‘Holy — Look at this.’
Berg’s tone made even Kendrick wander over.
She said: ‘During his last visit, on April sixth, Torrance AKA Pope laid down two months’ rent in advance on his credit card.’
‘Rent for what?’ said Purkiss.
‘An apartment in Manhattan.’ She brought up a detailed street map. ‘Here. In Midtown East.’
Purkiss and Kendrick watched as she zoomed the view in. ‘This block.’
‘What’s that next to it?’ Purkiss asked. Berg called up Google Earth, entered the address and swung the view to street level.
The apartment block looked fifteen or twenty stories high, but was dwarfed by a broad-based, soaring building beside it.
‘The Loomis Building,’ said Berg.
‘What’s that?’
‘Offices, I believe,’ she said. She typed the name in to Google and a list came up.
‘My God,’ said Purkiss.
Occupying all thirty-four floors of the Loomis Building were the offices of Holtzmann Solar.
*
Purkiss took the stairs three at a time, Berg and Kendrick jostling behind him. The crosstown journey could take any time at all, Berg said, given that it was morning rush hour.
She was still driving Nakamura’s Taurus and had parked on a yellow line up on the kerb. She had the engine running before Purkiss had strapped himself in.
In the small of his back, Purkiss felt the pressure of the Glock, now reloaded.
Berg put a flasher on the roof and turned on the sound. The Taurus howled through the streets heading eastwards.
‘Just in the beginning, to clear the path,’ she said.
Even so, the traffic threatened to snarl them and she had to detour south and loop round. Purkiss slowed his breathing, concentrated on feeling his heart beat steadily rather than gallop. He needed to be at the peak of the adrenaline curve later, when it mattered, not now.
They were crossing Broadway, Purkiss recognised, when two sirening marked police cars cut across them, heading in the same direction.
‘Shit,’ said Berg. ‘I forgot this.’ She turned on the radio.
It immediately squawked into life, voices criss-crossing and initially unintelligible over the static.
All units to First. Repeat, all units…. First. Loomis Building….evacuation……
Forty-Two
9.40 am
Pope heard the sirens distantly and saw that Nina had, too. The triple glazing of the windows muffled the sound remarkably. The glass, the space, the location… all contributed to the colossal price tag of the apartment’s rent. But that didn’t matter; it was a one-off payment, three months’ rent in advance, and it had bought him the location he wanted.
He and Nina sat in the middle of the expanse of the living room, among the modernist-spartan pieces of furniture. The heavy drapes were drawn across the wall-length windows that opened on to the balcony, and they would stay drawn for the time being.
The alarm sounded outside in the corridor, mirroring the klaxons that were going off on every one of the building’s other twenty-one floors.
Despite himself Pope was interested in the logistics of the evacuation. Would the police or the fire department do a door-to-door search of the building, ensuring everybody had vacated the apartments? Or would they rely on a head count, measured against the doorman’s record of who had signed in to the apartment block, and concentrate their efforts on clearing everyone out of the Loomis building? Even if they did come knocking door to door, they’d hardly expect anyone to be actively hiding in any of the apartments. Pope and Nina were in no danger of being discovered.
The response had been quick, he had to admit. They’d taken the service lift from the basement, just as he had done before entering Grosvenor’s flat when he’d first arrived in the city this time, and had reached the nineteenth-storey apartment without encountering another soul. Pope had sat Nina down on the sofa, a singularly uncomfortable-looking piece of furniture just like the rest, and had stood while he made the call.
He’d seen Nina’s eyes widen perceptibly as she’d listened.
‘There’s a bomb in the Loomis Building, Park Avenue,’ he said, once the 911 dispatcher had put him through to the police. ‘I’m going to set it off within the next hour. It’s going to bring down the entire building. I suggest you take the necessary steps to avoid substantial loss of life.’
And that was the extent of it. The sirens stared up within ten minutes. He’d — briefly — wondered if he’d be treated as a hoaxer. Perhaps before that day in the autumn of 2001 he would have been.
*
‘I don’t understand,’ she said.
He sat opposite her on another uncomfortable chair, leaned forward.
She raised her head. Her eyes were calm but questioning.
‘You’re letting them get all those people out.’
‘Because they don’t all deserve to die. Some of them do, but it’s impossible to separate them out. So they have to live, to avoid killing innocents.’
Pope regarded himself as honest, at least with himself. such honesty made him acknowledge inwardly that his explanation was only partially satisfactory. Yes, large-scale loss of life would be tragic, and unjustified, morally. But there was another reason he wanted everybody cleared out of the building. Almost everybody.
It meant he’d have uninterrupted time to talk to Z.
After the call to the police, after he’d shut the switchboard woman off in mid-question, he’d dialled again. It was answered even more quickly than the 911 call.
‘Yes.’
‘Are you in the building?’
‘Yes. I’m in the elevator.’ Giordano — Z — sounded out of breath. ‘Heading up to the boardroom annex now. Where — ’
‘They’re going to start evacuating the building very soon,’ said Pope. ‘Under no circumstances allow yourself to be removed. You understand why, don’t you?’
‘Yes. I understand.’
‘Hide if you have to. But be unobtrusive. And be there at ten o’clock.’
Pope rang off.
He walked over to the drapes and peered through the crack, in case Giordano was already there, in the specified room. But there was no movement at the glass.
The clatter of helicopters had started up, and in the distant sky Pope saw them converging like bees.
*
He’d laid the groundwork over the last ten years. The practical details of the plan had been set up in the last four months.
Once Pope had obtained the names and whereabouts of the four of them — Jablonsky, Taylor, Grosvenor and of course Giordano himself — it had been a matter of working out a schedule, one that would allow him to follow a path that would take out the first three as economically and yet as visibly as possible while keeping up enough momentum to prevent Giordano from stopping him. That path had begun in Amsterdam, almost been scuppered by Purkiss before leading to New York, and then via Charlottesville back to Manhattan.
Pope realised quickly, once he tracked Giordano down and discovered his senior position at Langley, that he’d never reach the man directly. His home was similarly next to impossible to find: its location was such a cleverly concealed secret that Pope had marvelled when his repeated attempts had failed to find it. So, Giordano would have to be got at by another route. Pope based his strategy on a gamble: he believed, from his repeated analysis of his father’s diary notes, that Giordano had strong feelings for the daughter he’d abandoned, and that she would provide a point of access.
What Pope hadn’t bargained on — and it was a mistake, he admitted to himself — was that Giordano would have Nina under constant surveillance. That detail had, like Purkiss’s intervention in Amsterdam, nearly derailed the plan. Pope’s first visit to the United States in January had established Ramirez’s whereabouts, her working patterns, but it had failed to appreciate the fact that she had watchers constantly. Pope considered himself lucky that the watchers hadn’t spotted him at that early stage.