Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Industries, #Technology & Engineering, #Law, #Mystery & Detective, #Science, #Energy, #Public Utilities, #General, #Fiction - General, #Power Resources, #Literary Criticism, #Energy Industries, #English; Irish; Scottish; Welsh, #Fiction, #Non-Classifiable, #Business & Economics, #European
'Yes.
"Thank you. We had to verify the call. Where will you be if you are
required later?"
"At the Christopher Columbus Hotel," Nancy said. "Where the hell else?"
She hung up.
The police lieutenant debated briefly with himself. He had established
that the call was genuine and not from a crank. But was the information
strong enough to justify emptying the city's biggest hotel, with
resultant chaos, in the middle of the night?
Normally, in the case of a bomb warning-the police received hundreds
every year-the procedure was to send an advance squad, consisting of a
sergeant and two or three patrolmen, to investigate. If they were
suspicious or found merit in the tip, they would phone the operations
center and emergency procedures would begin. (Radio communication was
never used at that stage for two reasons. One, if a bomb existed, a radio
signal might set it off. Two, since police radios were monitored by all
and sundry, the police sought to delay having press and spectators clog
the scene.)
But, if the report just received was genuine, the danger real, there was
insufficient time for normal methods.
In daytime, with emergency forces from the police and fire departments
working together, a big hotel like the Christopher Columbus could be
evacuated in half an hour. At night, however, it would take longer-an
hour if they were fast and lucky. Nighttime evacuation posed special
problems; there were always some heavy sleepers, drunks, skeptics,
illicit lovers unwilling to be discovered, all requiring room-byroom
checks and the use of passkeys.
But there wasn't an hour. The watch lieutenant glanced at the big digital
clock above him: 2:21 A.M. The newspaperwoman had said a bomb or bombs
might go off at 3 A.m. True? False? He wished to hell a more senior
officer could be briefed and make the judgment. No time for that either.
The lieutenant made the only decision be could, and ordered, "Start bomb
evacuation procedures-the Christopher Columbus Hotel."
A balf-dozen phones in the operations center went into use immediately.
Alarm calls were placed to central district police and fire units first;
fire trucks and all available police cars would roll at once. Next, calls
went directly to the police department's night commander and deputy fire
chief who, together, would direct the hotel evacuation. Si-
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multaneously, the police tactical unit, which included the bomb squad, was
being alerted; they would follow other forces quickly. After that: a call to
a nearby Army depot where an explosives ordnance squad would contribute
experts in bomb disarming. Police departments in neighboring municipalities
were asked to aid by rushing their bomb squads too. Ambulances-almost
certain to be needed-were summoned. Continuing to work down a list, major
law enforcement, fire, and city functionaries were notified, most aroused
from sleep at home.
The watch lieutenant was speaking by telephone with the night manager of
the Christopher Columbus. "We have a tip, which we believe to be authentic,
that bombs have been placed in your hotel. We recommend you evacuate
immediately. Police and fire units are on the way."
The word "recommend" was used advisedly. Technically, the lieutenant had no
authority to order evacuation; any such decision must be the hotel
management's. Fortunately, the night manager was neither a hairsplitter nor
a fool. "I'll sound the house alarms," he said, "and our staff will do
whatever you say."
Like a war machine set in motion, the command effect spread rapidly, each
component gathering momentum, each utilizing specialized techniques to
become part of a total effort. The action had already moved away from the
operations center, which would now become a conduit for reports. Meanwhile,
answers remained unknown to two vital questions. First: Would bomb
explosions occur at 3 A.M.? Second: Assuming they did, could the hotel be
effectively cleared in the remaining time-an all-too-inadequate thirty-six
minutes?
Tle suspense would be short-lived. The answers to both questions would be
known soon.
She had done her bit for humanity, Nancy Molineaux decided. Now she could
go back to being a newspaperwoman.
She was still in her apartment though getting ready to leave. In between
throwing on outdoor clothes hurriedly, Nancy phoned the Examiner's night
editor and gave him a fast rundown of what she had. As be asked quick
questions, she sensed his excitement at the prospect of a big, breaking
story.
"I'm going to the hotel," Nancy told him. "Then I'll come in to write." She
knew, without asking, that every available photographer would be dispatched
to the scene at once.
"Oh, one other thing," she told the night man. "I have two tape cassettes.
I bad to tell the police about them, and they're sure to be wanted as
evidence, which means they'll be impounded. Before that happens, we should
make copies."
They arranged that a messenger would meet Nancy at the hotel and collect
the tapes. From there he would rush them to the residence of
314
the paper's entertainment editor, a hi-fi nut who had his own sound lab.
The entertainment writer was known to be at home and would be warned that
the tapes were on the way. The copies and a portable playback machine
would be in the newsroom, waiting, when Nancy got there.
Nancy had reached the outer door of her apartment, on the run, when she
remembered one more thing. Racing back to the phone, she dialed the
number of the Christopher Columbus Hotel, which she knew from memory.
When the operator answered, she instructed, "Give me Nimrod Goldman's
room."
In Nim's dream, the GSP & L electric system was in desperate crisis. One
by one, the system's generating stations had failed until only one
remained-La Mission No- 5, Big Lil. Then, exactly as happened last summer
on the day Walter Talbot died, the La Mission No- 5 panel at Energy
Control began emitting warning signals-flashing lights and a high-pitched
ringing. The lights diminished but the ringing persisted, filling all of
Nim's consciousness until he awoke and found the bedside telephone
shrilling. Sleepily, he reached out and picked it up.
"Goldman! Is that you, Goldman?"
Still only partially awake, he answered, "Yeah."
"This is Nancy Molineaux. Listen to mel"
41-Vao?"
"Nancy Molineaux, you idiot!"
Anger fought its way through sleep. "Molineaux, don't you know it's
the middle of the night . . . V,
"Shut up and listen! Goldman, get hold of yourself and come awake. You
and your family are in danger. Trust me . . ."
Raising himself on an elbow, Nim said, "I wouldn't trust you Then he
remembered what she had written yesterday, and stopped.
"Goldman, get your family out of that hotel! Now! Don't stop for
anythingi Bombs are going off."
Now he was wide-awake. "Is this some sick joke? Because if it is .
"It's no joke." There was pleading in Nancy's voice. "Ob, for Cbris-
sakes, believe me! Those Friends of Freedom bastards have planted
bombs disguised as fire extinguishers. Get your wife and kids . . ."
The words "Friends of Freedom" convinced him. Then he remembered the
hotel, jammed with conventioneers.
"What about other people?"
"The alarm's gone out. You get moving!"
"Right!"
"I'll see you outside the hotel," Nancy said, but Nim hadn't beard.
Instead he had slammed down the phone and was fiercely shaking Ruth.
315
Only minutes later, with the children crying, sleepily bewildered, and
still in nightclothes, Nim rushed them from the suite. Ruth was right
behind. Nim headed for the emergency stairs, knowing enough to stay away
from elevators in a crisis in case they failed and occupants were trapped.
As they began the long journey down twenty-six flights, be could hear the
sound of sirens from outside, faint at first, then growing louder.
They were three floors down when fire alarm bells throughout the hotel
began ringing stridently.
There were acts of gallantry and heroism that night. Some passed unnoticed,
others were conspicuous.
Evacuation of the hotel proceeded swiftly and, for the most part, calmly.
Police and firemen moved promptly onto every floor; they thumped on doors,
shouted, brushed aside questions with commands, hurried people toward
stairwells, cautioning them not to use elevators. Others from the emergency
force, assisted by hotel staff, used passkeys to check rooms from which
there bad been no response. Through it all, the fire alarm bells continued
ringing.
A few guests protested and argued, a handful was belligerent but, when
threatened with arrest, even they joined the outward exodus. Few, if any,
of the hotel guests knew exactly what was happening; they accepted the
imminence of danger and moved fast, pulling on a minimum of clothing,
abandoning belongings in their rooms. One man, obeying orders sleepily, got
as far as the stairway door on his floor before realizing he was naked. A
grinning fireman let him go back to put on pants and a shirt.
The evacuation was already in progress when the police bomb squad arrived
in three trucks, tires and sirens screaming. The bomb men poured into the
hotel and, working swiftly but carefully, checked every fire extinguisher
in sight. Those which were suspect had ropes looped over them, after
which-paying out rope as they went-tbe bomb men retreated around corners,
getting as far away as was practical. When someone bad made sure the
immediate area was clear of people, the ropes were tugged. This jogged the
extinguishers and toppled themnormally enough movement to set off any booby
traps. However, there were no explosions and, after each extinguisher was
dealt with, a bomb man lifted it and carried it outside. That represented
the greatest risk of all, but was accepted because of the special
circumstances.
From the street in front of the hotel, the extinguisher bombs were rushed,
by a hastily assembled fleet of trucks, to a disused waterfront pier where
they were dumped into the bay.
Soon after deployment of the police bomb squad, they were joined by an Army
ordnance unit of a half-dozen officers and NCOs-bomb experts who helped
speed the removal process.
3.z 6
Twenty minutes after the alarm was given, it became evident to those in
charge that evacuation was going well, and faster than expected. The
chances of having most guests out of the hotel before 3 A.M. looked good.
By now, every street leading to the Christopher Columbus was jampacked with
vehicles-fire equipment, police cars and wagons, ambulances, all with dome
lights flashing. A huge van, operated by the city's Office of Emergency
Services, had just moved in and was setting up an on-site command post. Two
GSP&L heavy-duty service trucks were among recent arrivals, one crew
standing by in case of power problems, the other disconnecting gas service