13
ST. LOUIS TO DALLAS-Fort Worth is 568 miles by
air, and it took a comfortable ninety minutes, thirty of them
climbing hard, thirty of them cruising fast, and thirty of them
descending on approach. Reacher and Jodie were together in business
class, this time on the port side of the plane, among a very
different clientele than had flown with them out of New York. Most
of the cabin was occupied by Texan businessmen in sharkskin suits
in various shades of blue and gray, with alligator boots and big
hats. They were larger and ruddier and louder than their East Coast
counterparts, and they were working the stewardesses harder. Jodie
was in a simple rust-colored dress like something Audrey Hepburn
might have worn, and the businessmen were stealing glances at her
and avoiding Reacher’s eye. He was on the aisle, in his crumpled
khakis and his ten-year-old English shoes, and they were trying to
place him. He saw them going around in circles, looking at his tan
and his hands and his companion, figuring him for a roughneck who
got lucky with a claim, then figuring that doesn’t really happen
anymore, then starting over with new speculations. He ignored them
and drank the airline’s best coffee from a china cup and started
thinking about how to get inside Wolters and get some sense out of
DeWitt.
A military policeman trying to get some sense
out of a two-star general is like a guy tossing a coin. Heads
brings you a guy who knows the value of cooperation. Maybe he’s had
difficulties in the past inside some unit or another, and maybe
he’s had them solved for him by the MPs in an effective and
perceptive manner. Then he’s a believer, and his instinct goes with
you. You’re his friend. But tails brings you a guy who has maybe
caused his own difficulties. Maybe he’s botched and blundered his
way through some command and maybe the MPs haven’t been shy about
telling him so. Then you get nothing from him except aggravation.
Heads or tails, but it’s a bent coin, because on top of everything
any institution despises its own policemen, so it comes down tails
a lot more than it comes up heads. That had been Reacher’s
experience. And, worse, he was a military policeman who was now a
civilian. He had two strikes against him before he even stepped up
to the plate.
The plane taxied to the gate and the businessmen
waited and ushered Jodie down the aisle ahead of them. Either plain
Texan courtesy or they wanted to watch her legs and her ass as she
walked, but Reacher couldn’t mount any serious criticism on that
issue because he wanted to do exactly the same thing. He carried
her bag and followed her down the jetway and into the terminal. He
stepped alongside her and put his arm around her shoulders and felt
a dozen pairs of eyes drilling into his back.
“Claiming what’s yours?” she asked.
“You noticed them?” he asked back.
She threaded her arm around his waist and pulled
him closer as they walked.
“They were kind of hard to miss. I guess it
would have been easy enough to get a date for tonight.”
“You’d have been beating them off with a
stick.”
“It’s the dress. Probably I should have worn
trousers, but I figured it’s kind of traditional down here.”
“You could wear a Soviet tank driver’s suit, all
gray-green and padded with cotton, and they’d still have their
tongues hanging out.”
She giggled. “I’ve seen Soviet tank drivers. Dad
showed me pictures. Two hundred pounds, big mustaches, smoking
pipes, tattoos, and that was just the women.”
The terminal was chilled with air-conditioning
and they were hit with a forty-degree jump in temperature when they
stepped out to the taxi line. June in Texas, just after ten in the
morning, and it was over a hundred and humid.
“Wow,” she said. “Maybe the dress makes
sense.”
They were in the shade of an overhead roadway,
but beyond it the sun was white and brassy. The concrete baked and
shimmered. Jodie bent and found some dark glasses in her bag and
slipped them on and looked more like a blond Audrey Hepburn than
ever. The first taxi was a new Caprice with the air going full
blast and religious artifacts hanging from the rearview mirror. The
driver was silent and the trip lasted forty minutes, mostly over
concrete highways that shone white in the sun and started out busy
and got emptier.
Fort Wolters was a big, permanent facility in
the middle of nowhere with low elegant buildings and landscaping
kept clean and tidy in the sterile way only the Army can achieve.
There was a high fence stretching miles around the whole perimeter,
taut and level all the way, no weeds at its base. The inner curb of
the road was whitewashed. Beyond the fence internal roads faced
with gray concrete snaked here and there between the buildings.
Windows winked in the sun. The taxi rounded a curve and revealed a
field the size of a stadium with helicopters lined up in neat rows.
Squads of flight trainees moved about between them.
The main gate was set back from the road, with
tall white flagpoles funneling down toward it. Their flags hung
limp in the heat. There was a low, square gatehouse with a
red-and-white barrier controlling access. The gatehouse was all
windows above waist level and Reacher could see MPs inside watching
the approach of the taxi. They were in full service gear, including
the white helmets. Regular Army MPs. He smiled. This part was going
to be no problem. They were going to see him as more their friend
than the people they were guarding.
The taxi dropped them in the turning circle and
drove back out. They walked through the blinding heat to the shade
of the guardhouse eaves. An MP sergeant slid the window back and
looked at them inquiringly. Reacher felt the chilled air spilling
out over him.
“We need to get together with General DeWitt,”
he said. “Is there any chance of that happening, Sergeant?”
The guy looked him over. “Depends who you are, I
guess.”
Reacher told him who he was and who he had been,
and who Jodie was and who her father had been, and a minute later
they were both inside the cool of the guardhouse. The MP sergeant
was on the phone to his opposite number in the command
office.
“OK, you’re booked in,” he said. “General’s free
in half an hour.”
Reacher smiled. The guy was probably free right
now, and the half hour was going to be spent checking that they
were who they said they were.
“What’s the general like, Sergeant?” he
asked.
“We’d rate him SAS, sir,” the MP said, and
smiled.
Reacher smiled back. The guardhouse felt
surprisingly good to him. He felt at home in it. SAS was MP code
for “stupid asshole sometimes,” and it was a reasonably benevolent
rating for a sergeant to give a general. It was the kind of rating
that meant if he approached it right, the guy might cooperate. On
the other hand, it meant he might not. It gave him something to
ponder during the waiting time.
After thirty-two minutes a plain green Chevy
with neat white stencils pulled up inside the barrier and the
sergeant nodded them toward it. The driver was a private soldier
who wasn’t about to speak a word. He just waited until they were
seated and turned the car around and headed slowly back through the
buildings. Reacher watched the familiar sights slide by. He had
never been to Wolters, but he knew it well enough because it was
identical to dozens of other places he had been. The same layout,
the same people, the same details, like it was built to the same
master plan. The main building was a long two-story brick structure
facing a parade ground. Its architecture was exactly the same as
the main building on the Berlin base where he was born. Only the
weather was different.
The Chevy eased to a stop opposite the steps up
into the building. The driver moved the selector into park and
stared silently ahead through the windshield. Reacher opened the
door and stepped out into the heat with Jodie.
“Thanks for the ride, soldier,” he said.
The boy just sat in park with the motor running
and stared straight ahead. Reacher walked with Jodie to the steps
and in through the door. There was an MP private stationed in the
cool of the lobby, white helmet, white gaiters, a gleaming M-16
held easy across his chest. His gaze was fixed on Jodie’s bare legs
as they danced in toward him.
“Reacher and Garber to see General DeWitt,”
Reacher said.
The guy snapped the rifle upright, which was
symbolic of removing a barrier. Reacher nodded and walked ahead to
the staircase. The place was like every other place, built to a
specification poised uneasily somewhere between lavish and
functional, like a private school occupying an old mansion. It was
immaculately clean, and the materials were the finest available,
but the decor was institutional and brutal. At the top of the
stairs was a desk in the corridor. Behind it was a portly MP
sergeant, swamped with paperwork. Behind him was an oak door with
an acetate plate bearing DeWitt’s name, his rank, and his
decorations. It was a large plate.
“Reacher and Garber to see the general,” Reacher
said.
The sergeant nodded and picked up his telephone.
He pressed a button.
“Your visitors, sir,” he said into the
phone.
He listened to the reply and stood up and opened
the door. Stepped aside to allow them to walk past. Closed the door
behind them. The office was the size of a tennis court. It was
paneled in oak and had a huge, dark rug on the floor, thread-bare
with vacuuming. The desk was large and oak, and DeWitt was in the
chair behind it. He was somewhere between fifty and fifty-five,
dried out and stringy, with thinning gray hair shaved down close to
his scalp. He had half-closed gray eyes and he was using them to
watch their approach with an expression Reacher read as halfway
between curiosity and irritation.
“Sit down,” he said. “Please.”
There were leather visitor chairs drawn up near
the desk. The office walls were crowded with mementoes, but they
were all battalion and division mementos, war-game trophies, battle
honors, old platoon photographs in faded monochrome. There were
pictures and cutaway diagrams of a dozen different helicopters. But
there was nothing personal to DeWitt on display. Not even family
snaps on the desk.
“How can I help you folks?” he asked.
His accent was the bland Army accent that comes
from serving all over the world with people from all over the
country. He was maybe a midwesterner, originally. Maybe from
somewhere near Chicago, Reacher thought.
“I was an MP major,” he said, and waited.
“I know you were. We checked.”
A neutral reply. Nothing there at all. No
hostility. But no approval, either.
“My father was General Garber,” Jodie
said.
DeWitt nodded without speaking.
“We’re here in a private capacity,” Reacher
said.
There was a short silence.
“A civilian capacity, in fact,” DeWitt said
slowly.
Reacher nodded. Strike
one.
“It’s about a pilot called Victor Hobie. You
served with him in Vietnam.”
DeWitt looked deliberately blank. He raised his
eyebrows.
“Did I?” he said. “I don’t remember him.”
Strike two.
Uncooperative.
“We’re trying to find out what happened to
him.”
Another short silence. Then DeWitt nodded,
slowly, amused.
“Why? Was he your long-lost uncle? Or maybe he
was secretly your father? Maybe he had a brief, sad affair with
your mother when he was her pool boy. Or did you buy his old
childhood home and find his long-lost teenage diaries hidden behind
the wainscoting with a 1968 issue of Playboy magazine?”
Strike three.
Aggressively uncooperative. The office went silent again. There was
the thumping of rotor blades somewhere in the far distance. Jodie
hitched forward on her chair. Her voice was soft and low in the
quiet room.
“We’re here for his parents, sir. They lost
their boy thirty years ago, and they’ve never known what happened
to him. They’re still grieving, General.”
DeWitt looked at her with gray eyes and shook
his head.
“I don’t remember him. I’m very sorry.”
“He trained with you right here at Wolters,”
Reacher said. “You went to Rucker together and you sailed to Qui
Nhon together. You served the best part of two tours together,
flying slicks out of Pleiku.”
“Your old man in the service?” DeWitt
asked.
Reacher nodded. “The Corps. Thirty years, Semper
Fi.”
“Mine was Eighth Air Force,” DeWitt said. “World
War Two, flying bombers out of East Anglia in England all the way
to Berlin and back. You know what he told me when I signed up for
helicopters?”
Reacher waited.
“He gave me some good advice,” DeWitt said. “He
told me, don’t make friends with pilots. Because they all get
killed, and it just makes you miserable.”
Reacher nodded again. “You really can’t recall
him?”
DeWitt just shrugged.
“Not even for his folks?” Jodie asked. “Doesn’t
seem right they’ll never know what happened to their boy, does
it?”
There was silence. The distant rotor blades
faded to nothing. DeWitt gazed at Jodie. Then he spread his small
hands on the desk and sighed heavily.
“Well, I guess I can recall him a little,” he
said. “Mostly from the early days. Later on, when they all started
dying, I took the old man’s advice to heart. Kind of closed in on
myself, you know?”
“So what was he like?” Jodie asked.
“What was he like?” DeWitt repeated. “Not like
me, that’s for sure. Not like anybody else I ever knew, either. He
was a walking contradiction. He was a volunteer, you know that? I
was, too, and so were a lot of the guys. But Vic wasn’t like the
others. There was a big divide back then, between the volunteers
and the drafted guys. The volunteers were all rahrah boys, you
know, going for it because they believed in it. But Vic wasn’t like
that. He volunteered, but he was about as mousy quiet as the
sulkiest draftee you ever saw. But he could fly like he was born
with a rotor blade up his ass.”
“So he was good?” Jodie prompted.
“Better than good,” DeWitt replied. “Second only
to me in the early days, which is saying something, because I was
definitely born with a rotor blade up my ass. And Vic was smart
with the book stuff. I remember that. He had it all over everybody
else in the classroom.”
“Did he have an attitude problem with that?”
Reacher asked. “Trading favors for help?”
DeWitt swung the gray eyes across from
Jodie.
“You’ve done your research. You’ve been in the
files.”
“We just came from the NPRC,” Reacher
said.
DeWitt nodded, neutrally. “I hope you didn’t
read my jacket.”
“Supervisor wouldn’t let us,” Reacher
said.
“We were anxious not to poke around where we’re
not wanted,” Jodie said.
DeWitt nodded again.
“Vic traded favors,” he said. “But they claimed
he did it in the wrong way. There was a little controversy about
it, as I recall. You were supposed to do it because you were glad
to help your fellow candidates, you know? For the good of the unit,
right? You remember how that shit went?”
He stopped and glanced at Reacher, amused.
Reacher nodded. Jodie’s being there was helping him. Her charm was
inching him back toward approval.
“But Vic was cold about it,” DeWitt said. “Like
it was all just another math equation. Like x amount of lift moves
the chopper off the ground, like this much help with that
complicated formula gets his boots bulled up. They saw it as
cold.”
“Was he cold?” Jodie asked.
DeWitt nodded. “Emotionless, the coldest guy I
ever saw. It always amazed me. At first I figured it was because he
came from some little place where he’d never done anything or seen
anything. But later I realized he just felt nothing. Nothing at
all. It was weird. But it made him a hell of a tremendous
flyer.”
“Because he wasn’t afraid?” Reacher asked.
“Exactly,” DeWitt said. “Not courageous, because
a courageous guy is somebody who feels the fear but conquers it.
Vic never felt it in the first place. It made him a better war
flyer than me. I was the one passed out of Rucker head of the
class, and I’ve got the plaque to prove it, but when we got
in-country, he was better than me, no doubt about it.”
“In what kind of a way?”
DeWitt shrugged, like he couldn’t explain it.
“We learned everything as we went along, just made it all up. Fact
is, our training was shit. It was like being shown a little round
thing and being told ‘this is a baseball,’ and then getting sent
straight out to play in the major leagues. That’s something I’m
trying to put right now that I’m here running this place. I never
want to send boys out as unprepared as we were.”
“Hobie was good at learning on the job?” Reacher
asked.
“The best,” DeWitt said. “You know anything
about helicopters in the jungle?”
Reacher shook his head. “Not a lot.”
“First main problem is the LZ,” DeWitt said.
“LZ, landing zone, right? You got a desperate bunch of tired
infantry under fire somewhere, they need exfiltrating, they get on
the radio and our dispatcher tells them sure, make us an LZ and
we’ll be right over to pull you out. So they use explosives and
saws and whatever the hell else they got and they blast a temporary
LZ in the jungle. Now a Huey with the rotor turning needs a space
exactly forty-eight feet wide and fifty-seven feet nine-point-seven
inches long to land in. But the infantry is tired and in a big
hurry and Charlie is raining mortars down on them and generally
they don’t make the LZ big enough. So we can’t get them out. This
happened to us two or three times, and we’re sick about it, and one
night I see Vic studying the leading edge of the rotor blade on his
Huey. So I say to him, ‘What are you looking at?’ And he says,
‘These are metal.’ I’m thinking, like what else would they be?
Bamboo? But he’s looking at them. Next day, we’re called to a
temporary LZ again, and sure enough the damn thing is too small, by
a couple of feet all around. So I can’t get in. But Vic goes down
anyway. He spins the chopper around and around and cuts his way in
with the rotor. Like a gigantic flying lawn mower? It was awesome.
Bits of tree flying everywhere. He pulls out seven or eight guys
and the rest of us go down after him and get all the rest. That
became SOP afterward, and he invented it, because he was cold and
logical and he wasn’t afraid to try. That maneuver saved hundreds
of guys over the years. Literally hundreds, maybe even
thousands.”
“Impressive,” Reacher said.
“You bet your ass impressive,” DeWitt said back.
“Second big problem we had was weight. Suppose you were out in the
open somewhere, like a field. The infantry would come swarming in
on you until the damn chopper was too heavy to take off. So your
own gunners would be beating them off and leaving them there in the
field, maybe to die. Not a nice feeling. So one day Vic lets them
all on board, and sure enough he can’t get off the ground. So he
shoves the stick forward and sort of skitters horizontally along
the field until the airspeed kicks in under the rotor and unsticks
him. Then he’s up and away. The running jump. It became another
SOP, and he invented it, too. Sometimes he would do it downhill,
even down the mountainsides, like he was heading for a certain
crash, and then up he went. Like I told you, we were just making it
up as we went along, and the truth is a lot of the good stuff got
made up by Victor Hobie.”
“You admired him,” Jodie said.
DeWitt nodded. “Yes, I did. And I’m not afraid
to admit it.”
“But you weren’t close.”
He shook his head. “Like my daddy told me, don’t
make friends with the other pilots. And I’m glad I didn’t. Too many
of them died.”
“How did he spend his time?” Reacher asked. “The
files show a lot of days you couldn’t fly.”
“Weather was a bitch. A real bitch. You got no
idea. I want this facility moved someplace else, maybe Washington
State, where they get some mists and fogs. No point training down
in Texas and Alabama if you want to go fighting someplace you get
weather.”
“So how did you spend the downtime?”
“Me? I did all kinds of things. Sometimes I
partied, sometimes I slept. Sometimes I took a truck out and went
scavenging for things we needed.”
“What about Vic?” Jodie asked. “What did he
do?”
DeWitt just shrugged again. “I have no idea. He
was always busy, always up to something, but I don’t know what it
was. Like I told you, I didn’t want to mix with the other
flyers.”
“Was he different on the second tour?” Reacher
asked.
DeWitt smiled briefly. “Everybody was different
second time around.”
“In what way?” Jodie asked.
“Angrier,” DeWitt said. “Even if you signed up
again right away it was nine months minimum before you got back,
sometimes a whole year. Then you got back and you figured the place
had gone to shit while you were away. You figured it had gotten
sloppy and half-assed. Facilities you’d built would be all falling
down, trenches you’d dug against the mortars would be half full of
water, trees you’d cleared away from the helicopter parking would
be all sprouting up again. You’d feel your little domain had been
ruined by a bunch of know-nothing idiots while you were gone. It
made you angry and depressed. And generally speaking it was true.
The whole ’Nam thing went steadily downhill, right out of control.
The quality of the personnel just got worse and worse.”
“So you’d say Hobie got disillusioned?” Reacher
asked.
DeWitt shrugged. “I really don’t remember much
about his attitude. Maybe he coped OK. He had a strong sense of
duty, as I recall.”
“What was his final mission about?”
The gray eyes suddenly went blank, like the
shutters had just come down.
“I can’t remember.”
“He was shot down,” Reacher said. “Shot out of
the air, right alongside you. You can’t recall what the mission
was?”
“We lost eight thousand helicopters in ‘Nam,”
DeWitt said. “Eight thousand, Mr. Reacher, beginning to end. Seems
to me I personally saw most of them go down. So how should I recall
any particular one of them?”
“What was it about?” Reacher asked again.
“Why do you want to know?” DeWitt asked
back.
“It would help me.”
“With what?”
Reacher shrugged. “With his folks, I guess. I
want to be able to tell them he died doing something useful.”
DeWitt smiled. A bitter, sardonic smile, worn
and softened at the edges by thirty years of regular use. “Well, my
friend, you sure as hell can’t do that.”
“Why not?”
“Because none of our missions were useful. They
were all a waste of time. A waste of lives. We lost the war, didn’t
we?”
“Was it a secret mission?”
There was a pause. Silence in the big
office.
“Why should it be secret?” DeWitt asked back,
neutrally.
“He only took on board three passengers. Seems
like a special sort of a deal to me. No running jump required
there.”
“I don’t remember,” DeWitt said again.
Reacher just looked at him, quietly. DeWitt
stared back.
“How should I remember? I hear about something
for the first time in thirty years and I’m supposed to remember
every damn detail about it?”
“This isn’t the first time in thirty years. You
were asked all about it a couple of months ago. In April of this
year.”
DeWitt was silent.
“General Garber called the NPRC about Hobie,”
Reacher said. “It’s inconceivable he didn’t call you afterward.
Won’t you tell us what you told him?”
DeWitt smiled. “I told him I didn’t
remember.”
There was silence again. Distant rotor blades,
coming closer.
“On behalf of his folks, won’t you tell us?”
Jodie asked softly. “They’re still grieving for him. They need to
know about it.”
DeWitt shook his head. “I can’t.”
“Can’t or won’t?” Reacher asked.
DeWitt stood up slowly and walked to the window.
He was a short man. He stood in the light of the sun and squinted
left, across to where he could see the helicopter he could hear,
coming in to land on the field.
“It’s classified information,” he said. “I’m not
allowed to make any comment, and I’m not going to. Garber asked me,
and I told him the same thing. No comment. But I hinted he should
maybe look closer to home, and I’ll advise you to do the exact same
thing, Mr. Reacher. Look closer to home.”
“Closer to home?”
DeWitt put his back to the window. “Did you see
Kaplan’s jacket?”
“His copilot?”
DeWitt nodded. “Did you read his last-but-one
mission?”
Reacher shook his head.
“You should have,” DeWitt said. “Sloppy work
from somebody who was once an MP major. But don’t tell anybody I
suggested it, because I’ll deny it, and they’ll believe me, not
you.”
Reacher looked away. DeWitt walked back to his
desk and sat down.
“Is it possible Victor Hobie is still alive?”
Jodie asked him.
The distant helicopter shut off its engines.
There was total silence.
“I have no comment on that,” DeWitt said.
“Have you been asked that question before?”
Jodie said.
“I have no comment on that,” DeWitt said
again.
“You saw the crash. Is it possible anybody
survived it?”
“I saw an explosion under the jungle canopy, is
all. He was way more than half-full with fuel. Draw your own
conclusions, Ms. Garber.”
“Did he survive?”
“I have no comment on that.”
“Why is Kaplan officially dead and Hobie
isn’t?”
“I have no comment on that.”
She nodded. Thought for a moment and regrouped
exactly like the lawyer she was, boxed in by some recalcitrant
witness. “Just theoretically, then. Suppose a young man with Victor
Hobie’s personality and character and background survived such an
incident, OK? Is it possible a man like that would never even have
made contact with his own parents again afterward?”
DeWitt stood up again. He was clearly
uncomfortable.
“I don’t know, Ms. Garber. I’m not a damn
psychiatrist. And like I told you, I was careful not to get to know
him too well. He seemed like a real dutiful guy, but he was cold.
Overall, I guess I would rate it as very unlikely. But don’t
forget, Vietnam changed people. It sure as hell changed me, for
instance. I used to be a nice guy.”
OFFICER SARK WAS forty-four years old, but he looked older. His physique was damaged by a poor childhood and ignorant neglect through most of his adult years. His skin was dull and pale, and he had lost his hair early. It left him looking sallow and sunken and old before his time. But the truth was he had woken up to it and was fighting it. He had read stuff the NYPD’s medical people were putting about concerning diet and exercise. He had eliminated most of the fats from his daily intake, and he had started sunbathing a little, just enough to take the pallor off his skin without provoking the risk of melanomas. He walked whenever he could. Going home, he would get off the subway a stop short and hike the rest of the way, fast enough to get his breath going and his heartbeat raised, like the stuff he’d read said he should. And during the workday, he would persuade O’Hallinan to park the prowl car somewhere that would give them a short walk to wherever it was they were headed.
O’Hallinan had no interest in aerobic exercise,
but she was an amiable woman and happy enough to cooperate with
him, especially during the summer months, when the sun was shining.
So she put the car against the curb in the shadow of Trinity Church
and they approached the World Trade Center on foot from the south.
It gave them a brisk six-hundred-yard walk in the sun, which made
Sark happy, but it left the car exactly equidistant from a quarter
of a million separate postal addresses, and with nothing on paper
in the squad room it left nobody with any clue about which one of
them they were heading for.
YOU WANT A ride back to the airport?” DeWitt asked.
Reacher interpreted the offer as a dismissal
mixed in with a gesture designed to soften the stonewall
performance the guy had been putting up. He nodded. The Army
Chevrolet would get them there faster than a taxi, because it was
already waiting right outside with the motor running.
“Thanks,” he said.
“Hey, my pleasure,” DeWitt said back.
He dialed a number from his desk and spoke like
he was issuing an order.
“Wait right here,” he said. “Three
minutes.”
Jodie stood up and smoothed her dress down.
Walked to the windows and gazed out. Reacher stepped the other way
and looked at the mementoes on the wall. One of the photographs was
a glossy reprint of a famous newspaper picture. A helicopter was
lifting off from inside the embassy compound in Saigon, with a
crowd of people underneath it, arms raised like they were trying to
force it to come back down for them.
“You were that pilot?” Reacher asked, on a
hunch.
DeWitt glanced over and nodded.
“You were still there in ‘75?”
DeWitt nodded again. “Five combat tours, then a
spell on HQ duty. Overall, I guess I preferred the combat.”
There was noise in the distance. The bass
thumping of a powerful helicopter, coming closer. Reacher joined
Jodie at the window. A Huey was in the air, drifting over the
distant buildings from the direction of the field.
“Your ride,” DeWitt said.
“A helicopter?” Jodie said.
DeWitt was smiling. “What did you expect? This
is the helicopter school, after all. That’s why these boys are down
here. It ain’t driver’s ed.”
The rotor noise was building to a loud wop-wop-wop. Then it slowly blended to a
higher-pitched whip-whip-whip as it came
closer and the jet whine mixed in.
“Bigger blade now,” DeWitt shouted. “Composite
materials. Not metal anymore. I don’t know what old Vic would have
made of it.”
The Huey was sliding sideways and hovering over
the parade ground in front of the building. The noise was shaking
the windows. Then the helicopter was straightening and settling to
the ground.
“Nice meeting you,” DeWitt shouted.
They shook his hand and headed out. The MP
sergeant at the desk nodded to them through the noise and went back
to his paperwork. They went down the stairs and outside into the
blast of heat and dust and sound. The copilot was sliding the door
for them. They ran bent-over across the short distance. Jodie was
grinning and her hair was blowing everywhere. The copilot offered
his hand and pulled her up inside. Reacher followed. They strapped
themselves into the bench seat in back and the copilot slid the
door closed and climbed through to the cabin. The familiar shudder
of vibration started up as the craft hauled itself into the air.
The floor tilted and swung and the buildings rotated in the
windows, and then their roofs were visible, and then the outlying
grassland, with the highways laid through it like gray pencil
lines. The nose went down and the engine noise built to a roar as
they swung on course and settled to a hundred-mile-an-hour
cruise.
THE STUFF SARK had read called it “power walking,” and the idea was to push yourself toward a speed of four miles an hour. That way your heartbeat was raised, which was the key to the aerobic benefit, but you avoided the impact damage to your shins and knees that you risked with proper jogging. It was a convincing proposition, and he believed in it. Doing it properly, six hundred yards at four miles an hour should have taken a fraction over five minutes, but it actually took nearer eight, because he was walking with O’Hallinan at his side. She was happy to walk, but she wanted to do it slowly. She was not an unfit woman, but she always said I’m built for comfort, not for speed. It was a compromise. He needed her cooperation to get to walk at all, so he never complained about her pace. He figured it was better than nothing. It had to be doing him some kind of good.
“Which building?” he asked.
“The south, I think,” she said.
They walked around to the main entrance of the
south tower and inside to the lobby. There were guys in security
uniforms behind a counter, but they were tied up with a knot of
foreign men in gray suits, so Sark and O’Hallinan stepped over to
the building directory and consulted it direct. Cayman Corporate
Trust was listed on the eighty-eighth floor. They walked to the
express elevator and stepped inside without the security force
being aware they had ever entered the building.
The elevator floor pressed against their feet
and sped them upward. It slowed and stopped at eighty-eight. The
door slid back and a muted bell sounded and they stepped out into a
plain corridor. The ceilings were low and the space was narrow.
Cayman Corporate Trust had a modem oak door with a small window and
a brass handle. Sark pulled the door and allowed O’Hallinan to go
inside ahead of him. She was old enough to appreciate the
courtesy.
There was an oak-and-brass reception area with a
thickset man in a dark suit behind a chest-high counter. Sark stood
back in the center of the floor, his loaded belt emphasizing the
width of his hips, making him seem large and commanding. O’Hallinan
stepped up to the counter, planning her approach. She wanted to
shake something loose, so she tried the sort of frontal attack she
had seen detectives use.
“We’ve come about Sheryl,” she said.
“I NAVE TO go home, I guess,” Jodie said.
“No, you’re coming to Hawaii, with me.”
They were back inside the freezing terminal at
Dallas-Fort Worth. The Huey had put down on a remote apron and the
copilot had driven them over in a golf cart painted dull green. He
had shown them an unmarked door that led them up a flight of stairs
into the bustle of the public areas.
“Hawaii? Reacher, I can’t go to Hawaii. I need
to be back in New York.”
“You can’t go back there alone. New York is
where the danger is, remember? And I need to go to Hawaii. So
you’ll have to come with me, simple as that.”
“Reacher, I can’t,” she said again. “I have to
be in a meeting tomorrow. You know that. You took the call,
right?”
“Tough, Jodie. You’re not going back there
alone.”
Checking out of the St. Louis honeymoon suite
that morning had done something to him. The lizard part of his
brain buried deep behind the frontal lobes had shrieked: The honeymoon is over, pal. Your
life is changing and the problems start now. He had ignored it.
But now he was paying attention to it. For the first time in his
life, he had a hostage to fortune. He had somebody to worry about.
It was mostly a pleasure, but it was a burden.
“I have to go back, Reacher,” she said. “I can’t
let them down.”
“Call them, tell them you can’t make it. Tell
them you’re sick or something.”
“I can’t do that. My secretary knows I’m not
sick, right? And I’ve got a career to think about. It’s important
to me.”
“You’re not going back there alone,” he said
again.
“Why do you need to go to Hawaii anyway?”
“Because that’s where the answer is,” he
said.
He stepped away to a ticket counter and took a
thick time-table from a small chrome rack. Stood in the cold
fluorescence and opened it up to D for the Dallas-Fort Worth
departures and ran his finger down the list of destinations as far
as H for Honolulu. Then he flipped ahead to the Honolulu departures
and checked the flights going back to New York. He double-checked,
and then he smiled with relief.
“We can make it anyway, do both things. Look at
this. There’s a twelve-fifteen out of here. Flight time minus the
time change going west gets us to Honolulu at three o’clock. Then
we get the seven o’clock back to New York, flight time plus the
time change coming back east gets us into JFK at twelve noon
tomorrow. Your guy said it was an afternoon meeting, right? So you
can still make it.”
“I need to get briefed in,” she said. “I have no
idea what it’s about.”
“You’ll have a couple of hours. You’re a quick
study.”
“It’s crazy. Only gives us four hours in
Hawaii.”
“All we need. I’ll call ahead, set it up.”
“We’ll be on a plane all night. I’ll be going to
my meeting after a sleepless night on a damn plane.”
“So we’ll go first-class,” he said. “Rutter’s
paying, right? We can sleep in first class. The chairs look
comfortable enough.”
She shrugged and sighed. “Crazy.”
“Let me use your phone,” he said.
She handed him the mobile from her bag and he
called long-distance information and asked for the number. Dialed
it and heard it ring six thousand miles away. It rang eight times
and the voice he wanted to hear answered it.
“This is Jack Reacher,” he said. “You going to
be in the office all day?”
The answer was slow and sleepy, because it was
very early in the morning in Hawaii, but it was the answer he
wanted to hear. He clicked the phone off and turned back to Jodie.
She sighed at him again, but this time there was a smile mixed in
with it. She stepped to the counter and used the gold card to buy
two first-class tickets, Dallas-Fort Worth to Honolulu to New York.
The guy at the counter made the seat assignments on the spot,
slightly bewildered in front of people spending the price of a used
sportscar to buy twenty hours on a plane and four on the ground on
Oahu. He handed the wallets over and twenty minutes later Reacher
was settling into an enormous leather-and-sheepskin chair with
Jodie safely a yard away at his side.
THERE WAS A routine to be followed in this situation. It had never before been employed, but it had been rehearsed often and thoroughly. The thickset man at the chest-high counter moved his hand casually sideways and used his index finger on one button and his middle finger on another. The first button locked the oak door out to the elevator lobby. There was an electromagnetic mechanism that clicked the steel tongue into place, silently and unobtrusively. Once it was activated, the door stayed locked until the mechanism was released again, no matter what anybody did with the latch or the key. The second button set a red light flashing in the intercom unit on Hobie’s desk. The red light was bright and the office was always dark, and it was impossible to miss it.
“Who?” the thickset guy said.
“Sheryl,” O’Hallinan repeated.
“I’m sorry,” the guy said. “There’s nobody
called Sheryl working here. Currently we have a staff of three, and
they’re all men.”
He moved his hand to the left and rested it on a
button marked TALK, which activated the intercom.
“You operate a black Tahoe?” O’Hallinan asked
him.
He nodded. “We have a black Tahoe on the
corporate fleet.”
“What about a Suburban?”
“Yes, I think we have one of those, too. Is this
about a traffic violation?”
“It’s about Sheryl being in the hospital,”
O’Hallinan said.
“Who?” the guy asked again.
Sark came up behind O’Hallinan. “We need to
speak with your boss.”
“OK,” the guy said. “I’ll see if that can be
arranged. May I have your names?”
“Officers Sark and O’Hallinan, City of New York
Police Department.”
Tony opened the inner office door, and stood
there, inquiringly.
“May I help you, Officers?” he called.
In the rehearsals, the cops would turn away from
the counter and look at Tony. Maybe take a couple of steps toward
him. And that is exactly what happened. Sark and O’Hallinan turned
their backs and walked toward the middle of the reception area. The
thickset man at the counter leaned down and opened a cupboard.
Unclipped the shotgun from its rack and held it low, out of
sight.
“It’s about Sheryl,” O’Hallinan said
again.
“Sheryl who?” Tony asked.
“The Sheryl in the hospital with the busted
nose,” Sark said. “And the fractured cheekbones and the concussion.
The Sheryl who got out of your Tahoe outside St. Vincent’s
ER.”
“Oh, I see,” Tony said. “We didn’t get her name.
She couldn’t speak a word, because of the injuries to her
face.”
“So why was she in your car?” O’Hallinan
asked.
“We were up at Grand Central, dropping a client
there. We found her on the sidewalk, kind of lost. She was off the
train from Mount Kisco, and just kind of wandering about. We
offered her a ride to the hospital, which seemed to be what she
needed. So we dropped her at St. Vincent’s, because it’s on the way
back here.”
“Bellevue is nearer Grand Central,” O’Hallinan
said.
“I don’t like the traffic over there,” Tony said
neutrally. “St. Vincent’s was more convenient.”
“And you didn’t wonder about what had happened
to her?” Sark asked. “How she came by the injuries?”
“Well, naturally we wondered,” Tony said. “We
asked her about it, but she couldn’t speak, because of the
injuries. That’s why we didn’t recognize the name.”
O’Hallinan stood there, unsure. Sark took a step
forward.
“You found her on the sidewalk?”
Tony nodded. “Outside Grand Central.”
“She couldn’t speak?”
“Not a word.”
“So how do you know she was off the Kisco
train?”
The only gray area in the rehearsals had been
picking the exact moment to drop the defense and start the offense.
It was a subjective issue. They had trusted that when it came, they
would recognize it. And they did. The thickset man stood up and
crunched a round into the shotgun’s chamber and leveled it across
the counter.
“Freeze!” he screamed.
A nine-millimeter pistol appeared in Tony’s
hand. Sark and O’Hallinan stared at it and glanced back at the
shotgun and jerked their arms upward. Not a rueful little gesture
like in the movies. They stretched them violently upward as if
their lives depended on touching the acoustic tile directly above
their heads. The guy with the shotgun came up from the rear and
jammed the muzzle hard into Sark’s back and Tony stepped around
behind O’Hallinan and did the same thing with his pistol. Then a
third man came out from the darkness and paused in the office
doorway.
“I’m Hook Hobie,” he said.
They stared at him. Said nothing. Their gazes
started on his disfigured face and traveled slowly down to the
empty sleeve.
“Which of you is which?” Hobie asked.
No reply. They were staring at the hook. He
raised it and let it catch the light.
“Which of you is O’Hallinan?”
O’Hallinan ducked her head in acknowledgment.
Hobie turned.
“So you’re Sark.”
Sark nodded. Just a fractional inclination of
his head.
“Undo your belts,” Hobie said. “One at a time.
And be quick.”
Sark went first. He was quick. He dropped his
hands and wrestled with his buckle. The heavy belt thumped to the
floor at his feet. He stretched up again for the ceiling.
“Now you,” Hobie said to O’Hallinan.
She did the same thing. The heavy belt with the
revolver and the radio and the handcuffs and the nightstick thumped
on the carpet. She stretched her hands back up, as far as they
would go. Hobie used the hook. He leaned down and swept the point
through both buckles and swung the belts up in the air, posing like
a fisherman at the end of a successful day on the riverbank. He
reached around and used his good hand to pull the two sets of
handcuffs out of their worn leather cups.
“Turn around.”
They turned and faced the guns head-on.
“Hands behind you.”
It is possible for a one-armed man to put
handcuffs on a victim, if the victim stands still, wrists together.
Sark and O’Hallinan stood very still indeed. Hobie clicked one
wrist at a time, and then tightened all four cuffs against their
ratchets until he heard gasps of pain from both of them. Then he
swung the belts high enough not to drag on the floor and walked
back inside the office.
“Come in,” he called.
He walked around behind the desk and laid the
belts on it like items for close examination. He sat heavily in his
chair and waited while Tony lined up the prisoners in front of him.
He left them in silence while he emptied their belts. He unstrapped
their revolvers and dropped them in a drawer. Took out their radios
and fiddled with the volume controls until they were hissing and
crackling loudly. He squared them together at the end of the
desktop with their antennas pointed toward the wall of windows. He
inclined his head for a moment and listened to the squelch of radio
atmospherics. Then he turned back and pulled both nightsticks out
of the loops on the belts. He placed one on the desk and hefted the
other in his left hand and examined it closely. It was the modern
kind, with a handle, and a telescopic section below. He peered at
it, interested.
“How does this work, exactly?”
Neither Sark or O’Hallinan replied. Hobie played
with the stick for a second, and then he glanced at the thickset
guy, who jabbed the shotgun forward and hit Sark in the
kidney.
“I asked you a question,” Hobie said to
him.
“You swing it,” he muttered. “Swing it, and sort
of flick it.”
He needed space, so he stood up. Swung the stick
and flicked it like he was cracking a whip. The telescopic section
snapped out and locked into place. He grinned with the unburned
half of his face. Collapsed the mechanism and tried again. Grinned
again. He took to pacing big circles around the desk, swinging the
stick and cracking it open. He did it vertically, and then
horizontally. He used more and more force. He spun tight circles,
flashing the stick. He whipped it backhanded and the mechanism
sprang open and he whirled around and smashed it into O’Hallinan’s
face.
“I like this thing,” he said.
She was swaying backward, but Tony jabbed her
upright with his pistol. Her knees gave way and she fell forward in
a heap, pressed up against the front of the desk, arms cuffed tight
behind her, bleeding from the mouth and nose.
“What did Sheryl tell you?” Hobie asked.
Sark was staring down at O’Hallinan.
“She said she walked into a door,” he
muttered.
“So why the hell are you bothering me? Why are
you here?”
Sark moved his gaze upward. Looked Hobie full in
the face.
“Because we didn’t believe her. It was clear
somebody beat on her. We followed up on the Tahoe plate, and it
looks like it led us to the right place.”
The office went silent. Nothing except the hiss
and the squelch from the police radios on the end of the desk.
Hobie nodded.
“Exactly the right place,” he said. “There was
no door involved.”
Sark nodded back. He was a reasonably courageous
man. The Domestic Violence Unit was no kind of safe refuge for
cowards. By definition it involved dealing with men who had the
capacity for brutal violence. And Sark was as good at dealing with
them as anybody.
“This is a big mistake,” he said quietly.
“In what way?” Hobie asked, interested.
“This is about what you did to Sheryl, is all.
It doesn’t have to be about anything else. You really shouldn’t mix
anything else in with it. It’s a big step up to violence against
police officers. It might be possible to work something out about
the Sheryl issue. Maybe there was provocation there, you know, some
mitigating circumstance. But you keep on messing with us, then we
can’t work anything out. Because you’re just digging yourself into
bigger trouble.”
He paused and watched carefully for the
response. The approach often worked. Self-interest on the part of
the perpetrator often made it work. But there was no response. from
Hobie. He said nothing. The office was silent. Sark was shaping the
next gambit on his lips when the radios crackled and some distant
dispatcher came over the air and sentenced him to death.
“Five one and five two,
please confirm your current location. ”
Sark was so conditioned to respond that his hand
jerked toward where his belt had been. It was stopped short by the
handcuff. The radio call died into silence. Hobie was staring into
space.
“Five one, five two, I need
your current location, please. ”
Sark was staring at the radios in horror. Hobie
followed his gaze and smiled.
“They don’t know where you are,” he said.
Sark shook his head. Thinking fast. A courageous
man.
“They know where we are. They know we’re here.
They want confirmation, is all. They check we’re where we’re
supposed to be, all the time.”
The radios crackled again. “Five one, five two,
respond please. ”
Hobie stared at Sark. O’Hallinan was struggling
to her knees and staring toward the radios. Tony moved his pistol
to cover her.
“Five one, five two, do you
copy?”
The voice slid under the sea of static and then
came back stronger.
“Five one, five two, we have
a violent domestic emergency at Houston and Avenue D. Are you
anywhere near that vicinity?”
Hobie smiled.
“That’s two miles from here,” he said. “They
have absolutely no idea where you are, do they?”
Then he grinned. The left side of his face
folded into unaccustomed lines, but on the right the scar tissue
stayed tight, like a rigid mask.