Tick Tock

Tick Tock Read Free Page B

Book: Tick Tock Read Free
Author: James Patterson
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers, Fiction / Thrillers
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cake.
    “Fine, fine. You ready to see the main attraction?” Cell said, ushering me through the library door with a gracious wave of his hand.
    “No, but let’s do it, anyway,” I said, taking a breath.
    We passed another half dozen even more nervous-looking cops as we crossed the library’s monster marble entry hall to a flight of stone stairs. More bomb techs were helping their buddy out of the green astronaut-like Kevlar bomb suit in the ostentatious wood-paneled rotunda on the third floor. Another guy was putting away the four-wheeler wireless robot and the X-ray equipment.
    “Uh, won’t we need that stuff?” I said.
    Cell shook his head.
    “We already deactivated the device. Actually, we didn’t have to. It wasn’t meant to go off. Here, I’ll show you.”
    I reluctantly followed him into the cavernous reading room. The space resembled a ballroom and was even more impressive than the entry hall, with its massive arched windows, chandeliers, and nineteenth-century indoor football field of books. The last library table in the northern end zone of the elaborate room was covered by a thick orange Kevlar bomb-suppression blanket. I felt my pulse triple and my hands clench involuntarily as Cell lifted it off.
    In the center of the table was what looked like a silverlaptop. Then I saw the nails and wires and claylike plastique explosive where the keyboard should have been, and shivered.
    On the screen, the chilling and redundant words
I AM A BOMB
flashed on and off before the scrolling message:
    THIS WASN’T SUPPOSED TO GO BOOM, BUT THE NEXT ONE WILL. I SWEAR IT ON POOR LAWRENCE’S EYES.
    “This guy has style,” Cell said, looking almost admiringly at the bomb. “It’s basically like a Claymore mine. Two K’s of plastique behind all these nails, one huge mother of a shotgun shell. All wired to a nifty motion-sensitive mercury switch, only the second one I’ve ever seen. He even glued it to the desk so someone would have to open it and spill the mercury.”
    “How… interactive of him,” I said, shaking my head.
    By far, my least favorite part of the message was the ominous reference to the next one. I was afraid of that. It looked like somebody wanted to play a little game with the NYPD. Considering I was on vacation, unless it was beach ball, I really wasn’t that interested in games.
    “He used a real light touch with a soldering gun to wire it up to the battery. He must know computers as well, because even though the hard drive is missing, he was able to program his little greeting card through the computer’s firmware internal operating system.”
    “Why didn’t it go off?” I said.
    “He cut one of the wires and capped both ends in order for it
not
to go off, thank God. Security guy said the room was packed, like it is every Saturday. This would have killed a dozen people easily, Mike. Maybe two dozen. The blast wave itself from this much plastique could collapse a house.”
    We stared silently at the scrolling message.
    “It almost sounds like a poem, doesn’t it?” Cell said.
    “Yeah,” I said, taking out my BlackBerry and speed-dialing my boss. “I’ve even seen the style before. It’s called psychotic pentameter.”
    “Tell me what we got, Mike,” Miriam said a moment later.
    “Miriam,” I said, staring at the flashing
I AM A BOMB
. “What we got here is a problem.”

Chapter 6
    THE ALEXANDER HOTEL just off Madison on 44th was understaffed, overpriced, and excessively seedy. All the grim, peeling walls, off-white towels, and pot smoke and piss stench $175 a night could buy.
    Sitting cross-legged on the desk that he’d moved in front of his top-floor room’s window, Berger slowly panned his camera across the columns and entablatures of the landmark marble library seventeen stories below.
    The $11,000 Nikkor super-zoom lens attached to his 35-millimeter digital camera could make faces distinguishable at up to a mile. At a block and a half, with the incredibly vivid

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