‘Photographs,’ Hellerman identified them for Jarvis, ‘and get this — they were all taken around mountains in the heart of the Nez Perce National Forest in Idaho, right where we found those hard-rock mines and right where most of the missing persons have been reported.’
Jarvis watched as Hellerman opened the folder. Two more folders were within: one named ‘EVIDENCE’ and the other named ‘ACTIVITY’. The technician opened the evidence folder, revealing a huge mass of photographs. He double-clicked on one and then began scrolling through them.
Jarvis saw endless images of enormous five-toed footprints, with a ruler set alongside to give scale to them.
‘I’ve never seen so many images like these,’ Hellerman said. ‘Absolutely incredible, unassailable evidence of Bigfoot.’
‘Absolutely incredible, unassailable evidence of big feet,’ Jarvis corrected him. ‘This isn’t what we’re looking for.’
‘Isn’t it?’ the technician asked. He looked at Jarvis, and then tapped to the next image.
Jarvis glanced up at the screen and froze. There, captured in broad daylight, was the image of a pair of footprint casts that had been taken in situ alongside the actual prints, part of a track running along the floor of a dry creek bed. Judging by the sunlight and foliage in the image, it had been shot in summer.
What was striking was that one foot was deformed, the toes splayed and twisted.
‘It’s caused by gout,’ the technician said, ‘or perhaps a bad case of club-foot. Point is, this is a record of a sasquatch suffering from a disease that affects humans. You think that a faker would bother to think to do something like this?’
Jarvis shook his head. Even the most determined of fakers would probably not be able to create a convincing example of such a track, especially not one that carried on for tens of metres along the creek bed.
‘The strides are almost two metres apart, much too large for any human to fake and convince even amateur trackers. And look at the roll pattern in the dried mud,’ Hellerman said, ‘caused by the ball of the foot digging in as the creature walked. This thing was real. Even using stilts, no human could produce enough weight and momentum to produce a set of tracks like these.’
Jarvis gestured to the other file.
‘What’s in there?’
The technician closed the evidence file, and opened the activity file.
‘This one you’re really going to have to see to believe.’
Jarvis watched as the file opened and he saw images of what looked like an old abandoned mine set into the steep hillside of a mountain high in the forest. Hellerman flipped across a couple of images and then paused on one.
‘I’ll be damned,’ Jarvis said.
From the mine a group of men were walking out, dressed in civilian clothes. The technician moved on to images of a jet-black, unmarked helicopter landing near the mine and picking up the men before flying away into the distance.
‘You got an ID on that helicopter?’ Jarvis asked.
‘Not a thing,’ Hellerman said. ‘No identifying marks whatsoever. All I can tell you is that we matched the date and time of the image to air traffic records from Boise, Idaho. That helicopter flew from there to Mountain Home Air Force Base.’
Jarvis’s mind began racing.
‘Where the National Guard are based.’
‘And that’s not all,’ Hellerman said, flicking across to another set of images.
The new pictures were not taken near the mine, and were shot a couple of days prior to those of the helicopter. Jarvis squinted for a moment before he realized what he was looking at.
Dense forest cloaked with thick foliage, a mass of greenery that seemed devoid of anything interesting until his mind had spent a few seconds processing the image and doing what it did best: looking for patterns. Moments later, as though appearing by magic, a pair of eyes stared out past Jarvis, focused on some distant target over the barrel of a rifle.
‘M-16,’ Jarvis uttered to himself, ‘under-slung 203 launcher, and that guy’s not wearing standard-issue disruptive-pattern material. Looks like foreign stuff, maybe German.’
‘Special Forces soldier,’ Hellerman confirmed. ‘We can’t confirm the location from this image but it’s likely that it was taken in the same region, maybe even the same mountain. Point is, whatever’s going on up there is important and it’s off the record because that area is not military owned.’
‘That everything?’
‘No,’ the technician said, and flicked to the next image.
Jarvis looked at the screen and saw that the soldier with the rifle had fired, the muzzle of the M-16 aflame as a high-velocity round was released. The technician’s voice was heavy as he spoke.
‘Next image is not a good one.’
Jarvis watched as the image flipped. This time, it was of a man in hiking gear lying flat on his back, his face turned toward the camera. A bloodied red hole was punched through the side of his face just below the right eye, and his hair on the opposite side of his head was a matted mess of blood and bone.
Jarvis took a pace toward the screen as Hellerman flicked across the images.
The man’s ruined face, close up.
Then more men standing around the body, heavily armed and camouflaged.
The body being hoisted into a large black bag and being carried away by the soldiers into the forest. The fourth image showed them vanishing into the woods somewhere just below the mountain peak that was obviously the same one that contained the supposedly abandoned mine.
‘Oh Christ,’ Jarvis said.
Hellerman’s voice was somber as he replied.
‘We used a basic facial recognition program on the close-up shot of the photograph that Randy, or his brother Cletus, must have taken. The victim’s name was Aaron Hall, forty-two, out of Michigan. A keen hiker, he was reported missing in the Nez Perce National Forest two months ago.’
Jarvis turned slowly to face the technician as he went on.
‘National Guard conducted the search and it was reported that they found Hall’s jacket and a few belongings high in the mountains. They concluded that he was attacked and killed by a bear. His body was never found.’
Jarvis turned back to the screen.
‘They’re killing anybody who gets too close to the mountain,’ he said in disbelief, then shook himself from his stupor. ‘Get me Earl Carpenter at the Riggins Sheriff ’s Office on the line, right now.’
The technician called up the office details, and moments later he put the phone down as he looked up at Jarvis. ‘Sheriff Earl Carpenter was retired this afternoon on a full pension,’ he said. ‘He’s no longer available for duty.’
Jarvis felt the blood in his veins run cold. Everything had been planned. Everything had been done at once.
The whole thing was a trap.
‘Make copies of the files and send them to each other,’ he snapped to Hellerman. ‘Do it now before anybody can stop you.’
‘Who would want to stop us from—’
‘Do it, now!’
The technician flinched as Jarvis shouted, then hurried away. Jarvis called after him.
‘Then make hard copies and send them via the postal service to yourselves. You’ll need them, keep them safe and tell nobody about any of this, okay?’
The technicians in the office all nodded, their features creased with concern as Jarvis stormed out of the laboratory and across to the elevators. He was on the seventh floor a few minutes later as he charged down the corridor and burst into the director’s office before his secretary could even get up out of her seat to stop him.
‘You’ve burned them!’ Jarvis shouted.
Abraham Mitchell looked up, as did four other men all holding files and wearing surprised expressions. For all Jarvis knew they were high-ranking Pentagon officials but he didn’t care as he growled at them.