10
HE SLEPT BADLY and woke himself up before six in
the morning and rolled toward the nightstand. Flicked on the
bedside light and checked the exact time on his watch. He was cold.
He had been cold all night. The sheets were starched, and the shiny
surfaces pulled heat away from his skin.
He reached for the phone and dialed Jodie’s
apartment. He got the machine. No answer in her office. Her mobile
was switched off. He held the phone to his ear for a long time,
listening to her cellular company telling him so, over and over
again. Then he hung up and rolled out of bed.
He walked to the window and pulled the drapes open.
The view faced west and it was still dark night outside. Maybe
there was a sunrise behind him on the other side of the building.
Maybe it hadn’t happened yet. He could hear the distant sound of
hard rain on dying leaves. He turned his back on it and walked to
the bathroom.
He used the toilet and shaved slowly. Spent fifteen
minutes in the shower with the water as hot as he could stand it,
getting warm. Then he washed his hair with the FBI’s shampoo and
toweled it dry. Carried his clothes out of the steam and dressed
standing by the bed. Buttoned his shirt and hung his ID around his
neck. He figured room service was unlikely, so he just sat down to
wait.
He waited forty-five minutes. There was a polite
knock at the door, followed by the sound of a key going into the
lock. Then the door opened and Lisa Harper was standing there,
backlit by the brightness of the corridor. She was smiling,
mischievously. He had no idea why.
“Good morning,” she said.
He raised his hand in reply. Said nothing. She was
in a different suit. This one was charcoal gray, with a white shirt
and a dark red tie. An exact parody of the unofficial Bureau
uniform, but a whole lot of cloth had been cut out of it to make it
fit. Her hair was loose. There was a wave in it, and it hung front
and back of her shoulders, very long. It looked golden in the light
from the corridor.
“We’ve got to go,” she said. “Breakfast
meeting.”
He took his coat from the closet as he passed. They
rode down to the lobby together and paused at the doors. It was
raining hard outside. He pulled his collar up and followed her out.
The light had changed from black to gray. The rain was cold. She
sprinted down the walkway, and he followed a pace behind, watching
her run. She looked pretty good doing it.
Lamarr and Blake and Poulton were waiting for them
in the cafeteria. They were in three of five chairs crowded around
a four-place table by the window. They were watching him carefully
as he approached. There was a white coffee jug in the center of the
table, surrounded by upside-down mugs. A basket of sugar packets
and little pots of cream. A pile of spoons. Napkins. A basket of
doughnuts. A pile of morning newspapers. Harper took a chair and he
squeezed in next to her. Lamarr was watching him, something in her
eyes. Poulton looked away. Blake looked amused, in a sardonic kind
of a way.
“Ready to go to work?” he asked.
Reacher nodded. “Sure, after I’ve had some
coffee.”
Poulton turned the mugs over and Harper
poured.
“We called Fort Dix last night,” Blake said. “Spoke
with Colonel Trent. He said he’ll give you all day today. ”
“That should do it.”
“He seems to like you.”
“No, he owes me, which is different.”
Lamarr nodded. “Good. You need to exploit that. You
know what you’re looking for, right? Concentrate on the dates. Find
somebody whose stand-down weeks match. My guess is he’s doing it
late in the week. Maybe not exactly the last day, because he’s got
to get back to base and calm down afterward.”
Reacher smiled. “Great deduction, Lamarr. You get
paid for this?”
She just looked at him and smiled back, like she
knew something he didn’t.
“What?” he asked.
“Just keep a civil tongue in your head,” Blake
said. “You got a problem with what she’s suggesting?”
Reacher shrugged. “We do it by dates alone, we’re
going to come up with maybe a thousand names.”
“So narrow it down some. Get Trent to
cross-reference against the women. Find somebody who served with
one of them.”
“Or served with one of the men who got canned,”
Poulton said.
Reacher smiled again. “Awesome brainpower around
this table. It could make a guy feel real intimidated.”
“You got better ideas, smart guy?” Blake
asked.
“I know what I’m going to do.”
“Well, just remember what’s riding on it, OK? Lots
of women in danger, one of them yours.”
“I’ll take care of it.”
“So get going.”
Harper took the cue and stood up. Reacher eased out
of his seat and followed her. The three at the table watched him
go, something in their eyes. Harper was waiting for him at the
cafeteria door, looking back at him, watching him approach, smiling
at him. He stopped next to her.
“Why’s everybody looking at me?” he asked.
“We checked the tape,” she said. “You know, the
surveillance camera.”
"So?”
She wouldn’t answer. He reviewed his time in the
room. He’d showered twice, walked around some, pulled the drapes,
slept, opened the drapes, walked around some more. That was
all.
“I didn’t do anything,” he said.
She smiled again, wider. “No, you didn’t.”
“So what’s the big deal?”
“Well, you know, you don’t seem to have brought any
pajamas.”
A MOTOR POOL guy brought a car to the doors and
left it there with the motor running. Harper watched Reacher get in
and then slid into the driver’s seat. They drove out through the
rain, past the checkpoint, through the Marine perimeter, out to
I-95. She blasted north through the spray and a fast forty minutes
later turned east across the southern edge of D.C. Cruised hard for
ten more minutes and made an abrupt right into the north gate of
Andrews Air Force Base.
“They assigned us the company plane,” she
said.
Two security checks later they were at the foot of
an unmarked Learjet’s cabin steps. They left the car on the tarmac
and climbed inside. It was taxiing before they had their seat belts
fastened.
“Should be a half hour to Dix,” Harper said.
“McGuire,” Reacher corrected. “Dix is a Marine
Corps base. We’ll land at McGuire Air Force Base.”
Harper looked worried. “They told me we’re going
straight there.”
“We are. It’s the same place. Different names, is
all.”
She made a face. “Weird. I guess I don’t understand
the military.”
“Well, don’t feel bad about it. We don’t understand
you either.”
They were on approach thirty minutes later with the
sharp, abrupt motions a small jet makes in rough air. There was
cloud almost all the way down, then the ground was suddenly in
sight. It was raining in Jersey. Dim, and miserable. An Air Force
base is a gray place to start with, and the weather wasn’t helping
any. McGuire’s runway was wide enough and long enough to let giant
transports struggle into the air, and the Lear touched down and
stopped in less than a quarter of its length, like a hummingbird
coming to rest on an interstate. It turned and taxied and stopped
again on a distant corner of tarmac. A flat-green Chevy was racing
through the rain to meet it. By the time the cabin steps were down,
the driver was waiting at the bottom. He was a Marine lieutenant,
maybe twenty-five, and he was getting wet.
“Major Reacher?” he asked.
Reacher nodded. “And this is Agent Harper, from the
FBI.”
The lieutenant ignored her completely, like Reacher
knew he would.
“The colonel is waiting, sir,” he said.
“So let’s go. Can’t keep the colonel waiting,
right?”
Reacher sat in the front of the Chevy with the
lieutenant and Harper took the back. They drove out of McGuire into
Dix, following narrow roadways with whitewashed curbstones through
blocks of warehouses and barracks. They stopped at a huddle of
brick offices a mile from McGuire’s runway.
“Door on the left, sir,” the lieutenant said.
The guy waited in the car, like Reacher knew he
would. Reacher got out and Harper followed him, staying close to
his shoulder, huddling against the weather. The wind was blowing
the rain horizontal. The office building had a group of three
unmarked personnel doors in the center of a blank brick wall.
Reacher took the left-hand door and led Harper into a spacious
anteroom full of metal desks and file cabinets. It was
antiseptically clean and obsessively tidy. Brightly lit against the
gloom of the morning. Three sergeants worked at separate desks. One
of them glanced up and hit a button on his telephone.
“Major Reacher is here, sir,” he said into
it.
There was a moment’s pause and then the inner
office door opened and a man stepped out. He was tall, built like a
greyhound, short black hair silvering at the temples. He had a lean
hand extended, ready to shake.
“Hello, Reacher,” John Trent said.
Reacher nodded. Trent owed the second half of his
career to a paragraph Reacher had omitted from an official report
ten years before. Trent had assumed the paragraph was written and
ready to go. He had come to see Reacher, not to plead for its
deletion, not to bargain, not to bribe, but just to explain,
officer to officer, how he’d made the mistake. Simply because he
had needed Reacher to understand it was a
mistake, not malice or dishonesty. He had left without asking for a
thing, and then sat still and waited for the ax. It never came. The
report was published and the paragraph wasn’t in it. What Trent
didn’t know was that Reacher had never even written it. Then ten
years had passed and the two men hadn’t really spoken since. Not
until the previous morning, when Reacher had made the first of his
urgent calls from Jodie’s apartment.
“Hello, Colonel,” Reacher said. “This is Agent
Harper, from the FBI.”
Trent was politer than his lieutenant. His rank
meant he had to be. Or maybe he was just more impressed by tall
damp blondes dressed like men. Either way, he shook hands. And
maybe held on to the shake longer than was necessary. And maybe
smiled, just a fraction.
“Pleased to meet you, Colonel,” Harper said. “And
thanks in advance.”
“I haven’t done anything yet,” Trent said.
“Well, we’re always grateful for cooperation
anyplace we can get it, sir.”
Trent released her hand. “Which is a strictly
limited number of places, I expect.”
“Fewer than we’d like,” she said. “Considering
we’re all on the same side.”
Trent smiled again.
“That’s an interesting concept,” he said. “I’ll do
what I can, but the cooperation will be limited. As I’m sure you
anticipated. We’re going to be examining personnel records and
deployment listings that I’m just not prepared to share with you.
Reacher and I will do it on our own. There are issues of national
and military security at stake. You’re going to have to wait out
here.”
“All day?” she said.
Trent nodded again. “As long as it takes. You
comfortable with that?”
It was clear she wasn’t. She looked at the floor
and said nothing.
“You wouldn’t let me see confidential FBI stuff,”
Trent said. “I mean, you don’t really like us any more than we like
you, right?”
Harper glanced around the room. “I’m supposed to
watch over him.”
“I understand that. Your Mr. Blake explained your
role to me. But you’ll be right here, outside my office. There’s
only one door. The sergeant will give you a desk.”
A sergeant stood up unbidden and showed her to an
empty desk with a clear view of the inner office door. She sat down
slowly, unsure.
"You’ll be OK there,” Trent said. "This could take
us some time. It’s a complicated business. I’m sure you know how
paperwork can be.”
Then he led Reacher into the inner office and
closed the door. It was a large room, windows on two walls,
bookcases, cabinets, a big wooden desk, comfortable leather chairs.
Reacher sat down in front of the desk and leaned back.
“Give it two minutes, OK?” he said.
Trent nodded. “Read this. Look busy.”
He handed over a thick file in a faded green folder
from a tall stack. Reacher opened it up and bent to examine it.
There was a complicated chart inside, detailing projected
aviation-fuel requirements for the coming six-month period. Trent
walked back to the door. Opened it wide.
“Ms. Harper?” he called. “Can I get you a cup of
coffee?”
Reacher glanced over his shoulder and saw her
staring in at him, taking in the chairs, the desk, the stack of
files.
“I’m all set, right now,” she called back.
“OK,” Trent said. “You want anything, just tell the
sergeant.”
He closed the door again. Walked to the window.
Reacher took off his ID tag and laid it on the desk. Stood up.
Trent unlatched the window and opened it as wide as it would
go.
“You didn’t give us much time,” he whispered. “But
I think we’re in business.”
“They fell for it right away,” Reacher whispered
back. “A lot sooner than I thought they would.”
“But how did you know you’d have the escort?”
“Hope for the best, plan for the worst. You know
how it is.”
Trent nodded. Stuck his head out of the window and
checked both directions.
“OK, go for it,” he said. “And good luck, my
friend.”
“I need a gun,” Reacher whispered.
Trent stared at him and shook his head again,
firmly.
“No,” he said. “That, I can’t do.”
“You have to. I need one.”
Trent paused. He was agitated. Getting
nervous.
“Christ, OK, a gun,” he said. “But no ammunition.
My ass is already way out on a limb on this thing.”
He opened a drawer and took out a Beretta M9. Same
weapon as Petrosian’s boys had carried, except Reacher could see
this one still had its serial number intact. Trent took the clip
out and thumbed the bullets back into the drawer, one by one.
“Quiet,” Reacher whispered urgently.
Trent nodded and clicked the empty clip back into
the grip. Handed the gun to Reacher, butt-first. Reacher took it
and put it in his coat pocket. Sat on the window ledge. Turned and
swiveled his legs outside.
“Have a nice day,” he whispered.
“You too. Take care,” Trent whispered back.
Reacher braced himself with his hands and dropped
to the ground. He was in a narrow alley. It was still raining. The
lieutenant was waiting in the Chevy, ten yards away, motor running.
Reacher sprinted for the car and it was rolling before his door was
closed. The mile back to McGuire took little over a minute. The car
raced out onto the tarmac and headed straight for a Marine Corps
helicopter. Its belly door was standing open and the rotor blade
was turning fast. The rain in the air was whipping up into spiral
patterns.
“Thanks, kid,” Reacher said.
He stepped out of the car and across to the
chopper’s ramp and ran up into the dark. The door whirred shut
behind him and the engine noise built to a roar. He felt the
machine come off the ground and two pairs of hands grabbed him and
pushed him into his seat. He buckled his harness and a headset was
thrust at him. He put it on and the intercom crackle started at the
same time as the interior lights came on. He saw he was sitting in
a canvas chair between two Marine load-masters.
“We’re going to the Coast Guard heliport in
Brooklyn, ” the pilot called through. “Close as we can get without
filing a flight plan, and filing a flight plan ain’t exactly on the
agenda today, OK?”
Reacher thumbed his mike. “Suits me, guys. And
thanks.”
“Colonel must owe you big,” the pilot said.
“No, he just likes me,” Reacher said.
The guy laughed and the helicopter swung in the air
and settled to a bellowing cruise.