He shook his head. “No response on any of the communicators.”
“Do you have any word from the field office?”
“They’re mounting a response. That’s all I know.”
She swore under her breath and dialed the number for the hotel, which returned a busy signal.
“Agent Frieze!”
She looked up from her phone to see Peter Conley making his way toward her. “Have you got anything?” he asked.
“First responders are thin on the ground,” she said as he approached, “scrambling to deal with the three-pronged attack. From what I gather, though, the Waldorf attack has priority one. This place is going to be swarming with people from at least half a dozen agencies within fifteen minutes.”
“That’s going to be a problem,” he said. “I’ve got a man on the inside, and he just made contact. We’ve got a hostage situation. The people inside are wired with explosives. There’s no way to get them out safely.”
“You’ve got a man on the inside? We need to establish reliable contact with him and coordinate with—”
“He’s not going to wait,” said Conley. “And neither is this situation. We need to buy him time to deal with the situation.”
“NYPD is getting a negotiator here,” she said. “Plus tactical response teams and snipers. Protocol for defusing this sort of situation.”
“That’s not going to work here,” said Conley. “The hostage situation is just a diversion. The terrorists are leaving through an old train tunnel that goes from the Waldorf to Grand Central.”
“How do you know this?” asked Frieze. “Who’s this man on the inside? Is he State Department?”
“He’s a trained black operative,” said Conley. Frieze eyed him, but left it at that. There was no time to quibble about these things.
“How does he know their plan?”
“I’d call it a professional hunch,” said Conley. “It’s the only plan that fits.”
“What if they’re suicide bombers?”
“Then everybody would already be dead.”
Frieze kicked the ground. “Goddamn it,” she said. “What the hell do we do, then?”
“We keep the tactical teams out of the hotel,” said Conley.
“If this doesn’t pan out, my career at the New York bureau is over on my first day.”
“Do you think there’s any other plausible explanation?”
The tire squeal of a halting car cut off Frieze before she could respond. A thickset man with side-parted salt-and-pepper hair and the expression of a charging bull sprang out and pushed through the barrier.
“Get these people out of here!” he yelled to the policemen at the scene. “I want a perimeter set up on a one-block radius. You.” He pointed at the young cop who had let Frieze through earlier. “Push the crowd back, have the barriers set up on Fiftieth, half a block down that way.” The cop stood still like a deer in the headlights. “Now would be good.”
He charged the few additional yards to the front door of the Waldorf. “I’m taking charge of this scene,” he yelled out to all present. “All decisions and new information now go through me. Do we have eyes on the inside?”
Frieze spoke up. “Agent Frieze, FBI.”
“Sergeant Pearson.” His cheeks were splotchy red, nostrils flaring at the base of his bulbous nose. “Are you in charge of the scene?”
“No,” she said. “But I need to talk to you.”
10:15 a.m.
“Another camera’s gone black,” said Rosso, hunched over the monitors in the surveillance room. “The elevator to the Presidential Suite.”
Morgan poked his head out the door and looked both ways down the hall. Wisps of extinguisher powder still hung in the air, but it was otherwise empty. “Does that give them access to Track Sixty-one?”
“Yeah,” said Rosso. “That’s the one.”
“Then it won’t be long before they blow this place,” said Morgan. He sat down next to Rosso. “We need to act. There,” he said, pointing at a monitor showing the lobby. Only one Iranian was left there, all the others having disappeared. “In that man’s hand, see?” It was something small and black, barely visible in the hotel feed. “That’s our detonator. We need to get to him before he blows this lobby sky-high.”
“All right,” said Rosso. “What’s the plan?” He winced in pain.
“You sure you’re up to it?”
“I’m not doing this out of heroism,” he said, refolding his bloody handkerchief and pressing it again to the wound. He stood up, bracing against the desk. He let go to stand only on his feet and swayed. Morgan was ready to catch him, but he didn’t fall. “I’m not getting out of here unless that guy is dead. Saving those people is the only way I make it out alive. So that’s what I’m going to do.”
“I have an idea,” said Morgan. “Let me tell you how we’re going to do this.”
10:18 a.m.
“That’s quite a story,” Sergeant Pearson said to Frieze, half turned away from her. He towered above her, heavyset and broad shouldered. Working his bushy gray eyebrows into a scowl, he addressed two newcomers bearing tactical sniper rifles, gesturing to them with a hand like a ham. “I want you on the roof of the building across the street, and you at the Intercontinental on Forty-ninth.”
“You need to trust us,” said Conley, at her side. “Keep the Hercules teams out.”
“The Iranians will blow the explosives on the first sign of invaders,” added Frieze.
“What the hell do you want me to do?” said Pearson, still looking past them at the wider scene, the lines of cop cars and two fire trucks, and dozens of first responders, moving with purpose in all directions. Some pushed people back farther and several scanned the windows of the hotel with binoculars.
Pearson gestured to someone behind Frieze. “If what you’re saying is true, we need to get the Herc teams in there as soon as possible.”
“That would be a mistake,” insisted Conley.
“So instead I’m supposed to trust that this guy on the inside is going to take care of the situation?” Then he shouted, “Get those civilians back! I want Park clear of civilians!”
“It’s our best shot,” said Frieze.
“Get me in contact with this guy. We’ll see where to go from there, all right?”
Frieze saw two black shapes approaching from Forty-ninth Street—large vans, which halted just around the corner. Men clad in black tactical gear with helmets carrying Colt Tactical Carbines and shotguns spilled out. The NYPD Hercules teams—New York City’s elite police special forces. They were running out of time.
“All right,” said Conley. “I’ll patch you through.”
10:21 a.m.
Morgan was checking the magazine of the dead Secret Service agent’s gun when he was hailed on the radio communicator.
“Sergeant