Bramall’s navigation screen showed their best route would be Laramie to Cheyenne on the highway, and then straight north on a state road, all the way. So they turned at Mule Crossing, off the dirt road, on to the two-lane, past the post office, past the fire-work store, past the bottle rocket billboard, and all the way up to the highway, where they turned east. Mackenzie looked anxious all the way. She had jumped off the same building as her sister. They had jumped hand in hand. They had committed to the same problems, one from the inside and one from the outside. Sanderson herself was sitting with her head turned, watching out her window. Her hands were clasped together. To keep them from shaking, Reacher thought. She was pushing herself hard. She was rationing. Maybe she had set a target. A hundred miles, maybe. Before the next quarter inch. Or five red trucks, or a rest area, or a hybrid car.
Reacher checked the guns. The Smith & Wesson 39, the Ruger .22, the Springfield P9, and the Colt .45. All four were scratched and battered. But they probably all worked. All were only part loaded. The Smith had four Parabellum rounds in it, and the Springfield had five. He liked the Smith better, so he put all nine rounds in it, eight in the mag and one in the chamber. He dumped the empty Springfield in the door cubby. He put the Smith in his coat pocket. The Ruger was an ancient thing, a Standard, maybe dating all the way back to 1949, when it was the company’s first product. It had just two rounds in it, .22 Long Rifle rimfires. Not Reacher’s favourite calibre, so he dumped it in the door cubby along with the empty Springfield. The Colt was a military M1911, and judging by the style of its engravings and markings it could have been even older than the Ruger. It had three rounds in it. He held it by the barrel and half turned in his seat and offered it to Sanderson.
She was sitting behind Bramall, at that moment turned towards him at an angle where he saw more of the left side of her face than the right. Amazing work, Bramall had said. A virtuoso performance. But actually pretty lousy. Reacher thought all three things were true. She was sewn together from pieces the size of a postage stamp on a regular first-class letter. He could only imagine the immense skill and care employed in the surgery. Hours and hours of precision work. Reattaching nerves and muscles. But some hadn’t taken. There were dead spots. And each postage-stamp piece was thickened and scarred at the edges, and lumpy with sutures. There had been some guesswork about what went where. Her nostril was stitched to her cheek at an odd angle. He couldn’t compare it to the other side, because of the foil.
She said no to the gun. Not in words, but by unclasping her hands and holding them up. He saw a faint tremor. Nothing terrible. But it was still early. He turned back and offered the gun to Bramall. Who had different problems. More rules than Reacher, and a licence from the state of Illinois. He thought for a moment, and then he took the gun, but he put it in the door cubby, not his coat pocket. Some kind of an ethical compromise.
Nakamura saw Scorpio go in his back door just as late morning turned into lunchtime. She was parked on the cross street, at just the right angle. Scorpio left the door open again. Just an inch. Another warm day. A cloudless sky, above the tangle of cables on their leaning poles. Power lines and phone wires. Some thick, some thin. Some old, some new. Some very new. Maybe fibre optics, for the internet.
She took out her phone and dialled her friend.
She said, ‘Look out for that signal again. Scorpio just went in his office.’
Her friend said, ‘It’s not an exact science.’
‘You got it right last time, about the new Billy. There was a DEA bulletin.’
‘I saw it.’
‘Plus another one, posted just afterwards, about prescription medication. Which is weird, because they already track that stuff. They log the trucks as they leave the factory, and they log their routes by GPS, and they match invoices to payments. So where’s the leakage?’
‘That’s your job. I’m just a humble tech.’
‘Which is why I call you all the time. So I don’t make a fool of myself.’
‘What’s the wild idea this time?’
‘The computer guys at the factory could erase a whole truck, right? They could just delete it completely. They could erase its inventory and its GPS track. Like the departure never existed. Like that particular truck was in the shop that day. Or parked in the lot.’
‘That suggests corruption among computer guys. I may not be the person to ask.’
‘Is it possible?’ she said.
‘They would have to erase the invoice too. Also the original order. They would have to amend the factory production records, otherwise it would look like they were making more pills than went out the door. If they did all that, then everything would balance. The unrecorded surplus would be a kind of ghost quantity, floating out there somewhere.’
‘Could they do all that?’ she said.
‘Of course they could,’ her friend said. ‘A computer does what it’s told. The result depends on who’s doing the telling.’
‘What about someone not in the factory? Could they do it by remote control?’
‘A hacker, you mean? Sure, if they breached security. Which would be tough, since we’re talking pharmaceuticals and the DEA. But not impossible. You can buy software from Russia.’
‘What kind of equipment would he need?’
‘In the end nothing more than a laptop. But getting there would involve a lot of high-speed number crunching. There would be a lot of stuff running at once. He would have a couple of racks at least. Like his own server.’
‘Hot, right?’
‘We use max AC down here.’
‘Thanks,’ she said.
She clicked off, and looked at the wires overhead, and Scorpio’s open door.
Bramall’s cell phone rang just north of a place named Defiant, which had a John Deere dealership and not much else. Bramall fumbled the phone up out of his pocket and checked the screen. He offered it to Reacher, the same way Reacher had offered him the Colt.
The screen said West Point Superintendent’s Office.
Reacher said, ‘How does it know?’
‘I programmed it,’ Bramall said. ‘When he called the first time.’
‘You can take the boy out of the FBI,’ Reacher said.
He answered the phone.
The same woman.
She said, ‘Major Reacher, please.’
‘Ma’am, this is Reacher.’
‘Please hold for General Simpson.’
The supe came on and said, ‘Major.’
Reacher said, ‘General.’
‘Progress report?’
‘We’re in the car.’
‘Can she hear what you’re saying?’
‘Loud and clear.’
‘Is she OK?’
‘So far.’
‘We’re still working on the roadside bomb. Those files are sealed up pretty tight. But we got something new on Porterfield. Through the Marine Corps side. They had a stray copy classified at a lower level.’
‘What did you get?’
‘There was an arrest warrant out on him. Sworn a week before he died.’
‘By who?’
‘Defense Intelligence Agency.’
‘Have you seen it?’
‘No point. The DIA never says why.’
‘Did it feel like a big deal?’
‘It was DIA. That’s always a big deal.’
‘Do you know anyone there?’
‘Forget it,’ Simpson said. ‘I want to retire in Florida, not Leavenworth.’
‘Understood,’ Reacher said. ‘Thank you, general.’
He clicked off and passed the phone back to Bramall. As he turned he saw Sanderson’s eyes on him, from under her hood. She knew something was up. He had asked, what did you get? She wasn’t dumb. She knew what was out there.
He said nothing.
She said, ‘Let’s talk later.’
Then she turned away to look out the window. Reacher faced front. Bramall drove on.
FORTY-TWO