headed?”
The man in front scoffed at the stupidity of the question, indicating the interior of the Park with the merest jerk of his head.
“We’re here to take care of business,” came a voice from the group.
Hayward shook her head. “What’s going on there is none of your business.”
“The hell it isn’t,” the one in front snapped. “We’ve got friends there, getting the shit beat out of them by a bunch of goddamn bums. There’s no way we’re going to let that go on.” He took another step forward.
“This is a police matter,” Hayward said.
“The police haven’t done jack shit,” the man replied. “Look around. You’ve let this scum trash our city.”
“We heard they killed twenty, thirty people already!” came the slurred voice of a man holding up a cellular phone. “Including Mrs. Wisher. They’re trashing the city. They got bastards from the East Village and Soho to help them out. Goddamn NYU activists. Our friends need help.”
“Got that?” said the one in front. “So get out of the way, lady.” He took another step forward.
“You take another step and I’ll part your hair with this;” Hayward said, slipping her hand from her gun to her baton and sliding it smoothly from the belt ring. She felt Carlin tense beside her.
“Pretty easy for you to talk tough,” the man said scornfully. “With a gun on your belt and a goddamn human refrigerator at your side.”
“Think you can take all five of us?” said someone in the group.
“Maybe she thinks she can smother us all to death with those jugs of hers,” said another. Several grins broke out.
Hayward took a deep breath, then replaced her baton. “Officer Carlin,” she said, “please take twenty steps back.”
Carlin remained motionless.
“Do it!” she snapped.
Carlin stared at her for a moment. Then, without turning or taking his eyes from the group, he began walking backward down the path they had come.
Hayward stepped deliberately up to the lead youth. “Now listen up,” she said evenly, without taking her eyes off his. “I could take off my badge and my piece, and still kick all your sorry white-bread asses back to Scarsdale, or Greenwich, or wherever it is your mothers tuck you in at night. But I don’t need to do that. See, if you refuse to follow my instructions to the letter, then your mothers won’t be tucking you in this evening. They’ll be waiting in line at Police Plaza tomorrow morning to make your bails. And all the money, or power, or influence in the world won’t be able to remove the words
She paused a moment. “So drop your weapons,” she said coolly.
There was a brief instant in which nobody moved.
“I said,
In the silence that followed, she heard the clink of an aluminum bat hitting asphalt. Then another. Then came a quieter sound: a steel blade dropping to the earth. She waited a long moment, then took a deliberate step backward.
“Officer Carlin,” Hayward said quietly. In a moment, he was at her side.
“Shall I frisk them?” he asked.
Hayward shook her head. “Driver’s licenses,” she said to the group. “I want those, too. Drop them on the ground right there.”
There was a brief pause. Then the youth in front dug a hand into his jacket pocket, removed his wallet, and let the plastic card flutter to the ground. The rest followed suit.
“You can pick them up tomorrow afternoon at One Police Plaza,” she continued. “Ask for Sergeant Hayward. Now, I want you all to walk straight past me until you reach Central Park West. Then I want you to go your separate ways. Do not pass Go; do not collect two hundred dollars. Head straight home, and go to bed. Understand?”
There was another silence.
“
“We understand,” came the chorused response.
“Then move out,” Hayward said. The youths stood motionless, as if rooted to the spot.
“
“Bunch of pricks,” said Carlin. “You think twenty or thirty were really killed?”
Hayward snorted as she bent to pick up the weapons and licenses. “Hell, no. But if the rumors keep spreading, people like that are going to keep coming. And this situation will never get resolved.” She handed him the bats with a sigh. “Come on. We might as well report in and see if we can help out tonight. Because tomorrow, you know we’re going to get our butts reprimanded for what happened down in those tunnels.”
“Not this time,” Carlin replied, grinning slightly.
“You said that before.” Hayward turned toward him. “Just what are you telling me, Carlin?”