Read an Excerpt
Running Toward the Bombs
Kevin Cullen
Dawn broke clear and clean over Boston on Patriots’ Day, 2013, and Dan Linskey was up before the dawn.
He walked down Boylston Street, near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, as he does every Patriots’ Day, because this is his town and this is his baby. Dan Linskey is the chief of the Boston Police Department. And he owns every big outdoor event in the city, from the raucous celebrations that follow the championships of Boston’s sports teams, which seem to happen every other year, to the star-spangled festival when the Boston Pops serenades the city every Fourth of July.
His was not an idle walk. As chief of the department, Linskey had drawn up several disaster scenarios, and the reality is that in the post-9/11 world, the marathon, like every other outdoor event in Boston, was a target for terrorists.
Still, there was nothing on this sunny morning that led Linskey to believe it would be anything other than the day it usually is, the people lined along Boylston, five deep, cheering the runners on those last few hundred yards, toward the finish line at the Boston Public Library.
Patriots’ Day is a holiday in Boston recalling the shots fired at Concord and Lexington, just outside the city, when a bunch of farmers took on an empire and won. The traffic is light. Out of the corner of his eye, Dan Linskey spied a woman who had set up camp on the corner of the Ring Road, blocking it. The Ring Road was an access point for emergency vehicles to Boylston Street.
“Ma’am, you can’t stay here,” Dan Linskey told the woman.
This being Boston, she gave it right back to him, informing him that she had got up early to stake out a prime spot on Boylston and she wasn’t giving it up, no matter what he said.
Dan Linskey, a cop for twenty-seven years, a Marine before that, can be nice when he has to be. But he can also be firm. With this woman he was firm, and soon she had begrudgingly decamped to a place farther down Boylston. She was angry, furious actually. But in moving, at Dan Linskey’s insistence, that woman unwittingly saved many lives.
Bill and Denise Richard told the kids the night before that they were heading into town from their Dorchester home to see the marathon. Their children—Henry, nine, Martin, eight, and Jane, seven — were excited. It was a family tradition, and like all family traditions, it was something cherished.
Bill and Denise were what some suburbanites would call homesteaders. From the 1970s right through the end of the twentieth century, many people had left Boston in what the demographers dubbed “white flight.” The Richards were the other side of the coin. They chose to live in the Ashmont section of Dorchester, which like a lot of neighborhoods in Boston’s inner city had seen something of a decline in the second half of the twentieth century.
But the Richards were part and parcel of Ashmont’s revitalization. They sent their kids to the local charter school. They, like others, saw things changing for the better when Chris Douglass, one of the city’s premier restaurateurs, opened a high-end place, the Ashmont Grill, right in the middle of the neighborhood in 2005. And the Richards were prime movers in getting the state to invest heavily in rebuilding the Ashmont train and bus station. The Richards were among those who breathed new life into an old neighborhood, giving it new life and endless possibilities.
The Richard kids were giddy with excitement, leaning against the metal barriers, watching the runners, who were different colors, like the flags of all the world’s nations lining the last portion of the marathon route.
Standing there, enraptured by the sights and sounds of people finishing the last steps of twenty-six miles, the cheering sustained, neither the Richards nor anyone else noticed as a nineteen-year-old Chechen kid named Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, wearing his baseball cap backward like many other kids in the crowd, approached from behind. Tsarnaev placed a backpack right behind eight-year-old Martin Richard, then continued to walk up Boylston Street.
They call the fire station Broadway, even though it’s in the South End, a mile away from the real Broadway in South Boston. It houses Engine 7 and Tower Ladder 17, and it is one of the busiest firehouses in the city.
On Patriots’ Day, as the runners passed the finish line on Boylston, the men from Engine 7 were around the corner, at an apartment building on Commonwealth Avenue, Boston’s grandest boulevard. A group of college students had managed to put a gas grill on a narrow balcony to cook hamburgers and hot dogs while they partied Patriots’ Day away.
Two firefighters, Benny Upton and Sean O’Brien, looked at each other, thinking that however smart these kids were to get into college, they couldn’t be that smart.
“Do you guys know how dangerous this is?” Upton asked them.
The college kids were offering sheepish apologies when there was a boom from around the corner.
Upton, a former Marine who had done three combat tours, he knew exactly what had happened.
“Bomb!” he yelled, and he and the men from Engine 7 and Tower Ladder 17 were soon running at full clip up Exeter Street, right into the belly of the beast. They had only just begun running when they heard a second explosion.
“Jesus Christ,” Tommy Hughes said to himself as he ran. Like Upton, he was a former Marine and could only imagine what lay around the corner on Boylston.
Actually, he later told me, he couldn’t imagine it. It was worse than anything he saw in the military. Acrid smoke hung in the air and people lay scattered across the sidewalk. There were pools of blood, body parts. It was, at first, eerily quiet and the firefighters instinctively ran to the sides of the wounded.
Upton, like the other firefighters, knew it was terrorism, and they assumed they were running into secondary explosions, and perhaps a biochemical attack. But they, like their brother and sister police officers and paramedics and EMTs, ran toward the bombs anyway, because that’s what they do.
Tommy Hughes was almost immediately faced with a Hobson’s choice. Two children, one a boy, the other a girl, both missing a leg, lay on the sidewalk, like fish out of water, wriggling helplessly. Hughes reached down and picked up the boy, who was closer to him, but his guilt was assuaged immediately because another firefighter picked up the girl.
The little boy was as much in fear as he was in pain. Tommy Hughes hugged him as much as he carried him.
“It’s OK, buddy,” Tommy Hughes whispered into his ear. “I’ve got you. It’s OK, pal.”
Sean O’Brien, a firefighter from Engine 7, was almost as stunned as the victims, because when he rounded the corner he came face to face with Bill Richard, a friend from the neighborhood in Dorchester.
“I can’t find Denise!” Bill Richard yelled to Sean O’Brien. Bill Richard was clearly in shock, his ears numbed by the explosion.
It was a short-lived blessing, because he did not fully comprehend, in that moment, that his family lay scattered around him: his son was dead, his daughter was missing a leg, his wife had shrapnel in her eye.
O’Brien pushed his emotion aside and his training kicked in. But his task was Herculean. He looked down and saw young Martin.
“I knew Marty was gone,” O’Brien told me a day later.
Sean O’Brien was not just looking at a little boy. He was looking at a little boy who was kind to everyone, including O’Brien’s daughter, who was in the same third-grade class. O’Brien’s heart ached so badly that he almost keeled over. But whatever feelings he had for little Martin Richard, Sean O’Brien forced himself to try to save others. The best way to honor Martin, he later told me, was to save others.
In fact, almost every firefighter from Engine 7 and Tower Ladder 17 knew the Richard family. Many of them were Dorchester guys. The daughter of Kevin Meehan, the chauffeur—firefighter lingo for the engine driver—babysat the Richard kids. The daughter of Eddie Kelly, who was off duty but raced to the scene after watching his wife cross the finish line, was in the same Irish step dance school as Janey Richard.