Part 43 (2/2)
”It's perpetually imminent, apparently.”
Reacher thought back to Thurman's smug little speech in the metal plant.There are signs, he had said. he had said.And the possibility of precipitating events.
Reacher asked, ”What would be the trigger?”
”I'm not sure there's a trigger, as such. Presumably a large element of divine will would be involved. One would certainly hope so.”
”Pre-echoes, then? Ways to know it's coming?”
The minister shrugged at the wheel. ”End Times people read the Bible like other people listen to Beatles records backward. There's something about a red calf being born in the Holy Land. End Times enthusiasts are real keen on that part. They comb through ranches, looking for cattle a little more auburn than usual. They s.h.i.+p pairs to Israel, hoping they'll breed a perfect redhead. They want to get things started. That's another key characteristic. They can't wait. Because they're all awfully sure they'll be among the righteous. Which makes them self-righteous, actually. Most people accept that who gets saved is G.o.d's decision, not man's. It's a form of sn.o.bbery, really. They think they're better than the rest of us.”
”That's it? Red calves?”
”Most enthusiasts believe that a major war in the Middle East is absolutely necessary, which is why they've been so unhappy about Iraq. Apparently what's happening there isn't bad enough for them.”
”You sound skeptical.”
The guy smiled again.
”Of course I'm skeptical,” he said. ”I'm an Anglican.”
There was no more conversation after that, either theological or secular. Reacher was too tired and the guy behind the wheel was too deep into night-driving survival mode, where nothing existed except the part of the road ahead that his headlights showed him. His eyes were wedged open and he was sitting forward, as if he knew that to relax would be fatal. Reacher stayed awake, too. He knew the Hope road wouldn't be signposted and it wasn't exactly a major highway. The guy behind the wheel wouldn't spot it on his own.
It arrived exactly two hours into the trip, a lumpy two-lane crossing their path at an exact right angle. It had stop signs, and the main north-south drag didn't. By the time Reacher called it and the minister reacted and the U-Haul's overmatched brakes did their job they were two hundred yards past it. Reacher got out and waved the truck away and waited until its lights and its noise were gone. Then he walked back through the dark empty vastness. Predawn was happening way to the east, over Kansas or Missouri. Colorado was still pitch black. There was no cell phone signal.
No traffic, either.
Reacher took up station on the west side of the junction, standing on the shoulder close to the traffic lane. East-west drivers would have to pause at the stop sign opposite, and they would get a good look at him twenty yards ahead. But there were no east-west drivers. Not for the first ten minutes. Then the first fifteen, then the first twenty. A lone car came north, trailing the U-Haul by twenty miles, but it didn't turn off. It just blasted onward. An SUV came south, and slowed, ready to turn, but it turned east, away from Hope. Its lights grew small and faint and then they disappeared.
It was cold. There was a wind coming out of the east, and it was moving rain clouds into the sky. Reacher turned his collar up and crossed his arms over his chest and trapped his hands under his biceps for warmth. Cloudy diffused streaks of pink and purple lit up the far horizon. A new day, empty, innocent, as yet unsullied. Maybe a good day. Maybe a bad day. Maybe the last day.The end is near, Thurman's church had promised. Maybe a meteorite the size of a moon was hurtling closer. Maybe governments had suppressed the news. Maybe rebels were right then forcing the locks on an old Ukrainian silo. Maybe in a research lab somewhere a flask had cracked or a glove had torn or a mask had leaked. Thurman's church had promised. Maybe a meteorite the size of a moon was hurtling closer. Maybe governments had suppressed the news. Maybe rebels were right then forcing the locks on an old Ukrainian silo. Maybe in a research lab somewhere a flask had cracked or a glove had torn or a mask had leaked.
Or maybe not. Reacher stamped his feet and ducked his face into his shoulder. His nose was cold. When he looked up again he saw headlights in the east. Bright, widely s.p.a.ced, far enough away that they seemed to be static. A large vehicle. A truck. Possibly a semi trailer. Coming straight toward him, with the new dawn behind it.
Four possibilities. One, it would arrive at the junction and turn right and head north. Two, it would arrive at the junction and turn left and head south. Three, it would pause at the stop sign and then continue west without picking him up. Four, it would pause and cross the main drag and then pause again to let him climb aboard.
Chances of a happy ending, twenty-five percent. Or less, if it was a corporate vehicle with a no-pa.s.senger policy because of insurance ha.s.sles.
Reacher waited.
When the truck was a quarter-mile away he saw that it was a big rigid panel van, painted white. When it was three hundred yards away he saw that it had a refrigerator unit mounted on top. Fresh food delivery, which would have reduced the odds of a happy outcome if it hadn't been for the stop signs. Food drivers usually didn't like to stop. They had schedules to keep, and stopping a big truck and then getting it back up to speed could rob a guy of measurable minutes. But the stop signs meant he had to slow anyway.
Reacher waited.
He heard the guy lift off two hundred yards short of the junction. Heard the hiss of brakes. He raised his hand high, thumb extended.I need a ride. Then he raised both arms and waved. The distress semaph.o.r.e. Then he raised both arms and waved. The distress semaph.o.r.e.I really reallyneed a ride.
The truck stopped at the line on the east side of the junction. Neither one of its direction indicators was flas.h.i.+ng. A good sign. There was no traffic north or south, so it moved on again immediately, diesel roaring, gears grinding, heading west across the main drag, straight toward Reacher. It accelerated. The driver looked down. The truck kept on moving.
Then it slowed again.
The air brakes hissed loud and the springs squealed and the truck came to a stop with the cab forty feet west of the junction and the rear fender a yard out of the north-south traffic lane. Reacher turned and jogged back and climbed up on the step. The window came down and the driver peered out from seven feet south. He was a short, wiry man, incongruously small in the huge cab. He said, ”It's going to rain.”
Reacher said, ”That's the least of my problems. My car broke down.”
The guy at the wheel said, ”My first stop is Hope.”
Reacher said, ”You're the supermarket guy. From Topeka.”
”I left there at four this morning. You want to ride along?”
”Hope is where I'm headed.”
”So quit stalling and climb aboard.”
Dawn chased the truck all the way west, and overtook it inside thirty minutes. The world lit up cloudy and pale gold and the supermarket guy killed his headlights and sat back and relaxed. He drove the same way Thurman had flown his plane, with small efficient movements and his hands held low. Reacher asked him if he often carried pa.s.sengers and he said that about one morning in five he found someone looking for a ride. Reacher said he had met a couple of women who had ridden with him.
”Tourists,” the guy said.
”More than that,” Reacher said.
”You think?”
”I know.”
”How much?”
”All of it.”
”How?”
”I figured it out.”
The guy nodded at the wheel.
”Wives and girlfriends,” he said. ”Looking to be close by while their husbands and boyfriends pa.s.s through the state.”
”Understandable,” Reacher said. ”It's a tense time for them.”
”So you know what their husbands and boyfriends are?”
”Yes,” Reacher said. ”I do.”
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