Die Trying by Lee Child

technicians were swarming all over the third-floor conference room

again, hooking up a standard VHS player to the bank of monitors piled

down the middle of the long table. There was a problem with a fuse,

and then the right wire proved too short, so a computer had to be moved

to allow the video player to get nearer to the center of the table.

Then the head tech handed McGrath the remote and nodded.

“All yours, chief,” he said.

McGrath sent him out of the room and the three agents crowded around

the screens, waiting for the picture to roll. The screens faced the

wall of windows, so they all three had their backs to the glass. But

at that time of day, there was no danger of anybody getting

uncomfortable because right then the bright morning sun was blasting

the other side of the building.

That same sun rolled on seventeen hundred and two miles from Chicago

and made it bright morning outside the white building. He knew it had

come. He could hear the quiet ticking as the old wood frame warmed

through. He could hear muffled voices outside, below him, down at

street level. The sound of people starting a new day.

His fingernails were gone. He had found a gap where two boards were

not hard together. He had forced his fingertips down and levered with

all his strength. His nails had torn off, one after the other. The

board had not moved. He had scuttled backward into a corner and curled

up on the floor. He had sucked his bloodied fingers and now his mouth

was smeared all around with blood, like a child’s with cake.

He heard footsteps on the staircase. A big man, moving lightly. The

sound halted outside the door. The lock clicked back. The door

opened. The employer looked in at him. Bloated face, two nickel-sized

red spots burning high on his cheeks.

“You’re still here,” he said.

The carpenter was paralyzed. Couldn’t move, couldn’t speak.

“You failed,” the employer said.

There was silence in the room. The only sound was the slow ticking of

the wood frame as the morning sun slid over the roof.

“So what shall we do now?” the employer asked.

The carpenter just stared blankly at him. Didn’t move. Then the

employer smiled a relaxed, friendly smile. Like he was suddenly

surprised about something.

“You think I meant it?” he said, gently.

The carpenter blinked. Shook his head, slightly, hopefully.

“You hear anything?” the employer asked him.

The carpenter listened hard. He could hear the quiet ticking of the

wood, the song of the forest birds, the silent sound of sunny morning

air.

“You were just kidding around?” he asked.

His voice was a dry croak. Relief and hope and dread were jamming his

tongue into the roof of his mouth.

“Listen,” the employer said.

The carpenter listened. The frame ticked, the birds sang, the warm air

sighed. He heard nothing else. Silence. Then he heard a click. Then

he heard a whine. It started slow and quiet and stabilized up at a

familiar loud pitch. It was a sound he knew. It was the sound of a

big power saw being run up to speed.

“Now do you think I meant it?” the employer screamed.

ELEVEN

HOLLY JOHNSON HAD BEEN MILDLY DISAPPOINTED BY REACHER’S assessment of

the cash value of her wardrobe. Readier had said he figured she had

maybe fifteen or twenty outfits, four hundred bucks an outfit, maybe

eight grand in total. Truth was she had thirty-four business suits in

her closet. She’d worked three years on Wall Street. She had eight

grand tied up in the shoes alone. Four hundred bucks was what she had

spent on a blouse, and that was when she felt driven by native common

sense to be a little economical.

She liked Armani. She had thirteen of his spring suits. Spring

clothes from Milan were just about right for most of the Chicago

summer. Maybe in the really fierce heat of August she’d break out her

Moschino shifts, but June and July, September too if she was lucky, her

Armanis were the thing. Her favorites were the dark-peach shades she’d

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