T
hirteen
“C
OME
on, Sarge, give the First Amendment some respect. People have a right to know!”
The speaker was a young news reporter, green parka too large for his small frame, press credentials swaying around his neck. He was being escorted—okay,
pushed
—through the precinct’s front doors by a beefy desk sergeant who hadn’t bothered with a coat.
“Sorry, pal. When Lieutenant DeFasio says you gotta go, then you’re outta here!”
Despite the frigid temperatures, the sergeant waited in shirtsleeves until the young newsman disappeared down the sidewalk. When he turned, the sergeant spied Quinn.
“Mike!” he said, greeting Quinn with a smile and a handshake. “Welcome back.”
“Trouble?” Quinn asked.
“Nah, just another newshound who thinks he can bypass Popeye’s press conferences. So what brings you here?”
“Same thing as that reporter,” Quinn replied, his breath fogging the icy air. “I want to speak with DeFasio.”
The sergeant nodded, and led us through the glass doors.
The lobby smelled of cleaning fluid and air freshener. Like many older city buildings, the steam plant was running overtime. Somewhere deep inside the precinct house, an overheated radiator clanked repeatedly.
We followed the sergeant to his desk; but when he reached for the phone, Quinn stopped him. “Do me a favor, don’t call us in. I’d like to surprise him.”
The sergeant shrugged. “Be my guest.”
A few steps away, we overheard the sergeant talking to a patrolman: “I told DeFasio the Feds would try to muscle in again, only a matter of time.”
Quinn didn’t appear bothered by the words, but it set me flashing on the sight of that reporter being physically thrown out.
“What if the lieutenant refuses to see anyone right now?” I asked Quinn as we moved down a cabinet-lined hallway.
Quinn waved aside my worries. “He’ll see me. I’m not just a former colleague, now I’m an agent of the U.S. Justice Department. That kind of clout will get us through the door.”
Maybe,
I thought, clutching my tote bag tighter,
but just in case I’m glad I brought some culinary backup.
At the end of the brightly lit corridor I spied a fire door with a not-so-friendly
Keep the Hell Out
sign taped over the official
NYPD Bomb Squad
plaque.
Quinn paused for a moment to consider the sign. Then he balled his fist and boldly pounded on the door. That persistently clanging radiator suddenly stopped (which led me to believe it hadn’t been a radiator after all).
Finally, a deep voice roared, “Who the hell is beating down my door?”
“Open up, you pyromaniac,” Quinn called. “It’s the
Federales
!”
“I dealt with your people already. Go join your posse at One PP.”
“It’s Mike Quinn—and a civilian.”
The lock clicked and the door opened inward. A stocky, broad-shouldered man in a form-fitting NYPD tee appeared. He ran a hand through spiky, salt-and-pepper hair. Then he folded his muscular arms and leaned against the heavy door, barring our way.
“Quinn,” he said with a cautious nod. “So it is you.”
Our human barricade had a generous mouth under a roman nose. He looked about forty with a rough complexion and dark, close-set eyes that went from suspicious to attentive when they met my wide-open, green ones.
“And who is
this
?” he asked with naked interest.
Quinn stepped forward. “Clare Cosi, meet Detective Lieutenant Dennis DeFasio, aka, Dennis the Menace.”
“
Buona sera
, Miss Cosi,” DeFasio said, gently shaking my hand. His gaze went from me to Quinn and back again. “By the possessive way the big guy is looking at you, I can tell you two are
close
. Guess this old firehouse mick is trying to improve his pedigree.”
“Watch it, Firecracker. Another ethnic slur will get you a mandatory seat at a sensitivity training seminar.”
“Nah. All that touchy-feely stuff is a Fed thing. But then, you’d know all about that now, wouldn’t you, Mike?”
“Easy, Dennis. I’m not here for a pissing contest—”
“Then why are you here? The FBI has come and gone. They know and we know this wasn’t terrorism.”
“How?”
“The type of device, the lack of chatter, no claim of responsibility, and a dozen other indicators, none of which I’m at liberty to discuss. You know I pull bombs off cars and trucks dozens of times a year. They’re planted by criminal rivals, disgruntled employees, angry business partners, and scheming spouses. And guess what, Mike: there’s a helluva lot more of them than there are jihadists. But then, their firecrackers hardly ever go off—or make the papers. So take a hike downtown and wait for the commissioner’s briefing at One Police Plaza like everybody else.”
I never saw clout wither and die before. It wasn’t pretty. Quinn raised his hands in surrender.
“Wait just a second, okay? I’m not here in any official capacity,
Clare
is. She’s an eyewitness to yesterday’s bomb blast and has information that may help.”
DeFasio seemed underwhelmed. “I have a folder full of eyewitnesses. I’ll be turning it over to the investigating officers first thing in the morning. Leave your name and address with the desk sergeant and—”
“And,” I sharply cut in, “how many of your witnesses were speaking with the owner of the car when it blew up? I was.”
“That’s right,” Quinn quickly added, “and Clare has pertinent information to the investigation. These statements are time sensitive, too, and may involve other victims.”
DeFasio didn’t budge. “Talk to the sergeant. He’ll get you in touch with the investigators.” He checked his watch. “In a few hours.”
“Oh, come on, Lieutenant.” I stepped closer. “We’re here now. Aren’t you curious what I have to say? What have you got to lose? Except the opportunity to sample a batch of my homemade fudge.”
“Fudge?” The stonewall weakened. DeFasio’s tight mouth loosened and his eyebrows lifted with interest as he watched me reach into my trusty tote. I pulled out a large plastic container and waved it under his Roman nose.
“This box is filled with freshly sliced squares of my special Baileys Irish Cream and Caramel-Nut Fudge. It’s absolute heaven with a hot cup of coffee.”
A groan echoed from somewhere beyond the door. Then a desperate voice cried out, “For God’s sake, Dennis, let her in! The lady’s got spiked fudge.
Spiked fudge!
”
DeFasio rolled his eyes—and waved us in. “Let’s talk in my office.”
Score!
I glanced at Quinn and he flashed me a look—half amusement, half admiration.
Fudge one, Feds none.
Honestly, I wasn’t surprised. In my view, you couldn’t count on people to be hungry for justice. But you could always count on them to be hungry.
F
ourteen
A
S
soon as I stepped through the steel door, I had to make a sharp, right turn into a long hallway that led to the Bomb Squad’s HQ. In that shadowy corridor I confronted my second bomb in twelve hours.
I suppose I should have expected something like this. As my grandmother used to say (in Italian, of course), “You shouldn’t be surprised to find fruit at the fruit market!” Nevertheless, the sight of a missile-like explosive device dangling over my head by a few micro-thin wires was unnerving, and the shark teeth painted on the tube’s pointed snout didn’t help.
“Don’t let Minnie scare you,” DeFasio said, seeing my reaction. “Generally speaking, bombs only go off when someone wants them to.”
“But that thing is hanging from the ceiling by threads. What if it dropped?”
“Even if she fell”—he loudly clapped his hands—“this old girl still wouldn’t explode. A bomb is one of the most stable devices in the world, Ms. Cosi—”
DeFasio grinned impishly, his bright teeth flashing against his dusky complexion. “Until she isn’t.”
“Sounds like a teenage daughter.”
DeFasio snorted, glanced at Quinn. “I like her.”
“Yeah? Me, too.”
“Come on . . .”
We followed the lieutenant to a place few civilians, or even police officers, had ever been: the Bomb Squad’s inner sanctum.
The chaotic space more resembled a military arsenal than an office. Most of the desk, the shelves, the filing cabinets, and sections of the floor were cluttered with explosive devices.
Hand grenades lay scattered like overripe plums under a tree, each tagged with the country of origin. Among them were complex bombs with rainbows of colored wires attaching clocks to batteries or cell phones, missing only the explosives that would turn them into weapons of mass destruction.
Artillery rounds lined one wall, placed short to tall. Above them, jars and vials of various sizes were crammed on a shelf labeled
Molotov Cocktails
.
Lining the walls were photographs of bombs, X-ray images of lethal devices, and notices from the FBI, ATF, NSA, and Homeland Security, some of which nearly papered over official portraits of the mayor and police commissioner—the man whom the rank and file had nicknamed Popeye, primarily because he resembled the sailorman, complete with a smile that looked like a wince.
DeFasio sat Quinn and me down in dented chairs across from his gunmetal-steel desk. Then the head of the A-Team sunk into a swivel chair and faced Quinn.
“So how’s the Washington gig?”
“Complicated.”
DeFasio briefly held his nose. “I’ll bet. Feds know how to pile it on, higher and deeper, until they stink up the room. I had my fill of G-man stuff in the army.”
Quinn had told me DeFasio was an ordnance officer during the Gulf War. He’d joined the NYPD right after the military and was sent to the Hazardous Devices School in Alabama—known in the trade as “Bomb 101”—before joining the A-Team. DeFasio, like every other member of the Bomb Squad, carried a detective’s shield, but they preferred to be addressed as Bomb Technician, or “Tech” rather than “Detective.”
With mounting impatience (and nervous leg syndrome), I watched Quinn and DeFasio dance around the reason for our visit. Just when I was about to scream—
Lives are in danger and we’re wasting time!—
we were interrupted by a third detective poking his head through the door.
“Yo, boss?”
“Something eating you, Spinelli?” DeFasio barked.
“More like something I’m
not
eating.”
Younger than his commander by at least a decade, the wiry newcomer wore an identical NYPD tee but with sleeves cut away to display sinewy arms etched with military tattoos. I later discovered that Martin Spinelli was a younger version of his boss, the difference being that Spinelli got his first ordnance training in the Marine Corps, and had served in Afghanistan.
“I heard a rumor that spiked fudge was on the premises,” Spinelli said.
I reached for my backpack. “If this officer could show me to the kitchen, I can brew coffee to go with the fudge.”
The Bomb Squad had a kitchen, a lounge, and a barracks, too. Like firemen, at least one of the city’s multi-man teams was on duty twenty-four/seven to answer emergency calls across the five boroughs—and I’d spotted the kitchen on our way in. The door was closed, but I noticed several cases of Brooklyn’s Best Sweet Tea (a pricey artisan beverage) were stacked outside. It struck me as odd.
“That’s an awful lot of sweet tea,” I noted.
DeFasio frowned and his animated arms went rigid. “Techs are trying to re-create yesterday’s bomb in the kitchen, so it’s
off limits
.”
That explained the noises I’d heard as we passed the door—a strange hissing rush that didn’t register as any pantry sound I’d ever experienced.
“Spinelli, grab a fresh pot and bring cups for everyone.”
“Roger that, boss.”
Minutes later, I was arranging two dozen squares of my culinary bribe on a platter. When the coffee arrived, I poured for everyone.
Soon DeFasio and Spinelli were cooing over my happy candy. Finally, DeFasio sat back in his chair and sighed, an expression of contentment on his face.
“Good stuff, Ms. Cosi,” he said before he gobbled up his fifth piece. “I’m glad you brought it.”
This hardcase was getting softer. It was time for me to strike.
“I came with more than snacks,” I said. “I’m here to help.”
I sat across from DeFasio and for the next fifteen minutes, described in detail the moments leading up to the explosion. DeFasio, Spinelli, and Quinn listened without interruption.
“So,” I concluded, “if the bomb had a timer, then it was supposed to explode someplace else. You saw the damage it did to my coffeehouse and the businesses around us. What if it was meant to explode in a crowd, or inside a building’s garage? You have to discover the real target before the bomber strikes again.”
Three heads nodded in agreement. DeFasio cleared his throat.
“We recovered fragments of an electric clock, so we know the bomb worked off a timer.”
Question answered,
I thought
. Now we need to know the real target.
Quinn spoke up. “You’d think a software billionaire would travel with some kind of security.”
DeFasio frowned. “Thorner had security.”
This was news to me. “I didn’t see a bodyguard with him.”
“That’s because his security was in the car. The individual who died in the front seat was a former New York City police officer.”
F
ifteen
A
FTER
DeFasio dropped that info bomb, he clammed up. The more I tried to pry details out of him, the more robotic the responses became. In desperation, I tossed a grenade of my own.
“Eric Thorner already told me the victim’s name was
Charley
.”
DeFasio said nothing, and the glances he exchanged with Spinelli were infuriatingly unreadable.
“Was he a detective? Was he retired?
Fired?
” Quinn asked.
“I’m not at liberty to discuss the identity of the victim until the next of kin has been officially notified,” DeFasio replied, arms folded.
I was beginning to understand this man. When DeFasio lost the ethnic gestures or lapsed into bureaucrat speak, he was holding back. I pushed harder.
“So you’re working furiously on this investigation, you’ve got guys hammering away in the kitchen re-creating the bomb. Yet you’ve failed to make a phone call to a wife, or visited a family missing a loved one? I find that very odd.”
“Informing the next of kin is someone else’s headache,” DeFasio replied, robot voice in place. “Our job is to find out how the bomb was built, when it was built, why it was built—”
“And
who
built it?”
DeFasio nodded.
“Was that why you ejected the reporter from the
Daily News
? You already have a person of interest, and the journalist was getting too close for comfort.”
DeFasio glanced at Quinn. But if he was looking for help, none came.
“Clare’s got you,” Mike said with a half-smile. “In my experience, she’s better at ferreting out information than most of the people at Justice. You might as well come clean. She’ll find out sooner or later.”
DeFasio threw up his hands. “Okay, it’s true. We have a person of interest. But we can’t prove anything. It would help if we had Thorner’s schedule—”
“Then you’d know where the blast was supposed to have taken place,” I interrupted.
“We could also determine when and where the bomb was planted. And if it placed our suspect in the general vicinity.” DeFasio shrugged. “You get it.”
“Have you talked to Thorner’s people?”
“Person. The investigators are at the hospital, waiting for Thorner to wake up after surgery. They tried speaking with Anton Alonzo. He’s Thorner’s personal and executive assistant.” DeFasio rolled his eyes. “If you think I’m a blue wall of silence, you should see how
this
guy stonewalls.”
“Too bad you didn’t appropriate Thorner’s smartphone at the hospital,” Quinn said.
“Actually, we believe we have Mr. Thorner’s phone. Crime scene techs scooped it off the floor of the Village Blend while we were sweeping for bomb fragments—”
“That’s right!” I confirmed. “Thorner had the phone in his hand before he passed out. Then the ambulance crew arrived and he was off to the hospital.”
Spinelli flicked some fudge crumbs off his shirt, and reached for another square. “You didn’t notice the phone was left behind?”
“I was injured and worried about our staff and customers. Then firefighters told us to evacuate. I took my people out for drinks and left my business partner behind to deal with your forensic units.”
“Why was Thorner holding the phone?” DeFasio asked.
“He had it in his hand when the glass hit him. Then he was holding it out to me, asking me to call 911.”
“Wish we could access the data.” Spinelli shook his head. “But that phone’s locked up tighter than a virgin’s legs—uh . . . sorry, Ms. Cosi. What I meant was, Thorner would have had to give you the password.”
“So you’ve been trying to retrieve the data on that phone?” Quinn’s tone made the question sound more like an accusation.
“What do you think?” DeFasio said evenly.
“You
do
have a warrant?”
“We have yet to establish ownership,” DeFasio replied. “Why involve a judge at this point?”
Quinn’s eyes narrowed. “You’re pushing it, Dennis. You don’t want to poison evidence by gathering it illegally.”
Spinelli snorted. “Spoken like a Fed.”
“I thought we’d gotten past that crap,” Quinn replied.
“You’re the one who’s got to get past it.” DeFasio leaned across his desk. “You used to think like a cop, Mike. Now you sound like those FBI pukes my predecessor dealt with back in ’93, after the first WTC attack.”
Quinn’s blue eyes turned frosty. “That’s a low blow, even for you.”
“Yeah? I don’t think so.”
Now both men were on their feet. “You’ve got me all wrong, Dennis, and I don’t appreciate—”
“Wait!” I cried.
The two men looked at me.
Fearing fists would fly, I moved between them. “Gentlemen, I don’t understand your reference. Would somebody mind explaining what happened in 1993?”
Frankly, I didn’t care—but if it would get these guys to “chill,” as my barista Dante was fond of saying, I would listen.
“You see!” Now DeFasio was addressing his underling. “In a post–9/11 world, civilians like her have completely forgotten the World Trade Center was bombed once before!”
“And?” I prompted.
“And . . .” DeFasio threw up his hands and sat. Quinn settled down, too. Their stare-off continued, but at least both men were back in their own corners.
“. . . one of this squad’s technicians found the chassis of the van that carried in the explosives. The Feds told him not to touch the evidence, leave it where it was, but he was worried a cave-in might destroy it, so he violated every protocol and moved it. At the lab on 20th Street, our guys broke protocols again by dousing the chassis with acid so they could read the VIN number. When the FBI found out, all hell broke loose.”
“Why did they risk breaking protocols?” I asked.
“Because it solved the case!” DeFasio replied, spearing Quinn.
“It’s true,” Spinelli added. “Within twenty-four hours, that VIN number led to the rental agency that owned the truck, then to the bombers themselves. Arrests were made and the perps were in custody. Doing it the Fed’s way would have given the bombers time to escape and bomb again.”
“That’s why I’m pushing,” DeFasio said. “This bomber killed one of our own. Time is critical, and I don’t want the bastard who planted that bomb to get away with murder. Anyway, it’s a moot point. A warrant isn’t going to do us any good if we can’t hack the passcode.”