Charges

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Charges Page 6

by Stephen Knight


  Vincenzo knew he had a lot to learn, but the first thing he had to do was get out of the city. The George Washington Bridge, located ten miles to the north, was his escape path. He could walk west on Fifty-Seventh Street to where it intersected the Joe DiMaggio Highway, then he would walk those ten miles northbound. The Joe DiMaggio would turn into the Henry Hudson around West Seventy-Ninth Street. Eventually, he would come to the George Washington, a two-level bridge spanning the Hudson River that connected the island of Manhattan with New Jersey. He had never cared much for Jersey, but he found he was suddenly quite eager to put foot on soil in the Garden State.

  Eventually, he would have to leave New York City.

  He sucked it up for two days, hanging out in the tower while clinging to the hope the lights would come back on. During daylight hours, he struck out for the rumored aid stations and found huge lines, a combative crowd, and far too little in way of supplies. By the second day, three of the distribution points had been bled dry. Signs directed people to additional sites, so Vincenzo walked to the closest one, all the way over on Twelfth Avenue. The area was a mob scene, and the NYPD and other emergency services personnel were having a difficult time maintaining order. It was a powder keg situation, and Vincenzo didn’t stick around. He returned to the Metropolitan and spent a lot of time in the lobby, talking with other residents and Geraldo.

  That night, Vincenzo didn’t get much in the way of rest. Not only was there mounting commotion in the streets below, but odd noises seemed to come from the building itself as it cooled—creaks, rumbles, and cracking sounds that finally prompted him to close and lock the door. He stretched out on his bed, his pistol close at hand as he dozed fitfully.

  Finally, when he sensed a brightening in the eastern sky, he got up to brush his teeth then went into the kitchen. Through the open windows in the living room, he heard the distant screams of a woman. He felt he should do something, but he had no idea what that might be. The NYPD was on the streets; it was their job to keep the peace. He still felt guilty, but he fumbled in the semidarkness as he set about grabbing some breakfast. He helped himself to some pumpkin spice cupcakes, chased down with two kid-sized containers of orange juice he had bought for Benny. Since the chances of his son visiting New York in the near future were remarkably dismal, Vincenzo elected to drink them. By the time he finished his brief breakfast, the screaming had stopped.

  He walked through the condo, checking all the rooms to make sure he wasn’t leaving anything useful behind. He was certain the place would be looted, so anything he didn’t take would likely be lost forever. He found nothing. Everything he needed was already in his backpack and the leather knapsack.

  He went back to the bathroom, brushed his teeth again, and took a long piss into the bathroom sink. After gathering his bags, he slipped on his StealthGear holster and seated the Beretta into it. He headed for the stairway on sore legs, Mag-Lite in hand.

  The walk down the stairs was as dreadful as it had been the day before. The emergency lights were completely exhausted, their batteries drained. The fluorescent tape that marked the boundaries of the steps had likewise lost its effectiveness. With no illumination to recharge the chemicals that made the strips glow in darkness, the applications had been rendered inoperative. As an added discomfort, the stairwell was still warm, full of thick, humid air that couldn’t be dispelled. The vague stink of old urine tickled Vincenzo’s nostrils. Clearly, someone had been using the stairwell as a toilet. He shined his Mag-Lite around, looking for any puddles of piss that might be in his path. The last thing he wanted was to slip and break his ass, especially since medical care would be a long way away. He found nothing, but the stench increased the lower he went. Shit rolls downhill.

  By the time he made it to the first floor, his legs were on fire, and his heart was hammering in his chest. He was exhausted, and sweat poured down his body, leaving his shirt soaked and clinging to him like a second skin. The door to the lobby was propped open, allowing dim light to reveal the stairwell landing. Vincenzo heard voices, and he crept toward the doorway. He didn’t know who was out there, and he didn’t want to step into the middle of a robbery or invasion in progress. He slipped his Mag-Lite into the retainer ring on his backpack then reached under his shirt and gripped the butt of the Beretta with his right hand. Just in case.

  There were several people in the lobby. Vincenzo recognized some faces but knew no names. He hadn’t been in the building long enough to really have any meet-and-greets beyond a casual nod or smile in the elevator. A few of them turned toward him as he emerged from the stairwell, their faces illuminated by the stark glow of several LED lanterns that had been set up around the lounge area.

  “Hello,” a middle-aged woman with clear blue eyes said. Vincenzo recognized her. Her normally perfect blond hair was a stringy, sweaty mop on top of her head.

  “Hi, there,” Vincenzo said, easing his hand off the butt of his pistol. “Is Geraldo around?”

  The woman shook her head. “Nope. Gone. No one from the building management staff is here, as far as we know.”

  “Ah.” It wasn’t much of a response, but that was all he could manage. He wiped the sweat from his brow. The lobby was much cooler than the stairwell, but he was still hot as hell.

  “What floor are you from again?” she asked.

  “Seventy-two. I’m kind of new.”

  “Seventy-two. You’re the guy who bought the Heldermans’ place, right?”

  Vincenzo nodded and looked toward the door. The lower pane of glass was still webbed with cracks. He hoped it wasn’t locked, then he remembered he still had the key Geraldo had given him. The street beyond seemed dark and vacant. “Is the curfew lifted?”

  “Sun isn’t up yet,” a paunchy man said. He was dressed in cargo shorts and a T-shirt with enormous sweat stains under the arms. He had several days of stubble on his chin, and his long dark hair was an uncombed mass. “Curfew isn’t lifted until after the sun comes up.”

  Vincenzo checked his watch. It was five twenty in the morning.

  “It should be up in a few minutes,” the woman said. “I checked my calendar. It has sunrise and sunset times. Today, it’s supposed to be up at five twenty-four a.m.”

  Someone had fetched some shopping carts from somewhere, and they stood in one corner. One was empty, while the other had three baseball bats in it.

  The woman followed his gaze and motioned toward the carts. “We’re going to the aid stations today. A lot of people need stuff, so we’re going to load up with whatever we can get.”

  “What’s with the bats?”

  “The aid stations can be pretty rough,” the man in the cargo shorts said. “A lot of people and not enough goods. The city’s coming up short right now, and the NYPD’s spread pretty thin, so we’re going in prepared.”

  “A couple of the residents got sent to the hospital yesterday afternoon trying to get water and food from the station on Fifty-Ninth Street,” the woman added. “One of them looked pretty serious. Eric Wallenstein, from sixty-one. You know him?”

  Vincenzo shook his head. “No. I don’t think so.”

  She glanced at his backpack. “You thinking of going out solo? I wouldn’t advise that.”

  “Don’t worry. I’m not going to any of the aid stations.”

  “Oh? Then where, if you don’t mind me asking?”

  “Los Angeles. My family’s there.”

  The people in the lobby exchanged glances. The man in the cargo shorts snorted.

  “You realize there’s no transportation, right? LA’s a long walk.”

  “I figure about four months,” Vincenzo said.

  The blond woman clucked her tongue. “You can’t be serious.”

  “Yeah, I am. Next stop for me is the GWB. Then Joisey.”

  “That sounds… crazy,” the woman said. “A lot could change in four months.”

  Vincenzo shrugged. He already had doubts about the trip, and he certainly didn’t need a stranger adding to it. H
e jerked his chin toward the door. “Sun’s up. Catch you guys later.”

  He walked over and unlocked the door. He handed the key to the man nearest him. “You might need this,” he said, then he stepped out into the brightening morning.

  6

  The morning was cool with low humidity. The scene hadn’t changed much since the previous day. The street was full of litter, from broken glass to discarded boxes and old newspapers. The tang of smoke hung in the air, along with an unpleasant after note of sewage. Without pumps powering the city’s septic system, sewage control was going to be a problem, a situation that wouldn’t improve with time.

  The other folks in the lobby followed him outside. The wheels of one shopping cart squeaked as a man shoved across shards of shattered glass. Vincenzo stepped out from beneath the tower’s frayed awning. Every ground-level shop or dwelling had suffered from vandalism. The only thing that kept the vandals out of Metropolitan Tower was the thickness of the glass. The building had been constructed with an eye toward keeping out undesirables, and so far, that had worked. Vincenzo didn’t figure that would be a lasting condition, however.

  “You should come with us,” the blond woman said from behind him. Her voice sounded pale and weak outdoors.

  Vincenzo hitched his backpack up on his shoulders and adjusted the set of the pistol beneath his shirt. “You guys take care of yourselves.” He didn’t look back.

  He set off down Fifty-Seventh Street, heading west. Glass and other debris crunched beneath his hiking boots, the sound echoing off the faces of the darkened buildings that lined the boulevard. He heard the others pushing off in the opposite direction, headed for Sixth Avenue, while he advanced toward Seventh. He could see figures moving through the gloom, pushing shopping carts or wheelbarrows, hauling wagons, or carrying empty backpacks and duffel bags. Some even had fabric shopping bags from Whole Foods, hoping to fill them at the aid station.

  As he drew nearer to the intersection, he saw several NYPD officers standing on the northern corner, regarding the approaching humanity that swelled up from downtown. The officers were clad in full riot gear, and many of them had Heckler & Koch personal defense weapons. He didn’t know if they were fully automatic—in the movies they were, but he had no clue about them in real life—but they had expanded magazines that held more than thirty rounds. A few of them also held mean-looking shotguns. Those guys were ready to shoot it out, and after what he had seen the morning before, he didn’t blame them.

  Vincenzo thought about approaching them for more information, but their body language indicated they weren’t open to a casual chat. They kept their eyes on the people emerging from the buildings around them, weapons held low but at the ready. Vincenzo pressed on, crossing the intersection as more and more people began to fill it. He was amazed at the volume of people, and it seemed to increase with every step he took. He had to bob and weave around individuals to get across the street. Things weren’t much better on the sidewalk. More denizens of New York City were emerging from their abodes, clogging the sidewalks and street as they moved toward Seventh Avenue to cut north to Central Park. He felt like a lone salmon swimming upstream. It took twenty minutes to make it to the middle of the next block. By then, the street traffic had thinned a bit, and he was able to get to Broadway without further incident.

  A ripple of gunshots sounded in the distance. Vincenzo had no idea where they had come from, but he hitched up his backpack and picked up his pace. The pressure of the Beretta in his waistband provided a small measure of comfort, but he knew if push came to shove, he’d have to move fast to pull it out of the holster. The Pax Wholesome Foods at the corner of West Fifty-Seventh and Broadway had already been thoroughly looted, but a steady stream of people moved in to pick through the destruction. Some of them—mostly men—regarded Vincenzo with dark eyes as he hurried past. He could feel the weight of their collective gaze. He knew they were interested in discovering what might lie inside his backpack.

  A young boy stood on the opposite corner, crying for his mother. Two days ago, Vincenzo would have stopped and tried to help the kid. The big city was no place for a boy to wander around by himself. But Vincenzo just kept going, trying to reconcile the conflicting emotions he felt at turning his back on a four-year-old boy clearly in need of assistance. I have to get to my family. I have to get to my family. I have to get to my family.

  The mantra was enough to give him the necessary strength to keep moving, to keep putting one foot in front of the other. The heavy gazes from the others in the area added enough charge to stop him from diverting course. He fairly plunged across Broadway, continuing his trek westward, trying to stay alert but at the same time avoiding any eye contact with anyone. He shot a few furtive glances over his shoulder as he headed to Eighth Avenue. No one was following him, but the crowd outside the ransacked store was growing. And then, a scuffle broke out as several men went at each other, drowning out the boy’s plaintive cries. One was a beefy Wall Street type swinging a two-thousand-dollar golf club like a knight in a swordfight. Vincenzo didn’t stick around to see how the guy fared.

  Ahead, he could see the looming glass expanse of the Hearst Tower, a forty-six-story building crouched over a six-story stone base. The triangular frame had already lost a great deal of its luster, as several dozen windows had been broken. Smoke oozed from the upper floors. Apparently, Manhattan’s greenest office building had become one of its greatest polluters, thanks to a fire which had apparently broken out. He smelled ash and cooking meat, and he wondered if he might not have found a silver lining in the cloud of doom that had descended over the city: the chances of there being any new issues of Cosmopolitan hitting newsstands seemed very low.

  More glass crunched under his boots, and he noticed that some of the shards were still quite large. He slowed down, checking his footing. The last thing he wanted was to slice his foot open on one of those gleaming daggers. There was blood splattered in places. Clearly, others hadn’t been as careful, and they had paid a price for it. A Mister Softee ice cream truck lay angled across the street. Ravaged by looters, the wreck reeked of spoiled milk and melted yogurt that had turned rancid in the heat. Some people were still peering inside the vehicle, despite the fact that whatever was left would likely only give them an award-winning case of botulism.

  The Walgreens near the corner of West Fifty-Seventh and Ninth Avenue had been severely looted, but it still attracted a great deal of attention, despite the presence of a dozen NYPD officers at the corner. They watched as people swarmed through the store, some of them sitting astride motor scooters that apparently still operated. There was nothing left to protect—the store had been picked clean. Across the intersection, the Morning Star Restaurant had met a similar fate, as had the bodega next door. The people of Midtown West were like vultures picking away at the corpse of New York City, and the NYPD seemed either powerless or unwilling to do anything about it.

  Vincenzo knew he had made the right decision. To remain in New York merely invited death.

  It took almost an hour and a half to make it to the Joe DiMaggio. The roadway was clogged with cars and trucks that had been rendered inoperable from the electromagnetic pulse event. Bicyclists and pedestrians wended their way through the still river of sheet metal and fiberglass. Vincenzo crossed Twelfth Avenue and moved over the northbound lanes, heading for the Jersey barrier in the middle of the roadway that separated the northbound lanes from the southbound. His feeling was that he would make better time over there and that the sight lines would be less restrictive. All during his journey down West Fifty-Seventh, he had felt bottled up, restrained and vulnerable. In the more open areas that lined the westernmost side of Manhattan Island, he might be a bit safer. Without the shadows cast by the skyscrapers of midtown, the sun’s rays beat down on him directly. The temperature was rising, as was the humidity, especially so close to the Hudson River. Vincenzo lifted his khaki Polo cap and ran a hand over his short hair. His palm came back covered in sweat. He needed t
o halt his march for a few minutes to drink some water and apply sunscreen.

  Hiding in the leeward shadow of a dead tractor-trailer, he started to reach for the Hydro Flask but checked himself. It was still cool to the touch, thanks to its substantial insulation. He had a long day ahead of him, and drinking the cold water now would mean less later. Instead, he reached into his knapsack and pulled out one of the plastic water bottles. Keeping alert, he unscrewed the cap and drained the water quickly, gulping as fast as he could. People moved past on the highway, heading in either direction, but they kept their distance. He rubbed sunscreen across his face, arms, and the back of his neck then took another moment to smear more on his ears and the bridge of his nose. He put the sunscreen back in the knapsack and considered the empty water bottle. Normally, he would have just tossed it. Plastic bottles probably weren’t going to be a rare commodity, at least in the short term, but not having one when he needed it might be troublesome. He placed it in the knapsack as well. Repositioning his backpack once again—his shoulders and lower back were beginning to ache—he pressed on.

  He was walking past the rear of the truck when movement to his right caught his eye. Vincenzo stepped back immediately, his hand going for the Beretta, as a tall white man stepped into his path. The guy wore faded jeans, a yellow T-shirt, expensive designer sunglasses, and surprisingly, a multi-colored Rasta cap that either restrained several decades of dreadlocks or held a small immigrant family. Vincenzo realized that he could be flanked by someone who had rolled under the truck trailer, so he ducked down and checked. No one was under there. He straightened as the man came around the trailer, a huge grin on his face.

 

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