11
EVENING FALLS IN Hanoi a full twelve hours
earlier than in New York, so the sun which was still high as
Reacher and Jodie left the Bronx had already slipped behind the
highlands of northern Laos, two hundred miles away to the west of
Noi Bai Airport. The sky was glowing orange and the long shadows of
late afternoon were replaced by the sudden dull gloom of tropical
dusk. The smells of the city and the jungle were masked under the
reek of kerosene, and the noises of car horns and nighttime insects
were blown away by the steady whine of jet engines idling.
A giant U.S. Air Force C-141 Starlifter
transport was standing on the apron, a mile from the crowded
passenger terminals, next to an unmarked hangar. The plane’s rear
ramp was down, and its engines were running fast enough to power
the interior lighting. Inside the unmarked hangar, too, lights were
on. There were a hundred arc lights, slung high up under the
corrugated metal roof, washing the cavernous space with their
bright yellow glow.
The hangar was as large as a stadium, but it
held nothing except seven caskets. Each one of them was six and a
half feet long, made from ribbed aluminum polished to a high shine
and shaped roughly like a coffin, which is exactly what each one of
them was. They were standing in a neat row, on trestles, each one
draped with an American flag. The flags were newly laundered and
crisply pressed, and the center stripe of each flag was precisely
aligned with the center rib of each casket.
There were nine men and two women in the hangar,
standing next to the seven aluminum caskets. Six of the men were
there as the honor guard. They were regular soldiers of the United
States Army, newly showered, newly shaved, dressed in immaculate
ceremonial uniforms, holding themselves at rigid attention, away
from the other five people. Three of those were Vietnamese, two men
and a woman, short, dark, impassive. They were dressed in uniform,
too, but theirs were everyday uniforms, not ceremonial. Dark olive
cloth, worn and creased, badged here and there with the unfamiliar
insignia of their rank.
The last two people were Americans, dressed in
civilian clothes, but the sort of civilian clothes that indicate
military status as clearly as any uniform. The woman was young,
with a mid-length canvas skirt and a long-sleeved khaki blouse,
with heavy brown shoes on her feet. The man was tall,
silver-haired, maybe fifty-five years old, dressed in tropical
khakis under a lightweight belted raincoat. He was carrying a
battered brown leather briefcase in his hand, and there was a
garment bag of similar vintage on the ground at his feet.
The tall silver-haired man nodded to the honor
guard, a tiny signal, almost imperceptible. The senior soldier
spoke a muted command and the six men formed up in two lines of
three. They slow-marched forward, and right-turned, and
slow-marched again until they were lined up precisely, three each
side of the first casket. They paused a beat and stooped and lifted
the casket to their shoulders in a single fluid movement. The
senior man spoke again, and they slow-marched forward toward the
hangar door, the casket supported exactly level on their linked
arms, the only sounds the crunch of their boots on the concrete and
the whine of the waiting engines.
On the apron, they turned right and wheeled a
wide, slow semicircle through the hot jet wash until they were
lined up with the Starlifter’s ramp. They slow-marched forward, up
the exact center of the ramp, feeling carefully with their feet for
the metal ribs bolted there to help them, and on into the belly of
the plane. The pilot was waiting for them. She was a U.S. Air Force
captain, trim in a tropical-issue flight suit. Her crew was
standing at attention with her, a copilot, a flight engineer, a
navigator, a radio operator. Opposite them were the loadmaster and
his crew, silent in green fatigues. They stood face-to-face in two
still lines, and the honor guard filed slowly between them, all the
way up to the forward loading bay. There they bent their knees and
gently lowered the casket onto a shelf built along the fuselage
wall. Four of the men stood back, heads bowed. The forward man and
the rear man worked together to slide the casket into place. The
loadmaster stepped forward and secured it with rubber straps. Then
he stepped back and joined the honor guard and held a long silent
salute.
It took an hour to load all seven caskets. The
people inside the hangar stood silent throughout, and then they
followed the seventh casket onto the apron. They matched their walk
to the honor guard’s slow pace, and waited at the bottom of the
Starlifter’s ramp in the hot, noisy damp of the evening. The honor
guard came out, duty done. The tall silver-haired American saluted
them and shook hands with the three Vietnamese officers and nodded
to the American woman. No words were exchanged. He shouldered his
garment bag and ran lightly up the ramp into the plane. A slow,
powerful motor whirred and the ramp closed shut behind him. The
engines ran up to speed and the giant plane came off its brakes and
started to taxi. It wheeled a wide cumbersome left and disappeared
behind the hangar. Its noise grew faint. Then it grew loud again in
the distance and the watchers saw it come back along the runway,
engines screaming, accelerating hard, lifting off. It yawed right,
climbing fast, turning, dipping a wing, and then it was gone, just
a triangle of winking lights tiny in the distance and a vague
smudge of black kerosene smoke tracing its curved path into the
night air.
The honor guard dispersed in the sudden silence
and the American woman shook hands with the three Vietnamese
officers and walked back to her car. The three Vietnamese officers
walked in a different direction, back to theirs. It was a Japanese
sedan, repainted a dull military green. The woman drove, and the
two men sat in back. It was a short trip to the center of Hanoi.
The woman parked in a chain-link compound behind a low concrete
building painted the color of sand. The men got out without a word
and went inside through an unmarked door. The woman locked the car
and walked around the building to a different entrance. She went
inside and up a short flight of stairs to her office. There was a
bound ledger open on her desk. She recorded the safe dispatch of
the cargo in neat handwriting and closed the ledger. She carried it
to a file cabinet near her office door. She locked it inside, and
glanced through the door, up and down the corridor. Then she
returned to her desk and picked up her telephone and dialed a
number eleven thousand miles away in New York City.
MARILYN WOKE UP Sheryl and brought Chester around into some sort of consciousness before the thickset man came into the bathroom with the coffee. It was in mugs, and he was holding two in one hand and one in the other, unsure of where to leave them. He paused and stepped to the sink and lined them up on the narrow granite ledge under the mirror. Then he turned without speaking and walked back out. Pulled the door closed after him, firmly, but without slamming it.
Marilyn handed out the mugs one at a time,
because she was trembling and pretty sure she was going to spill
them if she tried them two at a time. She squatted down and gave
the first one to Sheryl, and helped her take the first sip. Then
she went back for Chester’s. He took it from her blankly and looked
at it like he didn’t know what it was. She took the third for
herself and stood against the sink and drank it down, thirstily. It
was good. The cream and the sugar tasted like energy.
“Where are the stock certificates?” she
whispered.
Chester looked up at her, listlessly. “At my
bank, in my box.”
Marilyn nodded. Came face-to-face with the fact
she didn’t know which was Chester’s bank. Or where it was. Or what
stock certificates were for.
“How many are there?”
He shrugged. “A thousand, originally. I used
three hundred for security against the loans. I had to give them up
to the lender, temporarily.”
“And now Hobie’s got those?”
He nodded. “He bought the debt. They’ll
messenger the security to him, today, maybe. They don’t need it
anymore. And I pledged him another ninety. They’re still in the
box. I guess I was due to deliver them soon.”
“So how does the transfer actually
happen?”
He shrugged again, wearily, vaguely. “I sign the
stock over to him, he takes the certificates and registers them
with the Exchange, and when he’s got five hundred and one
registered in his name, then he’s the majority owner.”
“So where’s your bank?”
Chester took his first sip of coffee. “About
three blocks from here. About five minutes’ walk. Then another five
minutes to the Exchange. Call it ten minutes beginning to end, and
we’re penniless and homeless on the street.”
He set the mug on the floor and lapsed back into
staring. Sheryl was listless. Not drinking her coffee. Her skin
looked clammy. Maybe concussed, or something. Maybe still in shock.
Marilyn didn’t know. She had no experience. Her nose was awful.
Black and swollen. The bruising was spreading under her eyes. Her
lips were cracked and dry, from breathing through her mouth all
night.
“Try some more coffee,” she said. “It’ll be good
for you.” She squatted beside her and guided her hand up to her
mouth. Tilted the mug. Sheryl took a sip. Some of the hot liquid
ran down her chin. She took another sip. She glanced up at Marilyn,
with something in her eyes. Marilyn didn’t know what it was, but
she smiled back anyway, bright with encouragement.
“We’ll get you to the hospital,” she
whispered.
Sheryl closed her eyes and nodded, like she was
suddenly filled with relief. Marilyn knelt beside her, holding her
hand, staring at the door, wondering how she was going to deliver
on that promise.
“ARE YOU GOING to keep this thing?“ Jodie asked.
She was talking about the Lincoln Navigator.
Reacher thought about it as he waited. They were jammed up on the
approach to the Triborough.
“Maybe,” he said.
It was more or less brand new. Very quiet and
smooth. Black metallic outside, tan leather inside, four hundred
miles on the clock, still reeking of new hide and new carpet and
the strong plastic smell of a box-fresh vehicle. Huge seats, each
one identical with the driver’s chair, lots of fat consoles with
drinks holders and little lids suggestive of secret storage
spaces.
“I think it’s gross,” she said.
He smiled. “Compared to what? That tiny little
thing you were driving?”
“That was much smaller than this.”
“You’re much smaller than me.”
She was quiet for a beat.
“It was Rutter’s,” she said. “It’s
tainted.”
The traffic moved, and then stopped again
halfway over the Harlem River. The buildings of midtown were
faraway to his left, and hazy, like a vague promise.
“It’s just a tool,” he said. “Tools have no
memory.”
“I hate him,” she said. “I think more than I’ve
ever hated anybody.”
He nodded.
“I know,” he said. “The whole time we were in
there I was thinking about the Hobies, up there in Brighton, alone
in their little house, the look in their eyes. Sending your only
boy off to war is a hell of a thing, and to be lied to and cheated
afterward, Jodie, there’s no excuse for that. Swap the chronology,
it could have been my folks. And he did it fifteen times. I should
have hurt him worse.”
“As long as he doesn’t do it again,” she
said.
He shook his head. “The list of targets is
shrinking. Not too many BNR families left now to fall for
it.”
They made it off the bridge and headed south on
Second Avenue. It was fast and clear ahead for sixty blocks.
“And it wasn’t him coming after us,” she said
quietly. “He didn’t know who we were.”
Reacher shook his head again. “No. How many fake
photographs do you have to sell to make it worth trashing a Chevy
Suburban? We need to analyze it right from the beginning, Jodie.
Two full-time employees get sent to the Keys and up to Garrison,
right? Two full-time salaries, plus weapons and airfare and all,
and they’re riding around in a Tahoe, then a third employee shows
up with a Suburban he can afford to just dump on the street? That’s
a lot of money, and it’s probably just the visible tip of some kind
of an iceberg. It implies something worth maybe millions of
dollars. Rutter was never making that kind of money, ripping off
old folks for eighteen thousand bucks a pop.”
“So what the hell is this about?”
Reacher just shrugged and drove, and watched the
mirror all the way.
HOBIE TOOK THE call from Hanoi at home. He listened to the Vietnamese woman’s short report and hung up without speaking. Then he stood in the center of his living room and tilted his head to one side and narrowed his good eye like he was watching something physical happening in front of him. Like he was watching a baseball soaring out of the diamond, looping upward into the glare of the lights, an outfielder tracking back under it, the fence getting closer, the glove coming up, the ball soaring, the fence looming, the outfielder leaping. Will the ball clear the fence? Or not? Hobie couldn’t tell.
He stepped across the living room and out to the
terrace. The terrace faced west across the park, from thirty floors
up. It was a view he hated, because all the trees reminded him of
his childhood. But it enhanced the value of his property, which was
the name of the game. He wasn’t responsible for the way other
people’s tastes drove the market. He was just there to benefit from
them. He turned and looked left, to where he could see his office
building, all the way downtown. The Twin Towers looked shorter than
they should, because of the curvature of the earth. He turned back
inside and slid the door closed. Walked through the apartment and
out to the elevator. Rode down all the way to the parking
garage.
His car was not modified in any way to help him
with his handicap. It was a late-model Cadillac sedan with the
ignition and the selector on the right of the steering column.
Using the key was awkward, because he had to lean across with his
left hand and jab it in backward and twist. But after that, he
never had much of a problem. He put it in drive by using the hook
on the selector and drove out of the garage one-handed, using his
left, the hook resting down in his lap.
He felt better once he was south of Fifty-ninth
Street. The park disappeared and he was deep in the noisy canyons
of midtown. The traffic comforted him. The Cadillac’s
air-conditioning relieved the itching under his scars. June was the
worst time for that. Some particular combination of heat and
humidity acted together to drive him crazy. But the Cadillac made
it better. He wondered idly whether Stone’s Mercedes would be as
good. He thought not. He had never trusted the air on foreign cars.
So he would turn it into cash. He knew a guy in Queens who would
spring for it. But it was another chore on the list. A lot to do,
and not much time to do it in. The outfielder was right there,
under the ball, leaping, with the fence at his back.
He parked in the underground garage, in the slot
previously occupied by the Suburban. He reached across and pulled
the key and locked the Cadillac. Rode upstairs in the express
elevator. Tony was at the reception counter.
“Hanoi called again,” Hobie told him. “It’s in
the air.”
Tony looked away.
“What?” Hobie asked him.
“So we should just abandon this Stone
thing.”
“It’ll take them a few days, right?”
“A few days might not be enough,” Tony said.
“There are complications. The woman says she’s talked it over with
him, and they’ll do the deal, but there are complications we don’t
know about.”
“What complications?”
Tony shook his head. “She wouldn’t tell me. She
wants to tell you, direct.”
Hobie stared at the office door. “She’s kidding,
right? She damn well better be kidding. I can’t afford any kind of
complications now. I just presold the sites, three separate deals.
I gave my word. The machinery is in motion. What
complications?”
“She wouldn’t tell me,” Tony said again.
Hobie’s face was itching. There was no
air-conditioning in the garage. The short walk to the elevator had
upset his skin. He pressed the hook to his forehead, looking for
some relief from the metal. But the hook was warm, too.
“What about Mrs. Jacob?” he asked.
“She was home all night,” Tony said. “With this
Reacher guy. I checked. They were laughing about something this
morning. I heard them from the corridor. Then they drove somewhere,
north on the FDR Drive. Maybe going back to Garrison.”
“I don’t need her in Garrison. I need her right
here. And him.”
Tony was silent.
“Bring Mrs. Stone to me,” Hobie said.
He walked into to his office and across to his
desk. Tony went the opposite way, toward the bathroom. He came out
a moment later, pushing Marilyn in front of him. She looked tired.
The silk sheath looked ludicrously out of context, like she was a
partygoer caught out by a blizzard and stranded in town the morning
after.
Hobie pointed to the sofa.
“Sit down, Marilyn,” he said.
She remained standing. The sofa was too low. Too
low to sit on in a short dress, and too low to achieve the
psychological advantage she was going to need. But to stand in
front of his desk was wrong, too. Too supplicant. She walked around
to the wall of windows. Eased the slats apart and gazed out at the
morning. Then she turned and propped herself against the ledge.
Made him rotate his chair to face her.
“What are these complications?” he asked.
She looked at him and took a deep breath.
“We’ll get to that,” she said. “First we get
Sheryl to the hospital.”
There was silence. No sound at all, except the
rumbling and booming of the populated building. Faraway to the
west, a siren sounded faintly. Maybe all the way over in Jersey
City.
“What are these complications?” he asked again.
He used the same exact voice, the same exact intonation. Like he
was prepared to overlook her mistake.
“The hospital first.”
The silence continued. Hobie turned back to
Tony.
“Get Stone out of the bathroom,” he said.
Stone stumbled out, in his underwear, with
Tony’s knuckles in his back, all the way to the desk. He hit his
shins on the coffee table and gasped in pain.
“What are these complications?” Hobie asked
him.
He just glanced wildly left and right, like he
was too scared and disoriented to speak. Hobie waited. Then he
nodded.
“Break his leg,” he said. He turned to look at
Marilyn. There was silence. No sound, except Stone’s ragged
breathing and the faint boom of the building. Hobie stared on at
Marilyn. She stared back at him.
“Go ahead,” she said quietly. “Break his damn
leg. Why should I care? He’s made me penniless. He’s ruined my
life. Break both his damn legs if you feel like it. But it won’t
get you what you want any quicker. Because there are complications,
and the sooner we get to them, the better it is for you. And we
won’t get to them until Sheryl is in the hospital.”
She leaned back on the window ledge, palms down,
arms locked from the shoulder. She hoped it made her look relaxed
and casual, but she was doing it to keep herself from falling on
the floor.
“The hospital first,” she said again. She was
concentrating so hard on her voice, it sounded like somebody
else’s. She was pleased with it. It sounded OK. A low, firm voice,
steady and quiet in the silent office.
“Then we deal,” she said. “Your choice.”
The outfielder was leaping, glove high, and the
ball was dropping. The glove was higher than the fence. The
trajectory of the ball was too close to call. Hobie tapped his hook
on the desk. The sound was loud. Stone was staring at him. Hobie
ignored him and glanced up at Tony.
“Take the bitch to the hospital,” he said
sourly.
“Chester goes with them,” Marilyn said. “For
verification. He needs to see her go inside to the ER, alone. I
stay here, as surety.”
Hobie stopped tapping. Looked at her and smiled.
“Don’t you trust me?”
“No, I don’t trust you. We don’t do it this way,
you’ll just take Sheryl out of here and lock her up someplace
else.”
Hobie was still smiling. “Farthest thing from my
thoughts. I was going to have Tony shoot her and dump her in the
sea.”
There was silence again. Marilyn was shaking
inside.
“You sure you want to do this?” Hobie asked her.
“She says one word to the hospital people, she gets you killed, you
know that, right?”
Marilyn nodded. “She won’t say anything to
anybody. Not knowing you’ve still got me here.”
“You better pray she doesn’t.”
“She won’t. This isn’t about us. It’s about her.
She needs to get help.”
She stared at him, leaning back, feeling faint.
She was searching his face for a sign of compassion. Some
acceptance of his responsibility. He stared back at her. There was
no compassion in his face. Nothing there at all, except annoyance.
She swallowed and took a deep breath.
“And she needs a skirt. She can’t go out without
one. It’ll look suspicious. The hospital will get the police
involved. Neither of us wants that. So Tony needs to go out and buy
her a new skirt: ‘
“Lend her your dress,” Hobie said. “Take it off
and give it to her.”
There was a long silence.
“It wouldn’t fit her,” Marilyn said.
“That’s not the reason, is it?”
She made no reply. Silence. Hobie
shrugged.
“OK,” he said.
She swallowed again. “And shoes.”
“What?”
“She needs shoes,” Marilyn said. “She can’t go
without shoes.”
“Jesus,” Hobie said. “What the hell next?”
“Next, we deal. Soon as Chester is back here and
tells me he saw her walk in alone and unharmed, then we
deal.”
Hobie traced the curve of his hook with the
fingers of his left hand.
“You’re a smart woman,” he said.
I know I am, Marilyn
thought. That’s the first of your
complications.
REACHER PLACED THE sports bag on the white sofa underneath the Mondrian copy. He unzipped it and turned it over and spilled out the bricks of fifties. Thirty-nine thousand, three hundred dollars in cash. He split it in half by tossing the bricks alternately left and right to opposite ends of the sofa. He finished up with two very impressive stacks.
“Four trips to the bank,” Jodie said. “Under ten
thousand dollars, the reporting rules don’t apply, and we don’t
want to be answering any questions about where we got this from,
right? We’ll put it in my account and cut the Hobies a cashier’s
check for nineteen-six-fifty. Our half, we’ll access through my
gold card, OK?”
Reacher nodded. “We need airfare to St. Louis,
Missouri, plus a hotel. Nineteen grand in the bank, we can stay in
decent places and go business class.”
“It’s the only way to fly,” she said. She put
her arms around his waist and stretched up on tiptoes and kissed
him on the mouth. He kissed her back, hard.
“This is fun, isn’t it?” she said.
“For us, maybe,” he said. “Not for the
Hobies.”
They made three trips together to three separate
banks and wound up at a fourth, where she made the final deposit
and bought a cashier’s check made out to Mr. T. and Mrs. M. Hobie
in the sum of $19,650. The bank guy put it in a creamy envelope and
she zipped it into her pocketbook. Then they walked back to
Broadway together, holding hands, so she could pack for the trip.
She put the bank envelope in her bureau and he got on the phone and
established that United from JFK was the best bet for St. Louis,
that time of day.
“Cab?” she asked.
He shook his head. “We’ll drive.”
The big V-8 made a hell of a sound in the
basement garage. He blipped the throttle a couple of times and
grinned. The torque rocked the heavy vehicle, side to side on its
springs.
“The price of their toys,” Jodie said.
He looked at her.
“You never heard that?” she said. “Difference
between the men and the boys is the price of their toys?”
He blipped the motor and grinned again. “Price
on this was a dollar.”
“And you just blipped away two dollars in gas,”
she said.
He shoved it in drive and took off up the ramp.
Worked around east to the Midtown Tunnel and took 495 to the Van
Wyck and down into the sprawl of JFK.
“Park in short-term,” she said. “We can afford
it now, right?”
He had to leave the Steyr and the silencer
behind. No easy way to get through the airport security hoops with
big metal weapons in your pocket. He hid them under the driver’s
seat. They left the Lincoln in the lot right opposite the United
building and five minutes later were at the counter buying two
business-class one-ways to St. Louis. The expensive tickets
entitled them to wait in a special lounge, where a uniformed
steward served them good coffee in china cups with saucers, and
where they could read The Wall Street
Journal without paying for it. Then Reacher carried Jodie’s bag
down the jetway into the plane. The business-class seats were
two-on-a-side, the first half-dozen rows. Wide, comfortable seats.
Reacher smiled.
“I never did this before,” he said.
He slid into the window seat. He had room to
stretch out a little. Jodie was lost in her seat. There was room
enough for three of her, side by side. The attendant brought them
juice before the plane even taxied. Minutes later they were in the
air, wheeling west across the southern tip of Manhattan.
TONY CAME BACK into the office with a shiny red Talbot’s bag and a brown Bally carrier hanging by their rope handles from his clenched fist. Marilyn carried them into the bathroom and five minutes later Sheryl came out. The new skirt was the right size, but the wrong color. She was smoothing it down over her hips with vague movements of her hands. The new shoes didn’t match the skirt and they were too big. Her face looked awful. Her eyes were blank and acquiescent, like Marilyn had told her they should be.
“What are you going to tell the doctors?” Hobie
called to her.
Sheryl looked away and concentrated on Marilyn’s
script. “I walked into a door,” she said.
Her voice was low and nasal. Dull, like she was
still in shock.
“Are you going to call the cops?”
She shook her head. “No, I’m not going to do
that.”
Hobie nodded. “What would happen if you
did?”
“I don’t know,” she replied. Blank and
dull.
“Your friend Marilyn would die, in terrible
pain. You understand that?”
He raised the hook and let her focus on it from
across the room. Then he came out from behind the desk. Walked
around and stood directly behind Marilyn. Used his left hand to
lift her hair aside. His hand brushed her skin. She stiffened. He
touched her cheek with the curve of the hook. Sheryl nodded,
vaguely.
“Yes, I understand that,” she said.
I HAD TO be done quickly, because although Sheryl was now in her new skirt and shoes, Chester was still in his boxers and undershirt. Tony made them both wait in reception until the freight elevator arrived, and then he hustled them along the corridor and inside. He stepped out in the garage and scanned ahead. Hustled them over to the Tahoe and pushed Chester into the backseat and Sheryl into the front. He fired it up and locked the doors. Took off up the ramp and out to the street.
He could recall offhand maybe two dozen
hospitals in Manhattan, and as far as he knew most of them had
emergency rooms. His instinct was to drive all the way north, maybe
up to Mount Sinai on 100th Street, because he felt it would be
safer to put some distance between themselves and wherever Sheryl
was going to be. But they were tight for time. To drive all the way
uptown and back was going to take an hour, maybe more. An hour they
couldn’t spare. So he decided on St. Vincent’s on Eleventh Street
and Seventh Avenue. Bellevue, over on Twenty-seventh and First, was
better geographically, but Bellevue was usually swarming with cops,
for one reason or another. That was his experience. They
practically lived there. So St. Vincent’s it would be. And he knew
St. Vincent’s had a big, wide area facing the ER entrance, where
Greenwich Avenue sliced across Seventh. He remembered the layout
from when they had gone out to capture Costello’s secretary. A big,
wide area, almost like a plaza. They could watch her all the way
inside, without having to stop too close.
The drive took eight minutes. He eased into the
curb on the west side of Seventh and clicked the button to unlock
the doors.
“Out,” he said.
She opened the door and slid down to the
sidewalk. Stood there, uncertain. Then she moved away to the
crosswalk, without looking back. Tony leaned over and slammed the
door behind her. Turned in his seat toward Stone.
“So watch her,” he said.
Stone was already watching her. He saw the
traffic stop and the walk light change. He saw her step forward
with the crowd, dazed. She walked slower than the others, shuffling
in her big shoes. Her hand was up at her face, masking it. She
reached the opposite sidewalk well after the walk light changed
back to DON’T. An impatient truck pulled right and eased around
her. She walked on toward the hospital entrance. Across the wide
sidewalk. Then she was in the ambulance circle. A pair of double
doors ahead of her. Scarred, floppy plastic doors. A trio of nurses
standing next to them, on their cigarette break, smoking. She
walked past the nurses, straight to the doors, slowly. She pushed
at them, tentatively, both hands. They opened. She stepped inside.
The doors fell shut behind her.
“OK, you see that?”
Stone nodded. “Yes, I saw it. She’s
inside.”
Tony checked his mirror and fought his way out
into the traffic stream. By the time he was a hundred yards south,
Sheryl was waiting in the triage line, going over and over in her
head what Marilyn had told her to do.
IT WAS A short and cheap cab ride from the St. Louis Airport to the National Personnel Records Center building, and familiar territory for Reacher. Most of his Stateside tours of duty had involved at least one trip through the archives, searching backward in time for one thing or another. But this time, it was going to be different. He would be going in as a civilian. Not the same thing as going in dressed in a major’s uniform. Not the same thing at all. He was clear on that.
Public access is controlled by the counter staff
in the lobby. The whole archive is technically part of the public
record, but the staff take a lot of trouble to keep that fact well
obscured. In the past Reacher had agreed with that tactic, no
hesitation. Military records can be very frank, and they need to be
read and interpreted in strict context. He’d always been very happy
they were kept away from the public. But now he was the public, and
he was wondering how it was going to play. There were millions of
files piled up in dozens of huge storerooms, and it would be very
easy to wait days or weeks before anything got found, even with the
staff running around like crazy and looking exactly like they were
doing their absolute best. He had seen it happen before, from the
inside, many times. It was a very plausible act. He had watched it,
with a wry smile on his face.
So they paused in the hot Missouri sunshine
after they paid off the cab and agreed on how to do it. They walked
inside and saw the big sign: One File at a Time. They lined up in
front of the clerk and waited. She was a heavy woman, middle-aged,
dressed in a master sergeant’s uniform, busy with the sort of work
designed to achieve nothing at all except to make people wait until
it was done. After a long moment she pushed two blank forms across
the counter and pointed to where a pencil was tied down to a desk
with a piece of string.
The forms were access requests. Jodie filled in
her last name as Jacob and requested all and any information on
Major Jack-none-Reacher, U.S. Army Criminal
Investigation Division. Reacher took the pencil from her and
asked for all and any information on Lieutenant
General Leon Jerome Garber. He slid both forms back to the
master sergeant, who glanced at them and dropped them in her
out-tray. She rang a bell at her elbow and went back to work. The
idea was some private would hear the bell, come pick up the forms,
and start the patient search for the files.
“Who’s working supervisor today?” Reacher
asked.
It was a direct question. The sergeant looked
for a way to avoid answering it, but she couldn’t find one.
“Major Theodore Conrad,” she said,
reluctantly.
Reacher nodded. Conrad? Not a name he
recalled.
“Would you tell him we’d like to meet with him,
just briefly? And would you have those files delivered to his
office?”
The way he said it was exactly halfway between a
pleasant, polite request and an unspoken command. It was a tone of
voice he had always found very useful with master sergeants. The
woman picked up the phone and made the call.
“He’ll have you shown upstairs,” she said, like
in her opinion she was amazed Conrad was doing them such a massive
favor.
“No need,” Reacher said. “I know where it is.
I’ve been there before.”
He showed Jodie the way, up the stairs from the
lobby to a spacious office on the second floor. Major Theodore
Conrad was waiting at the door. Hot-weather uniform, his name on an
acetate plate above his breast pocket. He looked like a friendly
guy, but maybe slightly soured by his posting. He was about
forty-five, and to still be a major on the second floor of the NPRC
at forty-five meant he was going nowhere in a hurry. He paused,
because a private was racing along the hallway toward him with two
thick files in his hand. Reacher smiled to himself. They were
getting the A-grade service. When this place wanted to be quick, it
could be real quick. Conrad took the files and dismissed the
runner.
“So what can I do for you folks?” he asked. His
accent was slow and muddy, like the Mississippi where it
originated, but it was hospitable enough.
“Well, we need your best help, Major,” Reacher
said. “And we’re hoping if you read those files, maybe you’ll feel
willing to give it up.”
Conrad glanced at the files in his hand and
stood aside and ushered them into his office. It was a quiet,
paneled space. He showed them to a matched pair of leather
armchairs and stepped around his desk. Sat down and squared the
files on his blotter, one on top of the other. Opened the first,
which was Leon’s, and started skimming.
It took him ten minutes to see what he needed.
Reacher and Jodie sat and gazed out of the window. The city baked
under a white sun. Conrad finished with the files and studied the
names on the request forms. Then he glanced up.
“Two very fine records,” he said. “Very, very
impressive. And I get the point. You’re obviously Jack-none-Reacher
himself, and I’m guessing Mrs. Jodie Jacob here is the Jodie Garber
referred to in the file as the general’s daughter. Am I
right?”
Jodie nodded and smiled.
“I thought so,” Conrad said. “And you think
being family, so to speak, will buy you better and faster access to
the archive?”
Reacher shook his head solemnly.
“It never crossed our minds,” he said. “We know
all access requests are treated with absolute equality.”
Conrad smiled, and then he laughed out
loud.
“You kept a straight face,” he said. “Very, very
good. You play much poker? You damn well should, you know. So how
can I help you folks?”
“We need what you’ve got on a Victor Truman
Hobie,” Reacher said.
“Vietnam?”
“You familiar with him?” Reacher asked,
surprised.
Conrad looked blank. “Never heard of him. But
with Truman for a middle name, he was born somewhere between 1945
and 1952, wasn’t he? Which makes him too young for Korea and too
old for the Gulf.”
Reacher nodded. He was starting to like Theodore
Conrad. He was a sharp guy. He would have liked to pull his file to
see what was keeping him a major, behind a desk out in Missouri at
the age of forty-five.
“We’ll work in here,” Conrad said. “My
pleasure.”
He picked up the phone and called directly to
the storerooms, bypassing the master sergeant at the front desk. He
winked at Reacher and ordered up the Hobie file. Then they sat in
comfortable silence until the runner came in with the folder five
minutes later.
“That was quick,” Jodie said.
“Actually it was a little slow,” Conrad said
back. “Think about it from the private’s point of view. He hears me
say H for Hobie, he runs to the H section, he locates the file by
first and middle initials, he grabs it, he runs up here with it. My
people are subject to the Army’s normal standards for physical
fitness, which means he could probably run most of a mile in five
minutes. And although this is a very big place, there was a lot
less than a mile to cover in the triangle between his desk and the
H section and this office, believe me. So he was actually a little
slow. I suspect the master sergeant interrupted him, just to
frustrate me.”
Victor Hobie’s file jacket was old and furred,
with a printed grid on the cover where access requests were noted
in neat handwriting. There were only two. Conrad traced the names
with a finger.
“Requests by telephone,” he said. “General
Garber himself, in March of this year. And somebody called
Costello, calling from New York, beginning of last week. Why all
the sudden interest?”
“That’s what we hope to find out,” Reacher
said.
A combat soldier has a thick file, especially a
combat soldier who did his fighting thirty years ago. Three decades
is long enough for every report and every note to end up in exactly
the right place. Victor Hobie’s paperwork was a compressed mass
about two inches deep. The old furred jacket was molded tight
around it. It reminded Reacher of Costello’s black leather wallet,
which he’d seen in the Keys bar. He hitched his chair closer to
Jodie’s and closer to the front edge of Conrad’s desk. Conrad laid
the file down and reversed it on the shiny wood and opened it up,
like he was displaying a rare treasure to interested
connoisseurs.
MARILYN’S INSTRUCTIONS HAD been precise, and Sheryl followed them to the letter. The first step was get treatment. She went to the desk and then waited on a hard plastic chair in the triage bay. The St. Vincent’s ER was less busy than it sometimes is and she was seen within ten minutes by a woman doctor young enough to be her daughter.
“How did this happen?” the doctor asked.
“I walked into a door,” Sheryl said.
The doctor led her to a curtained area and sat
her down on the examination table. Started checking the reflex
responses in her limbs.
“A door? You absolutely sure about that?”
Sheryl nodded. Stuck to her story. Marilyn was
counting on her to do that.
“It was half-open. I turned around, just didn’t
see it.”
The doctor said nothing and shone a light into
Sheryl’s left eye, then her right.
“Any blurring of your vision?”
Sheryl nodded. “A little.”
“Headache?”
“Like you wouldn’t believe.”
The doctor paused and studied the admission
form.
“OK, we need X rays of the facial bones,
obviously, but I also want a full skull film and a CAT scan. We
need to see what exactly happened in there. Your insurance is good,
so I’m going to get a surgeon to take a look at you right away,
because if you’re going to need reconstructive work it’s a lot
better to start on that sooner rather than later, OK? So you need
to get into a gown and lie down. Then I’ll put you on a painkiller
to help with the headache.”
Sheryl heard Marilyn insist make the call before the painkiller, or you’ll fuzz out
and forget.
“I need to get to a phone,” she said,
worried.
“We can call your husband, if you want,” the
doctor said, neutrally.
“No, I’m not married. It’s a lawyer. I need to
call somebody’s lawyer.”
The doctor looked at her and shrugged.
“OK, down the hall. But be quick.”
Sheryl walked to the bank of phones opposite the
triage bay. She called the operator and asked for collect, like
Marilyn had told her to. Repeated the number she’d memorized. The
phone was answered on the second ring.
“Forster and Abelstein,” a bright voice said.
“How may we help you?”
“I’m calling on behalf of Mr. Chester Stone,”
Sheryl said. “I need to speak with his attorney.”
“That would be Mr. Forster himself,” the bright
voice said. “Please hold.”
While Sheryl was listening to the hold music,
the doctor was twenty feet away, at the main desk, also making a
call. Her call featured no music. Her call was to the NYPD’s
Domestic Violence Unit.
“This is St. Vincent’s,” she was saying. ”I’ve
got another one for you. This one says she walked into a damn door.
Won’t even admit she’s married, much less he’s beating on her. You
can come on down and talk to her anytime you want.”
THE FIRST ITEM in the file was Victor Hobie’s original application to join the Army. It was brown at the edges and crisp with age, handwritten in the same neat left-handed schoolboy script they had seen in the letters home to Brighton. It listed a summary of his education, his desire to fly helicopters, and not very much else. On the face of it, not an obvious rising star. But around that time for every one boy stepping up to volunteer, there were two dozen others buying one-way tickets on the Greyhound to Canada, so the Army recruiters had grabbed Hobie with both hands and sent him straight to the doctor.
He had been given a flight medical, which was a
tougher examination than standard, especially concerning eyesight
and balance. He had passed A-1. Six feet one inch, 170 pounds,
twenty-twenty vision, good lung capacity, free of infectious
diseases. The medical was dated early in the spring, and Reacher
could picture the boy, pale from the New York winter, standing in
his boxers on a bare wooden floor with a tape measure tight around
his chest.
Next item in the file showed he was given travel
vouchers and ordered to report to Fort Dix in two weeks’ time. The
following batch of paperwork originated from down there. It started
with the form he signed on his arrival, irrevocably committing
himself to loyal service in the United States Army. Fort Dix was
twelve weeks of basic training. There were six proficiency
assessments. He scored well above average in all of them. No
comments were recorded.
Then there was a requisition for travel vouchers
to Fort Polk, and a copy of his orders to report there for a month
of advanced infantry training. There were notes about his progress
with weapons. He was rated good, which meant something at Polk. At
Dix, you were rated good if you could recognize a rifle at ten
paces. At Polk, such a rating spoke of excellent hand-to-eye
coordination, steady muscle control, calm temperament. Reacher was
no expert on flying, but he guessed the instructors would have been
fairly sanguine about eventually letting this guy loose with a
helicopter.
There were more travel vouchers, this time to
Fort Wolters in Texas, where the U.S. Army Primary Helicopter
School was located. There was a note attached from the Polk CO
indicating Hobie had turned down a week’s leave in favor of heading
straight there. It was just a bald statement, but it carried an
approving resonance, even after all those years. Here was a guy who
was just about itching to get going.
The paperwork thickened up at Wolters. It was a
five-month stay, and it was serious stuff, like college. First came
a month of preflight training, with heavy academic concentration on
physics and aeronautics and navigation, taught in classrooms. It
was necessary to pass to progress. Hobie had creamed it. The math
talent his father had hoped to turn toward accountancy ran riot
through those textbook subjects. He passed out of preflight top of
his class. The only negative was a short note about his attitude.
Some officer was criticizing him for trading favors for coaching.
Hobie was helping some strugglers through the complex equations and
in return they were shining his boots and cleaning his kit. Reacher
shrugged to himself. The officer was clearly an asshole. Hobie was
training to be a helicopter pilot, not a damn saint.
The next four months at Wolters were airborne
for primary flight training, initially on H-23 Hillers. Hobie’s
first instructor was a guy called Lanark. His training notes were
written in a wild scrawl, very anecdotal, very un-military.
Sometimes very funny. He claimed learning to fly a helicopter was
like learning to ride a bike as a kid. You screwed it up, and you
screwed it up, and you screwed it up, and then all of a sudden it
came right and you never again forgot how to do it. In Lanark’s
opinion, Hobie had maybe taken longer than he ought to master it,
but thereafter his progress moved from excellent to outstanding. He
signed him off the Hiller and onto the H-19 Sikorsky, which was
like moving up to a ten-speed English racer. He performed better on
the Sikorsky than he had on the Hiller. He was a natural, and he
got better the more complicated the machines became.
He finished Wolters overall second in his class,
rated outstanding, just behind an ace called A. A. DeWitt. More
travel vouchers had them heading out together, over to Fort Rucker
in Alabama, for another four months in advanced flight
training.
“Have I heard of this guy DeWitt?” Reacher
asked. “The name rings a bell.”
Conrad was following progress upside down.
“Could be General DeWitt,” he said. “He runs the
Helicopter School back at Wolters now. That would be logical,
right? I’ll check it out.”
He called direct to the storeroom and ordered up
Major General A. A. DeWitt. Checked his
watch as the phone went back down. “Should be faster, because the D
section is nearer his desk than the H section. Unless the damn
master sergeant interferes with him again.”
Reacher smiled briefly and rejoined Jodie thirty
years in the past. Fort Rucker was the real thing, with brand-new
front-line assault helicopters replacing the trainers. Bell UH-1
Iroquois, nicknamed Hueys. Big, fierce
machines, gas turbine engines, the unforgettable wop-wop-wop sound of a rotor blade forty-eight feet
long and twenty-one inches wide. Young Victor Hobie had hurled one
around the Alabama skies for seventeen long weeks, and then he
passed out with credits and distinctions at the parade his father
had photographed.
“Three minutes forty seconds,” Conrad
whispered.
The runner was on his way in with the DeWitt
jacket. Conrad leaned forward and took it from him. The guy saluted
and went back out.
“I can’t let you see this,” Conrad said. “The
general’s still a serving officer, right? But I’ll tell you if it’s
the same DeWitt.”
He opened the file at the beginning and Reacher
saw flashes of the same paper as in Hobie’s. Conrad skimmed and
nodded. “Same DeWitt. He survived the jungle and stayed on board
afterward. Total helicopter nut. My guess is he’ll serve out his
time down at Wolters.”
Reacher nodded. Glanced out of the window. The
sun was falling away into afternoon.
“You guys want some coffee?” Conrad asked.
“Great,” Jodie said. Reacher nodded again.
Conrad picked up the phone and called the
storeroom.
“Coffee,” he said. “That’s not a file. It’s a
request for refreshment. Three cups, best china, OK?”
The runner brought it in on a silver tray, by
which time Reacher was up at Fort Belvoir in Virginia, with Victor
Hobie and his new pal A. A. DeWitt reporting to the 3rd
Transportation Company of the First Cavalry Division. The two boys
were there two weeks, long enough for the Army to add air-mobile to their unit designation, and then to
change it completely to Company B, 229th Assault Helicopter
Battalion. At the end of the two weeks, the renamed company sailed
away from the Alabama coast, part of a seventeen-ship convoy on a
thirty-one-day sea voyage to Long Mai Bay, twenty miles south of
Qui Nhon and eleven thousand miles away in Vietnam.
Thirty-one days at sea is a whole month, and the
company brass invented make-work to keep boredom at bay. Hobie’s
file indicated he signed up for maintenance, which meant endlessly
rinsing and greasing the disassembled Hueys to beat the salt air
down in the ship’s hold. The note was approving, and Hobie stepped
onto the Indochina beach a first lieutenant, after leaving the
States a Second, and thirteen months after joining the Army as an
officer candidate. Merited promotions for a worthy recruit. One of
the good kids. Reacher recalled Ed Steven’s words, in the hot
sunshine outside the hardware store: very
serious, very earnest, but not really a whole lot out of the
ordinary.
“Cream?” Conrad asked.
Reacher shook his head, in time with
Jodie.
“Just black,” they said, together.
Conrad poured and Reacher kept on reading. There
were two variants of Hueys in use at that time: one was a gunship,
and the other was a transport chopper nicknamed a slick. Company B was assigned to fly slicks,
servicing First Cavalry’s battlefield transport needs. The slick
was a transport hack, but it was not unarmed. It was a standard
Huey, with the side doors stripped off and a heavy machine gun hung
on a bungee cord in each open doorway. There were a pilot and a
copilot, two gunners, and a crew chief acting as an all-purpose
engineer and mechanic. The slick could lift as many grunts as could
pack themselves into the boxy space between the two gunners’ backs,
or a ton of ammunition, or any combination.
There was on-the-job training to reflect the
fact that Vietnam was very different from Alabama. There was no
formal grading attached to it, but Hobie and DeWitt were the first
new pilots assigned to the jungle. Then the requirement was to fly
five combat missions as a copilot, and if you handled that, you
took the pilot’s seat and got your own copilot. Then the serious
business started, and it was reflected in the file. The whole
second half of the jacket was stuffed with mission reports on
flimsy onion-skin paper. The language was dry and matter-of-fact.
They were not written by Hobie himself. They were the work of the
company dispatch clerk.
It was very episodic fighting. The war was
boiling all around him unabated, but Hobie spent a long time on the
ground, because of the weather. For days at a time, the fogs and
mists of Vietnam made it suicidal to fly a helicopter low-level
into the jungle valleys. Then the weather would suddenly clear and
the reports would clump together all under the same date: three,
five, sometimes seven missions a day, against furious enemy
opposition, inserting, recovering, supplying and resupplying the
ground troops. Then the mists would roll back in, and the Hueys
would wait inert once more in their laagers. Reacher pictured
Hobie, lying in his hooch for days on end, frustrated or relieved,
bored or tense, then bursting back into terrifying action for
frantic exhausting hours of combat.
The reports were separated into two halves by
paperwork documenting the end of the first tour, the routine award
of the medal, the long furlough back in New York, the start of the
second tour. Then more combat reports. Same exact work, same exact
pattern. There were fewer reports from the second tour. The very
last sheet in the file recorded Lieutenant Victor Hobie’s 991st
career combat mission. Not routine First Cavalry business. It was a
special assignment. He took off from Pleiku, heading east for an
improvised landing zone near the An Khe Pass. His orders were to
fly in as one of two slicks and exfiltrate the personnel waiting on
the landing zone. DeWitt was flying backup. Hobie got there first.
He landed in the center of the tiny landing zone, under heavy
machine-gun fire from the jungle. He was seen to take on board just
three men. He took off again almost immediately. His Huey was
taking hits to the airframe from the machine guns. His own gunners
were returning fire blind through the jungle canopy. DeWitt was
circling as Hobie was heading out. He saw Hobie’s Huey take a
sustained burst of heavy machine-gun fire through the engines. His
formal report as recorded by the dispatch clerk said he saw the
Huey’s rotor stop and flames appear in the fuel tank area. The
helicopter crashed through the jungle canopy four miles west of the
landing zone, at a low angle and at a speed estimated by DeWitt to
be in excess of eighty miles an hour. DeWitt reported a green flash
visible through the foliage, which was normally indicative of a
fueltank explosion on the forest floor. A search-and-rescue
operation was mounted and aborted because of weather. No fragments
of wreckage were observed. Because the area four miles west of the
pass was considered inaccessible virgin jungle, it was procedure to
assume there were no NVA troops on foot in the immediate vicinity.
Therefore there had been no risk of immediate capture by the enemy.
Therefore the eight men in the Huey were listed as missing in
action.
“But why?” Jodie asked. “DeWitt saw the thing
blow up. Why list them as missing? They were obviously all killed,
right?”
Major Conrad shrugged.
“I guess so,” he said. “But nobody knew it for
sure. DeWitt saw a flash through the leaves, is all. Could
theoretically have been an NVA ammo dump, hit by a lucky shot from
the machine as it went down. Could have been anything. They only
ever said killed in action when they knew for damn sure. When
somebody literally eyeballed it happening. Fighter planes went down
alone two hundred miles out in the ocean, the pilot was listed as
missing, not killed, because perhaps he could have swum away
somewhere. To list them as killed, someone had to see it happen. I
could show you a file ten times thicker than this one, packed with
orders defining and redefining exactly how to describe
casualties.”
“Why?” Jodie asked again. “Because they were
afraid of the press?”
Conrad shook his head. “No, I’m talking about
internal stuff here. Anytime they were afraid of the press, they
just told lies. This all was for two reasons. First, they didn’t
want to get it wrong for the next of kin. Believe me, weird things
happened. It was a totally alien environment. People survived
things you wouldn’t expect them to survive. People turned up later.
They found people. There was a massive search-and-recovery deal
running, all the time. People got taken prisoner, and Charlie never
issued prisoner lists, not until years later. And you couldn’t tell
folks their boy was killed, only to have him turn up alive later
on. So they were anxious to keep on saying missing, just as long as
they could.”
Then he paused for a long moment.
“Second reason is yes, they were afraid. But not
of the press. They were afraid of themselves. They were afraid of
telling themselves they were getting beat, and beat bad.”
Reacher was scanning the final mission report,
picking out the copilot’s name. He was a second lieutenant named F.
G. Kaplan. He had been Hobie’s regular partner throughout most of
the second tour.
“Can I see this guy’s jacket?” he asked.
“K section?” Conrad said. “Be about four
minutes.”
They sat in silence with the cold coffee until
the runner brought F. G. Kaplan’s life story to the office. It was
a thick, old file, similar size and vintage as Hobie’s. There was
the same printed grid on the front cover, recording access
requests. The only note less than twenty years old showed a
telephone inquiry had been made last April by Leon Garber. Reacher
turned the file facedown and opened it up from the back. Started
with the second-to-last sheet of paper. It was identical to the
last sheet in Hobie’s jacket. The same mission report, with the
same eyewitness account from DeWitt, written up by the same clerk
in the same handwriting.
But the final sheet in Kaplan’s file was dated
exactly two years later than the final mission report. It was a
formal determination made after due consideration of the
circumstances by the Department of the Army that F. G. Kaplan had
been killed in action four miles west of the An Khe Pass when the
helicopter he was copiloting was brought down by enemy
ground-to-air fire. No body had been recovered, but the death was
to be considered as actual for purposes of memorializing and
payment of pensions. Reacher squared the sheet of paper on the
desk.
“So why doesn’t Victor Hobie have one of
these?”
Conrad shook his head. “I don’t know.”
“I want to go to Texas,” Reacher said.
NOI BAI AIRPORT outside Hanoi and Hickam Field outside Honolulu share exactly the same latitude, so the U.S. Air Force Starlifter flew neither north nor south. It just followed a pure west-east flight path across the Pacific, holding comfortably between the Tropic of Cancer and the Twentieth Parallel. Six thousand miles, six hundred miles an hour, ten hours’ flight time, but it was on approach seven hours before it took off, at three o’clock in the afternoon of the day before. The Air Force captain made the usual announcement as they crossed the date line and the tall silver-haired American in the rear of the cockpit wound his watch back and added another bonus day to his life.
Hickam Field is Hawaii’s main military air
facility, but it shares runway space and air-traffic control with
Honolulu International, so the Starlifter had to turn a wide, weary
circle above the sea, waiting for a JAL 747 from Tokyo to get down.
Then it turned in and flattened and came down behind it, tires
shrieking, engines screaming with reverse thrust. The pilot was not
concerned with the niceties of civilian flying, so she jammed the
brakes on hard and stopped short enough to get off the runway on
the first taxiway. There was a standing request from the airport to
keep the military planes away from the tourists. Especially the
Japanese tourists. This pilot was from Connecticut and had no real
interest in Hawaii’s staple industry or Oriental sensitivities, but
the first taxiway gave her a shorter run to the military compound,
which is why she always aimed to take it.
The Starlifter taxied slowly, as was
appropriate, and stopped fifty yards from a long, low cement
building near the wire. The pilot shut down her engines and sat in
silence. Ground crew in full uniform marched slowly toward the
belly of the plane, dragging a fat cable behind them. They latched
it into a port under the nose and the plane’s systems kicked in
again under the airfield’s own power. That way, the ceremony could
be conducted in silence.
The honor guard at Hickam that day was the usual
eight men in the usual mosaic of four different full-dress
uniforms, two from the United States Army, two from the United
States Navy, two from the United States Marine Corps, and two from
the United States Air Force. The eight slow-marched forward and
waited in silent formation. The pilot hit the switch and the rear
ramp came whining down. It settled against the hot blacktop of
American territory and the guard slow-marched up its exact center
into the belly of the plane. They passed between the twin lines of
silent aircrew and moved forward. The loadmaster removed the rubber
straps and the guard lifted the first casket off the shelves and
onto their shoulders. They slow-marched back with it through the
darkened fuselage and down the ramp and out into the blazing
afternoon, the shined aluminum winking and the flag glowing bright
in the sun against the blue Pacific and the green highlands of
Oahu. They right-wheeled on the apron and slow-marched the fifty
yards to the long, low cement building. They went inside and bent
their knees and laid the casket down. They stood in silence, hands
folded behind them, heads bowed, and then they about-turned and
slow-marched back toward the plane.
It took an hour to unload all seven of the
caskets. Only when the task was complete did the tall silver-haired
American leave his seat. He used the pilot’s stairway, and paused
at the top to stretch his weary limbs in the sun.