was no way out for Thomas Byrnes. No escape.
He was closing in on the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, where he knew the President and his wife would be staying. It was typical for this president to go against the advice of his security advisors.
It fit his profile perfectly.
Don't listen to the experts. Fix what isn't broken. Arrogant fool, useless bastard. Traitor to the American people.
The night was cool and fine, the light rain having finally stopped. The air felt good against his skin. He was certain that he wasn't going to be spotted as Kevin Hawkins. He'd taken care of that. There were easily a couple of hundred NYPD uniforms around the hotel. It didn't matter. No one would recognize him now. Not even his own mother and father.
The picturesque divided avenue outside the hotel was relatively crowded at this time of night. Some spectators had come in hopes of seeing the President shot. They didn't know when the President would be arriving, but they knew the likely hotels in midtown. The Waldorf was a good guess.
The local tabloids, and even the New York Times, had run huge headlines about Jack and Jill and the ongoing drama. In typical fashion, the press had gotten it mostly wrong -- but that would be helpful to him soon.
Kevin Hawkins joined in with the strangely noisy and almost festive crowd, several of whom had wandered over from holiday visits to the Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center. The unruly ambulance-chasers gathered outside the hotel told smugly ironic jokes, and he despised them for their big-city cynicism, their attitude.
He despised them even more than the useless president he had come to this city to kill.
He stayed at the outer edge of the crowd, just in case he suddenly had to move fast. He didn't want to be around there too late, but the presidential motorcade was running behind the schedule he had, the schedule he had been given.
Finally, he saw heads and necks in the crowd craning to the far left. He could hear the roar of cars coming up Park Avenue. The motorcade was approaching the hotel. It had to be the motorcade coming.
The dozen or so cars stopped at the canopied entrance on Park Avenue. Then Kevin Hawkins almost couldn't believe what he was seeing.
The arrogant bastard had chosen to walk inside from the street rather than use the underground garage. He wanted to be seen -to be photographed. He wanted to show his courage to all the world... to show that Thomas Byrnes wasn't afraid of Jack and Jill.
The photojournalist watched the cocksure and vainglorious chief executive as he was ushered from his limousine. He could have taken out Thomas Byrnes right there! Once the hotshot, former automobile executive had made the decision to return the presidency to “business as usual,” the assassination was virtually guaranteed.
Amateurs made such amateurish decisions, Hawkins knew. Always.
It was a fact that he counted on in his work.
I could do him right now. I could take out the President right here on Park Avenue.
How does that make me feel? Excited--pumped. No guilt.
What a strange man I have become, Kevin Hawkins thought.
That was really why he was there that night- to test his emotional responses.
This was his dress rehearsal for the big event. The only rehearsal he would need, or get.
The Secret Service team smoothly and expertly got the President safely inside the hotel. Their coverage was excellent. Three tight rings around the PP, the protected person.
The presidential detail was very good, but not good enough.
No one could be. Not for what Kevin Hawkins had in mind.
A kamikaze attack! A suicide attack. The President would not be able to escape from it. No one could. It was a done deal.
He watched the rest of the shiny blue and black sedans unload, and he recognized nearly every face. He took his usual mind photos. Dozens of shots to remember -- all inside his head.
Finally, he saw Jill. She looked so cool and utterly unconcerned.
She was such a great psycho in her own right, wasn't she?
Jill stood there in the middle of all the fuss and bustle. Then she disappeared inside the Waldorf with the rest of them.
The photojournalist finally sauntered away, down Park toward what had once been the Pan Am Building and now belonged to MetLife. A float with Snoopy driving Santa's sleigh stood out on the building's rooftop.
The President ought to buy some term life insurance tonight, he thought, whatever the price. The assassination is as good as done.
It was guaranteed.
But what Kevin Hawkins didn't even suspect, didn't realize, was that he too was being watched. He was under close observation, at that very moment, in New York City.
Jack was watching Kevin Hawkins stroll down Park Avenue.
JACK BE NIMBLEST.
Jack be quickest.
After he had watched Kevin Hawkins disappear on Park Avenue, Sam Harrison left the crowded area near the