20
"I CUTA few corners,” Stavely said. “You need to
understand that, OK? You guys are in a big hurry, and we think
we’re dealing with a consistent MO, so all I did was look at the
questions that the first three left behind. I mean, we all know
what it isn’t, right?”
“It isn’t everything, far as we know,” Blake
said.
“Right. No blunt trauma, no gunshots, no stab
wounds, no poison, no strangulation.”
“So what is it?”
Stavely moved a complete circle around the table
and sat down at an empty chair, on his own, three seats from
Poulton and two from Reacher.
“Did she drown?” Poulton asked.
Stavely shook his head. “No, just like the first
three didn’t. I took a look at her lungs, and they were completely
clear.”
“So what is it?” Blake asked again.
“Like I told you,” Stavely said. “You stop the
heart, or you deny oxygen to the brain. So first, I looked at her
heart. And her heart was perfect. Completely undamaged. Same as the
other three. And these were fit women. Great hearts. It’s easier to
spot the damage on a good heart. An older person might have a bad
heart, with preexisting damage, you know, furring or scarring from
previous cardiac trouble, and that can hide new damage. But these
were perfect hearts, like athletes. Any trauma, it would have stuck
out a mile. But there wasn’t any. So he didn’t stop their
hearts.”
“So?” Blake asked.
“So he denied them oxygen,” Stavely said. “It’s the
only remaining possibility.”
“How?”
“Well, that’s the big question, isn’t it?
Theoretically he could have sealed off the bathroom and pumped the
oxygen out and replaced it with some inert gas.”
Blake shook his head. “That’s absurd.”
“Of course it is,” Stavely said. “He’d have needed
equipment, pumps, tanks of gas. And we’d have found residue in the
tissues. Certainly in the lungs. There aren’t any gases we wouldn’t
have detected.”
“So?”
“So he choked off their airways. It’s the only
possibility. ”
“You said there are no signs of
strangulation.”
Stavely nodded. “There aren’t. That’s what got me
interested. Strangulation normally leaves massive trauma to the
neck. All kinds of bruising, internal bleeding. It sticks out a
mile. Same for garroting.”
“But?”
“There’s something called gentle
strangulation.”
“Gentle?” Harper said. “Awful phrase.”
“What is it?” Poulton asked.
“A guy with a big arm,” Stavely said. “Or a padded
coat sleeve. Gentle consistent pressure, that will do it.”
“So is that it?” Blake asked.
Stavely shook his head. “No, it isn’t. No external
marks, but to get far enough to kill them, you leave internal
damage. The hyoid bone would be broken, for instance. Certainly
cracked, at least. Other ligament damage too. It’s a very fragile
area. The voice box is there.”
“And you’re going to tell me there was no damage, I
guess,” Blake said.
“Nothing gross,” Stavely said. “Did she have a
cold, when you met with her?”
He looked at Harper, but Reacher answered.
“No,” he said.
“Sore throat?”
“No.”
“Husky voice?”
“She seemed pretty healthy to me.”
Stavely nodded. Looked pleased. “There was some
very, very slight swelling inside the throat. It’s what you’d get
recovering from a head cold. Mucus drip might do it, or a very mild
strep virus. Ninety-nine times in a hundred, I’d ignore it
completely. But the other three had it too. That’s a little
coincidental for me.”
“So what does it mean?” Blake asked.
“It means he pushed something down their throats,”
Stavely said.
Silence in the room.
“Down their throats?” Blake repeated.
Stavely nodded. “That was my guess. Something soft,
something which would slip down and then expand a little. Maybe a
sponge. Were there sponges in the bathrooms?”
“I didn’t see one in Spokane,” Reacher said.
Poulton was back in the piles of paper. “Nothing on
the inventories.”
“Maybe he removed them,” Harper said. “He took
their clothes.”
“Bathrooms without sponges,” Blake said slowly.
“Like the dog that didn’t bark.”
“No,” Reacher said. “There wasn’t a sponge
before, is what I meant.”
“You sure?” Blake asked.
Reacher nodded. “Totally.”
“Maybe he brings one with him,” Harper said. “The
type he prefers.”
Blake looked away, back to Stavely. “So that’s how
he’s doing it? Sponges down their throats?”
Stavely stared at his big red hands, resting on the
tabletop.
“It has to be,” he said. “Sponges, or something
similar. Like Sherlock Holmes, right? First you eliminate the
impossible, and whatever you’re left with, however improbable, has
got to be the answer. So the guy is choking
them to death by pushing something soft down their throats.
Something soft enough not to cause blunt trauma internally, but
something dense enough to block the air.”
Blake nodded, slowly. “OK, so now we know.”
Stavely shook his head. “Well, no, we don’t.
Because it’s impossible.”
“Why?”
Stavely just shrugged miserably.
“Come here, Harper,” Reacher said.
She looked at him, surprised. Then she smiled
briefly and stood up and scraped her chair back and walked toward
him.
“Show, don’t tell, right?” she said.
“Lie on the table, OK?” he asked.
She smiled again and sat on the edge of the table
and swiveled into position. Reacher pulled Poulton’s pile of paper
over and pushed it under her head.
“Comfortable?” he asked.
She nodded and fanned her hair and lay back like
she was at the dentist. Pulled her jacket closed over her
shirt.
“OK,” Reacher said. “She’s Alison Lamarr in the
tub.”
He pulled the top sheet of paper out from under her
head and glanced at it. It was the inventory from Caroline Cooke’s
bathroom. He crumpled it into a ball.
“This is a sponge,” he said. Then he glanced at
Blake. “Not that there was one in the room.”
“He brought it with him,” Blake said.
“Waste of time if he did,” Reacher said. “Because
watch.”
He put the crumpled paper to Harper’s lips. She
clamped them tight.
“How do I get her to open her mouth?” he asked. “In
the full and certain knowledge that what I’m doing is going to kill
her?”
He leaned close and used his left hand under her
chin, his fingers and thumb up on her cheeks. “I could squeeze, I
guess. Or I could clamp her nose until she had to breathe. But what
would she do?”
“This,” Harper said, and threw a playful roundhouse
right which caught Reacher high on the temple.
“Exactly,” he said. “Two seconds from now, we’re
fighting, and there’s a gallon of paint on the floor. Another
gallon all over me. To get anywhere with this, I’d have to get
right in the tub with her, behind her or on top of her.”
“He’s right,” Stavely said. “It’s just impossible.
They’d be fighting for their lives. No way to force something into
somebody’s mouth against their will, without leaving bruises on
their cheeks, their jaws, all over them. Flesh would tear against
their teeth, their lips would be bruised and cut, maybe the teeth
themselves would loosen. And they’d be biting and scratching and
kicking. Traces under their nails. Bruised knuckles. Defensive
injuries. It would be a fight to the death, right? And there’s no
evidence of fighting. None at all.”
“Maybe he drugged them,” Blake said. “Made them
passive, you know, like that date-rape thing.”
Stavely shook his head.
“Nobody was drugged,” he said. “Toxicology is
absolutely clear, all four cases.”
The room went silent again and Reacher pulled
Harper upright by the hands. She slid off the table and dusted
herself down. Walked back to her seat.
“So you’ve got no conclusions?” Blake asked.
Stavely shrugged. “Like I said, I’ve got a great
conclusion. But it’s an impossible conclusion.”
Silence.
“I told you, this is a very smart guy,” Reacher
said. “Too smart for you. Way too smart. Four homicides, and you
still don’t know how he’s doing it.”
“So what’s the answer, smart guy?” Blake said. “You
going to tell us something four of the nation’s best pathologists
can’t tell us?”
Reacher said nothing.
“What’s the answer?” Blake asked again.
“I don’t know,” Reacher said.
“Great. You don’t know.”
“But I’ll find out.”
“Yeah, like how?”
“Easy. I’ll go find the guy, and I’ll ask
him.”
FORTY-ONE MILES AWAY, slightly east of north, the
colonel was two miles from his office, after a ten-mile journey. He
had taken the shuttle bus from the Pentagon’s parking lot and
gotten off near the Capitol. Then he had hailed a cab and headed
back over the river to the National Airport’s main terminal. His
uniform was in a leather one-suiter slung on his shoulder, and he
was cruising the ticket counters at the busiest time of day,
completely anonymous in a teeming crush of people.
“I want Portland, Oregon,” he said. “Open
roundtrip, coach.”
A clerk entered the code for Portland and his
computer told him he had plenty of availability on the next
nonstop.
“Leaves in two hours,” he said.
“OK,” the colonel said.
"YOU THINK YOU’LL find the guy?” Blake
repeated.
Reacher nodded. “I’ll have to, won’t I? It’s the
only way.”
There was silence in the conference room for a
moment. Then Stavely stood up.
“Well, good luck to you, sir,” he said.
He walked out of the room and closed the door
softly behind him.
“You won’t find the guy,”
Poulton said. “Because you’re wrong about Caroline Cooke. She never
served in ordnance warehousing or weapons testing. She proves your
theory is shit.”
Reacher smiled. “Do I know all about FBI
procedures? ”
“No, you don’t.”
“So don’t talk to me about the Army. Cooke was an
officer candidate. Fast-track type. Had to be, to finish up in War
Plans. People like that, they send them all over the place first,
getting an overview. That summary you’ve got in your file is
incomplete.”
"It is?”
Reacher nodded. “Has to be. If they listed
everywhere she was posted, you’d have ten pages before she made
first lieutenant. You check back with Defense, get the details,
you’ll find she was someplace that could tie her in.”
The silence came back. There was a faint rush from
the forced-air heating and a buzz from a failing fluorescent tube.
A high-pitched whistle from the silent television. That was all.
Nothing else. Poulton stared at Blake. Harper stared at Reacher.
Blake looked down at his fingers, which were tapping on the table
with silent fleshy impacts.
“Can you find him?” he
asked.
“Somebody’s got to,” Reacher said. “You guys aren’t
getting anywhere.”
“You’ll need resources.”
Reacher nodded. “A little help would be
nice.”
“So I’m gambling here.”
“Better than putting all your chips behind a
loser.”
“I’m gambling big-time. With a lot at stake.”
“Like your career?”
“Seven women, not my career.”
“Seven women and your
career.”
Blake nodded, vaguely. “What are the odds?”
Reacher shrugged. “With three weeks to do it in?
It’s a certainty.”
“You’re an arrogant bastard, you know that?”
“No, I’m realistic, is all.”
“So what do you need?”
“Remuneration,” Reacher said.
“You want to get paid?”
“Sure I do. You’re getting paid, right? I do all
the work, only fair I get something out of it too.”
Blake nodded. “You find the guy, I’ll speak to
Deerfield up in New York, get the Petrosian thing forgotten
about.”
“Plus a fee.”
“How much?”
“Whatever you think is appropriate.”
Blake nodded again. “I’ll think about it. And
Harper goes with you, because right now the Petrosian thing ain’t
forgotten about.”
“OK. I can live with that. If she can.”
“She doesn’t get a choice,” Blake said. “What
else?”
“Set me up with Cozo. I’ll start in New York. I’ll
need information from him.”
Blake nodded. “I’ll call him. You can see him
tonight. ”
Reacher shook his head. “Tomorrow morning. Tonight,
I’m going to see Jodie.”