45
THE CLASSIC MISTAKE in firing an automatic weapon
is to let the recoil from the first bullet jerk the barrel upward,
so that the second bullet goes high, and the third higher still.
But Garber did not make that mistake. He had enough hours on the
range to be reliable from seventy yards. He had been through enough
edgy situations to know how to stay cool and concentrated. He put
all three bullets right through the exact center of the pink cloud
that had been Borken’s head.
They spent two ten-thousandths of a second
traveling through it and flew on uninterrupted. They smashed
through the new plywood sheeting in the window frame. The leading
bullet was distorted slightly by the impact and jerked left,
tearing through the inner pine siding twenty-two inches later. It
crossed Holly’s room and reentered the wall to the left of the
doorway. Smashed right through and buried itself in the far wall of
the corridor.
The second bullet came in through the first
bullet’s hole and therefore traversed the twenty-two inch gap in a
straight line. It came out through the inner siding and was thrown
to the right. Crossed the room and smashed on through the bathroom
partition and shattered the cheap white ceramic toilet.
The third shell was rising just a fraction. It hit
a nail in the outer wall and turned a right angle. Drilled itself
sideways and down through eight of the new two-by-fours like a
demented termite before its energy was expended. It ended up
looking like a random blob of lead pressed into the back of the new
pine boarding.
REACHER SAW GARBER’S muzzle flash through his
scope. Knew he must be firing triples. Knew he must have hit the
courthouse wall. He stared down from twelve hundred yards away and
gripped the ridge of the roof and shut his eyes. Waited for the
explosion.
GARBER KNEW HIS shots hadn’t killed Borken. There
hadn’t been time. Even dealing with tiny fractions of a second,
there’s a rhythm. Fire . . . hit. Borken had been hit before his
bullets could possibly have gotten there. So somebody else was up
and shooting. There was a team in action. Garber smiled. Fired
again. Pumped his trigger finger nine more times and stitched
Borken’s two soldiers all over the courthouse wall with his
remaining twenty-seven shells.
MILOSEVIC CAME OUT of the courthouse lobby and
down the steps at a run. He had his Bureau .38 held high in his
right hand and his gold shield in his left.
“FBI agent!” he screamed. “Everybody freeze!”
He glanced to his right at Holly and then at Garber
on his way up to meet him and at McGrath racing around from behind
the office building. McGrath went straight for Holly. He hugged her
tight against the dead tree. She was laughing. She couldn’t hug
back, because her arms were still cuffed behind the post. McGrath
let her go and ran down the slope. Smacked a high five with
Milosevic.
“Who’s got the keys?” McGrath yelled.
Garber pointed over toward the two dead soldiers.
McGrath ran to them and searched through the oozing pockets. Came
out with a key and ran back up to the knoll. Ducked around to the
back of the stump and unlocked Holly’s wrists. She staggered away
and McGrath darted forward and grabbed her arm. Milosevic found her
crutch on the road and tossed it over. McGrath caught it and handed
it to her. She got steady and came down the rise, arm in arm with
McGrath. They made it to level ground and stood there together,
gazing around in the sudden deafening quiet.
“Who do I thank?” Holly asked.
She was holding McGrath’s arm, staring at the
remains of Borken, lying sixty feet away. The corpse was flat on
its back, high and wide. It had no head.
“This is General Garber,” McGrath said. “Top boy in
the military police.”
Garber shook his head.
“Wasn’t me,” he said. “Somebody beat me to
it.”
“Wasn’t me,” Milosevic said.
Then Garber nodded behind them.
“Probably this guy,” he said.
Reacher was on his way down the knoll. Out of
breath. A frame six five high and two hundred and twenty pounds in
weight is good for a lot of things, but not for sprinting a
mile.
“Reacher,” Holly said.
He ignored her. Ignored everybody. Just ran on
south and turned to stare up at the white wall. He saw bullet
holes. A lot of bullet holes. Probably thirty holes, most of them
scattered over the second floor in the southeastern corner. He
stared at them for a second and ran for the jeep parked at the
curb. Snatched the shovel from its clips under the spare fuel can.
Sprinted for the steps. Crashed through the door and up the stairs
to Holly’s room. Ran for the front wall.
He could see at least a dozen exit holes punched
through the wood. Ragged splintered holes. He smashed the blade of
the shovel into one of them. Split the pine board lengthways and
used the shovel to wrench it off. Smashed the shovel behind the
next and tore it away from the nails securing it. By the time
McGrath was in the room, he had exposed four feet of studding. By
the time Holly joined them, they were staring into an empty
cavity.
“No dynamite,” she said, quietly.
Reacher ducked away to the adjacent wall. Tore
enough boards off to be sure.
“There never was any,” Holly said. “Shit, I can’t
believe it.”
“There was some,” McGrath said. “Jackson called it
in. Described the whole thing. I saw his report. He unloaded the
truck with seven other guys. He carried it up here. He saw it going
into the walls, for God’s sake. A ton of dynamite. Kind of a hard
thing to be confused about.”
“So they put it in,” Reacher said. “And then they
took it out. They let people see it going in, then they took it out
again secretly. They used it somewhere else.”
“Took it out again?” Holly repeated.
“Women and children have to die,” Reacher said,
slowly.
“What?” Holly asked. “What are you saying?”
“But not here,” he said. “Not these women and
children.”
“What?” Holly said again.
“Not mass suicide,” Reacher said. “Mass
murder.”
Then he just went blank. He was silent. But in his
head, he was hearing something. He was hearing the same terrible
blast he had heard thirteen years before. The sound of Beirut. The
sound of the Marine compound, out near the airport. He was hearing
it all over again, and it was deafening him.
“Now we know what it is,” he muttered through the
shattering roar.
“What is it?” McGrath asked.
“Low on its springs,” Reacher said. “But we don’t
know where it’s gone.”
“What?” Holly said again.
“Women and children have to die,” Reacher repeated.
“Borken said so. He said the historical circumstances justified it.
But he didn’t mean these women and these children up here.”
“What the hell are you talking about?” McGrath
said.
Reacher glanced at him, and then at Holly,
surprised, like he was seeing them both for the first time.
“I was in the motor pool,” he said. “I saw the
truck. Our truck? It was parked up, low on its springs, like it had
a heavy weight inside.”
“What?” Holly said again.
“They’ve made themselves a truck bomb,” Reacher
said. “Stevie’s delivering it somewhere, some public place. That’s
the other attack. They’re going to explode it in a crowd. There’s a
whole ton of dynamite in it. And he’s six hours ahead of us.”
McGrath was first down the stairs.
“Into the jeep,” he yelled.
Garber ran for the jeep. But Milosevic was much
nearer. He vaulted in and fired it up. Then McGrath was helping
Holly into the front seat. Reacher was on the sidewalk, staring
south, lost in thought. Milosevic was drawing his revolver. He was
thumbing the hammer back. Garber stopped. Raised his rifle and
aimed. Milosevic leaned across in front of Holly. McGrath jumped
away. Milosevic stamped on the gas and roared away one-handed with
the muzzle jammed into Holly’s side. One-handed over the rough
road, the jeep was all over the place. No chance of hitting
Milosevic. Garber could see that. He lowered his rifle and watched
them go.
BOTH OF THEM?” Webster said to himself. “Please,
God, no.”
“We could use another chopper right now,” the aide
said. “I don’t think we have to worry about the missiles
anymore.”
He panned the camera north and west and zoomed in
on the mountain bowl in front of the mine entrances. The four
missile trucks were sitting inert. The sprawled body of the dead
sentry was nearby.
“OK, call in a chopper,” Johnson said.
“Better coming direct from you, sir,” the aide
said.
Johnson turned sideways to use the phone. Then he
spun back to watch as the jeep drove into shot. It bounced up out
of the last hairpin into the bowl and raced across the shale.
Swerved around the dead trucks and slewed to a stop in front of the
left-hand shed. Milosevic jumped out and danced around the hood.
Revolver steady on Holly as he approached. He pulled her out by the
arm and dragged her to the big wooden doors. Levered one open with
his foot and pushed her inside. He followed her in and the huge
door swung shut. Webster glanced away from the screen.
“Call the chopper, sir,” the aide said.
“Make it a fast one,” Webster added.
QUICKEST WAY TO the mines was a shortcut through
the Bastion. It was deserted and quiet. They ran through it and
headed north across the rifle range toward the parade ground.
Stopped short in the woods. The whole remaining militia population
was standing silently in neat ranks, quiet fearful faces turned to
the front, where Borken’s upturned box still awaited his
arrival.
Reacher ignored them and led the others around in
the trees. Then in a straight line to the road. Straight north
along it. Reacher was carrying the big Barrett. He had retrieved it
from the mess hall roof, because he liked it. Garber was hurrying
at his side. McGrath was pushing ahead as fast as he could,
desperate to get to Holly.
They ducked back into the woods before the last
hairpin and Reacher scouted ahead. He holed up behind the rock he’d
used before and covered every inch of the bowl with the Barrett’s
scope. Then he waved the other two up to join him.
“They’re in the motor pool,” he said. “Left-hand
shed.”
He pointed with the fat barrel of the sniper rifle
and the others saw the abandoned jeep and nodded. He ran over the
shale and crouched behind the hood of the first missile truck.
Garber sent McGrath next. Then he ran over. They crouched together
behind the truck and stared at the log doors.
“What now?” Garber asked. “Frontal assault?”
“He’s got a gun to her head,” McGrath said. “I
don’t want her hurt, Reacher. She’s precious to me, OK?”
“Any other way in?” Garber asked.
Reacher stared at the doors and the roaring of the
Beirut bomb receded and was replaced by the quiet whimpering of an
earlier nightmare. He spent a minute trawling desperately for an
alternative. He thought about the rifles and the missiles and the
trucks. Then he gave it up.
“Keep him occupied,” he said. “Talk to him,
anything.”
He left the Barrett and took the Glock back from
McGrath. Dodged to the next truck, and the next, all the way level
with the entrance to the other cavern. The charnel house, full of
bodies and skeletons and rats. He heard McGrath calling to
Milosevic in a faint faraway voice and he ran to the big log doors.
Ducked in through the gap and moved back into the dark.
He had no flashlight. He felt his way around the
troop carrier and eased on into the mountain. He held his hand
above his head and felt the roof come down. Felt for the bodies in
the pile and skirted them. Crouched and headed left for the
skeletons. The rats were hearing him and smelling him and squealing
angry warnings all the way back to their nests. He dropped to his
knees and then lay down and swam through the pile of damp bones.
Felt the roof of the tunnel lower and the sides press in. Took a
deep breath and felt the fear come back.
THE FASTEST HELICOPTER available on that day was
a Marine Corps Night Hawk stationed at Malmstrom. It was a long,
fat, humped machine, but it was quick. Within minutes of Johnson’s
call, it was spinning up and receiving orders to head west and
north to a gravel turnout on the last road in Montana. Then it was
in the air. The Marine pilot found the road and followed it north,
fast and low, until he spotted a cluster of Army command vehicles
parked tight into a rock cutting. He swung back and put down on the
turnout and waited. Saw three men racing south toward him. One was
a civilian, and two were Army. One was a Colonel and the other was
the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The pilot shrugged at
his crewman who pointed upward through the Plexiglas canopy. There
was a lone vapor trail maybe thirty-six thousand feet up. Some big
jet was unwinding a tight spiral and streaking south. The pilot
shrugged again and figured whatever was happening, it was happening
to the south. So he made a provisional course calculation and was
surprised when the brass clambered aboard and ordered him to head
north into the mountains.
REACHER WAS LAUGHING. He was hauling himself
along through the tunnel and laughing out loud. Shaking and crying
with laughter. He was no longer afraid. The tight clamp of the rock
on his body was like a caress. He had done this once, and survived
it. It was possible. He was going to get through.
The fear had disappeared as suddenly as it had
come. He had pushed through the pile of bones in the dark and
stretched out and felt the rock clamp down against his back. His
chest had seized and his throat had gagged tight. He had felt the
hot damp flush of panic and pressed himself into the ground. He had
felt his strength drain away. Then he had focused. The job in hand.
Holly. Milosevic’s revolver pushed against the dark billow of her
hair, her fabulous eyes dull with despair. He had seen her in his
mind at the end of the tunnel. Holly. Then the tunnel seemed to
straighten and become a warm smooth tube. An exact fit for his
bulky shoulders. Like it was tailored for him, and him alone. A
simple horizontal journey. He had learned a long time ago that some
things were worth being afraid of. And some things were not. Things
that he had done before and survived did not justify fear. To be
afraid of a survivable thing was irrational. And whatever else he
was, Reacher knew he was a rational man. In that split second the
fear disappeared and he felt himself relax. He was a fighter. An
avenger. And Holly was waiting for him. He thrust his arms forward
like a swimmer diving for the water and swarmed through the
mountain toward her.
He charged along with a tidy rhythm. Like marching
out on the open road, but doing it lying down in the dark. Small
deft movements of hands and feet. Head lowered. Laughing with
relief. He felt the tunnel get smaller and hug him. He slid on
through. He felt the blank wall ahead and folded himself neatly
around the corner. Breathed easily and stopped laughing. Told
himself it was time for quiet. He crawled on as fast as he could.
Slowed up when he sensed the roof soaring away above him. Crept
forward until the smell of the air told him he was nearly
through.
Then he heard the helicopter. He heard the faint
thumping of the rotors in the distance. He heard feet scuffling
forty yards in front of him. The inarticulate sound of surprise and
panic. He heard Milosevic’s voice. High-pitched West Coast
accent.
“Keep that chopper away from here,” Milosevic
screamed through the door.
The noise was getting nearer. Growing louder.
“Keep it away, you hear?” Milosevic screamed. “I’ll
kill her, McGrath. That’s a promise, you hear?”
It was totally dark. There were vehicles between
Reacher and the cracks of light around the door. But not the white
truck. That was gone. He rolled up into the space where it had been
and pulled the Glock from his pocket. The thumping of the rotor
blades was very close. It was battering the doors and filling the
cavern.
“I’ll trade her with you,” Milosevic screamed
through the door. “I get out of here unharmed, you get her back,
OK? McGrath? You hear me?”
If there was a reply, Reacher didn’t hear it.
“I’m not with these guys,” Milosevic screamed.
“This whole thing is nothing to do with me. Brogan got me into it.
He made me do it.”
The noise was shattering. The heavy doors were
shaking.
“I did it for the money, that’s all,” Milosevic
screamed. “Brogan was giving me money. Hundreds of thousands of
dollars, McGrath. You’d have done the exact same thing. Brogan was
making me rich. He bought me a Ford Explorer. The Limited Edition.
Thirty-five grand. How the hell else was I ever going to get
one?”
Reacher listened to the screaming voice in the
darkness. He didn’t want to shoot him. For one crazy moment, he
felt absurdly grateful to him, because he had banished his
childhood nightmare. He had forced him to confront it and defeat
it. He had made him a better man. He wanted to run up to him and
shake him by the hand. He could picture himself doing it. But then
the picture changed. He needed to run up to him and shake him by
the throat and ask him if he knew where Stevie had taken the white
truck. That was what he needed to do. That was why he didn’t want
to shoot him. He crept forward in the deafening noise and skirted
around the vehicles.
He was operating in a one-dimensional world. He
could see nothing, because of the darkness. He could hear nothing,
because of the helicopter. He sensed movement near the doors. Came
out from behind a pickup and saw a shape framed against the cracks
of light. A shape that should have been two shapes. Wide at the
top, four legs, Milosevic with his arm around Holly’s throat, his
gun at her head. He waited for his vision to build. Their faces
faded in from black to gray. Holly in front of Milosevic. Reacher
raised the Glock. Circled left to get an angle. His shin caught a
fender. He staggered and backed into a pile of paint cans. They
crashed silently to the rock floor, inaudible in the crushing noise
from outside. He sprinted closer to the light.
Milosevic sensed it and turned. Reacher saw his
mouth open in a silent shout. Saw him twist and push Holly out in
front of him like a shield. Saw him stall with indecision, his
revolver up in the air. Reacher dodged right, then danced back
left. He saw Milosevic track him both ways. Saw Holly use the sway
to tear herself out of his grip. The rotor noise was shattering. He
saw Milosevic glancing left and right. Saw him making his decision.
Reacher was armed, Holly was not. Milosevic lunged forward. The .38
flashed silently in the noise. The brief white flame was blinding
in the dark. Reacher lost his sense of where Holly was. He cursed
and held his fire. He saw Milosevic aim again. Beyond him, he saw
Holly’s arm come up and stretch around his head from behind. He saw
her hand touch his face with gentle precision. He saw him stumble.
Then the door heaved open and Holly staggered away from the
shattering flood of noise and sunlight and crashed straight into
his arms.
The sunlight fell in a bright bar across Milosevic.
He was lying on his back. His .38 was in his hand. The hammer was
back. There was a shard of bathroom tile sticking out of his head
where his left eye should have been. It was maybe three inches in
and three inches out. A small worm of blood was running away from
the point of entry.
Then the open door was crowded with people. Reacher
saw McGrath and Garber standing in a blast of dust. A Night Hawk
was landing behind them. Three men were spilling out and running
over. A civilian and a Colonel. And General Johnson. Holly twisted
and saw them and buried her face back in Reacher’s chest.
Garber was the first to them. He pulled them out
into the light and the noise. They stumbled awkwardly, four-legged.
The downdraft tore at them. Dust blasted off the shale. McGrath
stepped near and Holly pulled herself from Reacher’s grip and threw
herself at him and hugged him hard. Then General Johnson was moving
in on her through the crowd.
“Holly,” he mouthed through the din.
She straightened in the light. Grinned at him.
Hooked her hair back behind her ears. Pulled away from McGrath and
hugged her father close.
“Still stuff for me to do, Dad,” she screamed over
the engines. “I’ll tell you everything later, OK?”