appreciate the cooperation,” Larkin said, and hung up.
En route from the Schoolhouse to the Federal Courts Building in Captain Mike Sabara’s unmarked car, Detective Payne realized that he had no idea where in the Federal Courts Building he was to meet Supervisory Special Agent H. Charles Larkin. For that matter, he didn’t know where in the building the Secret Service maintained its offices, and he suspected that he would not be allowed to drive a car into the building’s basement garage without the proper stickers on its windshield.
Fuck it, he decided. I’ll park right in front of the place, and worry about fixing the ticket later.
His concerns were not justified. When he pulled to the curb, Larkin was standing there waiting for him. He pulled open the passenger side door and got in.
“Good morning, Detective Payne,” he said cheerfully. “And how are you this bright and sunny morning?”
Matt opened his mouth to reply, but before a word came out, Larkin went on: “Has this thing got a whistle?”
He means “siren,” Detective Payne mentally translated.
He looked down at the row of switches mounted below the dash. He saw Larkin’s finger flip one up and the siren began to howl.
“A Jersey State Trooper is waiting for us on the Jersey side of the Ben Franklin Bridge,” Larkin said.
Matt looked into his rearview mirror and pulled into the stream of traffic.
No one got out of his way, despite the wailing siren, and, Matt presumed, flashing lights concealed behind the grill.
Larkin read his mind:
“If you think this is bad, try doing it in New York City. They get out of the way of a whistle only when it’s mounted on a thirty-ton fire truck.”
There was a New Jersey State Trooper car waiting in a toll booth lane on the Jersey side of the bridge, the lights on its bubble gum machine flashing. As Matt pulled up behind it, a State Trooper, his brimmed cap so low on his nose that Matt wondered how he could see, came up.
“Secret Service?”
“Larkin,” Larkin said, holding out a leather identification folder. “I appreciate the cooperation.”
“We’re on our way,” the Trooper said and trotted to his car.
There were more vehicles than Matt could count around what looked like a depression off a dirt road in the Pine Barrens, so many that a deputy sheriff had been detailed to direct traffic. He waved them to a stop.
“I’m Larkin, Secret Service,” Larkin said, leaning across Matt to speak to him.
“Yes, sir, we’ve been waiting for you,” the sheriff said. “Pull it over there. Everybody’s in the garbage dump.”
Matt parked the car and then followed Larkin to the depression, which he saw was in fact a garbage dump.
A tall, slender man with rimless glasses detached himself from a group of men, half in one kind or another of police uniform, a few in civilian clothes, and several in overalls with FEDERAL AGENT printed in large letters across their backs.
“Mr. Larkin?” the man asked, and when Larkin nodded, he went on, “I’m Howard Samm, I have the Atlantic City office of ATF.”
“I’m very glad to meet you,” Larkin said. “I can’t tell you how much I appreciate your help with this.”
“I like to think we have a pretty good team,” Samm said. “And Agent Glynes was really on the ball with this, wasn’t he? We didn’t get that Request for All Information teletype until yesterday.”
“He certainly was,” Larkin said. “Mr. Samm, this is Detective Payne of the Philadelphia Police Department. He’s working with us.”
Samm shook Matt’s hand.
Well, that’s very nice of you, Mr. Larkin, but it’s bullshit. Unless driving you around and running errands is “working with you.”
“Well, what have we got?” Larkin asked.
“Somebody has been blowing things—specifically metal lockers, the kind you find in airports, bus stations—up with high explosives. My senior technician—the large fellow, in the coveralls?—says he’s almost sure it’s Composition C-4.”
“When will we know for sure?”
“We just finished making sure the rest of the lockers weren’t booby-trapped. The next step is taking a locker to the lab.”
He pointed. Matt looked. Two of the men in coveralls were dragging a cable from a wrecker with MODERN CHEVROLET painted on its doors down to the remnants of a row of rental lockers. A Dodge van with no identifying marks on it waited for it, its rear doors open.
“We have any idea who’s been doing this?” Larkin asked.
“That’s going to be a problem, I’m afraid,” Samms said.
“Not even a wild hair?” Larkin asked. “Who owns this property? Has anybody talked to him?”