24
THEY LEFT THE beer untouched on the bar and
headed back to the parking lot. Unlocked the Nissan and slid
inside.
“Couple months is no good,” Harper said. “Puts him
right outside the picture.”
“He was never in the
picture,” Reacher said. “But we’ll go talk to him anyway.”
“How can we do that? He’s in the Army system
somewhere.”
He looked at her. “Harper, I was a military
policeman for thirteen years. If I can’t find him, who can?”
“He could be anywhere.”
“No, he couldn’t. If this dump is his local bar, it
means he was posted somewhere near here. Low-grade guy like that, a
regional MP office will be handling him. Two-month time span, he’s
not court-martialed yet, so he’s in a holding pattern at a regional
MP HQ, which for this region is Fort Armstrong outside of Trenton,
which is less than two hours away.”
“You sure?”
He shrugged. "Unless things have changed a hell of
a lot in three years.”
“Some way you can check?” she asked.
“I don’t need to check.”
“We don’t want to waste time here,” she said.
He said nothing back and she smiled and opened her
bag. Came out with a folded cellular phone the size of a cigarette
packet.
“Use my mobile,” she said.
EVERYBODY USES MOBILES. They
use them all the time, just constantly. It’s a phenomenon of the
modern age. Everybody’s talk, talk, talking, all the time, little
black telephones pressed up to their faces. Where does all that
conversation come from? What happened to all that conversation
before mobiles were invented? Was it all bottled up? Burning ulcers
in people’s guts? Or did it just develop spontaneously because
technology made it possible?
It’s a subject you’re
interested in. Human impulses. Your guess is a small percentage of
calls made represents useful exchange of information. But the vast
majority must fall into one of two categories, either the fun
aspect, the sheer delight of doing something simply because you
can, or else the ego-building self-important bullshit aspect. And
your observation is that it splits pretty much along gender lines.
It’s not an opinion you’d care to voice in public, but privately
you’re sure women talk because they enjoy it, and men talk because
it builds them up. Hi, honey, I’m just getting off the plane, they
say. So what? Like, who cares?
But you’re confident that men’s
use of mobiles is more closely connected to their ego needs, so
it’s necessarily a stronger attachment, and therefore a more
frequent urge. So if you steal a phone from a man, it will be
discovered earlier, and reacted to with a greater degree of upset.
That’s your judgment. Therefore you’re sitting in the airport food
court watching the women.
The other major advantage of
women is that they have smaller pockets. Sometimes, no pockets at
all. Therefore they carry bags, into which goes all their stuff.
Their wallets, their keys, their makeup. And their mobile phones.
They take them out to use them, maybe rest them on the table for a
spell, and then put them right back in their bags. If they get up
for a coffee refill, of course, they take their bags with them.
That’s ingrained. Always keep your pocketbook with you. But some of
them have other bags too. There are laptop cases, which these days
are made with all kinds of extra compartments for the disks and the
CD-ROM thing and the cables. And some of them have pockets for
mobiles, little external leather rectangles the same shape as the
cigarettes-and-lighter cases women carried back when people smoked.
Those other cases, they don’t always take them with them. If
they’re just stepping away to the beverage counter, they often
leave them at the table, partly to keep their place claimed, partly
because who can carry a pocketbook and a laptop case and a hot cup
of coffee?
But you’re ignoring the women
with the laptop cases. Because those expensive leather articles
imply some kind of serious purpose. Their owners might get home in
an hour and want to check their e-mail or finalize a pie chart or
something, whereupon they open their laptop case and find their
phone is gone. Police notified, account canceled, calls traced, all
within an hour. No good at all.
So the women you’re watching
are the nonbusiness travelers. The ones with the little nylon
backpacks carried as cabin baggage. And you’re specifically
watching the ones heading out of town, not in toward home.
They’re going to make a last couple of calls
from the airport and then stuff their phones into their backpacks
and forget all about them, because they’re flying out of the local
coverage area and they don’t want to pay roaming charges. Maybe
they’re vacationing overseas, in which case their phones are as
useless to them as their house keys. Something they have to take
along, but not something they ever think about.
The one particular target
you’re watching most closely is a woman of about twenty-three or
-four, maybe forty feet away. She’s dressed comfortably like she’s
got a long flight ahead, and she’s leaning back in her chair with
her head tilted left and her phone trapped in her shoulder. She’s
smiling vacantly as she talks, and playing with her nails. Picking
at them and turning her hands in the light to look at them. This is
a lazy say-nothing chat with a girlfriend. No intensity in her
face. She’s just talking for the sake of talking.
Her carry-on bag is on the
floor near her feet. It’s a small designer backpack, all covered in
little loops and catches and zippers. It’s clearly so complicated
to close that she’s left it gaping open. She picks up her coffee
cup and puts it down again. It’s empty. She talks and checks her
watch and cranes to look at the beverage counter. She wraps up the
chat. Flips her phone closed and drops it in her backpack. Picks up
a matching pocketbook and stands up and wheels away to get more
coffee.
You’re on your feet instantly.
Car keys in your hand. You hustle straight across the court, ten
feet, twenty, thirty. You’re swinging the keys. Looking busy. She’s
in line. About to be served. You drop your keys and they skid
across the tiles. You bend to retrieve them. Your hand skims her
bag. You come back up with the keys and the phone together. You
walk on. The keys go back in your pocket.
The phone stays in your hand. Nothing more ordinary than somebody
walking through an airport lounge holding a mobile.
You walk at normal pace. Stop
and lean on a pillar. You flip the phone open and hold it at your
face, pretending to make a call. Now you’re invisible. You’re a
person leaning on a pillar making a call. There are a dozen of you
within a twenty-foot radius. You look back. She’s back at her
table, drinking her coffee. You wait, whispering nothing into the
phone. She drinks. Three minutes. Four. Five. You press random
buttons and start talking again. You’re on a new call. You’re busy.
You’re one of the guys. She stands up. Yanks on the cords of her
backpack to close it up. Picks it up by the cords and bounces it
against its own weight to make them tight. She buckles the catches.
Swings the pack onto one shoulder and picks up her pocketbook.
Opens it to check her ticket is accessible. Closes it again. She
looks around once and strides purposefully out of the food court.
Straight toward you. She passes within five feet and disappears
toward the departure gates. You flip the phone closed and slip it
into the pocket of your suit and you walk out the other way. You
smile to yourself as you go. Now the crucial call is going to end
up on someone else’s bill.
THE PHONE CALL to the Fort Armstrong duty officer
revealed nothing at all on the surface, but the guy’s evasions were
voiced in such a way that a thirteen-year Army cop like Reacher
took them to be confirmation as good as he’d get if they were
written in an affidavit sworn before a notary public.
“He’s there,” he said.
Harper had been eavesdropping, and she didn’t look
convinced.
“They tell you that for sure?” she asked.
“More or less,” he said.
“So is it worth going?”
He nodded. “He’s there, I guarantee it.”
The Nissan had no maps in it, and Harper had no
idea of where she was. Reacher had only anecdotal knowledge of New
Jersey geography. He knew how to get from A to B, and then from B
to C, and then from C to D, but whether that was the most efficient
direct route all the way from A to D, he had no idea. So he came
out of the lot and headed for the turnpike on-ramp. He figured
driving south for an hour would be a good start. He realized within
a minute he was using the same road Lamarr had driven him on, just
a few days before. It was raining lightly and the Nissan rode
harder and lower than her big Buick. It was right down there in the
tunnel of spray. The windshield was filmed with city grease and the
wipers were blurring the view out with every alternate stroke.
Smear, clear, smear, clear. The needle on
the gas gauge was heading below a quarter.
“We should stop,” Harper said. “Get gas, clean the
window.”
“And buy a map,” Reacher said.
He pulled off into the next service area. It was
pretty much identical to the place Lamarr had used for lunch. Same
layout, same buildings. He rolled through the rain to the gas pumps
and left the car at the full-service island. The tank was full and
the guy was cleaning the windshield when he got back, wet, carrying
a colored map which unfolded awkwardly into a yard-square
sheet.
“We’re on the wrong road,” he said. “Route 1 would
be better.”
“OK, next exit,” Harper said, craning over. “Use 95
to jump across.”
She used her finger to trace south down Route 1.
Found Fort Armstrong on the edge of the yellow shape that
represented Trenton.
“Close to Fort Dix,” she said. “Where we were
before. ”
Reacher said nothing. The guy finished with the
windshield and Harper paid him through her window. Reacher wiped
rain off his face with his sleeve and started the motor. Threaded
his way back to the highway and watched for the turn onto 95.
I-95 was a mess, with heavy traffic. Route 1 was
better. It curved through Highland Park and then ran dead straight
for nearly twenty miles, all the way into Trenton. Reacher
remembered Fort Armstrong as a left-hand turn coming north out of
Trenton, so coming south it was a right-hand turn, onto another
dead straight approach road, which took them all the way to a
vehicle barrier outside a two-story brick guardhouse. Beyond the
guardhouse were more roads and buildings. The roads were flat with
whitewashed curbs and the buildings were all brick with radiused
corners and external stairways made of welded tubular steel painted
green. Window frames were metal. Classic Army architecture of the
fifties, built with unlimited budgets and unlimited scope.
Unlimited optimism.
"The U.S. military,” Reacher said. "We were kings
of the world, back then.”
There was dimmed light in the guardhouse window
next to the vehicle barrier. A sentry was visible, silhouetted
against the light, bulky in a rain cape and helmet. He peered
through the window and stepped to the door. Opened it up and came
out to the car. Reacher buzzed his window down.
“You the guy who called the captain?” the sentry
asked.
He was a heavy black guy. Low voice, slow accent
from the Deep South. Far from home on a rainy night. Reacher
nodded. The sentry grinned.
“He figured you might show up in person,” he said.
“Go ahead in.”
He stepped back into the guardhouse and the barrier
came up. Reacher drove carefully over the tire spikes and turned
left.
“That was easy,” Harper said.
“You ever met a retired FBI agent?” Reacher
asked.
“Sure, once or twice. Couple of the old
guys.”
“How did you treat them?”
She nodded. “Like that guy treated you, I
guess.”
“All organizations are the same,” he said.
“Military police more so than the others, maybe. The rest of the
Army hates you, so you stick together more.”
He turned right, then right again, then left.
“You been here before?” Harper asked.
“These places are all the same,” he said. “Look for
the biggest flower bed, that’s where the general office is.”
She pointed. “That looks promising.”
He nodded. “You got the idea.”
The headlight beams played over a rose bed the size
of an Olympic pool. The roses were just dormant stalks, sticking up
out of a surface lumpy with horse manure and shredded bark. Behind
them was a low symmetrical building with whitewashed steps leading
up to double doors in the center. A light burned in a window in the
middle of the left-hand wing.
“Duty office,” Reacher said. “The sentry called the
captain soon as we were through the gate, so right now he’s walking
down the corridor to the doors. Watch for the light.”
The fanlights above the doors lit up with a yellow
glow.
“Now the outside lights,” Reacher said.
Two carriage lamps mounted on the door pillars lit
up. Reacher stopped the car at the bottom of the steps.
“Now the doors open,” he said.
The doors opened inward and a man in uniform
stepped through the gap.
“That was me, about a million years ago,” Reacher
said.
The captain waited at the top of the steps, far
enough out to be in the light from the carriage lamps, far enough
in to be sheltered from the drizzle. He was a head shorter than
Reacher had ever been, but he was broad and he looked fit. Dark
hair neatly combed, plain steel eyeglasses. His uniform jacket was
buttoned, but his face looked open enough. Reacher slid out of the
Nissan and walked around the hood. Harper joined him at the foot of
the whitewashed steps.
“Come in out of the rain,” the captain
called.
His accent was East Coast urban. Bright and alert.
He had an amiable smile. Looked like a decent guy. Reacher went up
the steps first. Harper saw his shoes leaving wet stains on the
whitewash. Glanced down and saw her own were doing the same
thing.
“Sorry,” she said.
The captain smiled again.
“Don’t worry,” he said. “The prisoners paint them
every morning.”
“This is Lisa Harper,” Reacher said. “She’s with
the FBI.”
“Pleased to meet you,” the captain said. “I’m John
Leighton.”
The three of them shook hands all around at the
doors and Leighton led them inside. He turned off the carriage
lamps with a switch inside the doors and then killed the hallway
light.
“Budgets,” he said. “Can’t waste money.”
Light from his office was spilling out into the
corridor, and he led them toward it. Stood at his door and ushered
them inside. The office was original fifties, updated only where
strictly necessary. Old desk, new computer, old file cabinet, new
phone. There were crammed bookcases and every surface was
overloaded with paper.
“They’re keeping you busy,” Reacher said.
Leighton nodded. “Tell me about it.”
“So we’ll try not to take up too much of your
time.”
“Don’t worry. I called around, after you called me,
naturally. Friend of a friend said I should push the boat out. Word
is you were a solid guy, for a major.”
Reacher smiled, briefly.
“Well, I always tried to be,” he said. “For a
major. Who was the friend of the friend?”
“Some guy worked for you when you worked for old
Leon Garber. He said you were a stand-up guy and old Garber always
swore by you, which makes you pretty much OK as long as this
generation is still in harness.”
“People still remember Garber?”
"Do Yankees fans still remember Joe
DiMaggio?”
“I’m seeing Garber’s daughter,” Reacher said.
“I know,” Leighton said. “Word gets around. You’re
a lucky guy. Jodie Garber’s a nice lady, from what I recall.”
“You know her?”
Leighton nodded. "I met her on the bases, when I
was coming up.”
“I’ll remember you to her.”
Then he lapsed into silence, thinking about Jodie,
and Leon. He was going to sell the house Leon had left him, and
Jodie was worrying about it.
“Sit down,” Leighton said. “Please.”
There were two upright chairs in front of the desk,
tubular metal and canvas, like the things storefront churches threw
away a generation ago.
“So how can I help you?” Leighton said, aiming the
question at Reacher, looking at Harper.
“She’ll explain,” Reacher said.
She ran through it all from the beginning,
summarizing. It took seven or eight minutes. Leighton listened
attentively, interrupting her here and there.
“I know about the women,” he said. “We
heard.”
She finished with Reacher’s smoke screen theory,
the possible Army thefts, and the trail which led from Petrosian’s
boys in New York to Bob in New Jersey.
“His name is Bob McGuire,” Leighton said.
“Quartermaster sergeant. But he’s not your guy. We’ve had him two
months, and he’s too dumb, anyway.”
“We figured that,” Harper said. “Feeling was he
could name names, maybe lead us to somebody more likely.”
“A bigger fish?”
Harper nodded. “Somebody doing enough business to
make it worth killing witnesses.”
Leighton nodded back.
“Theoretically, there might be such a person,” he
said, cautiously.
“You got a name?”
Leighton looked at her and shook his head. Leaned
back in his chair and rubbed the heels of his hands over his eyes.
Suddenly looked very tired.
“Problem?” Reacher asked.
“How long have you been out?” Leighton asked back,
eyes closed.
“About three years, I guess,” Reacher said.
Leighton yawned and stretched and returned to an
upright position.
“Things have changed,” he said. “Time marches on,
right?”
“What’s changed?”
“Everything,” Leighton said. “Well, this, mainly.”
He leaned over and tapped his computer monitor with his nail. It
made a glassy ringing thunk, like a bottle.
“Smaller Army, easier to organize, more time on our hands. So they
computerized us, completely. Makes communication a whole lot
easier. Makes it so we all know each other’s business. Makes
inventories easier to manage. You want to know how many Willys Jeep
tires we got in store, even though we don’t use Willys Jeeps
anymore? Give me ten minutes, I can tell you.”
“So?”
“So we keep track of everything, much better than
we used to. For instance, we know how many M9 Berettas have ever
been delivered, we know how many have ever been legitimately
issued, and we know how many we got in store. And if those numbers
didn’t add up, we’d be worrying about it, believe me.”
“So do the numbers add up?”
Leighton grinned, briefly. “They do now. That’s for
damn sure. Nobody’s stolen an M9 Beretta from the U.S. Army in the
last year and a half.”
“So what was Bob McGuire doing two months ago?”
Reacher asked.
“Selling out the last of his stockpile. He’d been
thieving ten years, at least. A little computer analysis made it
obvious. Him, and a couple dozen others in a couple dozen different
locations. We put procedures in place to dry up the stealing and we
rounded up all the bad guys selling whatever they still had
left.”
“All of them?”
“Computer says so. We were leaking weapons like
crazy, all kinds of descriptions, couple of dozen locations, so we
arrest a couple dozen guys, and the leakage has stopped. McGuire
was about the last, maybe second-to-last, I’m not sure.”
“No more weapons theft?”
“Yesterday’s news,” Leighton said. “You’re behind
the times.”
There was silence.
“Good job,” Reacher said. “Congratulations.”
“Smaller Army,” Leighton said. “More time on our
hands.”
“You got them all?” Harper
asked.
Leighton just nodded. “All of them. Big push,
worldwide. There weren’t that many. Computers did the trick.”
Silence in the office.
“Well, shit, there goes that theory,” she
said.
She stared at the floor. Leighton shook his head,
cautiously.
“Maybe not,” he said. “We’ve got a theory of our
own.”
She looked up again. “The big fish?”
Leighton nodded. “Right.”
“Who is he?”
“He’s only theoretical, as of now.”
“Theoretical?”
“He’s not active,” Leighton said. “He’s not
stealing anything. Like I told you, we identified all the leaks and
we plugged them all. Couple dozen guys waiting for trial, all the
leak locations accounted for. But the way we picked them up was we
sent undercover guys in, to buy the stuff. Entrapment. Bob McGuire,
for instance, he sold a couple of Berettas to a couple of
lieutenants in a bar.”
"We were just there,” Harper said. "MacStiophan’s,
near the New Jersey Turnpike.”
“Right,” Leighton said. “Our guys bought two M9s
out of the trunk of his car, two hundred bucks apiece, which is
about a third of what the Army pays for them, by the by. So then we
haul McGuire in and we start ripping him apart. We know more or
less exactly how many pieces he’s stolen over the years, because of
the inventory analysis on the computer, and we figure an average
price, and we start looking for where the money has gone. And we
find about a half of it, either in bank accounts or in the form of
stuff he’s bought.”
“So?” Reacher said.
“So nothing, not right then. But we’re pooling
information and the story is pretty much the same everywhere.
They’ve all got about a half of their money missing. More or less
the exact same proportion everywhere. And these guys are not the
smartest guys you’ve ever met, right? They couldn’t hide their
money from us. And even if they could, why would they all hide
exactly half of it? Why wouldn’t some of them hide all of it, or
two thirds, or three quarters? You know, whatever, a different
proportion in each case?”
“Enter the theoretical big fish,” Reacher
said.
Leighton nodded. “Exactly. How else to explain it?
It was like a puzzle with a missing piece. We started to figure
some kind of a godfather figure, you know, some big guy in the
shadows, maybe organizing everything, maybe offering protection in
exchange for half the profit.”
“Or half the guns,” Reacher said.
“Right,” Leighton said.
“Somebody running a protection racket,” Harper
said. “Like a scam inside a scam.”
“Right,” Leighton said again.
There was a long pause.
“Looks good from our point of view,” Harper said.
“Guy like that, he’s smart and capable, and he has to run around
taking care of problems in various random locations. Could explain
why he’s interested in so many different women. Not because all the
women knew him, but because maybe each one
of them knew one of his clients.”
“Timing is good for you too,” Leighton said. “If
our guy is your guy, he started planning two, three months ago,
when he heard his clients were starting to go down.”
Harper sat forward. “What was the volume of
business like two, three years ago?”
"Pretty heavy,” Leighton said. "You’re really
asking how much these women could have seen, right?”
“Right.”
“They could have seen plenty,” Leighton said.
“So how good is your case?” she asked. “Against Bob
McGuire, for instance?”
Leighton shrugged. “Not brilliant. We’ve got him
for the two pieces he sold to our guys, of course, but that’s only
two pieces. The rest of it is basically circumstantial, and the
fact the money doesn’t tie up properly weakens the hell out of
it.”
“So eliminating the witnesses before the trials
makes sense.”
Leighton nodded. “Makes a hell of a lot of sense, I
guess.”
“So who is this guy?”
Leighton rubbed his eyes again. “We have no idea.
We don’t even know for sure there is a guy.
He’s just a guess right now. Just our theory.”
“Nobody’s saying anything?”
“Not a damn word. We’ve been asking, two months
solid. We’ve got two dozen guys, all of them with their mouths shut
tight. We figure the big guy’s really put the frighteners
on.”
“He’s scary, that’s for sure,” Harper said. “From
what we know about him.”
There was silence in Leighton’s office. Just the
brittle patter of rain on the windows.
“If he exists,” Leighton said.
“He exists,” Harper said.
Leighton nodded. “We think so too.”
“Well, we need his name, I guess,” Reacher
said.
No reply.
“I should go talk to McGuire for you,” Reacher
said.
Leighton smiled. “I figured you’d be saying that
before long. I was all set to say no, it’s improper. But you know
what? I just changed my mind. I just decided to say yes, go ahead.
Be my guest.”
THE CELL BLOCK was underground, like it always is
in a regional HQ, below a squat brick building with an iron door,
standing alone on the other side of the rose bed. Leighton led them
over there through the rain, their collars turned up against the
damp and their chins ducked down to their chests. Leighton used an
old-fashioned bellpull outside the iron door and it opened after a
second to reveal a bright hallway with a huge master sergeant
standing in it. The sergeant stepped aside and Leighton led them
in.
Inside, the walls were made of brick faced with
white porcelain glaze. The floors and the ceilings were smooth
troweled concrete painted shiny green. Lights were fluorescent
tubes behind thick metal grilles. Doors were iron, with square
barred openings at the top. There was a cubbyhole office on the
right, with a wooden rack of keys on four-inch metal hoops. There
was a big desk, piled high with video recorders taping milky-gray
flickering images from twelve small monitor screens. The screens
showed twelve cells, eleven of them empty and one of them with a
humped shape under a blanket on the bed.
“Quiet night at the Hilton,” Reacher said.
Leighton nodded. “Gets worse Saturday nights. But
right now McGuire’s our only guest.”
“The video recording is a problem,” Reacher
said.
“Always breaking down, though,” Leighton
said.
He bent to examine the pictures on the monitors.
Braced his hands on the desk. Bent closer. Rolled his right hand
until his knuckle touched a switch. The recorders stopped humming
and the REC legends disappeared from the
corners of the screens.
“See?” he said. “Very unreliable system.”
“It’ll take a couple hours to fix,” the sergeant
said. “At least.”
The sergeant was a giant, shiny skin the color of
coffee. His uniform jacket was the size of a field tent. Reacher
and Harper would have fitted into it together. Maybe Leighton, too.
The guy was the exact ideal-issue MP noncom.
“McGuire’s got a visitor, Sergeant,” Leighton said.
An off-the-record voice. “Doesn’t need to go in the log.”
Reacher took off his coat and his jacket. Folded
them and left them on the sergeant’s chair. The sergeant took a
hoop of keys off the wooden board and moved to the inside door.
Unlocked it and swung it back. Reacher stepped through and the
sergeant closed the door and locked it again behind him. Pointed to
the head of a staircase.
“After you,” he said.
The staircase was built of bricks, rounded at the
nose of each stair. The walls either side were the same white
glaze. There was a metal handrail, bolted through to the wall every
twelve inches. Another locked door at the bottom. Then a corridor,
then another locked door. Then a lobby, with three locked doors to
three blocks of cells. The sergeant unlocked the middle door.
Flipped a switch and fluorescent light stuttered and flooded a
bright white area forty feet by twenty. There was an access zone
the length of the block and about a third of its depth. The rest of
the space was divided into four cells delineated by heavy iron
bars. The bars were thickly covered in shiny white enamel paint.
The cells were about ten feet wide, maybe twelve deep. Each cell
had a video camera opposite, mounted high on the wall. Three of the
cells were empty, with their gates folded back. The fourth was
locked closed. It held McGuire. He was struggling awake, sitting
up, surprised by the light.
“Visitor for you,” the sergeant called.
There were two tall wooden stools in the corner of
the access zone nearest the exit door. The sergeant carried the
nearer one over and placed it in front of McGuire’s cell. Walked
back and sat on the other. Reacher ignored the stool and stood with
his hands behind his back, gazing silently through the bars.
McGuire was pushing his blanket aside and swinging his feet to the
floor. He was wearing an olive undershirt and olive shorts. He was
a big guy. More than six feet tall, more than two hundred pounds,
more than thirty-five years old. Heavily muscled, a thick neck, big
arms, big legs. Thinning hair cropped close, small eyes, a couple
of tattoos. Reacher stood absolutely still, watching him, saying
nothing.
“Hell are you?” McGuire said. His voice matched his
bulk. It was deep, and the words were half swallowed by a heavy
chest. Reacher made no reply. It was a technique he had perfected
half a lifetime ago. Just stand absolutely still, don’t blink, say
nothing. Wait for them to run through the possibilities. Not a buddy. Not a lawyer. Who, then? Wait for them
to start worrying.
“Hell are you?” McGuire said again.
Reacher walked away. He stepped over to where the
master sergeant was sitting and bent to whisper in his ear. The
giant’s eyebrows came up. You sure? Reacher
whispered again. The guy nodded and stood up and handed Reacher the
hoop of keys. Went out through the door and closed it behind him.
Reacher hung the keys on the knob and walked back to McGuire’s
cell. McGuire was staring through the bars at him.
“What do you want?” he said.
“I want you to look at me,” Reacher replied.
“What?”
“What do you see?”
“Nothing,” McGuire said.
“You blind?”
“No, I ain’t blind.”
“Then you’re a liar,” Reacher said. “You don’t see
nothing.”
“I see some guy,” McGuire said.
“You see some guy bigger than you who had all kinds
of special training while you spent your time shuffling paper in
some piece-of-shit quartermaster’s stores.”
“So?”
"So nothing. Just something to bear in mind for
later, is all.”
“What’s later?”
“You’ll find out,” Reacher said.
“What do you want?”
“I want proof.”
“Of what?”
“Of exactly how dumb a piece of shit like you
really is.”
McGuire paused. His eyes narrowed, pushed into deep
furrows by his brow.
“Easy for you to talk like that,” he said.
“Standing six feet away from these bars.”
Reacher took an exaggerated pace forward.
“Now I’m two feet from the bars,” he said. “And
you’re still a dumb piece of shit.”
McGuire took a step forward, too. He was a foot
inside the cell, holding a bar in each fist. A level gaze in his
eyes. Reacher stepped forward again.
“Now I’m a foot from the bars, same as you,” he
said. “And you’re still a dumb piece of
shit.”
McGuire’s right hand came off the bar and closed
into a fist and his whole arm rammed straight out like a piston. It
was headed for Reacher’s throat. Reacher caught the wrist and
swayed and whipped the fist past his head and rocked his weight
back and hauled McGuire tight up against the inside of the bars.
Twisted the wrist palm-out and walked left and bent the arm back
against the elbow joint.
“See how dumb you are?” he said. “I keep on
walking, I break your arm.”
McGuire was gasping against the pressure. Reacher
smiled briefly and dropped the wrist. McGuire stared at him and
hauled his arm back inside, rolling the shoulder, testing the
damage.
“What do you want?” he said again.
“Want me to open the cell gate?”
“What?”
“Keys are right over there. You want the gate open,
even things up a little?”
McGuire’s eyes narrowed a little more. He nodded.
“Yeah, open the damn gate.”
Reacher stepped away and lifted the hoop of keys
off the knob of the exit door. Shuffled through them and found the
right one. He’d handled plenty of cell keys. He could pick one out
blindfolded. He stepped back and unlocked the gate. Swung it open.
McGuire stood still. Reacher walked away and put the hoop of keys
back on the doorknob. Stood facing the door, his back to the
cell.
“Sit down,” he called. “I left the stool there for
you.”
He sensed McGuire coming out of the cell. Heard his
bare feet on the concrete floor. Heard them stop.
“What do you want?” McGuire said again.
Reacher kept his back turned. Straining to sense
McGuire’s approach. It wasn’t happening.
“It’s complicated,” he said. “You’re going to have
to juggle a number of factors.”
“What factors?” McGuire asked, blankly.
“First factor is I’m unofficial, OK?” Reacher
said.
“What does that mean?”
“You tell me.”
“I don’t know,” McGuire said.
Reacher turned around. “It means I’m not an Army
cop, I’m not a civilian cop, in fact I’m not anything at
all.”
“So?”
“So there’s no comeback on me. No disciplinary
procedures, no pension to lose, no nothing.”
“So?”
“So if I leave you walking on crutches and drinking
through a straw the rest of your life, there’s nothing anybody can
do to me. And we got no witnesses in here.”
“What do you want?”
“Second factor is whatever the big guy says he’ll
do to you, I can do worse.”
“What big guy?”
Reacher smiled. McGuire’s hands bunched into fists.
Heavy biceps, big shoulders.
“Now it gets sophisticated,” Reacher said. “You
need to concentrate real hard on this part. Third factor is, if you
give me the guy’s name, he goes away somewhere else, forever. You
give me his name, he can’t get to you. Not ever, you
understand?”
“What name? What guy?”
“The guy you were paying off with half your
take.”
“No such guy.”
Reacher shook his head. “We’re past that stage now,
OK? We know there’s such a guy. So don’t make me smack you around
before we even get to the important part.”
McGuire tensed up. Breathed hard. Then he quieted
down. His body slackened slightly and his eyes narrowed
again.
“So concentrate,” Reacher said. “You think that to
rat him out puts you in the shit. But you’re wrong. What you need
to understand is, you rat him out and actually it makes you safe,
the whole rest of your life, because people are looking at him for
a bunch of things a whole lot worse than ripping off the
Army.”
“What’s he done?” McGuire asked.
Reacher smiled. He wished the video cameras had
sound. The guy exists. Leighton would be
dancing around the office.
“The FBI thinks he killed four women. You give me
his name, they’ll put him away forever. Nobody’s even going to ask
him about anything else.”
McGuire was silent. Thinking about it. It wasn’t
the speediest process Reacher had ever seen.
“Two more factors,” he said. “You tell me right
now, I’ll put in a good word for you. They’ll listen to me, because
I used to be one of them. Cops stick together, right? I can get you
easy time.”
McGuire said nothing.
“Last factor,” Reacher said gently. “You need to
understand, sooner or later you’ll tell me anyway. It’s just a
question of timing. Your choice. You can tell me right now, or you
can tell me in a half hour, right after I’ve broken your arms and
legs and I’m about to snap your spine.”
“He’s a bad guy,” McGuire said.
Reacher nodded. “I’m sure he’s real bad. But you
need to prioritize. Whatever he says he’s going to do, that’s
theoretical, way off in the future, and like I told you, it isn’t
going to happen anyway. But what I’m going to do, it’s going to
happen right now. Right here.”
“You ain’t going to do nothing,” McGuire
said.
Reacher turned and picked up the wooden stool.
Flipped it upside down and held it chest high with his hands around
two of the legs. Took a firm backhand grip and bunched his
shoulders and pulled steadily. Then he breathed hard and snapped
his elbows back and the legs tore away from the rungs. The rungs
clattered to the floor. He reversed the stool and held the seat in
his left hand and splintered a leg free with his right. Dropped the
wreckage and retained the leg. It was about a yard long, the size
and weight of a ball bat.
“Now you do the same,” he said.
McGuire tried hard. He turned over his own stool
and grasped the legs. His muscles bunched and the tattoos swelled,
but he got nowhere with it. He just stood there, holding the stool
upside down.
“Too bad,” Reacher said. “I tried to make it
fair.”
“He was Special Forces,” McGuire said. “He was in
Desert Storm. He’s real tough.”
“Doesn’t matter,” Reacher said. “He resists, the
FBI will shoot him down. End of problem.”
McGuire said nothing.
“He won’t know it came from you,” Reacher said.
“They’ll make it look like he left some evidence behind. ”
McGuire said nothing. Reacher swung the leg of the
stool.
“Left or right?” he asked.
“What?” McGuire said.
“Which arm you want me to break first?”
"LaSalle Kruger,” McGuire said. "Supply battalion
CO. He’s a colonel.”