32
THE CROWD WAS silent. Their breathing was
swallowed up by the awesome mountain silence. Everybody was staring
at Holly. She was holding the Ingram reversed, the muzzle jammed
into a spot above her heart. Thumb backward on the trigger, tensed.
Borken’s bloated face was greased with panic. His huge frame was
shaking and trembling. He was hopping around next to his upturned
box, staring wide-eyed at her. She was looking back at him,
calmly.
“I’m a hostage, right?” she said to him. “Important
to them, important to you, because of who I am. All kinds of
importance to all kinds of people. You expect them to do stuff to
keep me alive. So now it’s your turn. Let’s talk about what stuff
you’re prepared to do to keep me alive.”
Borken saw her glance at Reacher.
“You don’t understand,” he screamed at her. Wild
urgency in his voice. “I’m not going to kill this guy. This guy
stays alive. The situation has changed.”
“Changed how?” she asked, calmly.
“I’m commuting his sentence,” Borken said. Still
panic in his voice. “That’s why we’re here. I was just going to
announce it. We know who he is. We just found out. We were just
informed. He was in the Army. Major Jack Reacher. He’s a hero. He
won the Silver Star.”
“So?” Holly asked.
“He saved a bunch of Marines,” Borken said
urgently. “In Beirut. Ordinary fighting men. He pulled them out of
a burning bunker. Marines will never attack us while he’s here.
Never. So I’m going to use him as another hostage. He’s good
insurance, against the damn Marines. I need him.”
She stared at him. Reacher stared at him.
“His sentence is commuted,” Borken said again.
“Five years on punishment detail. That’s all. Nothing else. No
question about it. I need him alive.”
He stared at her with a salesman’s beam like the
problem was solved. She stared back and forth between him and
Reacher. Reacher was watching the crowd. The crowd was angry. The
circus had left town before the performance. Reacher felt like they
had all taken a step toward him. They were testing Borken’s power
over them. Holly glanced at him, fear in her eyes. Nodded to him.
An imperceptible movement of her head. She would be safe, she was
saying, whatever happened. Her identity protected her like an
invisible magic cloak. Reacher nodded back. Without turning around,
he judged the distance to the trees behind him. Maybe twenty feet.
Shove Fowler at the front rank, drag the chain, sprint like hell,
he might be in the trees before anybody could aim a weapon. Twenty
feet, standing start, using the momentum of shouldering Fowler away
to help him, maybe four or five strides, maybe three seconds, maybe
four. In the trees, he would stand a chance against the bullets. He
imagined them smacking into the trunks either side of him as he ran
and dodged. A forest is a fugitive’s best friend. It takes a lot of
luck to hit a guy running through trees. He shifted his weight and
felt his ham-strings tighten. Felt the flood of adrenaline. Fight
or flight. But then Borken flung his arms wide again. Held them out
like an angel’s wings and used the awesome power of his eyes on his
people.
“I have made my decision,” he called. “Do you
understand?”
There was a long pause. It went on for seconds.
Then a hundred heads snapped back.
“Yes sir!” a hundred voices yelled.
“Do you understand?” he called again.
A hundred heads snapped back again.
“Yes sir!” a hundred voices yelled.
“Five years on punishment detail,” Borken called.
“But only if he can prove who he is. We are informed this man is
the only non-Marine in history to win the Marine Sniper
competition. We are told this man can put six bullets through a
silver dollar a thousand yards away. So I’m going to shoot against
him. Eight hundred yards. If he wins, he lives. If he loses, he
dies. Do you understand?”
A hundred heads snapped back.
“Yes sir!” a hundred voices yelled.
The rumble from the crowd started up again. This
time, they sounded interested. Reacher smiled inwardly. Smart move,
he thought. They wanted a spectacle, Borken was giving them one.
Fowler breathed out and pulled a key from his pocket. Ducked around
and unlocked the handcuffs. The chain fell to the floor. Reacher
breathed out and rubbed his wrists.
Then Fowler stepped over to Holly in the press of
people. Stepped right in front of her. She paused for a long moment
and glanced at Borken. He nodded.
“You have my word,” he said, with as much dignity
as he could recover.
She glanced at Reacher. He shrugged and nodded. She
nodded back and looked down at the Ingram. Clicked the safety on
and looped the strap off her shoulder. Grinned and dropped the gun
to the floor. Fowler bent at her feet and scooped it up. Borken
raised his arms for quiet.
“To the rifle range,” he called out. “Orderly
fashion. Dismiss.”
Holly limped over and walked next to Reacher.
“You won the Wimbledon?” she asked, quietly.
He nodded.
“So can you win this?” she asked.
He nodded again.
“With my head in a bag,” he said.
“Is that such a good idea?” she asked quietly. “Guy
like this, he’s not going to be happy to get beat.”
Reacher shrugged.
“He wants a big performance, he’s going to get
one,” he said. “He’s all shaken up. You started it. I want to keep
it going. Long run, it’ll do us good.”
“Well, take care,” she said.
“Watch me,” Reacher said.
TWO BRAND-NEW TARGETS were placed side by side at
the extreme end of the range. Borken’s was on the left, with ATF
daubed across its chest. Reacher’s was on the right, with FBI over
its heart. The rough matting was pulled back to give maximum
distance. Reacher figured he was looking at about eight hundred and
thirty yards. Fifty yards shy of a full half-mile. A hell of a long
way.
The swarm of people had settled into a rough
semicircle, behind and beside the matting. The nearer targets were
flung into the undergrowth to clear their view. Several people had
field glasses. They peered up the range and then their noise faded
as one after the other they settled into quiet anticipation.
Fowler made the trip to the armory in the clearing
below. He walked back with a rifle in each hand. One for Borken,
one for Reacher. Identical guns. The price of a small family car in
each hand. They were .50-inch Barrett Model 90s. Nearly four feet
long, over twenty-two pounds in weight. Bolt-action repeaters,
fired a bullet a full half-inch across. More like an artillery
shell than a rifle bullet.
“One magazine each,” Borken said. “Six
shots.”
Reacher took his weapon and laid it on the ground
at his feet. Little Stevie marshaled the crowd backward to clear
the matting. Borken checked his rifle and flicked the bipod legs
out. Smacked the magazine into place. He set the weapon down gently
on the matting.
“I shoot first,” he said.
He dropped to his knees and forced his bulk down
behind the rifle. Pulled the stock to him and snuggled it in close.
Dragged the bipod legs an inch to the left and swung the butt a
fraction to the right. He smacked the bolt in and out and pressed
himself close to the ground. Eased his cheek against the stock and
put his eye to the scope. Joseph Ray stepped from the edge of the
crowd and offered Reacher his field glasses. Reacher nodded
silently and took them. Held them ready. Borken’s finger tightened
against the trigger. He fired the first shot.
The Barrett’s huge muzzle brake blasted gas
sideways and downward. Dust blasted back up off the matting. The
rifle kicked and boomed. The sound crashed through the trees and
came back off the mountains, seconds later. A hundred pairs of eyes
flicked from Borken to the target. Reacher raised the field glasses
and focused eight hundred and thirty yards up the range.
It was a miss. The target was undamaged. Borken
peered through the scope and grimaced. He hunkered down again and
waited for the dust to clear. Reacher watched him. Borken was just
waiting. Steady breathing. Relaxed. Then his finger tightened
again. He fired the second shot. The rifle kicked and crashed and
the dust blasted upward. Reacher raised the field glasses again. A
hit. There was a splintered hole on the target’s right
shoulder.
There was a murmur from the crowd. Field glasses
were passed from hand to hand. The whispers rose and fell. The dust
settled. Borken fired again. Too quickly. He was still wriggling.
Reacher watched him making the mistake. He didn’t bother with the
field glasses. He knew that half-inch shell would end up in
Idaho.
The crowd whispered. Borken glared through the
scope. Reacher watched him do it all wrong. His relaxation was
disappearing. His shoulders were tensed. He fired the fourth.
Reacher handed the field glasses back to Joseph Ray on the edge of
the crowd. He didn’t need to look. He knew Borken was going to miss
with the rest. In that state, he’d have missed at four hundred
yards. He’d have missed at two hundred. He’d have missed across a
crowded room.
Borken fired the fifth and then the sixth and stood
up slowly. He lifted the big rifle and used the scope to check what
everybody already knew.
“One hit,” he said.
He lowered the rifle and looked across at
Reacher.
“Your shot,” he said. “Life or death.”
Reacher nodded. Fowler handed him his magazine.
Reacher used his thumb to test the spring. He pressed down on the
first bullet and felt the smooth return. The bullets were shiny.
Polished by hand. Sniper’s bullets. He bent and lifted the heavy
rifle. Held it vertical and clicked the magazine into place. He
didn’t smack at it, like Borken had done. He pressed it home gently
with his palm.
He opened the bipod legs, one at a time. Clicked
them against their detents. Glanced up the range and laid the rifle
on the matting. Squatted next to it and lay down, all in one fluid
motion. He lay like a dead man, arms flung upward around the gun.
He wanted to lie like that for a long time. He was tired. Deathly
tired. But he stirred and laid his cheek gently against the stock.
Snuggled his right shoulder close to the butt. Clamped his left
hand over the barrel, fingers under the scope. Eased his right hand
toward the trigger. Moved his right eye to the scope. Breathed
out.
Firing a sniper rifle over a long distance is a
confluence of many things. It starts with chemistry. It depends on
mechanical engineering. It involves optics and geophysics and
meteorology. Governing everything is human biology.
The chemistry is about explosions. The powder
behind the bullet in the shell case has to explode perfectly,
predictably, powerfully, instantly. It has to smash the projectile
down the barrel at maximum speed. The half-inch bullet in the
Barrett chamber weighs a hair over two ounces. One minute it’s
stationary. A thousandth of a second later, it’s doing nearly
nineteen hundred miles an hour, leaving the barrel behind on its
way to the target. That powder has to explode fast, explode
completely, and explode hard. Difficult chemistry. Weight for
weight, that explosion has got to be the best explosion on the
planet.
Then mechanical engineering takes over for a spell.
The bullet itself has to be a perfect little artifact. It’s got to
be as good as any manufactured article has ever been. It has got to
be cast better than any jewelry. It must be totally uniform in size
and weight. Perfectly round, perfectly streamlined. It has to
accept ferocious rotation from the rifling grooves inside the
barrel. It has to spin and hiss through the air with absolutely no
wobble, no bias.
The barrel has to be tight and straight. No good at
all if a previous shot has heated and altered the barrel shape. The
barrel has to be a mass of perfect metal, heavy enough to remain
inert. Heavy enough to kill the tiny vibrations of the bolt and the
trigger and the firing pin. That’s why the Barrett Reacher was
holding cost as much as a cheap sedan. That’s why Reacher’s left
hand was loosely clamped over the top of the gun. He was damping
any residual shock with it.
Optics play a big part. Reacher’s right eye was an
inch behind a Leupold & Stevens scope. A fine instrument. The
target was showing small, behind the fine data lines etched into
the glass. Reacher stared hard at it. Then he eased the stock down
and saw the target disappear and the sky swim into view. He
breathed out again and stared at the air.
Because geophysics are crucial. Light travels in a
straight line. But it’s the only thing that does. Bullets don’t.
Bullets are physical things which obey the laws of nature, like any
other physical things. They follow the curvature of the earth.
Eight hundred and thirty yards is a significant piece of curvature.
The bullet comes out of the barrel and rises above the line of
sight, then it passes through it, then it falls below it. In a
perfect curve, like the earth.
Except it’s not a perfect curve, because the very
first millisecond the bullet is gone, gravity is plucking at it
like a small insistent hand. The bullet can’t ignore it. It’s a
two-ounce copper-jacketed lead projectile traveling at nearly
nineteen hundred miles an hour, but gravity has its way. Not very
successfully, at first, but its best ally soon chips in. Friction.
From the very first millisecond of its travel, air friction is
slowing the bullet down and handing gravity a larger and larger say
in its destiny. Friction and gravity work together to haul that
bullet down.
So you aim way high. You aim maybe ten feet
directly above the target and eight hundred and thirty yards later
the curvature of the earth and the pull of its gravity bring that
bullet home to where you want it.
Except you don’t aim directly above the target.
Because that would be to ignore meteorology. Bullets travel through
air, and air moves. It’s a rare day when the air is still. The air
moves one way or another. Left or right, up or down, or any
combination. Reacher was watching the leaves on the trees, and he
could see a slow steady breeze coming out of the north. Dry air,
moving slowly right to left across his line of sight. So he was
aiming about eight feet to the right and ten feet above where he
wanted to put the bullet. He was going to launch that projectile
and let nature curve it left and down.
Human biology was all that stood in the way.
Snipers are people. People are quivering, shuddering masses of
flesh and muscle. The heart is beating away like a giant pump, and
the lungs are squeezing huge volumes of air in and out. Every nerve
and every muscle is trembling with microscopic energy. Nobody is
ever still. Even the calmest person is vibrating like crazy. Say
there’s a yard between the rifle’s firing pin and the muzzle. If
the muzzle moves a tiny fraction, then eight hundred and thirty
yards later, the bullet is going to miss by eight hundred and
thirty tiny fractions. A multiplying effect. If the shooter’s
vibration disturbs the muzzle by even a hundredth of an inch, the
bullet will be eight-point-three inches off target. About the width
of a man’s head.
So Reacher’s technique was to wait. Just to gaze
through the sight until his breathing was regular and his heartbeat
was slow. Then to tighten the trigger finger slowly and wait some
more. Then to count the heartbeats. One-and-two-and-three-and-four.
Keep on waiting until the rhythm was slow. Then to fire between
beats. Right when the vibration was as small as a human being could
get it.
He waited. He breathed out, long and slow. His
heart beat once. It beat again. He fired. The stock jumped against
his shoulder and his view was obliterated by the blast of dust from
the matting under the muzzle. The heavy thump of the shot crashed
off the mountainsides and came back to him with a wave of
whispering from the crowd. He had missed. The running, crouching
screen-print with FBI daubed on its chest was undamaged.
He let the dust settle and checked the trees. The
wind was steady. He breathed out and let his heart rate drop. He
fired again. The big rifle kicked and crashed. The dust flew. The
crowd stared and whispered. Another miss.
Two misses. He breathed steadily and fired again. A
miss. And again. Another miss. He paused for a long time. Picked up
his rhythm again and fired the fifth. He missed the fifth. The
crowd was restless. Borken lumbered nearer.
“All on the last shot,” he said, grinning.
Reacher made no reply. No way could he afford the
physical disturbance involved in speaking. The disruption to his
breathing, the muscular contraction of his lungs and throat would
be fatal. He waited. His heart beat. And again. He fired the sixth.
He missed. He dropped the sight and stared at the plywood target.
Undamaged.
Borken was staring at him. Questions in his eyes.
Reacher got to his knees and lifted the rifle. Snapped the empty
magazine out. Pushed the bolt home. Traced a finger along the neat
engraving on the side of the stock. Folded the bipod legs. Laid the
warm gun neatly on the matting. He stood up and shrugged. Borken
stared at him. Glanced at Fowler. Fowler glanced back, puzzled.
They had watched a man shooting for his life, and they had watched
him miss every shot.
“You knew the rules,” Borken said quietly.
Reacher stood still. Ignored him. Gazed up at the
blue sky. A pair of vapor trails were crawling across it, like tiny
chalk lines far overhead in the stratosphere.
“Wait, sir,” Joseph Ray called loudly.
He came forward out of the crowd. Bristling with
urgency. Self-important. Things to say. He was one of the few men
in the Bastion with any actual military service behind him, and he
prided himself on seeing things that other people missed. He
thought it gave him an edge. Made him useful in special ways.
He looked hard at the matting and lay himself down
exactly where Reacher had lain. Glanced down the range to the
targets. Closed one eye and stared through half his field glasses
like a telescope. Focused on the screen-print of the running man.
Moved his line of sight a fraction and focused just beyond the
hunch of the target’s shoulder. Stared into the distance and nodded
to himself.
“Come on,” he said.
He got to his feet and started jogging down the
range. Fowler went with him. Eight hundred and thirty yards later,
Ray passed the target without a second glance. Kept on jogging.
Fowler followed. Fifty yards. A hundred. Ray dropped to his knees
and stared backward. Aligned himself with the target and the
matting, way back in the far distance. Turned and pointed forward,
using his whole arm and finger like a rifle barrel. Stood up again
and walked fifty more yards to a particular tree.
It was an orphan silver birch. A straggly wild
survivor, forcing its way up alongside the tall pines. Its trunk
was contorted as it fought for light and air, one way and then the
next. It was narrow, not more than seven or eight inches across.
Six feet from the ground, it had six bullet holes in it. Big fresh
half-inch holes. Three of them were in a perfect straight vertical
line maybe seven inches high. The other three were curled in a
loose curve to the right, running from the top hole out and back to
the middle hole and out and back again to the bottom hole. Joseph
Ray stared hard at them. Then he realized what they were. He
grinned. The six holes made a perfect capital B, right there on the
white bark. The letter covered an area of maybe seven inches by
five. About the dimensions of a fat man’s face.
Fowler shouldered past Ray and turned and leaned on
the trunk. Stood and pressed the back of his head against the
ragged holes. Raised his field glasses and looked back down the
range toward the matting. He figured he was more than a hundred and
fifty yards behind the target. The target had been more than eight
hundred yards from the matting. He did the math in his head.
“A thousand yards,” he breathed.
Fowler and Joseph Ray paced it out together on the
way back to Borken. Ray kept his stride long, just about exactly a
yard. Fowler counted. Nine hundred and ninety strides, nine hundred
and ninety yards. Borken knelt on the matting and used Ray’s field
glasses. He closed one eye and stared across the distance. He could
barely even see the white tree. Reacher watched him try to keep the
surprise out of his face. Thought to himself: you wanted a big
performance, you got one. You like it, fat boy?
“OK,” Borken said. “So let’s see how damn smart
you’re going to act now.”
TH E FIVE GUARDS that had been six when Jackson
was with them formed up in a line. They moved forward and took up
position around Reacher and Holly. The crowd started filing away,
quietly. Their feet crunched and slid on the stony ground. Then
that sound was gone and the rifle range was quiet.
Fowler stooped and picked up the guns. He hefted
one in each hand and walked away through the trees. The five guards
unslung their weapons with the loud sound of palms slapping on wood
and metal.
“OK,” Borken said again. “Punishment detail.”
He turned to Holly.
“You too,” he said. “You’re not too damn valuable
for that. You can help him. He’s got a task to perform for
me.”
The guards stepped forward and marched Reacher and
Holly behind Borken, slowly down through the trees to the Bastion
and on along the beaten earth track to the command hut clearing.
They halted there. Two of the guards peeled off and walked to the
stores. They were back within five minutes with their weapons
shouldered. The first guard was carrying a long-handled shovel in
his left hand and a crowbar in his right. The second was carrying
two olive fatigue shirts. Borken took them from him and turned to
face Reacher and Holly.
“Take your shirts off,” he said. “Put these
on.”
Holly stared at him.
“Why?” she said.
Borken smiled.
“All part of the game,” he said. “You’re not back
by nightfall, we turn the dogs loose. They need your old shirts for
the scent.”
Holly shook her head.
“I’m not undressing,” she said.
Borken looked at her and nodded.
“We’ll turn our backs,” he said. “But you only get
one chance. You don’t do it, these boys will do it for you,
OK?”
He gave the command and the five guards fanned out
in a loose arc, facing the trees. Borken waited for Reacher to turn
away and then swiveled on his heels and stared up in the air.
“OK,” he said. “Get on with it.”
The men heard unbuttoning sounds and the rasp of
cotton. They heard the old shirt fall to the ground and the new one
slipping on. They heard fingernails clicking against buttons.
“Done,” Holly muttered.
Reacher took off his jacket and his shirt and
shivered in the mountain breeze. He took the new shirt from Borken
and shrugged it on. Slung the jacket over his shoulder. Borken
nodded and the guard handed Reacher the shovel and the crowbar.
Borken pointed into the forest.
“Walk due west a hundred yards,” he said. “Then
north another hundred. You’ll know what to do when you get
there.”
Holly looked at Reacher. He looked back and nodded.
They strolled together into the trees, heading west.
THIRTY YARDS INTO the woods, as soon as they were
out of sight, Holly stopped. She planted her crutch and waited for
Reacher to turn and rejoin her.
“Borken,” she said. “I know who he is. I’ve seen
his name in our files. They tagged him for a robbery, northern
California somewhere. Twenty million dollars in bearer bonds.
Armored car driver was killed. Sacramento office investigated, but
they couldn’t make it stick.”
Reacher nodded.
“He did it,” he said. “That’s for damn sure. Fowler
admitted it. Says they’ve got twenty million in the Caymans.
Captured from the enemy.”
Holly grimaced.
“It explains the mole in Chicago,” she said.
“Borken can afford a pretty handsome bribe with twenty million
bucks in the bank, right?”
Reacher nodded again, slowly.
“Anybody you know would take a bribe?” he
asked.
She shrugged.
“They all bitch about the salary,” she said.
He shook his head.
“No,” he said. “Think of somebody who doesn’t bitch
about it. Whoever’s got Borken’s bearer bonds behind him isn’t
worried about money anymore.”
“Some of them don’t grumble,” she said. “Some of
them just put up with it. Like me, for instance. But I guess I’m
different.”
He looked at her. Walked on.
“You’re different,” he repeated. “That’s for damn
sure.”
He said it vaguely, thinking about it. They walked
on for ten yards. He was walking slower than his normal pace and
she was limping at his side. He was lost in thought. He was hearing
Borken’s high voice claiming: she’s more than his daughter. He was
hearing her own exasperated voice asking: why the hell does
everybody assume everything that ever happens to me is because of
who my damn father is? Then he stopped walking again and looked
straight at her.
“Who are you, Holly?” he asked.
“You know who I am,” she said.
He shook his head again.
“No, I don’t,” he said. “At first I thought you
were just some woman. Then you were some woman called Holly
Johnson. Then you were an FBI agent. Then you were General
Johnson’s daughter. Then Borken told me you’re even more than that.
She’s more than his daughter, he said. That stunt you pulled, he
was shitting himself. You’re some kind of a triple-A gold-plated
hostage, Holly. So who the hell else are you?”
She looked at him. Sighed.
“Long story,” she said. “Started twenty-eight years
ago. My father was made a White House Fellow. Seconded to
Washington. They used to do that, with the fast-track guys. He got
friendly with another guy. Political analyst, aiming to be a
congressman. My mother was pregnant with me, his wife was pregnant,
he asked my parents to be godparents, my father asked them to be
godparents. So this other guy stood up at my christening.”
“And?” Reacher said.
“The guy got into a career,” Holly said. “He’s
still in Washington. You probably voted for him. He’s the
President.”
REACHER WALKED ON in a daze. Kept glancing at
Holly, gamely matching him stride for stride. A hundred yards west
of the punishment hut, there was an outcrop of rock, bare of trees.
Reacher and Holly turned there and walked north, into the
breeze.
“Where are we going?” Holly said. Her voice had an
edge of worry.
Reacher stopped suddenly. He knew where they were
going. The answer was on the breeze. He went cold. His skin
crawled. He stared down at the implements in his hands like he’d
never seen such things before.
“You stay here,” he said.
She shook her head.
“No,” she said. “I’m coming with you, wherever it
is.”
“Please, Holly,” he said. “Stay here, will
you?”
She looked surprised by his voice, but she kept on
shaking her head.
“I’m coming with you,” she said again.
He gave her a bleak look and they walked on north.
He forced himself onward, toward it. Fifty yards. Each step
required a conscious effort of will. Sixty yards. He wanted to turn
and run. Just run and never stop. Hurl himself across the wild
river and get the hell out. Seventy yards. He stopped.
“Stay here, Holly,” he said again. “Please.”
“Why?” she asked.
“You don’t need to see this,” he said,
miserably.
She shook her head again and walked on. He caught
her up. They smelled it long before they saw it. Faint, sweet,
unforgettable. One of the most common and one of the most terrible
smells in mankind’s long and awful history. The smell of fresh
human blood. Twenty paces after they smelled it, they heard it. The
buzzing of a million flies.
Jackson was crucified between two young pines. His
hands had been dragged apart and nailed to the trees through the
palms and wrists. He had been forced up onto his toes and his feet
had been nailed flat against the base of the trunks. He was naked
and he had been mutilated. He had taken several minutes to die.
Reacher was clear on that.
He stood immobile, staring at the crawling mass of
blue shiny flies. Holly had dropped her crutch and her face was
white. Ghastly staring white. She fell to her knees and retched.
Spun herself away from the dreadful sight and fell forward on her
face. Her hands clawed blindly in the forest dirt. She bucked and
screamed into the buzzing forest silence. Screamed and cried.
Reacher watched the flies. His eyes were
expressionless. His face was impassive. Just a tiny muscle jumping
at the corner of his jaw gave anything away. He stood still for
several minutes. Holly went silent, on the forest floor beside him.
He dropped the crowbar. Slung his jacket over a low branch. Stepped
over directly in front of the body and started digging.
He dug with a quiet fury. He smashed the shovel
into the earth as hard as he could. He chopped through tree roots
with single savage blows. When he hit rocks, he heaved them out and
hurled them into a pile. Holly sat up and watched him. She watched
the blazing eyes in his impassive face and the bulging muscles in
his arms. She followed the relentless rhythm of the shovel. She
said nothing.
The work was making him hot. The flies were
checking him out. They left Jackson’s body and buzzed around his
head. He ignored them. Just strained and gasped his way six feet
down into the earth. Then he propped the shovel against a tree.
Wiped his face on his sleeve. Didn’t speak. Took the crowbar and
stepped close to the corpse. Batted away the flies. Levered the
nails out of the left hand. Jackson’s body flopped sideways. The
left arm pointed grotesquely down into the pit. The flies rose in
an angry cloud. Reacher walked around to the right hand. Pried the
nails out. The body flopped forward into the hole. Reacher
extracted the nails from the feet. The body tumbled free into the
grave. The air was dark with flies and loud with their sound.
Reacher slid down into the hole and straightened the corpse out.
Crossed the arms over the chest.
He climbed back out. Without pausing he picked up
the shovel and started filling the hole. He worked relentlessly.
The flies disappeared. He worked on. There was too much dirt. It
mounded up high when he had finished, like graves always do. He
pounded the mound into a neat shape and dropped the shovel. Bent
and picked up the rocks he’d cleared. Used them to shore up the
sides of the mound. Placed the biggest one on top, like some kind
of a headstone.
Then he stood there, panting like a wild man,
streaked with dirt and sweat. Holly watched him. Then she spoke for
the first time in an hour.
“Should we say a prayer?” she asked.
Reacher shook his head.
“Way too late for that,” he said quietly.
“You OK?” she asked.
“Who’s the mole?” he asked in turn.
“I don’t know,” she said.
“Well, think about it, will you?” he said,
angrily.
She glared up at him.
“Don’t you think I have been?” she said. “What the
hell else do you think I was doing for the last hour?”
“So who the hell is it?” he asked. Still
angry.
She paused. Went quiet again.
“Could be anybody,” she said. “There are a hundred
agents in Chicago.”
She was sitting on the forest floor, small,
miserable, defeated. She had trusted her people. She had told him
that. She had been full of naive confidence. I trust my people, she
had said. He felt a wave of tenderness for her. It crashed over
him. Not pity, not concern, just an agonizing tenderness for a good
person whose bright new world was suddenly dirty and falling apart.
He stared at her, hoping she would see it. She stared back, eyes
full of tears. He held out his hands. She took them. He lifted her
to her feet and held her. He lifted her off the ground and crushed
her close. Her breasts were against his pounding chest. Her tears
were against his neck.
Then her hands were behind his head, pulling him
close. She squirmed her face up and kissed him. She kissed him
angrily and hungrily on the mouth. Her arms were locking around his
neck. He felt her wild breathing. He knelt and laid her gently on
the soft earth. Her hands burrowed at his shirt buttons. His at
hers.
They made love naked on the forest floor, urgently,
passionately, greedily, as if they were defying death itself. Then
they lay panting and spent in each other’s arms, gazing up at the
sunlight spearing down through the leaves.
HE STROKED HER hair and felt her breathing slow
down. He held her silently for a long time, watching the dust motes
dancing in the sunbeams over her head.
“Who knew your movements on Monday?” he asked
softly.
She thought about it. Made no reply.
“And which of them didn’t know about Jackson then?”
he asked.
No reply.
“And which of them isn’t short of money?” he
asked.
No reply.
“And which of them is recent?” he asked. “Which of
them could have come close enough to Beau Borken somewhere to get
bought off? Sometime in the past? Maybe investigating the robbery
thing in California?”
She shuddered in his arms.
“Four questions, Holly,” he said. “Who fits?”
She ran through all the possibilities. Like a
process of elimination. An algorithm. She boiled the hundred names
down. The first question eliminated most of them. The second
question eliminated a few more. The third question eliminated a
handful. It was the fourth question which proved decisive. She
shuddered again.
“Only two possibilities,” she said.