46
REACHER MADE A twirling signal with his hand to
tell the helicopter pilot to keep the engines spinning and ran
through the noise and the eddying dust to take the Barrett back
from Garber. He waved the others toward the machine. Hustled them
up the ladder and followed them in through the sliding door. Laid
the Barrett on the metal floor and dumped himself into a canvas
chair. Pulled his headset on. Thumbed the button and called through
to the pilot.
“Stand by, OK?” he said. “I’ll give you a course as
soon as I’ve got one.”
The pilot nodded and ran the engines up out of
idle. The rotor thumped faster and the noise built louder. The
weight of the aircraft came up off the tires.
“Where the hell are we going?” Webster
shouted.
“We’re chasing Stevie, chief,” McGrath shouted
back. “He’s driving the truck. The truck is full of dynamite. He’s
going to explode it somewhere. Remember what the Kendall sheriff
said? Stevie always got sent out to do the dirty work? You want me
to draw you a damn picture?”
“But he can’t have gotten out of here,” Webster
yelled. “The bridge is blown. And there are no tracks through the
forest. They closed them all.”
“Forest Service guy didn’t say that,” McGrath
yelled back. “They closed some of them. He wasn’t sure which ones,
was all. What he said was maybe there’s a way through, maybe there
isn’t.”
“They had two years to spy it out,” Reacher
shouted. “You said the pickup had spent time on Forest Service
tracks, right? Crushed sandstone all over the underside? They had
two whole years to find a way through the maze.”
Webster glanced to his left, east, over to where
the forest lay beyond the giant mountain. He nodded urgently, eyes
wide.
“OK, so we got to stop him,” he yelled. “But where
has he gone?”
“He’s six hours ahead of us,” Reacher shouted. “We
can assume the forest was pretty slow. Call it two hours? Then four
hours on the open road. Maybe two hundred miles? Diesel Econoline,
hauling a ton, can’t be averaging more than about fifty.”
“But which damn direction?” Webster yelled through
the noise.
Holly glanced at Reacher. That was a question they
had asked each other a number of times, in relation to that exact
same truck. Reacher opened up the map in his head and trawled
around it all over again, clockwise.
“Could have gone east,” he shouted. “He’d still be
in Montana, past Great Falls. Could be down in Idaho. Could be in
Oregon. Could be halfway to Seattle.”
“No,” Garber yelled. “Think about it the other way
around. That’s the key to this thing. Where has he been ordered to
go? What would the target be?”
Reacher nodded slowly. Garber was making sense. The
target.
“What does Borken want to attack?” Johnson
yelled.
Borken had said: you study the system and you learn
to hate it. Reacher thought hard and nodded again and thumbed his
mike and called through to the pilot.
“OK, let’s go,” he said. “Straight on south of here
should do it.”
The noise increased louder and the Night Hawk
lifted heavily off the ground. It swung in the air and rose clear
of the cliffs. Slipped south and banked around. Dropped its nose
and accelerated hard. The noise moved up out of the cabin and
settled to a deep roar inside the engines. The ground tilted and
flashed past below. Reacher saw the mountain hairpins unwinding and
the parade ground sliding past. The knot of tiny people was
breaking up. They were drifting away into the trees and being
swallowed up under the green canopy. Then the narrow slash of the
rifle range was under them, then the broad stony circle of the
Bastion. Then the aircraft rose sharply as the ground fell away so
that the big white courthouse slipped by underneath as small as a
dollhouse. Then they were over the ravine, over the broken bridge,
and away into the vast forested spaces to the south.
Reacher tapped the pilot on the shoulder and spoke
through the intercom.
“What speed are we doing?” he asked.
“Hundred and sixty,” the pilot said.
“Course?” Reacher asked.
“Dead on south,” the pilot said.
Reacher nodded. Closed his eyes and started to
calculate. It was like being back in grade school. He’s two hundred
miles ahead, doing fifty miles an hour. You’re chasing him at a
hundred and sixty. How long before you catch him? Grade school math
had been OK for Reacher. So had fighting in the yard. The fighting
part had stayed with him better than the math. He was sure there
must be some kind of a formula for it. Something with x and y all over the damn
page. Something equaling something else. But if there was a
formula, he had long ago forgotten it. So he had to do it by trial
and error. Another hour, Stevie would be two hundred and fifty
miles from home. The Night Hawk would have done one hundred and
sixty. Way behind. An hour after that, Stevie would be three
hundred miles out, and the Night Hawk would be three hundred and
twenty. Overshot. Therefore they were going to catch him somewhere
near the top of the second hour. If they were headed in the right
direction.
Flathead Lake came into view, far ahead and far
below. Reacher could see the roads snaking across the rugged
terrain. He thumbed the button on his mike.
“Still south?” he asked.
“Dead on,” the pilot said.
“Still one-sixty?” Reacher asked.
“Dead on,” the pilot said again.
“OK, stick with it,” Reacher said. “Hour and fifty
minutes, maybe.”
“So where is he going?” Webster asked.
“San Francisco,” Reacher said.
“Why?” McGrath asked.
“Or Minneapolis,” Reacher said. “But I’m gambling
on San Francisco.”
“Why?” McGrath asked again.
“San Francisco or Minneapolis,” Reacher said.
“Think about it. Other possibilities would be Boston, New York,
Philly, Cleveland, Richmond in Virginia, Atlanta, Chicago, St.
Louis, and Kansas City in Missouri, or Dallas in Texas.”
McGrath just shrugged blankly. Webster looked
puzzled. Johnson glanced at his aide. Garber was motionless. But
Holly was smiling. She smiled and winked at Reacher. He winked back
and the Night Hawk thumped on south over Missoula at a hundred and
sixty miles an hour.
“CHRIST, IT’S THE Fourth of July,” Webster said
suddenly.
“Tell me about it,” Reacher said. “Lots of people
gathered in public places. Families, kids and all.”
Webster nodded grimly.
“OK, where exactly in San Francisco?” he
asked.
“I’m not sure,” Reacher said.
“North end of Market,” Holly said. “Right near
Embarcadero Plaza. That’s where, chief. I’ve been there on the
Fourth. Big parade in the afternoon, fireworks over the water at
night. Huge crowds all day long.”
“Huge crowds everywhere on the Fourth,” Webster
said. “You better be guessing right, people.”
McGrath looked up. A slow smile was spreading over
his bruised face.
“We are guessing right,” he said. “It’s San
Francisco for sure. Not Minneapolis or anyplace else.”
Reacher smiled back and winked. McGrath had gotten
it.
“You want to tell me why?” Webster asked him.
McGrath was still smiling.
“Go figure,” he said. “You’re the damn
Director.”
“Because it’s the nearest?” Webster asked.
McGrath nodded.
“In both senses,” he said, and smiled again.
“What both senses?” Webster asked. “What are we
talking about?”
Nobody answered him. The military men were quiet.
Holly and McGrath were staring out through the windows at the
ground, two thousand feet below. Reacher was craning up, looking
ahead through the pilot’s Plexiglas canopy.
“Where are we?” he asked him.
The pilot pointed down at a concrete ribbon
below.
“That’s U.S. 93,” he said. “Just about to leave
Montana and enter Idaho. Still heading due south.”
Reacher nodded.
“Great,” he said. “Follow 93. It’s the only road
goes south, right? We’ll catch him somewhere between here and
Nevada.”
HE STARTED WORRYING near the top of the second
hour. Started worrying badly. Started desperate revisions to his
grade school calculations. Maybe Stevie was driving faster than
fifty. He was a fast driver. Faster than Bell had been. Maybe he
was doing nearer sixty. Where did that put him? Three hundred and
sixty miles out. In which case they wouldn’t catch him until two
hours fifteen minutes had elapsed. What if he was doing seventy?
Could that Econoline sustain seventy, hour after hour, with a ton
in back? Maybe. Probably. In which case he was four hundred and
twenty miles out. A total of two hours forty minutes before they
overhauled him. That was the envelope. Somewhere between one hour
fifty minutes and two hours forty minutes, somewhere between
Montana and Nevada. A whole fifty minutes of rising panic. More
than a hundred miles of concrete ribbon to watch before he could
know for sure he was wrong and they had to peel off hopelessly
northeast toward Minnesota.
The helicopter was flying nose down, top speed,
straight along U.S. 93. The seven passengers were craned forward,
staring down at the road. They were over a town called Salmon. The
pilot was calling out information like a tour guide. The giant peak
of Mount McGuire, ten thousand feet, way off to the right. Twin
Peaks, ten and a half thousand feet, up ahead to the right. Borah
Peak, highest of all, twelve and a half thousand feet, way ahead to
the left. The aircraft rose and fell a thousand feet above the
terrain. Hurtled along lower than the surrounding peaks, nose down
to the highway like a bloodhound.
Time ticked away. Twenty minutes. Thirty. The road
was pretty much empty. It connected Missoula in the north to Twin
Falls in Idaho, three hundred miles to the south. Neither was a
booming metropolis and this was a holiday. Everybody had already
gotten where they were going. There was an occasional automobile
and an occasional trucker working overtime. No white Econoline.
There had been two white vehicles, but they were both pickups.
There had been one panel truck, but it was dark green. That was
all. Nothing else. No white truck. Sometimes the road was empty all
the way to the horizon in front of them. The time was ticking away.
Like a bomb. Forty minutes. Fifty.
“I’m going to call Minneapolis,” Webster said. “We
blew it.”
McGrath waited, hoping. He shook his head.
“Not yet,” he said. “That’s a desperation move.
Mass panic. Can you imagine the crowds? The evacuation? People are
going to get trampled.”
Webster peered out and down. Stared at the road for
a full minute. Fifty-four minutes into the fifty-minute
envelope.
“Get worse than trampled if that damn truck’s
already up there,” he said. “You want to imagine that?”
Time ticked away. Fifty-eight minutes. An hour. The
road stayed empty.
“There’s still time,” Garber said. “San Francisco
or Minneapolis, either one, he’s still got to be a long way
short.”
He glanced at Reacher. Doubt and trust visible in
his eyes, in approximately equal measures. More time ticked away.
An hour and five minutes. The road still stayed empty, all the way
to the distant horizon. The speeding helicopter reeled it in, only
to reveal a new horizon, still empty.
“He could be anywhere,” Webster said. “San
Francisco’s wrong, maybe Minneapolis is wrong, too. He could be in
Seattle already. Or anywhere.”
“Not Seattle,” Reacher said.
He stared forward. Stared on and on. Fear and panic
had him by the throat. He checked his watch again and again. An
hour and ten minutes. Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. An hour
and fifteen minutes. He stared at the watch and the empty ribbon
below. Then he sat back and went quiet. Chilled with terror. He had
hung on as long as he could, but they had reached the point where
the math went absurd. To be this far south without passing him,
Stevie would need to be driving at a hundred miles an hour. Or a
hundred and twenty. Or a hundred and fifty. He glanced at the
others and spoke in a voice which didn’t sound like his own.
“I blew it,” he said. “It must have been
Minneapolis.”
Then the thump of the engines faded and for the
second time that day the huge bass roar of the bomb came back. He
kept his eyes wide open so he wouldn’t have to see it, but he saw
it anyway. Not Marines this time, not hard men camped out in the
heat to do a job, but soft people, women and children, small and
smaller, camped out in a city park to watch fireworks, vaporizing
and bursting into a hazy pink dew like his friends had done
thirteen years before. The bone fragments coming out of children
and hissing away through the burning air and hitting other children
a hundred yards farther on. Hitting them and tearing through their
soft guts like shrapnel and putting the luckiest ones in the
hospital for a whole agonizing year.
They were all staring at him. He realized tears
were rolling down his cheeks and splashing onto his shirt.
“I’m sorry,” he said.
They looked away.
“I got calls to make,” Webster said. “Why is it
Minneapolis now? Why was it ever San Francisco?”
“Federal Reserve branches,” Reacher said quietly.
“There are twelve of them. The nearest two to Montana are San
Francisco and Minneapolis. Borken hated the Fed. He thought it was
the main instrument of the world government. He thought it was a
big conspiracy to eliminate the middle classes. It was his special
theory. He said it put him ahead in his understanding. And he
believed the Fed ordered his father’s bank to finagle the old guy
into taking a loan so they could deliberately default him
later.”
“So Borken’s attacking the Fed?” Johnson asked
urgently. Reacher nodded.
“Twin blows,” he said. “In the war against the
world government. Attack the old system with a surprise move, like
Pearl Harbor. At the same time as setting up a brand-new system for
converts to flock to. One bird with two stones.”
He stopped talking. Too tired to continue. Too
dispirited. Garber was staring at him. Real pain in his face. The
beating of the engines was so loud it sounded like total
silence.
“The declaration of independence was only half of
it,” McGrath said. “Double decoy. We were supposed to be focused up
there, worried about Holly, worried about a suicide pact, going
crazy, while they bombed the Fed behind our backs. I figured San
Francisco because of Kendall, remember? I figured Borken would
target the nearest branch to where his old man’s farm was.”
Webster nodded.
“Hell of a plan,” he said. “Holiday weekend, agents
on leave, big strategic decisions to make, everybody looking in the
wrong place. Then the whole world looking at the bombing while
Borken secures his territory back up there.”
“Where is the Fed in Minneapolis?” Johnson asked
urgently.
Webster shrugged vaguely.
“No idea,” he said. “I’ve never been to
Minneapolis. I imagine it’s a big public building, probably in a
nice spot, parks all around, maybe on the river or something.
There’s a river in Minneapolis, right?”
Holly nodded.
“It’s called the Mississippi,” she said.
“No,” Reacher said.
“It damn well is,” Holly said. “Everybody knows
that.”
“No,” Reacher said again. “It’s not Minneapolis.
It’s San Francisco.”
“Mississippi goes nowhere near San Francisco,”
Holly said.
Then she saw a giant smile spreading across
Reacher’s face. A final gleam of triumph in his tired eyes.
“What?” she said.
“San Francisco was right,” he said.
Webster grunted in irritation.
“We’d have passed him already,” he said. “Miles
back.”
Reacher thumbed his mike. Shouted up to the
pilot.
“Turn back,” he said. “A big wide loop.”
Then he smiled again. Smiled and closed his
eyes.
“We did pass him,” he said. “Miles back. Right over
his damn head. They painted the truck green.”
The Night Hawk swung away into a high banked loop.
The passengers swung their gaze from window to window as the
landscape rotated below.
“There was paint in the motor pool,” Reacher said.
“I tripped over the cans. Probably camouflage base coat. They
slapped it on this morning. Damn stuff is probably still
wet.”
They saw a Kenworth they had passed minutes ago. It
was snuffling along a thousand feet below. Then a long stretch of
empty pavement. Then a white pickup. More empty road. Then a dark
green panel truck, speeding south.
“Down, down,” Reacher was calling through.
“Is that it?” McGrath asked.
The gap between the panel truck and the pickup in
front was lengthening. The truck was falling back. There was
nothing behind it, all the way to the horizon. The Night Hawk was
losing height. It was dropping toward the truck the way an eagle
heads for a baby rabbit.
“Is that it?” McGrath asked again.
“That’s it,” Reacher said.
“It sure is,” Holly whooped.
“You positive?” McGrath asked.
“Look at the roof,” Holly told him.
McGrath looked. The roof was streaked with dark
green paint, but he could see it was peppered with tiny holes. Like
somebody had fired a shotgun right through it.
“We stared at those damn holes for two whole days,”
Holly said. “I’ll remember them the rest of my life.”
“There are a hundred and thirteen of them,” Reacher
said. “I counted. It’s a prime number.”
Holly laughed and leaned over. Smacked a joyous
high five with him.
“That’s our truck,” she said. “No doubt about
it.”
“Can you see the driver?” McGrath asked.
The pilot tilted down and rocked sideways for a
close look.
“It’s Stevie,” Holly shouted back. “For sure. We’ve
got him.”
“This thing got weapons?” Webster asked.
“Two big machine guns,” the pilot called through.
“But I’m not going to use them. That I can’t do. Military can’t get
involved in law enforcement.”
“Can you fly this thing straight and level?”
Reacher asked him. “Fifty miles an hour? Maybe sixty? Without
asking too many questions?”
The pilot laughed. It came through the headsets
tinny and distorted.
“I can fly this thing any old way you want me to,”
he said. “With the General’s permission, of course.”
Johnson nodded cautiously. Reacher leaned down and
picked the Barrett up off the floor. Unfastened his harness and
stood up into a crouch. Waved to Holly to change seats with him.
She crawled across in front of McGrath and Reacher eased into her
place. He could feel the Night Hawk slowing and dropping in the
air. He put some length into Holly’s harness and fastened it
loosely around his waist. Stretched back for the door release.
Tugged at the handle and the door slid back on its runners.
Then there was a gale of air coming in as the
slipstream howled through the opening and the aircraft was turning
half sideways, sliding through the air like a car skids through
snow. The green truck was below and behind, maybe two hundred feet
down. The pilot was stabilizing his speed until he matched the
truck’s progress and tilting the aircraft so that Reacher’s eyeline
was pointing straight down at the road.
“How’s this?” the pilot asked.
Reacher thumbed his mike button.
“Dead on,” he said. “Anything up ahead?”
“One vehicle coming north,” the copilot said. “When
that’s through, you got nothing at all for ten miles.”
“Anything behind?” Reacher asked. He saw the
north-bound vehicle streak by below.
McGrath stuck his head out into the gale. Ducked
back in and nodded.
“Clear behind,” he said.
Reacher raised the Barrett to his shoulder. Put a
round in the breech. Shooting at a moving vehicle from another
moving vehicle is not a great recipe for accuracy, but he was
looking at a distance of less than seventy yards and a target about
twenty feet long and seven feet wide, so he wasn’t worrying about
it. He put the crosshairs on a point two-thirds of the way down the
length of the roof. He figured the forward movement of the truck
and the backward movement of the air might put the bullet dead
center through the load compartment. He wondered vaguely whether
the three-foot mattress was still in there.
“Wait,” Webster shouted. “What if you’re wrong?
What if it’s empty? You’re only guessing, right? This whole thing
is guesswork. We need proof, Reacher. We need some kind of
corroboration here.”
Reacher didn’t glance back. Kept his eye on the
scope.
“Bullshit,” he said, quietly, concentrating. “This
is going to be all the corroboration we need.”
Webster grabbed his arm.
“You can’t do this,” he said. “You could be killing
an innocent man.”
“Bullshit,” Reacher said again. “If he’s an
innocent man, I won’t be killing him, will I?”
He shook Webster’s hand off his arm. Turned to face
him.
“Think about it, Webster,” he said. “Relax. Be
logical. The proof comes after I shoot, right? If he’s hauling a
bomb, we’ll know all about it. If he’s hauling fresh air, nothing
bad will happen to him. He’ll just get another hole in his damn
truck. Number one hundred and fourteen.”
He turned back to the door. Raised the rifle again.
Acquired the target. Out of sheer habit, he waited for his breath
to be out and his heart to be between beats. Then he pulled the
trigger. It took a thousandth of a second for the sound of the shot
to hit his ear, and seventy times as long as that for the big heavy
bullet to hit the truck. Nothing happened for a second. Then the
truck ceased to exist. It was suddenly a blinding fireball rolling
down the highway like a hot white tumbleweed. A gigantic concussion
ring blasted outward. The helicopter was hit by a violent shock
wave and tossed sideways and five hundred feet higher in the air.
The pilot caught it at the top and slewed back. Steadied it in the
air and swung around. Dropped the nose. There was nothing to see on
the highway except a roiling cloud of thin smoke slowing into a
teardrop shape three hundred yards long. No debris, no metal, no
hurtling wheels, no clattering wreckage. Nothing at all except
microscopic invisible particles of vapor accelerating into the
atmosphere way faster than the speed of sound.
THE PILOT STUCK around at a hover for a long
moment and then drifted east. Put his craft gently down on the
scrub, a hundred yards from the shoulder. Shut the engines down.
Reacher sat in the deafening silence and unclipped his belt. Laid
the Barrett on the floor and vaulted out through the open door.
Walked slowly toward the highway.
A ton of dynamite. A whole ton. A hell of a bang.
There was nothing left at all. He guessed there were flattened
grasses for a half-mile all around, but that was it. The terrible
energy of the explosion had blasted outward and met absolutely
nothing at all in its path. Nothing soft, nothing vulnerable. It
had blasted outward and then weakened and slowed and died to a puff
of breeze miles away and it had hurt nothing. Nothing at all. He
stood in the silence and closed his eyes.
Then he heard footsteps behind him. It was Holly.
He heard her good leg alternating with her bad leg. A long stride,
then a shuffle. He opened his eyes and looked at the road. She
walked around in front of him and stopped. Laid her head on his
chest and put her arms around him. Squeezed him tight and held on.
He raised his hand to her head and smoothed her hair behind her
ear, like he had seen her do.
“All done,” she said.
“Get a problem, solve a problem,” he said. “That’s
my rule.”
She was quiet for a long time.
“I wish it was always that easy,” she said.
The way she said it, after the delay, it was like a
long speech. Like a closely reasoned argument. He pretended not to
know which problem she was talking about.
“Your father?” he said. “You’re way, way out of his
shadow now.”
She shook her head against his chest.
“I don’t know,” she said.
“Believe it,” he said. “That thing you did for me
on the parade ground was the smartest, coolest, bravest thing I
ever saw anybody do, man or woman, young or old. Better than
anything I ever did. Better than anything your old man ever did.
He’d give his front teeth for guts like that. So would I. You’re
way out of anybody’s shadow now, Holly. Believe it.”
“I thought I was,” she said. “I felt like it. I
really did. For a while. But then when I saw him again, I felt just
the same as I always did. I called him Dad.”
“He is your dad,” Reacher said.
“I know,” she replied. “That’s the problem.”
He was quiet for a long moment.
“So change your name,” he said. “That might do
it.”
He could feel her holding her breath.
“Is that a proposal?” she asked.
“It’s a suggestion,” he said.
“You think Holly Reacher sounds good?” she
asked.
His turn to stay quiet for a long time. His turn to
catch his breath. And finally, his turn to talk about the real
problem.
“It sounds wonderful,” he said. “But I guess Holly
McGrath sounds better.”
She made no reply.
“He’s the lucky guy, right?” he said.
She nodded. A small motion of her head against his
chest.
“So tell him,” he said.
She shrugged in his arms.
“I can’t,” she said. “I’m nervous.”
“Don’t be,” he said. “He might have something
similar to tell you.”
She looked up. He squinted down at her.
“You think so?” she asked.
“You’re nervous, he’s nervous,” Reacher said.
“Somebody should say something. I’m not about to do it for either
of you.”
She squeezed him harder. Then she stretched up and
kissed him. Hard and long on the mouth.
“Thank you,” she said.
“For what?” he asked.
“For understanding,” she said.
He shrugged. It wasn’t the end of the world. Just
felt like it.
“Coming?” she asked.
He shook his head.
“No,” he said.
She left him on the shoulder of U.S. 93, right
there in Idaho. He watched her all the way back to the Night Hawk.
Watched her climb the short ladder. She paused and turned. Looked
back at him. Then she ducked up and in. The door closed. The rotor
thumped. He knew he would never see her again. His clothes tore at
him and the dust swirled all around him as the helicopter took off.
He waved it away. Watched it until it was lost to sight. Then he
took a deep breath and looked left and right along the empty
highway. Friday, the Fourth of July. Independence Day.
SATURDAY THE FIFTH and Sunday the sixth, Yorke
County was sealed off and secret Army units were moving in and out
around the clock. Air Artillery squads recovered the missile unit.
They took it south in four Chinooks. Quartermasters went in and
recovered all the ordnance they could find. They collected enough
for a small war.
Medical corpsmen removed the bodies. They found the
twenty men from the missile unit in the cave. They found the
skeletons Reacher had crawled through. They found five mutilated
bodies in another cave. Dressed like workmen. Like builders or
carpenters. They took Fowler out of the command hut and Borken from
the road in front of the courthouse. They brought Milosevic down
from the mountain bowl and Brogan out of the small clearing west of
the Bastion. They found Jackson’s rough grave in the forest and dug
him up. They laid eighteen dead militiamen and one dead woman side
by side on the rifle range and helicoptered them away.
One of Garber’s military investigators flew in
alone and took the hard disk out of the financial computer and put
it on a chopper for transport to Chicago. Engineers moved in and
dynamited the mine entrances. Sappers moved into the Bastion and
disabled the water supply and tore down the power lines. They set
fire to the huts and watched as they burned. Late Sunday night,
when the last of the smoke was rising, they marched back to their
choppers and lifted away south.
Early Monday morning, Harland Webster was back in
the off-white parlor inside the White House. Ruth Rosen was smiling
at him and asking how his holiday weekend had been. He was smiling
back at her and saying nothing. An hour later, the morning sun was
rolling west to Chicago and three agents were arresting Brogan’s
girlfriend. They grilled her for thirty minutes and advised her to
get out of town, leaving behind anything he had ever bought her.
Then the same agents took Milosevic’s brand-new Ford Explorer out
of the Federal Building’s parking lot and drove it five miles
south. They left it on a quiet street, doors unlocked, keys in. By
the time it had been stolen, Holly Johnson was arriving at the knee
clinic for an early appointment. An hour after that, she was back
at her desk. Before lunch, the missing money from the bearer bond
robbery was following a route of her own choosing out of the
Caymans. Six o’clock Monday evening she was home and packing. She
threw her bags into her car and drove north. Moved into McGrath’s
house up in Evanston.
Tuesday morning, there were three separate stories
on the National Militia Internet. Refugees from an isolated valley
in Montana had drifted south and west to new settlements with
reports of a recent world government maneuver. Foreign troops had
wiped out a band of militia heroes. The foreign battalion had been
led by a French mercenary. He had succeeded only because he had
used classified SDI technology, including satellites and lasers and
microchips. Journalists picked up on the story and called the
Hoover Building. Late Tuesday evening, in a prepared statement, an
FBI spokesperson denied all knowledge of any such events.
Early Wednesday morning, after five hitched rides
and four buses through seven states, Reacher was finally in
Wisconsin. It was where he had aimed to be exactly a week before.
He liked it there. It struck him as a fine place to be in July. He
stayed until Friday afternoon.