Part 39 (1/2)

Nothing To Lose Lee Child 45820K 2022-07-22

”Ontario's biggest city is Toronto,” Vaughan said. ”So from Toronto, according to the law of averages.”

Reacher nodded. ”Route 401 in Canada, I-94 around Detroit, I-75 out of Toledo, I-70 all the way over here. That's a long distance.”

”Relatively.”

”Especially considering that Canada probably has steel mills all its own. I know for sure they're thick on the ground around Detroit and all over Indiana, which is practically next door. So why haul a.s.s all the way out here?”

”Because Thurman's place is a specialist operation. You said so yourself.”

”Canada's army is three men and a dog. They probably keep their stuff forever.”

Vaughan said, ”Combat wrecks.”

Reacher said, ”Canada isn't fighting in Iraq. Canadians had more sense.”

”So what was in that truck?”

”My guess is nothing at all.”

Plenty more trucks pa.s.sed by in both directions, but they were all uninteresting. Semi trailers from Nebraska, Wyoming, Utah, Was.h.i.+ngton State, and California, loaded with crushed cars and bales of crushed steel and rusted industrial hulks that might once have been boilers or locomotives or parts of s.h.i.+ps. Reacher looked at them as they pa.s.sed and then looked away. He kept his focus on the eastern horizon and the clock in his head. Vaughan got out and brought the captured file from under the mat in the trunk. She took the papers out of the cardboard cradle and turned them over and squared them on her knee. Licked her thumb and started with the oldest page first. It was dated a little less than seven years previously. It was a purchase order for five thousand gallons of trichloroethylene, to be delivered prepaid by Kearny Chemical to Thurman Metals. The second-oldest page was identical. As was the third. The fourth fell into the following calendar year.

Vaughan said, ”Fifteen thousand gallons in the first year. Is that a lot?”

”I don't know,” Reacher said. ”We'll have to let the state lab be the judge.”

The second year of orders came out the same. Fifteen thousand gallons. Then the third year jumped way up, to five separate orders for a total of twenty-five thousand gallons. A refill every seventy-some days. An increase in consumption of close to sixty-seven percent.

Vaughan said, ”The start of major combat operations. The first wrecks.”

The fourth year held steady at twenty-five thousand gallons.

The fifth year matched it exactly.

”David's year,” Vaughan said. ”His Humvee was rinsed with some of those gallons. What was left of it.”

The sixth year she looked at jumped again. Total of six orders. Total of thirty thousand gallons. Iraq, getting worse. A twenty percent increase. And the current year looked set to exceed even that. There were already six orders in, and the year still had a whole quarter to run. Then Vaughan paused and looked at the six pages again, one by one, side by side, and she said, ”No, one of these is different.”

Reacher asked, ”Different how?”

”One of the orders isn't for trichloroethylene. And it isn't in gallons. It's in tons, for something called trinitrotoluene. Thurman bought twenty tons of it.”

”When?”

”Three months ago. Maybe they misfiled it.”

”From Kearny?”

”Yes.”

”Then it isn't misfiled.”

”Maybe it's another kind of degreaser.”

”It isn't.”

”You heard of it?”

”Everyone has heard of it. It was invented in 1863 in Germany, for use as a yellow dye.”

”I never heard of it,” Vaughan said. ”I don't like yellow.”

”A few years later they realized it decomposes in an exothermic manner.”

”What does that mean?”

”It explodes.”

Vaughan said nothing.

”Trichloroethylene is called TCE,” Reacher said. ”Trinitrotoluene is called TNT.”

”I've heard ofthat. ” ”

”Everyone has heard of it.”

”Thurman bought twenty tons of dynamite? Why?”

”Dynamite is different. It's nitroglycerine soaked into wood pulp and molded into cylinders wrapped in paper. TNT is a specific chemical compound. A yellow solid. Much more stable. Therefore much more useful.”

”OK, but why did he buy it?”

”I don't know. Maybe he busts things up with it. It melts easily, and pours. That's how they get it into sh.e.l.l casings and bombs and shaped charges. Maybe he uses it like a liquid and forces it between seams he can't cut. He was boasting to me about his advanced techniques.”

”I never heard any explosions.”

”You wouldn't. You're twenty miles from the plant. And maybe they're small and controlled.”

”Is it a solvent, when it's liquid?”

”I'm not sure. It's a reagent, that's all I know. Carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen. Some complicated formula, lots of sixes and threes and twos.”

Vaughan riffled back through the pages she had already examined.

”Whatever, he never bought any before,” she said. ”It's something new.”