14
HE WOKE EARLY, before daybreak. Stood at the
window for a spell, wrapped in a towel, staring out into the
darkness. It was cold again. He shaved and showered. He was halfway
through the Bureau’s bottle of shampoo. He dressed standing next to
the bed. Took his coat from the closet and put it on. Ducked back
into the bathroom and clipped his toothbrush into the inside
pocket. Just in case today was the day.
He sat on the bed with the coat wrapped around him
against the cold and waited for Harper. But when the key went into
the lock and the door opened, it wasn’t Harper standing there. It
was Poulton. He was keeping his face deliberately blank, and
Reacher felt the first stirrings of triumph.
“Where’s Harper?” he asked.
“Off the case,” Poulton said.
“Did she talk to Blake?”
“Last night.”
“And?”
Poulton shrugged. “And nothing.”
“You’re ignoring my input?”
“You’re not here for input.”
Reacher nodded. “OK. Ready for breakfast?”
Poulton nodded back. “Sure.”
The sun was coming up in the east and sending color
into the sky. There was no cloud. No damp. No wind. It was a
pleasant walk through the early gloom. The place felt busy again.
Monday morning, the start of a new week. Blake was at the usual
table in the cafeteria, over by the window. Lamarr was sitting with
him. She was wearing a black blouse in place of her customary
cream. It was slightly faded, like it had been washed many times.
There was coffee on the table, and mugs, and milk and sugar, and
doughnuts. But no newspapers.
“I was sorry to hear the news from Spokane,”
Reacher said.
Lamarr nodded, silently.
“I offered her time off,” Blake said. “She’s
entitled to compassionate leave.”
Reacher looked at him. “You don’t need to explain
yourself to me.”
“In the midst of life is death,” Lamarr said.
“That’s something you learn pretty quickly around here.”
“You’re not going to the funeral?”
Lamarr took a teaspoon and balanced it across her
forefinger. Stared down at it.
“Alison hasn’t called me,” she said. “I don’t know
what the arrangements are going to be.”
“You didn’t call her?”
She shrugged. “I’d feel like I was
intruding.”
“I don’t think Alison would agree with that.”
She looked straight at him. “But I just don’t
know.”
There was silence. Reacher turned a mug over and
poured coffee.
“We need to get to work,” Blake said.
“You didn’t like my theory?” Reacher said.
“It’s a guess, not a theory,” Blake said back. “We
can all guess, as much as we want to. But we can’t turn our backs
on eighty women just because we enjoy guessing.”
“Would they notice the difference?” Reacher
asked.
He took a long sip of coffee and looked at the
doughnuts. They were wrinkled and hard. Probably Saturday’s.
“So you’re not going to pay attention?” he
asked.
Blake shrugged. “I gave it some
consideration.”
“Well, give it some more. Because the next woman to
die will be one of the eleven I marked, and it’ll be on your
head.”
Blake said nothing and Reacher pushed his chair
back.
“I want pancakes,” he said. “I don’t like the look
of those doughnuts.”
He stood up before they could object and stepped
away toward the center of the room. Stopped at the first table with
a New York Times on it. It belonged to a
guy on his own. He was reading the sports. The front section was
discarded to his left. Reacher picked it up. The story he was
waiting for was right there, front page, below the fold.
“Can I borrow this?” he asked.
The guy with the interest in sports nodded without
looking. Reacher tucked the paper under his arm and walked to the
serving counter. Breakfast was set out like a buffet. He helped
himself to a stack of pancakes and eight rashers of bacon. Added
syrup until the plate was swimming. He was going to need the
nutrition. He had a long journey ahead, and he was probably going
to be walking the first part of it.
He came back to the table and squatted awkwardly to
get the plate down without spilling the syrup or dropping the
newspaper. He propped the paper in front of his plate and started
to eat. Then he pretended to notice the headline.
“Well, look at that,” he said, with his mouth
full.
The headline read Gang Warfare
Explodes in Lower Manhattan, Leaves Six Dead. The story
recounted a brief and deadly turf war between two rival protection
rackets, one of them allegedly Chinese, the other allegedly Syrian.
Automatic firearms and machetes had been used. The body count ran
four to two in favor of the Chinese. Among the four dead on the
Syrian side was the alleged gang leader, a suspected felon named
Almar Petrosian. There were quotes from the NYPD and the FBI, and
background reporting about the hundred-year history of protection
rackets in New York City, the Chinese tongs, the jockeying between
different ethnic groups for their business, which reputedly ran to
billions of dollars nationwide.
“Well, look at that,” Reacher said again.
They had already looked at it. That was clear. They
were all turned away from him. Blake was staring through the window
at the streaks of dawn in the sky. Poulton had his eyes fixed on
the back wall. Lamarr was still studying her teaspoon.
“Cozo call you to confirm it?” Reacher asked.
Nobody said a thing, which was the same as a yes.
Reacher smiled.
“Life’s a bitch, right?” he said. “You get a hook
into me, and suddenly the hook isn’t there anymore. Fate’s a funny
thing, isn’t it?”
“Fate,” Blake repeated.
“So let me get this straight,” Reacher said.
“Harper wouldn’t play ball with the femme fatale thing, and now old
Petrosian is dead, so you got no more cards to play. And you’re not
listening to a word I say anyway, so is there a reason why I
shouldn’t walk right out of here?”
“Lots of reasons,” Blake said.
There was silence.
“None of them good enough,” Reacher said.
He stood up and stepped away from the table again.
Nobody tried to stop him. He walked out of the cafeteria and out
through the glass doors into the chill of dawn. Started
walking.
HE WALKED ALL the way out to the guardhouse on
the perimeter. Ducked under the barrier and dropped his visitor’s
pass on the road. Walked on and turned the corner and entered
Marine territory. He kept to the middle of the pavement and reached
the first clearing after a half-mile. There was a cluster of
vehicles and a number of quiet, watchful men. They let him go on.
Walking was unusual, but not illegal. He reached the second
clearing thirty minutes after leaving the cafeteria. He walked
through it and kept on going.
He heard the car behind him five minutes later. He
stopped and turned and waited for it. It came near enough for him
to see past the dazzle of its running lights. It was Harper, which
is what he had expected. She was alone. She drew level with him and
buzzed her window down.
“Hello, Reacher,” she said.
He nodded. Said nothing.
“Want a ride?” she asked.
“Out or back?”
“Wherever you decide.”
“I-95 on-ramp will do it. Going north.”
“Hitchhiking?”
He nodded. “I’ve got no money for a plane.”
He slid in next to her and she accelerated gently
away, heading out. She was in her second suit and her hair was
loose. It spilled all over her shoulders.
“They tell you to bring me back?” he asked.
She shook her head. “They decided you’re useless.
Nothing to contribute, is what they said.”
He smiled. “So now I’m supposed to get all boiled
up with indignation and storm back in there and prove them
wrong?”
She smiled back. “Something like that. They spent
ten minutes discussing the best approach. Lamarr decided they
should appeal to your ego.”
“That’s what happens when you’re a psychologist who
studied landscape gardening in school.”
“I guess so.”
They drove on, through the wooded curves, past the
last Marine clearing.
“But she’s right,” he said. “I’ve got nothing to
contribute. Nobody’s going to catch this guy. He’s too smart. Too
smart for me, that’s for damn sure.”
She smiled again. “A little psychology of your own?
Trying to leave with a clear conscience?”
He shook his head. “My conscience is always
clear.”
“Is it clear about Petrosian?”
“Why shouldn’t it be?”
“Hell of a coincidence, don’t you think? They
threaten you with Petrosian, and he’s dead within three
days.”
“Just dumb luck.”
“Yeah, luck. You know I didn’t tell them I was
outside Trent’s office all day?”
“Why not?”
“I was covering my ass.”
He looked at her. "And what’s Trent’s office got to
do with anything?”
She shrugged. “I don’t know. But I don’t like
coincidences. ”
“They happen, time to time. Obviously.”
“Nobody in the Bureau likes coincidences.”
“So?”
She shrugged again. “So they could, you know, dig
around. Might make it hard for you, later.”
He smiled again. “This is phase two of the
approach, right?”
She smiled back, and then the smile exploded into a
laugh. “Yeah, phase two. There are about a dozen still to go. Some
of them are real good. You want to hear them all?”
“Not really. I’m not going back. They’re not
listening. ”
She nodded and drove on. Paused before the junction
with the interstate, and then swooped north up the ramp.
“I’ll take you to the next one,” she said. “Nobody
uses this one except Bureau people. And none of them is going to
give you a ride.”
He nodded. “Thanks, Harper.”
“Jodie’s home,” she said. “I called Cozo’s office.
Apparently they had a little surveillance going. She’s been away.
She got back this morning, in a taxi. Looked like she’d come from
the airport. Looks like she’s working from home today.”
He smiled. “OK, so now I’m definitely out of
here.”
“We need your input, you know.”
“They’re not listening.”
“You need to make them listen,” she said.
“This is phase three?”
“No, this is me. I mean it.”
He was silent for a long moment. Then he
nodded.
“So why won’t they
listen?”
“Pride, maybe?” she said.
“They need somebody’s input,” he said. “That’s for
sure. But not mine. I don’t have the resources. And I don’t have
the authority.”
“To do what?”
“To take it out of their hands. They’re wasting
their time with this profiling shit. It won’t get them anywhere.
They need to work the clues.”
“There aren’t any clues.”
“Yes, there are. How smart the guy is. And the
paint, and the geography, and how quiet the scenes are. They’re all
clues. They should work them. They’ve got to mean something.
Starting with the motive is starting at the wrong end.”
“I’ll pass that on.”
She pulled off the highway and stopped at the cross
street.
“You going to get into trouble?” he asked.
“For failing to bring you back?” she said.
“Probably. ”
He was silent. She smiled.
“That was phase ten,” she said. “I’ll be perfectly
OK.”
“I hope so,” he said, and got out of the car. He
walked north across the street to the ramp and stood all alone and
watched her car slide under the bridge and turn back south.
A MALE HITCHHIKER standing six feet five and
weighing two hundred and thirty pounds is on the cusp of
acceptability for easy rides. Generally, women won’t stop for him,
because they see a threat. Men can be just as nervous. But Reacher
was showered and shaved and clean, and dressed quietly. That
shortened the odds, and there were enough trucks on the road with
big confident owner-drivers that he was back in New York City
within seven hours of starting out.
He was quiet most of the seven hours, partly
because the trucks were too noisy for conversation, and partly
because he wasn’t in the mood for talking. The old hobo demon was
whispering to him again. Where are you
going? Back to Jodie, of course. OK, smart
guy, but what else? What the hell else? Yardwork behind your house?
Painting the damn walls? He sat next to a succession of kindly
drivers and felt his brief unsatisfactory excursion into freedom
ebb away. He worked on forgetting about it, and felt he succeeded.
His final ride was from a New Jersey vegetable truck delivering to
Greenwich Village. It rumbled in through the Holland Tunnel. He got
out and walked the last mile on Canal and Broadway, all the way
down to Jodie’s apartment house, concentrating hard on his desire
to see her.
He had his own key to her lobby, and he went up in
the elevator and knocked on her door. The peephole went dark and
light again and the door opened and she was standing there, in
jeans and a shirt, tall and slim and vital. She was the most
beautiful thing he had ever seen. But she wasn’t smiling at
him.
“Hey, Jodie,” he said.
“There’s an FBI agent in my kitchen.” she
replied.
“Why?”
“Why?” she repeated. “You tell me.”
He followed her into the apartment, through to the
kitchen. The Bureau guy was a short young man with a wide neck.
Blue suit, white shirt, striped tie. He was holding a cell phone up
to his face, reporting Reacher’s arrival to somebody else.
“What do you want?” Reacher asked him.
“I want you to wait here, sir,” the guy said.
“About ten minutes, please.”
“What’s this about?”
“You’ll find out, sir. Ten minutes, is all.”
Reacher felt like walking out, just to be contrary,
but Jodie sat down. There was something in her face. Something
halfway between concern and annoyance. The New
York Times was open on the countertop. Reacher glanced at
it.
“OK,” he said. “Ten minutes.”
He sat down, too. They waited in silence. It was
nearer fifteen minutes than ten. Then the buzzer from the street
sounded and the Bureau guy went to answer it. He clicked the door
release and moved out to the hallway. Jodie sat still and passive,
like a guest in her own apartment. Reacher heard the whine of the
elevator. He heard it stop. He heard the apartment door open. He
heard footsteps on the maple floor.
Alan Deerfield walked into the kitchen. He was in a
dark raincoat with the collar turned up. He was moving
energetically and he had sidewalk grit on the soles of his shoes
and it made him loud and invasive.
“I got six people dead in my city,” he said. He saw
the Times on the counter and walked over
and folded it back to reveal the headline. “So I got a couple
questions, naturally.”
Reacher looked at him. “What questions?”
Deerfield looked back. “Delicate questions.”
“So ask them.”
Deerfield nodded. “First question is for Ms.
Jacob.”
Jodie stirred in her chair. Didn’t look up.
“What’s the question?” she said.
“Where have you been, the last few days?”
“Out of town,” she said. “On business.”
“Where out of town?”
“London. Client conference.”
“London, England?”
“As opposed to what other Londons?”
Deerfield shrugged. “London, Kentucky? London,
Ohio? There’s a London somewhere in Canada too, I believe. Ontario,
maybe.”
“London, England,” Jodie said.
“You got clients in London, England?”
Jodie was still looking at the floor. “We’ve got
clients everywhere. Especially in London, England.”
Deerfield nodded. “You go by the Concorde?”
She looked up. “Yes I did, as a matter of
fact.”
“Real quick, right?”
Jodie nodded. “Quick enough.”
“But expensive.”
“I guess.”
“But worth it for a partner on important
business.”
Jodie looked at him. “I’m not a partner.”
Deerfield smiled. “Even better, right? They put an
associate on the Concorde, got to mean something. Must mean they
like you. Must mean you’ll be a partner real soon. If nothing comes
along and gets in the way.”
Jodie said nothing in reply.
“So, London,” Deerfield said. “Reacher knew you
were there, right?”
She shook her head. “No, I didn’t tell him.”
There was a pause.
“Scheduled trip?” Deerfield asked.
Jodie shook her head again. “Last-minute.”
“And Reacher didn’t know?”
“I already told you that.”
“OK,” Deerfield said. “Information is king, is what
I say.”
“I don’t have to tell him where I go.”
Deerfield smiled. “I’m not talking about what
information you give Reacher. I’m talking about what information I
get out of a situation. Right now I’m getting he didn’t know where
you were.”
“So?”
“That should have worried him. And it did worry
him. Right after he got to Quantico, he was trying to get you on
the phone. Office, home, mobile. That night, same thing again.
Calling, calling, calling, couldn’t get you. A worried man.”
Jodie glanced up at Reacher. Concern in her face,
maybe a little apology.
“I should have told him, I guess.”
“Hey, that’s up to you. I don’t go around telling
people how to conduct their relationships. But the interesting
thing is, then he stops calling you. Suddenly he’s not calling you
anymore. Now why is that? Did he find out you were safe over there
in London, England? ”
She started to reply, and then she stopped.
“I’ll take that for a no,” Deerfield said. “You
were worried about Petrosian, so you told people in your office to
clam up about where you were. So as far as Reacher knew, you were
still right here in town. But he’s suddenly not worried anymore. He
doesn’t know you’re safe and sound in London, England, but maybe he
does know you’re safe and sound because of some other reason, such
as maybe he knows Petrosian isn’t going to be around for very much
longer.”
Jodie’s eyes were back on the floor again.
“He’s a smart guy,” Deerfield said. “My guess is he
whistled up some pal of his to set the cat among the pigeons up
here in Chinatown, and then he sat back and waited for the tongs to
do what they always do when somebody starts messing with them. And
he figures he’s safe. He knows we’ll never find his busy little
pal, and he figures those Chinese boys aren’t going to tell us
diddly, not in a million years, and he knows the exact moment old
Petrosian is getting the good news with the machete, he’s locked
into a room down in Quantico. A smart guy.”
Jodie said nothing.
“But a very confident guy,” Deerfield said. “He
stopped calling you two days before Petrosian finally bought the
farm.”
There was silence in the kitchen. Deerfield turned
to Reacher.
“So am I on the money?” he asked.
Reacher shrugged. “Why should anybody have been
worrying about Petrosian?”
Deerfield smiled again. “Oh, sure, we can’t talk
about that. We’ll never admit Blake said a word to you on that
subject. But like I told Ms. Jacob, information is king. I just
want to be a hundred percent sure what I’m dealing with here. If
you stirred it up, just tell me and maybe I’ll pat you on the back
for a job well done. But if by some chance it was a genuine
dispute, we need to know about it.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Reacher
said.
“So why did you stop calling Ms. Jacob?”
“That’s my business.”
“No, it’s everybody’s business,” Deerfield said.
“Certainly it’s Ms. Jacob’s business, right? And it’s mine too. So
tell me about it. And don’t go thinking you’re out of the woods
yet, Reacher. Petrosian was a piece of shit for sure, but he’s
still a homicide, and we can crank up a pretty good motive for you
anyway, based on what was witnessed by two credible witnesses the
other night in the alley. We could call it a conspiracy with
persons unknown. Careful preparation of the case, you could be
inside two years, just waiting for the trial. Jury might let you go
in the end, but then who really knows what a jury might do?”
Reacher said nothing. Jodie stood up.
“You should leave now, Mr. Deerfield,” she said.
“I’m still his lawyer, and this is an inappropriate forum for this
discussion.”
Deerfield nodded slowly, and looked around the
kitchen, like he was seeing it for the first time.
“Yes, it sure is, Ms. Jacob,” he said. “So maybe
we’ll have to continue this discussion someplace more appropriate
at some future time. Maybe tomorrow, maybe next week, maybe next
year. Like Mr. Blake pointed out, we know where you both
live.”
He turned on the spot, with the grit on his shoes
loud in the silence. They heard him walk through the living room
and they heard the apartment door open and slam shut.
“So you took Petrosian out,” Jodie said.
“I never went near him,” Reacher replied.
She shook her head. “Save that stuff for the FBI,
OK? You arranged it or provoked it or engineered it or whatever the
correct phrase would be. You took him out, as surely as if you were
standing right next to him with a gun.”
Reacher said nothing.
“And I told you not to do that,” she said.
Reacher said nothing.
“Deerfield knows you did it,” she said.
“He can’t prove it.”
“That doesn’t matter,” she said. “Don’t you see
that? He can try to prove it. And he’s not
kidding about the two years in jail. A suspicion of gang warfare? A
thing like that, the courts will back him up all the way. Denial of
bail, continuances, the prosecutors will really go to bat for him.
It’s not an empty threat. He owns you now. Like I told you he
would.”
Reacher said nothing.
“Why did you do it?”
He shrugged. “Lots of reasons. It needed
doing.”
There was a long silence.
“Would my father have agreed with you?” Jodie
asked.
“Leon?” Reacher said. He recalled the photographs
in Cozo’s packet. The photographs of Petrosian’s handiwork. The
dead women, displayed like centerfolds. Pieces missing, things
inserted. “Are you kidding? Leon would have agreed with me in a
heartbeat.”
“And would he have gone ahead and done what you
did?”
“Probably.”
She nodded. “Yes, he probably would. But look
around you, OK?”
“At what?”
“At everything. What do you see?”
He looked around. “An apartment.”
She nodded. “My apartment.”
“So?”
“Did I grow up here?”
“Of course not.”
“So where did I grow up?”
He shrugged. “All over the place, on Army bases,
like I did.”
She nodded. “Where did you first meet me?”
“You know where. Manila. On the base.”
“Remember that bungalow?”
“Sure I do.”
She nodded. “So do I. It was tiny, it stank, and it
had cockroaches bigger than my hand. And you know what? That was
the best place I ever lived as a kid.”
“So?”
She was pointing at her briefcase. It was a leather
pilot’s case, stuffed with legal paper, parked against the wall
just inside the kitchen door. “What’s that?”
“Your briefcase.”
“Exactly. Not a rifle, not a carbine, not a
flame-thrower. ”
“So?”
“So I live in a Manhattan apartment instead of base
quarters, and I carry a briefcase instead of infantry
weapons.”
He nodded. “I know you do.”
“But do you know why?”
“Because you want to, I guess.”
“Exactly. Because I want
to. It was a conscious choice. My
choice. I grew up in the Army, just like you did, and I could have
joined up if I’d wanted to, just like you did. But I didn’t want
to. I wanted to go to college and law school instead. I wanted to
join a big firm and make partner. And why was that?”
“Why?”
“Because I wanted to live in a world with
rules.”
“Plenty of rules in the Army,” he said.
“The wrong rules, Reacher. I wanted civilian rules.
Civilized rules.”
“So what are you saying?”
“I’m saying I left the military all those years ago
and I don’t want to be back in it now.”
“You’re not back in it.”
“But you make me feel that I am. Worse than the military. This thing with Petrosian?
I don’t want to be in a world with rules like that. You know I
don’t.”
“So what should I have done?”
“You shouldn’t have gotten into it in the first
place. That night in the restaurant? You should have walked away
and called the cops. That’s what we do here.”
“Here?”
“In the civilized world.”
He sat on her kitchen stool and leaned his forearms
on her countertop. Spread his fingers wide and placed his palms
down flat. The countertop was cold. It was some kind of granite,
gray and shiny, milled to reveal tiny quartz speckles throughout
its surface. The corners and angles were radiused into perfect
quarter-circles. It was an inch thick, and probably very expensive.
It was a civilized product. It belonged right there in a world
where people agree to labor forty hours, or a hundred, or two
hundred, and then exchange the remuneration they get for
installations they hope will make their kitchens look nice, inside
their expensive remodeled buildings high above Broadway.
“Why did you stop calling me?” she asked.
He looked down at his hands. They lay on the
polished granite like the rough exposed roots of small trees.
“I figured you were safe,” he said. “I figured you
were hiding out someplace.”
“You figured,” she repeated. “But you didn’t
know.”
“I assumed,” he said. “I was taking care of
Petrosian, I assumed you were taking care of yourself. I figured we
know each other well enough to trust assumptions like that.”
“Like we were comrades,” she said softly. “In the
same unit, a major and a captain maybe, in the middle of some tight
dangerous mission, absolutely relying on each other to do our
separate jobs properly.”
He nodded. “Exactly.”
“But I’m not a captain. I’m not in some unit. I’m a
lawyer. A lawyer, in New York, all alone and afraid, caught up in
something I don’t want to be caught up in.”
He nodded again. “I’m sorry.”
“And you’re not a major,” she said. “Not anymore.
You’re a civilian. You need to get that straight.”
He nodded. Said nothing.
“And that’s the big problem, right?” she said.
“We’ve both got the same problem. You’re getting me caught up in
something I don’t want to be caught up in, and I’m getting you
caught up in something you don’t want to be caught up in either.
The civilized world. The house, the car, living somewhere, doing
ordinary things.”
He said nothing.
“My fault, probably,” she said. “I wanted those things. God, did I want them. Makes it
kind of hard for me to accept that maybe you don’t want them.”
“I want you,” he said.
She nodded. “I know that. And I want you. You know that too. But do we want each other’s
lives?”
The hobo demon erupted in his head, cheering and
screaming like a fan watching the winning run soar into the
bleachers, bottom of the ninth. She said it!
She said it! Now it’s right there, out in the open! So go for it!
Jump on it! Just gobble it right up!
“I don’t know,” he said.
“We need to talk about it,” she said.
But there was no more talking to be done, not then,
because the buzzer from the lobby started up an insistent squawk,
like somebody was down there on the street leaning on the button.
Jodie stood up and hit the door release and moved into the living
room to wait. Reacher stayed on his stool at the granite counter,
looking at the quartz sparkles showing between his fingers. Then he
felt the elevator arrive and heard the apartment door open. He
heard urgent conversation and fast light footsteps through the
living room and then Jodie was back in the kitchen with Lisa Harper
standing at her side.