“You’re not going to make it to the ventilation system. You have to climb all the way up the shaft. I’ll shoot you before you make it halfway up. A couple of times.”
No answer. Fisher sighed and reached to touch the wall with his left hand, walking gingerly along it. The bottom of a service elevator shaft opened about fifty feet ahead.
“You see me, Faud?”
The terrorist answered by firing a gun.
“Dinky little twenty-two, I bet,” said Fisher.
The gun flashed again, this time giving Fisher an idea of where it was. He fired three of his .44’s six bullets, and all smacked hard against a pipe at the far end.
The terrorist shot again. He, too, missed, though Fisher noted that the ricochet was a bit closer.
“All right, let’s get this part out of the way,” yelled the FBI agent. “You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. You have a right to an attorney—”
A succession of bullets flew through the air. Fisher fired again. When he heard Faud dropping his gear, he realized he’d missed again.
“Hey!” shouted someone from above. Macklin was in the elevator shaft. “Hey!”
More gunfire. More smoke. Fisher tried to remember what the technical people had told him a few weeks earlier about sarin’s ability to spread.
Just as well he couldn’t remember, he thought.
“Stop him!” yelled a voice as the subbasement once more echoed with the roar of gunfire.
Fisher dropped to his knee.
So, where was the terrorist? And did he have friends?
Fisher realized where he was too late to beat him back to the passage. He fired a shot, then yelled to Macklin to grab the canisters.
“Where are they?” shouted Macklin.
“I haven’t a clue,” yelled Fisher. “But they’ll look out of place, even down here, don’t you think?”
Fisher stopped, listening near the opening. Faud was out on the track somewhere.
“Firemen,” said Fisher aloud.
“Firemen?”
“Who would you let into a building in a blackout? A fireman,” said Fisher, answering his own question. “Jeez, what a dummy. I’ve been thinking Con Ed. Look for a fireman’s oxygen tank,” he shouted to Macklin.
“Really?”
“Macklin, if you’re going to ask me questions all day, we’re never going to catch this scumbag,” said Fisher.
He stuck his hand through the opening, then pulled back just as a fusillade of bullets hit the wall. He got down on his stomach and slid beneath the pipes to the entrance Faud had used. But it was still pitch-black and he couldn’t see.
Cursing, Fisher reached back and pulled off his shoe, then slid around so he could throw it in front of the other opening. When Faud started firing, Fisher pulled himself out, fired once, and tumbled down onto the tracks.
Faud stood in the darkness a few feet away. Fisher brought his gun up to fire. As he did, Faud aimed first and pulled the trigger.
Empty.
“Who says today’s not my lucky day?” asked Fisher, rising slowly.
He, too, was out of bullets, though he wasn’t about to share that bit of news.
“You heard your rights, right?” Fisher asked.
The terrorist threw down the gun. Fisher saw him pull something from his pocket — not a weapon, but some sort of canister.
“Let me just guess: sarin gas, right? Going to kill us both?” Fisher took a step. Faud took two backward.
“Except you took the antidote, right? I did,” lied Fisher.
They’d offered him a shot but he hated needles.
“Give it up,” said Fisher. “You’re only going to kill yourself. The antidote might not work.”
“You’ll die too,” growled the man.
“Hey, let’s say you’re right. Where’s the thrill in that?”
Fisher took an awkward step forward with his shoeless foot. The terrorist had taken off or lost his night vision goggles. They were twelve feet apart.
“Better watch where you’re going,” said the agent as Faud edged down the tunnel. “Lights are going to come on and you’re going to fry yourself.”
Faud took a step backward, then another.
“Mrs. DeGarmo says hi,” said Fisher.
Faud didn’t answer.
“I didn’t think that was going to work,” said Fisher. “But seriously, now, you better watch where you’re going. Power comes on, this tunnel’s a death trap. Come out with me and we’ll talk.”
“The power won’t be on for months.”
“I wouldn’t count on it. Con Ed’s not nearly as inefficient as everyone thinks.”
“Go to hell.”
“I appreciate the sentiment. And I’m not kidding about the rail. Really.”
Fisher saw the man move his hands. He dropped down, grabbing for the backup Glock he had in a holster on his calf. Before he could fire, a flash of light blinded him.
Then there was an awful sound, something like a scream that twisted in half. The tunnel filled with acrid smoke, the scent of burnt flesh permeating the dank space.
“Told you the lights were coming back on,” said Fisher. “You didn’t think I could keep them off forever, did you? The paperwork alone is ridiculous.”
He holstered his pistol. Faud lay slumped against the third rail, still frying. The can of gas lay in the middle of the tracks, unopened.
“Andy! Andy Fisher!” yelled Macklin.
“Where the hell have you been, Macklin?” asked Fisher, turning back.
“He hit the third rail?”
“Guess he didn’t believe me about the power.” Fisher pulled out his cigarette pack. “You stopped the trains, right?”
“Like you said.”
Fisher lit up. “Good. Only damn place in New York City you can smoke in peace anymore.”
They left it up to the President.
The terrorist was dead, his canisters of sarin gas secured. A thorough search had turned up nothing, there were guards all over the place, and the crowd outside was as patient as New Yorkers could be.
Which wasn’t very.
“I say let’s move on with it,” said the President. “The hell with these terrorist scumbags.”
“You shouldn’t say scumbags,” said one of his advisors.
“You want me to say what I really think of them?”
The man shut his mouth.
The tip-off started at ten P.M., a delay of only an hour and a half. As an added bonus, the network agreed to cut the number of commercials and show the game as it was meant to be played, without interference.
Dr. Blitz left the President just before the end of first half of the game, walking outside with the Secret Service bodyguard to the task force trailer. There he was briefed personally by the Homeland Security agent who had coordinated the operation, Michael Macklin. Macklin, his clothes soiled with dirt and sweat, looked as if had crawled through the sewer to get there.
“We don’t know yet if the man who died down there worked alone or not,” Macklin told him. “He didn’t have an accomplice on the scene that we’ve found, which was one reason we were able to fool him with the temporary blackout. That was supposed to be his signal to begin.”
“Who figured that out?” asked Blitz.
“Andy Fisher,” said DIA agent Kowalski, standing nearby. He had a pained expression on his face. “The Andy Fisher.”
“So Fisher and Colonel Howe were right: It was connected to the UAV and the E-bomb,” said Blitz. “Which means the Korean is still at large somewhere.”
“Or he sold the thing to them before he escaped.”
Blitz turned around. A tall, bedraggled man in a rumbled brown suit stood before him. He was missing a shoe.
“Agent Fisher, how are you?”
“Actually, that’s Special Agent Fisher.” Fisher took a puff on his cigarette. “They screwed up the paperwork somewhere a few years ago and promoted me by mistake.”
Blitz shook his head. As the President said, a real pistol.
“So, where is this Korean?” Blitz asked.
Fisher shrugged. “Not my case.”
“Maybe it ought to be,” said Howe.
“Take it up with the boss,” said Fisher, drawing on his cigarette. “Meantime, I thought I’d go watch the end of this basketball game.”
When dawn broke, Kuong’s ship was several hundred miles from the American coast, well on its way to Africa. Once there, Kuong would make his way to Nigeria, where he would board the first of several airplanes for the flight to Peru. How long it would take to accomplish that journey, he did not know; it would be many days if not weeks, considerably longer than the trip he had taken to board the Beneficent Goddess. But this was necessary, and because it was necessary, he did not mind it.
He had watched CNN via the satellite dish during the night. By the time the clock passed ten and there was no announcement, Kuong knew there would be none. His plan had failed.
He had been reluctant to turn the set off, hoping still that the stories would come. He longed to watch the casualty lists and footage of looters rampaging the city. He wanted to see the parade of ambulances and the somber faces. He would have laughed at their tears.
It was not to be — not now. Revenge would have to be sought far in the future.
Some men would conclude optimistically that failure would make his future success that much more delicious. But Kuong did not believe such lies. Bitterness could never really be washed away. He stood at the bow of the ship, staring at the pink light pushing back the gray of the ocean.