Worth Dying For
that the four-mile hike would be the hardest part of the whole trip, but it wasn’t, really. It felt good to be out in the air, moving around. It was cold, but they were used to cold, because winter in Thailand was cold, and they had warm clothes to wear. The best part was when their guide stopped and raised his finger to his lips again and then traced an imaginary sideways line on the ground. He pointed beyond it and mouthed, ‘America.’ They walked on and passed the line one after the other and smiled happily and picked their way onward, across American soil at last, slowly and delicately, like ballet dancers.
The Duncan driver in the grey van on the Montana side of the border saw them coming about a hundred yards away. As always his Canadian counterpart was leading the procession, setting the pace, holding the rope. Behind him the shipment floated along, seemingly weightless, curving and snaking through the gaps between the trees. The Duncan driver opened his rear doors and stood ready to receive them. The Canadian handed over the free end of the rope, like he always did, like the baton in a relay race, and then he turned about and walked back into the forest and was lost to sight. The Duncan driver gestured into the truck, but before each of his passengers climbed aboard he looked at their faces and smiled and shook their hands, in a way his passengers took to be a formal welcome to their new country. In fact the Duncan driver was a gambling man, and he was trying to guess ahead of time which kid the Duncans would choose to keep. The women would go straight to the Vegas escort agencies, and nine of the girls would end up somewhere farther on down the line, but one of them would stay in the county, at least for a spell, or actually for ever, technically. Buy ten and sell nine, was the Duncan way, and the driver liked to look over the candidates and make a guess about which one was the lucky one. He saw fourreal possibilities, and then felt a little jolt of excitement about a fifth, not that she would be remotely recognizable by the time she was passed on to him.
Dorothy Coe stood behind her truck’s open door for ten whole minutes. Reacher stood in front of her, watching her, hoping he was blocking her view of the barn, happy to keep on standing there as long as it took, ten hours or ten days or ten years, or for ever, anything to stop her going inside. Her gaze was a thousand miles away, and her lips were moving a little, as if she was rehearsing arguments with someone, look or don’t look, know or don’t know.
Eventually she asked, ‘How many are in there?’
Reacher said, ‘About sixty.’
‘Oh my God.’
‘Two or three a year, probably,’ Reacher said. ‘They got a taste for it. An addiction. There are no ghosts. Ghosts don’t exist. What the stoner kid heard from time to time was real.’
‘Who were they all?’
‘Asian girls, I think.’
‘You can tell that from their bones?’
‘The last one isn’t bones yet.’
‘Where were they all from?’
‘From immigrant families, probably. Illegals, almost certainly, smuggled in, for the sex trade. That’s what the Duncans were doing. That’s how they were making their money.’
‘Were they all young?’
‘About eight years old.’
‘Are they buried?’
Reacher said, ‘No.’
‘They’re just dumped in there?’
‘Not dumped,’ Reacher said. ‘They’re displayed. It’s like a shrine.’
There was a long, long pause.
Dorothy Coe said, ‘I should look.’
‘Don’t.’
‘Why not?’
‘There are photographs. Like a record. Like mementos. In silver frames.’
‘I should look.’
‘You’ll regret it. All your life. You’ll wish you hadn’t.’
‘You looked.’
‘And I regret it. I wish I hadn’t.’
Dorothy Coe went quiet again. She breathed in, and breathed out, and watched the horizon. Then she asked, ‘What should we do now?’
Reacher said, ‘I’m going to head over to the Duncan houses. They’re all in there, sitting around, thinking everything is going just fine. It’s time they found out it isn’t.’
Dorothy Coe said, ‘I want to come with you.’
Reacher said, ‘Not a good idea.’
‘I need to.’
‘Could be dangerous.’
‘I hope it is. Some things are worth dying for.’
The doctor’s wife said, ‘We’re coming too. Both of us. Let’s go, right now.’
FIFTY-SEVEN
D OROTHY C OE GOT BEHIND THE WHEEL OF HER TRUCK AGAIN AND the doctor and his wife slid in beside her.
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