26
LEIGHTON WALKED THE length of the room and sat
down at the table, in the right-hand chair. Same chair as Reacher
had used. He put his elbows on the table and his head in his hands.
Same gesture.
“First thing, there was no list,” he said. He
looked up at Harper. “You asked me to check thefts where the women
worked, so I needed a list of the women to do that, obviously, so I
tried to find one, but I couldn’t, OK? So I made some calls, and
what happened was when your people came to us a month ago, we had
to generate a list from scratch. It was a pain in the ass, trawling
through all the records. So some guy had a bright idea, took a
shortcut, called one of the women herself, some bullshit pretext.
We think it was actually Alison Lamarr, and she supplied the list. Seems they’d set up a big
support group among themselves, couple of years ago.”
“Scimeca called them her sisters,” Reacher said.
“Remember that? She said four of my sisters are dead.”
“It was their own list?” Harper said.
“We didn’t have one,” Leighton said again. “And
then Kruger’s records started coming in, and the dates and places
didn’t match. Not even close.”
“Could he have falsified them?”
Leighton shrugged. “He could have. He was an ace at falsifying his
inventories, that’s for damn sure. But you haven’t heard the kicker
yet.”
“Which is?”
“Like Reacher said, Special Forces to supply
battalion needs some explaining. So I checked it out. He was a top
boy in the Gulf. Big star, a major. They were out in the desert,
behind the lines, looking for mobile SCUD launchers, small unit,
bad radio. Nobody else had any real clear idea of where they were,
hour to hour. So they start the artillery barrage and Kruger’s unit
gets all chewed up under it. Friendly fire. Bad casualties. Kruger
himself was seriously hurt. But the Army was his life, so he wanted
to stay in, so they gave him the promotion all the way up to bird
colonel and stuck him somewhere his injuries wouldn’t disqualify
him, hence the desk job in supply. My guess is we’ll find he got
all bitter and twisted afterward and started running the rackets as
a kind of revenge or something. You know, against the Army, against
life itself.”
“But what’s the kicker?” Harper asked.
Leighton paused.
“The friendly fire,” he said. “The guy lost both
his legs.”
Silence.
“He’s in a wheelchair.”
“Shit,” she said.
“Yeah, shit. No way he’s running up and down any
stairs to any bathrooms. Last time he did that was ten years
ago.”
She stared at the wall.
“OK,” she said slowly. “Bad idea.”
“I’m afraid so, ma’am. And they’re right about
Cooke. I checked her too, and she never held anything heavier than
a pen, her whole short career. That was something else I was going
to have to tell you.”
“OK,” she said again.
She examined the wall.
“But thanks anyway,” she said. “And now we’re out
of here. Back to Quantico, face the music.”
“Wait,” Leighton said. “You need to hear about the
paint.”
“More bad news?”
“Weird news,” Leighton said. “I started a search
for reports about missing camo green, like you asked me to. Only
definitive thing was hidden in a buried file, closed-access. A
theft of a hundred and ten three-gallon cans.”
“That’s it,” Harper said. “Three hundred thirty
gallons. Eleven women, thirty gallons each.”
“Evidence was clear,” Leighton said. “They fingered
a supply sergeant in Utah.”
“Who was he?”
“She,” Leighton said. “She was Sergeant Lorraine
Stanley.”
Total silence.
“But that’s impossible,” Harper said. “She was one
of the victims.”
Leighton shook his head. “I called Utah. Got hold
of the investigating officer. I got him out of bed. He says it was
Stanley, no doubt about it. Means and opportunity. She’d tried to
cover her tracks, but she wasn’t smart enough about it. It was
clear-cut. They didn’t proceed against her because it was
politically impossible right then. She’d just come off of the
harassment thing, not long before. No way were they going to start
in on her at that point. So they just watched her, until she quit.
But it was her.”
“One victim stole the paint?” Reacher said. “And
another provided the list of names?”
Leighton nodded, somber. “That’s how it was, I
promise you. And you know I wouldn’t bullshit one of Garber’s
boys.”
Reacher just nodded.
THERE WAS NO more conversation. No more talk. The
room went silent. Leighton sat at the table. Harper dressed
mechanically. Reacher put his coat on and found the Nissan keys in
Harper’s jacket. Went outside and stood in the rain for a long
moment. Then he unlocked the car and slid inside. Started the motor
and waited. Harper and Leighton came out together. She crossed to
the car and he walked back to his. He waved, just a brief motion of
his hand. Reacher put the Nissan in drive and pulled slowly out of
the lot.
“Check the map for me,” he said.
“I-295 and then the Turnpike,” she said.
He nodded. “I know it after that. Lamarr showed
me.”
“Why the hell would Lorraine Stanley steal the
paint?”
“I don’t know,” he said.
“And you want to tell me why?” she asked. “You knew
this Army thing was nothing, but you made us spend thirty-six hours
on it. Why?”
“I already told you,” he said. “It was an
experiment, and I needed time to think.”
“About what?”
He didn’t answer. She went quiet for a spell.
“Good job we didn’t go all the way celebrating,”
she said.
He didn’t reply to that either. Didn’t speak again,
the whole way. He just found the right roads and drove on through
the rain. He had new questions in his head, and he tried to think
of some answers, but nothing would come. The only thing in his mind
was the feel of her tongue in his mouth. It felt different from
Jodie’s. Tasted different. He guessed everybody’s was
different.
HE DROVE FAST and it took a fraction under three
hours from the outskirts of Trenton all the way back to Quantico.
He turned in at the unmarked road off 95 and drove through the
Marine checkpoints in the dark and waited at the vehicle barrier.
The FBI sentry shone a flashlight on their badges and their faces
and raised the striped pole and waved them through. They eased over
the speed bumps and wound slowly through the empty parking lots and
pulled up opposite the glass doors. It had stopped raining back in
Maryland. Virginia was dry.
“OK,” Harper said. “Let’s go get our asses chewed.”
Reacher nodded. Killed the motor and the lights and sat in the
silence for a beat. Then they looked at each other and slid out of
the car and stepped to the doors. Took a deep breath. But the
atmosphere inside the building was very calm. It was quiet. Nobody
was around. Nobody was waiting for them. They went down in the
elevator to Blake’s underground office. Found him sitting in there
at his desk with one hand resting on the telephone and the other
holding a curled sheet of fax paper. The television was playing
silently, political cable, men in suits at an impressive table.
Blake was ignoring it. He was staring at a spot on his desk
equidistant from the fax paper and the phone and his face was
totally blank. Harper nodded to him, and Reacher said
nothing.
“Fax in from UPS,” Blake said. His voice was
gentle. Amiable, even benign. He looked crestfallen, adrift,
confused. He looked beaten.
“Guess who sent the paint to Alison Lamarr?” he
said.
“Lorraine Stanley,” Reacher said.
Blake nodded.
“Correct,” he said. “From an address in a little
town in Utah, that turned out to be a self-storage facility. And
guess what else?”
“She sent all of it.”
Blake nodded again. “UPS has got eleven consecutive
consignment numbers showing eleven identical cartons going to
eleven separate addresses, including Stanley’s own place in San
Diego. And guess what else?”
“What?”
“She didn’t even have her
own place when she first put the paint in the storage facility. She
waited the best part of a year until she was settled, then she went
back up to Utah and dispatched it all. So what do you make of
that?”
“I don’t know,” Reacher said.
“Neither do I,” Blake said.
Then he picked up the phone. Stared at it. Put it
down again.
“And Poulton just called,” he said. “From Spokane.
Guess what he had to say?”
“What?”
“He just got through interviewing the UPS driver.
The guy remembers pretty well. Isolated place, big heavy box, I
guess he would.”
“And?”
“Alison was there when he called. She was listening
to the ball game too, radio on in the kitchen. She asked him
inside, gave him coffee, they heard the grand slam together. A
little hollering, a little dancing around, another coffee, he tells
her he’s got a big heavy box for her.”
“And?”
“And she says oh, good. He goes back out and wheels
it off the tail lift on a hand truck, she clears a space for it in
the garage, he brings it in, he dumps it, and she’s all smiles
about it.”
“Like she was expecting it?”
Blake nodded. “That was the guy’s impression. And
then what does she do?”
“What?”
“She tears off the ‘Documents enclosed’ thing and
carries it back to the kitchen with her. He follows, to finish up
his mug of coffee. She pulls the delivery note out of the plastic,
and she shreds it up into small pieces, and she dumps them in the
trash, along with the plastic. ”
“Why?”
Blake shrugged. “Who the hell knows? But this guy
worked UPS four years, and six times out of ten people were home
for him, and he never saw such a thing before.”
“Is he reliable?”
“Poulton thinks so. Says he’s a solid guy, clear,
articulate, ready to swear the whole damn thing on a stack of
Bibles.”
“So what’s your take?”
Blake shook his head. “I had any idea, you’d be the
first to know.”
Nighttime silence in the office.
“I apologize,” Reacher said. “My theory led us
nowhere. ”
Blake made a face. “Don’t think twice. It was our
call. It was worth a try. We wouldn’t have let you go,
otherwise.”
“Is Lamarr around?”
“Why?”
“I should apologize to her, too.”
Blake shook his head. “She’s at home. She hasn’t
been back. Says she’s a wreck, and she’s right. Can’t blame
her.”
Reacher nodded. “A lot of stress. She should get
away.”
Blake shrugged. “Where to? She won’t get on a damn
plane. And I don’t want her driving anyplace, the state she’s
in.”
Then his eyes hardened. He seemed to come back down
to earth.
“I’m going to look for another consultant,” he
said. “When I find one, you’re out of here. You’re getting nowhere.
You’ll have to take your chances with the New York people.”
Reacher nodded.
“OK,” he said.
Blake looked away and Harper took her cue and led
Reacher out of the office. Into the elevator, up to ground level,
up to the third floor. They walked together through the corridor to
the familiar door.
“Why was she expecting it?” Harper said. “Why was
Alison expecting the box of paint, when all the others
weren’t?”
He shrugged. “I don’t know.”
Harper opened his door.
“OK, good night,” she said.
“You mad at me?”
“You wasted thirty-six hours.”
“No, I invested thirty-six hours.”
“In what?”
“I don’t know, yet.”
She shrugged. “You’re a weird guy.”
He nodded. “So people say.”
Then he kissed her chastely on the cheek, before
she could duck away. He stepped into his room. She waited until the
door swung shut before she walked back to the elevator.
THE SHEETS AND the towels had been changed. There
was new soap and shampoo. A new razor and a fresh can of shaving
cream. He upended a glass and put his toothbrush in it. Walked to
the bed and lay down, fully dressed, still in his coat. Stared up
at the ceiling. Then he rolled up onto one elbow and picked up the
phone. Dialed Jodie’s number. It rang four times, and he heard her
voice, slow and sleepy.
“Who is it?” she said.
“Me,” he said back.
“It’s three o’clock in the morning.”
“Nearly.”
“You woke me up.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Where are you?”
“Locked up in Quantico.”
She paused, and he heard the hum of the line and
the faraway night sounds of New York. Faint isolated car horns, the
whoop of a distant siren.
“How’s it going?” she asked.
“It’s not,” he said. “They’re going to replace me.
I’ll be home soon.”
“Home?”
“New York,” he said.
She was silent. He heard a quiet, urgent siren.
Probably right there on Broadway, he thought. Under her window. A
lonely sound.
“The house won’t change anything,” he said. “I told
you that.”
“It’s the partnership meeting tomorrow,” she
said.
“So we’ll celebrate,” he said. “When I get back. As
long as I’m not in jail. I’m still not out of the woods with
Deerfield and Cozo yet.”
“I thought they were going to forget about
it.”
“If I delivered,” he said. “And I haven’t
delivered.”
She paused again.
“You shouldn’t have gotten involved in the first
place.”
“I know that.”
“But I love you,” she said.
“Me too,” he said. “Good luck for tomorrow.”
“You too.”
He hung up and lay back down and resumed his survey
of the ceiling. Tried to see her up there, but all he saw instead
were Lisa Harper and Rita Scimeca, who were the last two women he’d
wanted to take to bed but couldn’t, for force of circumstance.
Scimeca, it would have been totally inappropriate. Harper, it would
have been an infidelity. Perfectly sound reasons, but reasons not
to do something don’t kill the original impulse. He thought about
Harper’s body, the way she moved, the guileless smile, her frank
engaging stare. He thought about Scimeca’s face, the invisible
bruises, the hurt in her eyes. Her rebuilt life out there in
Oregon, the flowers, the piano, the shine of her furniture wax, the
buttoned-up defensive domesticity. He closed his eyes and then
opened them and stared hard at the white paint above him. Rolled
onto his elbow again and picked up the phone. Dialed 0, hoping to
get a switchboard.
“Yes?” said a voice he had never heard
before.
“This is Reacher,” he said. “Up on the third
floor.”
“I know who you are and where you are.”
“Is Lisa Harper still in the building?”
“Agent Harper?” the voice said. “Hold,
please.”
The line went quiet. No music. No recorded
advertisements. No your call is very important
to us. Just nothing. Then the voice came back.
“Agent Harper is still here,” it said.
“Tell her I want to see her,” Reacher said. “Right
away.”
“I’ll pass that message on,” the voice said.
Then the line went dead. Reacher swung his feet to
the floor and sat on the edge of the bed, facing the door,
waiting.
THREE O’CLOCK IN the morning in Virginia was
midnight on the Pacific coast, and midnight was Rita Scimeca’s
habitual bedtime. She followed the same routine every night, partly
because she was naturally an organized person, and partly because
that aspect of her nature had been rigorously reinforced by her
military training, and anyway when you’ve always lived alone and
always will, how many ways are there of
getting yourself to bed?
She started in the garage. Turned off the power to
the door opener, slid the bolts into place, checked the car was
locked, turned off the light. Locked and bolted the door through to
the basement, checked the furnace. Walked upstairs, turned off the
basement light, locked the door out to the hallway. Checked the
front door was locked, did the bolts, put the chain on.
Then she checked the windows. There were fourteen
windows in the house, and all of them had locks. Late fall and
cold, they were all closed and locked anyway, but still she checked
each one of them. It was her routine. Then she returned to the
front parlor with a rag for the piano. She had played four hours,
mostly Bach, mostly half speed, but she was getting there. Now she
had to wipe down the keyboard. It was important to remove the acid
from the skin of her fingers. She knew the keys were actually some
kind of sophisticated plastic and were probably impervious, but it
was a devotional thing. If she treated the piano right, it would
reward her.
She wiped the keyboard vigorously, rumbling down at
the bass end, tinkling all the way up to the top of the
eighty-eight keys. She closed the lid and turned out the light and
returned the rag to the kitchen. Turned out the kitchen light and
felt her way in the dark up to her bedroom. Used the bathroom,
washed her hands, her teeth, her face, all in her usual strict
order. She stood at an angle to the sink, so she didn’t have to
look at the tub. She hadn’t looked at the tub since Reacher had
told her about the paint.
Then she stepped through to her bedroom and slid
under the covers. Pulled her knees up and hugged them. She was
thinking about Reacher. She liked him. She really did. It had been
good to see him. But then she rolled the other way and put him out
of her mind, because she didn’t expect ever to see him again.
HE WAITED TWENTY minutes before the door opened
and Harper came back. She didn’t knock, just used her key and
walked right in. She was in shirtsleeves, rolled up to the elbows.
Her forearms were slim and tanned. Her hair was loose. She wasn’t
wearing a bra. Maybe it was still in the motel room in
Trenton.
“You wanted me?” she asked.
“You still on the case?” he asked.
She stepped into the room and glanced at herself in
the mirror. Stood next to the dresser and turned to face him.
“Sure,” she said. “Advantage of being a
plain-vanilla agent, you don’t get the blame for other people’s
crazy ideas.”
He was silent. She looked at him.
“What did you want?” she said.
“I wanted to ask you a question,” he said. “What
would have happened if we’d already known about the paint delivery
and we’d asked Alison Lamarr about it instead of the UPS guy? What
would she have said?”
“The same as he said, presumably. Poulton told us
the guy is solid.”
“No,” Reacher said. “He’s solid, but she would have
lied to us.”
“She would? Why?”
“Because they’re all lying to us, Harper. We’ve
spoken to seven women, and they all lied to us. Vague stories about
roommates and mistakes? All bullshit. If we’d gotten to Alison
before, she’d have given us the same kind of a story.”
“How do you know?”
“Because Rita Scimeca was lying to us. That’s for
damn sure. I just figured that out. She didn’t have any roommate.
Never. It just doesn’t fit.”
“Why not?”
“Everything’s wrong about it. You saw her place.
You saw how she lives. All buttoned up and prissy? Everything was
so neat and clean and polished. Obsessive. Living like that, she
couldn’t stand anybody else in her house. She even threw us out pretty damn quick, and I was her friend. And
she didn’t need a roommate for money. You saw her car, some big new
sedan. And that piano. You know how much a grand piano costs? More
than the car, probably. And did you see the tools on her pegboard?
The pegs were all held in with little plastic loops.”
“You’re basing this on loops in her
pegboard?”
“On everything. It’s all indicative.”
“So what are you saying?”
“I’m saying she was expecting the delivery, just
like Alison was. Just like they all were.
The cartons came, they all said oh good,
just like Alison did, they all made space, they all stored their
cartons.”
“It’s not possible. Why would they?”
“Because the guy has got some kind of a hold over
them,” Reacher said. “He’s forcing them to participate. He forced Alison to give him their own
list of names, he forced Lorraine Stanley to steal the paint, he
forced her to hide it in Utah, he forced her to send it out at the
right time, he forced each one of them to accept the delivery and
then store it until he was ready. He forced each one of them to
destroy the delivery notes immediately and he had each of them
ready to lie about it afterward if anything unraveled before he got
to them.”
Harper stared at him. “But how? How the hell? How
would he do all that?”
“I don’t know,” Reacher said.
“Blackmail?” she said. “Threats? Fear? Is he
saying, play along and the others die but you live? Like he’s
conning them all separately?”
“I just don’t know. Nothing fits. They weren’t an
especially fearful bunch, were they? Certainly Alison didn’t look
it. And I know Rita Scimeca isn’t afraid of
much.”
She was still staring at him.
“But it’s not just participation, is it?” she said.
“It’s more than that. He’s forcing them to be happy about it too. Alison said oh good when her carton came.”
Silence in the room.
“Was she relieved or
something?” she said. “Did he promise her, you get your carton by
UPS instead of FedEx or in the afternoon instead of the morning or
on some particular day of the week it means you’re definitely going
to be OK?”
“I don’t know,” he said again.
Silence.
“So what do you want me to do?” Harper asked.
He shrugged. “Just keep on thinking, I guess.
You’re the only one can do anything about it now. The others won’t
get anywhere, not if they keep on heading the direction they’ve
been going.”
“You’ve got to tell Blake.”
He shook his head. “Blake won’t listen to me. I’ve
exhausted my credibility with him. It’s up to you now.”
“Maybe you’ve exhausted your credibility with me,
too.”
She sat down on the bed next to him, like she was
suddenly unsteady on her feet. He was looking at her, something in
his eyes.
“What?” she said.
“Is the camera on?”
She shook her head. “They gave up on that. Why?”
“Because I want to kiss you again.”
“Why?”
“I liked it, before.”
“Why should I want to kiss you again?”
“Because you liked it before too.”
She blushed. “Just a kiss?”
He nodded.
“Well, OK, I guess,” she said.
She turned to him and he took her in his arms and
kissed her. She moved her head like she had before. Pressed harder
and put her tongue against his lips and his teeth. Into his mouth.
He moved his hand down to her waist. She laced her fingers into his
hair. Kissed harder. Her tongue was urgent. Then she put her hand
on his chest and pushed herself away. Breathed hard.
“We should stop now,” she said.
“I guess,” he said.
She stood up, unsteady. Bent forward and back and
tossed her hair behind her shoulders.
“I’m out of here,” she said. “I’ll see you
tomorrow.”
She opened the door. Stepped outside. He heard her
wait in the corridor until the door swung shut again. Then he heard
her walk away to the elevator. He lay back on the bed. Didn’t
sleep. Just thought about obedience and acquiescence, and means and
motives and opportunities. And truth and lies. He spent five solid
hours thinking about all of those things.
SHE CAME BACK at eight in the morning. She was
showered and glowing and wearing a different suit and tie. She
looked full of energy. He was tired, and crumpled and sweaty and
hot and cold all at the same time. But he was standing just inside
the door with his coat buttoned, waiting for her, his heart
hammering with urgency.
“Let’s go,” he said. “Right now.”
Blake was in his office, at his desk, same as he
had been before. Maybe he’d been there all night. The UPS fax was
still at his elbow. The television was still playing silently. Same
channel. Some Washington reporter was standing on Pennsylvania
Avenue, the White House behind his shoulder. The weather looked
good. Bright blue sky, clear cold air. It would be an OK day for
travel.
“Today you work the files again,” Blake said.
“No, I need to get to Portland,” Reacher said.
“Will you lend me the plane?”
“The plane?” Blake repeated. “What are you, crazy?
Not in a million years.”
“OK,” Reacher said.
He moved to the door. Took a last look at the
office and stepped into the corridor. Stood still and quiet in the
center of the narrow space. Harper crowded past him.
“Why Portland?” she asked.
He looked at her. “Truth, and lies.”
“What does that mean?”
“Come with me and find out.”