“Plan?” Neagley asked.
“No plan,” Reacher said.
The phone directory that Dixon had captured was in O’Donnell’s room at the motel, but they didn’t want to go anywhere near Sunset Boulevard. Not at that point. So they pieced together half-remembered fragments of the manufacturing plant’s Highland Park address and headed in that direction.
They found Highland Park easily enough. It was a decent place full of streets and houses and business parks and small clean hi-tech manufacturing enterprises. It was harder to find New Age’s specific location. They weren’t expecting a billboard and didn’t get one. Instead they looked for unmarked buildings and serious fences and helipads. They found several. It was that kind of a neighborhood.
“Dixon called the helicopter a Bell 222,” Reacher said. “Could you recognize one of those if you saw one?”
“I’ve seen three in the last five minutes,” Neagley said.
“She said it was white.”
“Two in the last five minutes.”
“Where?”
“The second one was a mile back. Two lefts and a right. The first one was three places before that.”
“Both places with fences?”
“Check.”
“Outbuildings?”
“Both of them.”
Reacher braked and pulled an illegal U across the full width of the road and headed back the way they had come. He took two lefts and a right and slowed and Neagley pointed at a collection of gray metal buildings squatting behind a fence that would have looked right at home outside a supermax prison. It was at least eight feet tall and close to four feet thick, two faces of tight barbed wire with giant coils of razor wire heaped between them and huge concertinas of the same stuff piled on top. It was one hell of a barrier. There were four buildings behind it. One was a large shed and three were smaller constructions. There was a huge concrete rectangle with a long-nosed helicopter parked on it, white, still, and quiet.
“That’s a Bell 222?” Reacher asked.
“Unmistakable,” Neagley said.
“So is this the place?”
“Hard to say.”
Next to the helipad was an orange windsock on a tall pole. It was hanging limp in the warm dry air. There was a small parking lot full of thirteen cars. Nothing expensive. No blue Chryslers.
“What would assembly workers drive?” Reacher asked.
“Cars like those,” Neagley said.
Reacher drove on, past one place, past another. The third place in line was very similar to the first. A serious fence, four blank buildings with gray metal siding, a parking lot full of cheap cars, a helipad, a parked Bell 222, white. No names, no markings, no signs.
Reacher said, “We need the exact address.”
“We don’t have time. The Dunes is a long way from here.”
“But Pasadena isn’t.”
They made the short hop east on York Boulevard and the 110. Pulled up outside the inn in Pasadena fifteen minutes later. Five minutes after that they were in Margaret Berenson’s room. They told her what they needed. They didn’t tell her why. They wanted to preserve an illusion of competence, for her sake.
Berenson told them the first place they had seen was the place they wanted.
Fifteen minutes later they cruised past the first place again. The fence was appalling. Brutal. A main battle tank might have breached it. A car almost certainly wouldn’t. Not a Honda Prelude. Not even a big lump like the Chrysler. Not even a heavy truck. It was a question of the wire’s resilience. The outer strands would stretch like guitar strings before they broke, dissipating the force of impact, slowing the vehicle, robbing its momentum. Then the inner coils would compress. Like a sponge. Like a spring. The vehicle would tangle and slow and stall. No way through on wheels. And no way through on foot. An individual with a bolt cutter would bleed to death before he was a quarter of the way in. And there was no way over the top, either. The concertinas were too broad and too loosely coiled to allow scaling by ladder.
Reacher drove all the way around the block. The whole facility occupied a couple of acres. It was roughly square, about a hundred yards on a side. Four buildings, one large, three small. Dried brown grass and cinder footpaths between them. The fence was four hundred yards long in total and had no weak spots. And only one gate. It was a wide steel assembly that slid sideways on wheels. Welded to its top rail was more concertina wire. Flanking it was a guard hut.
“Pentagon requirement,” Neagley said. “Has to be.”
There was a guard in the hut. An old guy, gray hair. Gray uniform. A belt around his hips, a gun in the belt. A simple job. The right pass and the right paperwork, he would hit a button and the gate would roll back. No pass and no paperwork, he wouldn’t and it wouldn’t. There was a lightbulb above the guy’s head. It would be lit after dark. It would throw a soft yellow halo for twenty feet all around.
“No way through,” Reacher said.
“Are they even in there?”
“Must be. It’s like a private jail. Safer than stashing them anywhere else. And it’s where they put the others.”
“How did it go down?”
“Mauney arrested them in the hospital lot. Maybe he had help from Lamaison’s guys. Crowded place, total surprise, what were they going to do?”
Reacher drove on. The Prelude was an unremarkable car, but he didn’t want it to be seen too many times in the same place. He turned a corner and parked a quarter of a mile away. Didn’t speak. Because he had nothing to say.
Neagley’s phone rang again. Her personal cell. She answered. Listened. Clicked off. Closed her eyes.
“My Pentagon guy,” she said. “The missiles just rolled out the gate in Colorado.”
70
If Mahmoud has got the missiles, then this thing is bigger than we are. We have to suck it up and move on.
Reacher looked at Neagley. She opened her eyes and stared right back.
“How much do they weigh?” Reacher asked.
“Weigh?”
“As in weight. Pounds and ounces.”
“I don’t know. They’re new. I never saw one.”
“Guess.”
“Heavier than a Stinger. Because they do more. But still man-portable. Crated, with launch tubes and spare parts and manuals, say fifty pounds each.”
“That’s sixteen and a quarter tons.”
“A semi,” Neagley said.
“Average speed on the interstates, fifty miles an hour?”
“Probably.”
“North on I-25 to I-80, then west to Nevada, that’s about nine hundred miles. So we’ve got eighteen hours. Call it twenty-four, because the driver will take a rest period.”
“They’re not going to Nevada,” Neagley said. “Nevada is bullshit, because they’re going to use these things, not destroy them.”
“Wherever. Anywhere significant is eighteen hours from Denver.”
Neagley shook her head. “This is insane. We can’t wait twenty-four hours. Or eighteen. You said it yourself, there could be ten thousand KIAs.”
“But not yet.”
“We can’t wait,” Neagley said again. “Easier to stop the truck on the way out of Denver. It could be headed anywhere. It could be headed to New York. JFK, or LaGuardia. Or Chicago. You want to think about Little Wing deployed at O’Hare?”
“Not really.”
“Every minute we delay makes that truck harder to find.”
“Moral dilemma,” Reacher said. “Two people we know, or ten thousand we don’t.”
“We have to tell someone.”
Reacher said nothing.
“We have to, Reacher.”
“They might not listen. They didn’t listen about September eleventh.”
“You’re clutching at straws. They’ve changed. We have to tell someone.”
“We will,” Reacher said. “But not yet.”
“Karla and Dave will have a better chance with a couple of SWAT teams on their side.”
“You’re kidding. They’ll wind up as collateral damage in a heartbeat.”
Neagley said, “We can’t even get through the fence. Dixon will die, O’Donnell will die, ten thousand other people will die, and we’ll die.”
“You want to live forever?”
“I don’t want to die today. Do you?”
“I really don’t care one way or the other.”
“Seriously?”
“I never have. Why would I?”
“You
are
psychotic.”
“Look on the bright side.”
“Which is what?”
“Maybe none of the bad stuff will happen.”
“Why wouldn’t it?”
“Maybe we’ll win. You and me.”
“Here? Maybe. But later? Dream on. We have no idea where that truck is going.”
“We can find out later.”
“You think?”
“It’s what we’re good at.”
“Good enough to gamble ten thousand lives against two?”
“I hope so,” Reacher said.
He drove a mile south and parked again on a curving side street outside a custom Harley motorcycle shop. He could see New Age’s helicopter in the far distance.
He asked, “What is their security going to be like?”
“Normally?” Neagley said. “Motion detectors on the fence and big locks on all the doors and a guy in the sentry hut twenty-four hours a day. That’s all they need, normally. But today isn’t going to be normal. You can forget about that. They know we’re still out here. The whole of New Age security is going to be in there, locked and loaded.”
“Seven men.”
“Seven we know about. Maybe more.”
“Maybe.”
“And they’re going to be inside the fence. We’re going to be outside the fence.”
“Let me worry about the fence.”
“There’s no way through it.”
“Doesn’t need to be. There’s a gate. What time does it get full dark?”
“Say nine o’clock, to be safe.”
“They won’t fly before dark. We’ve got seven hours. Seven out of our twenty-four.”
“We never had twenty-four.”
“You elected me CO. We’ve got what I say we’ve got.”
“They could have shot them both already.”
“They didn’t shoot Franz or Orozco or Swan. They’re worried about ballistics.”
“This is insane.”
“I’m not going to lose another two,” Reacher said.
They drove around New Age’s block one more time, fast and unobtrusive, and fixed the geography in their minds. The gate was in the center of the front face of the square. The main building was front and center behind it at the end of a short driveway. In back of that the three outbuildings were scattered. One was close to the helipad. One was a little farther away. The last was standing on its own, maybe thirty yards from anything else. All four buildings were set on concrete pads. They had gray galvanized siding. No signs, no labels. It was a severe, practical establishment. There were no trees. No landscaping. Just uneven brown grass and hard dirt paths and a parking lot.
“Where are the Chryslers?” Reacher asked.
“Out,” Neagley said. “Looking for us.”
They headed back to the hospital in Glendale. Neagley collected her car from the lot. They stopped in at a supermarket. Bought a pack of wooden kitchen matches. And two cases of Evian water. Twelve one-liter bottles, nested together in packs of six and shrink-wrapped in plastic. They stopped again down the street at an auto parts store. Bought a red plastic five-gallon gasoline can and a bag of polishing rags.
Then they stopped at a gas station and filled the cars and the can.
They headed southwest out of Glendale and ended up in Silver Lake. Reacher called Neagley on the phone and said, “We should drop by the motel now.”
Neagley said, “They might still have surveillance going.”
“Which is exactly why we should drop by. If we can take one of them out now, that’s one less to worry about later.”