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I roll him up onto his side, reach underneath, and unbuckle it.

She grabs the buckle end and yanks it several times until it comes free from his pants. She puts the belt under his chest, tells me to lay him down flat on his stomach, and fastens the belt directly over the plastic bag and the wound. She runs the open end of the belt through the buckle and pulls it as tight as she can. She puts her knee against the center of his back and pulls harder. “I know this looks bad, but it’s a sucking chest wound and I have to seal it off or else he’ll drown in his own blood.”

I notice that the bubbles stop.

She opens Herman’s mouth, reaches between his teeth with two fingers, and scoops out blood. She does this two or three times, each time reaching back farther toward his throat to clear his airway.

We roll him onto his back and she starts doing heavy compressions on his chest as I open his mouth, move his tongue out of the way, and try to blow air into his lungs.

FORTY-FIVE

Zeb Thorpe had been in the command center at FBI headquarters since shortly after six that morning. He was called in early on an emergency in New York and was busy watching live images on a screen as transit authorities, police in New York, and construction workers tried to stabilize a cement truck and pull it away from an open cavern over the Fulton Street subway station.

Transit police had managed to stop the truck, but four of the eight rear wheels on the dual doubles were already over the edge of the hole.

Thorpe believed he already knew what was on board the truck, and it wasn’t cement. Victor Soyev, the Russian arms merchant, had given them leads, all of them pointing to New York as the target. Thorpe’s people had turned over every rock until they found the garage in upstate New York where the work had been done. From there they were within hours of running the thing down when the cement truck turned up at the building site.

The bomb squad had already confirmed that the mixing drum on the back of the truck was welded into position so that it couldn’t turn. And there were wires leading from the drum through holes in the cab to a metal box that appeared to be a triggering device. Transit police had shot the driver dead before his hands could reach the trigger.

But if the rear wheels slid a few more inches, the front end of the truck would lift up and the entire vehicle would tumble into the open cavern below. The bomb squad was concerned that a trembler switch might be connected to the detonator. If so, any sudden jarring would set it off.

Authorities were desperately trying to clear the subway below, to get everyone out, as workers used a heavy cable from one of the construction cranes and a D9 Caterpillar bulldozer to try to stabilize the truck and pull it back from the opening. The question was whether the bulldozer was heavy enough, or if the weight of the truck and the mammoth air-fuel bomb might pull the entire truck down into the hole.

“Mr. Thorpe, telephone call for you on line one.” It was Thorpe’s secretary, her head through the door. “Caller says it’s urgent.”

“Not now,” said Thorpe. “Who is it?”

“Mr. Madriani.”

“Take a message,” said Thorpe. “Tell him to turn on his television, cable news. Tell him I’ll call him back.”

“He says his investigator has just been stabbed. It happened right here in the city, near a hotel downtown just a few minutes ago. He says a man named Liquida did it.”

“Tell him to call the police,” said Thorpe.

“He already has. He says paramedics are working on the man who was stabbed, but that it doesn’t look good. He wants to know why our agents weren’t there.”

“What’s he talking about? The last I heard, Madriani was headed out of the States somewhere. Puerto Rico, as I recall. Are we supposed to be everywhere?” said Thorpe.

“He says somebody by the name of Thorn got away. And that he’s up to something near the Capitol.”

“Tell him not now. I’ll have to call him back. Get a number.”

Joselyn finished getting dressed, then checked her watch. It was almost ten o’clock. She was wondering how Herman could be so sure that the police and the FBI had fallen down on the job and that Thorn was running free. After all, Joselyn had had assurances direct from the lips of god that the authorities were on top of it.

Still, it wouldn’t hurt to check, but she didn’t want to insult him. After all, he was the one who’d fed her the highly secretive information on the loose nuke in Coronado involved in the attack on the navy base. He was her compatriot in crime when it came to insider stuff whenever the government was trying to hide things under the nutshell of national security.

The man knew where all the bodies were buried because of his status, his position and unique access to information. And for that reason Joselyn had to protect him. Portions of what he had told her over the years were sufficiently sensitive that he could go to jail if the facts were known.

Because of the risks he took in a worthwhile cause, she considered him a true patriot. It was too early to reach him in the office, but Joselyn had his private cell number.

She had to tell him that Thorn was on the move, roaming near the Capitol. He would want to know, even if the FBI had everything under control. She called up the contact list on her iPhone and thumbed in the first three letters. She hadn’t even gotten to the h when the words “Joshua Root, Chairman, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,” popped up on the phone’s screen.

As soon as the paramedics arrived, the nurse and I moved back and allowed them to take over. There was no FBI, and the only police on the scene were the first responders who had come in just ahead of the ambulance.

Nobody other than Herman was watching Thorn. According to Thorpe’s secretary, he had no agents on the ground tracking Thorn. What was worse, he didn’t have a clue as to what Thorn was up to in Washington. What had happened to all of Joselyn’s phone calls and the assurances from her contact?

Herman lies on the ground surrounded by a growing throng of gawkers as the paramedics work furiously trying to keep him alive. Swallowed up in the emerging crowd, I have never felt so alone in my life.

My blood-soaked shirt lies balled up on the concrete next to Herman’s body. One of the firemen from the pumper truck that accompanied the ambulance hands me a yellow fire jacket from the back of the truck. I put it on to cover my bare, blood-streaked upper body.

The ambulance and fire truck block the garage entrance and exit as police cordon off the entire area around the building with yellow tape. The paramedics have now been at it for more than ten minutes. You can read it in their eyes, see it on their faces as they work feverishly; Herman isn’t going to make it.

He lies unconscious on his back on a flat body board as they work on him. His head is back, Adam’s apple protruding, eyes half open in that glazed look of death. They are having trouble finding a pulse. They started an IV but his blood pressure keeps dropping until the monitor finally flatlines.

One of the paramedics rips Herman’s shirt down the middle with a pair of scissors. He reaches over, grabs the portable paddles from the defibrillator, and then flips the dial. “Clear!” Everybody backs away. He places the paddles diagonally across Herman’s chest and pulls the trigger. Herman’s upper body heaves as his back arches up off the body board.

The monitor beeps and a weak pulse jots across the screen and then goes flat.

“Again.” The paramedic lifts the paddles and hits the switch on the defibrillator. The machine makes a whining sound as it re-charges the coil. “Clear!” They back away once more. Herman’s body arches up again and the monitor picks up the blip as his heart muscle convulses with the electrical shock.