A terrorist stranglehold tightens on New York...and only one cop can break its grip.
Born in the mountainous jungles of Peru. Smuggled to the concrete jungles of NYC. It's the most ingenious terrorist setup ever conceived, and it could bring the city-- and the nation-- to its knees.
Former NYPD detective Brian McKenna has tangled with the Shining Path before. His new identity and early retirement in Florida were supposed to put him beyond the terrorist army's retribution. But when the guerrillas cut down the son of his closest friend, New York's police commissioner Ray Brunette, McKenna's lured back into the center of the action, and into a deadly battle of wits with a brilliant man and a cunning and dangerous woman.
Former NYPD Captain Dan Mahoney spins a chillingly authentic tale of a city held hostage, a city at the edge of disaster.
Release date:
July 1, 1995
Publisher:
St. Martin's Publishing Group
Print pages:
514
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Chapter 1
JULY 20, NEW YORK CITY—It started to drizzle just before three on Sunday morning, breaking the heat and producing a sparse vapor cloud that hung close to the ground as the raindrops hit the sidewalk. The city that never sleeps was at least taking a break. The streets outside the United Nations at East 45th Street and First Avenue were deserted, with no signs of life except for the uniformed cop assigned to the lighted police booth on the cornertside the United States Mission to the UN. The post is covered twenty-four hours a day by a cop from the 17th Precinct, and his job is to protect the outside perimeter of the mission. The inside of the mission is guarded by a uniformed Federal Protective Service agent, who was visible from the street as he sat behind a desk in the lobby, reading.
A marked blue-and-white radio car turned onto First Avenue from East 44th Street and stopped next to the police booth. The uniformed cop left the booth, went to the driver's side of the car, and received the package of two coffees and two copies of the Sunday Daily News. After the radio car pulled off and made a left on East 47th Street, the cop went back to his booth and put one coffee and one newspaper on the counter. He brought the other coffee and newspaper to the federal agent inside the mission, who was waiting for him at the door. They chatted for a moment, then the cop went back to his booth and the agent returned to his desk after locking the front door.
Once inside his booth, the cop put the newspaper under the counter, stirred his coffee, and resumed studying his Patrol Guide, the New York City Police Department manual, which proscribed a procedure to be followed for each and every conceivable event. He would read a paragraph of a procedure, close his eyes and try to repeat what he had just read, then take a look around the street.
Tall and thin in an athletic way, he had a baby face accentuated by dimples that appeared at the corners of his mouth as he mumbled to himself the procedural banalities. He was handsome, with straight black hair and finely chiseled features, but looked too young to be a cop.
He was halfway into the manual and memorizing the nonsense contained in the three-page procedure titled "Processing Non-evidence Currency with or without Numismatic/Sentimental Value." It was an easy one for him because he had been studying that particular procedure for four years, which meant that three years before he even joined the police department he had been filling his young mind with police procedural trivia.
The young cop finished reading Steps 31 and 32 of the procedure, then looked up and was surprised to see a short, well-dressed man in his twenties coming toward him, slowly walking south on First Avenue under his open umbrella. He smiled as he approached the police booth, then stopped at the door. "Excuse me, Officer," he said politely in a soft, Spanish-accented voice, "but can you tell me what time the United Nations opens?"
The young cop did not like it. The man was looking at his name tag as he talked, not his face, but it was one of the usual questions.
"Yes, sir. The tours start at ten o'clock and cost seven dollars."
"Seven dollars? Is it worth it?" he asked, still smiling and talking to the cop's chest.
"I guess everyone should do it once."
"Thank you, Officer Brunette. I will." The man turned and continued his slow saunter down First Avenue. Brunette watched him until he turned at East 44th Street and disappeared from view, then returned to his coffee and Patrol Guide.