37
FOUR-THIRTY IN THE morning, Webster was more than
ready for the watch change. Johnson and Garber and the General’s
aide were dozing in their chairs. McGrath was outside with the
telephone linemen. They were just finishing up. The job had taken
much longer than they had anticipated. Some kind of interface
problem. They had physically cut the phone line coming out of
Yorke, and bent the stiff copper down to a temporary terminal box
they had placed at the base of a pole. Then they had spooled cable
from the terminal box down the road to the mobile command vehicle.
Connected it into one of the communications ports.
But it didn’t work. Not right away. The linemen had
fussed with multimeters and muttered about impedances and
capacitances. They had worked for three solid hours. They were
ready to blame the Army truck for the incompatibility when they
thought to go back and check their own temporary terminal box. The
fault lay there. A failed component. They wired in a spare and the
whole circuit worked perfectly. Four thirty-five in the morning,
McGrath was shaking their hands and swearing them to silence when
Webster came out of the trailer. The two men stood and watched them
drive away. The noise of their truck died around the curve. Webster
and McGrath stayed standing in the bright moonlight. They stood
there for five minutes while McGrath smoked. They didn’t speak.
Just gazed north into the distance and wondered.
“Go wake your boys up,” Webster said. “We’ll stand
down for a spell.”
McGrath nodded and walked down to the accommodation
trailers. Roused Milosevic and Brogan. They were fully dressed on
their bunks. They got up and yawned. Came down the ladder and found
Webster standing there with Johnson and his aide. Garber standing
behind them.
“The telephone line is done,” Webster said.
“Already?” Brogan said. “I thought it was being
done in the morning.”
“We figured sooner was better than later,” Webster
said. He inclined his head toward General Johnson. It was a gesture
which said: he’s worried, right?
“OK,” Milosevic said. “We’ll look after it.”
“Wake us at eight,” Webster said. “Or earlier if
necessary, OK?”
Brogan nodded and walked north to the command
vehicle. Milosevic followed. They paused together for a look at the
mountains in the moonlight. As they paused, the fax machine inside
the empty command trailer started whirring. It fed its first
communication face upward into the message tray. It was ten to five
in the morning, Friday the fourth of July.
BROGAN WOKE GENERAL Johnson an hour and ten
minutes later, six o’clock exactly. He knocked loudly on the
accommodation trailer door and got no response, so he went in and
shook the old guy by the shoulder.
“Peterson Air Force Base, sir,” Brogan said. “They
need to talk to you.”
Johnson staggered up to the command vehicle in his
shirt and pants. Milosevic joined Brogan outside in the predawn
glow to give him some privacy. Johnson was back out in five
minutes.
“We need a conference,” he called.
He ducked back into the trailer. Milosevic walked
down and roused the others. They came forward, Webster and the
General’s aide yawning and stretching, Garber ramrod-straight.
McGrath was dressed and smoking. Maybe hadn’t tried to sleep at
all. They filed up the ladder and took their places around the
table, bleak red eyes, hair fuzzed on the back from the
pillows.
“Peterson called,” Johnson told them. “They’re
sending a helicopter search-and-rescue out, first light, looking
for the missile unit.”
His aide nodded.
“That would be standard procedure,” he said.
“Based on an assumption,” Johnson said. “They think
the unit has suffered some kind of mechanical and electrical
malfunction.”
“Which is not uncommon,” his aide said. “If their
radio fails, their procedure would be to repair it. If a truck also
broke down at the same time, their procedure would be to wait as a
group for assistance.”
“Circle the wagons?” McGrath asked.
The aide nodded again.
“Exactly so,” he said. “They would pull off the
road and wait for a chopper.”
“So do we tell them?” McGrath asked.
The aide sat forward.
“That’s the question,” he said. “Tell them what
exactly? We don’t even know for sure that these maniacs have got
them at all. It’s still possible it’s just a radio problem and a
truck problem together.”
“Dream on,” Johnson said.
Webster shrugged. He knew how to deal with such
issues.
“What’s the upside?” he said.
“There is no upside,” Johnson said. “We tell
Peterson the missiles have been captured, the cat’s out of the bag,
we lose control of the situation, we’re seen to have disobeyed
Washington by making an issue out of it before Monday.”
“OK, so what’s the downside?” Webster asked.
“Theoretical,” Johnson said. “We have to assume
they’ve been captured, so we also have to assume they’ve been well
hidden. In which case the Air Force will never find them. They’ll
just fly around for a while and then go home and wait.”
Webster nodded.
“OK,” he said. “No upside, no downside, no
problem.”
There was a short silence.
“So we sit tight,” Johnson said. “We let the
chopper fly.”
McGrath shook his head. Incredulous.
“Suppose they use them to shoot the chopper down?”
he asked.
The General’s aide smiled an indulgent smile.
“Can’t be done,” he said. “The IFF wouldn’t allow
it.”
“IFF?” McGrath repeated.
“Identify Friend or Foe,” the aide said. “It’s an
electronic system. The chopper will be beaming a signal. The
missile reads it as friendly, refuses to launch.”
“Guaranteed?” McGrath asked.
The aide nodded.
“Foolproof,” he said.
Garber glowered at him. But he said nothing. Not
his field of expertise.
“OK,” Webster said. “Back to bed. Wake us again at
eight, Brogan.”
ON THE TARMAC at Peterson, a Boeing CH-47D Chinook
was warming its engines and sipping the first of its eight hundred
and fifty-eight gallons of fuel. A Chinook is a giant aircraft,
whose twin rotors thump through an oval of air a hundred feet long
and sixty wide. It weighs more than ten tons empty, and it can lift
another eleven. It’s a giant flying box, the engines and the fuel
tanks strapped to the top and the sides, the crew perched high at
the front. Any helicopter can search, but when heavy equipment is
at stake, only a Chinook can rescue.
Because of the holiday weekend, the Peterson
dispatcher assigned a skeleton crew of two. No separate spotter. He
figured he didn’t need one. How difficult could it be to find five
Army trucks on some shoulder in Montana?>
“YOU SHOULD HAVE stayed here,” Borken said.
“Right, Joe?”
Reacher glanced into the gloom inside the
punishment hut. Joseph Ray was standing to attention on the yellow
square. He was staring straight ahead. He was naked. Bleeding from
the mouth and nose.
“Right, Joe?” Borken said again.
Ray made no reply. Borken walked over and crashed
his fist into his face. Ray stumbled and fell backward. Staggered
against the back wall and scrambled to regain his position on the
square.
“I asked you a question,” Borken said.
Ray nodded. The blood poured off his chin.
“Reacher should have stayed here,” he said.
Borken hit him again. A hard straight right to the
face. Ray’s head snapped back. Blood spurted. Borken smiled.
“No talking when you’re on the square, Joe,” he
said. “You know the rules.”
Borken stepped back and placed the muzzle of the
Sig-Sauer in Reacher’s ear. Used it to propel him out into the
clearing. Gestured Stevie to follow.
“You stay on the square, Joe,” he called over his
shoulder.
Stevie slammed the door shut. Borken reversed his
direction and used the Sig-Sauer to shove Reacher toward him.
“Tell Fowler to get rid of this guy,” he told him.
“He’s outlived his usefulness, such as it ever was. Put the bitch
back in her room. Put a ring of sentries right around the building.
We got things to do, right? No time for this shit. Parade ground at
six-thirty. Everybody there. I’m going to read them the
proclamation, before we fax it.”
MCGRATH COULDN’T SLEEP. He walked back to the
accommodations trailer with the others and got back on his bunk,
but he gave it up after ten minutes. Quarter to seven in the
morning, he was back in the command vehicle with Brogan and
Milosevic.
“You guys take a break if you want,” he said. “I’ll
look after things here.”
“We could go organize some breakfast,” Brogan said.
“Diners in Kalispell should be open by now.”
McGrath nodded vaguely. Started into his jacket for
his wallet.
“Don’t worry about it,” Brogan said. “I’ll pay. My
treat.”
“OK, thanks,” McGrath said. “Get coffee. Lots of
it.”
Brogan and Milosevic stood up and left. McGrath
stood in the doorway and watched them drive an Army sedan south.
The sound of the car faded and he was left with the silent humming
of the equipment behind him. He turned to sit down. The clock
ticked around to seven. The fax machine started whirring.
HOLLY SMOOTHED HER hands over the old mattress
like Reacher was there on it. Like it was really his body under
her, scarred and battered, hot and hard and muscular, not a worn
striped cotton cover stuffed with ancient horsehair. She blinked
the tears out of her eyes. Blew a deep sigh and focused on the next
decision. No Reacher, no Jackson, no weapon, no tools, six sentries
in the street outside. She glanced around the room for the
thousandth time and started scoping it out all over again.
MCGRATH WOKE THE others by thumping on the sides
of the accommodations trailer with both fists. Then he ran back to
the command post and found a third copy of the message spooling out
of the machine. He already had two. Now he had three.
Webster was the first into the trailer. Then
Johnson, a minute behind. Then Garber, and finally the General’s
aide. They rattled up the ladder one by one and hurried over to the
table. McGrath was absorbed in reading.
“What, Mack?” Webster asked him.
“They’re declaring independence,” McGrath said.
“Listen to this.”
He glanced around the four faces. Started reading
out loud.
“‘Governments are instituted among men,’ ” he read.
“ ‘Deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. It
is the right of the people to alter or abolish them after a long
train of abuses and usurpations.’ ”
“They’re quoting from the original,” Webster
said.
“Paraphrasing,” Garber said.
McGrath nodded.
“Listen to this,” he said again. “ ‘The history of
the present government of the United States is a history of
repeated injuries and usurpations all designed to establish an
absolute tyranny over the people.’ ”
“What the hell is this?” Webster said. “1776 all
over again?”
“It gets worse,” McGrath said. “ ‘We therefore are
the representatives of the Free States of America, located
initially in what was formerly Yorke County in what was formerly
Montana, and we solemnly publish and declare that this territory is
now a free and independent State, which is absolved of allegiance
to the United States, with all political connection totally
dissolved, and that as a free and independent State has full power
to levy war, conclude peace, defend its land borders and its
airspace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and to do all
other things as all independent States may do.’ ”
He looked up. Shuffled the three copies into a neat
stack and laid them on the table in silence.
“Why three copies?” Garber asked.
“Three destinations,” McGrath said. “If we hadn’t
intercepted them, they’d be all over the place by now.”
“Where?” Webster asked.
“First one is a D.C. number,” McGrath said. “I’m
guessing it’s the White House.”
Johnson’s aide scooted his chair to the computer
terminal. McGrath read him the number. He tapped it in, and the
screen scrolled down. He nodded.
“The White House,” he said. “Next?”
“New York somewhere,” McGrath said. Read out the
number from the second sheet.
“United Nations,” the aide said. “They want
witnesses.”
“Third one, I don’t know,” McGrath said. “Area code
is 404.”
“Atlanta, Georgia,” Garber said.
“What’s in Atlanta, Georgia?” Webster asked.
The aide was busy at the keyboard.
“CNN,” he said. “They want publicity.”
Johnson nodded.
“Smart moves,” he said. “They want it all on live
TV. Christ, can you imagine? The United Nations as umpires and
round-the-clock coverage on the cable news? The whole world
watching?”
“So what do we do?” Webster asked.
There was a long silence.
“Why did they say airspace?” Garber asked out
loud.
“They were paraphrasing,” Webster said. “1776,
there wasn’t any airspace.”
“The missiles,” Garber said. “Is it possible
they’ve disabled the IFF?”
There was another long silence. They heard a car
pull up. Doors slammed. Brogan and Milosevic rattled up the ladder
and stepped into the hush. They carried brown bags and Styrofoam
cups with plastic lids.
THE GIANT SEARCH-AND-RESCUE Chinook made it north
from Peterson in Colorado to Malmstrom Air Force Base outside of
Great Falls in Montana without incident. It touched down there and
fuel bowsers came out to meet it. The crew walked to the mess for
coffee. Walked back twenty minutes later. Took off again and swung
gently in the morning air before lumbering away northwest.