The Getaway (Sam Archer 2) (6 page)

It was another beautiful day in
New York City
, the sun warm, the sky blue, not a whisper of wind in the air. He was dressed in a navy blue and white flannel shirt over a white t-shirt and faded jeans, light clothing, not enough to make him sweat but little enough to keep him cool. He slid a pair of sunglasses resting on his towel-dried hair
down
over his nose and walked forward through a small metal gate. Pulling it open and then pulling it back in place behind him, he stepped out onto the sidewalk and looked each way down
38
th
Street
, left
and right.

It was quiet. There were a few people walking down the sidewalk, most of them pulling small metal carriages packed with groceries, but everything was still and calm. He could hear birds chirping and tweeting in the trees that lined the street, and the faint shouting and drilling of workmen digging a hole somewhere nearby. Turning right, he started walking down the sidewalk towards the end of
38
th
Street
, and the turn to
30
th
Avenue
.

From the apartment he’d just left, he had two choices of subway trains to take. The R train was five minutes away to the left, up on Steinway Street, and the N train ran from the bottom of the hill on 30
th
Avenue to the right, slightly further away. He wasn’t in a hurry, so he opted for the N. It was also over-ground for the first half of the journey, and provided a far better view than the dark tunnels and passages of the underground R service. On a morning as beautiful as this, it would
have to be the N, no question.

He walked to the end of
38
th
Street
, and turning left, started to wander down the hill.
30
th
Avenue
was a great stretch of neighbourhood, one of the best in the outer boroughs in Archer’s opinion. It had everything. As he walked down, he saw cafes, markets, different kinds of stores. Across the street, he saw people sitting outside a restaurant, enjoying a relaxed morning brunch and each other’s company. It was a great place to live. He remembered being told once that
Astoria
contained the biggest population of Greeks in the world outside of
Greece
itself. The area certainly had a relaxed European feel to it, and definitely had the quality of food.

He made his way down the seven blocks to the subway. It was busier on 30
th
than it had been on
38
th
Street
, and he saw people formally dressed in suits headed in the same direction
towards
the station. The rail line itself ran horizontal to the street, looming over 31
st
Street, and served as direct passage to either the east and
Ditmars Boulevard
or the west and
Manhattan
. As he approached the stairs that led up to the station and platforms up above, he heard a Manhattan-bound train arriving, moving into the
30
th
Avenue
station from
Astoria Boulevard
. He jogged briskly up the steps, pulling a yellow Metrocard from his pocket, and swiped his way through the turnstiles as the train rattled into the station above. He ran up the second flight of steps and arrived on the platform just as the train screeched to a halt. The doors opened, and he stepped past people departing the carriages, moving inside one and joining scores of people already inside. Judging by their clothing, most of them seemed to be headed for work. He took up a position by one of the doors, and turning, watched the carriage next door.

He wanted to get a good look at the guy following him.

He’d picked up the tail the moment he’d turned off 38
th
. The guy had been waiting for him outside a restaurant across the street, pretending to read a paper. He was sloppy, and had picked a bad spot for surveillance. It was a 50/50 chance that Archer would come this way and not head up Steinway. But then again, there was probably someone else waiting for him up there doing the same thing. The guy been almost directly in Archer’s line of sight, an amateur mistake
, and behind his sunglasses Archer had
seen the man rise from his chair and start to move down the hill the opposite side, watching his mark.

Right on cue, he saw the guy appear, running up the steps, out of breath, and moving forward to just make it inside the carriage next door, jamming his arm in the sliding doors as they closed and then pulling them open and dragging himself inside. Archer examined him quickly before the guy relocated him. He was one of the men from t
he group at the bar last night.

Not Farrell.

Not the man with longer hair.

The third guy, shaved head and tattoos on his forearms, the one who had been the first to spot the six guys coming down the street. He saw him looking around, trying to relocate his mark, and Archer turned his back, feeling the man’s gaze fall on him. He didn’t move. There was no point trying to lose him yet. The trip into the city would take about twenty minutes and he didn’t want to alert the
guy that he knew he was there.

The train moved off towards the next stop, the streets rolling past down below through the windows. The carriage Archer was standing in was busy, full of people headed to the office, crossing off another day, another step close
r to the weekend. People were sitting and stan
d
ing
everywhere, listening to music through headphones, reading newspapers, sipping coffees and tapping into cell-phones or just looking out
of the window, lost in thought
. Archer wasn’t impressed to see a number of
seats
occupied by men as women in heels stood nearby, clutching the rail,
some of them
fighting to keep their balance. None of the guys
on the benches
seemed to care though, and he swallowed down his irritation. A small thing, but something that always pissed him off when he saw it. Unlike him, he guessed some guys just didn’t give a shit when it came to stuff
like that.

The train slowed and came to a halt at the next stop, Broadway. Archer realised the guy next door had no idea where he was getting off. He contemplated deceiving him by stepping outside then back in at the last moment, but decided against it. The guy didn’t know he’d been made. It would make it easier to lose him when they got to
Manhattan
, and would avoid a confrontation that Archer could do without. The doors closed and the train pushed on, stopping twice more at 36
th
and
39
th
Avenue
before swinging a right hook and
approaching
Queensborough
Plaza
, the eastern side of
Manhattan
coming into view up ahead across the
East River
.

Looking around the carriage to pass the time, he saw a young boy sitting on one of the blue benches, his father standing over him, both in jeans and polo shirts. The kid was no older than fiv
e or six but they were already the
spitting image of each other,
and the boy looked excited as if
they had something fun planned for the day, an outing or
maybe
just a chance to spend time with his father. Archer watched him. His shoelaces were untied, and they swung back and forth in the air as the train moved and slowed, the plastic tips occasionally brushing the ground. His father realised, and knelt down, tying them up, keeping his balance as the train started to slow. Archer smiled, then swallowed and averted his gaze.

There were more people waiting on the platform here, as there always were.
Queensborough
Plaza
was where the N and Q line met the 7 train, the line that ran through all the other neighbourhoods in
Queens
. The doors opened and everyone on the platform moved i
nside, the carriage becoming even more crowded, everyone packed in together, the carriage
full. Eventually, the doors closed again and the train rolled on. He saw people making last minute texts or ending calls on cell phones. They were about to go into the tunnel, under the river, heading towards
59
th
Street
and
Manhattan
, and all cellular service would cut out
shortly
.

The train
entered
the tunnel and rumbled and rattled on through the darkness. Despite the crowd around him, the sudden change in light made him realise how clean the train was. Archer had seen photos from the 80’s and early 90’s of the NYC MTA subway system. Graffiti, dirt, scores of homeless people, murders, intimidating gangs waiting for prey and chances to mug passengers. This was a marked change. He’d read in the paper that Mayor Giuliani had cleaned up the streets and the city’s transport system during the last decade after 9/11 and he’d done a great job. Archer could think of only one better system that he had used in his lifetime, and that was the subway in
Washington
D.C.
That was about as good as it got. Carpets, no music, no food, everyone sat pretty much in silence, everything clean, no trash. But then again, the New York MTA ran all night, which drew the two just about even.

After another minute or so, the train rolled into
59
th
Street
and
Lexington Avenue
, the darkness of the tunnels suddenly
illuminated by the lights of the station at they
flashed past the windows. The train slowed as a female voice announced the station over the train’s intercom system, then eventually pulled to a halt, the brakes screeching and stopping the train with an operatic crescendo. The doors opened, and the carriage suddenly started to empty, pretty much everyone inside getting off. Archer saw the boy climb off the bench and grab his father’s hand and the two of them joined everyone else
exiting the train
. The sudden increase in room was pleasant, and Archer saw the
few
people left inside the carriage visibly relax like himself, enjoying getting their personal space back. After another moment, the doors shut, and the train moved on.

They stopped three more times, at
5
th
Avenue
,
57
th
Street
and 7
th
, and
49
th
Street
before the train pulled into
Times Square
42
nd
Street
. This station wa
s the central transport hub in M
idtown Manhattan, conjoining a series of various subway and transport lines from all sorts of different paths and routes through the city. After the train stopped and the doors opened, Archer stepped out and began walking briskly through the crowd down the platform, headed towards the stairs. He didn’t need to look behind him. He knew the guy would be following. He jogged up the steps, quick enough to move up them swiftly but not fast enough to alert the man following him that the game was up.

But the moment he reached the upper tier, he moved fast, gaining some distance. He rushed through a winding turnstile and walked
swiftly
towards the stairs, taking them two at a time
and coming out on the corner of
42
nd
Street
and
7
th
Avenue
.

Up on the busy street, he moved through the crowds of people, ducking into a store to the left of the stairs that led down to the subway. It was some kind of hat-store, all sorts of caps and beanies sitting on racks lining the shelves. He grabbed a navy blue baseball cap from a shelf and moved to the back, pulling it over his head. Taking cover behind a rack, he looked around it and waited.

The guy
appeared, rushing up onto the street level from the stairs, looking side-to-side as he searched for any sign of Archer. It was no use. He’d lost him. After a few more moments, Archer watched the guy curse to himself then visibly give up, disappearing from view as he returned down into the subway, probably headed back to Queens. Taking no chances, Archer moved to the counter and bought the cap. Ripping off the tag, he pulled it back over his head, took off his flannel shirt and then ducked out of the left side of the store, moving fast down 42
nd
towards
8
th
Avenue
. As he passed two large cinemas, one either side of the street, he checked behind him to make sure the guy hadn’t picked him up again, the peak of the cap low, hiding his face, the sunglasses hiding his eyes. This detour would add to his journey, but he wanted to make sure he’d lost the guy for good.

Once he got to 8
th
, he crossed the street and ducked into a pizza place on the corner opposite the Port Authority Bus Terminal. There were a few stools near the window, and he sat on one, checking the street, waiting for five minutes. The guy didn’t reappear. Archer hung on for a few more minutes, just to make sure he’d ditched the tail, then left the restaurant, crossing the street and walking south. He could see the ugly shape of
Madison
Square
Garden
starting to appear up ahead on the corner of
33
rd
Street
. One of the most famous arenas in the world, possibly the most famous, yet it was decidedly unattractive from the outside, looking like a big, muddy, brown doughnut. If it wasn’t for its illustrious history, the place surely would have been demolished and rebuilt a long time ago considering the way it looked from the outside. Crossing the streets, he moved past people gathering on the corner of 35
th
and turned to his left, headed back towards 7
th
.

Other books

PETALS AND THORNS by PARIS, JENNIFER
The Secretary by Brooke, Meg
Last Light by Terri Blackstock
The Exchange by Carrie Williams
No Safe Haven by Kimberley Woodhouse
The Weston Front by Gray Gardner
Suddenly at Singapore by Gavin Black
Untouched by Alexa Riley


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024