Read The Screaming Room Online
Authors: Thomas O'Callaghan
Thomlinson hadn't quite gotten over the stiffness in his lower back from the cemetery run. Driscoll's Chevy was roomyâas long as you were seated up front. That's why he was now in a super-sized GMC Yukon. Fleet Services had wired this baby up with XM satellite radio. Thomlinson was known to the crew as “a frequent flyer” of this particular vehicle. That being the case, Pokee, one of the technicians, had the receiver set to XM101 when he handed Thomlinson the keys.
His eyes were on the entrance to Shewster's hotel. His thoughts were on what he imagined was going on at the loft. But his ears were lost to the sound of Bob Marley's “Jammin'.” The prolific songwriter may have left this planet in 1981, but thankfully, he hadn't taken his music with him.
His cell phone dispelled his rapture.
“Two of your key players just hooked up by phone,” said an excited Danny O'Brien from inside TARU. “We put Angus on East Sixtieth near the FDR when he got through to Shewster. Their conversation was not what I'd call G-rated. You want me to play it back?”
“I'll have to settle for the gist,” said Thomlinson starting up the Yukon. “Shewster just flew out of his hotel.”
By the time Shewster's limo crossed Park Avenue, heading east on Fifty-ninth, Thomlinson had been brought up to speed on Angus's demand for an airlift out of the country and Shewster's assurance that he'd arrange it with Driscoll. But both he and O'Brien had a question. Thomlinson wanted to know what Shewster meant when he told Angus not to do anything rash. He'd personally see to it that Angus and his sister were long gone before day's end. Not to worry. They'd never see Driscoll again. O'Brien's inquiry involved whether Thomlinson and the Lieutenant were aware of what Abigail Shewster had hidden up her sleeve. Her pink sleeve. He also asked who Gwennypoo was.
Thomlinson's response was succinct. “Don't lose the tape.”
Angus had rummaged through Mary Humphrey's bag, securing what he'd hope to find: a ladies' compact. He'd snapped it apart and had the mirrored portion affixed to the end of a wooden stick that measured approximately eighteen inches. It was grooved at one end. Cassie had supplied it.
“Where'd this come from?” he asked her.
“You don't wanna know.”
Although the mirror was small, when Angus planted himself below the window and held it over his head, he could survey the area outside, which was littered with an assortment of police vehicles and a bevy of police officers apparently in position. For what? he wasn't sure. He adjusted the view. “Will ya look at that? They've got shooters on the rooftops across the street and I doubt they're hunting geese, unless there's a flock perched above us. Their rifles are all pointed this way.”
Angus watched as a dark blue automobile came to a stop several yards from the loft. A smile lit his face when a man in a dark suit got out. He summoned Cassie.
“Driscoll?”
“That's him. He's even bigger in person.”
Cassie watched through the mirror as a woman joined him and pointed to the loft. “That lady cop is with him now. They're making some hand gestures to the other policemen. Another glance up here. Now they're talking.”
What Cassie didn't know was that Margaret was filling Driscoll in on Liz Butler's conversation with Timothy Alfreds. Margaret reported that Butler couldn't swear to know if Sanderson was dead or not. Though she wished he was. But she was certain Sanderson had been serving up some real treats for his riders since the twins were ten. Margaret closed by telling Driscoll that the Carbondale sheriff's office didn't know there was anyone living in the house but the twins.
Cassie thought the conversation between Driscoll and the Sergeant looked innocuous. She turned and faced Angus. “You think Shewster had a chance to speak with Lieutenant Bulldog about our travel plans?”
“We'll soon find out. She awake?”
“Oh, yeah! You don't hear that whimpering?”
“I hit the off switch an hour ago. Pull the rag out and hold the phone to her mouth.”
“What's the number?”
“She'll know it.”
“She'd better,” said Cassie, dislodging the gag, Beretta firmly in hand. “No funny stuff, lady, or the next time your brother gets to see you you'll be in a box. Start punchin' numbers!”
“Driscoll has a bullhorn in his hand,” reported Angus. “Whaddya think'll happen next? Horn to mouth?”
“Nope. Phone to ear.”
Thomlinson had a pretty good idea where Shewster was headed. What he wished he knew was whether he had called anyone on the way. And if he had, what'd they talk about?
The laptop had him turning right at the FDR. He had apparently come to a stop a half block south. That'd put him between East Sixty-first and East Sixty-second. Why two blocks from the loft?
Thomlinson turned at the FDR, spotting the limo behind one of those trucks similar to the ones the city sends out to repair faulty streetlights. They were parked on the right side of the street approximately one hundred feet from the corner, in front of a single-story commercial structure, its security gate down, as was the case for the row of similar structures on either side of the street. The limo's engine was idling. It didn't appear anyone had gotten out. Thomlinson pulled in on the left, put the vehicle in park, and watched. Could Shewster be on the phone? He wasn't driving. If he needed to place a call, that wouldn't require him to pull over. Why had he? And why two blocks away?
Shewster's car continued to idle. Thomlinson continued to watch. He unpocketed his phone, intent on calling Driscoll, but the cherry picker atop the utility truck made him look up. Standing on the roof of the single-story structure was a man in dark clothing. Sharpshooter? From this distance? Thomlinson doubted it. He wasn't holding a rifle. In fact, he wasn't holding anything. That's when he spotted the tripod to the man's right. What appeared to be mounted on it caused Thomlinson to draw his weapon, bolt from the Yukon, and charge down the street hollering like a madman. This action prompted three reactions: the driver of the utility vehicle bolted away from the curb, Shewster's chauffeur did the same, and the man on the roof disappeared.
When Thomlinson rounded the corner on East Sixty-first, the only person he happened upon was a locksmith who was closing his shop, toolbox in hand. Despite the fact that Thomlinson was breathing heavily, wearing a disheveled suit, and had appeared out of nowhere brandishing a gun, the locksmith was quite accommodatingâafter he'd recovered from a rapid pulse, a surge of adrenaline, and a thunderous heartbeat. When color finally returned to the locksmith's face, the detective gained access to the shopkeeper's roof. A bit of high-stepping from roof to roof brought him to within inches of what had caused the ruckus.
Thomlinson had come across a variety of weapons during the course of his crime-fighting career. But there were always surprises. And not having served in the military, today was the first time he'd ever seen an Mk19 automatic grenade launcher.
Margaret and Driscoll had helped each other shoulder a fair amount of stress over the years. Both on the job and off. Here was a man who had only now buried his wife after losing her six years ago. Margaret was heartbroken when he confided to her that sitting beside his comatose wife was tantamount to kneeling before her open casket. My God, a six-year wake! How he managed to get out of bed in the morning was beyond her. She realized she wasn't helping matters by dragging her own demons into their on-again, off-again relationship. Through it all, they had discovered their connection was similar to that reportedly experienced by twins, where unexplainable and extraordinary bonds exist. Ironic, considering their current case.
That's why the second he said hello to whomever had just called, she knew he'd been invited into a nightmare.
“You okay?” she asked as he ended the call. “You look like you're about to be hanged. Who was on the phone?”
“My sister.”
“What's happened?”
“She's been abducted.”
“Abducted? By whom?”
Driscoll pointed to the loft.
“The twins?”
“They're holding her hostage.”
“Jesus Christ! What'd she say to you on the phone?”
“That he's holding a gun to her head.” His eyes targeted the second-story window, then sought Margaret's. “She asked me the oddest question, even for her. She wanted to know if I would be the one getting them to the airport.”
The Lieutenant's phone sounded again.
“Yes?” he blurted, his heart pounding.
“Lieutenant? That you?”
Driscoll's caller was Thomlinson. The sight of color returning to the Lieutenant's face had Margaret somewhat relieved.
In his conversation with the detective, the perplexity involving the helicopter was quickly resolved as Driscoll was apprised of Angus's demands to set it in motion this afternoon and of Shewster's promise to comply. With that being said, Thomlinson offered a more precise version of what Shewster's afternoon looked like. So far. “What I wanna know,” said Thomlinson, “is how Shewster, within fifteenâ¦twenty minutes tops, had an automatic grenade-launcher set up within two blocks of the loft. Granted, the crowd of power players this guy's got in his pocket would fill the Super Bowl, but a freakin' military assault weapon
and
a cherry picker? C'mon! Merlin the Magician couldn't pull that off.”
“Merlin didn't have speed dial on his Rolodex. Where are you now?”
“Outside Shewster's hotel.”
“He's probably contemplating Plan B. Any further word from Danny?”
“Zip.”
“You don't know it yet, Cedric, but I owe you a very personal debt of gratitude.” Before Driscoll could explain, their conversation was interrupted by the sound of gunfire.
It came from the loft.
In kaleidoscope fashion, a slide show of images flooded Driscoll's brain. Catapulted haphazardly through time, he witnessed blood washing over Colette's hand, obscuring all but a glint of gold that was the curve of her wedding band; he watched his mother leap into the path of the oncoming commuter train; he listened to his daughter crying out to him while her mangled body was encased in the metal of their family van. Hearses materialized, only to vanish like the edges of a dream. As his family plot beckoned, he heard the sound of a woman's voice.
With his sight suddenly returning, he discovered Margaret was holding his cell phone to her ear. Her voice, a faint whisper grew in intensity.
“Okay. Your brother made his point. It's loaded and it works. Just bring her to the window so we know he didn't shoot her, then hand Angus the phone.”
Driscoll glanced up to see the look of total bewilderment on his sister's face. Retrieving the cell phone, he spoke to Angus calmly and clearly. “The chopper is sitting at the heliport, just south of us, at East Thirty-fourth Street. We're waiting for Mr. Shewster to arrange clearance for the departure of a corporate jet from JFK.”
“What's the hold-up?” Angus asked.
It was the first time the Lieutenant had heard him speak. His voice was not as Driscoll had imagined. “There's no hold-up. Ever since 9/11 federal regulations requiâ”
“We're leaving the freakin' country. Not coming in. He's got twenty minutes.”
The line went dead and his sister disappeared from sight, as though she were on wheels.
“Any truth to that?” asked Margaret.
Driscoll's expression didn't make known Shewster's attempt to lob a grenade, but Margaret clearly understood there'd be no plane. “We've got twenty minutes. Get on the horn to every utility that operates in Manhattan. Within the next five minutes, I want a team of eight men with jackhammers tearing into the asphalt under the highway, toward Fifty-ninth. The loft has no window facing south. I don't want the twins to see them. Then dispatch a team from Special Operations Division. No slackers. Let's move!”
“Yessir!”
Driscoll approached Lieutenant Ted McKeever, the SWAT team commander.
“How ya holdin' up, John?” McKeever asked.
“I'll feel a lot better when she's sitting inside a patrol car. He's given us twenty minutes. Any of your shooters get a bearing on him?”
“Once. Too much of a chance of the wrong person getting hit, though. You sure his sister's with him? Nobody's spotted her.”
“She was Margaret's last caller. When I got on the line, she put me on with her brother.”
“He did a fair amount of pacing when he was on the phone. Any chance of getting him on the line again?”
Driscoll hit the return button, hoping he'd come up with a reason why he was calling by the time Angus answered the phone.
“Ready to roll?” said Angus.
He wasn't standing.
“The Mayor's on the line with Homeland Security. It won't be long, now.”
“Good. Here's how this is gonna play out. I count six shooters perched across the street. They come down. Mount your car on the sidewalk, rear door open and butted against the door to the stable. One driver. Not you. We get clearance on the plane. Cassie, me, and your sister will get into the car. Head directly to the helicopter. Make sure we hit no traffic. If I see so much as a skateboarder that looks like a cop, you'll be calling a funeral director to arrange your sister's wake.”
The line went dead. Not once did Angus stand.
“How many shooters up there?” he asked McKeever.
“Six.”
“Well, he tagged them all.”
Ten minutes later, Driscoll's cruiser was on the sidewalk, its left rear door open and butted. The six sharpshooters were not only down from their perches, they were lined up in the middle of the street, weapons at their feet. To the onlooker, it appeared the Lieutenant and his idling team were waiting for clearance from JFK. But while Con Edison's air-compressed hammers ripped into asphalt, coupled with the noise of hovering helicopters, a team of Special Operations technicians were using a Sawzall to cut through the rear wall of the stable.