Gone Tomorrow - Lee Child [155]
“You didn’t. We brought you straight here.”
“We?”
“Me and Mr. Springfield.”
“How did you find me?”
“We triangulated the cell phone. Which led us to the general area. The exact address was Mr. Springfield’s idea.”
Springfield said, “A certain mujahideen leader told us all about doubling back to abandoned hideouts twenty-five years ago.”
I asked, “Is there going to be any comeback?”
John Sansom said, “No.”
Simple as that.
I said, “Are you sure? There are nine corpses in that house.”
“The DoD guys are there right now. They’ll issue a loud no comment. With a knowing smirk. Designed to make everyone give them the credit.”
“Suppose the wind changes direction? That happens from time to time. As you know.”
“As a crime scene, it’s a mess.”
“I left blood there.”
“There’s a lot of blood there. It’s an old building. If anyone runs tests they’ll come up with rat DNA, mostly.”
“There’s blood on my clothes.”
Theresa Lee said, “The hospital burned your clothes.”
“Why?”
“Biohazard.”
“They were brand-new.”
“They were soaked with blood. No one takes a risk with blood anymore.”
“Right-hand fingerprints,” I said. “Inside the window handles and on the trapdoor.”
“Old building,” Sansom said. “It will be torn down and redeveloped before the wind changes.”
“Shell cases,” I said.
Springfield said, “Standard DoD issue. I’m sure they’re delighted. They’ll probably leak one to the media.”
“Are they still looking for me?”
“They can’t. It would confuse the narrative.”
“Turf wars,” I said.
“Which they just won, apparently.”
I nodded.
Sansom asked, “Where is the memory stick?”
I looked at Jacob Mark. “You OK?”
He said, “Not really.”
I said, “You’re going to have to hear some stuff.”
He said, “OK.”
I hauled myself into a sitting position. Didn’t hurt at all. I guessed I was full of painkiller. I pulled my knees up and tented the sheet and moved the hem of my paper gown and took a peek at the cut. Couldn’t see it. I was wrapped with bandages from my hips to my ribcage.
Sansom said, “You told us you could get us within fifteen feet.”
I shook my head. “Not anymore. Time has moved on. We’re going to have to do it by dead reckoning.”
“Great. You were bullshitting all along. You don’t know where it is.”
“We know the general shape of it,” I said. “They planned for the best part of three months and then executed during the final week. They coerced Susan by using Peter as leverage. She drove up from Annandale, got stuck in a four-hour traffic jam, say from nine in the evening until one in the morning, and then she arrived in Manhattan just before two in the morning. I assume we know exactly when she came out of the Holland Tunnel. So what we have to do is work backward and figure out exactly where her car was jammed up at midnight.”
“How does that help us?”
“Because at midnight she threw the memory stick out her car window.”
“How can you possibly know that?”
“Because when she arrived she didn’t have a cell phone with her.”
Sansom glanced at Lee. Lee nodded. Said, “Keys and a wallet. That was all. Not in her car, either. The FBI inventoried the contents.”
Sansom said, “Not everyone uses a cell phone.”
“True,” I said. “And I’m that guy. The only guy in the world without a cell phone. Certainly a person like Susan would have had one.”
Jacob Mark said, “She had one.”
Sansom said, “So?”
“The Hoths set a deadline. Almost certainly midnight. Susan didn’t show, the Hoths went to work. They made a threat, and they carried it out. And they proved it. They phoned through a cell phone picture. Maybe a live video clip. Peter on the slab, that long first cut. Susan’s life changed, effectively, on the stroke of midnight. She was helpless in a traffic jam. The phone in her hand was suddenly appalling and repugnant. She threw it out the window. Followed it with the memory stick, which was the symbol of all her troubles. They’re both still there, in the trash on the side of I-95. No other explanation.”
Nobody spoke.
I said, “The median, probably. Subconsciously Susan would have put herself in the overtaking lane, because she was