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The top of Jack’s head slammed into Khan’s jaw with a satisfying crack. Jack saw stars, felt a sharp pain, but he knew the Afghani was hurting more. Khan Ali Kahlil attempted to choke him again, but Jack managed to get both hands around the cord. Though the rough hemp ripped the palms of his hands, the rope no longer strangled Jack. Now the dog was controlling the leash, and Jack used his weight to throw Khan Ali Kahlil backward, against the aluminum guardrail. He felt the man’s ribs crack, heard the Afghani howl.

Khan Ali Kahlil still gripped the garrote, and that was his mistake. Younger, stronger, and better trained, Jack recovered immediately. Now he used his own weight to press Khan against the rail while he pummeled the man with his elbows, the backs of his arms. Finally Jack seized the Afghani man’s wrist and twisted out of his grip. The bones in Khan’s forearms twisted, then snapped. He howled and released the cord. An elbow to his face shattered Khan’s nose, sending black blood cascading down the front of his loose cotton shirt.

Jack could easily finish the man, but he needed Khan alive and as cooperative as possible. He whirled, pinned Khan’s good arm behind his back.

“Surrender,” Jack cried, pressing the man against the Promenade’s aluminum guardrail. “Tell me what your brother is doing with the Lynch brothers and Felix Tanner. Tell me where the missile launchers are hidden. Cooperate and I can guarantee the President of the United States will grant you immunity from all past crimes.”

Eyes bright, Khan ceased struggling as he seemed to consider Jack’s words. He grinned behind the ooze of blood that gushed from his flattened nose. “I will help you.”

Jack stepped back, released the man. “Listen to me, Khan Ali Kahlil. I know that you’ve made a life for yourself here. Don’t throw it all away for a struggle that is not yours, for a dying cause—”

Khan lashed out, slamming Jack’s jaw with a balled fist. The blow was meant to crush his throat, but Jack saw it coming and dodged it. Khan turned and jumped over the guardrail. Jack made it to the fence in time to see the man land headfirst on the roadway forty feet below, in the path of rushing traffic. Horns blared, brakes squealed, a woman screamed.

Jack looked away, stumbled to the bench where he’d almost lost his life. The flesh around Jack’s throat was raw, his palms gouged and sticky with blood. He stared at the wounds. As the adrenaline drained out of him, his hands began to tremble uncontrollably.

He felt weak and nauseated. He thought of his wife, Teri, his daughter, Kim — now almost a teenager. Who would take care of his family if he had died here, a wanted fugitive three thousand miles from home, hunted by the FBI?

Glancing up, Jack’s gaze traveled across the river and up the gleaming glass walls of the World Trade Center. Those towers, the city around them — it all seemed so massive and permanent. Was this city, this country really in mortal danger? Could this enormous city, this entire nation, ever really be hurt by a haphazard cadre of individual terrorists? As he gazed at those twin towers, so solid, so substantial, the concept suddenly seemed absurd. Yet Jack knew from experience the kind of acts such men as Taj and Khan Ali Kahlil and the Lynch brothers were capable.

Jack reached for his cell phone to check back with CTU. With Khan Ali Kahlil dead and his brother Taj missing, Jack had run out of options. Then remembered he’d given the phone, ID, PDA, and even his.45 to Caitlin — and right now he didn’t even know where she was.

10:19:45 A.M.EDT Aboard the Manhattan-bound R Train

A battered Liam immediately left the scene of the lethal explosion. Delivery was impossible, and he still clutched the silver attaché case. The first time he’d made a delivery to Taj, several weeks ago or more, Shamus told him that if something happened and he couldn’t make the delivery, he was to return the case to the Lynch brothers’ Green Dragon store in Forest Hills. With no other plan, Liam now followed those same instructions.

Unfortunately, the blast and subsequent rupture of a water main had forced the closure of the 2 and 3 train routes, so it took him nearly forty-five minutes to walk across downtown Brooklyn to the nearest working subway, the Manhattan-bound R train.

Now, as he sat in a corner seat in the crowded subway, the attaché case on his lap, his sister Caitlin’s words from the night before came to mind. Was this delivery on the up-and-up? If it was, then why did the police, the FBI, raid Kahlil’s store? Was Taj some kind of crook?

And what if I’d been inside when the FBI charged the building? Liam thought. Then I’d be dead, too. What is in this case that’s so bleedin’ important that it had to be delivered in the middle of the night? Am I carrying what the FBI and the police were looking for?

Liam fingered the case, noting for the first time that one of the clasps had already been broken and hung loose — probably by the fall onto the subway tracks. He touched the other latch and it sprung open. Liam paused, looked around.

If the case was full of money or cocaine or something, he didn’t want anyone else in the packed subway to notice. But everyone was minding his own business, reading the paper or dozing or listening to music on their Walkmans so he decided to risk it.

Taking a deep breath, Liam opened the case.

Inside he found sponge packing material and a black plastic device lying in a formed depression. Long and thin, the black plastic object seemed innocent enough. Liam touched it, picked it up. On the smooth unbroken surface he saw a serial number, a plug-in port of some kind, and nothing else. Obviously the object was just what Shamus said it was, some bloody part for a computer.

Liam placed the device back into the depression, lifted the sponge packing. Under it he saw two black squares, each the size of a pack of coffin nails. They were completely covered with electrical tape. More tape held the squares to the side of the case. Liam figured it was just more packing material. He closed the case and leaned back with relief.

In another hour or so he’d be in Forest Hills. He could return the case to Shamus, go back to The Last Celt and catch some zeds at last…

10:34:40 A.M.EDT CTU Headquarters, Los Angeles

Jamey was following Nina Myers’s sole lead — the identity of Felix Tanner. Using state, federal, and local databases, banking information, tax records, and corporate registers, she found some interesting connections.

For one thing, according to tax records from the Lynch brothers’ Green Dragon franchise, most of the shop’s income was generated by a vaguely worded contract Griffin Lynch had signed with Prolix Security, the firm taken over by Felix Tanner.

Even more interesting, with some electronic digging Jamey also discovered that Wexler Business Storage— the company that owned the SUV that had served as Dante Arete’s deathtrap — had only two clients renting space in their Houston Street storage facility. One was Green Dragon Computers of Forest Hills, the other firm was Prolix Security of Manhattan.

Jamey grinned as she added the intelligence to her electronic data log.

Let’s see Nina Myers accuse me of “sloppy performance” now!

10:59:56 A.M.EDT Montague Street, Brooklyn

Following the homing technology embedded inside his digital watch, Jack located the narrow-band beacon signal constantly broadcast by his CTU-issue Personal Digital Assistant. There was a lot of interference, and sometimes he stumbled into blind spots and lost the signal, but Jack knew that Caitlin must be close or he would not be receiving the signal at all.

Along a trendy, upscale commercial area on tree-lined Montague Street in Brooklyn Heights, the signal became very strong. As Jack wove his way through throngs of late morning shoppers, the watch began to emit tiny beeps — a warning that he was within fifty yards of his PDA.