40
MCGRATH SNATCHED THE radio from his pocket.
Flipped it open and stared at it. It was crackling loudly in his
hand. Webster stepped forward and took it from him. Ducked back to
the cover of the rock face and clicked the button.
“Jackson?” he said. “This is Harland
Webster.”
McGrath and Johnson crowded in on him. The three
men crouched against the rock wall. Webster moved the unit an inch
from his ear so the other two could listen in. In the cover of the
rock, in the silence of the mountains, they could hear it crackling
and hissing and the fast breathing of a person on the other end.
Then they heard a voice.
“Harland Webster?” the voice said. “Well, well, the
head man himself.”
“Jackson?” Webster said again.
“No,” the voice said. “This is not Jackson.”
Webster glanced at McGrath.
“So who is it?” he asked.
“Beau Borken,” the voice said. “And as of today, I
guess that’s President Borken. President of the Free States of
America. But feel free to speak informally.”
“Where’s Jackson?” Webster asked.
There was a pause. Nothing to hear except the faint
electronic sound of FBI telecommunications technology. Satellites
and microwaves.
“Where’s Jackson?” Webster asked again.
“He died,” the voice said.
Webster glanced at McGrath again.
“How?” he asked.
“Just died,” Borken said. “Relatively quickly,
really.”
“Was he sick?” Webster asked.
There was another pause. Then there was the sound
of laughter. A high, tinny sound. A loud, shrieking laugh which
overloaded Webster’s earpiece and spilled into distortion and
bounced off the rock wall.
“No, he wasn’t sick, Webster,” Borken said. “He was
pretty healthy, up until the last ten minutes.”
“What did you do to him?” Webster asked.
“Same as I’m going to do to the General’s little
girl,” Borken said. “Listen up, and I’ll tell you the exact
details. You need to pay attention, because you need to know what
you’re dealing with here. We’re serious here. We mean business, you
understand? You listening?”
Johnson pushed in close. White and sweating.
“You crazy bastards,” he yelled.
“Who’s that?” Borken asked. “That the General
himself?”
“General Johnson,” Webster said.
There was a chuckle on the radio. Just a short,
satisfied sound.
“A full house,” Borken said. “The Director of the
FBI and the Joint Chairman. We’re flattered, believe me. But I
guess the birth of a new nation deserves nothing less.”
“What do you want?” Webster asked.
“We crucified him,” Borken said. “We found a couple
of trees a yard apart, and we nailed him up. We’re going to do that
to your daughter, General, if you step out of line. Then we cut his
balls off. He was pleading and screaming for us not to, but we did
it anyway. We can’t do that to your kid, her being a woman and all,
but we’ll find some equivalent, you know what I mean? Do you think
she’ll be screaming and pleading, General? You know her better than
me. Personally, I’m betting she will be. She likes to think she’s a
tough cookie, but when she sees those blades coming close, she’s
going to change her damn tune pretty quick, I’m just about sure of
that.”
Johnson turned whiter. All his blood just drained
away. He fell back and sat heavily against the rock. His mouth was
working soundlessly.
“What the hell do you bastards want?” Webster
yelled.
There was another silence. Then the voice came
back, quiet and firm.
“I want you to stop yelling,” it said. “I want you
to apologize for yelling at me. I want you to apologize for calling
me a rude name. I’m the President of the Free States, and I’m owed
some courtesy and deference, wouldn’t you say?”
His voice was quiet, but McGrath heard it clearly
enough. He looked across at Webster in panic. They were close to
losing, before they had even started. First rule was to negotiate.
To keep them talking, and gradually gain the upper hand. Establish
dominance. Classic siege theory. But to start out by apologizing
for yelling was to kiss goodbye any hope of dominance. That was to
lie down and roll over. From that point on, you were their
plaything. McGrath shook his head urgently. Webster nodded back.
Said nothing. Just held the radio without speaking. He knew how to
do this. He had been in this situation before. Several times. He
knew the protocol. Now, the first one to speak was the weaker one.
And it wasn’t going to be him. He and McGrath gazed at the ground
and waited.
“You still there?” Borken asked.
Webster kept on staring down. Saying nothing.
“You there?” Borken said again.
“What’s on your mind, Beau?” Webster asked,
calmly.
There was angry breathing over the air.
“You cut my phone line,” Borken said. “I want it
restored.”
“No, we didn’t,” Webster said. “Doesn’t your phone
work?”
“My faxes,” Borken said. “I got no response.”
“What faxes?” Webster said.
“Don’t bullshit me,” Borken said. “I know you cut
the line. I want it fixed.”
Webster winked at McGrath.
“OK,” he said. “We can do that. But you’ve got to
do something for us first.”
“What?” Borken asked.
“Holly,” Webster said. “Bring her down to the
bridge and leave her there.”
There was another silence. Then the laughter
started up again. High and loud.
“No dice,” Borken said. “And no deals.”
Webster nodded to himself. Lowered his voice.
Sounded like the most reasonable man on earth.
“Listen, Mr. Borken,” he said. “If we can’t deal,
how can we help each other?”
Another silence. McGrath stared at Webster. The
next reply was crucial. Win or lose.
“You listen to me, Webster,” the voice said. “No
deals. You don’t do exactly what I say, Holly dies. In a lot of
pain. I hold all the cards, and I’m not doing deals. You understand
that?”
Webster’s shoulders slumped. McGrath looked
away.
“Restore the fax line,” the voice said. “I need
communications. The world must know what we’re doing here. This is
a big moment in history, Webster. I won’t be denied by your stupid
games. The world must witness the first blows being struck against
your tyranny.”
Webster stared at the ground.
“This decision is too big for you alone,” Borken
said. “You need to consult with the White House. There’s an
interest there too, wouldn’t you say?”
Even over the tinny handheld radio, the force of
Borken’s voice was obvious. Webster was flinching like a physical
weight was against his ear. Flinching and gasping, as his heart and
lungs fought each other for space inside his chest.
“Make your decision,” Borken said. “I’ll call back
in two minutes.”
Then the radio went dead. Webster stared at it like
he had never seen such a piece of equipment before. McGrath leaned
over and clicked the button off.
“OK,” he said. “We stall, right? Tell him we’re
fixing the line. Tell him it will take an hour, maybe two. Tell him
we’re in contact with the White House, the UN, CNN, whoever. Tell
him whatever the hell he wants to hear.”
“Why is he doing this?” Webster asked, vaguely.
“Escalating everything? He’s making it so we have to attack him. So
we have to, right? Like he wants us to. He’s giving us no choice.
He’s provoking us.”
“He’s doing it because he’s crazy,” McGrath
said.
“He must be,” Webster said. “He’s a maniac.
Otherwise I just can’t understand why he’s trying to attract so
much attention. Because like he says, he holds all the cards
already.”
“We’ll worry about that later, chief,” McGrath
said. “Right now, we just need to stall him.”
Webster nodded. Forced himself back to the problem
in hand.
“But we need longer than two hours,” he said.
“Hostage Rescue will take at least four to get over here. Maybe
five, maybe six.”
“OK, it’s the Fourth of July,” McGrath said. “Tell
him the linemen are all off duty. Tell him it could take us all day
to get them back.”
They stared at each other. Glanced at Johnson. He
was right out of it. Just slumped against the rock face, white and
inert, barely breathing. Ninety hours of mortal stress and emotion
had finally broken him. Then the radio in Webster’s hand crackled
again.
“Well?” Borken asked, when the static
cleared.
“OK, we agree,” Webster said. “We’ll fix the line.
But it’s going to take some time. Linemen are off duty for the
holidays.”
There was a pause. Then a chuckle.
“Independence Day,” Borken said. “Maybe I should
have chosen another date.”
Webster made no reply.
“I want your Marines where I can see them,” Borken
said.
“What Marines?” Webster said.
There was another short laugh. Short and
complacent.
“You got eight Marines,” Borken said. “And an
armored car. We got lookouts all over the place. We’ve been
watching you. Like you’re watching us with those damn planes.
You’re lucky Stingers don’t shoot that high, or you’d have more
than a damn helicopter on the ground by now.”
Webster made no reply. Just scanned the horizon.
McGrath was doing the same thing, automatically, looking for the
glint of the sun on field glasses.
“I figure you’re close to the bridge right now,”
Borken said. “Am I right?”
Webster shrugged. McGrath prompted him with a
nod.
“We’re close to the bridge,” Webster said.
“I want the Marines on the bridge,” Borken said.
“Sitting on the edge in a neat little row. Their vehicle behind
them. I want that to happen now, you understand? Or we go to work
on Holly. Your choice, Webster. Or maybe it’s the General’s choice.
His daughter, and his Marines, right?”
Johnson roused himself and glanced up. Five minutes
later the Marines were sitting on the fractured edge of the
roadway, feet dangling down into the abyss. Their LAV was parked up
behind them. Webster was still in the lee of the rock face with
McGrath and Johnson. The radio still pressed to his ear. He could
hear muffled sounds. Like Borken had pressed his hand over the
microphone and was using a walkie-talkie. He could hear his muffled
voice alternating with crackly replies. Then he heard the hand come
away and the voice come back again, loud and clear in the
earpiece.
“OK, Webster, good work,” Borken said to him. “Our
scouts can see all eight of them. So can our riflemen. If they
move, they die. Who else have you got there with you?”
Webster paused. McGrath shook his head
urgently.
“Can’t you see?” Webster asked. “I thought you were
watching us.”
“Not right now,” Borken said. “I pulled my people
back a little. Into our defensive positions.”
“There’s nobody else here,” Webster said. “Just me
and the General.”
There was another pause.
“OK, you two can join the Marines,” Borken said.
“On the bridge. On the end of the line.”
Webster waited for a long moment. A blank
expression on his face. Then he got up and nodded to Johnson.
Johnson got up unsteadily and the two of them walked forward
together around the curve. Left McGrath on his own, crouched in the
lee of the rock.
MCGRATH WAITED THERE two minutes and crawled back
south to the Chevrolet. Garber and Johnson’s aide were in front and
Milosevic and Brogan were in back. They were all staring at
him.
“What the hell happened?” Brogan asked.
“We’re in deep, deep shit,” McGrath said.
Two minutes of hurried explanation, and the others
agreed with him.
“So what now?” Garber asked.
“We go get Holly,” McGrath said. “Before he
realizes we’re bullshitting him.”
“But how?” Brogan asked.
McGrath glanced at him. Glanced at Milosevic.
“The three of us,” he said. “End of the day, this
is a Bureau affair. Call it whatever you want, terrorism, sedition,
kidnapping, it’s all FBI territory.”
“We’re going to do it?” Milosevic said. “Just the
three of us? Right now?”
“You got a better way?” McGrath said. “You want
something done properly, you do it yourself, right?”
Garber was twisted around, scanning along the three
faces on the rear seat.
“So go do it,” he said.
McGrath nodded and held up his right hand, the
thumb and the first two fingers sticking out.
“I’m the thumb,” he said. “I go in east of the
road. Brogan, you’re the first finger. You walk a mile west of the
road and go in from there. Milo, you’re the second finger. You walk
two miles west and go north from there. We infiltrate separately,
spaced out a mile between each of us. We meet up back on the road a
half-mile shy of the town. Clear?”
Brogan made a face. Then he nodded. Milosevic
shrugged. Garber glanced at McGrath and the General’s aide started
the Chevy and rolled it gently south. He stopped it again after
four hundred yards, where the road came back out of the rock cover
and there was clear access left and right into the countryside. The
three FBI men checked their weapons. They each had a
government-issue .38 in a shiny brown leather shoulder holster.
Full load of six, plus another six in a speed-loader in their
pockets.
“Try to capture a couple of rifles,” McGrath said.
“Don’t worry about taking prisoners. You see somebody, you shoot
the bastard down, OK?”
Milosevic had the longest walk, so he was first to
go. He ducked across the road and struck out due west across the
mountain scrub. He made it to a small stand of trees and
disappeared. McGrath lit a cigarette and sent Brogan after him.
Garber waited until Brogan was in the trees, then he turned back to
McGrath.
“Don’t forget what I told you about Reacher,” he
said. “I’m not wrong about that guy. He’s on your side, believe
me.”
McGrath shrugged and said nothing. Smoked in
silence. Opened the Chevy’s door and slid out. Ground out the
cigarette under his shoe and walked away east, across the grassy
shoulder and onto the scrub.
MCGRATH WAS NOT far off fifty, and a heavy
smoker, but he was a fit man. He had that type of mongrel
constitution that age and smoke could not hurt. He was short at
five seven, but sturdy. About one-sixty, made up of that hard
slabby muscle which needs no maintenance and never fades into fat.
He felt the same as he had as a kid. No better, no worse. His
Bureau training had been a long time ago, and fairly rudimentary
compared to what people were getting now. But he’d aced it.
Physically, he’d been indestructible. Not the fastest guy in his
class, but easily the best stamina. The training runs in the early
days of Quantico had been crude. Around and around in the Virginia
woods, using natural obstacles. McGrath would come in maybe third
or fourth every time. But if they were sent around again, he could
do the same exact time, just about to the second. The faster guys
would be struggling at his side as he pounded relentlessly onward.
Then they would fall back. Second time around, McGrath would come
in first. Third time around, he would be the only guy to
finish.
So he was jogging comfortably as he approached the
southern edge of the ravine. He had worked about three hundred
yards east to a point where the slopes were reasonable and not
directly overlooked. He went straight down without pausing. Short,
stiff strides against the incline. The footing was loose. He
skidded on small avalanches of gravel and used the stunted trees to
check his speed. He dodged around the litter of rocks in the bottom
of the trench and started up the northern slope.
Going up was harder. He kicked his toes into the
gravel for grip and hauled himself upward with handfuls of grass.
He zigzagged between the small trees and bushes, looking for
leverage. The extra fifty feet on the northern rim was a
punishment. He tracked right to where a small landslide had created
a straight path at a kinder angle. Slipped and slid upward through
the crushed rock to the top.
He waited in the overhang, where the earth had
fallen away beneath the crust of roots. Listened hard. Heard
nothing except silence. He lifted himself onto the rim. Stood there
with his chest against the earth, head and shoulders exposed,
looking north into enemy territory. He saw nothing. Just the gentle
initial slopes, then the hills, then the giant mountains glowering
in the far distance. Blue sky, a million trees, clean air, total
silence. He thought: you’re a long way from Chicago, Mack.
Ahead of him was a belt of scrub where the ancient
rock was too close to the surface for much to grow. Then a ragged
belt of trees, interrupted at first by rocky outcrops, then growing
denser into the distance. He could see the curved gap in the
treetops where the road must run. Three hundred yards to his left.
He rolled up onto the grass and ran for the trees. Worked left
toward the road and shadowed it north in the forest.
He jogged along, dodging trees like a slow-motion
parody of a wide receiver heading for the end zone. The map was
printed in his mind. He figured he had maybe three miles to go.
Three miles at a slow jog, not much better than a fast walk, maybe
forty-five, fifty minutes. The ground was rising gently under his
feet. Every fourth or fifth stride, his feet hit the floor a
fraction sooner than they should have as the gradient lifted him
into the hills. He tripped a couple of times on roots. Once, he
slammed into a pine trunk. But he pounded on, relentlessly.
After forty minutes, he stopped. He figured Brogan
and Milosevic were having a similar journey, but they were dealing
with extra distance because they had tracked west at the outset. So
he expected a delay. With luck, they would be about twenty minutes
behind him. He walked deeper into the woods and sat down against a
trunk. Lit a cigarette. He figured he was maybe a half-mile shy of
the rendezvous. The map in his head said the road was about due to
arrow up into the town.
He waited fifteen minutes. Two cigarettes. Then he
stood up and walked on. He went cautiously. He was getting close.
He made two diversions to his left and found the road. Just crept
through the trees until he caught the gleam of sun on the gray
cement. Then he dodged back and continued north. He walked until he
saw the forest thinning ahead. He saw sunlight on open spaces
beyond the last trees. He stopped and stepped left and right to
find a view. He saw the road running up to the town. He saw
buildings. A gray ruin on a knoll on the left. The courthouse on
the right. Better preserved. Gleaming white in the sunshine. He
stared through the trees at it for a long moment. Then he turned
back. Paced five hundred yards back into the woods. Drifted over
toward the road until he could just make out the gray gleam through
the trees. Leaned on a trunk and waited for Brogan and
Milosevic.
THIS TIME, HE resisted the attraction of another
cigarette. He had learned a long time ago that to smoke while in
hiding was not a smart thing to do. The smell drifts, and a keen
nose can detect it. So he leaned on the tree and stared down in
frustration. Stared at his shoes. They were ruined from the
scramble up the north face of the ravine. He had jabbed them hard
into the rocky slope and they were scratched to pieces. He stared
at the ruined toe caps and instantly knew he had been betrayed.
Panic rose in his throat. His chest seized hard. It hit him like a
prison door swinging gently shut. It swung soundlessly inward on
greased hinges and clanged shut right in his face.
What had Borken said on the radio? He had said:
like you’re watching us with those damn planes. But what had the
General’s aide told him back in the Butte office? You look up and
you see a tiny vapor trail and you think it’s TWA. You don’t think
it’s the Air Force checking if you’ve shined your shoes this
morning. So how did Borken know there were surveillance planes in
the sky? Because he had been told. But by who? Who the hell
knew?
He glanced around wildly and the first thing he saw
was a dog coming at him from dead ahead. Then another. They bounded
through the trees at him. He heard a sound from behind him. The
crunch of feet and the flick of branches. Then the same sound from
his right. The snicking and slapping of a weapon from his left. The
dogs were at his feet. He spun in a panic-stricken circle. All
around him men were coming at him through the trees. Lean, bearded
men, in camouflage gear, carrying rifles and machine guns. Grenades
slung from their webbing. Maybe fifteen or twenty men. They stepped
forward calmly and purposefully. They were in a complete ring,
right around him. He turned one way, then the other. He was
surrounded. They were raising their weapons. He had fifteen or
twenty automatic weapons pointing straight at him like spokes in a
wheel.
They stood silent, weapons ready. McGrath glanced
from one to the next, in a complete wide circle. Then one of them
stepped forward. Some kind of an officer. His hand went straight in
under McGrath’s jacket. Jerked the .38 out of his holster. Then the
guy’s hand went into McGrath’s pocket. Closed over the speedloader
and pulled it out. The guy slipped both items into his own pocket
and smiled. Swung his fist and hit McGrath in the face. McGrath
staggered and was prodded back forward with the muzzle of a rifle.
Then he heard tires on the road. The grumble of a motor. He glanced
left and caught a flash of olive green in the sun. A jeep. Two men
in it. The soldiers pressed in and forced him out of the forest.
They jostled him through the trees and onto the shoulder. He
blinked in the sun. He could feel his nose was bleeding. The jeep
rolled forward and stopped alongside him. The driver stared at him
with curiosity. Another lean, bearded man in uniform. In the
passenger seat was a huge man wearing black. Beau Borken. McGrath
recognized him from his Bureau file photograph. He stared at him.
Then Borken leaned over and grinned.
“Hello, Mr. McGrath,” he said. “You made good
time.”