Chapter 1
SITTING IN THE control center of Algonquin Consolidated Power and Light’s sprawling complex on the East River in Queens, New York, the morning supervisor frowned at the pulsing red words on his computer screen.
Critical failure.
Below them was frozen the exact time: 11:20:20:003 a.m.
He lowered his cardboard coffee cup, blue and white with stiff depictions of Greek athletes on it, and sat up in his creaky swivel chair.
The power company control center employees sat in front of individual workstations, like air traffic controllers. The large room was brightly lit and dominated by a massive flat-screen monitor, reporting on the flow of electricity throughout the power grid known as the Northeastern Interconnection, which provided electrical service in New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Connecticut. The architecture and decor of the control center were quite modern - if the year were 1960.
The supervisor squinted up at the board, which showed the juice arriving from generating plants around the country: steam turbines, reactors and the hydroelectric dam at Niagara Falls. In one tiny portion of the spaghetti depicting these electrical lines, something was wrong. A red circle was flashing.
Critical failure . . .
“What’s up?” the supervisor asked. A gray-haired man with a taut belly under his short-sleeved white shirt and thirty years’ experience in the electricity business, he was mostly curious. While critical-incident indicator lights came on from time to time, actual critical incidents were very rare.
A young technician replied, “Says we have total breaker separation. MH-Twelve.”
Dark, unmanned and grimy, Algonquin Consolidated Substation 12, located in Harlem - the “MH” for Manhattan - was a major area substation. It received 138,000 volts and fed the juice through transformers, which stepped it down to 10 percent of that level, divided it up and sent it on its way.
Additional words now popped onto the big screen, glowing red beneath the time and the stark report of the critical failure.
MH-12 offline.
The supervisor typed on his computer, recalling the days when this work was done with radio and telephone and insulated switches, amid a smell of oil and brass and hot Bakelite. He read the dense, complicated scroll of text. He spoke softly, as if to himself, “The breakers opened? Why? The load’s normal.”
Another message appeared.
MH-12 offline. RR to affected service area from MH-17, MH-10, MH-13, NJ-18.
“We’ve got load rerouting,” somebody called unnecessarily.
In the suburbs and countryside the grid is clearly visible - those bare overhead high-tension wires and power poles and service lines running into your house. When a line goes down, there’s little difficulty finding and fixing the problem. In many cities, though, like New York, the electricity flows underground, in insulated cables.
From THE BURNING WIRE by Jeffrey Deaver
© 2010 Jeffery Deaver
As Earth Day approaches, someone breaks into the power company and manipulates the electric grid in New York City. The result—a 5000° arc flash—shoots out of a substation, killing a man on the street. Even more terrifying, this attack seems to be a test for a far greater display. But who is behind it: an eco-terrorist group, a disgruntled utility employee or some psychotic individual? Aware that arc flashes can leap from electrical outlets at anytime, anywhere, Lincoln Rhyme, Amelia Sachs and their crew must find and stop the killer before more people die.
Then Rhyme gets a call from body-language expert Kathryn Dance: the Watchmaker is in Mexico City stalking a target. Can Rhyme work both cases without letting either perp get away?
Lrg Print Hardcover: 448 pages
Publisher: Simon and Schuster, Inc. ( June 08, 2010 )
Item #: 09-4113
ISBN: 9781616643768
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 1.3 inches
Product Weight: 28.0 ounces
