“I don’t know what the hell we’ve stumbled onto here and until I do, you’re going to do as I say.”
Harvath had no choice but to comply. “Listen,” he said as he lay down on the ground. “There’s a man retreating along the pathway-dark hair, mid-forties, with dark pants and shirt. He looks Spanish or Italian. That’s who we were waiting for. He may be connected to today’s bombings. We need to apprehend him for questioning. Please.”
The officer looked down at Harvath and then over at his partner. “Frank, you wanna take a look?”
“Sure,” replied the partner. “Why not?”
Before Harvath could object, the officer’s horse crunched through the brush and clattered out onto the paved walkway, its hoofbeats echoing like machine-gun fire off the stone walls of the Denesmouth Arch.
“You see anything?” yelled the first officer.
“Nope,” replied the partner, who then said, “Wait a second, yeah I think I do. Wait here. I’ll be right back.”
Spurring his horse into a trot, the partner rode along the pathway and disappeared beneath the arch.
“You’re making a mistake,” said Harvath.
“First you want us to apprehend the guy, and now we’re making a mistake?” said the cop in his thick New York accent. “What’s wrong with you? You retarded or something?”
“He didn’t want you to go, dumb-ass,” replied Herrington. “He wanted us to.”
“Watch your mouth, smart guy.”
“Your partner’s going to scare him off,” said Morgan.
“Or worse,” added Cates.
“Okay, everybody shut up,” demanded the mounted patrolman. “You. Homeland Security,” he said as he pointed his pistol at Harvath. “I want you to very slowly use your left hand to remove your creds from your pocket. Remember, very slowly.”
Suddenly, there was a burst of activity over the officer’s radio as his partner yelled, “The suspect is fleeing. West towards Fifth Avenue and the Sixty-fourth Street exit. One-Baker-Eleven in pur-”
The transmission was cut short by the unmistakable crack of gunfire.
The officer who had remained behind to watch Harvath and the other three men radioed shots fired to his dispatcher and then said, “One-Baker-Eleven, come in. Frank, talk to me. What the hell is going on?”
“Here,” said Harvath as he flipped open his wallet and revealed his ID. “We’re legit. Let us up.”
The cop was torn. On one hand his partner could be in grave danger, and on the other all he could think about was how Timothy McVeigh had been captured by an alert highway patrolman shortly after the Oklahoma City bombing. While everyone had been looking for Arabs, that officer had been smart enough to realize that McVeigh and the circumstances under which he was stopped warranted a closer look. It was just as true here. The cop couldn’t let these people go, ID or no ID. “No dice. Everybody stay where you are.”
Harvath couldn’t believe it. “Our suspect’s getting away and your partner could be dying or dead, for all you know.”
“One-Baker-Eleven, this is One-Baker-Twelve. Talk to me, Frank, God damn it. Talk to me.”
Harvath was about to appeal to the officer again, when a voice came over the earpiece attached to his Motorola. He listened to it for several seconds and then said to the patrolman, “I’ve shown you my ID and I’m going to stand up now. If you want to shoot a fellow law enforcement officer, that’s up to you, but I’m not going to lose that suspect.”
“I swear to God,” said the cop, “if you move I will shoot you.”
“I don’t think so,” replied Harvath as he slid his hands off his back and placed them palms-down like he was about to do push-ups.
“This is your last warning!” barked the patrolman as he steadied his weapon and took aim.
Suddenly, the well-trained police horse reared up on its hind legs. The officer was taken completely by surprise as Tracy Hastings’s deftly wielded tree limb connected with his chest and knocked him from his mount. To the man’s credit, he managed to hold on to his weapon, but it made little difference.
Cates got to the patrolman before he could find his feet and quickly stripped him of his gun.
“Cuff him,” said Harvath as he approached the startled horse, grabbed the reins, and swung up into the saddle.
“What the hell are you doing?”
“I’m going after our suspect.”
Forty-Eight
It had been a long time since Harvath had ridden a horse, and he quickly discovered that riding one on pavement was nothing at all like riding on grass or sand. Racing out from under the Delacorte Clock, the horse slipped and Harvath thought for sure they were going down, but the animal righted itself and then lunged forward.
On the north side of the Armory, Harvath saw the other horse and just beyond it the second patrolman-both had been shot, both were on the ground, and neither was moving. Harvath radioed the information back to Tracy Hastings and kept riding toward the park’s 64th Street exit.