Child, Lee – Without Fail

in on three sides by high brick walls. It was impossible to

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decipher the building’s original purpose. Maybe it had been a

stable, back when Union Station’s freight had been hauled away

by horses. Maybe later it was updated with new windows and

used as a trucking depot after the horses faded away. Maybe it

had served time as an office. It was impossible to tell.

It housed fifty homeless people every night. They were

woken early every morning and given breakfast and turned out

on the streets. Then the fifty cots were stacked and stored and

the floor was washed and the air was misted with disinfectant.

Metal tables and chairs were carried in and placed where the

beds had been. Lunch was available every day, and dinner, and

then the reverse conversion to a dormitory took place at nine

every evening.

But this day was different. Thanksgiving Day was always

different, and this year it was more different than usual. Wake

up call happened a little earlier and breakfast was served a little

faster. The overnighters were shown the door a full half-hour

before normal, which was a double blow to them because cities

are notoriously quiet on Thanksgiving Day and panhandling

receipts are dismal. The floor was washed more thoroughly

than usual and more disinfectant was sprayed into the air. The

tables were positioned more exactly, the chairs were lined up

more precisely, more volunteers were on. hand, and all of them

were wearing fresh white sweatshirts with the benefactor’s

name brightly printed in red.

The first Secret Service agents to arrive were the line-of-sight

team. They had a large-scale city surveyor’s map and a telescopic

sight removed from a sniper rifle. One agent walked

through every step that Armstrong was scheduled to take.

Every separate pace he would stop and turn round and squint

through the scope and call out every window and every rooftop

he could see. Because if he could see a rooftop or a window, a

potential marksman on that rooftop or in that window could

see him. The agent with the map would identify the building

concerned and check the scale and calculate the range. Anything under seven hundred feet he marked in black.

But it was a good location. The only available sniper nests

were on the roofs of the abandoned five-storey warehouses

opposite. The guy with the map finished up with a straight line

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of just five black crosses, nothing more. He wrote checked with

scope, clear daylight, 0845 hrs, all suspect locations recorded across the bottom of the map and signed his name and added

the date. The agent with the scope countersigned and the map

was rolled and stored in the back of a department Suburban,

awaiting Froelich’s arrival.

Next on scene was a convoy of police vans with five separate

canine units in them. One unit cleared the shelter. Two more

entered the warehouses. The last two were explosives hunters

who checked the surrounding streets in all directions on a four

hundred-yard radius. Beyond four hundred yards, the maze of

streets meant there were too many potential access routes to

check, and therefore too many to bomb with any realistic

chance of success. As soon as a building or a street was

pronounced safe a D.C. patrolman took up station on foot. The

sky was still clear and the sun was still out. It gave an illusion of

warmth. It kept grousing to a minimum.

By nine thirty the shelter was the epicentre of a quarter of a

square mile of secure territory. D.C. cops held the perimeter on

foot and in cars and there were better than fifty more loose in

the interior. They made up the majority of the local population.

The city was still quiet. Some of the shelter inhabitants were

hanging around. There was nowhere productive to go, and they

knew from experience that to be early in the lunch line was

better than late. Politicians didn’t understand portion control,

and pickings could be getting slim after the first thirty minutes.

Froelich arrived at ten o’clock exactly, driving a Suburban

with Reacher and Neagley riding with her. Stuyvesant was right

behind in a second Suburban. Behind him were four more

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