Tommy’s mother died of breast cancer. Later it was learned that he had grown up in a “cancer cluster,” a cute name to define living over a biological and chemical atrocity. American Cyanamid, the behemoth chemical conglomerate, eventually settled out of court with no admission of guilt or assumption of responsibility on their part. After all the “incidental” legal expenses were siphoned off, in addition to the incurred attorney’s fees, the remaining dollars were distributed among the affected families. Tommy was awarded the paltry sum of $5,000 for his mother’s life, on which he was taxed.
The righteous indignation over all of this didn’t coalesce in his mind until after he was hit with shrapnel during the Grenada incursion. His head wound terminated his military career … and gave him a remarkable new sense of perspective. He spent months in and out of veteran hospitals during recovery and rehabilitation. The doctors were encouraged when he showed a voracious appetite for reading. Of all that he read, it was the radical literature and the rants and ravings of eco-terrorists like the ELM that found a home in his newly ventilated brain. Eventually Tommy came to understand that he was also a wounded veteran of their “Great Cause.” His moment of epiphany came with the realization that his family had actually been attacked, raped, and pillaged by corporate greed and disregard for the sacred Earth.
Over the previous two weeks, he had observed no less than three trucks, sometimes as many as five, drive through the gates into the facility after 12:30 AM. Inside there was a portico strategically located a quarter-mile away from the main tank farm. At this safe distance, every truck was inspected before it entered. Bomb-sniffing dogs were used, as were mirrors on long poles to check the undercarriage. The driver was wanded for any weapons.
Tommy noticed, to his great satisfaction, that they only checked the lower half of the cab and undercarriage of the trailer. They never looked higher than the roof of the cab. He panned his Nikon high-powered binoculars left and up the turnpike. There, approximately a quarter-mile from the turnoff the trucks took to get to the tank farm, was a pedestrian overpass. Although the span was fenced and wired to stop evil kids and other miscreants from hurling bricks into speeding windshields for fun, the access stairs, parallel to the turnpike, were only blocked by a three-foot railing. The light traffic, remote location of the rest stop, the overpass, and the tank farm all gave him precisely what he was looking for.
For the last week, Tommy had practiced in his backyard with a seven-pound sack of sand. He laid down a two by four piece of wood, then paced off twenty-two feet and placed an upright Coke can on the ground. He spent two hours a night pitching the bag the twenty-two feet until he could crush the can 48 out of 50 times. Tonight he would make one last reconnoiter of the tank farm. Then, tomorrow, he would make his statement — one that would be heard around the world.
At 9 PM, after consuming a microwaved franks-and-beans dinner, Tommy went out to the Camaro and turned the key … and got nothing. The battery was dead! After the obligatory punching of the steering wheel, he went inside to call his friend Arnold to ask for a jump, but got his answering machine instead. He left a short message asking Arnold to come over to charge the car and then dialed the number of the local cab company.
The cab pulled up to the Long Island Railroad station just as the
9:20 PM to Penn Station was pulling in. Tommy threw the driver a twenty for an eight-dollar fare and bolted. He boarded the train just as the doors shut. Passing the time by looking into the Long Island night, its sleepy homes and red-taillight-spotted roadways smeared by the scratched plastic window of the train, he reviewed every step of the plan and contemplated every possible scenario.
When the train arrived in Manhattan, he walked through the shared terminal on his way to the New Jersey Transit Morristown line. A thirty-minute ride on that train would connect him to a bus route that had a stop a quarter-mile behind the Jersey Turnpike rest area. In the morning, Arnold would come over with his charger and tomorrow night he would have his Camaro in working order for his attack. It was a giant kickoff, of sorts, in that it would come on the eve of the big Sabot Society meeting scheduled two days later.
Officer Darrel Spoon, a New York City Transit cop sitting behind the courtesy desk on the main concourse, noticed the man as he emerged from the track seventeen stairway. He watched him with one eye as he leafed through the clipboard with all his notices of the day. He found the picture of Thomas Regan that the FBI distributed to all points of embarkation. Unfortunately, at that instant, hundreds of Islander hockey fans swarmed down the escalators, hooting, hollering, pumped, and psyched because their Long Island team beat the New York Rangers in their own house, Madison Square Garden, located directly above the terminal. Darrel lost the bearded man in the thick of the crowd and keyed his radio, calling it in to the central dispatcher. Other officers immediately converged on the main concourse, fanning out toward the tracks.
Penn Station was a tactical nightmare for tracking. The 7th Avenue and 8th Avenue subways ran down each side of the station with four tracks each. The Long Island Railroad and Amtrak trains shared twenty-one platforms. New Jersey Transit trains were squeezed in there with the others for good measure. In all, no less than five separate transit systems, six if you counted cabs and seven if you counted buses, connected Penn Station to the greater metropolitan area. Further confounding the issue was the fact that several major office buildings and one of the largest sports arenas in the world were right above it, offering any target a simple escalator or elevator ride to anonymity.
Still, the transit cops did what they were trained to do, which was to doggedly focus on the trains. Based on the radio broadcast description, they stopped and detained any needle in this haystack of train passengers who even closely matched the FBI description. Tommy had missed all the action, since he had gone straight to the New Jersey Transit tracks and, for the second time that evening, boarded a train just as the doors closed. He never saw the two cops rush down the platform futilely as the train rolled out.
Dennis was reading the latest David Baldacci thriller, nestled into his Barcalounger in the living room, when Cynthia answered the phone. It was just past 11:00 PM. He heard her say, “Yes indeed, he’s right here.” He got out of his chair with a grunt and took the call in his den.
“Dennis, it’s Agent Burrell. We were just notified of a possible sighting of the beard at Penn Station.”
“Who made the ID?”
“It was a transit cop. They lost him.”
“I’m going down there. Thanks for the call.” As he hung up, Cynthia looked at him questioningly.
“They may have found our guy. I want to talk to the cop that spotted him.”
Dennis got to Penn Station just at midnight as Darrel was getting off his shift.
Burrell was just leaving, having already debriefed the officer. “You got in fast, Mallory.”
“I didn’t want to miss this. Can you tell me anything?”
“New rules, you know. You got the courtesy call. That’s as far as I can go. The rest is now part of an ongoing federal investigation. Sorry.”
“Hey, no problem. Thanks for the heads up, Brooke. Er, mind if I talk to the officer?”
“I don’t see why not, we’re done here.”
Dennis made his way to the young transit cop who had gotten more attention in the last two hours than he had in his whole career. He assessed the black officer to be in his late twenties and in good physical shape, with eyes that looked like they could disarm a perpetrator at ten yards. That was the way cops were supposed to be … big, mean-looking, and tough.