14
FOR THE FIRST time in his life, Reacher was truly
comfortable in an airplane. He had been flying since birth, first
as a soldier’s kid and then as a soldier himself, millions of miles
in total, but all of them hunched in roaring spartan military
transports or folded into hard civilian seats narrower than his
shoulders. Traveling first-class on a scheduled airline was a
completely new luxury.
The cabin was dramatic. It was a calculated insult
to the passengers who filed down the jetway and glanced into it
before shuffling along the aisle to their own mean accommodations.
It was cool and pastel in first class, with four seats to a row
where there were ten in coach. Arithmetically, Reacher figured that
made each seat two and a half times as wide, but they felt better
than that. They felt enormous. They felt like sofas, wide enough
for him to squirm left and right without bruising his hips against
the arms. And the legroom was amazing. He could slide right down
and stretch right out without touching the seat in front. He could
hit the button and recline almost horizontally without bothering
the guy behind. He operated the mechanism a couple of times like a
kid with a toy, and then he settled on a sensible halfway position
and opened the in-flight magazine, which was crisp and new and not
creased and sticky like the ones they were reading forty rows
back.
Jodie was lost in her own seat, with her shoes off
and her feet tucked up under her, the same magazine open on her lap
and a glass of chilled champagne at her elbow. The cabin was quiet.
They were a long way forward of the engines, and their noise was
muted to a hiss no louder than the hiss of the air coming through
the vents in the overhead. There was no vibration. Reacher was
watching the sparkling gold wine in Jodie’s glass, and he saw no
tremor on its surface.
“I could get accustomed to this,” he said.
She looked up and smiled.
“Not on your wages,” she said.
He nodded and went back to his arithmetic. He
figured a day’s earnings from digging swimming pools would buy him
fifty miles of first-class air travel. Cruising speed, that was
about five minutes’ worth of progress. Ten hours of work, all gone
in five minutes. He was spending money 120 times faster than he had
been earning it.
“What are you going to do?” she asked. “When this
is all over?”
“I don’t know,” he said.
The question had been in the back of his mind ever
since she told him about the house. The house itself sat there in
his imagination, sometimes benign, sometimes threatening, like a
trick picture that changed depending on how you tilted it against
the light. Sometimes it sat there in the glow of the sun,
comfortable, low and spreading, surrounded by its amiable jungle of
a yard, and it looked like home. Other times, it looked like a
gigantic millstone, requiring him to run and run and run just to
stay level with the starting line. He knew people with houses. He
had talked to them, with the same kind of detached interest he
would talk to a person who kept snakes as pets or entered ballroom
dancing competitions. Houses forced you into a certain lifestyle.
Even if somebody gave you one for nothing, like Leon had, it
committed you to a whole lot of different things. There were
property taxes. He knew that. There was insurance, in case the
place burned down or was blown away in a high wind. There was
maintenance. People he knew with houses were always doing something
to them. They would be replacing the heating system at the start of
the winter, because it had failed. Or the basement would be leaking
water, and complicated things with excavations would be required.
Roofs were a problem. He knew that. People had told him. Roofs had
a finite life span, which surprised him. The shingles needed
stripping off and replacing with new. Siding, also. Windows, too.
He had known people who had put new windows in their houses. They
had deliberated long and hard about what type to buy.
“Are you going to get a job?” Jodie asked.
He stared out through the oval window at southern
California, dry and brown seven miles below him. What sort of a
job? The house was going to cost him maybe ten thousand dollars a
year in taxes and premiums and maintenance. And it was an isolated
house, so he would have to keep Rutter’s car, too. It was a free
car, like the house, but it would cost him money just to own.
Insurance, oil changes, inspections, title, gasoline. Maybe another
three grand a year. Food and clothes and utilities were on top of
all of that. And if he had a house, he would want other things. He
would want a stereo. He would want Wynonna Judd’s record, and a
whole lot of others, too. He thought back to old Mrs. Hobie’s
handwritten calculations. She had settled on a certain sum of money
she needed every year, and he couldn’t see getting it any lower
than she had gotten it. The whole deal added up to maybe thirty
thousand dollars a year, which meant earning maybe fifty, to take
account of income taxes and the cost of five days a week traveling
back and forth to wherever the hell he was going to earn it.
“I don’t know,” he said again.
“Plenty of things you could do.”
“Like what?”
“You’ve got talents. You’re a hell of an
investigator, for instance. Dad always used to say you’re the best
he ever saw.”
“That was in the Army.” he said. “That’s all over
now.”
“Skills are portable, Reacher. There’s always
demand for the best.”
Then she looked up, a big idea in her face. “You
could take over Costello’s business. He’s going to leave a void. We
used him all the time.”
“That’s great. First I get the guy killed, then I
steal his business.”
“It wasn’t your fault,” she said. “You should think
about it.”
So he looked back down at California and thought
about it. Thought about Costello’s well-worn leather chair and his
aging, comfortable body. Thought about sitting in his pastel room
with its pebble glass windows, spending his whole life on the
telephone. Thought about the cost of running the Greenwich Avenue
office and hiring a secretary and providing her with new computers
and telephone consoles and health insurance and paid vacations. All
on top of running the Garrison place. He would be working ten
months of the year before he got ahead by a single dollar.
“I don’t know,” he said again. “I’m not sure I want
to think about it.”
“You’re going to have to.”
“Maybe,” he said. “But not necessarily right
now.”
She smiled like she understood and they lapsed back
into silence. The plane hissed onward and the stewardess came back
with the drinks cart. Jodie got a refill of champagne and Reacher
took a can of beer. He flipped through the airline magazine. It was
full of bland articles about nothing much in particular. There were
advertisements for financial services and small, complicated
gadgets, all of which were black and ran on batteries. He arrived
at the section where the airline’s operational fleet was pictured
in little colored drawings. He found the plane they were on and
read about its passenger capacity and its range and the power of
its engines. Then he arrived at the crossword in back. It filled a
page and looked pretty hard. Jodie was already there in her own
copy, ahead of him.
“Look at eleven down,” she said.
He looked.
“They can weigh heavy,” he read. “Sixteen
letters.”
“Responsibilities,” she said.
MARILYN AND CHESTER Stone were huddled together on
the left-hand sofa in front of the desk, because Hobie was in the
bathroom, alone with the two cops. The thickset man in the dark
suit sat on the opposite sofa with the shotgun resting in his lap.
Tony was sprawled out next to him with his feet on the coffee
table. Chester was inert, just staring into the gloom. Marilyn was
cold and hungry, and terrified. Her eyes were darting all around
the room. There was total silence from the bathroom.
“What’s he doing in there with them?” she
whispered.
Tony shrugged. “Probably just talking to them right
now.”
“About what?”
“Well, asking them questions about what they like
and what they don’t. In terms of physical pain, you understand. He
likes to do that.”
“God, why?”
Tony smiled. “He feels it’s more democratic, you
know, letting the victims decide their own fate.”
Marilyn shuddered. “Oh God, can’t he just let them
go? They thought Sheryl was a battered wife, that’s all. They
didn’t know anything about him.”
“Well, they’ll know something about him soon,” Tony
said. “He makes them pick a number. They never know whether to pick
high or low, because they don’t know what it’s for. They think they
might please him, you know, if they pick right. They spend forever
trying to figure it out.”
“Can’t he just let them go? Maybe later?”
Tony shook his head.
“No,” he said. “He’s very tense right now. This
will relax him. Like therapy.”
Marilyn was silent for a long moment. But then she
had to ask.
“What is the number for?” she whispered.
“How many hours it takes them to die,” Tony said.
“The ones who pick high get real pissed when they find that
out.”
“You bastards.”
“Some guy once picked a hundred, but we let him off
with ten.”
“You bastards.”
“But he won’t make you pick a number. He’s got
other plans for you.”
Total silence from the bathroom.
“He’s insane,” Marilyn whispered.
Tony shrugged. “A little, maybe. But I like him.
He’s had a lot of pain in his life. I think that’s why he’s so
interested in it.”
Marilyn stared on at him in horror. Then the buzzer
sounded at the oak door out to the elevator lobby. Very loud in the
awful silence. Tony and the thickset man with the shotgun spun
around and stared in that direction.
“Check it out,” Tony said.
He went into his jacket and came out with his gun.
He held it steady on Chester and Marilyn. His partner with the
shotgun jacked himself up out of the low sofa and stepped around
the table to the door. He closed it behind him and the office went
quiet again. Tony stood up and walked to the bathroom door. Knocked
on it with the butt of his gun and opened it a fraction and ducked
his head inside.
“Visitors,” he whispered.
Marilyn glanced left and right. Tony was twenty
feet from her, and he was the nearest. She jumped to her feet and
snatched a deep breath. Hurdled the coffee table and scrambled
around the opposite sofa and made it all the way to the office
door. She wrenched it open. The thickset man in the dark suit was
on the far side of the reception area, talking to a short man
framed in the doorway out to the elevator lobby.
“Help us!” she screamed to him.
The man stared over at her. He was dressed in dark
blue pants and a blue shirt, with a short jacket open over it, the
same blue as the pants. Some kind of uniform. There was a small
design on the jacket, left side of the chest. He was carrying a
brown grocery sack cradled in his arms.
“Help us!” she screamed again.
Two things happened. The thickset man in the dark
suit darted forward and bundled the visitor all the way inside and
slammed the door after him. And Tony grabbed Marilyn from behind
with a strong arm around her waist. He dragged her backward into
the office. She arched forward against the pressure of his arm. She
was bending herself double and fighting.
“God’s sake, help us!”
Tony lifted her off her feet. His arm was bunching
under her breasts. The short dress was riding up over her thighs.
She was kicking and struggling. The short man in the blue uniform
was staring. Her shoes came off. Then the short man was smiling. He
walked forward into the office after her, stepping carefully over
her abandoned shoes, carrying his grocery sack.
“Hey, I’d like to get me a piece of that,” he
said.
“Forget it,” Tony gasped from behind her. “This
one’s off limits, time being.”
“Pity,” the new guy said. “Not every day you see a
thing like that.”
Tony struggled with her all the way back to the
sofa. Dumped her down next to Chester. The new guy shrugged
wistfully and emptied the grocery sack on the desk. Bricks of cash
money thumped out on the wood. The bathroom door opened and Hobie
stepped into the room. His jacket was off and his shirtsleeves were
rolled up to the elbow. On the left was a forearm. It was knotted
with muscle and thick with dark hair. On the right was a heavy
leather cup, dark brown, worn and shiny, with straps riveted to it
running away up into the shirtsleeve. The bottom of the cup was
narrowed to a neck, with the bright steel hook coming down out of
it, running straight for six or eight inches and then curving
around to the point.
“Count the money, Tony,” Hobie said.
Marilyn jerked upright. Turned to face the new
guy.
“He’s got two cops in there,” she said urgently.
“He’s going to kill them.”
The guy shrugged at her.
“Suits me,” he said. “Kill them all, is what I
say.”
She stared at him blankly. Tony moved behind the
desk and sorted through the bricks of money. He stacked them neatly
and counted out loud, moving them from one end of the desk to the
other.
“Forty thousand dollars.”
“So where are the keys?” the new guy asked.
Tony rolled open the desk drawer. “These are for
the Benz.”
He tossed them to the guy and went into his pocket
for another bunch.
“And these are for the Tahoe. It’s in the garage
downstairs.”
“What about the BMW?” the guy asked.
“Still up in Pound Ridge,” Hobie called across the
room.
“Keys?” the guy asked.
“In the house, I guess,” Hobie said. “She didn’t
bring a pocketbook, and it doesn’t look like she’s concealing them
about her person, does it?”
The guy stared at Marilyn’s dress and smiled an
ugly smile, all lips and tongue.
“There’s something in there, that’s for damn sure.
But it don’t look like keys.”
She looked at him in disgust. The design on his
jacket read Mo’s Motors. It was embroidered in red silk. Hobie
walked across the room and stood directly behind her. He leaned
forward and brought the hook around into her line of vision. She
stared at it, close up. She shuddered.
“Where are the keys?” he asked.
“The BMW is mine,” she said.
“Not anymore it isn’t.”
He moved the hook closer. She could smell the metal
and the leather.
“I could search her,” the new guy called. “Maybe
she is concealing them after all. I can think of a couple of
interesting places to look.”
She shuddered.
“Keys,” Hobie said to her softly.
“Kitchen counter,” she whispered back.
Hobie took the hook away and walked around in front
of her, smiling. The new guy looked disappointed. He nodded to
confirm he’d heard the whisper and walked slowly to the door,
jingling the Benz keys and the Tahoe keys in his hand.
“Pleasure doing business,” he said as he
walked.
Then he paused at the door and looked back,
straight at Marilyn.
“You completely sure that’s off limits, Hobie?
Seeing as how we’re old friends and all? Done a lot of business
together?”
Hobie shook his head like he meant it. “Forget
about it. This one’s mine.”
The guy shrugged and walked out of the office,
swinging the keys. The door closed behind him and they heard the
second thump of the lobby door a moment later. Then there was
elevator whine and the office fell silent again. Hobie glanced at
the stacks of dollar bills on the desk and headed back to the
bathroom. Marilyn and Chester were kept side by side on the sofa,
cold, sick, and hungry. The light coming in through the chinks in
the blinds faded away to the yellow dullness of evening, and the
silence from the bathroom continued until a point Marilyn guessed
was around eight o’clock in the evening. Then it was shattered by
screaming.
I HE PLANE CHASED the sun west but lost time all
the way and arrived on Oahu three hours in arrears, in the middle
of the afternoon. The first-class cabin was emptied ahead of
business class and coach, which meant Reacher and Jodie were the
first people outside the terminal and into the taxi line. The
temperature and the humidity out there were similar to Texas, but
the damp had a saline quality to it because of the Pacific close
by. And the light was calmer. The jagged green mountains and the
blue of the sea bathed the island with the jeweled glow of the
tropics. Jodie put her dark glasses on again and gazed beyond the
airport fences with the mild curiosity of somebody who had passed
through Hawaii a dozen times in her father’s service days without
ever really stopping there. Reacher did the same. He had used it as
a Pacific stepping-stone more times than he could count, but he had
never served in Hawaii.
The taxi waiting at the head of the line was a
replica of the one they’d used at Dallas-Fort Worth, a clean
Caprice with the air roaring full blast and the driver’s
compartment decorated halfway between a religious shrine and a
living room. They disappointed the guy by asking him for the
shortest ride available on Oahu, which was the half-mile hop around
the perimeter road to the Hickam Air Force Base entrance. The guy
glanced backward at the line of cars behind him, and Reacher saw
him thinking about the better fares the other drivers would
get.
“Ten-dollar tip in it for you,” he said.
The guy gave him the same look the ticket clerk at
Dallas-Fort Worth had used. A fare that was going to leave the
meter stuck on the basic minimum, but a ten-dollar tip? Reacher saw
a photograph of what he guessed was the guy’s family, taped to the
vinyl of the dash. A big family, dark, smiling children and a dark,
smiling woman in a cheerful print dress, all standing in front of a
clean simple home with something vigorous growing in a dirt patch
to the right. He thought about the Hobies, alone in the dark
silence up in Brighton with the hiss of the oxygen bottle and the
squeak of the worn wooden floors. And Rutter, in the dusty squalor
of his Bronx storefront.
“Twenty dollars,” he said. “If we get going right
now, OK?”
“Twenty dollars?” the guy repeated, amazed.
“Thirty. For your kids. They look nice.”
The guy grinned in the mirror and touched his
fingers to his lips and laid them gently on the shiny surface of
the photograph. He swung the cab through the lane changes onto the
perimeter track and came off again more or less immediately, eight
hundred yards into the journey, outside a military gate which
looked identical to the one fronting Fort Wolters. Jodie opened the
door and stepped out into the heat and Reacher went into his pocket
and came out with his roll of cash. Top bill was a fifty, and he
peeled it off and pushed it through the little hinged door in the
Plexiglas.
“Keep it.”
Then he pointed at the photograph. “That your
house?”
The driver nodded.
“Is it holding up OK? Anything need fixing on
it?”
The guy shook his head. “Tip-top condition.”
“The roof OK?”
“No problems at all.”
Reacher nodded. “Just checking.”
He slid across the vinyl and joined Jodie on the
blacktop. The taxi moved off through the haze, back toward the
civilian terminal. There was a breeze coming off the ocean. Salt in
the air. Jodie pushed the hair off her face and looked
around.
“Where are we going?”
“CIL-HI,” Reacher said. “It’s right inside
here.”
He pronounced it phonetically, and it made her
smile.
“Silly?” she repeated. “So what’s that?”
“C,I,L,H,I,” he said. “Central Identification
Laboratory, Hawaii. It’s the Department of the Army’s main
facility.”
“For what?”
“I’ll show you for what,” he said.
Then he paused. “At least I hope I will.”
They walked up to the gatehouse and waited at the
window. There was a sergeant inside, same uniform, same haircut,
same suspicious expression on his face as the guy at Wolters. He
made them wait in the heat for a second, and then he slid the
window back. Reacher stepped forward and gave their names.
“We’re here to see Nash Newman,” he said.
The sergeant looked surprised and picked up a
clipboard and peeled thin sheets of paper back. He slid a thick
finger along a line and nodded. Picked up a phone and dialed a
number. Four digits. An internal call. He announced the visitors
and listened to the reply, and then he looked puzzled. He covered
the phone with his palm and turned back to Jodie.
“How old are you, miss?” he asked.
“Thirty,” Jodie said, puzzled in turn.
“Thirty,” the MP repeated into the phone. Then he
listened again and hung it up and wrote something on the clipboard.
Turned back to the window.
“He’ll be right out, so come on through.”
They squeezed through the narrow gap between the
gatehouse wall and the heavy counterweight on the end of the
vehicle barrier and waited on the hot pavement six feet away from
where they had started, but now it was military pavement, not
Hawaii Department of Transportation pavement, and that made a lot
of difference to the look on the sergeant’s face. The suspicion was
all gone, replaced by frank curiosity about why the legendary Nash
Newman was in such a big hurry to get these two civilians inside
the base.
There was a low concrete building maybe sixty yards
away with a plain personnel door set in the blank end wall. The
door opened up and a silver-haired man stepped out. He turned back
to close it and lock it and then set out at a fast walk toward the
gatehouse. He was in the pants and the shirt of an Army
tropical-issue uniform, with a white lab coat flapping open over
them. There was enough metal punched through the collar of the
shirt to indicate he was a high-ranking officer, and nothing in his
distinguished bearing to contradict that impression. Reacher moved
to meet him and Jodie followed. The silver-haired guy was maybe
fifty-five, and up close he was tall, with a handsome patrician
face and a natural athletic grace in his body that was just
beginning to yield to the stiffness of age.
“General Newman,” Reacher said. “This is Jodie
Garber.”
Newman glanced at Reacher and took Jodie’s hand,
smiling.
“Pleased to meet you, General,” she said.
“We already met,” Newman said.
“We did?” she said, surprised.
“You wouldn’t recall it,” he said. “At least I’d be
terribly surprised if you did. You were three years old at the
time, I guess. In the Philippines. It was in your father’s
backyard. I remember you brought me a glass of planter’s punch. It
was a big glass, and a big yard, and you were a very little girl.
You carried it in both hands, with your tongue sticking out,
concentrating. I watched you all the way, with my heart in my mouth
in case you dropped it.”
She smiled. “Well, you’re right, I’m afraid I don’t
recall it. I was three? That’s an awful long time ago now.”
Newman nodded. “That’s why I checked how old you
looked. I didn’t mean for the sergeant to come right out and ask
you straight. I wanted his subjective impression, is all. It’s not
the sort of thing one should ask a lady, is it? But I was wondering
if you could really be Leon’s daughter, come to visit me.”
He squeezed her hand and let it go. Turned to
Reacher and punched him lightly on the shoulder.
“Jack Reacher,” he said. “Damn, it’s good to see
you again.”
Reacher caught Newman’s hand and shook it hard,
sharing the pleasure.
“General Newman was my teacher,” he said to Jodie.
“He did a spell at staff college about a million years ago.
Advanced forensics, taught me everything I know.”
“He was a pretty good student,” Newman said to her.
“Paid attention at least, which is more than most of them
did.”
“So what is it you do, General?” she asked.
“Well, I do a little forensic anthropology,” Newman
said.
“He’s the best in the world,” Reacher said.
Newman waved away the compliment. “Well, I don’t
know about that.”
“Anthropology?” Jodie said. “But isn’t that
studying remote tribes and things? How they live? Their rituals and
beliefs and so on?”
“No, that’s cultural anthropology,” Newman said.
“There are many different disciplines. Mine is forensic
anthropology, which is a part of physical anthropology.”
“Studying human remains for clues,” Reacher
said.
“A bone doctor,” Newman said. “That’s about what it
amounts to.”
They were drifting down the sidewalk as they
talked, getting nearer the plain door in the blank wall. It opened
up and a younger man was standing there waiting for them in the
entrance corridor. A nondescript guy, maybe thirty years old, in a
lieutenant’s uniform under a white lab coat. Newman nodded toward
him. “This is Lieutenant Simon. He runs the lab for me. Couldn’t
manage without him.”
He introduced Reacher and Jodie and they shook
hands all around. Simon was quiet and reserved. Reacher figured him
for a typical lab guy, annoyed at the disruption to the measured
routine of his work. Newman led them inside and down the corridor
to his office, and Simon nodded silently to him and
disappeared.
“Sit down,” Newman said. “Let’s talk.”
“So you’re a sort of pathologist?” Jodie asked
him.
Newman took his place behind his desk and rocked
his hand from side to side, indicating a disparity. “Well, a
pathologist has a medical degree, and we anthropologists don’t. We
studied anthropology, pure and simple. The physical structure of
the human body, that’s our field. We both work postmortem, of
course, but generally speaking if a corpse is relatively fresh,
it’s a pathologist’s job, and if there’s only a skeleton left, then
it’s our job. So I’m a bone doctor.”
Jodie nodded.
“Of course, that’s a slight simplification,” Newman
said. “A fresh corpse can raise questions concerning its bones.
Suppose there’s dismemberment involved? The pathologist would refer
to us for help. We can look at the saw marks on the bones and help
out. We can say how weak or strong the perpetrator was, what kind
of saw he used, was he left-handed or right-handed, things like
that. But ninety-nine times out of a hundred, I’m working on
skeletons. Dry old bones.”
Then he smiled again. A private, amused smile. “And
pathologists are useless with dry old bones. Really, really
hopeless. They don’t know the first thing about them. Sometimes I
wonder what the hell they teach them in medical school.”
The office was quiet and cool. No windows, indirect
lighting from concealed fixtures, carpet on the floor. A rosewood
desk, comfortable leather chairs for the visitors. And an elegant
clock on a low shelf, ticking quietly, already showing three-thirty
in the afternoon. Just three and a half hours until the return
flight.
“We’re here for a reason, General,” Reacher said.
“This isn’t entirely a social call, I’m afraid.”
“Social enough to stop calling me General and start
calling me Nash, OK? And tell me what’s on your mind.”
Reacher nodded. “We need your help, Nash.”
Newman looked up. “With the MIA lists?”
Then he turned to Jodie, to explain.
“That’s what I do here,” he said. “Twenty years,
I’ve done nothing else.”
She nodded. “It’s about a particular case. We sort
of got involved in it.”
Newman nodded back, slowly, but this time the light
was gone from his eyes.
“Yes, I was afraid of that,” he said. “There are
eighty-nine thousand, one hundred twenty MIA cases here, but I bet
I know which one you’re interested in.”
“Eighty-nine thousand?” Jodie repeated,
surprised.
“And a hundred twenty. Two thousand, two hundred
missing from Vietnam, eight thousand, one hundred seventy missing
from Korea, and seventy-eight thousand, seven hundred fifty missing
from World War Two. We haven’t given up on any single one of them,
and I promise you we never will.”
“God, why so many?”
Newman shrugged, a bitter sadness suddenly there in
his face.
“Wars,” he said. “High explosive, tactical
movement, airplanes. Wars are fought, some combatants live, some
die. Some of the dead are recovered, some of them aren’t. Sometimes
there’s nothing left to recover. A direct hit on a man by an
artillery shell will reduce him to his constituent molecules. He’s
just not there anymore. Maybe a fine red mist drifting through the
air, maybe not even that, maybe he’s completely boiled off to
vapor. A near miss will blow him to pieces. And fighting is about
territory, isn’t it? So even if the pieces of him are relatively
large, enemy tank movement or friendly tank movement back and forth
across the disputed territory will plow the pieces of him into the
earth, and then he’s gone forever.”
He sat in silence, and the clock ticked slowly
around.
“And airplanes are worse. Many of our air campaigns
have been fought over oceans. A plane goes down in the ocean and
the crew is missing until the end of time, no matter how much
effort we expend in a place like this.”
He waved his arm in a vague gesture that took in
the office and all the unseen space beyond and ended up resting
toward Jodie, palm up, like a mute appeal.
“Eighty-nine thousand,” she said. “I thought the
MIA stuff was just about Vietnam. Two thousand or so.”
“Eighty-nine thousand, one hundred twenty,” Newman
said again. “We still get a few from Korea, the occasional one from
World War Two, the Japanese islands. But you’re right, this is
mostly about Vietnam. Two thousand, two hundred missing. Not so
very many, really. They lost more than that in a single morning
during World War One, every morning for four long years. Men and
boys blown apart and mashed into the mud. But Vietnam was
different. Partly because of things like World War One. We won’t
take that wholesale slaughter anymore, and quite rightly. We’ve
moved on. The population just won’t stand for those old attitudes
now.”
Jodie nodded quietly.
“And partly because we lost the war in Vietnam,”
Newman said quietly. “That makes it very different. The only war we
ever lost. Makes it all feel a hell of a lot worse. So we try
harder to resolve things.”
He made the gesture with his hand again, indicating
the unseen complex beyond the office door, and his voice ended on a
brighter note.
“So that’s what you do here?” Jodie asked. “Wait
for skeletons to be discovered overseas and then bring them back
here to identify? So you can finally tick the names off the missing
lists?”
Newman rocked his hand again, equivocating. “Well,
we don’t wait, exactly. Where we can, we go out searching for them.
And we don’t always identify them, although we sure as hell try
hard.”
“It must be difficult,” she said.
He nodded. “Technically, it can be very
challenging. The recovery sites are usually a mess. The
field-workers send us animal bones, local bones, anything. We sort
it all out here. Then we go to work with what we’ve got. Which
sometimes isn’t very much. Sometimes all that’s left of an American
soldier is just a handful of bone fragments you could fit in a
cigar box.”
“Impossible,” she said.
“Often,” he said back. “We’ve got a hundred
part-skeletons here right now, unidentified. The Department of the
Army can’t afford mistakes. They demand a very high standard of
certainty, and sometimes we just can’t meet it.”
“Where do you start?” she asked.
He shrugged. “Well, wherever we can. Medical
records, usually. Suppose Reacher here was an MIA. If he’d broken
his arm as a boy, we’d be able to match the old X ray against a
healed break in the bones we found. Maybe. Or if we found his jaw,
we could match the work on his teeth with his dental charts.”
Reacher saw her looking at him, imagining him
reduced to dry yellowing bones on a jungle floor, scraped out of
the dirt and compared to brittle fading X rays taken thirty years
earlier. The office went silent again, and the clock ticked
around.
“Leon came here in April,” Reacher said.
Newman nodded. “Yes, he visited with me. Foolish of
him, really, because he was a very sick man. But it was good to see
him.”
Then he turned to Jodie, sympathy on his
face.
“He was a fine, fine man. I owed him a lot.”
She nodded. It wasn’t the first time she’d heard
it, and it wouldn’t be the last.
“He asked you about Victor Hobie,” Reacher
said.
Newman nodded again. “Victor Truman Hobie.”
“What did you tell him?”
“Nothing,” Newman said. “And I’m going to tell you
nothing, too.”
The clock ticked on. A quarter to four.
“Why not?” Reacher asked.
“Surely you know why not.”
“It’s classified?”
“Twice over,” Newman said.
Reacher moved in the silence, restless with
frustration. “You’re our last hope, Nash. We’ve already been all
over everything else.”
Newman shook his head. “You know how it is,
Reacher. I’m an officer in the U.S. Army, damn it. I’m not going to
reveal classified information.”
“Please, Nash,” Reacher said. “We came all this
way.”
“I can’t,” Newman said.
“No such word,” Reacher said.
Silence.
“Well, I guess you could ask me questions,” he
said. “If a former student of mine comes in here and asks me
questions based on his own skills and observations, and I answer
them in a purely academic fashion, I don’t see that any harm can
come to anybody.”
It was like the clouds shifting away from the sun.
Jodie glanced at Reacher. He glanced at the clock. Seven minutes to
four. Less than three hours to go.
“OK, Nash, thanks,” he said. “You’re familiar with
this case?”
“I’m familiar with all of them. This one
especially, since April.”
“And it’s classified twice over?”
Newman just nodded.
“At a level that kept Leon out of the loop?”
“That’s a pretty high level,” Newman hinted.
“Wouldn’t you agree?”
Reacher nodded. Thought hard. “What did Leon want
you to do?”
“He was in the dark,” Newman said. “You need to
bear that in mind, right?”
“OK,” Reacher said. “What did he want you to
do?”
“He wanted us to find the crash site.”
“Four miles west of An Khe.”
Newman nodded. “I felt badly for Leon. No real
reason for him to be out of the loop on this, and there was nothing
I could do to alter the classification code. But I owed that man a
lot, way more than I can tell you about, so I agreed to find the
site.”
Jodie leaned forward. “But why wasn’t it found
before? People seem to know roughly where it is.”
Newman shrugged. “It’s all incredibly difficult.
You have no idea. The terrain, the bureaucracy. We lost the war,
remember. The Vietnamese dictate the terms over there. We run a
joint recovery effort, but they control it. The whole thing is
constant manipulation and humiliation. We’re not allowed to wear
our uniforms over there, because they say the sight of a U.S. Army
uniform will traumatize the village populations. They make us rent
their own helicopters to get around, millions and millions of
dollars a year for ratty old rust buckets with half the capability
of our own machines. Truth is, we’re buying those old bones back,
and they set the price and the availability. Bottom line right now
is the United States is paying more than three million dollars for
every single identification we make, and it burns me up.”
Four minutes to four. Newman sighed again, lost in
thought.
“But you found the site?” Reacher prompted.
“It was scheduled for sometime in the future,”
Newman said. “We knew roughly where it was, and we knew exactly
what we’d find when we got there, so it wasn’t much of a high
priority. But as a favor to Leon, I went over there and bargained
to move it up the schedule. I wanted it next item on the list. It
was a real bitch to negotiate. They get wind you want something in
particular, they go stubborn as all hell. You’ve got no idea.
Inscrutable? Tell me about it.”
“But you found it?” Jodie asked.
“It was a bitch, geographically,” Newman said. “We
talked to DeWitt over at Wolters, and he helped us pin down the
exact location, more or less. Remotest place you ever saw.
Mountainous and inaccessible. I can guarantee you no human being
has ever set foot there, no time in the history of the planet. It
was a nightmare trip. But it was a great site. Completely
inaccessible, so it wasn’t mined.”
“Mined?” Jodie repeated. “You mean they booby-trap
the sites?”
Newman shook his head. “No, mined, as in excavated.
Anything accessible, the population was all over it thirty years
ago. They took dog tags, ID cards, helmets, souvenirs, but mostly
they were after the metals. Fixed-wing sites, mostly, because of
the gold and platinum.”
“What gold?” she asked.
“In the electrical circuits,” Newman said. “The F-4
Phantoms, for instance, they had about five thousand dollars’ worth
of precious metals in the connections. Population used to hack it
all out and sell it. You buy cheap jewelry in Bangkok, probably
it’s made out of old U.S. fighter-bomber electronics.”
“What did you find up there?” Reacher asked.
“A relatively good state of preservation,” Newman
said. “The Huey was smashed up and rusted, but it was recognizable.
The bodies were completely skeletonized, of course. Clothing was
rotted and gone, long ago. But nothing else was missing. They all
had dog tags. We packed them up and helicoptered them to Hanoi.
Then we flew them back here in the Starlifter, full honors. We only
just got back. Three months, beginning to end, one of the best
we’ve ever done in terms of time scale. And the IDs are going to be
a total formality, because we’ve got the dog tags. No role for a
bone doctor on this one. Open and shut. I’m just sorry Leon didn’t
live to see it. It would have put his mind at rest.”
“The bodies are here?” Reacher asked.
Newman nodded. “Right next door.”
“Can we see them?” Reacher asked.
Newman nodded again. “You shouldn’t, but you need
to.”
The office went quiet and Newman stood up and
gestured toward the door with both hands. Lieutenant Simon walked
past. He nodded a greeting.
“We’re going into the lab,” Newman said to
him.
“Yes, sir,” Simon said back. He moved away into his
own office cubicle and Reacher and Jodie and Newman walked in the
other direction and paused in front of a plain door set in a blank
cinder block wall. Newman took keys from his pocket and unlocked
it. He pulled it open and repeated the same formal gesture with
both his hands. Reacher and Jodie preceded him into the lab.
SIMON WATCHED THEM go inside from his cubicle.
When the door closed and locked behind them, he picked up his phone
and dialed nine for a line and then a ten-figure number starting
with the New York City area code. The number rang for a long time
because it was already the middle of the evening six thousand miles
to the east. Then it was answered.
“Reacher’s here,” Simon whispered. “Right now, with
a woman. They’re in the lab, right now. Looking.”
Hobie’s voice came back low and controlled. “Who’s
the woman?”
“Jodie Garber,” Simon said. “General Garber’s
daughter.”
“Alias Mrs. Jacob.”
“What do you want me to do?”
There was silence on the line. Just the whistle of
the long-distance satellite.
“You could give them a ride back to the airport,
maybe. The woman’s got an appointment in New York tomorrow
afternoon, so I guess they’ll be trying to make the seven o’clock
flight. Just make sure they don’t miss it.”
“OK,” Simon said, and Hobie broke the
connection.
THE LAB WAS a wide, low room, maybe forty feet by
fifty. There were no windows. The lighting was the bland wash of
fluorescent tubes. There was the faint hiss of efficient air
circulation, but there was a smell in the room, somewhere between
the sharp tang of strong disinfectant and the warm odor of earth.
At the far end of the space was an alcove filled with racks. On the
racks were rows of cardboard boxes, marked with reference numbers
in black. Maybe a hundred boxes.
“The unidentified,” Reacher said.
Newman nodded at his side.
“As of now,” he said, quietly. “We won’t give up on
them.”
Between them and the distant alcove was the main
body of the room. The floor was tile, swabbed to a shine. Standing
on it were twenty neat wooden tables set in precise rows. The
tables were waist high and topped with heavy polished slabs. Each
table was a little shorter and a little narrower than an Army cot.
They looked like sturdy versions of the tables decorators use for
wallpaper pasting. Six of them were completely empty. Seven of them
had the lids of seven polished aluminum caskets laid across them.
The final seven tables held the seven aluminum caskets themselves,
in neat alternate rows, each one adjacent to the table bearing its
lid. Reacher stood silent with his head bowed, and then he drew
himself up to attention and held a long, silent salute for the
first time in more than two years.
“Awful,” Jodie whispered.
She was standing with her hands clasped behind her,
head bowed, like she was at a graveside ceremony. Reacher released
his salute and squeezed her hand.
“Thank you,” Newman said quietly. “I like people to
show respect in here.”
“How could we not?” Jodie whispered.
She was staring at the caskets, with tears starting
in her eyes.
“So, Reacher, what do you see?” Newman asked in the
silence.
Reacher’s eyes were wandering around the bright
room. He was too shocked to move.
“I see seven caskets,” he said quietly. “Where I
expected to see eight. There were eight people in that Huey. Crew
of five, and they picked up three. It’s in DeWitt’s report. Five
and three make eight.”
“And eight minus one makes seven,” Newman
said.
“Did you search the site? Thoroughly?”
Newman shook his head. “No.”
“Why not?”
“You’ll have to figure that out.”
Reacher shook himself and took a step forward. “May
I?”
“Be my guest,” Newman replied. “Tell me what you
see. Concentrate hard, and we’ll see what you’ve remembered, and
what you’ve forgotten.”
Reacher walked to the nearest casket and turned so
that he was looking down into it along its length. The casket held
a rough wooden box, six inches smaller in every dimension than the
casket itself.
“That’s what the Vietnamese make us use,” Newman
said. “They sell those boxes to us and make us use them. We put
them in our own caskets in the hangar at the airfield in
Hanoi.”
The wooden box had no lid. It was just a shallow
tray. There was a jumble of bones in it. Somebody had arranged them
in roughly the correct anatomical sequence. There was a skull at
the top, yellowed and old. It grinned up with a grotesque smile.
There was a gold tooth in the mouth. The empty eye sockets stared.
The vertebrae of the neck were lined up neatly. Below them the
shoulder blades and the collarbones and the ribs were laid out in
their correct places above the pelvis. The arm bones and the leg
bones were stacked to the sides. There was the dull glint of a
metal chain draped over the vertebrae of the neck, running away
under the flatness of the left shoulder blade.
“May I?” Reacher asked again.
Newman nodded. “Please.”
Reacher stood silent for a long moment and then
leaned in and hooked his finger under the chain and eased it out.
The bones stirred and clicked and moved as the dog tags caught. He
pulled them out and brought them up and rubbed the ball of his
thumb across their faces. Bent down to read the stamped name.
“Kaplan,” he said. “The copilot.”
“How did he die?” Newman asked.
Reacher draped the tags back across the bony ribs
and looked hard for the evidence. The skull was OK. No trace of
damage to the arms or legs or chest. But the pelvis was smashed.
The vertebrae toward the bottom of the spine were crushed. And the
ribs at the back were fractured, eight of them on both sides,
counting upward from the bottom.
“Impact, when the Huey hit the ground. He took a
big hit in the lower back. Massive internal trauma and hemorrhage.
Probably fatal within a minute.”
“But he was strapped in his seat,” Newman said.
“Head-on crash into the ground, how does that injure him from
behind?”
Reacher looked again. He felt the way he had years
before in the classroom, nervous about screwing up in front of the
legendary Nash Newman. He looked hard, and he put his hands lightly
on the dry bones, feeling them. But he had to be right. This was a
crushing impact to the lower back. There was no other
explanation.
“The Huey spun,” he said. “It came in at a shallow
angle and the trees spun it around. It separated between the cabin
and the tail and the cabin hit the ground traveling
backward.”
Newman nodded. “Excellent. That’s exactly how we
found it. It hit backward. Instead of his harness saving him, his
chair killed him.”
Reacher moved on to the next casket. There was the
same shallow wooden tray, the same jumble of yellow bones. The same
grotesque, accusing, grinning skull. Below it, the neck was broken.
He eased the dog tags out from between the shards of cracked
bone.
“Tardelli,” he read.
“The starboard side gunner,” Newman said.
Tardelli’s skeleton was a mess. The gunners stood
on a slick stand in the open doorway, basically unsecured, juggling
with the heavy machine gun swinging on a bungee cord. When the Huey
went down, Tardelli had been thrown all over the cabin.
“Broken neck,” Reacher said. “Crushing to the upper
chest.”
He turned the awful yellow skull over. It was
fractured like an eggshell.
“Head trauma also. I’d say he died instantaneously.
Wouldn’t like to say which exact injury killed him.”
“Neither would I,” Newman said. “He was nineteen
years old.”
There was silence. Nothing in the air except the
faint sweet aroma of loam.
“Look at the next one,” Newman said.
The next one was different. There was a single
injury to the chest. The dog tags were tangled into splintered
bones. Reacher couldn’t free them. He had to bend his head to get
the name.
“Bamford.”
“The crew chief,” Newman said. “He would have been
sitting on the cabin bench, facing the rear, opposite the three
guys they picked up.”
Bamford’s bony face grinned up at him. Below it,
his skeleton was complete and undamaged, except for the narrow
crushing injury sideways across the upper body. It was like a
three-inch trench in his chest. The sternum had been punched down
to the level of the spine and had gone on and knocked three
vertebrae out of line. Three ribs had gone with it.
“So what do you think?” Newman asked.
Reacher put his hand into the box and felt the
dimensions of the injury. It was narrow and horizontal. Three
fingers wouldn’t fit into it, but two would.
“Some kind of an impact,” he said. “Something
between a sharp instrument and a blunt instrument. Hit him sideways
in the chest, obviously. It would have stopped his heart
immediately. Was it the rotor blade?”
Newman nodded. “Very good. The way it looked, the
rotor folded up against the trees and came down into the cabin. It
must have struck him across the upper body. As you say, a blow like
that would have stopped his heart instantaneously.”
In the next casket, the bones were very different.
Some of them were the same dull yellow, but most of them were white
and brittle and eroded. The dog tags were bent and blackened.
Reacher turned them to throw the embossing into relief against the
ceiling lights and read: Soper.
“The port side gunner,” Newman said.
“There was a fire,” Reacher said.
“How can you tell?” Newman asked, like the teacher
he was.
“Dog tags are burned.”
“And?”
“The bones are calcinated,” Reacher said. “At
least, most of them are.”
“Calcinated?” Newman repeated.
Reacher nodded and went back fifteen years to his
textbooks.
“The organic components burned off, leaving only
the inorganic compounds behind. Burning leaves the bones smaller,
whiter, veined, brittle, and eroded.”
“Good,” Newman said.
“The explosion DeWitt saw,” Jodie said. “It was the
fuel tank.”
Newman nodded. “Classic evidence. Not a slow fire.
A fuel explosion. It spills randomly and burns quickly, which
explains the random nature of the burned bones. Looks to me like
Soper caught the fuel across his lower body, but his upper body was
lying outside of the fire.”
His quiet words died to silence and the three of
them were lost in imagining the terror. The bellowing engines, the
hostile bullets smashing into the airframe, the sudden loss of
power, the spurt of spilling fuel, the fire, the tearing smashing
impact through the trees, the screaming, the rotor scything down,
the shuddering crash, the screeching of metal, the smashing of
frail human bodies into the indifferent jungle floor where no
person had ever walked since the dawn of time. Soper’s empty eye
sockets stared up into the light, challenging them to
imagine.
“Look at the next one,” Newman said.
The next casket held the remains of a man called
Allen. No burning. Just a yellow skeleton with bright dog tags
around the broken neck. A noble, grinning skull. Even, white teeth.
A high, round, undamaged cranium. The product of good nutrition and
careful upbringing in the America of the fifties. His whole back
was smashed, like a dead crab.
“Allen was one of the three they picked up,” Newman
said.
Reacher nodded, sadly. The sixth casket was a burn
victim. His name was Zabrinski. His bones were calcinated and
small.
“He was probably a big guy in life,” Newman said.
“Burning can shrink your bones by fifty percent, sometimes. So
don’t write him off as a midget.”
Reacher nodded again. Stirred through the bones
with his hand. They were light and brittle. Like husks. The veining
left them sharp with microscopic ribbing.
“Injuries?” Newman asked.
Reacher looked again, but he found nothing.
“He burned to death,” he said.
Newman nodded.
“Yes, I’m afraid he did,” he said.
“Awful,” Jodie whispered.
The seventh and final casket held the remains of a
man named Gunston. They were terrible remains. At first Reacher
thought there was no skull. Then he saw it was lying in the bottom
of the wooden box. It was smashed into a hundred pieces. Most of
them were no bigger than his thumbnail.
“What do you think?” Newman asked.
Reacher shook his head.
“I don’t want to think,” he whispered. “I’m all
done thinking.”
Newman nodded, sympathetic. “Rotor blade hit him in
the head. He was one of the three they picked up. He was sitting
opposite Bamford.”
“Five and three,” Jodie said quietly. “So the crew
was Hobie and Kaplan, pilot and copilot, Bamford the crew chief,
Soper and Tardelli the gunners, and they went down and picked up
Allen and Zabrinski and Gunston.”
Newman nodded. “That’s what the files tell
us.”
“So where’s Hobie?” Reacher asked.
“You’re missing something,” Newman said. “Sloppy
work, Reacher, for somebody who used to be good at this.”
Reacher glanced at him. DeWitt had said something
similar. He had said sloppy work for somebody who was once an
MP major. And he had said look closer to home.
“They were MPs, right?” he said suddenly.
Newman smiled. “Who were?”
“Two of them,” Reacher said. “Two out of Allen and
Zabrinski and Gunston. Two of them were arresting the other one. It
was a special mission. Kaplan had put two MPs in the field the day
before. His last-but-one mission, flying solo, the one I didn’t
read. They were going back to pick them up, plus the guy they’d
arrested.”
Newman nodded. “Correct.”
“Which was which?”
“Pete Zabrinski and Joey Gunston were the cops.
Carl Allen was the bad guy.”
Reacher nodded. “What had he done?”
“The details are classified,” Newman said. “Your
guess?”
“In and out like that, a quick arrest? Fragging, I
suppose.”
“What’s fragging?” Jodie asked.
“Killing your officer,” Reacher said. “It happened,
time to time. Some gung ho lieutenant, probably new in-country,
gets all keen on advancing into dangerous positions. The grunts
don’t like it, figure he’s after a medal, figure they’d rather keep
their asses in one piece. So he says ‘charge,’ and somebody shoots
him in the back, or throws a grenade at him, which was more
efficient, because it didn’t need aiming and it disguised the whole
thing better. That’s where the name comes from, fragging,
fragmentation device, a grenade.”
“So was it fragging?” Jodie asked.
“The details are classified,” Newman said again.
“But certainly there was fragging involved, at the end of a long
and vicious career. According to the files, Carl Allen was
definitely not flavor of the month.”
Jodie nodded. “But why on earth is that classified?
Whatever he did, he’s been dead thirty years. Justice is done,
right?”
Reacher had stepped back to Allen’s casket. He was
staring down into it.
“Caution,” he said. “Whoever the gung ho lieutenant
was, his family was told he died a hero, fighting the enemy. If
they ever find out any different, it’s a scandal. And the
Department of the Army doesn’t like scandals.”
“Correct,” Newman said again.
“But where’s Hobie?” Reacher asked again.
“You’re still missing something. One step at a
time, OK?”
“But what is it?” Reacher asked. “Where is
it?”
“In the bones,” Newman said.
The clock on the laboratory wall showed
five-thirty. Not much more than an hour to go. Reacher took a
breath and walked back around the caskets in reverse order.
Gunston, Zabrinski, Allen, Soper, Bamford, Tardelli, Kaplan. Six
grinning skulls and one headless bony set of shoulders stared back
up at him. He did the round again. The clock ticked on. He stopped
next to each casket and gripped the cold aluminum sides and leaned
over and stared in, desperate to spot what he was missing. In the
bones. He started each search at the top. The skull, the neck, the
collarbones, the ribs, the arms, the pelvis, the legs, the feet. He
took to rummaging through the boxes, lightly, delicately sorting
the dry bones, looking for it. A quarter to six. Ten to six. Jodie
was watching him, anxiously. He did the round for the third time,
starting again with Gunston, the cop. He moved on to Zabrinski, the
other cop. On to Allen, the criminal. On to Soper, the gunner. On
to Bamford, the crew chief. He found it right there in Bamford’s
box. He closed his eyes. It was obvious. It was so obvious it was
like it was painted in Day-Glo paint and lit up with a searchlight.
He ran back around the other six boxes, counting, double-checking.
He was right. He had found it. Six o’clock in the evening in
Hawaii.
“There are seven bodies,” he said. “But there are
fifteen hands.”
SIX O’CLOCK IN the evening in Hawaii is eleven
o’clock at night in New York City, and Hobie was alone in his
apartment, thirty floors above Fifth Avenue, in the bedroom,
getting ready to go to sleep. Eleven o’clock was earlier than his
normal bedtime. Usually he would stay awake, reading a book or
watching a film on cable until one or two in the morning. But
tonight he was tired. It had been a fatiguing day. There had been a
certain amount of physical activity, and some mental strain.
He was sitting on the edge of his bed. It was a
king-size bed, although he slept alone, and always had. There was a
thick comforter in white. The walls were white and the blinds were
white. Not because he had wanted any kind of artistic consistency
in his decor, but because white things were always the cheapest.
Whatever you were dealing with, bed linen or paint or window
coverings, the white option was always priced lowest. There was no
art on the walls. No photographs, no ornaments, no souvenirs, no
hangings. The floor was plain oak strips. No rug.
His feet were planted squarely on the floor. His
shoes were black Oxfords, polished to a high shine, planted exactly
at right angles to the oak strips. He reached down with his good
hand and undid the laces, one at a time. Eased the shoes off, one
at a time. Pushed them together with his feet and picked them up
both together and squared them away under the bed. He slid his
thumb into the top of his socks, one at a time, and eased them off
his feet. Shook them out and dropped them on the floor. He
unknotted his tie. He always wore a tie. It was a source of great
pride to him that he could knot a tie with one hand.
He picked up the tie and stood and walked barefoot
to his closet. Slid the door open and worked the thin end of the
tie down behind the little brass bar where it hung at night. Then
he dropped his left shoulder and let his jacket slide off his arm.
Used the left hand to pull it off on the right. He reached into the
closet and came out with a hanger and slid the jacket onto it,
one-handed. He hung it up on the rail. Then he unbuttoned his pants
and dropped the zip. Stepped out of them and crouched and
straightened them on the shiny oak floor. No other way for a
one-armed man to fold trousers. He put the cuffs together one on
top of the other and trapped them under his foot and pulled the
legs straight. Then he stood up and took a second hanger from the
closet and bent down and flipped the bar under the cuffs and slid
it along the floor to the knees. Then he stood up again and shook
the hanger and the pants fell into perfect shape. He hung them
alongside the jacket.
He curled his left wrist around the starched
buttonholes and undid his shirt. He opened the right cuff. He
shrugged the shirt off his shoulders and used his left hand to pull
it down over his hook. Then he leaned sideways and let it fall down
his left arm. Trapped the tail under his foot and pulled his arm up
through the sleeve. The sleeve turned inside out as it always did
and his good hand squeezed through the cuff. The only modification
he had been forced to make in his entire wardrobe was to move the
cuff buttons on his shirts to allow them to pass over his left hand
while they were still done up.
He left the shirt on the floor and pulled at the
waistband of his boxers and wriggled them down over his hips.
Stepped out of them and grasped the hem of his undershirt. This was
the hardest part. He stretched the hem and ducked and whipped it up
over his head. Changed his grip to the neck and pulled it up over
his face. He pulled it down on the right and eased his hook out
through the armhole. Then he cracked his left arm like a whip until
the undershirt came off it and landed on the floor. He bent and
scooped it up with the shirt and the boxers and the socks and
carried them into the bathroom and dumped them all in the
basket.
He walked naked back to the bed and sat down again
on the edge. Reached across his chest with his left hand and
unbuckled the heavy leather straps around his right bicep. There
were three straps, and three buckles. He eased the leather corset
apart and squeezed it backward off his upper arm. It creaked in the
silence as it moved. The leather was thick and heavy, much thicker
and heavier than any shoe leather. It was built up in shaped
layers. It was brown and shiny with wear. Over the years it had
molded itself like steel to his shape. It crushed the muscle as he
eased it back. He fiddled the riveted straps clear of his elbow.
Then he took the cold curve of the hook in his left hand and pulled
gently. The cup sucked off the stump and he pulled it away. Clamped
it vertically between his knees, the hook pointing downward to the
floor and the cup facing upward. He leaned over to his nightstand
and took a wad of tissues from a box and a can of talc from a
drawer. He crushed the tissues in his left palm and pushed them
down into the cup, twisting the wad like a screw to wipe away the
sweat of the day. Then he shook the can of talc and powdered all
around the inside. He took more tissues and polished the leather
and the steel. Then he laid the whole assembly on the floor,
parallel with the bed.
He wore a thin sock on the stump of his right
forearm. It was there to stop the leather from chafing the skin. It
was not a specialist medical device. It was a child’s sock. Just
tubular, no heel, the sort of thing mothers choose before their
babies can walk. He bought them a dozen pairs at a time from
department stores. He always bought white ones. They were cheaper.
He eased the sock off the stump and shook it out and laid it next
to the box of tissues on the nightstand.
The stump itself was shriveled. There was some
muscle left, but with no work to do it had wasted away to nothing.
The bones were filed smooth on the cut ends, and the skin had been
sewn down tight over them. The skin was white, and the stitches
were red. They looked like Chinese writing. There was black hair
growing on the bottom of the stump, because the skin there had been
stretched down from the outside of his forearm.
He stood up again and walked to the bathroom. A
previous owner had installed a wall of mirror above the sink. He
looked at himself in it, and hated what he saw. His arm didn’t
bother him. It was just missing. It was his face he hated. The
burns. The arm was a wound, but the face was a disfigurement. He
turned half sideways so he didn’t have to look at it. He cleaned
his teeth and carried a bottle of lotion back to the bed. Squeezed
a drop onto the skin of the stump and worked it in with his
fingers. Then he placed the lotion next to the baby’s sock on the
nightstand and rolled under the covers and clicked the light
off.
“LEFT OR RIGHT?” Jodie asked. “Which did he
lose?”
Reacher was standing over Bamford’s bright casket,
sorting through bones.
“His right,” he said. “The extra hand is a right
hand.”
Newman moved across to Reacher’s shoulder and
leaned in and separated two splintered shards of bone, each one
about five inches in length.
“He lost more than his hand,” he said. “These are
the radius and the ulna from his right arm. It was severed below
the elbow, probably by a fragment of the rotor blade. There would
have been enough left to make a decent stump.”
Reacher picked up the bones and ran his fingers
across the splintered ends.
“I don’t understand, Nash,” he said. “Why didn’t
you search the area?”
“Why should we?” Newman said back, neutrally.
“Because why just assume he survived? He was
grievously injured. The impact, the severed arm? Maybe other
injuries, maybe internal? Massive blood loss at least? Maybe he was
burned, too. There was burning fuel everywhere. Think about it,
Nash. Probability is he crawled out from the wreck, bleeding from
his arteries, maybe on fire, he dragged himself twenty yards away
and collapsed in the undergrowth and died. Why the hell didn’t you
look for him?”
“Ask yourself the question,” Newman said. “Why
didn’t we look for him?”
Reacher stared at him. Nash Newman, one of the
smartest guys he had ever known. A man so picky and precise he
could take a fragment of skull an inch wide and tell you who it had
belonged to, how he had lived, how he had died. A man so
professional and meticulous he had run the longest-lasting and most
complicated forensic investigation ever known in history and had
received nothing but praise and plaudits all along the way. How
could Nash Newman have made such an elementary mistake? Reacher
stared at him, and then he breathed out and closed his eyes.
“Christ, Nash,” he said slowly. “You know he
survived, don’t you? You actually know it. You didn’t look
for him because you know it for sure.”
Newman nodded. “Correct.”
“But how do you know?”
Newman glanced around the lab. Lowered his
voice.
“Because he turned up afterward,” he said. “He
crawled into a field hospital fifty miles away and three weeks
later. It’s all in their medical files. He was racked with fever,
serious malnutrition, terrible burns to one side of his face, no
arm, maggots in the stump. He was incoherent most of the time, but
they identified him by his dog tags. Then he came around after
treatment and told the story, no other survivors but himself.
That’s why I said we knew exactly what we were going to find up
there. That’s why it was such a low priority, until Leon got all
agitated about it.”
“So what happened?” Jodie asked. “Why all the
secrecy?”
“The hospital was way north,” Newman said. “Charlie
was pushing south and we were retreating. The hospital was getting
ready for evacuation.”
“And?” Reacher asked.
“He disappeared the night before they were due to
move him to Saigon.”
“He disappeared?”
Newman nodded. “Just ran away. Got himself out of
his cot and lit out. Never been seen since.”
“Shit,” Reacher said.
“I still don’t understand the secrecy,” Jodie
said.
Newman shrugged. “Well, Reacher can explain it.
More his area than mine.”
Reacher still had hold of Hobie’s bones. The radius
and the ulna from his right arm, neatly socketed on the lower end
like nature intended, savagely smashed and splintered at the upper
end by a fragment of his own rotor blade. Hobie had studied the
leading edge of that blade and seen that it was capable of smashing
through tree limbs as thick as a man’s arm. He had used that
inspiration to save other men’s lives, over and over again. Then
that same blade had come folding and whirling down into his own
cockpit and taken his hand away.
“He was a deserter,” he said. “Technically, that’s
what he was. He was a serving soldier and he ran away. But a
decision was taken not to go after him. Had to be that way. Because
what could the Army do? If they caught him, what next? They would
be prosecuting a guy with an exemplary record, nine hundred
ninety-one combat missions, a guy who deserted after the trauma of
a horrendous injury and disfigurement. They couldn’t do that. The
war was unpopular. You can’t send a disfigured hero to Leavenworth
for deserting under those circumstances. But equally you can’t send
out the message that you’re letting deserters get away with it.
That would have been a scandal of a different sort. They were still
busting plenty of guys for deserting. The undeserving ones. They
couldn’t reveal they had different strokes for different folks. So
Hobie’s file was closed and sealed and classified secret. That’s
why the personnel record ends with the last mission. All the rest
of it is in a vault, somewhere in the Pentagon.”
Jodie nodded.
“And that’s why he’s not on the Wall,” she said.
“They know he’s still alive.”
Reacher was reluctant to put the arm bones down. He
held them, and ran his fingers up and down their length. The good
ends were smooth and perfect, ready to accept the subtle
articulation of the human wrist.
“Have you logged his medical records?” he asked
Newman. “His old X rays and dental charts and all that
stuff?”
Newman shook his head. “He’s not MIA. He survived
and deserted.”
Reacher turned back to Bamford’s casket and laid
the two yellow shards gently in one corner of the rough wooden box.
He shook his head. “I just can’t believe it, Nash. Everything about
this guy says he didn’t have a deserter’s mentality. His
background, his record, everything. I know about deserters. I
hunted plenty of them.”
“He deserted,” Newman said. “It’s a fact, it’s in
the files from the hospital.”
“He survived the crash,” Reacher said. “I guess I
can’t dispute that anymore. He was in the hospital. Can’t dispute
that, either. But suppose it wasn’t really desertion? Suppose he
was just confused, or groggy from the drugs or something? Suppose
he just wandered away and got lost?”
Newman shook his head. “He wasn’t confused.”
“But how do you know that? Loss of blood,
malnutrition, fever, morphine?”
“He deserted,” Newman said.
“It doesn’t add up,” Reacher said.
“War changes people,” Newman said.
“Not that much,” Reacher said back.
Newman stepped closer and lowered his voice
again.
“He killed an orderly,” he whispered. “The guy
spotted him on the way out and tried to stop him. It’s all in the
file. Hobie said ‘I’m not going back,’ and hit the guy in the head
with a bottle. Broke his skull. They put the guy in Hobie’s bed and
he didn’t survive the trip back to Saigon. That’s what the secrecy
is all about, Reacher. They didn’t just let him get away with
deserting. They let him get away with murder.”
There was total silence in the lab. The air hissed
and the loamy smell of the old bones drifted. Reacher laid his hand
on the shiny lip of Bamford’s casket, just to keep himself standing
upright.
“I don’t believe it,” he said.
“You should,” Newman said back. “Because it’s
true.”
“I can’t tell his folks that,” Reacher said. “I
just can’t. It would kill them.”
“Hell of a secret,” Jodie said. “They let him get
away with murder?”
“Politics,” Newman said. “The politics over there
stunk to high heaven. Still do, as a matter of fact.”
“Maybe he died later,” Reacher said. “Maybe he got
away into the jungle and died there later. He was still very sick,
right?”
“How would that help you?” Newman asked.
“I could tell his folks he was dead, you know,
gloss over the exact details.”
“You’re clutching at straws,” Newman said.
“We have to go,” Jodie said. “We need to make the
plane.”
“Would you run his medical records?” Reacher asked.
“If I got hold of them from his family? Would you do that for
me?”
There was a pause.
“I’ve already got them,” Newman said. “Leon brought
them with him. The family released them to him.”
“So will you run them?” Reacher asked.
“You’re clutching at straws,” Newman said
again.
Reacher turned around and pointed at the hundred
cardboard boxes stacked in the alcove at the end of the room. “He
could be already here, Nash.”
“He’s in New York,” Jodie said. “Don’t you see
that?”
“No, I want him to be dead,” Reacher said. “I can’t
go back to his folks and tell them their boy is a deserter and a
murderer and has been running around all this time without
contacting them. I need him to be dead.”
“But he isn’t,” Newman said.
“But he could be, right?” Reacher said. “He could
have died later. Back in the jungle, someplace else, maybe faraway,
on the run? Disease, malnutrition? Maybe his skeleton was found
already. Will you run his records? As a favor to me?”
“Reacher, we need to go now,” Jodie said.
“Will you run them?” Reacher asked again.
“I can’t,” Newman said. “Christ, this whole thing
is classified, don’t you understand that? I shouldn’t have told you
anything at all. And I can’t add another name to the MIA lists now.
The Department of the Army wouldn’t stand for it. We’re supposed to
be reducing the numbers here, not adding to them.”
“Can’t you do it unofficially? Privately? You can
do that, right? You run this place, Nash. Please? For me?”
Newman shook his head. “You’re clutching at straws,
is all.”
“Please, Nash,” Reacher said.
There was silence. Then Newman sighed.
“OK, damn it,” he said. “For you, I’ll do it, I
guess.”
“When?” Reacher asked.
Newman shrugged. “First thing tomorrow morning,
OK?”
“Call me as soon as you’ve done it?”
“Sure, but you’re wasting your time. Number?”
“Use the mobile,” Jodie said.
She recited the number. Newman wrote it on the cuff
of his lab coat.
“Thanks, Nash,” Reacher said. “I really appreciate
this.”
“Waste of time,” Newman said again.
“We need to go,” Jodie called.
Reacher nodded vaguely and they all moved toward
the plain door in the cinder-block wall. Lieutenant Simon was
waiting on the other side of it with the offer of a ride around the
perimeter road to the passenger terminals.