35
“I REFUSE TO believe it,” General Garber
said.
“He’s involved,” Webster said in reply. “That’s for
damn sure. We got the pictures, clear as day.”
Garber shook his head.
“I was promoted lieutenant forty years ago,” he
said. “Now I’m a three-star general. I’ve commanded thousands of
men. Tens of thousands. Got to know most of them well. And out of
all of them, Jack Reacher is the single least likely man to be
involved in a thing like this.”
Garber was sitting ramrod-straight at the table in
the mobile command post. He had shed his khaki raincoat to reveal
an old creased uniform jacket. It was a jacket which bore the
accumulated prizes of a lifetime of service. It was studded with
badges and ribbons. It was the jacket of a man who had served forty
years without ever making a single mistake.
Johnson was watching him carefully. Garber’s
grizzled old head was still. His eyes were calm. His hands were
laid comfortably on the table. His voice was firm, but quiet.
Definite, like he was being asked to defend the proposition that
the sky was blue and the grass was green.
“Show the General the pictures, Mack,” Webster
said.
McGrath nodded and opened his envelope. Slid the
four stills over the table to Garber. Garber held each one up in
turn, tilted to catch the green light from the overhead. Johnson
was watching his eyes. He was waiting for the flicker of doubt,
then the flicker of resignation. He saw neither.
“These are open to interpretation,” Garber
said.
His voice was still calm. Johnson heard an officer
loyally defending a favored subordinate. Webster and McGrath heard
a policeman of sorts expressing a doubt. They figured forty years’
service had bought the guy the right to be heard.
“Interpretation how?” Webster asked.
“Four isolated moments out of a sequence,” Garber
said. “They could be telling us the wrong story.”
Webster leaned over and pointed at the first
still.
“He’s grabbing her stuff,” he said. “Plain as day,
General.”
Garber shook his head. There was silence. Just
electronic hum throughout the vehicle. Johnson saw a flicker of
doubt. But it was in McGrath’s eyes, not Garber’s. Then Brogan
rattled his way up the ladder. Ducked his head into the
truck.
“Surveillance tapes, chief,” he said. “We’ve been
reviewing the stuff the planes got earlier. You should come see
it.”
He ducked out again and the four men glanced at
each other and got up. Walked the short distance through the cold
evening to the satellite truck and up the ladder. Milosevic was in
shirtsleeves, bathed in the blue light from a bank of video
screens. He shuttled a tape back and pressed play. Four screens lit
up with a perfect clear overhead view of a tiny town. The quality
of the picture was magnificent. Like a perfect movie picture,
except filmed vertically downward, not horizontal.
“Yorke,” Milosevic said. “The old courthouse,
bottom right. Now watch.”
He hit fast wind and watched the counter. Slowed
the tape and hit play again.
“This is a mile and a quarter away,” he said. “The
camera tracked northwest. There’s a parade ground, and this rifle
range.”
The camera had zoomed out for a wide view of the
area. There were two clearings with huts to the south, and a flat
parade ground to the north. In between was a long narrow scar in
the undergrowth, maybe a half-mile long and twenty yards wide. The
camera zoomed right out for a moment, to establish the scale, then
it tightened in on a crowd at the eastern end of the range. Then it
tightened further to a small knot of people standing on some brown
matting. There were four men clearly visible. And one woman.
General Johnson gasped and stared at his daughter.
“When was this?” he asked.
“Few hours ago,” Milosevic said. “She’s alive and
well.”
He froze the picture and tapped his fingernail four
times on the glass.
“Reacher,” he said. “Stevie Stewart. We figure this
one is Odell Fowle. And the fat guy is Beau Borken. Matches his
file photo from California.”
Then he hit play again. The camera held steady on
the matting, from seven miles up in the sky. Borken pressed his
bulk to the floor and lay motionless. Then a silent puff of dust
was seen under the muzzle of his rifle.
“They’re shooting a little over eight hundred
yards,” Milosevic said. “Some kind of a competition, I
guess.”
They watched Borken’s five final shots, and then
Reacher picked up his rifle.
“That’s a Barrett,” Garber said.
Reacher lay motionless and then fired six silent
shots, well spaced. The crowd milled around, and eventually Reacher
was lost to sight in the trees to the south.
“OK,” Webster said. “How do you want to interpret
that, General Garber?”
Garber shrugged. A dogged expression on his
face.
“He’s one of them, no doubt about it,” Webster
said. “Did you see his clothes? He was in uniform. Showing off on
the range? Would they give him a uniform and a rifle to play with
if he wasn’t one of their own?”
Johnson spooled the tape back and froze it. Looked
at Holly for a long moment. Then he walked out of the trailer.
Called over his shoulder to Webster.
“Director, we need to go to work,” he said. “I want
to make a contingency plan well ahead of time. No reason for us not
to be ready for this.”
Webster followed him out. Brogan and Milosevic
stayed at the video console. McGrath was watching Garber. Garber
was staring at the blank screen.
“I still don’t believe it,” he said.
He turned and saw McGrath looking at him. Nodded
him out of the trailer. The two men walked together into the
silence of the night.
“I can’t prove it to you,” Garber said. “But
Reacher is on our side. I’ll absolutely guarantee that,
personally.”
“Doesn’t look that way,” McGrath said. “He’s the
classic type. Fits our standard profile perfectly. Unemployed
ex-military, malcontent, dislocated childhood, probably full of all
kinds of grievances.”
Garber shook his head.
“He’s none of those things,” he said. “Except
unemployed ex-military. He was a fine officer. Best I ever had.
You’re making a big mistake.”
McGrath saw the look on Garber’s face.
“So you’d trust him?” he asked. “Personally?”
Garber nodded grimly.
“With my life,” he said. “I don’t know why he’s
there, but I promise you he’s clean, and he’s going to do what
needs doing, or he’s going to die trying.”
EXACTLY SIX MILES north, Holly was trusting to
the same instinct. They had taken her disassembled bed away, and
she was lying on the thin mattress on the floorboards. They had
taken the soap and the shampoo and the towel from the bathroom as a
punishment. They had left the small pool of blood from the dead
woman’s head untouched. It was there on the floor, a yard from her
makeshift bed. She guessed they thought it would upset her. They
were wrong. It made her happy. She was happy to watch it dry and
blacken. She was thinking about Jackson and staring at the stain
like it was a Rorschach blot telling her: you’re coming out of the
shadow now, Holly.
WEBSTER AND JOHNSON came up with a fairly simple
contingency plan. It depended on geography. The exact same
geography they assumed had tempted Borken to choose Yorke as the
location for his bastion. Like all plans based on geography, it was
put together using a map. Like all plans put together using a map,
it was only as good as the map was accurate. And like most maps,
theirs was way out of date.
They were using a large-scale map of Montana. Most
of its information was reliable. The main features were correct.
The western obstacle was plain to see.
“We assume the river is impassable, right?” Webster
said.
“Right,” Johnson agreed. “The spring melts are
going to be in full flow. Nothing we can do there before Monday.
When we get some equipment.”
The roads were shown in red like a man had placed
his right hand palm-down on the paper. The small towns of Kalispell
and Whitefish nestled under the palm. Roads fanned out like the
four fingers and the thumb. The index finger ran up through a place
called Eureka to the Canadian border. The thumb ran out northwest
through Yorke and stopped at the old mines. That thumb was now
amputated at the first knuckle.
“They assume you’ll come up the road,” Johnson
said. “So you won’t. You’ll loop east to Eureka and come in through
the forest.”
He ran his pencil down the thumb and across the
back of the hand. Back up the index finger and stopped it at
Eureka. Fifty miles of forest lay between Eureka and Yorke. The
forest was represented on the map by a large green stain. Deep and
wide. They knew what that green stain meant. They could see what it
meant by looking around them. The area was covered in virgin
forest. It ran rampant up and down the mountainsides. Most places,
the vegetation was so dense a man could barely squeeze between the
tree trunks. But the green stain to the east of Yorke was a
national forest. Owned and operated by the Forest Service. The
green stain showed a web of threads running through it. Those
threads were Forest Service tracks.
“I can get my people here in four hours,” Webster
said. “The Hostage Rescue Team. On my own initiative, if it comes
to it.”
Johnson nodded.
“They can walk right through the woods,” he said.
“Probably drive right through.”
Webster nodded.
“We called the Forest guys,” he said. “They’re
bringing us a detailed plan.”
“Perfect,” Johnson said. “If things turn bad, you
call your team in, send them direct to Eureka, we’ll all make a
little noise on the southern flank, and they muscle in straight
through from the east.”
Webster nodded again. The contingency plan was
made. Until the National Forests guy came up the short aluminum
ladder into the command post. McGrath brought him inside with
Milosevic and Brogan. Webster made the introductions and Johnson
asked the questions. Straightaway the Forest guy started shaking
his head.
“Those tracks don’t exist,” he said. “At least,
most of them don’t.”
Johnson pointed to the map.
“They’re right here,” he said.
The Forest guy shrugged. He had a thick book of
topographical plans under his arm. He opened it up to the correct
page. Laid it over the map. The scale was much larger, but it was
obvious the web of threads was a different shape.
“Mapmakers know there are tracks,” the guy said.
“So they just show them any old place.”
“OK,” Johnson said. “We’ll use your maps.”
The Forest guy shook his head.
“These are wrong, too,” he said. “They might have
been right at some stage, but they’re wrong now. We spent years
closing off most of these tracks. Had to stop the bear hunters
getting in. Environmentalists made us do it. We bulldozed tons of
dirt into the openings of most of the through tracks. Ripped up a
lot of the others. They’ll be totally overgrown by now.”
“OK, so which tracks are closed?” Webster asked. He
had turned the plan and was studying it.
“We don’t know,” the guy said. “We didn’t keep very
accurate records. Just sent the bulldozers out. We caught a lot of
guys closing the wrong tracks, because they were nearer, or not
closing them at all, because that was easier. The whole thing was a
mess.”
“So is there any way through?” Johnson asked.
The Forest guy shrugged.
“Maybe,” he said. “Maybe not. No way of knowing,
except to try it. Could take a couple of months. If you do get
through, keep a record and let us know, OK?”
Johnson stared at him.
“Let me get this straight,” he said. “You’re the
damn Forest Service, and you want us to tell you where your own
tracks are?”
The guy nodded.
“That’s about the size of it,” he said. “Like I
told you, our records are lousy. The way we figured it, who the
hell would ever care?”
The General’s aide walked him back to the
roadblock. There was silence in the command vehicle. McGrath and
Brogan and Milosevic studied the map.
“We can’t get through, they can’t get through,”
McGrath said. “We’ve got them bottled up. We need to start
exploiting that.”
“How?” Webster said.
“Control them,” McGrath said. “We already control
their road. We can control their power and their telephone line,
too. The lines more or less follow the road. Separate spurs up out
of Kalispell. We should cut the phone line so it terminates right
here, in this vehicle. Then they can’t communicate with anybody
except us. Then we tell them we control their power. Threaten to
cut it off if they don’t negotiate.”
“You want a negotiation?” Johnson asked.
“I want a stalling tactic,” McGrath said. “Until
the White House loosens up.”
Webster nodded.
“OK, do it,” he said. “Call the phone company and
get the line run in here.”
“I already did,” McGrath said. “They’ll do it first
thing in the morning.”
Webster yawned. Checked his watch. Gestured to
Milosevic and Brogan.
“We should get a sleeping rota going,” he said.
“You two turn in first. We’ll sleep two shifts, call it four hours
at a time.”
Milosevic and Brogan nodded. Looked happy enough
about it.
“See you later,” McGrath said. “Sleep tight.”
They left the trailer and closed the door quietly.
Johnson was still fiddling with the map. Twisting it and turning it
on the table.
“Can’t they do the phone thing faster?” he asked.
“Like tonight?”
Webster thought about it and nodded. He knew fifty
percent of any battle is keeping the command structure
harmonious.
“Call them again, Mack,” he said. “Tell them we
need it now.”
McGrath called them again. He used the phone at his
elbow. Had a short conversation which ended with a chuckle.
“They’re sending the emergency linemen,” he said.
“Should be done in a couple of hours. But we’ll get an invoice for
it. I told them to send it to the Hoover Building. The guy asked me
where that was.”
He got up and waited in the doorway. Johnson and
Webster stayed at the table. They huddled together over their map.
They looked at the southern ravine. It had been formed a million
years ago when the earth shattered under the weight of a billion
tons of ice. They assumed it was accurately represented on
paper.