2
GARRISON IS A place on the east bank of the
Hudson River, up in Putnam County, about fifty-eight road miles
north from Tribeca. Late on a fall evening, traffic is not a
problem. One toll plaza, empty parkways, average speed can be as
high as you dare to make it. But Reacher drove cautiously. He was
new to the concept of driving a regular journey from A to B. He was
new to even having an A or a B. He felt
like an alien in a settled landscape. And like any alien, he was
anxious to stay out of trouble. So he drove slow enough not to be
noticed and let the late commuters in their fast sedans scurry past
him on the left and the right. The fifty-eight miles took him an
hour and seventeen minutes.
His street was very dark, because it was buried
deep in an underpopulated rural area. The contrast with the brassy
glow of the city was total. He turned into his driveway and watched
his headlight beams bounce and flick over the massed plantings
crowding the asphalt. The leaves were turning dry brown and they
looked vivid and unreal in the electric light. He rounded the last
curve and the beams swung toward the garage door and washed over
two cars waiting nose-out in front of it. He jammed to a panic stop
and their lights came on and blazed in his face and blinded him
just as his mirror filled with bright light from behind. He ducked
his head away from the glare and saw people running at him from the
side with powerful flashlight beams bouncing in front of them
through the dark. He swiveled and saw two sedans crunching to a
stop behind him, headlights swinging and blazing. People were
spilling out and running toward him. His car was pinned motionless
in a bright matrix of light. People were flashing through light and
darkness, coming at him. They had guns and dark vests over their
coats. They were surrounding his car. He saw that some of the
flashlights were strapped to shotgun barrels. The crowding people
were lit from behind by the harsh beams from their cars. Fog was
drifting up from the river and hanging in the air. The lights were
cutting through the fog and the beams were crisscrossing in crazy
moving horizontal patterns.
A figure stepped close to his car. A hand came up
and rapped on the glass next to his head. The hand opened. It was a
small hand, pale and slim. A woman’s hand. A flashlight beam turned
directly on it and showed it was cupping a badge. The badge was
shaped like a shield. It was bright gold. There was a gold eagle
perched on the top of the shield with its head cocked to the left.
The flashlight moved closer and Reacher saw raised lettering on the
shield, gold on gold. He stared at it. It said Federal Bureau of Investigation. U.S. Department of
Justice. The woman pressed the shield against the window. It
touched the glass with a cold metallic click. She shouted in at
him. He heard her voice coming at him out of the darkness.
“Turn off the engine,” she was shouting.
He could see nothing except beams of light aimed at
him. He killed the motor and heard nothing but fog hanging in the
air and the crunch of restless boots on his driveway.
“Place both hands on the wheel,” the woman’s voice
shouted.
He placed both hands on the wheel and sat still,
head turned, watching the door. It was opened from the outside and
the light clicked on and spilled out over the dark woman from the
restaurant. The sandy guy with the fair mustache was at her
shoulder. She had the FBI badge in one hand and a gun in the other.
The gun was pointed at his head.
“Out of the vehicle,” she said. “Nice and
slow.”
She stepped back, with the gun tracking the
movement of his head. He twisted and swung his legs out of the
footwell and paused, one hand on the seatback, the other on the
wheel, his weight ready to slide his feet to the ground. He could
see a half-dozen men in front of him caught in the glare of
headlights. There would be more behind him. Maybe more near the
house. Maybe more at the mouth of the driveway. The woman stepped
back another pace. He stepped down to the ground in front of
her.
“Turn around,” she said. “Place your hands on the
vehicle.”
He did as he was told. The sheet metal was cold to
the touch and slimy with night dew. He felt hands on every inch of
his body. They took his wallet from his coat and the stolen cash
from his pants pocket. Somebody pushed past his shoulder and leaned
in and took his keys from the ignition.
“Now walk to the car,” the woman called.
She pointed with the badge. He half turned and saw
headlight beams trapped in the fog, missing his legs by a yard. One
of the sedans near the garage. He walked toward it. He heard a
voice behind him shouting search his
vehicle. A guy in a dark blue Kevlar vest was waiting at the
car near the garage. He opened the rear door and stepped back. The
woman’s briefcase was upright on the rear seat. Imitation leather,
with a clumsy coarse grain stamped into its surface. He folded
himself inside next to it. The guy in the vest slammed the door on
him and simultaneously the opposite door opened up and the woman
slid in alongside him. Her coat was open and he saw her blouse and
her suit. The skirt was dusty black and short. He heard the whisper
of nylon and saw the gun again, still pointing at his head. The
front door opened and the sandy guy knelt in on the seat and
stretched back for the briefcase. Reacher saw pale hairs on his
wrist. The strap of a watch. The guy flipped the case open and
pulled out a sheaf of papers. He juggled a flashlight and played
the beam over them. Reacher saw dense print and his own name in
bold letters near the top of the first page.
“Search warrant,” the woman said to him. “For your
house.”
The sandy guy ducked back out and slammed the door.
The car went silent. Reacher heard footsteps through the fog. They
grew faint. For a second the woman was backlit by the glare
outside. Then she reached up and forward and clicked on the dome
light. It was hot and yellow. She was sitting sideways, her back
against the door, her knees toward him, resting her gun arm along
the seatback. The arm was bent, with the elbow on the parcel shelf
so the gun was canted comfortably forward, pointing at him. It was
a SIG-Sauer, big and efficient and expensive.
“Keep your feet flat on the floor,” she said.
He nodded. He knew what she wanted. He kept his
back against his own door and shoved his feet underneath the front
seat. It put an awkward sideways twist in his body that meant if he
wanted to start moving he would be slow enough at it to get his
head blown off before he got anywhere.
“Hands where I can see them,” she said.
He straightened his arms and cupped his palms
around the headrest on the seat in front of him and rested his chin
on his shoulder. He was looking sideways at the SIG-Sauer’s muzzle.
It was rock-steady. Beyond it her finger was tight on the trigger.
Beyond that was her face.
“OK, now sit still,” she said.
Her face was impassive.
“You’re not asking what this is about,” she
said.
It’s not about what happened an
hour and seventeen minutes ago, he said to himself. No way was this all organized in an hour and seventeen
minutes. He kept quiet and absolutely still. He was worried
about the whiteness in the woman’s knuckle where it wrapped around
the SIG-Sauer’s trigger. Accidents can happen.
“You don’t want to know what this is about?” she
asked.
He looked at her, blankly. No
handcuffs, he thought. Why not? The
woman shrugged at him. OK have it your own
way, she was saying. Her face settled to a stare. It was not a
pretty face, but it was interesting. Some character there. She was
about thirty-five, which is not old, but there were lines in her
skin, like she spent time making animated expressions. Probably more frowns than smiles, he thought. Her
hair was jet-black but thin. He could see her scalp. It was white.
It gave her a tired, sickly look. But her eyes were bright. She
glanced beyond him, out into the darkness through the car window,
out to where her men were doing things in his house.
She smiled. Her front teeth were crossed. The right
one was canted sideways and it overlaid the left one by a fraction.
An interesting mouth. It implied some kind of a decision. Her
parents hadn’t had the flaw corrected, and later neither had she.
She must have had the opportunity. But she had decided to stick
with nature. Probably the right choice. It made her face
distinctive. Gave it character.
She was slim under her bulky coat. There was a
black jacket that matched the skirt, and a cream blouse loose over
small breasts. The blouse looked like polyester that had been
washed many times. It spiraled down into the waist-band of the
skirt. She was twisted sideways and the skirt was halfway up her
thighs. Her legs were thin and hard under black nylon. Her knees
were pressed together, but there was a gap between her
thighs.
“Would you stop doing that, please?” she
said.
Her voice had gone cold, and the gun moved.
“Doing what?” Reacher asked.
“Looking at my legs.”
He switched his gaze up to her face. “Somebody
points a gun at me, I’m entitled to check them out head to toe,
wouldn’t you say?”
“You like doing that?”
“Doing what?”
“Looking at women.”
He shrugged. “Better than I like looking at some
things, I guess.”
The gun moved closer. “This isn’t funny, asshole. I
don’t like the way you’re looking at me.”
He stared at her.
“What way am I looking at you?” he asked.
“You know what way.”
He shook his head.
“No, I don’t,” he said.
“Like you’re making advances,” she said. “You’re
disgusting, you know that?”
He listened to the contempt in her voice and stared
at her thin hair, her frown, her crooked tooth, her hard dried-up
body in its ludicrous cheap businesswoman’s uniform.
“You think I’m making advances to you?”
“Aren’t you? Wouldn’t you like to?”
He shook his head again.
“Not while there are dogs on the street,” he
said.
THEY SAT IN crackling hostile silence for the
best part of twenty minutes. Then the sandy guy with the mustache
came back to the car and slid into the front passenger seat. The
driver’s door opened and a second man got in. He had keys in his
hand. He watched the mirror until the woman nodded and then fired
up the motor and eased past Reacher’s parked truck and headed out
toward the road.
“Do I get to make a phone call?” Reacher asked. “Or
doesn’t the FBI believe in stuff like that?”
The sandy guy was staring straight ahead, at the
windshield.
“At some point within the first twenty-four hours,”
he said. “We’ll make sure you’re not denied your constitutional
rights.”
The woman kept the SIG-Sauer’s muzzle close to
Reacher’s head all the way back to Manhattan, fifty-eight fast
miles through the dark and the fog.