13
THE MORNING CAME, but it was the wrong morning.
He knew it as soon as he reached the cafeteria. He had been awake
and waiting thirty minutes before Harper showed up. She unlocked
his door and breezed in, looking elegant and refreshed, wearing the
same suit as the first day. Clearly she had three suits and wore
them in strict rotation. Three suits was about right, he figured,
given her likely salary. It was three suits more than he had,
because it was a whole salary more than he had.
They rode down in the elevator together and walked
between buildings. The whole campus was very quiet. It had a
weekend feel. He realized it was Sunday. The weather was better. No
warmer, but the sun was out and it wasn’t raining. He hoped for a
moment it was a sign that this was his day. But it wasn’t. He knew
that as soon as he walked into the cafeteria.
Blake was at the table by the window, alone. There
was a jug of coffee, three upturned mugs, a basket of cream and
sugar, a basket of Danish and doughnuts. The bad news was the pile
of Sunday newspapers, opened and read and scattered, with the
Washington Post and
USA Today and worst of all the New York Times just sitting right there in plain
view. Which meant there was no news from New York. Which meant it
hadn’t worked yet, which meant he was going to have to keep on
waiting until it did.
With three people at the table instead of five,
there was more elbow room. Harper sat down opposite Blake and
Reacher sat opposite nobody. Blake looked old and tired and very
strained. He looked ill. The guy was a heart attack waiting to
happen. But Reacher felt no sympathy for him. Blake had broken the
rules.
“Today you work the files,” Blake said.
“Whatever,” Reacher said.
“They’re updated with the Lorraine Stanley
material. So you need to spend today reviewing them and you can
give us your conclusions at the breakfast meeting tomorrow.
Clear?”
Reacher nodded. “Crystal.”
“Any preliminaries I should know about?”
“Preliminary what?”
“Conclusions. You got any thoughts yet?”
Reacher glanced at Harper. This was the point where
a loyal agent would inform her boss about his objections. But she
said nothing. Just looked down and concentrated on stirring her
coffee.
“Let me read the files,” he said. “Too early to say
anything right now.”
Blake nodded. “We’ve got sixteen days. We need to
start making some real progress real soon.”
Reacher nodded back. “I get the message. Maybe
tomorrow we’ll get some good news.”
Blake and Harper looked at him like it was an odd
thing to say. Then they took coffee and Danish and doughnuts and
sections of the papers and lingered like they had time to kill. It
was Sunday. And the investigation was stalled. That was clear.
Reacher recognized the signs. However urgent a thing is, there
comes a point where there are no more places to go. The urgency
burns out, and you sit there like you’ve got all the time in the
world, while the world rages on around you.
AFTER BREAKFAST HARPER took him to a room pretty
much the same as he’d imagined while bucketing along in the Cessna.
It was aboveground, quiet, filled with light oak tables and
comfortable padded chairs faced with leather. There was a wall of
windows, and the sun was shining outside. The only negative was one
of the tables held a stack of files about a foot high. They were in
dark blue folders, with FBI printed on them
in yellow letters.
The stack was split into three bundles, each one
secured with a thick rubber band. He laid them out on the table,
side by side. Amy Callan, Caroline Cooke, Lorraine Stanley. Three
victims, three bundles. He checked his watch. Ten twenty-five. A
late start. The sun was warming the room. He felt lazy.
“You didn’t try Jodie,” Harper said.
He shook his head and said nothing.
“Why not?”
“No point. She’s obviously not there.”
“Maybe she went to your place. Where her father
used to live.”
“Maybe,” he said. “But I doubt it. She doesn’t like
it there. Too isolated.”
“Did you try it?”
He shook his head. “No.”
“Worried?”
“I can’t worry about something I can’t
change.”
She said nothing. There was silence. He pulled a
file toward him.
“You read these?” he asked her.
She nodded. “Every night. I read the files and the
summaries.”
“Anything in them?”
She looked at the bundles, each one of them four
inches thick. “Plenty in them.”
“Anything significant?”
“That’s your call,” she said.
He nodded reluctantly and stretched the rubber band
off the Callan file. Opened up the folder. Harper took her jacket
off and sat down opposite. Rolled up her shirtsleeves. The sun was
directly behind her and it made her shirt transparent. He could see
the outside curve of her breast. It swelled gently past the strap
of her shoulder holster and fell away to the flatness of her waist.
It moved slightly as she breathed.
“Get to work, Reacher,” she said.
THIS IS THE tense time. You
drive by, not fast, not slow, you look carefully, you keep on going
up the road a little, and then you stop and you turn around and you
drive back. You park at the curb, leaving the car facing the right
direction. You switch the engine off. You take the keys out and put
them in your pocket. You put your gloves on. It’s cold outside, so
the gloves will look OK.
You get out of the car. You
stand still for a second, listening hard, and then you turn a
complete circle, slowly, looking again. This is the tense time.
This is the time when you must decide to abort or proceed. Think,
think, think. You keep it dispassionate. It’s just an operational
judgment, after all. Your training helps.
You decide to proceed. You
close the car door, quietly. You walk into the driveway. You walk
to the door. You knock. You stand there.
The door opens. She lets you in. She’s glad to see you. Surprised,
a little confused at first, then delighted. You talk for a moment.
You keep on talking, until the time is right. You’ll know the
moment, when it comes. You keep on talking.
The moment comes. You stand
still for a second, testing it. You make your move. You explain she
has to do exactly what you tell her. She agrees, of course, because
she has no choice. You tell her you’d like her to look like she’s
having fun while she’s doing it. You explain that’ll make the whole
thing more agreeable for you. She nods happily, willing to please.
She smiles. The smile is forced and artificial, which spoils it
somewhat, but it can’t be helped. Something is better than
nothing.
You make her show you the
master bathroom. She stands there like a real estate agent, showing
it off. The tub is fine. It’s like a lot of tubs you’ve seen. You
tell her to bring the paint inside. You supervise her all the way.
It takes her five trips, in and out of the house, up and down the
stairs. There’s a lot to carry. She’s huffing and puffing. She’s
starting to sweat, even though the fall weather is cold. You remind
her about the smile. She puts it back in place. It looks more like
a grimace.
You tell her to find something
to lever the lids off with. She nods happily and tells you about a
screwdriver in the kitchen drawer. You walk with her. She opens the
drawer and finds the screwdriver. You walk with her, back to the
bathroom. You tell her to take the lids off, one by one. She’s
calm. She kneels next to the first can. She works the tip of the
screwdriver in under the metal flange of the lid and eases it
upward. She works around it in a circle. The lid sucks off. The
chemical smell of the paint fills the air.
She moves on to the next can.
Then the next. She’s working hard. Working quickly. You tell her to
be careful. Any mess, she’ll be punished. You tell her to smile.
She smiles. She works. The last lid comes off.
You pull the folded refuse sack
from your pocket. You tell her to place her clothes in it. She’s
confused. Which clothes? The clothes you’re wearing, you tell her.
She nods and smiles. Kicks off her shoes. Their weight pulls the
folded bag into shape. She’s wearing socks. She tugs them off.
Drops them in the bag. She unbuttons her jeans. Hops from foot to
foot, taking them off. They go in the bag. She unbuttons her shirt.
Shrugs it off. Drops it in the bag. She reaches back and fiddles
with the catch on a her bra. Pulls it off. Her breasts are swinging
free. She slips her underpants down and balls them with the bra and
drops them in the bag. She’s naked. You tell her to
smile.
You make her carry the bag down
to the front door. You walk behind her. She props the bag against
the door. You take her back to the bathroom. You make her empty the
cans into the tub, slowly, carefully, one by one. She concentrates
hard, tongue between her teeth. The cans are heavy and awkward. The
paint is thick. It smells. It runs slowly into the tub. The level
creeps up, green and oily.
You tell her she’s done well.
You tell her you’re pleased. The paint is in the tub, and there are
no drips anywhere. She smiles, delighted at the praise. Then you
tell her the next part is harder. She has to take the empty cans
back where she got them. But now she’s naked. So she has to make
sure nobody can see. And she has to run. She nods. You tell her now
the cans are empty they weigh less, so she can carry more each
trip. She nods again. She understands. She threads them onto her
fingers, five empty cans in each hand. She
carries them downstairs. You make her wait. You ease the door open
and check. Look and listen. You send her out. She runs all the way
there. She replaces the cans. She runs all the way back, breasts
bouncing. It’s cold outside.
You tell her to stand still and
get her breath. You remind her about the smile. She bobs her head
apologetically and comes back with the grimace. You take her up to
the bathroom again. The screwdriver is still on the floor. You ask
her to pick it up. You tell her to make marks on her face with it.
She’s confused. You explain. Deep scratches will do, you tell her.
Three or four of them. Deep enough to draw blood. She smiles and
nods. Raises the screwdriver. Scrapes it down the left side of her
face, with the blade turned so the point is digging in. A livid red
line appears, five inches long. Make the next one harder, you say.
She nods. The next line bleeds. Good, you say. Do another. She
scratches another. And another. Good, you say. Now make the last
one really hard. She nods and smiles. Drags the blade down. The
skin tears. Blood flows. Good girl, you say.
She’s still holding the
screwdriver. You tell her to get into the bath, slowly and
carefully. She puts her right foot in. Then her left. She’s
standing in the paint, up to her calves. You tell her to sit down,
slowly. She sits. The paint is up over her waist. Touching the
underside of her breasts. You tell her to lie back, slowly and
carefully. She slides down into the paint. The level rises, two
inches below the lip of the tub. Now you smile. Just
right.
You tell her what to do. She
doesn’t understand at first, because it’s a very odd thing to be
asked. You explain carefully. She nods. Her hair is thick with
paint. She slides down. Now only her face is showing. She tilts her head back. Her hair floats. She uses her
fingers to help her. They’re slick and dripping with paint. She
does exactly what she’s been told. She gets it right first time.
Her eyes jam open with panic, and then she dies.
You wait five minutes. Just
leaning over the tub, not touching anything. Then you do the only
thing she can’t do for herself. It gets paint on your right glove.
Then you press down on her forehead with a fingertip and she slips
under the surface. You peel your right glove off inside out. Check
the left one. It’s OK. You put your right hand in your pocket for
safety and you keep it there. This is the only time your prints are
exposed.
Your carry the soiled glove in
your left hand and walk downstairs in the silence. Slip the glove
into the refuse sack with her clothes. Open the door. Listen and
watch. Carry the sack outside. Turn around and close the door
behind you. Walk down the driveway to the road. Pause behind the
car and slip the clean glove in the sack, too. Pop the trunk lid
and place the sack inside. Open the door and slide in behind the
wheel. Take the keys from your pocket and start the engine. Buckle
your belt and check the mirror. Drive away, not fast, not
slow.
THE CALLAN FILE started with a summary of her
military career. The career was four years long and the summary ran
to forty-eight lines of type. His own name was mentioned once, in
connection with the debacle at the end. He found he remembered her
pretty well. She had been a small, round woman, cheerful and happy.
He guessed she had joined the Army with no very clear idea of
why. There’s a definite type of person who
takes the same route. Maybe from a large family, comfortable with
sharing, good at team sports in school, academically proficient
without being a scholar, they just drift toward it. They see it as
an extension of what they’ve already known. Probably they don’t see
themselves as fighters, but they know for every person who holds a
gun the Army offers a hundred other niches where there are trades
to be learned and qualifications to be earned.
Callan had passed out of basic training and gone
straight to the ordnance storerooms. She was a sergeant within
twenty months. She shuffled paper and sent consignments around the
world pretty much like her contemporaries back home, except her
consignments were guns and shells instead of tomatoes or shoes or
automobiles. She worked at Fort Withe near Chicago in a warehouse
full of the stink of gun oil and the noise of clattering forklifts.
She had been content at first. Then the rough banter had gotten too
much, and her captain and her major had started stepping over the
line and talking dirty and acting physical. She was no shrinking
violet, but the pawing and the leering eventually brought her to
Reacher’s office.
Then after she quit she went to Florida, to a beach
town on the Atlantic forty miles north of where it stopped being
too expensive. She got married there, got separated there, lived
there a year, then died there. The file was full of notes and
photographs about where and nothing much about how. Her house was a
modern one-story crouching under an overhanging roof made of orange
tile. The crime scene photographs showed no damage to any doors or
windows, no disruption inside, a white-tiled bathroom with a tub
full of green paint and a slick indeterminate shape floating in
it.
The autopsy showed nothing at all. The paint was
designed to be tough and weatherproof and it had a molecular
structure designed to cling and penetrate anything it was slapped
onto. It covered a hundred percent of the body’s external area and
it had seeped into the eyes and the nose and the mouth and the
throat. Removing it removed the skin. There was no evidence of
bruising or trauma. The toxicology was clear. No phenol injection
to the heart. No air embolisms. There are many clever ways to kill
a person, and the Florida pathologists knew all of them, and they
couldn’t find any evidence of any of them.
“Well?” Harper said.
Reacher shrugged. “She had freckles. I remember
that. A year in the Florida sun, she must have looked pretty
good.”
“You liked her.”
He nodded. “She was OK.”
The final third of the file was some of the most
exhaustive crime scene forensics he had ever heard of. The analysis
was microscopic, literally. Every particle of dust or fiber in her
house had been vacuumed up and analyzed. But there was no evidence
of any intruder. Not the slightest sign.
“A very clever guy,” Reacher said.
Harper said nothing in reply. He pushed Callan’s
folder to one side and opened Cooke’s. It followed the same format
in its condensed narrative structure. She was different from Callan
in that she had obviously aimed for the Army right from the start.
Her grandfather and her father had been Army men, which creates a
kind of military aristocracy, the way certain families see it. She
had recognized the clash between her gender and her career
intention pretty early, and there were notes about her demands to
join her high school ROTC. She had begun her battles early.
She had been an officer candidate, and had started
out a second lieutenant. She had gone straight to War Plans, which
is where the brainy people waste their time assuming that when push
comes to shove your friends stay your friends and your enemies stay
your enemies. She had been promoted first lieutenant and posted to
NATO in Brussels and started a relationship with her colonel. When
she didn’t get promoted captain early enough, she complained about
him.
Reacher remembered it well. There was no harassment
involved, certainly not in the sense that Callan had endured. No
strangers had pinched her or squeezed her or made lewd gestures at
her with oily gun barrels. But the rules had changed, so that
sleeping with somebody you commanded was no longer allowed, so
Cooke’s colonel went down, and then ate his pistol. She quit and
flew home from Belgium to a lakeside cottage in New Hampshire,
where she was eventually found dead in a tub full of setting
paint.
The New Hampshire pathologists and forensic
scientists told the same story their Florida counterparts had,
which was absolutely no story at all. The notes and the photographs
were the same but different. A gray cedar house crowded by trees,
an undamaged door, an undisturbed interior, folksy bathroom decor
dominated by the dense green contents of the tub. Reacher skimmed
through and closed the folder.
“What do you think?” Harper asked.
“I think the paint is weird,” Reacher said.
“Why?”
He shrugged. “It’s so circular, isn’t it? It eliminates evidence on the
bodies, which reduces risk, but getting it and transporting it
creates risk.”
“And it’s like a deliberate clue,” Harper said. “It
underlines the motive. It’s definite confirmation it’s an Army guy.
It’s like a taunt.”
“Lamarr says it has psychological significance. She
says he’s reclaiming them for the military.”
Harper nodded. “By taking their clothes,
too.”
“But if he hates them enough to kill them, why
would he want to reclaim them?”
“I don’t know. A guy like this, who knows how he
thinks?”
“Lamarr thinks she knows how he thinks,” Reacher
said.
Lorraine Stanley’s file was the last of the three.
Her history was similar to Callan’s, but more recent. She was
younger. She had been a sergeant, bottom of the totem pole in a
giant quartermaster facility in Utah, the only woman in the place.
She had been pestered since day one. Her competence had been
questioned. One night her barrack was broken into and all her
uniform trousers were stolen. She reported for duty the next
morning wearing her regulation skirt. The next night, all her
underwear was stolen. The next morning she was wearing the skirt
and nothing underneath. Her lieutenant called her into his office.
Made her stand easy in the middle of the room, one foot either side
of a large mirror laid on the floor, while he yelled at her for a
paperwork snafu. The whole of the personnel roster filed in and out
of the office throughout, getting a good look at the reflection in
the mirror. The lieutenant ended up in prison and Stanley ended up
serving out another year and then living alone and dying alone in
San Diego, in the little bungalow shown in the crime scene
photographs, in which the California pathologists and forensics
people had found absolutely nothing at all.
“How old are you?” Reacher asked.
“Me?” Harper said. “Twenty-nine. I told you that.
It’s an FAQ.”
“From Colorado, right?”
“Aspen.”
“Family?”
“Two sisters, one brother.”
“Older or younger?”
“All older. I’m the baby.”
“Parents?”
“Dad’s a pharmacist, Mom helps him out.”
“You take vacations when you were kids?”
She nodded. “Sure. Grand Canyon, Painted Desert,
all over. One year we camped in Yellowstone.”
“You drove there, right?”
She nodded again. “Sure. Big station wagon full of
kids, happy family sort of thing. What’s this about?”
“What do you remember about the drives?”
She made a face. “They were endless.”
“Exactly.”
“Exactly what?”
“This is a real big country.”
“So?”
“Caroline Cooke was killed in New Hampshire and
Lorraine Stanley was killed three weeks later in San Diego. That’s
about as far apart as you can get, right? Maybe thirty-five hundred
miles by road. Maybe more.”
“Is he traveling by road?”
Reacher nodded. “He’s got hundreds of gallons of
paint to haul around.”
“Maybe he’s got a stockpile stashed away someplace.
”
“That just makes it worse. Unless his stash just
happened to be on a direct line between where he’s based now and
New Hampshire and southern California, he’d
have to detour to get it. It would add distance, maybe a lot of
distance.”
"So?”
“So he’s got a three-, four-thousand-mile road
trip, plus surveillance time on Lorraine Stanley. Could he do that
in a week?”
Harper made a face. “Call it seventy hours at
fifty-five miles an hour.”
“Which he couldn’t average. He’d pass through towns
and road construction. And he wouldn’t break the speed limit. A guy
this meticulous isn’t going to risk some trooper sniffing around
his vehicle. Hundreds of gallons of camouflage basecoat is going to
arouse some suspicions these days, right?”
“So call it a hundred hours on the road.”
“At least. Plus a day or two surveillance when he
gets there. That’s more than a week, in practical terms. It’s ten
or eleven days. Maybe twelve.”
“So?”
"You tell me.”
"This is not some guy working two weeks on, one
week off.”
Reacher nodded. “No, it’s not.”
THEY WALKED OUTSIDE and around toward the block
with the cafeteria in it. The weather had settled to what fall
should be. The air was ten degrees warmer, but still crisp. The
lawns were green and the sky was a shattering blue. The dampness
had blown away and the leaves on the surrounding trees looked dry
and two shades lighter.
“I feel like staying outside,” Reacher said.
“You need to work,” Harper said.
“I read the damn files. Reading them over again
isn’t going to help me any. I need to do some thinking.”
“You think better outside?”
“Generally.”
“OK, come to the range. I need to qualify on
handguns. ”
“You’re not qualified already?”
She smiled. “Of course I am. We have to requalify
every month. Regulations.”
They took sandwiches from the cafeteria and ate as
they walked. The outdoor pistol range was Sunday-quiet, a large
space the size of a hockey rink, bermed on three sides with high
earth walls. There were six separate firing lanes made out of
shoulder-high concrete walls running all the way down to six
separate targets. The targets were heavy paper, clipped into steel
frames. Each paper was printed with a picture of a crouching felon,
with target rings radiating out from his heart. Harper signed in
with the rangemaster and handed him her gun. He reloaded it with
six shells and handed it back, together with two sets of ear
defenders.
“Take lane three,” he said.
Lane three was in the center. There was a black
line painted on the concrete floor.
“Seventy-five feet,” Harper said.
She stood square-on and slipped the ear defenders
into position. Raised the gun two-handed. Her legs were apart and
her knees slightly bent. Her hips were forward and her shoulders
back. She loosed off the six shots in a stream, half a second
between them. Reacher watched the tendons in her hand. They were
tight, rocking the muzzle up and down a fraction each time she
pulled.
“Clear,” she said.
He looked at her.
“That means you go get the target,” she said.
He expected to see the hits arranged on a vertical
line maybe a foot long, and when he got down to the other end of
the lane, that is exactly what he found. There were two holes in
the heart, two in the next ring, and two in the ring connecting the
throat with the stomach. He unclipped the paper and carried it
back.
“Two fives, two fours, two threes,” she said.
“Twenty-four points. I pass, just.”
“You should use your left arm more,” he said.
“How?”
“Take all the weight with your left, and just use
your right for pulling the trigger.”
She paused.
“Show me,” she said.
He stepped close behind her and stretched around
with his left arm. She raised the gun in her right and he cupped
her hand in his.
“Relax the arm,” he said. “Let me take the
weight.”
His arms were long, but hers were too. She shuffled
backward and pressed hard against him. He leaned forward. Rested
his chin on the side of her head. Her hair smelled good.
“OK, let it float,” he said.
She clicked the trigger on the empty chamber a
couple of times. The muzzle was rock steady.
“Feels good,” she said.
“Go get some more shells.”
She peeled away from in front of him and walked
back to the rangemaster’s cubicle and got another clip, part loaded
with six. He moved into the next lane, where there was a new
target. She met him there and nestled back against him and raised
her gun hand. He reached around her and cupped it and took the
weight. She leaned back against him. Fired twice. He saw the holes
appear in the target, maybe an inch apart in the center ring.
“See?” he said. “Let the left do the work.”
“Sounds like a political statement.”
She stayed where she was, leaning back against him.
He could feel the rise and fall of her breathing. He stepped away
from behind her and she tried again, by herself. Two shots, fast.
The shell cases rang on the concrete. Two more holes appeared in
the heart ring. There was a tight cluster of four, in a diamond
shape a business card would have covered.
She nodded. “You want the last two?”
She stepped close and handed him the pistol,
butt-first. It was a SIG-Sauer, identical to the one Lamarr had
held next to his head throughout the car ride into Manhattan. He
stood with his back to the target and weighed the gun in his hand.
Then he spun abruptly and fired the two bullets, one into each of
the target’s eyes.
“That’s how I’d do it,” he said. “If I was real mad
with somebody, that’s what I’d do. I wouldn’t mess around with a
damn tub and twenty gallons of paint.”
THEY MET BLAKE on the way back to the library
room. He looked aimless and agitated all at the same time. There
was worry in his face. He had a new problem.
“Lamarr’s father died,” he said.
“Stepfather,” Reacher said.
“Whatever. He died, early this morning. The
hospital in Spokane called for her. Now I’ve got to call her at
home.”
“Give her our condolences,” Harper said.
Blake nodded vaguely and walked away.
“He should take her off the case,” Reacher
said.
Harper nodded. “Maybe he should, but he won’t. And
she wouldn’t agree, anyway. Her job is all she’s got.”
Reacher said nothing. Harper pulled the door and
ushered him back into the room with the oak tables and the leather
chairs and the files. Reacher sat down and checked his watch. Three
twenty. Maybe two more hours of daydreaming and then he could eat
and escape to the solitude of his room.
IT WAS THREE hours, in the end. And it wasn’t
daydreaming. He sat and stared into space and thought hard. Harper
watched him, anxious. He took the file folders and arranged them on
the table, Callan’s at the bottom right, Stanley’s at the bottom
left, Cooke’s at the top right, and stared at them, musing about
the geography again. He leaned back and closed his eyes.
“Making any progress?” Harper asked.
“I need a list of the ninety-one women,” he
said.
“OK,” she said.
He waited with his eyes closed and heard her leave
the room. Enjoyed the warmth and the silence for a long moment, and
then she was back. He opened his eyes and saw her leaning over near
him and handing him another thick blue file.
“Pencil,” he said.
She backed away to a drawer and found a pencil.
Rolled it across the table to him. He opened the new file and
started reading. First item was a Defense Department printout, four
pages stapled together, ninety-one names in alphabetical order. He
recognized some of them. Rita Scimeca was there, the woman he’d
mentioned to Blake. She was next to Lorraine Stanley. Then there
was a matching list with addresses, most of them obtained through
the VA’s medical insurance operation or mail-forwarding
instructions. Scimeca lived in Oregon. Then there was a thick sheaf
of background information, Army postdischarge intelligence reports,
extensive for some of the women, sketchy for others, but altogether
enough for a basic conclusion. Reacher flipped back and forth
between pages and went to work with the pencil and twenty minutes
later counted up the marks he’d made.
“It was eleven women,” he said. “Not
ninety-one.”
“It was?” Harper said.
He nodded.
“Eleven,” he said again. “Eight left, not
eighty-eight. ”
“Why?”
“Lots of reasons. Ninety-one was always absurd. Who
would seriously target ninety-one women? Five and a quarter years?
It’s not credible. A guy this smart would break it down into
something manageable, like eleven.”
“But how?”
“By limiting himself to what’s feasible. A
subcategory. What else did Callan and Cooke and Stanley have in
common?”
“What?”
“They were alone. Positively and unequivocally
alone. Unmarried or separated, single-family houses in the suburbs
or the countryside.”
“And that’s crucial?”
“Of course it is. Think about the MO. He needs
somewhere quiet and lonely and isolated. No interruptions. And no
witnesses nearby. He has to get all that paint into the house. So
look at this list. There are married women, women with new babies,
women living with family, parents, women in apartment houses and
condos, farms, communes even, women gone back to college. But he
wants women who live alone, in houses.”
Harper shook her head. “There are more than eleven
of those. We did the research. I think it’s more than thirty. About
a third.”
“But you had to check. I’m talking about women who
are obviously living alone and isolated. At
first glance. Because we have to assume the guy hasn’t got anybody
doing research for him. He’s working alone, in secret. All he’s got
is this list to study.”
“But that’s our
list.”
“Not exclusively. It’s his, too. All this
information came straight from the military, right? He had this
list before you did.”
FORTY-THREE MILES AWAY, slightly east of north,
the exact same list was lying open on a polished desk in a small
windowless office in the darkness of the Pentagon’s interior. It
was two Xerox generations newer than Reacher’s version, but it was
otherwise identical. All the same pages were there. And they had
eleven marks on them, against eleven names. Not hasty check marks
in pencil, like Reacher had scrawled, but neat under-linings done
with a fountain pen and a beveled ruler held away from the paper so
the ink wouldn’t smudge.
Three of the eleven names had second lines struck
through them.
The list was framed on the desk by the uniformed
forearms of the office’s occupant. They were flat on the wood, and
the wrists were cocked upward to keep the hands clear of the
surface. The left hand held a ruler. The right hand held a pen. The
left hand moved and placed the ruler exactly horizontal along the
inked line under a fourth name. Then it slid upward a fraction and
rested across the name itself. The right hand moved and the pen
scored a thick line straight through it. Then the pen lifted off
the page.
"SO WHAT DO we do about it?” Harper asked.
Reacher leaned back and closed his eyes
again.
“I think you should gamble,” he said. “I think you
should stake out the surviving eight around the clock and I think
the guy will walk into your arms within sixteen days.”
She sounded uncertain.
“Hell of a gamble,” she said. “It’s very tenuous.
You’re guessing about what he’s guessing about when he looks at the
list.”
“I’m supposed to be representative of the guy. So
what I guess should be what he guesses, right?”
“Suppose you’re wrong?”
“As opposed to what? The progress you’re
making?”
She still sounded uncertain. “OK. I guess it’s a
valid theory. Worth pursuing. But maybe they thought of it
already.”
“Nothing ventured, nothing gained, right?”
She was quiet for a second. “OK, talk to Lamarr,
first thing tomorrow.”
He opened his eyes. “You think she’ll be
here?”
Harper nodded. “She’ll be here.”
“Won’t there be a funeral for her father?”
Harper nodded again. “There’ll have to be a
funeral, obviously. But she won’t go. She’d miss her own funeral, a case like this.”
“OK, but you do the talking, and talk to Blake
instead. Keep it away from Lamarr.”
“Why?”
“Because her sister clearly lives alone, remember?
So her odds just went all the way down to eight to one. Blake will
have to pull her off now.”
“If he agrees with you.”
“He should.”
“Maybe he will. But he won’t pull her off.”
“He should.”
“Maybe, but he won’t.”
Reacher shrugged. “Then don’t bother telling him
anything. I’m just wasting my time here. The guy’s an idiot.”
“Don’t say that. You need to cooperate. Think about
Jodie.”
He closed his eyes again and thought about Jodie.
She seemed a long way away. He thought about her for a long
time.
“Let’s go eat,” Harper said. “Then I’ll go talk to
Blake.”
FORTY-THREE MILES AWAY, slightly east of north,
the uniformed man stared at the paper, motionless. There was a look
on his face appropriate to a man making slow progress through a
complicated undertaking. Then there was a knock at his door.
“Wait,” he called.
He clicked the ruler down onto the wood and capped
his pen and clipped it into his pocket. Folded the list and opened
a drawer in his desk and slipped the list inside and weighted it
down with a book. The book was a Bible, King James Version, black
calfskin binding. He placed the ruler flat on top of the Bible and
slid the drawer closed. Took keys from his pocket and locked the
drawer. Put the keys back in his pocket and moved in his chair and
straightened his jacket.
“Come,” he called.
The door opened and a corporal stepped inside and
saluted.
“Your car is here, Colonel,” he said.
“OK, Corporal,” the colonel said.
THE SKIES ABOVE Quantico were still clear, but
the crispness in the air was plummeting toward a real night chill.
Darkness was creeping in from the east, behind the buildings.
Reacher and Harper walked quickly and the lights along the path
came on in sequence, following their pace, as if their passing was
switching the power. They ate alone, at a table for two in a
different part of the cafeteria. They walked back to the main
building through full darkness. They rode the elevator and she
unlocked his door with her key.
“Thanks for your input,” she said.
He said nothing.
“And thanks for the handgun tutorial,” she
said.
He nodded. “My pleasure.”
“It’s a good technique.”
“An old master sergeant taught it to me.”
She smiled. “No, not the shooting technique. The
tutorial technique.”
He nodded again, remembering her back pressed close
against his chest, her hips jammed against his, her hair in his
face, her feel, her smell.
“Showing is always better than telling. I guess,”
he said.
“Can’t beat it,” she replied.
She closed the door on him and he heard her walk
away.