THE LINEUP OF SEDANS was still doing a slow crawl west on 57th Street. Through the gap of sky up and down Seventh Avenue, I spotted at least half a dozen news helicopters shadowing us. There hadn’t been this much attention on slow-moving vehicles since OJ’s white Bronco.
I watched with more intensity as the convoy of cars seemed to slow by the subway entrance on Sixth Avenue. All we would need was for them to bail out into the labyrinth that is the New York City subway system.
But then the cars passed through the intersection, returning to parade speed.
Why wouldn’t they do something, make their move?
It was as if the hijacker convoy was reading my mind as it came parallel to the Hard Rock Cafe a minute later.
There was a scream of engines and a bark of spinning tire rubber, and the five cars suddenly peeled out.
The cops blocking the intersection at Broadway looked like stunned NASCAR spectators as the vehicles rocketed past them.
The sedans seemed to be drag racing as they shot across Eighth. By the time they hit Ninth Avenue, they looked like they were taking a shot at the land speed record. The turbine of our chopper had to kick it up several notches just to stay on them.
I thought this sudden need to be somewhere in a hurry a tad peculiar, since they were speeding toward a dead end. There were maybe two blocks of Manhattan left.
Then what?
I could feel the blood leave my face as I watched the sedans scream down the final slope of street heading directly toward the Hudson River.
Would they try to ram one of the barricades? I didn’t know, but I was certain of one thing: A deadly crash was coming in seconds. And there was nothing I could do except watch from a front-row balcony seat.
Chapter 95
HOG-TIED IN THE FRONT passenger seat of the lead car heading west, rocker Charlie Conlan felt the cut on his chin reopen as the speeding vehicle bounded off a world-class pothole.
Conlan knew that the car was going way too fast. This was it, he thought. How it would happen. The End of a Legend.
As the sedan’s engine roared, Conlan was struck with anger at the animal sitting beside him. Then at himself. He was still breathing, which meant he could still fight, still resist. But his arms and legs were taped together. So what could he do?
He glanced at the hijacker behind the wheel to his left. His mask was still on, but the hood was down.
Conlan nodded to himself as he figured it out. Maybe I’ll die, but it won’t be on my knees to these bastards.
The car had just lifted off from a steep crest along Tenth Avenue when Conlan leaned over and bit down into the driver’s ear. The horrified scream the hijacker made almost drowned out the engine.
What this worthless vermin had put them through, Conlan thought, tasting blood. He’d killed his friend Rooney, then dragged him outside like a bag of garbage. Conlan wished he could inflict a world of pain on his sorry ass. But then the front tires shredded as the car touched down off-kilter, turned sideways—and began to flip.
Seconds later, the plate-glass window of the BMW showroom on the northeast corner of Eleventh seemed to evaporate as the sedan’s spinning ton of steel crashed through it.
A horrible crunching sound blasted out Conlan’s eardrums, and the world went black.
Then gray.
Then fluorescent white.
Conlan came out of the fog of shock and found himself blinking up into a bright ice cube–tray light fixture. He was in an operating room, right? Or maybe he was having an acid flashback. The pile of glass in his lap made a tinkling sound as he turned around to see what was up.
Damn, he was inside a car showroom. They had somehow landed right-side up. He gaped at the twisted metal inches away from his throat. The sedan was now a convertible, since the roof had been ripped away.
When he looked out the hole in the shattered windshield, his first thought was that the hijacker driver, who was hunched over one of the showroom motorcycles, was trying to escape.
Then he noticed that one of the handlebars was sticking out the middle of the hijacker’s back. “One down,” said Charlie Conlan. “That’s for John Rooney.”
He turned toward the backseat next. The rest of the passengers looked to be all right. Todd Snow undid his seat belt, crawled across broken glass, and ripped at the tape on Conlan’s wrists. They stared as the third passenger in the backseat took off a ski mask.
“Great job, fellas,” Mercedes Freer said with a big, bleached-out smile. “You saved us!” She grinned—just before Todd Snow punched out the two-faced diva’s front teeth.