On November 27, 2002, a Metro-North commuter train left New Haven, Connecticut, at 5:58 a.m., bound for Grand Central Terminal. Its scheduled arrival in New York was 7:39 a.m. This is what happened that morning.
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Karen Rizzini DiFalcone, a marketing administrator for an insurance broker on West 57th Street, boarded the train at the second stop, Milford, at 6:08 a.m. She shrugged off her heavy tan coat, with a fox-fur collar, and sat on a seat facing forward. She had ridden the train for six months, since she and her husband – Michael DiFalcone, an associate professor at Yale Medical school – traded a Queens apartment for a beachfront suburban condo.
“It’s so cold for November,” thought Karen as she fanned her black hair against the seat’s purplish vinyl. “The heat won’t get cranked until Bridgeport.” She closed her eyes. Twenty people were scattered through the car, a lot for an early train. As the train clanked west through the darkness, her mind drifted.
“Tomorrow – Thanksgiving. Our first as a married couple,” thought Karen. Her sister Rita with husband and kids were coming from Providence Wednesday night. Before they arrived, she and Mike would stuff the turkey, chop the vegetables, set the table, and take a deep breath. And make Thanksgiving love.
“Mike, our own place, with all this room! I love it,” cooed Karen as she prepared a pumpkin pie shell. “And I love you.”
“WHAT?” yelled Mike over the vacuum’s whine. He flicked the power switch with his shoe. The sudden quiet was jolting, as if the off-white carpets swallowed all noise.
“I said I love our new place, and I love you,” she called. “And I love having Thanksgiving with you and not having a gazillion people running around an apartment.”
Mike walked into the kitchen. Shiny appliances gleamed in the soft light. A microwave whirred. Working at the white-topped center island, Karen nudged the crust into the corners of the pie pan. She wore a baggy SUNY-Stony Brook jogging suit – “my cooking clothes,” she called them. Stepping behind her, Mike tried to focus on the pie pan. They’d been working for hours. Like, enough housework, he thought.
“Nice pie crust,” he said, wondering what Karen wanted to hear. Holiday preparations, he knew, were always a big deal for women, so he wanted to say and do the right things.
“I’m just about done,” said Karen. “I’ll put it in the fridge to set over night and we can put the batter in tomorrow.”
“Sounds like a plan. I’m done with the vacuum.”
“Hmm, so I’m done and you’re done. That’s nice,” said Karen. She looked over at Mike. He stood there, rocking slightly on his heels. “Did I spill some flour on my cheek?” she asked.
“Yeah, let me wipe it off,” said Mike. He dusted her cheek with his hands, then pushed a strand of her hair behind her ear.
“Uh-oh, I see some more flour. Better get that off, too,” he said, a little too seriously. He moved closer to her neck, tan beneath her pinned-up hair. “Yep, there’s some.” He flicked his fingertips over the warm skin. With a great show he dusted his hand against his pants. “There. Can’t have stray flour all over the place. You know, Karen, a recent Yale study found that flour is an aphrodisiac, right up there with the olive oil our grandparents used so effectively in Sicily.”
“That so?” she asked, catching the mock-serious tone in his voice. He had sidled closer to her, his khaki pants leg pressing against her jogging pants. She felt his heat, the hardness of his thigh and calf muscles, through the fabric.”
“Gee, you Yalies study the most interesting things.” With a quick move she flicked a pinch of flour against her throat. “Oh dear, I just got some on my throat. Could you get that off, too? Pleeease?”
“Let Dr. Mike take a look.” He turned her to face him. “Yep, flour right there.” He bent slightly and kissed her neck. Karen leaned her head back. “I’d better keep checking.” He pulled the sweatshirt’s collar, noticing she had no bra on. “Jesus, everywhere I look, more and more flour. Girlfriend, how’d you get so messy?” Mike kissed her shoulderblade, with one hand snaking under the sweatshirt to cup a warm, freeswinging breast. The other cupped her rump through her sweatpants.
“I bet you got a lot of flour on you in that chemistry research lab today,” said Karen. Her eyes closed, she reached out and unzipped Mike’s pants. Her manicured hand stroked Mike’s cock through his underwear. “Flour. I can feel its magic impact. I don’t even have to look,” she said in a throaty voice.
“Maybe you should look,” gulped Mike, squeezing her ass and boob.
“You’re right, I’d better do a visual inspection to be on the safe side.” Pulling a folding step stool from under a counter, Karen sat down on it in front of Mike. Her head was at crotch level. In a flash she eased Mike’s hardening cock out of the Dockers and eyed it critically. Her red-tipped nail traced its length from base to tip. “Covered in flour, just as I suspected. Time for an emergency floursuckectomy. They taught you about that in medical school, didn’t they, Mike?” she said.
“Uh, yeah, all the time,” said Mike, his head spinning from the speed of their leap to lust.
And then . . .
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Karen remembered nothing else. She fell asleep as the train pulled into Stratford, the next stop. The cold of the train’s window felt soothing against her cheek. It was 6:13 a.m.
“Please put your coats and cases in the overhead racks,” squawked the conductor over the intercom. “We’re one car short this morning and it’s the day before Thanksgiving. We’ll need all the seats we’ve got. Thank you for your cooperation.”
FBI Special Agent Jessica Chou rocked her briefcase between her feet. She looked down the platform straining to sense the train approaching Stratford from Milford. The platform was cold and crowded. Pre-holiday impatience rippled through the commuters anxious to get on, get to the office, and leave as early as possible. Family and football and turkey filled their thoughts; nobody was noticing odd packages or out-of-place passengers. The five frantic weeks of holidays were starting, for God’s sake. Who had time to think about less pleasant things?
Jessica pushed through the doors of the third car from the front when the train reached Stratford. With a sweet smile she eased between two businessmen with their faces buried in the Wall Street Journal. Jessica stood on tiptoe, stretching to put her trench coat on the rack, her breasts floating like apples on a tree before one of the businessmen. Jessica sensed, rather than saw, his glance appraise her lithe, silk-bloused figure. Let him look, she thought.
According to intelligence reports, the party would start in Bridgeport, right here in the third car from the front. She tapped a message on her BlackBerry to a beefy young man one car up, Special Agent Harris Birdwell, a former linebacker at the University of Texas. He was talking football with another big guy, Special Agent Armando Ruiz. “I’m on,” Chou wrote to Birdwell. “Target due here soon?
Birdwell wrote back, “On the Bridgeport platform now, position as expected.”
“I’ll confirm when he boards.”
A blue-collar crowd stepped on when the train reached Bridgeport at 6:19 a.m.; electricians, maintenance workers, nurses. Some would exit for the corporate centers in Stamford, others would head on to Manhattan. The man identified as Abdel Al-Malhouf entered the third car from the front. He carried a black North Face backpack and wore blue jeans with a cell phone on the belt, a long-sleeved shirt, a sweater over the shirt with a pocket removed, and a long fleece jacket. He sat down on one of the few single-seat sections of the car, ensuring nobody would sit beside him. Al-Malhouf stuffed the jacket in the overhead rack, removed a thick book on electrical engineering from his backpack and started to read.
Jessica’s casual glance picked up Abdel Al-Malhouf as he entered the car. Looking away, Jessica slipped on her portable stereo headset, then pushed a button, supposedly adjusting the sound level. Then she tapped a message on her BlackBerry to Birdwell, confirming Al-Malhouf boarded and she had him in view. “Three yards and a cloud of dust,” Birdwell told Ruiz, their signal that the target was on the train. Adjusting her headset to pick up reports from other agents, Chou settled back to watch and wait.
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Al-Malhouf’s cellphone chirped. He answered after a single ring. “Yeah, I’m on,” he said quietly. Surveillance had already identified the caller as a person using the name of Akhbar Mohammed. “And I’ve got the pumpkin. You got the turkey? Good. See ya.” He spoke without an accent. He idly turned the pages of the book. His studies did not matter, anymore. A hand slipped, unthinkingly, through the sweater slit that had no pocket underneath. His fingers touched the other belt, the one under the sweater, jolting him. Already he felt himself sweating through the undershirt – not what he wanted. Al-Malhouf concentrated on the book to force himself to calm down.