12
THERE WAS NO breakfast meeting the next morning.
The day started too early. Harper opened the door before Reacher
was even dressed. He had his pants on and was smoothing the
wrinkles out of his shirt with his palm against the mattress.
“Love those scars,” she said.
She took a step closer, looking at his stomach with
undisguised curiosity.
“What’s that one from?” she asked, pointing to his
right side.
He glanced down. The right side of his stomach had
a violent tracery of stitches in the shape of a twisted star. They
bulged out above the muscle wall, white and angry.
“My mother did it,” he said.
“Your mother?”
“I was raised by grizzly bears. In Alaska.”
She rolled her eyes and moved them up to the left
side of his chest. There was a .38 caliber bullet hole there,
punched right into the pectoral muscle. The hair was missing from
around it. It was a big hole. She could have lost her little finger
in it, right up to the first knuckle.
“Exploratory surgery,” he said. “Checking if I had
a heart.”
“You’re happy this morning,” she said.
He nodded. “I’m always happy.”
“Did you get Jodie yet?”
He shook his head. “I haven’t tried since
yesterday.”
“Why not?”
“Waste of time. She’s not there.”
“Are you worried?”
He shrugged. “She’s a big girl.”
“I’ll tell you if I hear anything.”
He nodded. “You better.”
“Where are they really from?” she asked. “The
scars?”
He buttoned his shirt.
“The gut is from bomb shrapnel,” he said. “The
chest, somebody shot me.”
“Dramatic life.”
He took his coat from the closet.
“No, not really. Pretty normal, wouldn’t you say?
For a soldier? A soldier figuring to avoid physical violence is
like a CPA figuring to avoid adding numbers. ”
“Is that why you don’t care about these
women?”
He looked at her. “Who says I don’t care?”
“I thought you’d be more agitated about it.”
“Getting agitated won’t achieve anything.”
She paused. “So what will?”
“Working the clues, same as always.”
“There aren’t any clues. He doesn’t leave
any.”
He smiled. “That’s a clue in itself, wouldn’t you
say?”
She used her key from the inside and opened the
door.
“That’s just talking in riddles,” she said.
He shrugged. “Better than talking in bullshit, like they do downstairs.”
THE SAME MOTOR pool guy brought the same car to
the doors. This time he stayed in the driver’s seat, sitting
square-on like a dutiful chauffeur. He drove them north on I-95 to
the National Airport. It was before dawn. There was a halfhearted
glow in the sky somewhere three hundred miles to the east, all the
way out over the Atlantic Ocean. The only other illumination was
from a thousand headlights streaming north toward work. The
headlights were mostly on old-model cars. Old, therefore cheap,
therefore owned by low-grade people aiming to be at their desks an
hour before their bosses, so they would look good and get
promotion, whereupon they could drive newer cars to work an hour
later in the day. Reacher sat still and watched their shadowed
faces as the Bureau driver sped past them, one by one.
Inside the airport terminal, it was reasonably
busy. Men and women in dark raincoats walked quickly from one place
to another. Harper collected two coach tickets from the United desk
and carried them over to the check-in counter.
“We could use some legroom,” she said to the guy
behind the counter.
She used her FBI pass for photo ID. She snapped it
down like a poker player completing a flush. The guy hit a few keys
and came up with an upgrade. Harper smiled, like she was genuinely
surprised.
First class was half-empty. Harper took an aisle
seat, trapping Reacher against the window like a prisoner. She
stretched out. She was in a third different suit, this one a fine
check in a muted gray. The jacket fell open and showed a hint of
nipple through the shirt, and no shoulder holster.
“Left your gun at home?” Reacher asked.
She nodded. “Not worth the hassle. Airlines want
too much paperwork. A Seattle guy is meeting us. Standard practice
is he’d bring a spare, should we need one. But we won’t, not
today.”
“You hope.”
She nodded. “I hope.”
They taxied on time and took off a minute early.
Reacher pulled the magazine out and started leafing through. Harper
had her tray unfolded, ready for breakfast.
“What did you mean?” she asked. “When you said it’s
a clue in itself?”
He forced his mind back an hour and tried to
remember.
“Just thinking aloud, I guess,” he said.
“Thinking about what?”
He shrugged. He had time to kill. “The history of
science. Stuff like that.”
“Is that relevant?”
“I was thinking about fingerprinting. How old is
that?”
She made a face. “Pretty old, I think.”
“Turn of the century?”
She nodded. “Probably.”
“OK, a hundred years old,” he said. “That was the
first big forensic test, right? Probably started using microscopes
around the same time. And since then, they’ve invented all kinds of
other stuff. DNA, mass spectrometry, fluorescence. Lamarr said
you’ve got tests I wouldn’t believe. I bet they can find a rug
fiber, tell you where and when somebody bought it, what kind of
flea sat on it, what kind of dog the flea came off. Probably tell
you what the dog’s name is and what brand of dog food it ate for
breakfast.”
“So?”
“Amazing tests, right?”
She nodded.
“Real science-fiction stuff, right?”
She nodded again.
“OK,” he said. “Amazing, science-fiction tests. But
this guy killed Amy Callan and beat all of
those tests, right?”
“Right.”
“So what do you call that type of a guy?”
“What?”
“A very, very clever guy, is what.”
She made a face. “Among other things.”
“Sure, a lot of other things, but whatever else, a
very clever guy. Then he did it again, with Cooke. Now what do we
call him?”
“What?”
“A very, very clever guy.
Once might have been luck. Twice, he’s damn good.”
“So?”
“Then he did it again, with
Stanley. Now what do we call him?”
“A very, very, very clever guy?”
Reacher nodded. “Exactly.”
“So?”
“So that’s the clue. We’re looking for a very,
very, very clever guy.”
“I think we know that
already.”
Reacher shook his head. “I don’t think you do.
You’re not factoring it in.”
“In what sense?”
“You think about it. I’m only an errand boy. You
Bureau people can do all the hard work.”
The stewardess came out of the galley with the
breakfast trolley. It was first class, so the food was reasonable.
Reacher smelled bacon and egg and sausage. Strong coffee. He
flipped his tray open. The cabin was half-empty, so he got the girl
to give him two breakfasts. Two airline meals made for a pleasant
snack. She caught on quick and kept his coffee cup full.
“How aren’t we factoring it in?” Harper
asked.
“Figure it out for yourself,” Reacher said. “I’m
not in a helpful mood.”
“Is it that he’s not a soldier?”
He turned to stare at her. “That’s great. We agree
he’s a really smart guy, and so you say well, then he’s obviously
not a soldier. Thanks a bunch, Harper.”
She looked away, embarrassed. “I’m sorry. I didn’t
mean it like that. I just can’t see how we’re not factoring it
in.”
He said nothing in reply. Just drained his coffee
and climbed over her legs to get to the bathroom. When he got back,
she was still looking contrite.
“Tell me,” she said.
“No.”
“You should, Reacher. Blake’s going to ask me about
your attitude.”
“My attitude? Tell him my attitude is if a hair on
Jodie’s head gets hurt, I’ll tear his legs off and beat him to
death with them.”
She nodded. “You really mean that, right?”
He nodded back. “You bet your ass I do.”
“That’s what I don’t understand. Why aren’t you
feeling a little bit of the same way about these women? You liked
Amy Callan, right? Not the same way as Jodie, but you liked
her.”
“I don’t understand you, either. Blake wanted to
use you like a hooker, and you’re acting like he’s still your best
buddy.”
She shrugged. “He was desperate. He gets like that.
He’s under a lot of stress. He gets a case like this, he’s just
desperate to crack it.”
“And you admire that?”
She nodded. “Sure I do. I admire dedication.”
“But you don’t share it. Or you wouldn’t have said
no to him. You’d have seduced me on camera, for the good of the
cause. So maybe it’s you who doesn’t care enough about these
women.”
She was quiet for a spell. “It was immoral. It
annoyed me.”
He nodded. “And threatening Jodie was immoral, too.
It annoyed me.”
“But I’m not letting my annoyance get in the way of
justice.”
“Well, I am. And if you don’t like that, tough
shit.”
THEY DIDN’T SPEAK again, all the way to Seattle.
Five hours, without a word. Reacher was comfortable enough with
that. He was not a compulsively sociable guy. He was happier
not talking. He didn’t see anything odd
about it. There was no strain involved. He just sat there, not
talking, like he was making the journey on his own.
Harper was having more trouble with it. He could
see she was worried about it. She was like most people. Put her
alongside somebody she was acquainted with, she felt she had to be
conversing. For her, it was unnatural not to be. But he didn’t
relent. Five hours, without a single word.
Those five hours were reduced to two by the West
Coast clocks. It was still about breakfast time when they landed.
The Sea-Tac terminals were filled with people starting out on their
day. The arrivals hall had the usual echelon of drivers holding
placards up. There was one guy in a dark suit, striped tie, short
hair. He had no placard, but he was their guy. He might as well
have had FBI tattooed across his
forehead.
“Lisa Harper?” he said. “I’m from the Seattle Field
Office.”
They shook hands.
“This is Reacher,” she said.
The Seattle agent ignored him completely. Reacher
smiled inside. Touché, he thought. But then
the guy might have ignored him anyway even if they were best
buddies, because he was pretty much preoccupied with paying a whole
lot of attention to what was under Harper’s shirt.
“We’re flying to Spokane,” he said. “Air taxi
company owes us a few favors.”
He had a Bureau car parked in the tow lane. He used
it to drive a mile around the perimeter road to General Aviation,
which was five acres of fenced tarmac filled with parked planes,
all of them tiny, one and two engines. There was a cluster of huts
with low-budget signs advertising transportation and flying
lessons. A guy met them outside one of the huts. He wore a generic
pilot’s uniform and led them toward a clean white six-seat Cessna.
It was a medium-sized walk across the apron. Fall in the Northwest
had brighter light than in D.C., but it was just as cold.
The interior of the plane was about the same size
Lamarr’s Buick had been, and a whole lot more spartan. But it
looked clean and well maintained, and the engines started first
touch on the button. It taxied out to the runway with the same
sensation of tiny size Reacher had felt in the Lear at McGuire. It
lined up behind a 747 bound for Tokyo the way a mouse lines up
behind an elephant. Then it wound itself up and was off the ground
in seconds, wheeling due east, settling to a noisy cruise a
thousand feet above the ground.
The airspeed indicator showed more than a hundred
and twenty knots, and the plane flew on for two whole hours. The
seat was cramped and uncomfortable, and Reacher started wishing
he’d thought of a better way to waste his time. He was going to
spend fourteen hours in the air, all in one day. Maybe he should
have stayed and worked on the files with Lamarr. He imagined a
quiet room somewhere, like a library, a stack of papers, a leather
chair. Then he pictured Lamarr herself and glanced across at Harper
and figured he’d maybe taken the right option after all.
The airfield at Spokane was a modest, modern place,
larger than he had expected. There was a Bureau car waiting on the
tarmac, identifiable even from a thousand feet up, a clean dark
sedan with a man in a suit leaning on the fender.
“From the Spokane satellite office,” the Seattle
guy said.
The car rolled over to where the plane parked and
they were on the road within twenty seconds of the pilot shutting
down. The local guy had the destination address written on a pad
fixed to his windshield with a rubber suction cup. He seemed to
know where the place was. He drove ten miles east toward the Idaho
panhandle and turned north on a narrow road into the hills. The
terrain was moderate, but there were giant mountains in the middle
distance. Snow gleamed on the peaks. The road had a building every
mile or so, separated by thick forest and broad meadow. The
population density was not encouraging.
The address itself might have been the main house
of an old cattle ranch, sold off long ago and refurbished by
somebody looking for the rural dream but unwilling to forget the
aesthetics of the city. It was boxed into a small lot by new ranch
fencing. Beyond the fencing was grazing land, and inside the
fencing the same grass had been fed and mowed into a fine lawn.
There were trees on the perimeter, contorted by the wind. There was
a small barn with garage doors punched into the side and a path
veering off from the driveway to the front door. The whole
structure stood close to the road and close to its own fencing,
like a suburban house standing close to its neighbors, but this one
stood close to nothing. The nearest man-made object was at least a
mile away north or south, maybe twenty miles away east or
west.
The local guys stayed in the car, and Harper and
Reacher got out and stood stretching on the shoulder. Then the
engine shut down behind them and the stunning silence of the empty
country fell on them like a weight. It hummed and hissed and echoed
in their ears.
“I’d feel better if she lived in a city apartment,”
Reacher said.
Harper nodded. “With a doorman.”
There was no gate. The ranch fencing just stopped
either side of the mouth of the driveway. They walked together
toward the house. The driveway was shale. Reassuringly noisy, at
least. There was a slight breeze. Reacher could hear it in the
power lines. Harper stopped at the front door. There was no bell
push. Just a big iron knocker in the shape of a lion’s head with a
heavy ring held in its teeth. There was a fisheye spyhole above it.
The spyhole was new. There were burrs of clean wood where the drill
had chipped the paint. Harper grasped the iron ring and knocked
twice. The ring thumped on the wood. The sound was loud and dull,
and it rolled out over the grassland. Came back seconds later from
the hills.
There was no response. Harper knocked again. The
sound boomed out. They waited. There was a creak of floorboards
inside the house. Footsteps. The sound approached unseen and
stopped behind the door.
“Who is it?” a voice called. A woman’s voice,
apprehensive.
Harper went into her pocket and came out with her
badge. It was backed with a slip of leather, the same type of
gold-on-gold shield Lamarr had clicked against Reacher’s car
window. The eagle at the top, head cocked to the left. She held it
up, six inches in front of the spyhole.
“FBI, ma’am,” she announced. “We called you
yesterday, made an appointment.”
The door opened with the creak of old hinges and
revealed an entrance hall with a woman in it. She was holding the
doorknob, smiling with relief.
“Julia’s got me so damn nervous,” she said.
Harper smiled back in a sympathetic way and
introduced herself and Reacher. The woman shook hands with both of
them.
“Alison Lamarr,” she said. “Really pleased to meet
you.”
She led the way inside. The hall was square and as
large as a room, walled and floored in old pine, which had been
stripped and waxed to a fresh color a shade darker than the gold on
Harper’s badge. There were curtains in yellow checked gingham.
Sofas with feather-filled pillows. Old oil lamps converted to take
electric bulbs.
“Can I get you guys coffee?” Alison Lamarr
asked.
“I’m all set right now,” Harper said.
“Yes, please,” Reacher said.
She led them through to the kitchen, which was the
whole rear quarter of the first floor. It was an attractive space,
waxed floor polished to a shine, new cabinets in unostentatious
timber, a big country range, a line of gleaming machines for
washing clothes and dishes, electric gadgets on the countertops,
more yellow gingham at the windows. An expensive renovation, he
guessed, but designed to impress only herself.
“Cream and sugar?” she asked.
“Just black,” he said.
She was medium height, dark, and she moved with the
bounce of a fit, muscular woman. Her face was open and friendly,
tanned like she lived outdoors, and her hands were worn, like she
maybe installed her own ranch fencing for herself. She smelled of
lemon scent and was dressed in clean denim which had been carefully
pressed. She wore tooled cowboy boots with clean soles. It looked
like she’d made an effort for her visitors.
She poured coffee from a machine into a mug. Handed
it to Reacher and smiled. The smile was a mixture of things. Maybe
she was lonely. But it proved there was no blood relationship with
her stepsister. It was a pleasant smile, interested, friendly,
smiled in a way Julia Lamarr had no idea existed. It reached her
eyes, which were dark and liquid. Reacher was a connoisseur of
eyes, and he rated these two as more than acceptable.
“Can I look around?” he asked.
“Security check?” she said.
He nodded. “I guess.”
“Be my guest.”
He took his coffee with him. The two women stayed
in the kitchen. The house had four rooms on the first floor,
entrance, kitchen, parlor, living room. The whole place was solidly
built out of good timber. The renovations were excellent quality.
All the windows were new storm units in stout wood frames. The
weather was cold enough that the screens were out and stored. Each
window had a key. The front door was original, old pine two inches
thick and aged like steel. Big hinges and a city lock. There was a
back hallway with a back door, similar vintage and thickness. Same
lock.
Outside there were thick thorny foundation
plantings he guessed were chosen for wind resistance, but were as
good as anything for stopping people spending time trying to get in
the windows. There was a steel cellar door with a big padlock
latched through the handles. The garage was a decent barn, less
well maintained than the house, but not about to fall down anytime
soon. There was a new Jeep Cherokee inside, and a stack of cartons
proving the renovations had been recent. There was a new washing
machine, still boxed up and sealed. A workbench with power saws and
drills stored neatly on a shelf above it.
He went back into the house and up the stairs. Same
windows as elsewhere. Four bedrooms. Alison’s was clearly the back
room on the left, facing west over empty country as far as the eye
could see. It would be dark in the mornings, but the sunsets would
be spectacular. There was a new master bathroom, stealing space
from the next-door bedroom. It held a toilet, and a sink, and a
shower. And a tub.
He went back down to the kitchen. Harper was
standing by the window, looking out at the view. Alison Lamarr was
sitting at the table.
“OK?” she said.
Reacher nodded. “Looks good to me. You keep the
doors locked?”
“I do now. Julia made such a fuss about it. I lock
the windows, I lock the doors, I use the spyhole, I put 911 on the
speed dial.”
“So you should be OK,” Reacher said. “This guy
isn’t into breaking doors down, apparently. Don’t open up to
anybody, nothing can go wrong.”
She nodded. “That’s how I figure it. You need to
ask me some questions now?”
“That’s why they sent me, I guess.”
He sat down opposite her. Focused on the gleaming
machines on the other side of the room, desperately trying to think
of something intelligent to say.
“How’s your father doing?” he asked.
“That’s what you want to know?”
He shrugged. “Julia mentioned he was sick.”
She nodded, surprised. “He’s been sick two years.
Cancer. Now he’s dying. Almost gone, just hanging on day by day.
He’s in the hospital in Spokane. I go there every afternoon.”
“I’m very sorry.”
“Julia should come out. But she’s awkward with
him.”
“She doesn’t fly.”
Alison made a face. “She could get over that, just
once in two years. But she’s all hung up on this step-family thing,
as if it really matters. Far as I’m concerned, she’s my sister,
pure and simple. And sisters take care of each other, right? She
should know that. She’s going to be the only relative I’ve got.
She’ll be my next of kin, for God’s sake.”
“Well, I’m sorry about all that, too.”
She made another face. “Right now, that’s not too
important. What can I help you with?”
“You got any feeling for who this guy could
be?”
She smiled. “That’s rather a basic question.”
“It’s rather a basic issue. You got any
instinct?”
“It’s some guy who thinks it’s OK to harass women.
Or maybe not OK, exactly. Could be some guy
who just thinks the fallout should be kept behind closed
doors.”
“Is that an option?” Harper asked. She sat down,
next to Reacher.
Alison glanced at her. “I don’t really know. I’m
not sure there is any middle ground. Either you swallow it, or it
goes public in a big way.”
“Did you look for the middle ground?”
She shook her head. “I’m the living proof. I just
went ballistic. There was no middle ground there. At least, I couldn’t see any.”
“Who was your guy?” Reacher asked.
“A colonel called Gascoigne,” she said. “He was
always full of shit about coming to him if anything was bothering
you. I went to him about getting reassigned. I saw him five times.
I wasn’t pleading the feminist case or anything. It wasn’t a
political thing. I just wanted something more interesting to do.
And frankly I thought the Army was wasting a good soldier. Because
I was good.”
Reacher nodded. “So what happened with Gascoigne?
”
Alison made a face.
“I didn’t see it coming,” she said. “At first I
thought he was just kidding around.”
She paused. Looked away.
“He said I should try next time without my uniform
on,” she said. “I thought he was asking for a date, you know, meet
him in town, some bar, off duty, plain clothes. But then he made it
clear, no, he meant right there in his office, stripped off.”
Reacher nodded. “Not a very nice suggestion.”
She made another face. “Well, he led up to it
pretty slow, and he was pretty jokey about it, at first. It was
like he was flirting. I almost didn’t notice, you know? Like he’s a man, I’m a woman, it’s
not a huge surprise, right? But clearly he figured I wasn’t getting
the message, so then all of a sudden he got obscene. He described what I’d have to do, you know?
One foot on this corner of his desk, the other foot on the other
corner, hands behind my head, motionless for thirty minutes. Then
bending over, you know? Like a porno movie. Then it did hit me, the rage, all in a split second, and I
just went nuclear.”
Reacher nodded. “And you busted him?”
“Sure I did.”
“How did he react?”
She smiled. “He was puzzled, more than anything.
I’m sure he’d done it lots of times before, and gotten away with
it. I think he was kind of surprised the rules had changed on
him.”
“Could he be the guy?”
She shook her head. “No. This guy is deadly, right? Gascoigne wasn’t like that. He was an
old, sad man. Tired, and ineffectual. Julia says this guy is a
piece of work. I don’t see Gascoigne having that kind of initiative , you know?”
Reacher nodded again. “If your sister’s profile is
correct, this is probably a guy from the background somewhere.
”
“Right,” Alison said. “Maybe not connected with any
specific incident. Maybe some kind of distant observer, turned
avenger.”
“If Julia’s profile is correct,” Reacher said
again.
There was a short silence.
“Big if,” Alison
said.
“You got doubts?”
“You know I have,” she said. “And I know you have,
too. Because we both know the same things.”
Harper sat forward. “What are you saying?”
Alison made a face. “I just can’t see a soldier
going to all this trouble, not over this
issue. It just doesn’t work like that. The Army changes the rules
all the time. Go back fifty years, it’s OK
to harass blacks, then it’s not. It’s OK to shoot gook babies, then
it’s not. A million things like that. Hundreds of men were canned
one after the other, for some new invented offense. Truman
integrated the Army, nobody started killing the blacks who filed
complaints. This is some kind of new
reaction. I can’t understand it.”
“Maybe men versus women is more fundamental,”
Harper said.
Alison nodded. “Maybe it is. I really don’t know.
But at the end of the day, like Julia says, the target group is so
specific, it has to be a soldier. Who else
could even identify us? But it’s a very
weird soldier, that’s for damn sure. Not like any I ever
met.”
“Really?” Harper said. “Nobody at all? No threats,
no comments, while it was all happening?”
“Nothing significant. Nothing more than casual
bullshit. Nothing that I recall. I even flew out to Quantico and
let Julia hypnotize me, in case there was something buried there,
but she said I came up with nothing.”
Silence again. Harper swept imaginary crumbs from
the table and nodded. “OK. Wasted trip, right?”
“Sorry, guys,” Alison said.
“Nothing’s ever wasted,” Reacher said. “Negatives
can be useful too. And the coffee was great.”
“You want more?”
“No, he doesn’t,” Harper said. “We’ve got to get
back.”
“OK.” She stood up and followed them out of her
kitchen. Crossed the hall and opened her front door.
“Don’t let anybody in,” Reacher said.
Alison smiled. “I don’t plan to.”
“I mean it,” Reacher said. “It looks like there’s
no force involved. This guy is just walking in. So you might know
him. Or he’s some kind of a con artist, with some kind of a
plausible excuse. Don’t fall for it.”
“I don’t plan to,” she said again. “Don’t worry
about me. And call me if you need anything. I’ll be at the hospital
afternoons, as long as it takes, but any other time is good. And
best of luck.”
Reacher followed Harper through the front door, out
onto the shale path. They heard the door close behind them, and
then the loud sound of the lock turning.
THE LOCAL BUREAU guy saved them two hours’ flying
time by pointing out that they could hop from Spokane to Chicago
and then change there for D.C. Harper did the business with the
tickets and found out it was more expensive, which was presumably
why the Quantico travel desk hadn’t booked it that way in the first
place. But she authorized the extra money herself and decided to
have the argument later. Reacher admired her for it. He liked
impatience and wasn’t keen on another two hours in the Cessna. So
they sent the Seattle guy back west alone and boarded a Boeing for
Chicago. This time there was no upgrade, because the whole plane
was coach. It put them close together, elbows and thighs touching
all the way.
“So what do you think?” Harper asked.
“I’m not paid to think,” Reacher said. “In fact, so
far I’m not getting paid at all. I’m a consultant. So you ask me
questions and I’ll answer them.”
“I did ask you a question. I asked you what you
think.”
He shrugged. “I think it’s a big target group and
three of them are dead. You can’t guard them, but if the other
eighty-eight do what Alison Lamarr is doing, they should be
OK.”
“You think locked doors are enough to stop this
guy?”
“He chooses his own MO. Apparently he doesn’t touch
anything. If they don’t open the door for him, what’s he going to
do?”
“Maybe change his MO.”
“In which case you’ll get him, because he’ll have
to start leaving some hard evidence behind.”
He turned to look out of the window.
“That’s it?” Harper said. “We should just tell the
women to lock their doors?”
He nodded. “I think you should be warning them,
yes.”
“That doesn’t catch the guy.”
“You can’t catch him.”
“Why not?”
“Because of this profiling bullshit. You’re not
factoring in how smart he is.”
She shook her head. “Yes, we are. I’ve seen the
profile. It says he’s real smart. And profiling works, Reacher.
Those people have had some spectacular successes. ”
“Among how many failures?”
“What do you mean?”
Reacher turned back to face her. “Suppose I was in
Blake’s position? He’s effectively a nationwide homicide detective,
right? Gets to hear about everything. So suppose I was him, getting
notified about every single homicide in America. Suppose every
single time I said the likely suspect was a white male, age thirty
and a half, wooden leg, divorced parents, drives a blue Ferrari.
Every single time. Sooner or later, I’d be right. The law of
averages would work for me. Then I could shout out hey, I was
right. As long as I keep quiet about the ten thousand times I was
wrong, I look pretty good, don’t I? Amazing deduction.”
“That’s not what Blake’s doing.”
“Isn’t it? Have you read stuff about his
unit?”
She nodded. “Of course I have. That’s why I applied
for the assignment. There are all kinds of books and
articles.”
“I’ve read them too. Chapter one, successful case.
Chapter two, successful case. And so on. No chapters about all the
times they were wrong. Makes me wonder about how many times that
was. My guess is a lot of times. Too many times to want to write
about them.”
“So what are you saying?”
“I’m saying a scattergun approach will always look
good, as long as you put the spotlight on the successes and sweep
the failures under the rug.”
“That’s not what they’re doing.”
He nodded. “No, it isn’t. Not exactly. They’re not
just guessing. They try to work at it. But it’s not an exact
science. It’s not rigorous. And they’re one unit among many,
fighting for status and funding and position. You know how
organizations work. They’ve got the budget hearings right now.
First, second, and third duty is protecting their own ass against
cuts by proclaiming their successes and concealing their
failures.”
“So you think the profile is worthless?”
He nodded. “I know it is. It’s internally flawed.
It makes two statements that are incompatible.”
“What two statements?”
He shook his head. “No deal, Harper. Not until
Blake apologizes for threatening Jodie and pulls Julia Lamarr off
the case.”
“Why would he do that? She’s his best
profiler.”
“Exactly.”
THE MOTOR POOL guy was at the National Airport in
D.C. to pick them up. It was late when they arrived back at
Quantico. Julia Lamarr met them, alone. Blake was in a budget
meeting, and Poulton had signed out and gone home.
“How was she?” Lamarr asked.
“Your sister?”
“My stepsister.”
“She was OK,” Reacher said.
“What’s her house like?”
“Secure,” he said. “Locked up tight as Fort
Knox.”
“But isolated, right?”
“Very isolated,” he said.
She nodded. He waited.
“So she’s OK?” she said again.
“She wants you to visit,” he said.
She shook her head. “I can’t. It would take me a
week to get there.”
“Your father is dying.”
“My stepfather.”
“Whatever. She thinks you should go out
there.”
“I can’t,” she said again. “She still the
same?”
Reacher shrugged. “I don’t know what she was like
before. I only just met her today.”
“Dressed like a cowboy, tanned and pretty and
sporty?”
He nodded. “You got it.”
She nodded again, vaguely. “Different from
me.”
He looked her over. Her cheap black city suit was
dusty and creased, and she was pale and thin and hard. Her mouth
was turned down. Her eyes were blank.
“Yes, different from you,” he said.
“I told you,” she said. “I’m the ugly
sister.”
She walked away without speaking again. Harper took
him to the cafeteria and they ate a late supper together. Then she
escorted him up to his room. Locked him inside without a word. He
listened to her footsteps fade away in the corridor and undressed
and showered. Then he lay down on the bed, thinking, and hoping.
And waiting. Above all, waiting. Waiting for the morning.