“Well, people worry.”
“I’m okay, Ma.” It occurred to Howe that he had been having some variation of this conversation for forty years.
“He has tickets for a football game.”
“NCAAs, Mom. It’s basketball. In New York. I already left a message telling him I can’t go.”
“He’s very excited.”
Howe laughed. “He’s always excited about something.”
“Just so you know.” His mother paused, changing the subject. “I’m going to bingo tonight with Gabby Thomas. I suppose my ears will be red for days.”
“I guess,” said Howe. He listened to his mother tell him something about the neighbors, then told her he had to get going.
“Well, of course you do. I will talk to you when I talk to you,” she said.
“Love you.”
He didn’t usually say that, and it took his mother a half-second to respond.
“I love you, too, Billy.”
Among the callers on his voice mail were three members of the NADT board, along with Delano, who was belatedly expressing surprise at the security snafu and sympathy about the “incident.” Howe decided that firing the vice president would be the first thing he did; one thing he didn’t need was a phony.
Howard McIntyre was the one person he wanted to talk to who hadn’t called. As Howe went through the cell menu to find his number, the cell phone rang; it was Alice.
“Hi,” he said.
“I wasn’t sure I’d get you,” she said. “I thought I’d just leave a message.”
“It’s me in the flesh,” he said. He winced, overly self-conscious but unable to do anything about it.
“Well…” she started.
“Well, what?”
“I, um… I’m sorry.”
“Sorry?”
Howe felt a pain in his ribs, a physical pain: She was dumping him.
Not dumping him exactly, since they weren’t a couple or anything like that, but she was going to tell him they couldn’t be.
The pain was like a hard cramp, the sort that might come from sudden depressurization.
He loved her, and he wasn’t going to let her walk away.
“I was rude yesterday,” she said.
“Rude?” The word croaked from his mouth. “You weren’t rude.”
“I should have thanked you for saving my life. But I didn’t.”
“If it weren’t for me, you wouldn’t have been there. So I apologize. I’m the one who should apologize.”
What else is it? he thought to himself. Go ahead and tell me.
Go ahead.
“Why don’t we argue about it over dinner?” he told her.
“Argue?”
“I’m joking. Want to have dinner with me?”
She hesitated. If she said no, he would ask, straight out, if she was seeing someone else.
Then he’d pull out all the stops. Though he wasn’t exactly sure what that would mean.
“Where do you want to eat?” Alice said finally.
Chapter 5
Macklin put a surveillance team on the real addresses but couldn’t come up with enough people to canvas the area of the phony address, which would have been across from Madison Square Garden if it had existed. Fisher decided to walk it himself, checking variations of the address on the theory that the real address would turn out to be some variation of the false one. He found a pizza parlor, an Israeli restaurant, and a junk shop proclaiming that it sold Manhattan ’s finest selection of antiques, but no safe house or reasonable facsimile.
“What’d you find out?” asked Macklin when he called in to see if anything was new.
“Scalpers are getting five hundred bucks for decent seats to the NCAA play-offs this weekend,” said Fisher.
“Five hundred, huh? Cheap.”
“Yeah, I bought two and charged it to your task force.”
“You’re shitting me.”
“I am,” said Fisher.
“God, you just about gave me a heart attack,” said Macklin.
“You search those two apartments?”
“Jesus, Andy, there’s no way in the world I can get a search warrant based on an address in a shoemaker’s ledger. You know that.”
“You have to be creative, Macklin. Come on. You’re disappointing me.”
“Look, if it helps, the Amsterdam Avenue place is vacant.”
“Sure that helps,” said Fisher. “That’s probably the place.”
“I don’t think so. The building was torn down two weeks ago.”
“Maybe we should sift the rubble.”
“You’re kidding, right?”
“We’re grasping at straws, Macklin. You have to get into the spirit of things,” said Fisher, though he, too, doubted that sifting the ruins would actually turn up anything.
“I put it under surveillance. Somebody’s watching it.”
“What about the other one-up in Inwood, right? Let’s get a search warrant.”
“If we see anything suspicious, then we can move.”
“He’s a terrorist and a fugitive, Kevin. You put that on the legal papers, the judge pounds his gavel, and we go in.”
“Come on, Andy. This is New York. I couldn’t get a search warrant here to raid Lee Harvey Oswald’s house.”
“That’s because he didn’t do it,” said Fisher.
Macklin, no conspiracy buff, changed the subject. “Kowalski has a phone conference set up for five.”
“That’s nice.”
“Come on, Andy. I have a number for you to call in to. You can do it with your sat phone. He’s been in D.C. talking to Howe and getting some other background. He really thinks the case is wrapped up,” Macklin added, “but if you want to present your arguments to him—”
“Listen, I’ll make you a deaclass="underline" I don’t scalp the tickets and I miss the phone conference, okay?”
“Andy. Look, I’ll call you, okay? Just leave your line open.”
“What kind of seats you want? On the aisle?”
Macklin hung up. Fisher walked around some more, hoping to be struck by inspiration; the only thing that came close was a bike messenger crossing against the light. Finally, Fisher decided he might just as well head back up to Scramdale; with any luck he’d be on the train when Macklin tried to connect for the conference call.
His wanderings had taken him over to Seventh Avenue, where there was an entrance to the subway. Unsure whether the lines that stopped here went to the Grand Central train station, Fisher did something native New Yorkers are loath to do in public: He stopped and consulted one of the large subway maps near the gates.
The trains in question were the 1, 2, 3, and 9, and are known collectively as the Broadway Line, taking their name from the fact that they follow the street. They did not, in fact, go to Grand Central, though it was possible to get there via a shuttle at Times Square.
Much more interestingly, Fisher realized that, not only was it the same line that went to Washington Heights, but the train ran north to Inwood — and its last stop in Manhattan was within two blocks of the address he’d found earlier.
A straw, surely, but one to be seized.
“Last natural forest in New York,” said one of the detectives Macklin had sent to watch the Inwood address. He jerked his hand behind him, gesturing toward the expanse of trees rising to the northwest. “You know, Peter Minuit bought Manhattan on a spot over there.”
“I’ll take the tour later,” said Fisher. “We have a suspect or what?”
“Basement apartment, halfway down Nagle,” said the detective. “Separate entrance. Looks vacant.”
Nagle mixed small food markets with check cashing shops with travel agencies; some of the signs were in Spanish but the graffiti betrayed a much wider mix of ethnic slurs. The man playing tour guide was named Witt. He was a state trooper whose enthusiasm made it clear he was not a native. Fisher and Witt sat in the front seat of a Jimmy SUV; Witt’s partner was in the back, nursing a 7-Up. They had a clear view of the apartment’s entrance, which sat between two travel stores. The entrance to the upper portion of the building was near the end of the block. Fisher noted that there were plenty of pay phones along the street.