Die Trying (39 page)

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Authors: Lee Child

BOOK: Die Trying
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“Stand up,” Ray said.
Give a grunt a task, and what's the thing he's most afraid of? Getting chewed out by an officer for failing to do it, that's what.
“Stand up, damn it,” Ray said.
So either he doesn't fail, or if he does, he conceals it. No grunt in the history of the world has ever just gone to his officer and said: I couldn't do it, sir.
“I'm telling you to stand up, Reacher,” Ray said quietly.
If he fails, he keeps it a big secret. Much better that way.
“You want me to stand up?” Reacher asked.
“Yeah, stand up,” Ray said.
Reacher shook his head.
“You're going to have to make me, Joe,” he said.
Ray was thinking about it. It was a reasonably slow thought process. Its progress was visible in his body language. First, the Glock came up. Then it went back down. Shooting at the prisoner was its own admission of failure. It was the same thing as saying: I couldn't make him do it, sir. Then he glanced at his hands. Glanced across at Reacher. Glanced away. Unarmed combat was rejected. He stood there, in a fog of indecision.
“Where did you serve?” Reacher asked him.
Ray shrugged.
“Here and there,” he said.
“Like where and where?” Reacher asked.
“I was in Germany twice,” Ray said. “And I was in Desert Storm.”
“Driver?” Reacher asked.
“Loader,” Ray answered.
Reacher nodded.
“You boys did a good job,” he said. “I was in Desert Storm. I saw what you boys did.”
Ray nodded. He took the opening, like Reacher knew he would. If you can't let them beat you, you let them join you. Ray moved casually to his left and sat down on the floor, back against the door, Glock resting against his thigh. He nodded again.
“We whupped them,” he said.
“You sure did,” Reacher said. “You whupped them real good. So, Germany and the desert. You liked it there?”
“Not much,” Ray said.
“You liked their systems?” Reacher asked.
“What systems?” Ray asked back.
“Their governments,” Reacher said. “Their laws, their liberties, all that stuff.”
Ray looked mystified.
“Never noticed,” he said. “Never paid any attention.”
“So how do you know they're better than ours?” Reacher asked.
“Who says they're better?” Ray said.
“You do,” Reacher said. “Last night you were telling me how bad it is here in America. Got to be better everywhere else, right?”
Ray shook his head.
“I never told you that,” he said.
“So is it or isn't it?” Reacher asked.
“I don't know,” Ray said. “Probably. Lot of things wrong with America.”
Reacher nodded.
“Lot of things,” he said. “I agree with you. But I'll tell you something. It's better in America than everyplace else. I know, because I've been everyplace else. Everyplace else is worse. A lot worse. Lot of things wrong in America, but plenty more things wrong everyplace else. You guys should think about that.”
Ray looked across through the gloom.
“You think we're wrong?” he asked.
Reacher nodded.
“I know you're wrong,” he said. “For certain. All that stuff you were telling me is bullshit. All of it. It's not happening.”
“It is happening,” Ray said. “Beau says so.”
“Think about it, Joe,” Reacher said. “You were in the service. You saw how it all operated. You think those guys could organize all that stuff and keep it a secret? They ever even give you a pair of boots the right size?”
Ray laughed.
“Not hardly,” he said.
“Right,” Reacher said. “So if they can't organize your damn boots, how can they organize all this other stuff Beau is talking about? What about these transmitters hidden in all the new cars? You think Detroit can do all that stuff? They'd be recalling them all because they didn't work right. You a gambling man, Joe?”
“Why?” he asked.
“What are the odds?” Reacher said. “Against they could organize a huge massive conspiracy like that and keep it all a secret for years and years?”
A slow smile spread across Ray's face and Reacher saw that he was losing. Like talking to the wall. Like teaching a chimpanzee to read.
“But they haven't kept it a secret,” Ray said triumphantly. “We found out about it. I told you, Beau's got the proof. He's got the documents. It's not a secret at all. That's why we're here. Beau's right, no doubt about it. He's a smart guy.”
Reacher closed his eyes and sighed.
“You better hope so,” he said. “He's going to need to be.”
“He's a smart guy,” Ray said again. “And he's got staying power. He's putting us all together. There were a dozen groups up here. Their leaders quit and left. All their people came and joined Beau, because they trust him. He's a smart guy, Reacher, and he's our only hope left. You won't change anybody's mind about him. You can forget about that. Far as we're concerned, we love him, and we trust him to do right.”
“What about Jackson?” Reacher asked. “You think he did right about that?”
Ray shrugged.
“Jackson was a spy,” he said. “Shit like that happens. Beau's studied the history. It happened in 1776, right? Redcoats had spies all over. We hanged them then, just the same. Plenty of old ladies back east got old oak trees in their front yards, famous for being where they strung up the redcoat spies. Some of them charge you a buck and a half just to take a look at them. I know, I went there once.”
“What time is lights-out here?” Reacher asked.
“Ten o'clock,” Ray said. “Why?”
Reacher paused. Stared at him. Thought back over their conversation. Gazed at his lean, mobile face. Looked into his crazy eyes, burning deep under his brow.
“I got to be someplace else after lights-out,” Reacher said.
Ray laughed again.
“And you think I'm going to let you?” he said.
Reacher nodded.
“If you want to live,” he said.
Ray lifted the pistol off his thigh and pointed it one-handed at Reacher's head.
“I'm the one got the gun here,” he said.
“You wouldn't live to pull the trigger,” Reacher said.
“Trigger's right here,” Ray said. “You're all the way over there.”
Reacher waved him a listen-up gesture. Leaned forward and spoke quietly.
“I'm not really supposed to tell you this,” he said. “But we were warned we'd meet a few guys smarter than the average, and we're authorized to explain a couple of things to them, if the operational circumstances make it advisable.”
“What circumstances?” Ray asked. “What things?”
“You were right,” Reacher said. “Most of the things you've said are correct. A couple of inaccuracies, but we spread a little disinformation here and there.”
“What are you talking about?” Ray asked.
Reacher lowered his voice to a whisper.
“I'm World Army,” he said. “Commander of the advance party. I've got five thousand UN troops in the forest. Russians, mostly, a few Chinese. We've been watching you on the satellite surveillance. Right now, we've got an X-ray camera on this hut. There's a laser beam pointed at your head. Part of the SDI technology.”
“You're kidding,” Ray said.
Reacher shook his head. Deadly serious.
“You were right about the microchips,” he said. “Look at this.”
He stood up slowly and pulled his shirt up to his chest. Turned slightly so Ray could see the huge scar on his stomach.
“Bigger than the modern ones,” he said. “The latest ones go in with no mess at all. The ones we put in the babies? But these old ones work just the same. The satellites know where I am at all times, like you said. You start to pull that trigger, the laser blows your head off.”
Ray's eyes were burning. He looked away from Reacher's scar and glanced nervously up at the roof.
“Suis pas américain,”
Reacher said.
“Suis soldat français, agent du gouvernement mondial depuis plusieurs années, parti en mission clandestine il y a deux mois. Il faut évaluer l'élément de risque que votre bande représente par ici.”
He spoke as fast as he could and ended up sounding exactly like an educated Parisian woman. Exactly like he recalled his dead mother sounding. Ray nodded slowly.
“You foreign?” he asked.
“French,” Reacher said. “We operate international brigades. I said I'm here to check out the degree of risk you people represent to us.”
“I saw you shooting,” Reacher said. “I spotted it. A thousand yards.”
“Guided by satellite,” Reacher said. “I told you, SDI technology, through the microchip. We can all shoot two miles, perfect score every time.”
“Christ,” Ray said.
“I need to be out in the open at ten o'clock,” Reacher said. “It's a safety procedure. You got a wife here?”
Ray nodded.
“What about kids?” Reacher asked. “Any of these kids yours?”
Ray nodded again.
“Sure,” he said. “Two boys.”
“If I'm not out by ten, they all die,” Reacher said. “If I get taken prisoner, the whole place gets incinerated. Can't afford for my microchip to get captured. I told them you guys wouldn't understand how it works, but my chief said some of you could be smarter than I thought. Looks like my chief was right.”
Ray nodded proudly and Reacher checked his watch.
“It's seven-thirty, right?” he said. “I'm going to sleep two and a half hours. The satellite will wake me at ten exactly. You wait and see.”
He lay back down on the floor and curled his arm under his head. Set the alarm in his head for two minutes to ten. Said to himself: don't let it fail me tonight.
35
“I REFUSE TO believe it,” General Garber said.
“He's involved,” Webster said in reply. “That's for damn sure. We got the pictures, clear as day.”
Garber shook his head.
“I was promoted lieutenant forty years ago,” he said. “Now I'm a three-star general. I've commanded thousands of men. Tens of thousands. Got to know most of them well. And out of all of them, Jack Reacher is the single least likely man to be involved in a thing like this.”
Garber was sitting ramrod-straight at the table in the mobile command post. He had shed his khaki raincoat to reveal an old creased uniform jacket. It was a jacket which bore the accumulated prizes of a lifetime of service. It was studded with badges and ribbons. It was the jacket of a man who had served forty years without ever making a single mistake.
Johnson was watching him carefully. Garber's grizzled old head was still. His eyes were calm. His hands were laid comfortably on the table. His voice was firm, but quiet. Definite, like he was being asked to defend the proposition that the sky was blue and the grass was green.
“Show the General the pictures, Mack,” Webster said.
McGrath nodded and opened his envelope. Slid the four stills over the table to Garber. Garber held each one up in turn, tilted to catch the green light from the overhead. Johnson was watching his eyes. He was waiting for the flicker of doubt, then the flicker of resignation. He saw neither.
“These are open to interpretation,” Garber said.
His voice was still calm. Johnson heard an officer loyally defending a favored subordinate. Webster and McGrath heard a policeman of sorts expressing a doubt. They figured forty years' service had bought the guy the right to be heard.
“Interpretation how?” Webster asked.
“Four isolated moments out of a sequence,” Garber said. “They could be telling us the wrong story.”
Webster leaned over and pointed at the first still.
“He's grabbing her stuff,” he said. “Plain as day, General.”
Garber shook his head. There was silence. Just electronic hum throughout the vehicle. Johnson saw a flicker of doubt. But it was in McGrath's eyes, not Garber's. Then Brogan rattled his way up the ladder. Ducked his head into the truck.
“Surveillance tapes, chief,” he said. “We've been reviewing the stuff the planes got earlier. You should come see it.”
He ducked out again and the four men glanced at each other and got up. Walked the short distance through the cold evening to the satellite truck and up the ladder. Milosevic was in shirtsleeves, bathed in the blue light from a bank of video screens. He shuttled a tape back and pressed play. Four screens lit up with a perfect clear overhead view of a tiny town. The quality of the picture was magnificent. Like a perfect movie picture, except filmed vertically downward, not horizontal.
“Yorke,” Milosevic said. “The old courthouse, bottom right. Now watch.”
He hit fast wind and watched the counter. Slowed the tape and hit play again.
“This is a mile and a quarter away,” he said. “The camera tracked northwest. There's a parade ground, and this rifle range.”
The camera had zoomed out for a wide view of the area. There were two clearings with huts to the south, and a flat parade ground to the north. In between was a long narrow scar in the undergrowth, maybe a half-mile long and twenty yards wide. The camera zoomed right out for a moment, to establish the scale, then it tightened in on a crowd at the eastern end of the range. Then it tightened further to a small knot of people standing on some brown matting. There were four men clearly visible. And one woman. General Johnson gasped and stared at his daughter.

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