As with any assassination, it wasn't only the opportunity to kill but the opportunity to kill and then escape to one day kill again that drove the preparations leading up to this day. Prior to leaving Hungary, Carl had spent dozens of hours with Kelly, viewing video footage provided by the X Group and planning the hit. They had a good plan.
He made his way toward a security line at Park Avenue and Fifty- second Street, two full city blocks from the Waldorf. He wore a foreign press badge that identified him as Armin Tesler, Ukraine, KYYTP Television. Beside him, Kelly was identified by a similar badge as Ionna Petriv.
We play our roles flawlessly,
he thought.
But not as flawlessly as all the others who had delivered them to Park Avenue as two Ukrainian reporters. This feat had required substantial support from Kalman and his host of contacts, none of whom Carl knew or cared to know.
They'd left Hungary by train three days ago, bound for the Ukraine, where their current coversâcomplete with passports, history, and press identification papersâhad been previously arranged. Their fingerprints had even been registered with the CIA and Secret Service. Kelly told him that these kinds of details had been handled long in advance through an extensive identity-requisition program that Kalman had fine-tuned over the years.
From Kiev, they'd flown through London into New York, arriving two days earlier.
First order of business: establishment of an operations center out of a hotel in Manhattan. This task required renting three separate rooms in their assumed names. Two were dummy rooms, in which they'd hidden miniature video cameras that sent signals to the third room, in which they would actually sleep and operate. In one of these dummy rooms, #202 in the Peking Grand Hotel, they'd left several spent rifle cartridges and a red message painted on the wall: “Death to America, Praise Be to Allah.” They'd made the room appear lived in and demanded that housekeeping not disturb them. Strategically planted clues would lead investigators to this room and slow down the post-assassination investigation. The delay would buy them time to chart an alternate escape if their planned route was cut off.
Another dummy room, #301 in the Chinatown Best Western, was reserved in the event that they needed to switch operational centers. They'd bagged several weapons and hidden them in the toilet tank. Otherwise the room was left undisturbed.
The hotel they selected as their actual operations center was a seedy place in Chinatown called the New York Dragon.
Second order of business: weapons. There was only one weapon Carl needed for the actual operation: a rifle. Anything else he might need, he could fabricate out of materials at hand.
Kelly had obtained the rifle he would use from a contact in New Jersey. An M40A3, nearly identical to the one Carl preferred in Hungary, sighted in at four hundred yards, with a Leopold Vari-X 4x12 scope, three-inch eye relief, and nonglare lens. The rifle had been modified for quick disassembly. It fit neatly into a soft-sided tripod bag normally used for a camera.
The host of assassin's tools common to the trade was useless in this setting. No vest, no night-vision equipment, no knives, nothing that smelled or looked anything remotely like something an assassin would wear. In this kill, Carl would simply be a shooter who pulled off a shot that only a couple of living souls could pull off.
Third order of business: reconnaissance of both the kill zones and the general area of operations. They'd spent the better part of the previous day walking the streets of midtown Manhattan, riding the subway from Central Park to Chinatown and taking taxis to a dozen destinations both in Manhattan and the two kill zones.
Fourth order of business: rehearsal of execution. Essentially a walk-through of the actual assassination. Carl had developed two alternate plans: one for a dinner of dignitaries at the Waldorf, which Assim Feroz was expected to attend; and one for a press conference scheduled at Central Park the following day, which Feroz would also participate in.
Each zone had been identified by Kalmanâhow, Carl didn't care. His task had been to find a place from which to shoot and escape during a narrow window of opportunity. He'd scouted both zones on foot in the dead of night, and then again the following day while the streets were crowded with cars and pedestrians. One shot would be made from a hotel room. The second, if required, would be made from a garbage bin.
Fifth order of business: performance of their roles, which they were doing now. Part of the X Group's training had involved role-playing, not simply on a conscious level, but deep down where belief was formed. Because he'd frequently been manipulated into assuming a particular identity, Carl now found that willfully playing a Ukrainian correspondent came easily.
He took a deep breath and regarded the bustle of the crowd around him. He judged each face that passed into his field of vision to determine if any threat might hide behind the eyes.
“We should go into the hotel,” he said softly.
Kelly cast him a natural glance. “It wasn't planned.”
“Then we should change the plan. We have time.”
She didn't respond. Any changes were his prerogativeâshe trusted him. Her trust made him proud.
A line of police cars and construction barriers cut off the street ahead. Carl walked toward the security check.
The guard eyed him with a steely stare, and Carl smiled gently. “Busy day,” he said, shifting to a nondescript European accent. With the blending of cultures in Europe, nearly any would do.
“Yes, it is. Can I see your identification?”
Carl unclipped his badge and handed it to the man. They were using a scanner that matched the thumbprint on the card to the thumbprint of the person carrying it. The information was relayed to a central processing station, where the authorities monitored the comings and goings of authorized cardholders.
The guard held out a small scanner, and Carl pressed his thumb on the glass surface. A soft
blip
sounded. After a few moments, the man nodded.
“Thank you, Mr. Tesler.”
It took only a minute for Kelly to pass in the same manner. Then they were in the outer security barrier. They would have to watch what they said here. Randomly placed recording devices monitored conversation. According to CNN, not all in the press were thrilled with the new security measure. Evidently they wanted to keep their comments private.
They'd passed through the second security checkpoint and were approaching the entrance to the Astoria when Assim Feroz stepped out with a small entourage and was swarmed by journalists.
Carl felt his pulse spike. Beside him, Kelly stiffened slightlyâhe felt it more than saw it.
It was the first time they'd seen the target in the flesh. Tall, gaunt, dark-haired, Iranian. This was the life that Carl would end, because that's what he did.
For a brief moment Carl wondered why they wanted him dead.
Who
wanted him dead?
What
had this man done to invite the bullet? And
why
was he agreeing to kill this man?
The last question came out of the blue, uninvited and unwelcome. The answer was obvious, of courseâhe wasn't so much agreeing to kill this man as he was agreeing to be himself. He was a killer. He was a man who knew nothing except killing. He could no more not kill than a heart could arbitrarily not beat. If he hadn't always been a killer, he was one now. And he'd been one for as long as he could properly remember.
His exposure to this noisy, confusing city was interfering with his focus. He blinked and shut out the thought.
“Closer,” he said, angling for the man who was now taking questions from an ABC correspondent. Kelly followed, pulling out a notebook.
Carl slipped between a heavyset reporter and a woman in a purple blouse, eyes fixed on the man. They were behind and to the right of the Iranian defense minister and the camera that captured the interview.
It took little effort to work his way to the front of the other journalists who were yielding space to ABC for the moment. Carl stopped ten feet from Feroz.
This was his prey. From his right, the scent of a flowery perfume. From his left, the smell of the asphalt and pollution and cooking meat. Feroz himself had practically doused himself in a spicy cologne laced with nutmeg.
Carl stepped from the circle, eyes fixed on the man's dark hair and gently working jaw. Assim's jaw was sharp and pitted, from acne, perhaps. His voice was low and gravelly. His dark, purposeful eyes cut through the crowd.
“. . . not rest until we have peace. How can one man stand against so many? Now the whole world will unite and bring peace where there has been no peace for centuries.”
An interesting voice. Carl wouldn't risk detection, despite the strong urge to pass closer to this man in his perfectly tailored suit.
Carl turned back and eyed Kelly. She stared at him, emotionless. He started to face Feroz again, saw that the camera was panning, and thought better of being caught in a full shot in the proximity of the target. Their appearances and identities would be changed immediately after the assassination, but his instinct warned him off.
A thin sheen of sweat covered Kelly's face. She wasn't comfortable with his admittedly unorthodox approach in this surveillance mission. They'd come to walk the perimeter, not enter the hotel. They hadn't expected to see the target, let alone make such a bold approach in the event that they did.
Carl guided her toward the Waldorf's revolving entry doors.
“I hope you know what you're doing,” she said.
“I wanted to know who he is.”
She didn't respond.
I want to know him so that I can know myself
.
I am a killer. Who
and how I kill define me.
They waited in line fifteen minutes before security would allow them to enter the hotel. It seemed that only a limited number of people were allowed inside at any given time. They walked up marble steps and entered a large atrium with towering pillars. Exotic floral arrangements that stood twice the height of a man blossomed in huge urns every seven paces.
Carl stopped below the arches that opened to the lobby and allowed the room to soak in. Magnificent. The old walls and ceiling were inspiring.
He scanned the room, detected no threat, and walked out to the center. Being taped by the hotel security cameras was actually to his benefit. The typical assassin would never be so bold. He faced the ceiling, where he knew the cameras hid, and examined the intricate designs etched into the wood.
Here was a building with a history. Unlike him.
Carl turned, refreshed by a sense of destiny. He was going to find himself here, in New York. The ceiling seemed to be staring down at him like a proud father. Rotating to his right like a camera on a wire. And in the center, him, staring up, lost to the world.
Are you my mother?
A hand touched his elbow. “We should go.”
Carl lowered his head. She was right. They'd come inside to see the reception hall on the tenth floor, where Assim Feroz would die this very night.
But a single sign made that impossible. A white placard etched in black calligraphy that read “No Press Above Lobby Floor.” Two guards stood at each elevator and beside the stairwell to enforce the restriction.
Carl walked toward an archway that led to specialty shops, the first of which he could see at the hall's end. “Should we go shopping?”
Kelly walked abreast and talked quietly. “Are you feeling all right?”
“What do you mean?” he asked. There were fewer people back here. “I'm feeling what I choose to feel.”
“You seem a bit erratic.”
“Because I'm making erratic choices. If it's any comfort, I can assure you that every one of these guards has been trained to pick out the calm, cool behavior of a potential assassin. It's better to play the part of an awed foreign correspondent, don't you think?”
“It just feels . . . odd. The way you're acting.”
“I don't feel odd. This building fascinates me.”
“And that's not odd? When was the last time you were fascinated by anything?”
Carl gave her a shallow grin. “I'm fascinated by you.”
Her face went red, and try as she might, she couldn't hide a grin. It was the first time he'd ever seen her so embarrassed, and strangely enough it thrilled him.
They walked by a shop window displaying gold and silver jewelry, something that held no fascination for him at the moment. The next store looked as if it sold dolls and stuffed animals. Toys. More fascinating.
“We should get back to the hotel,” Kelly said.
“I agree.”
A tall, dark-skinned man in a black suit stepped from the toy shop and faced them, eyes skittering along the hall. Secret Service.
A boy half Carl's height walked out after him, holding his purchase: a pair of compact binoculars. Polaroid XLVsâCarl knew of them. From where he couldn't remember, but he knew the binoculars. Perhaps he'd owned a pair himself when he was younger.
The boy turned blue eyes toward Carl and stopped. For a moment they exchanged stares.
“You're from the Ukraine?” he asked in a small but confident voice.
Carl wasn't sure how to respond. He should acknowledge the guess, but something about this boy struck a reverberating chord deep inside him.
“Yes,” Kelly said.
“That's good. I hope you support our president's position on Israel.” Had he seen this boy before? No, he didn't think so. As far as he knew, he hadn't really known any boys before. At least none he could remember.
The sound of feet clacking down the hall reached him.
Seven,
maybe eight pair,
he thought absently.
The Secret Service agent stepped around the boy, shielding him from Carl and Kelly. “Your father's coming, Jamie.”
Jamie.
They came around the corner, five agents and a lean, blond-headed man whom Carl immediately recognized as the president of the United States, Robert Stenton.