The Escape (John Puller, #3)(29)



“Amherst. Great school.”

“Yes, it is.”

“And what brought you to the Army?”

“My mother.”

“She was in the Army?” asked Puller.

“No, my father was. He maxed out as a full colonel. Finished up at Fort Hood.”

“Okay, I’m not getting the reference to your mom, then.”

“She said anything my father could do I could sure as hell do better. They’re divorced,” she added, perhaps unnecessarily.

“I take it you don’t get along with your father?”

“You take it right.” She drank her iced tea through a straw and then fiddled with the paper the straw had been wrapped in. “I looked you up, of course. Your father is John Puller Sr. Fighting John Puller.”

“That’s what they call him.”

“A true legend.”

“They call him that too.”

“I hear he’s in a VA hospital.”

“He is.”

“Is he doing okay?”

Puller glanced away and then looked directly at her. “He’s doing. We all get old, right?”

“If we live that long.” She eyed the scar that ran along the side of his neck to the point where it dipped down his back. “Fallujah?” she asked, indicating the mark.

“Mosul. My Fallujah souvenir is on my ankle.”

“I did a tour over there too. Nothing on the front lines.” She added firmly. “Nothing to do with me. Everything to do with the Army.”

“I’ve heard that before,” said Puller. “No mark against you if they wouldn’t let you fight at the front.”

“Still a mark, Puller.”

“But things are changing. And fast.”

“Things had to change. Twenty-first century. No way around it.”

He raised his bottle of Coors in salute. “Agreed. Some of the toughest soldiers I ever served with were women.”

They remained silent until their meals came, and they didn’t speak as they ate them. When the plates were cleared Puller came back around to why they were really here.

“Did you see what I saw in the interviews and paper trail?” he asked.

“Tell me what you saw and I’ll answer you.”

“Let’s say the visitors’ log is accurate and I’m the only one who visited my brother during the last six months.”

“Okay.”

“If he didn’t talk to anyone else on the outside, then we need to look inward.”

“Someone at DB?”

Puller nodded. “Wouldn’t be the first time a prisoner has been aided by someone on the other side of the cell door.”

“I’m pretty sure it would be the first time at DB.”

“And the computer system was hacked, ensuring the doors opened when the power blew. Now that definitely smacks of an inside hand.”

This was the other option Puller had been considering when Macri had told him about the suspected hacking.

“That makes sense,” agreed Knox.

“We need to talk to every guard who was on duty that night.”

“That’s a lot of guards.”

He sat back looking and feeling put off. “You got something else to do with your time?”

“No. So what would we be looking for?”

“An off answer, a look, a hesitation. And we need to comb through their histories, see if anything pops.”

“That could take a long time.”

Puller slapped the table with the palm of his hand. “I don’t care how long it takes, Knox. All I care about is setting this situation right.”

“And what exactly does that mean to you? Setting the situation right? Capturing your brother and returning him to prison safely?”

“What else would I mean?” he said slowly.

She studied him. “I wonder. But if this was an inside job, it might involve more than just a guard. And that for me is far-fetched.”

“It’s not far-fetched if it turns out to be true. Maybe the picture is a lot bigger than we think it is.”

“And maybe it isn’t.”

“Have you been briefed on my brother?”

“STRATCOM.”

Puller nodded. “And you know what that entails. That could be the motive right there. Our enemies snatch him for his brains, use what he knows against us.”

“So now you’ve moved on to spies?” she said skeptically. “A mole at DB?”

“Do you have another explanation?” he said tersely.

“No,” she admitted. “I don’t.”

“We still have no idea who the dead guy is or what he was doing there. I’ve made arrangements to see his body in the morning.”

“That is a puzzler,” she admitted. “I mean, how do you get into a prison and get yourself killed and no one sees or hears anything?”

“It might be easier than you think,” Puller said.

Knox looked at him expectantly, but he didn’t elaborate. Instead he said, “And who ordered you to babysit me?”

“I wasn’t ordered to babysit you!” she said sharply.

Puller ignored this. “Was it Schindler…Daughtrey…or Rinehart?”

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