Child, Lee – Without Fail

that the built-in suppressor created. And because of the low

power and the suppressor’s complex exhaust gas management

scheme there was very little recoil. Almost none at all. Just the

gentlest little kick imaginable. It was a fine rifle. With a good

scope like the Hensoldt it was a guaranteed killer at any range

up to two hundred yards. And the man with his eye to the scope

was only a hundred and twenty-six yards from Armstrong’s

back gate. He knew that for an exact fact, because he had just

checked the distance with a laser range finder. He was exposed

to the weather, but he was adequately prepared. He knew how

to do this. He was wearing a dark green down coat and a black

hat made of synthetic fleece. He had gloves made from the

same material, with the right-hand fingertips cut off for control.

He was lying down out of the wind, which kept his eyes clear of

tears. He anticipated absolutely no problems at all.

The way a man goes through a gate works like this: he stops

walking momentarily. He stands still. He has to, whichever way

the gate hinges. If it hinges towards him, he reaches out for the

latch and flips it open and pulls the gate and kind of stands on

tiptoe and arches his legs so the gate can swing past them. If it

hinges away from him, he stands still while he finds the latch

and pushes it open. That’s faster, but there’s still a moment

where there’s no real forward motion at all. And this particular

gate opened towards the house. That fact was clearly visible

through the Hensoldt. There was going to be a two-second

window of perfect opportunity.

Armstrong reached the gate. Stopped walking. One hundred

and twenty-six yards away the man with his eye to the scope

nudged the rifle a fraction left until the target was exactly

centred. Held his breath. Eased his finger back. Took up the

slack in the trigger. Then he squeezed it all the way. The rifle

coughed loudly and kicked gently. The bullet took a hair over

four-tenths of a secom[ to travel the hundred and twenty-six

yards. It hit Armstrong with a wet thump high on the forehead. It penetrated his skull and followed a downward angle through

his frontal lobe, through his central ventricles, through his

cerebellum. It shattered his first vertebra and exited at the base

of his neck through soft tissue near the top of his spinal cord. It

162

flew on and struck the ground eleven feet farther back and

buried itself deep in the earth.

Armstrong was clinically dead before he hit the ground. The

bullet’s path caused massive brain trauma and its kinetic

energy pulsed outward through brain tissue and was reflected

back by the inside of the skull bones like a big wave in a small

swimming pool. The resulting damage was catastrophic. All

brain function ceased before gravity dropped the body.

One hundred and twenty-six yards away the man with his eye

to the scope lay perfectly still for a second.Then he cradled the

rifle flat against his torso and rolled away until it was safe to

stand. He racked the rifle’s bolt and caught the hot shell case in

his gloved hand and dropped it into his pocket. Moved backward

into cover and then walked away, completely shielded

from view.

Neagley was uncharacteristically quiet in the car. Maybe she

was worried about the day ahead. Maybe she could sense the

altered chemistry. Reacher didn’t know, and either way he

wasn’t in a hurry to find out. He just sat quiet while Froelich

battled the traffic. She looped northwest and used the Whitney

Young bridge across the river and drove past the RFK football

stadium. Then she took Massachusetts Avenue and stayed

away from the congestion around the government part of town.

But Mass Ave was slow itself, and it was nearly nine o’clock

before they arrived in Armstrong’s Georgetown street. She

parked behind another Suburban near the mouth of the tent. An

agent stepped off the sidewalk and rounded the hood to talk to

her.

Fhe Spock just got here,’ he said. Fhey’ll be into Spying 101

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