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Final Seconds
Final Seconds
Final Seconds
Ebook429 pages6 hours

Final Seconds

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JOHN LUTZ IS. . .

"A MAJOR TALENT." –John Lescroart

"ONE OF THE MASTERS." –Ridley Pearson

"IN RARE FORM." –The New York Times Book Review

"AMONG THE BEST." –San Diego Union

THE HUNT BEGINS. . .AGAIN

Will Harper was an NYPD hero. Then fate, a fiery blast, and departmental politics burned down his career. Now Will is again in the line of fire as a disgraced FBI profiler pulls him back into the action—on a hunt for a serial killer authorities don't even know about yet.

"Fast-paced. . .Edge-of-your-seat suspense mixes well with a hefty dose of reality."


—Publishers Weekly

"Lutz always delivers the goods, and this is no exception."—Booklist
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 11, 2012
ISBN9780786032792
Final Seconds
Author

John Lutz

For over forty years, John Lutz (b. 1939) has been one of the premier voices in contemporary hard-boiled fiction, producing dozens of novels and over 250 short stories. His earliest success came with the Alo Nudger series, set in his hometown of St. Louis. Tropical Heat introduced Fred Carver, a Florida detective whom Lutz followed in ten novels. More recently, he has produced five books in the Frank Quinn serial killer series. Lutz is a former president of the Mystery Writers of America, and his many honors include lifetime achievement awards from the Short Mystery Fiction Society and the Private Eye Writers of America. He lives in St. Louis.

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Rating: 3.5625 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I liked this book alot, but I was listening to the Audio version...It was fabulous! The only thing that was bad was every now and again you would hear all sound stop and then it would start again and the vioce would change...same guy, just louder, or more garbled...that type of thing. It really took away from the experience. The book itself was awesome!

Book preview

Final Seconds - John Lutz

Page

Prologue

For the kids at a New York City high school, a bomb scare is like an extra recess.

As the student body of H.S. 146 in Queens poured down the back steps and out into the schoolyard, there were a few hushed and frightened kids among them, but only a few. The small number of gangbangers, who probably knew something about the bomb, were keeping silent and watching the police warily. But the rest of the kids were glad to be out in the crisp autumn air. Mock brawls broke out. Skateboards clattered to the pavement. Caps were snatched from heads and games of keep-away began. Red-faced, shouting cops and security guards struggled to get the kids back in line and keep them moving to the far end of the schoolyard. Back toward the fence, away from the patrolling teachers, two boys were mooning the camera crew on the sidewalk. The crew had been sent by one of the local television stations, just in case the school blew up.

In addition to the blue-uniformed cops who were trying to keep order in the schoolyard, there were brown uniforms from the Traffic Division, who were closing the street with sawhorses and yellow tape, and suits from the Detective Division, who were questioning a suspect near the steps of the building. So there were a lot of cops on the scene, and they were busy, but when the gray van inched between the sawhorses and rolled slowly up to the gates, all of them paused to take a look. It was a moment to be grateful you had the job you did—and not the job the cops in the van had come to do.

The gray van was an old and battered Ford Aerostar. It had the shield of the NYPD on the side, and above that the words

BOMB SQUAD.

It came to a stop and both doors opened.

Out of the driver’s side jumped a wiry young man in his mid twenties. He had curly black hair, fair Irish skin, and handsome features. He was aware that people were staring at him. It showed in the studied nonchalance of his movements as he walked around the van and lifted the back door.

The man who’d gotten out of the passenger’s side seemed oblivious to the attention. His hair was going gray at the temples and he had a sergeant’s stripes on the sleeves of his uniform shirt. He stood well over six feet, with wide, sloping shoulders and a linebacker’s neck. He had a broad face, with a lined brow and wide-set hazel eyes. It was the face of a craftsman or a musician—of someone who had learned the habits of deep concentration.

By the time he got around to the back of the van, the young man had his arms full of equipment. The sergeant picked up several cases and shut the door.

The young man went up to the Scene Control Officer, who was standing at the gate of the schoolyard. EOD Team 6, he said, Officer Fahey and Sergeant Harper. Want badge numbers?

The cop shook his head and wrote down the names. He looked up from his clipboard as the sergeant walked by. No kidding, he said to Fahey, that’s Harper?

Fahey grinned. That’s him.

He hurried to catch up with Harper. They walked past a skinny Latino teenager with his hands cuffed behind him who was being questioned by detectives. This would be the kid in whose locker the suspicious parcel—as it was officially termed—had been found. Fahey and Harper didn’t look at him. How the parcel had gotten in the kid’s locker was the detectives’ problem. Getting it out was theirs.

A school security guard was waiting for them at the door to the building. The last of the students were just coming out. As he led them upstairs to the second floor, Fahey questioned the guard. The parcel had been found during a routine search of the lockers for drugs. It had an unpleasant chemical smell. No one had touched it.

Harper listened to Fahey’s easy banter with the guard, all the time eliciting information. Fahey liked to joke around and stay loose. Most bomb scares turned out to be false alarms. No need to get tense until you were sure you were up against the real thing, that was how Fahey saw it.

Harper liked Jimmy Fahey. He’d had him in training classes, and they’d been partners for six months. When you were partners in the Bomb Squad, you spent hours together in the ready room at the Sixth Precinct, waiting for the call to come in. You got to know each other very well. Jimmy Fahey was a good man. But Harper disagreed with him about this bantering stuff. Harper preferred to keep quiet in the last moments before facing a suspicious parcel, emptying his mind of extraneous thoughts, sharpening his focus. It was better to assume the worst. Then you’d be ready for it.

Fahey was saying, Or one time—this really drove us nuts—it was a fake bomb. Some kid’s chemistry project. No explosives in it, but even under the fluoroscope we couldn’t tell it was fake.

This one’s real, said the guard grimly. You work in a high school these days, you learn a lot about ordnance.

Fahey got quiet after that. They were walking down a second-floor corridor. They reached a turning in the hallway and stopped. Harper and Fahey dropped their heavy equipment. The guard pointed down the line of lockers and said, It’s in 176. Then he turned to go.

Hold it, Harper said.

Ignoring him, the guard started to walk away. He figured he’d done his job and he didn’t want to linger around locker 176.

Stop, Harper said, quietly but with emphasis.

The guard halted and turned. His expression was receptive. Harper pointed. Across from the lockers was a row of windows. Through them, he could see a brick office building on the other side of the street. People were moving around inside it. Traffic noise was drifting up from the street.

Go to the Traffic Division guys. Tell whoever’s in charge he better close that street and evacuate the building opposite. Right away. If the bomb blows, those windows’ll turn into shrapnel.

I’ll tell him, said the guard, and went on his way.

Fahey was grinning. Harper said, What?

So when do I learn that voice?

What voice?

The one that makes people do what you say.

Harper shrugged and bent down to open one of the cases.

C’mon, Sarge, Fahey went on. "When you were down under Astor Place Station with a bomb and they handed you the phone and Mayor Giuliani was on the line, and you said he better shut down the goddamn Lexington Avenue line now—was that the voice you used?"

Not for the first time, Harper wondered who made up these stories about him. I didn’t say anything like that.

Okay, but you used the voice—and he shut down the Lexington Avenue line.

Harper shrugged again. He was already struggling into his blast protection suit. Fahey grabbed the nylon pants from his own bag and started to climb into them. It was a special kind of nylon, heavy and stiff as chain mail, and intended to serve the same purpose.

Putting on the protective suit ought to have been reassuring. But it never had that effect on Harper. This was the last step. Once you fastened the final strap, you went to face the bomb. His heartbeat was growing more rapid and his insides were tightening up. With a conscious effort, he began breathing more deeply, slowing his movements.

Fahey, straightened up with his helmet in his hands. His fair-skinned, Irish face was very pale now. He said, Say, Sarge? Does this part ever get any easier?

Harper shook his head.

But after you’ve done it hundreds of times and come through, you must start to think—

You start to think the law of averages is going to catch up with you.

He’d blurted it out without considering, and it brought him up short. Now he tried to dismiss the thought from his mind.

Fahey was blinking at him in surprise. But you could’ve stopped going out on calls years ago, couldn’t you?

I did, said Harper. Then came the budget cuts and personnel shortages. So I came back.

They’ll kick you upstairs for good pretty soon, Fahey said. And you know what? I bet you’ll mind plenty.

No, I won’t, said Harper, as he attached a Velcro strap on his wrist. I like investigative work and training. I’ll be happy when that’s all I do.

That right?

Harper nodded. It’s every teacher’s dream, teaching bomb disposal. Your class tends to pay attention.

Fahey grinned. Well, if you really don’t mind leaving the field, that’s fine with me.

Harper looked at him, puzzled. Why?

’Cause I want to be the next you. The handsome youthful face wasn’t smiling now. He meant it.

Embarrassed, Harper looked away. He bent down to pick up his helmet. If that’s what you want, I expect you’ll get your chance. There are plenty of terrorists around. He lowered his helmet, a steel box with a glass faceplate, over his head. Let’s go, Jimmy.

They walked slowly, two moon-men in an empty corridor. Noises filtered up from the street, but the building itself was quiet. The door of locker 176 was standing ajar. Fahey carefully opened it all the way.

A big cardboard box rested on the bottom of the locker. The guard had been right about the chemical smell: gasoline, Harper thought, and something else, a smell he couldn’t identify. But it was a bomb, all right. All his senses told him it was a bomb.

Mind if I handle this one, Sarge?

Behind the glass plate, Fahey’s face was calm and alert. There was no trace of the nervousness of a few minutes ago.

Go ahead, Jimmy.

Fahey went down on his haunches. The flaps at the top of the box weren’t sealed, but he didn’t take a chance on lifting them. You never went in the way a bomber would expect you to. He took the glass knife out of his tool kit. If the bomb had a magnetic detonator, a metal knife could set it off. Fahey made a slit in the side of the box.

He glanced at Harper, who nodded for him to go on. Using a cold light, he peered through the slit.

After a moment, he gave a breathy chuckle. "Well, Sarge, the first thing I see is the timer. It’s a cheap alarm clock, and the hands are not moving. Repeat, not moving. He sat back on his heels and grinned up at Harper through his faceplate. This baby hasn’t been armed."

Harper blew out his breath in relief. His faceplate clouded over. He started to take off his helmet, then thought better of it. What else can you see?

Fahey went down on his knees and used the knife to lengthen and widen the slit. He probed with the light. The timer’s wired to a fifty-volt dry cell battery, which is wired to a stick of—it looks like gelignite. There’s also a can of gas, straight from the service station. Strictly a high school kid’s job.

Okay. Now Harper took off his helmet. That first breath you drew after taking off the helmet always felt so deep and fresh. Go down and tell the detectives. The fact that the timer hadn’t been set indicated that the boy they had in custody was the bomber. It would be good news for the detectives, a chance for Fahey to rack up some points.

Right, Sarge. Fahey rose to his feet and started to unbuckle his helmet.

The bomb wagon should be there by now, Harper said, referring to the armored vehicle that would transport the bomb to the range for disassembly. Bring up a containment chamber and we’ll move the package right into it.

Harper glanced out the window and frowned. There were still people in the opposite building. And it sounded as if they hadn’t closed the street yet. It didn’t matter now, but still—he made a mental note to have a word with the Traffic Division guy when he got outside.

Jimmy! he called after Fahey, who was walking down the corridor. Make sure they understand, they can’t let anyone back in till we have the bomb out of the building, okay?

Okay, Fahey called without turning.

Harper tried to think if there was anything else, but nothing came to him. He was alone with the bomb. He squatted down and lifted the flaps. It was a crude, amateur job, as Fahey had said. The smells were stronger—the gasoline, and the other one he hadn’t placed yet. When Harper saw the grease stains on the cardboard around the stick of gelignite, he realized what the smell was.

Oh no! he thought. Oh Jesus!

Turning his head he yelled, Fahey!

Fahey had reached the turn in the corridor where they had left their gear. He spun around.

It’s unstable. The gelignite.

Fahey took a step back toward him. Hesitated.

He didn’t need an explanation. The explosive had been stored far too long in whatever warehouse the kid had stolen it from. It was chemically unstable. The kid was lucky it hadn’t blown up on him.

Harper might not be so lucky.

He leaned closer. Now the sticky-sweet smell was even stronger, and he could see the beads of moisture on the tacky gray surface of the stick of gelignite.

Will! Fahey called out to him. Get your helmet on!

Christ—how could he forget that? Harper sat back and reached for the helmet.

Get away from it, Fahey said. They can bring up a robot to transfer it to the containment box.

Harper hesitated with the helmet in his hands. It would take hours to move the robot into position. Jimmy, we have to get the stick away from the gasoline.

Fahey stood stock-still, fifty feet away. Slowly he began to shake his head. Will, don’t.

But there was no other way. To reach the gasoline can, he would have to move the stick. It was better just to pick up the stick. Harper secured the helmet and bent forward. He reached into the box. His hands were bare; he didn’t have any gloves. His fingers closed on the stick. It felt clammy. He cut the wire that connected it to the battery and gently lifted it out. Then, very slowly, he rose to a standing position. Will, throw it! Fahey yelled. Just throw the goddamn thing as far as you can.

But it would go off for sure then. And the windows would blow out. And glass fragments would fly into the building opposite and down to the street below.

Harper stood there motionless, holding the stick of gelignite in the palm of his band. He called, Bring me the blanket.

Fahey looked down. The bulky blast suppression blanket lay folded at his feet. It would effectively smother the explosion of a single stick of gelignite. All they had to do was put the stick down on the floor and cover it with the blanket.

Come on, Jimmy, Harper said.

But Fahey didn’t move. He was still looking down. Harper held his breath. After a long moment, Fahey looked up—but not at Harper’s face. He looked at the stick of gelignite in his outstretched hand.

He was paralyzed with fear. Five minutes ago Fahey had been able to go to work on the bomb, knowing that a mistake could mean his death. He’d been willing to bet his life on his skill. But this was different. The situation was out of his control now. Out of anyone’s control. It was sheer chance whether he and Harper would survive the next few minutes.

Harper spoke just loudly enough to make himself heard. Jimmy, I need you to bring me the blanket. Now.

Fahey wrested his gaze away from the gelignite. Stooping, he gathered the blanket in his arms. Then, with halting steps, he began to move down the corridor toward Harper.

For Christ’s sake, run! Harper wanted to scream at him. But the kid was doing his best. The closer he got, the more clearly Harper could see the terror clenching his features. With his white face and unsteady steps, he was like an invalid who might collapse at any moment. But he kept coming.

The only sound in the corridor was the scrape of his shoes on the linoleum.

Harper stood absolutely still with the stick of gelignite in his hand. He tried not to look at it. If the stick went off, the helmet and armor plates should protect his head and torso, but what about his limbs? His right arm would be blown off, that was certain. Would the paramedics get to him before he bled to death?

He stopped himself from thinking. Fahey was getting close now. His eyes were locked on to Harper’s. It was as if only the older man’s steady gaze could pull him over the last few paces.

When he was close enough, Harper said, That’s good, Jimmy. Now just drop the blanket.

He allowed himself to think they were going to get out of this. He’d be seeing his wife Laura at home in a few hours. He’d feel like shouting for joy and throwing his arms around her, but he mustn’t do that. He wouldn’t want to have to explain to her how much danger he’d been in. All he’d say was that it had been a hairy job, but Jimmy had done fine.

Fahey stiffly opened his arms and the blanket fell. It lay at Harper’s feet. Harper slowly sank down on one knee. With his free hand he lifted a fold of the blanket. He began to lower his right hand, taking care to keep it perfectly level. He was going to tuck the stick of gelignite in as gently as if it were his baby.

Harper almost made it.

That was the thought that was to haunt him in the months and years to come. He would never know what went wrong. Maybe he got overeager, moved his hand too quickly at the last second. Or maybe he hadn’t made a mistake and the gelignite was simply ready to blow.

There was a roar in his ears and Harper went tumbling and spinning to the floor.

Stunned, he stared at a splash of red on the wall. It was his blood. He felt no pain in his hand, only in his ears. He looked down at his arm, at the shredded nylon, the burned and blackened skin.

Fahey was kneeling beside him. Oh God! he said. Hang on, Will! Just hang on!

Slowly, disbelievingly, Harper raised his arm and stared at what had been his hand.

1

This was all too new to him.

Will Harper exited the highway and coasted down the ramp to the stop sign. There was no one behind him, so he paused to look around. He’d never been in this part of the country before.

He was in northwest Florida, just outside Pensacola. The landscape was different from what he’d seen in other parts of Florida. He liked it. The road in front of him had curves and hills and was lined with tall pine trees. The occasional palm tree still surprised him. He switched off the air conditioner and rolled down the window. Then he grasped the gear stick and shifted into first.

To be exact, he didn’t grasp it. He pinched it. Harper’s grasping days were over, at least with his right hand. The little finger and ring finger were gone, along with the top joint of the middle finger. The surgeons had done their best with that hand: It worked, it didn’t hurt anymore, and apart from the missing fingers it looked normal. Harper complained sometimes that because of the extensive skin grafts, the hair on the back of his hand and forearm had grown back in a strange pattern, but Laura said not to worry, no one would notice. This was true, Harper thought, because most people never got over staring at the fingers that weren’t there. But he kept this thought to himself.

As he accelerated down the road, he took a quick look at his map. It was only a couple more miles. Harper shifted his weight, a little nervously. He wasn’t looking forward to the end of this trip. He didn’t know what kind of reception he’d receive from Jimmy Fahey.

He and Fahey hadn’t seen each other in the two and a half years since the explosion in the high school corridor. Harper was still in the hospital when he heard that Fahey had quit the NYPD and left the city. No one knew where he’d gone.

For the next few weeks, the operations and therapy were all Harper could cope with. After he got out of the hospital, though, he started to think about Fahey again. He wrote to him, explaining that he’d retired from the Department with full disability and pension and was recovering quickly. He wanted to know how Fahey was.

It was a short letter, but hard to write. There were so many things he wanted to say but couldn’t put into words. And the physical act of writing was difficult for him. His right hand could still hold a pen, but the weak, wavering writing no longer looked like his own. Looking at the finished letter, he wondered about the effect his handwriting would have on Fahey. He copied the letter on a computer, laboriously hunting and pecking. Then he sent it in care of Fahey’s parents. Almost a year passed, and he had supposed Fahey had never gotten the letter, or decided not to reply.

Then a postcard arrived from Pensacola. The hurried scrawl said that Fahey had a cushy job running security on a millionaire’s estate. He was living in paradise and had plenty of leisure time. Harper ought to drop by if he was ever in the Panhandle. That was all it said.

Harper told his wife Laura that maybe he’d better leave well enough alone. She replied that this didn’t look like well enough to her.

So when they came on vacation to visit her parents, who lived a few hours’ drive north of Pensacola, he called the number on the postcard.

After Harper identified himself, Fahey said nothing for a long moment. Then he turned on the easy good humor that had always been his specialty. It would be great to see Will. The estate was fabulous and there were all sorts of fun things to do. Harper had put down the phone thinking the initial moment of shocked silence after he’d identified himself had been the only honest part of the conversation.

The pine trees gave way to a high wall overgrown with vines. This was the estate. Harper drove along it for several minutes before the gatehouse came into view. It was a low building in faded yellow stucco, with a sloping tile roof that projected over the drive. There was a permanent-looking painted sign at the mouth of the drive, red letters on a white background:

SOME THINGS HISS BEFORE THEY KILL

SOME THINGS RATTLE

SOME THINGS TICK

SOME THINGS ARE SILENT

WELCOME

The gates were open, so Harper, feeling less welcome than he had a minute ago, turned in. A guard in a khaki uniform was standing in the middle of the drive. He motioned for Harper to stop.

As the guard approached, Harper noticed the machine pistol strapped to his belt. It was an Ingram with a phenomenally rapid rate of fire, suitable for perforating brick walls or chopping down trees. The gun and the guard’s expression both meant business. Harper wondered who this millionaire client of Fahey’s was.

Help you?

Yeah, I’m looking for Jimmy Fahey. My name’s Harper.

The guard checked his clipboard. Evidently Harper’s name was there, because he said, Please park your vehicle on the apron over there. I’ll take you up to the house in the golf cart.

Harper parked and walked back. The guard was already sitting behind the wheel of a yellow golf cart with a canvas sunshade. A second guard had taken over his post in the driveway. Through a window in the gatehouse, Harper could see other uniformed men. This was quite a setup Fahey was running, and Harper couldn’t contain his curiosity any longer. As he got into the cart, he asked, Who lives here, anyway?

The guard blinked at the question, as if surprised that anyone could fail to know. This is the estate of Mr. Rod Buckner.

Oh, said Harper, suitably impressed, understanding the sign by the driveway now. Rod Buckner was a bestselling author of macho technothrillers. It seemed that every time Harper got on the subway, he saw somebody reading one of Buckner’s thick paperbacks. There had been hit movie adaptations, too. Harper had seen one. It was about a gung-ho CIA agent named Buck Reilly who was battling Iranian terrorists. Harper had liked it. He’d even bought Buckner’s latest. But the first chapter took place on a submarine and had so much technical detail that Harper bogged down. He hoped he wouldn’t be meeting Buckner today. He’d never met a novelist, but he figured the first question they’d ask you was whether you’d read their books. Harper wondered where Buckner got his ideas.

The driveway wound through beautifully landscaped grounds. They passed bank upon bank of azaleas, all blooming in brilliant and varied colors. Back home in New York, Harper reflected, the azaleas wouldn’t bloom for another three months. Back home, in fact, it was probably sleeting right now. On that postcard Fahey had said he was living in paradise. Maybe he’d meant it. Maybe he’d put the past behind him. Maybe this mission of Harper’s wasn’t necessary.

Harper put the questions out of his mind. He’d have the answers soon enough.

There was a distant, muffled boom. It sounded like thunder. Harper looked at the sky. It was overcast, but he saw no sign of a storm.

Sonic boom, the guard said, noticing his confusion. We get a lot of ’em. There’s a naval air station just down the road.

Oh. Too bad. Must be a nuisance.

No, said the guard. Mr. Buckner likes sonic booms.

Harper looked over at him, to see if this was a joke, but the guard kept a stony face.

The house gradually came into view through the trees. It was a sprawling villa in a vaguely Mediterranean style. Like the gatehouse, it had buff stucco walls and a tile roof. On a circle of grass before the front door stood a flagpole flying the American flag. At its base, where another proud owner might have placed an ornamental bench or a lawn jockey, Rod Buckner had set up a slim white missile—a SAM of some sort, Harper guessed.

As they came around the bend in the drive, a figure emerged from an archway at the side of the house. It was Jimmy Fahey. His uniform of short-sleeved bush jacket, Sam Browne belt, and khaki shorts struck Harper as something you’d expect to see on a doorman at a resort hotel, but it was just as immaculate and crisply pressed as Fahey’s NYPD blues used to be. He still liked to wear aviator shades, too. His mouth was smiling, but Harper wished he could see his eyes. He saw only his own reflection as he approached.

Will, how you doing?

Just fine, Jimmy. You?

Fine.

Harper was only a few strides away. In a second they would shake hands. But Fahey hadn’t even looked down at his hand yet, and at the last moment he turned away.

Come meet my boss.

Harper had to walk quickly to catch up with him. You mean Rod Buckner?

The fixed smile faltered. Fahey looked crestfallen. Oh, somebody told you. I wanted it to be a surprise. So how about that? Me working for Rod Buckner.

Congratulations, Harper said, since Fahey seemed to want him to.

Thanks. He’s a great guy. Says he’ll put me in a book sometime. Fahey was smiling again. Of course, he’ll probably bump me off.

The archway led to a patio shaded by mimosas. In the turquoise waters of a swimming pool, a couple of little girls were splashing and shouting. The novelist himself was sitting at a table under an umbrella. He had a laptop computer in front of him and was talking on a cell phone. As they approached, Harper was trying to remember the title of the novel whose first chapter he’d read.

Buckner put down the phone, which for some reason had two stubby, flexible antennae, and lit a cigarette.

Rod, said Fahey, like you to meet my old partner at the NYPD, Will Harper.

Harper didn’t say anything. It always threw him a little, meeting in the flesh somebody he’d seen on television. Their very familiarity was jarring, somehow.

Buckner didn’t speak either. He took a drag on his cigarette and studied Harper, who studied him back. The novelist was fiftyish and stocky, with a lined, jowly face. His eyes slitted as he exhaled, the way Duke Wayne’s used to do. He too was wearing a safari jacket with cutoff sleeves, and a blue baseball cap with

U.S.S. NIMITZ

stenciled across it in gold. He put the cigarette in an ashtray and stood.

It’s Sergeant Harper, isn’t it? he said, in the gravelly voice that was as familiar as his face.

Harper nodded.

It was you who disarmed that bomb under Madison Square Garden—what was it, six, seven years ago?

That was me. It had been seven years before, to be exact, and Harper had discovered just how exhilarating and fleeting fame could be. He was surprised that Buckner would remember.

It was Egyptian fundamentalists, wasn’t it, and they got ’em?

They got ’em.

Buckner hitched up his Bermuda shorts and put his hands on his hips. I always wondered how come you didn’t use a remote control vehicle?

The question threw Harper for a moment.

I mean, NYPD was deploying the Dollman EOD vehicle at the time, wasn’t it? Or did you use the Morfax Marauder Mk XII?

We had a robot, Harper said, but it wasn’t working.

Buckner’s brow furrowed. Sabotage?

No. It just wasn’t working.

So you went in there yourself. How’d you disarm the bomb?

Cut the wires, pulled out the detonator.

Buckner’s frown grew some more wrinkles. How come you didn’t use the BAS Developments BA93 Disruptor? It had just become available at the time. Used ultrasonic waves to neutralize a wide range of detonators. British Army had an eighty-seven percent success rate with it.

Well, said Harper, I had the wire cutters right there.

Fahey stepped forward. Excuse me, Rod, you mind if I take a little break now and show Will around?

Sure, Jim. Show him around. And while you’re at it, talk him into staying the night. Buckner’s eyes shifted back to Harper. See you at breakfast, Sergeant. We’ll talk more.

He sat down and picked up his cigarette. But as Fahey and Harper started to turn away he said, Jim? What are you carrying today?

Fahey glanced down at the covered holster on his hip. Sig Sauer nine-millimeter.

Buckner nodded, like a wine waiter approving a customer’s choice of vintage. What load?

Standard full-jacketed rounds.

We’ll be going down to the beach club for drinks this evening. Buckner was looking at him, expecting something from him.

Fahey thought fast, just the way he used to in class at the NYPD, when Harper asked him a tough one. I’ll reload before we go, Rod. Soft Points.

Again Buckner nodded his approval. That’d be good, Jim. If you have to open up, you don’t want the bullets penetrating, hitting innocent bystanders.

No, sir.

What about Homeland Security? Harper asked Buckner. Have you talked to them about your concerns?

I’ve contacted them, of course, Buckner said.

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