell of its discharge was more   noticeable than the odor of its owner.
 The room was dominated by a long table, covered   with documents and papers that only seconds ago seemed terribly important. A row   of windows overlooked a parking lot. Two doors led to the hallway.
 "Up against the   wall," he said, using the gun as a very  effective prop. Then he placed it very near   my head, and said, "Lock the doors."
 Which I did.
 Not a word from the eight litigators   as they scrambled backward. Not a word from me as I quickly locked the doors, then   looked at him for approval.
 For some reason, I kept thinking of the post office   and all those horrible shootings--a disgruntled employee returns after lunch with   an arsenal and wipes out fifteen of his co-workers. I thought of the playground massacres--and   the slaughters at fast-food restaurants.
 And those victims were innocent children   and otherwise decent citizens. We were a bunch of lawyers!
 Using a series of grunts   and gun thrusts, he lined the eight litigators up against the wall, and when their   positions suited him he turned his attention to me. What did he want?  Could he ask   questions?  If so, he could get anything he damned well pleased. I couldn't see his   eyes because of the sunglasses, but he could see mine. The gun was pointed at them.
 He removed his filthy trench coat, folded it as if it were new, and placed it in   the center of the table. The smell that had bothered me in the elevator was back,   but not important now. He stood at the end of the table and slowly removed the next   layer--a bulky gray cardigan.
 Bulky for a reason. Under it, strapped to his waist,   was a row of red sticks, which appeared to my untrained eye to be  dynamite. Wires   ran like colored spaghetti from the tops and bottoms of the sticks, and silver duct   tape kept things attached.
 My first instinct was to bolt, to lunge with arms and   legs flapping and flailing for the door, and hope for luck, hope for a bad shot as   I scrambled for the lock, then another bad shot as I fell through the doorway into   the hallway. But my knees shook and my blood ran cold. There were gasps and slight   moans from the eight against the wall, and this perturbed our captor. "Please be   quiet," he said in the tone of a patient professor. His calmness unnerved me. He   adjusted some of the spaghetti around his waist, then from a pocket in his large   trousers produced a neat bundle of yellow nylon rope and a switchblade.
 For good   measure, he waved the gun at the horrified faces in front of him, and said, "I don't   want to hurt anybody."
 That was nice to hear but hard to take seriously. I counted   twelve red sticks--enough, I was certain, to make it instantaneous and painless.
 Then the gun was back on me. "You," he said, "tie them up."
 Rafter had had enough.   He took one very small step forward and said, "Look, pal, just exactly what do you   want?"
 The third shot sailed over his head into the ceiling, where it lodged harmlessly.   It sounded like a cannon, and Madam Devier or some female shrieked in the foyer.   Rafter ducked, and as he attempted to stand upright the beefy elbow of Umstead caught   him squarely in the chest and returned him to his position against the wall.
 "Shut   up," Umstead said with clenched jaws.
 "Do not call me Pal," the man said, and Pal   was instantly discarded as a reference.
 "What would you like us to call you?" I   asked, sensing that I was about to become the leader of the hostages. I said this   very delicately, with great deference, and he appreciated my respect.
 "Mister,"   he said. Mister was perfectly fine with everyone in the room.
 The phone rang, and   I thought for a split second he was going to shoot it. Instead he waved it over,   and I placed it squarely before him on the table. He lifted the receiver with his   left hand; his right still held the gun, and the gun was still pointed at Rafter.
 If the nine of us had a vote, Rafter would be the first sacrificial lamb. Eight   to one.
 "Hello," Mister said. He listened briefly, then hung up. He carefully backed   himself into the seat at the end of the table and sat down.
 "Take the rope," he   said to me.
 He wanted all eight of them attached at the wrists. I cut rope and tied   knots and tried my best not to look at the faces of my colleagues as I hastened their   deaths. I could feel the gun at my back. He wanted them bound tightly, and I made   a show of practically drawing blood while leaving as much slack as possible.
 Rafter   mumbled something under his breath and I wanted to slap him. Umstead was able to   flex his wrists so that the ropes almost  fell loose when I finished with him. Malamud   was sweating and breathing rapidly. He was the oldest, the only partner, and two   years past his first heart attack.
 I couldn't help but look at Barry Nuzzo, my one   friend in the bunch. We were the same age, thirty-two, and had joined the firm the   same year. He went to Princeton, I went to Yale. Both of our wives were from Providence.   His marriage was working--three kids in four years. Mine was in the final stage of   a long deterioration.
 Our eyes met and we both were thinking about his kids. I felt   lucky to be childless.
 The first of many sirens came into range, and Mister instructed   me to close the blinds over the five large windows. I went about this methodically,   scanning the parking lot below as if being seen might somehow save me. A lone police   car sat empty with its lights on; the cops were already in the building.
 And there   we were, nine white boys and Mister.								
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