Die Trying by Lee Child

stop. Hurl himself across the wild river and get the hell out. Seventy

yards. He stopped.

“Stay here, Holly,” he said again. “Please.”

“Why?” she asked.

“You don’t need to see this,” he said, miserably.

She shook her head again and walked on. He caught her up. They

smelled it long before they saw it. Faint, sweet, unforgettable. One

of the most common and one of the most terrible smells in mankind’s

long and awful history. The smell of fresh human blood. Twenty paces

after they smelled it, they heard it. The insane buzzing of a million

flies.

Jackson was crucified between two young pines. His hands had been

dragged apart and nailed to the trees through the palms and wrists. He

had been forced up onto his toes and his feet had been nailed flat

against the base of the trunks. He was naked and he had been

mutilated. He had taken several minutes to die. Reacher was clear on

that.

He was immobile, staring at the crawling mass of blue shiny flies.

Holly had dropped her crutch and her face was white. Ghastly staring

white. She fell to her knees and retched. Spun herself away from the

dreadful sight and fell forward on her face. Her hands clawed blindly

in the forest dirt. She bucked and screamed into the buzzing forest

silence. Screamed and cried.

Reacher watched the flies. His eyes were expressionless. His face was

impassive. Just a tiny muscle jumping at the corner of his jaw gave

anything away. He stood still for several minutes. Holly went silent,

on the forest floor beside him. He dropped the crowbar. Slung his

jacket over a low branch. Stepped over directly in front of the body

and started digging.

He dug with a quiet fury. He smashed the shovel into the earth as hard

as he could. He chopped through tree roots with single savage blows.

When he hit rocks, he heaved them out and hurled them into a pile.

Holly sat up and watched him. She watched the blazing eyes in his

impassive face and the bulging muscles in his arms. She followed the

relentless rhythm of the shovel. She said nothing.

The work was making him hot. The flies were checking him out. They

left Jackson’s body and buzzed around his head. He ignored them. Just

strained and gasped his way six feet down into the earth. Then he

propped the shovel against a tree. Wiped his face on his sleeve.

Didn’t speak. Took the crowbar and stepped close to the corpse. Batted

away the flies. Levered the nails out of the left hand. Jackson’s body

flopped sideways. The left arm pointed grotesquely down into the pit.

The flies rose in an angry cloud. Reacher walked around to the right

hand. Pried the nails out. The body flopped forward into the hole.

He extracted the nails from the feet. The body tumbled free into the

grave. The air was dark with flies and loud with their sound. Reacher

slid down into the hole and straightened the corpse out. Crossed the

arms over the chest.

He climbed back out. Without pausing he picked up the shovel and

started filling the hole. He worked relentlessly. The flies

disappeared. He worked on. There was too much dirt. It mounded up

high when he had finished, like graves always do. He pounded the mound

into a neat shape and dropped the shovel. Bent and picked up the rocks

he’d cleared. Used them to shore up the sides of the mound. Placed

the biggest one on top, like some kind of a headstone.

Then he stood there, panting like a wild man, streaked with dirt and

sweat. Holly watched him. Then she spoke for the first time in an

hour.

“Should we say a prayer?” she asked.

Reacher shook his head.

“Way too late for that,” he said quietly.

“You OK?” she asked.

“Who’s the mole?” he asked in turn.

“I don’t know,” she said.

“Well, think about it, will you?” he said, angrily.

She glared up at him.

“Don’t you think I have been?” she said. “What the hell else do you

think I was doing for the last hour?”

“So who the hell is it?” he asked. Still angry.

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