Escape. It was the only possibility that remained.
On the night of December 24, Arch Carroll, Caitlin Dillon, the four Carroll children, and Mary Katherine locked hands and walked rapidly down Columbus Avenue. There had to be some way for three adults and four small children to escape a surveillance team. The New York crowds would provide temporary safety.
Columbus Avenue was buzzing with holiday music and festive bustle. The energetic crowd parted reluctantly for the hurrying family. Carroll wondered how he could protect Caitlin, Mary K., the kids-when he knew that professional gunmen were following them.
“Can we please stop running, Daddy? Please? Please, Daddy. Just for a minute? Please?” said Lizzie as she was being dragged along. Up ahead, Caitlin and Mary Katherine had the other three children bravely in tow.
Carroll stopped and wrapped his arms around his little girl. He whispered soothingly against her cold, red-rimmed ear. “Please, baby, please be good. Just a little longer, sweetheart.”
Carroll was almost certain he knew what was going to happen next. He gazed north, then down the bright lights of Columbus Avenue. His weary eyes brushed over colorful signs that said Sedutto, Diane's Uptown, Pershings, Cantina.
Columbus Avenue had changed dramatically since he'd last been above Seventy-second Street. The area had once been crowded with Spanish food stores as well as transient hotels and Oriental rug dealers. Now it was a trendy, self-conscious version of Greenwich Village.
He glanced over his shoulder again. The same persistent pair of men was still following. He was sure they had been joined by others. There seemed to be five men following the Carroll family.
Where in the name of God do we go from here? Somebody help us.
Carroll was sweating, even in the chill night air. He was so tired. He wanted to go to sleep right there in the middle of crowded Columbus Avenue.
This is happening. Whether I choose to believe it or not, this is happening.
Escape.
He had one desperate prayer. He was bursting with fear. He could see the same emotion on Caitlin's face. Mary Katherine was very pale, her usual ruddy color gone. He reached out for Caitlin and held her tight.
“Listen to me. Listen closely.” He whispered something to her that made her cry. “I love you so much, Caitlin. Everything has to be all right.”
“Oh, Arch, be careful. Please be careful.”
Then Carroll gently pushed her away. He sent Caitlin and his sister and the tangle of children running in the opposite direction, across Seventy-second Street. Away, far away from him.
“Daaa-ddy!… Daa-ddy!” Carroll heard his babies' cries as he raced away. He ran as fast as he could along the clogged sidewalk.
Suddenly powerful arms grabbed him. A hand clamped down hard, twisting into his face. Searing pain ripped through his eyes.
They were attacking him in the middle of New York City, in one of the most crowded, residential areas of the city. They had come for him in full view of a hundred witnesses…
They didn't even care about the witnesses anymore.
“Get the hell off me! Get off me, you pieces of shit!” Carroll's shouts rose above the honking horns, above the city's deafening street rumble. “Somebody, please help!”
They were injecting him. Some kind of long needle pierced his trousers right into his leg.
They were killing him right out here.
On West Seventieth Street in New York City.
“Somebody help! Somebody fucking help!”
There were obviously no secrets anymore. There was no bullshit pretense that this was a police bust, that they were New York detectives.
“Get off!… No needle… noooo!”
Arch Carroll roared. He screamed and fought back savagely. He clawed at them with his remaining strength. He was sure he broke a jaw. His elbow smashed hard into a fore head, and he heard a bone snap loudly.
Then he was being dragged into a dark blue sedan. He was being held upside down! He looked back as they pulled him out of the staring crowds.
He was still hanging upside down when he saw the second car arrive, saw Caitlin and his sister and the kids being snatched away.
No one connected with Green Band could live. The Committee, the American Wise Men, couldn't allow that.
“Not the kids! You goddamned bastards! Not my kids, not my kids!… No, please, not my kids!”