Child, Lee – Without Fail

The truck slipped and slid and skidded in the Tahoe’s impacted

ruts. He bounced over hidden rocks. He touched the brake. The

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truck lurched and drifted sideways and stopped with the front

wheels down in a snow-filled trench. Neagley fought her way

through the drifts and pulled the door. Icy air followed her

inside.

‘Hit it,’ she said. She was panting again. ‘They must be at

least five minutes ahead of us by now.’

He touched the gas. All four wheels spun uselessly. The

truck stayed motionless and all four tyres whined in the snow

and the front end dug in deeper.

‘Shit,’ he said.

He tried again. Same result. The truck shuddered and rocked

and didn’t go anywhere. He switched the transmission out of

locked-low-range and tried again. Same result. He let the engine

idle and put the transmission in reverse, then drive, then

reverse, then drive. The truck rocked urgently back and forth,

back and forth, six inches, a foot. But it didn’t climb out of the

trench.

Neagley glanced at her watch. Fhey’re out there ahead of us.

They could get back there in time.’

Reacher nodded and touched the gas and kept on banging

the transmission lever into reverse, into drive, into reverse. The

truck bucked and bounced. But it didn’t climb out of the trench.

The tyre treads howled on the glassy snow. The front end

dodged left and right with the engine torque and the rear

end squirmed with it.

‘Armstrong’s in the air now,’ Neagley said. ‘And our car isn’t

parked next to the church any more. So he’s going to go ahead

and land.’

Reacher looked at his own watch. Fought his rising panic.

‘You do it,’ he said. ‘Keep it rocking back and forward.’

He twisted round and grabbed his gloves. Unclipped his belt

and opened his door and slid out into the snow.

‘And if it goes, don’t stop for anything,’ he said.

He floundered round to the rear of .the truck. Stamped and

kicked at the snow until he got his feet braced against rock.

Neagley slid across into the driver’s seat. She built up a rhythm,

drive and reverse, drive and reverse, little taps on the gas as the

gears slid home. The truck rocked on its springs and began to

roll back and forth along a foot and a half of impacted ice.

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Reacher put his back against the tailgate and hooked his hands

under the rear bumper. Moved with the truck as it pushed back

at him. Straightened his legs and heaved as it moved away. The

tyre treads were full of snow. They flung little white hieroglyphs

into the air as they spun. The exhaust fumes burbled out near

his knees and hung in the air. He stumbled forward and pushed

backward, again, and again. Now the truck was moving two feet

at a time. He clamped his hands harder. Snow was blowing

straight out of the west into his face. He started counting. One,

two.., three. One, two.., three. He started walking the truck

backward and heaving it forward. Now it was moving three feet with each change of direction. He stamped a chain of footholds. One, two . . . three. On the last three he shoved with all his

strength. He felt the truck climb up out of the trench. Felt it fall

back in again. The tailgate butted him hard in the back. He

stumbled forward and floundered for grip. Rebuilt his rhythm.

He was sweating in the cold. He was out of breath. One, two…

three. He heaved again and the truck disappeared out from

behind him and he fell backward into the snow.

He rolled up through the stink of gasoline exhaust. The truck

was twenty yards ahead. Neagley was driving it as slow as she

dared. He slipped and slid and chased after it. He swerved right

to get in its wheel track. The ground rose: Neagley gunned it to

maintain her momentum. He was running hard but she was

driving away from him. He sprinted. He smashed the toes of his

boots into the snow to keep from slipping. She slowed at the top

of the rise. The truck went up and over. He saw the whole

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