For a long time the phone rang unanswered. Finally Laila heard the click of a receiver being lifted from its cradle.
“Self…’ she said in Arabic.
“… Al Islam,” came the reply-the Sword of Islam, the code name Muammar al-Qaddafi had assigned to his nuclear program in 1973.
“Begin your operation,” she ordered, still using her native tongue. Then she hung up.
The man who had answered Laila’s call stepped into the storeroom of a Syrian bakery just off Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. Two men waited for him. All three were Palestinians. All three were volunteers. All three had been chosen by Kamal Dajani from among two dozen volunteers in a training camp of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, outside Aleppo in Syria, over a year before.
None of them had any idea who Laila was or from where she had been calling.
They had only been told to wait by the telephone every morning at seven-thirty for the order she had just delivered.
They removed a lead chest from the storeroom’s unused oven and methodically broke open the seals that held it shut. Its interior was divided into two halves. In one was a collection of metal rings the size of a nickel. In the other were several rows of greenish-gray pills about as big as Alka-Seltzer tablets. Carefully, they snapped a tablet into each of the rings in the chest.
When they had finished, they opened the first of three identical wooden crates stacked in one corner of the room and lifted out one of its inhabitants. It was a pigeon, not a homing pigeon but an ordinary gray pigeon of the kind raised by kids all over New York in rooftop lofts. They snapped a ring to the bird’s leg, put him back in his crate and lifted out the next one.
As soon as the rings had been hooked to all the pigeons, the senior Palestinian embraced the other two warmly. “Ma salaam,” he murmured, “till we meet in Tripoli, insh’ Allah.” He picked up one of the three crates and left for a car parked in the street outside. The other two followed at fifteen-minute intervals.
Across the river, on the lower end of Manhattan Island, the Police Commissioner of the City of New York was enjoying a rare moment of silence and introspection. From the window of his office on the fourteenth floor of Police Plaza, Michael Bannion watched the first light steal over the rooftops of the city entrusted to his care. Ahead, looming behind the towers of the Alfred E. Smith housing project, was the familiar silhouette of the Brooklyn Bridge. To his left, far beyond the U.S. Courthouse in Foley Square, Bannion could just make out the tip of the eightstory tenement in which he had been born fifty-eight years before.
Bannion could spend-the rest of his life in the filtered purity of offices like this; his nostrils would always be filled with the smells that had permeated that dark tenement’s stairwells, the odors of his boyhood, the stench of the cabbage boiling in its kitchens, the reek of urine drifting from the toilets on each landing, the heavy aroma of the wax rubbed into its wooden banisters.
A telephone’s ring summoned Bannion back to the massive mahogany table that was the unofficial symbol of his office, the desk used by Teddy Roosevelt in his years as Police Commissioner. It was his private phone. He recognized immediately the voice of Harvey Hudson, the assistant director of the FBI in charge of the Bureau’s New York office.
“Michael,” he said, “I’ve got something urgent which concerns us both. I hate to take you out of your office, but for a number of reasons I don’t want to get into over the phone, I think we’d better discuss it over here.
It will require,” he added, “the services of your Detective Division.”
Bannion looked at the crowded appointments list his detective secretary had laid out on his desk.
“You’ve got to be kidding, Harv?”
“No, Michael,” Hudson answered. Bannion was struck by a curious catch in his voice. “It’s very, very urgent. It comes from the top, the very top.”
“Since when does your director tell the NYPD what to do?”
“It’s not from the director, Michael. It’s from the President.”
On the floor below the Commissioner’s office, the Chief of Detectives, Al Feldman, was staring at a young man advancing toward his office door between the gray metal desks of the junior detectives’ bullpen. He was a “contract,” a patrolman forced on his division because he’d had an uncle who’d been a deputy chief inspector in the Seventh Division. Just as Feldman had predicted he would, he’d fucked up.
Feldman waved a cold cigar at the youth, directing him toward the worn piece of carpet thrown over the linoleum flooring in front of his desk.
“You follow baseball, O’Malley?”
The question perplexed the redfaced young man. He was expecting a dressing-down, not a chat about sports. “Yeah, sure, Chief. You know, I watch it on TV in the summer. Take the wife out to Shea once in a while, see the Mets.”
“So what happens, a guy’s got two strikes on him, he swings and he misses?”
“Well, uh, he’s out, Chief.”
“Right,” Feldman snarled. He plucked a silver patrolman’s shield from his desk drawer and flung it across the desk. “And so are you. Tomorrow you’re back in uniform.”
His gesture reflected the littleknown fact that New York detectives served at the pleasure of their chief and could be instantly returned to the blue uniforms from which their gold detective’s shield had freed them. Feldman had not even had time to savor the delight his action had given him when his phone rang.
“The PC wants you,” the Commissioner’s secretary announced, “forthwith.”
There must have been half a million apartments in New York, more even, in which the almost identical scene was taking place this December morning. The TV was on, its volume, as always, turned up too high. Tommy Knowland, thirteen, moved an occasional spoonful of Rice Krispies and sliced bananas to his mouth with no apparent assistance from eyes that remained totally concentrated on Good Morning America blaring from the set before him.
Grace Knowland sipped her coffee on the chair beside his, studying her son with tender fascination. Even there at the breakfast table, without a trace of makeup, with thus far no effort at beauty beyond a dash of cold water on her face to rouse her and a few swift strokes of her hairbrush, she looked marvelous. Her eyes were clear, her face alive and engaging, the breasts that had excited more than a few admiring glances at Forlini’s the evening before thrusting out against the lapels of the man’s silk bathrobe she wore over her negligee.
“Aw, come off it!” Tommy’s spoon fell to his plate with a clank. “Jeez, Mom, how can Howard Cosell say something like that?”
Grace laughed softly. “I’m sure I don’t know. But what I do know is I can’t send him a bill for a broken plate.”
Her son grimaced and turned his attention back to the television set.
“Tommy, did you ever …” Grace sipped her coffee thoughtfully. “I mean after your father and I divorced, were you sad you didn’t have any brothers or sisters?”
It seemed for an instant as though her question had made no impact on her son. Finally, when a female face appeared on the screen, he turned to his mother. “Naw, Mom, not really. Yeck,” he squawked, “Rona Barrett’s next.
Turn it off, Mom.”
“Gotta run.” He sprang from the table, blotted his mouth with a napkin, grabbed for a pile of books and gave his mother’s cheek a quick, wet stab with his lips. “Hey, don’t forget I got my match at the armory tonight. You coming?”