41
REACHER WATCHED THE whole thing happen. He was a
hundred and fifty yards away in the trees. Northwest of the ambush,
high up the slope on the other side of the road. There was a dead
sentry at his feet. The guy was lying in the dirt with his head at
right angles to his neck. Reacher had his field glasses raised to
his eyes. Watching. Watching what, he wasn’t exactly sure.
He had caught the gist of the radio conversation in
the Bastion. He had heard Borken’s side. He had guessed the
replies. He had heard the southern lookouts calling in on the
walkie-talkies. He knew about the Marines on the bridge. He knew
about Webster and Johnson sitting there alongside them, on the end
of the line.
He had wondered who else was down there. Maybe more
military, maybe more FBI. The military wouldn’t come. Johnson would
have ordered them to sit tight. If anybody came, it would be the
FBI. He figured they might have substantial numbers standing by. He
figured they would be coming in, sooner or later. He needed to
exploit them. Needed to use them as a diversion while he got Holly
out. So he had moved southeast to wait for their arrival. Now, an
hour later, he was gazing down at the short stocky guy getting
loaded into the jeep. Dark suit, white shirt, town shoes. FBI, for
sure.
But not the Hostage Rescue Team. This guy had no
equipment. The HRT came in all loaded down with paramilitary gear.
Reacher was familiar with their procedures. He had read some of
their manuals. Heard about some of their training. He knew guys who
had been in and out of Quantico. He knew how the HRT worked. They
were a high-technology operation. They looked like regular
soldiers, in blue. They had vehicles. This guy he was watching was
on foot in the forest. Dressed like he had just stepped out of a
meeting.
It was a puzzle. Eight Marines. No Hostage Rescue
Team. An unarmed search-and-rescue Chinook. Then Reacher suddenly
thought maybe he understood. Maybe this was a very clandestine
operation. Low-profile. Invisible. They had tracked Holly all the
way west from Chicago, but for some reason they maybe weren’t
gathering any kind of a big force. They were dealing with it alone.
Some tactical reason. Maybe a political reason. Maybe something to
do with Holly and the White House. Maybe the policy was to deal
with this secretly, deal with it hard, tackle it with a tight
little team. So tight the right hand didn’t know what the left was
doing. Hence the unarmed search-and-rescue chopper. It had come in
blind. Hadn’t known what it was getting into.
In which case this ambushed guy he was watching was
direct from Chicago. Part of the original operation that must have
started up back on Monday. He looked like a senior guy. Maybe
approaching fifty. Could be Brogan, Holly’s section head. Could
even be McGrath, the top boy. In either case that made Milosevic
the mole. Question was, was he up here as well, or was he still
back in Chicago?
The jeep turned slowly in the road. The Bureau guy
in the suit was in back, jammed between two armed men. His nose was
bleeding and Reacher could see a swelling starting on his face.
Borken had twisted his bulk around and was talking at him. The rest
of the ambush squad was forming up in the road. The jeep drove past
them, north toward town. Passed by thirty yards from where Reacher
was standing in the trees. He watched it go. Turned and picked up
his rifle. Strolled through the woods, deep in thought.
His problem was priority order. He had a rule:
stick to the job in hand. The job in hand was getting Holly away
safe. Nothing else. But this Bureau guy was in trouble. He thought
about Jackson. The last Bureau guy they’d gotten hold of. Maybe
this new guy was heading for the same fate. In which case, he ought
to intervene. And he liked the look of the guy. He looked tough.
Small, but strong. A lot of energy. Some kind of charisma there.
Maybe an ally would be a smart thing to have. Two heads, better
than one. Two pairs of hands. Four trigger fingers. Useful. But his
rule was: stick to the job in hand. It had worked for him many
times over the years. It was a rule which had served him well.
Should he bend that rule? Or not? He stopped and stood concealed in
the forest while the ambush squad marched by on the road. Listened
to the sound of their footsteps die away. Stood there and thought
about the guy some more and forced himself toward a tough
decision.
GENERAL GARBER WATCHED the whole thing happen,
too. He was a hundred and fifty yards south of the ambush. West
side of the road, behind a rocky outcrop, exactly three hundred
yards south of where Reacher had been. He had waited three minutes
and then followed McGrath in through the ravine. Garber was also a
reasonably fit man, but a lot older, and it had cost him a lot to
keep pace with McGrath. He had arrived at the rocky outcrop and
collapsed, out of breath. He figured he had maybe fifteen or twenty
minutes to recover before the rendezvous took place. Then his plan
was to follow behind the three agents and see what was going to
happen. He didn’t want anybody making mistakes about Jack
Reacher.
But the rendezvous had never happened. He had
watched the ambush and realized a lot of mistakes had been made
about a lot of things.
“YOU’RE GOING TO die,” Borken said.
McGrath was jammed between two soldiers on the back
seat of the jeep. He was bouncing around because the road was
rough. But he couldn’t move his arms, because the seat was not
really wide enough for three people. So he put the shrug into his
injured face instead.
“We’re all going to die,” he said. “Sooner or
later.”
“Sooner or later, right,” Borken said. “But for
you, it’s going to be sooner, not later.”
Borken was twisted around in the front seat,
staring. McGrath looked past him at the vast blue sky. He looked at
the small white clouds and thought: Who was it? Who knew? Air Force
operational personnel, he guessed, but that link was ludicrous. Had
to be somebody nearer and closer. Somebody more involved. The only
possibilities were Johnson or his aide, or Webster himself, or
Brogan, or Milosevic. Garber, conceivably. He seemed pretty hot on
excusing this Reacher guy. Was this some military police conspiracy
to overthrow the Joint Chiefs?
“Who was it, Borken?” he asked.
“Who was what, dead man?” Borken asked back.
“Who’s been talking to you?” McGrath said.
Borken smiled and tapped his finger on his
temple.
“Common cause,” he said. “This sort of issue, there
are a lot more people than you think on our side.”
McGrath glanced back to the sky and thought about
Dexter, safe in the White House. What had Webster said he’d said?
Twelve million people? Or was it sixty-six million? >
“You’re going to die,” Borken said again.
McGrath shifted his focus back.
“So tell me who it was, before I do,” he
said.
Borken grinned at him.
“You’ll find out,” he said. “It’s going to be a big
surprise.”
The jeep pulled up in front of the courthouse.
McGrath twisted and looked up at it. There were six soldiers
standing guard outside the building. They were fanned into a rough
arc, facing south and east.
“She in there?” he asked.
Borken nodded and smiled.
“Right now she is,” he said. “I may have to get her
out later.”
The walkie-talkie on his belt burst into life. A
loud burst of static and a quick distorted message. He pressed the
key and bent his head down. Acknowledged the information without
unclipping the unit. Then he pulled the radio transmitter from his
pocket. Flipped it open and pulled up the short antenna. Pressed
the send button.
“Webster?” he said. “You lied to me. Twice. First,
there were three of your agents down there with you. We just
rounded them all up.”
He listened to the response. Kept the radio tight
against his ear. McGrath could not hear what Webster was
saying.
“Doesn’t matter anyway,” Borken said. “They weren’t
all on your side. Some people in this world will do anything for
money.”
He paused for a response. Apparently there was
none.
“And you bullshitted me,” Borken said. “You weren’t
going to fix the line at all, were you? You were just stringing me
along.”
Webster was starting a reply, but Borken cut him
off.
“You and Johnson,” he said. “You can get off the
bridge now. The Marines stay there. We’re watching. You and Johnson
walk back to your trucks. Get yourselves in front of those TVs.
Should be some interesting action pretty soon.”
He clicked off the radio and folded it back into
his pocket. A big wide smile on his face.
“You’re going to die,” he said to McGrath for the
third time.
“Which one?” McGrath asked. “Brogan or
Milosevic?”
Borken grinned again.
“Guess,” he said. “Figure it out for yourself.
You’re supposed to be the big smart federal investigator.
Agent-in-Charge, right?”
The driver jumped down and pulled a pistol from his
holster. Aimed it two-handed at McGrath’s head. The left-hand guard
squeezed out and unslung his rifle. Held it ready. The right-hand
guy did the same. Then Borken eased his bulk down.
“Out,” he said. “We walk from here.”
McGrath shrugged and eased himself down into the
circle of weapons. Borken stepped behind him and caught his arms.
Cuffed his wrists together behind his back. Then he shoved him
forward. Pointed beyond the ruined county office.
“Up there, dead man,” he said.
They left the jeep behind them next to the
courthouse. The two guards formed up. McGrath stumbled across the
street and up onto the lumpy knoll. He was pushed past the dead
tree. He was pushed left until he found the path. He followed it
around behind the old building. The rough ground bit up through the
thin soles of his ruined city shoes. He might as well have been
walking barefoot.
“Faster, asshole,” Borken grunted at him.
The guards were behind him, prodding him forward
with the muzzles of their rifles. He picked up the pace and
stumbled on through the woods. He felt the blood clotting on his
lip and nose. After a mile, he came out into the clearing he
recognized from the surveillance pictures. It looked bigger. From
seven miles overhead, it had looked like a neat hole in the trees,
with a tidy circle of buildings. From ground level, it looked as
big as a stadium. Rough shale on the floor of the clearing, big
wooden huts propped expertly on solid concrete piles.
“Wait here,” Borken said.
He walked away and the two guards took up station
either side of McGrath as he gazed around. He saw the
communications hut, with the phone wire and the whip antenna. He
saw the other buildings. Smelled stale institutional food coming
out of the largest. Saw the farthest hut, standing on its own. Must
be their armory, he thought.
He glanced up and saw the vapor trails in the sky.
The urgency of the situation was written up there, white on blue.
The planes had abandoned their innocent east-west trawling. Their
trails had tightened into continuous circles, one just inside the
other. They were flying around and around, centered seven miles
above his head. He stared up at them and mouthed: help! He wondered
if their lenses were good enough to pick that out. Wondered if
maybe Webster or Johnson or Garber or Johnson’s gofer could
lip-read. His best guess was: yes, and no.
REACHER’S PROBLEM WAS a hell of an irony. For the
first time in his life, he wished his opponents were better shots.
He was concealed in the trees a hundred yards northwest of the
courthouse. Looking down at six sentries. They were ranged in a
loose arc, to the south and east beyond the big white building.
Reacher’s rifle was trained on the nearest man. But he wasn’t
shooting. Because if he did, the six men were going to shoot back.
And they were going to miss.
Reacher was happy with an M-16 and a range of a
hundred yards. He could pretty much absolutely guarantee to hit
what he wanted with that weapon at that range. He would bet his
life on it. Many times, he had. And normally, the worse shots his
opponents were, the happier he’d be about it. But not in this
situation.
He would be shooting from a northwest direction.
His opponents would be shooting back from the southeast. They would
hear his shots, maybe see some muzzle flash, they would take aim,
and they would fire. And they would miss. They would shoot high and
wide. The targets on the rifle range were mute evidence for that
conclusion. There had been some competent shooting at three and
four hundred yards. The damaged targets bore witness to that fact.
But Reacher’s experience was that guys who could shoot just about
competently at three or four hundred yards on a range would be
useless in a firefight. Lying still on a mat and sighting in on a
target in your own time was one thing. Shooting into a noisy
confused hailstorm of bullets was a very different thing. A
different thing entirely. The guy defending the missile trucks had
proved that. His salvos had been all over the place. And that was
the problem. Shooting back from the southeast, these guys’ stray
rounds were going to be all over the place, too. Up and down, left
and right. The down rounds and the left rounds were no problem.
They were just going to damage the scrubby vegetation. But the up
rounds and the right rounds were going to hit the courthouse.
The M-16 uses bullets designated M855. Common NATO
rounds, 5.56 millimeters in caliber, just a fraction under a
quarter-inch wide. Fairly heavy for their size, because they are a
sandwich of lead and steel, inside a copper jacket. Designed for
penetration. Those stray rounds which hit the courthouse were going
to impact the siding at two thousand miles an hour. They were going
to punch through the old wood like it wasn’t there at all. They
were going to smash through the unstable dynamite like a train
wreck. The energy of their impact was going to act like a better
blasting cap than anything any mining company had ever possessed.
That was what those bullets were designed to do. Some committee had
asked for a bullet capable of shooting through the sides of
ammunition trucks. And that’s what had been delivered.
So Reacher wasn’t shooting. Three sentries, he
might have risked it. He figured he could get off three aimed shots
in maybe three seconds. Too fast for any reaction. But six was too
many. They were too spaced out. Too much physical movement was
required between rounds. The later targets would have time to
react. Not much time. Certainly not enough to be accurate. That was
the problem.
Reversing the geometry would be no help, either. He
could work himself right around to the south. It would take him
maybe twenty minutes to skirt around in the trees and come back at
them from the opposite direction. But then what? He would be
looking at his targets, uphill. The courthouse would be right
behind them. He could hit each of them in the head, no problem at
all. But he couldn’t ask the bullets just to stop there in midair.
He couldn’t prevent those high-energy copper-jackets bursting on
out of the back of those skulls and heading on their uphill
trajectories straight toward the courthouse’s second-story walls.
He shook his head and lowered his rifle.
MCGRATH SAW BORKEN conferring with somebody on
the edge of the clearing. It was the guy who had led the ambush
squad. The guy who had taken his gun and his bullets and punched
him in the face. The two of them were glancing at their watches and
glancing up at the sky. They were nodding. Borken slapped the guy
on the shoulder and turned away. Ducked into the trees and
disappeared back toward the town. The ambush leader started in
toward McGrath. He was smiling. He was unslinging his rifle.
“Showtime,” he called.
He stepped near and reversed the rifle in his hands
as he did so. Smashed the butt into McGrath’s stomach. McGrath went
down on the shale. One guard jammed the muzzle of his rifle into
McGrath’s throat. The other jammed his into McGrath’s stomach,
right where the blow had landed.
“Lie still, asshole,” the unit leader said. “I’ll
be back in a minute.”
McGrath could not move his head because of the
rifle in his throat, but he followed the guy with his eyes. He was
going into the next-to-last hut in line. Not the armory, which
stood on its own. Some kind of an equipment store. He came out with
a mallet and ropes and four metal objects. Dull-green, Army issue.
As he got nearer, McGrath recognized what they were. They were tent
pegs. Maybe eighteen inches long, designed for some kind of big
mess tent.
The guy dropped his load on the shale. The metal
pegs clinked on the stones. The guy nodded to the soldier with the
gun in McGrath’s belly, who straightened up and stepped away. The
unit leader took his place. Used his own weapon to keep McGrath
pinned down.
The soldier got busy. He seemed to know what he was
supposed to do. He used the mallet to drive the first peg into the
ground. The ground was stony and the guy had to work hard. He was
swinging the mallet in a big arc and using a lot of force. He drove
the peg down until it was two-thirds buried. Then he paced off
maybe eight feet and started driving the second. McGrath followed
him with his eyes. When the second peg was in, the guy paced
another eight feet at a right angle and hammered the third peg in.
The fourth peg completed an exact square, eight feet on a side.
McGrath had a pretty good idea what that square was for.
“We normally do this in the woods,” the unit leader
said. “We normally do it vertically, with trees.”
Then the guy pointed upward at the sky.
“But we need to let them see,” he said. “They can’t
see properly in the woods. This time of year, too many leaves in
the way, right?”
The guard who had driven the tent pegs into the
ground was panting from the exertion. He changed places with his
leader again. Jammed his rifle into McGrath’s gut and leaned on it,
recovering. McGrath gasped and squirmed under the pressure. The
leader squatted down and sorted through the ropes. Untangled one
and caught McGrath by the ankle. Looped the rope around and tied it
off, hard. Used the rope to drag McGrath by the leg into the
approximate center of the square. Then he tied the loose end to the
fourth peg. Tied it tight and tested it.
The second length of rope went around McGrath’s
other ankle. It was tied off to the third peg. McGrath’s legs were
forced apart at a right angle. His hands were still cuffed behind
his back, crushed against the rocky ground. The leader used the
sole of his boot to roll McGrath’s upper body sideways. Ducked down
and unlocked the cuff. Caught a wrist and looped a rope around.
Tied it tight and hauled the wrist up to the second peg. He pulled
on it until McGrath’s arm was stretched tight, in a perfect
straight line with the opposite leg. Then he tied it tight to the
peg and reached down for the other wrist. The soldiers jammed their
muzzles in tighter. McGrath stared up at the vapor trails and
gasped in pain as his arm was stretched tight and he was tied into
a perfect cross.
The two soldiers jerked their rifles away and
stepped back. They stood with their leader. Gazing down. McGrath
lifted his head and looked wildly around. Pulled on the ropes, and
then realized he was only pulling the knots tighter. The three men
stepped farther back and glanced up at the sky. McGrath realized
they were making sure the cameras got an uninterrupted view.
THE CAMERAS WERE getting an uninterrupted view.
Seven miles in the sky, the pilots were flying circles, one on a
tight radius of a few miles, the other outside him on a wider path.
Their cameras were trained downward, under the relentless control
of their computers. The inside plane was focusing tight on the
clearing where McGrath was spread-eagled. The outer camera was
zoomed wider, taking in the whole of the area from the courthouse
in the south to the abandoned mines in the north. Their real-time
video signals were bouncing down more or less vertically to the
dish vehicle parked behind the mobile command post. The dish was
focusing the datastream and feeding it through the thick armored
cable into the observation truck. Then the decoding computers were
feeding the large color monitors. Their phosphor screens were
displaying the appalling truth. General Johnson and his aide and
Webster were motionless in front of them. Motionless, silent,
staring. Video recorders were whirring away, dispassionately
recording every second’s activity taking place six miles to the
north. The whole vehicle was humming with faint electronic energy.
But it was as silent as a tomb.
“Can you zoom in?” Webster asked quietly. “On
McGrath?”
The General’s aide twisted a black rubber knob.
Stared at the screen. He zoomed in until the individual pixels in
the picture began to clump together and distort. Then he backed off
a fraction.
“Close as we can get,” he said.
It was close enough. McGrath’s spread-eagled figure
just about filled the screens. The unit leader could be seen from
directly above, stepping over the lengths of rope as he circled. He
had a knife in his hand. A black handle, a shiny blade, maybe ten
inches long. It looked like a big kitchen knife. The sort of thing
a gourmet cook might buy. Useful for slicing a tough cut of steak
into strips. The sort of tool that would get set out on the kitchen
counter by someone making a stew or a stroganoff.
They saw the guy lay the knife flat on McGrath’s
chest. Then he used both hands to fold back the flaps on McGrath’s
jacket. He loosened McGrath’s tie and pulled it sideways, almost up
under his ear. Then he grasped the shirt and tore it open. The
cotton pulled apart under the knife, leaving the knife where it
was, now next to the skin. The guy pulled the tails out of the
waistband and tucked the shirt right back to the sides. Carefully,
well out of the way, like he was a surgeon faced with a difficult
emergency procedure.
They saw the guy pick up the knife again. He was
squatted down to McGrath’s right, leaning over slightly, holding
the knife. He was holding it point down, close to McGrath’s belly.
The electronic pink of McGrath’s skin was reflected in the faces of
the watchers inside the observation vehicle.
They saw the guy raise the knife an inch. They saw
his index finger slide along the back of the blade, like he was
adjusting his grip for extra precision. They saw the blade move
down. The pale sun glinted on the steel. Then their view was
disrupted. A silent puff of pink mist obscured the picture. When it
cleared, the knife was still in the guy’s hand. But the guy had no
head. His whole head was a shattered pink wound, and he was
toppling slowly sideways.