“I… I didn’t!” she screamed, the words torn from her raw throat. She was probably in her early fifties, but with work done around her eyes and neck, a well-kept woman who was going to pieces. “The wheel jumped right out of my fucking hands; I didn’t even touch the accelerator….” She looked wildly from one man to the other, then at the SUV, slowly backing away.

A thud came from the hole on East 78th, and more smoke rushed skyward. Three people coming up Second Avenue ran in between them, a woman in a full business suit with two men dressed like couriers, darting hard and fast, not even bothering to look at Hawke and the others. The woman from the SUV shrank away like an abused dog as they went by, going into a half crouch, hands up around her head. Other people were screaming, and a man kept shouting over and over again from somewhere inside one of the nearby buildings, his voice ragged.

Hawke reached in through the open door and shut off the engine. He got in and switched the radio on, his heart thudding so loud he could barely hear. An automated message blared through the high-end audio system: “This is the emergency broadcast system…. This is not a test…. Mayor Weber has declared a state of emergency…. Please go immediately to your nearest safety checkpoint….”

Hawke found himself breathing too fast and shallow again, getting light-headed. The radio broadcast was listing the checkpoints now. He listened until the message began to repeat, and pressed the OnStar button, praying that the network wasn’t down.

“OnStar. How may I help you?”

Thank God. “I’d like to report an accident,” he said, words tumbling out. Just slow down.

“Name and location?”

“We need an ambulance at the corner of Seventy-ninth and Second; a woman is bleeding to death!” Hawke couldn’t bring himself to say that Kessler was already dead. Maybe we made a mistake. Maybe they can still save her life. He thought of asking for assistance with a possible B and E and giving the operator his apartment address. But something bothered him about the voice; he couldn’t put his finger on what.

“Vocal patterns suggest extreme stress,” the voice said. “Emotional reaction analysis. Recognition algorithms processing.” There was a long pause, and the voice recited his name and his Social Security number. “Please remain in the vehicle. Help is on the way.”

What? Fresh adrenaline flooded through him. He exited the Cadillac and slammed the door just as the locks clicked down again. He backed away, watching it as if it might jump at him at any moment. It was just a car, right? But the voice, although clearly female, had been too calm, too devoid of emotion even for an emergency services worker.

The operator had been trying to trap him.

As soon as the thought crossed his mind, he shook it off. Ridiculous. He could use the Cadillac to get out of the city, get him home to Robin and Thomas. It made the most sense, and yet he couldn’t bring himself to get back in. He had the feeling he might not make it out of the SUV a second time.

Another rattling boom shook the street and spun Hawke around. A fresh, blossoming flower of fire rose up from the hole in Second Avenue as the city bus toppled into the abyss. It was getting harder to breathe with the smoke. The immediacy of the situation came back to him. There was no time to think, not out here, exposed and vulnerable. They needed shelter and a plan.

He watched a figure disappear into a Jewish temple across the street. The building was a solid square of concrete, short and squat, small windows set deep into its surface, with a set of solid wooden doors that looked strong enough to hold off an army. Young and Vasco had gotten Weller upright between them, and Hawke ran toward Price, his shoulders hunched as fresh debris pattered down like hail, afraid a chunk of asphalt would come hurtling to earth and crush him. “Get up,” Hawke said, grabbing the man by the arm. “We’ve got to get to cover.”

Price shook him off but got to his feet, eyes still glassy with shock. “I’m okay,” he said. “I’m fine.”

Hawke considered giving him a helping hand, but Price took a step back and shook his head. Instead he helped carry Weller across the street to the temple, Price and the woman from the Cadillac following them at a short distance as if wary of their intentions but too terrified to let them go.

CHAPTER ELEVEN

11:46 A.M.

THE HUGE WOODEN DOORS SWUNG SHUT, and the small group stood for a moment, the sound of their harsh breathing echoing in the vestibule. The abrupt change was shocking. The power was out, but enough light filtered through a small window to allow them to see.

“Jesus Christ,” Vasco said finally. He leaned back against the doors for a moment with Weller’s arm still across his broad shoulders, closed his eyes in the shadows and tipped his head. “Jesus. Fuck. This is crazy. I gotta call in—” He banged his head against the door, opened his eyes again and stood up straight, looked around at them all, then shook his head. “We need to set him down. I need to think for a minute.”

Hawke’s limbs were trembling, but he managed to help carry Weller away from the doors as they set him down on the floor. The building was built like a bomb shelter with walls that were probably three feet thick, and the noise outside was barely audible. A second set of doors to the interior of the building was closed.

Weller’s head lolled limply against Young’s shoulder. “Wake up,” Hawke said, straightening Weller’s head and lightly slapping his cheek, trying to force him into consciousness. “I want to know what’s going on. What were you trying to tell me?”

Young stopped his hand. “He’s out,” she said. “Look at the bump on his head. He can’t answer. Leave him alone.”

“How could you leave her like that?” Price said. “All of you. Just leave her bleeding to death in that lobby.”

Hawke let out a long, trembling sigh. He could smell the blood on Price’s shirt. Kessler’s blood. Nobody spoke. There was no answer to give. Hawke had to collect his thoughts, try to make some sense of everything. He wanted to go at Weller until the man answered his questions.

“What do we do?” the woman from the SUV whispered, her voice hoarse with panic. She twisted her hands together around her clutch over and over, squeezing, digging at it with her manicured nails. “I need to find my husband.” Her gaze darted back and forth, refusing to settle on anything for more than a few seconds. “I have to get downtown.”

Hawke thought of Robin and Thomas, the woman ratcheting up his own anxiety again. What was happening right now at home? Not knowing made him wild, his imagination racing. But losing his cool wouldn’t do them any good. He had to focus, figure out the right way to get back to them.

“What’s your name?” he said. When the woman didn’t seem to hear him, he took her by the arms, forcing her to stop and look at him. “Your name,” he said again.

“Sarah Hanscomb,” she said, finally fixing her gaze on his face. The waves of panic pouring off her were going to make them all lose their minds. She nearly crumpled and looked away again, her brows coming together, mouth quivering, but she fought it off. “We’re from Englewood Cliffs. My husband works for Germer Benson; he’s at the office right now. I dropped him at the PATH this morning. I didn’t think—when things started happening I turned around; I wanted—I had to get over the bridge before—oh God.” She seemed to realize what she’d done, trapping herself in the city, everything crashing down on her at once. Her hands trembled as she brought them to her face as if trying to hide behind the clutch. The backs of them were veined, wrinkled. She was older than Hawke had first thought. He pulled them down again.

“Which bridge?” he said. “What happened?”

She shook her head, tears squeezing out over bruised lids. “The GW. He was downtown,” she said, pleading, as if she felt the need to explain herself. “I had to get him out. The radio said there were explosions

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