7
JODIE WOKE EARLY that morning, which was unusual
for her. Normally she slept soundly right up to the point when her
alarm went off and she had to drag herself out of bed and into the
bathroom, sleepy and slow. But that morning, she was awake an hour
before she had to be, alert, breathing lightly, heart racing gently
in her chest.
Her bedroom was white, like all her rooms, and
her bed was a king with a white wood frame, set with the head
against the wall opposite her window. The guest room was back to
back with her room, laid out in exactly the same way,
symmetrically, but in reverse, because it faced in the opposite
direction. Which meant that his head was about eighteen inches away
from hers. Just through the wall.
She knew what the walls were made of. She had
bought the apartment before it was finished. She had been in and
out for months, watching over the conversion. The wall between the
two bedrooms was an original wall, a hundred years old. There was a
great balk of timber lying crossways on the floor, with bricks
built up on top of it, all the way to the ceiling. The builders had
simply patched the bricks where they were weak, and then plastered
over them the way the Europeans do it, giving a solid hard stucco
finish. The architect felt it was the right way to do it. It added
solidity to the shell, and it gave better fireproofing and better
soundproofing. But it also gave a foot-thick sandwich of stucco and
brick and stucco between her and Reacher.
She loved him. She was in no doubt about that.
No doubt at all. She always had, right from the start. But was that
OK? Was it OK to love him the way she did? She had agonized over
that question before. She had lain awake nights about it, many
years ago. She had burned with shame about her feelings. The
nine-year age gap was obscene. Shameful. She knew that. A
fifteen-year-old should not feel that way about her own father’s
fellow officer. Army protocol had made it practically incestuous.
It was like feeling that way about an uncle. Almost like feeling
that way about her father himself. But she loved him. There was no
doubt about it.
She was with him whenever she could. Talking
with him whenever she could, touching him whenever she could. She
had her own print of the self-timer photograph from Manila, her arm
around his waist. She had kept it pressed in a book for fifteen
years. Looked at it countless times. For years, she had fed off the
feeling of touching him, hugging him hard for the camera. She still
remembered the exact feel of him, his broad hard frame, his
smell.
The feelings had never really gone away. She had
wanted them to. She had wanted it just to be an adolescent thing, a
teenage crush. But it wasn’t. She knew that from the way the
feelings endured. He had disappeared, she had grown up and moved
on, but the feelings were always there. They had never receded, but
they had eventually moved parallel to the main flow of her life.
Always there, always real, always strong, but not necessarily
connected with her day-to-day reality anymore. Like people she
knew, lawyers or bankers, who had really wanted to be dancers or
ballplayers. A dream from the past, unconnected with reality, but
absolutely defining the identity of the person involved. A lawyer,
who had wanted to be a dancer. A banker, who had wanted to be a
ballplayer. A divorced thirty-year-old woman, who had wanted to be
with Jack Reacher all along.
Yesterday should have been the worst day of her
life. She had buried her father, her last relative on earth. She
had been attacked by men with guns. People she knew were in therapy
for much less. She should be prostrate with misery and shock. But
she wasn’t. Yesterday had been the best day of her life. He had
appeared like a vision on the steps, behind the garage, above the
yard. The noon sun directly over his head, illuminating him. Her
heart had thumped and the old feelings had swarmed back into the
center of her life, fiercer and stronger than ever, like a drug
howling through her veins, like claps of thunder.
But it was all a waste of time. She knew it. She
had to face it. He looked at her like a niece or a kid sister. Like
the nine-year gap still counted for something. Which it no longer
did. A couple aged fifteen and twenty-four would certainly have
been a problem. But thirty and thirty-nine was perfectly OK. There
were thousands of couples with gaps bigger than that. Millions of
couples. There were guys aged seventy with twenty-year-old wives.
But it still counted for something with him. Or maybe he was just
too used to seeing her as Leon’s kid. Like a niece. Like the CO’s
daughter. The rules of society or the protocol of the Army had
blinded him to the possibility of seeing her any other way. She had
always burned with resentment about that. She still did. Leon’s
affection for him, his claiming of him as his own, had taken him
away from her. It had made it impossible from the start.
They had spent the day like brother and sister,
like uncle and niece. Then he had turned all serious, like a
bodyguard, like she was his professional responsibility. They had
had fun, and he cared about her physical safety, but nothing more.
There never would be anything more. And there was nothing she could
do about it. Nothing. She had asked guys out. All women her age
had. It was permissible. Accepted, even normal. But what could she
say to him? What? What can a sister say to a brother or a niece to
an uncle without causing outrage and shock and disgust? So it
wasn’t going to happen, and there was absolutely nothing she could
do about it.
She stretched out in her bed and brought her
hands up above her head. Laid her palms gently against the dividing
wall and held them there. At least he was in her apartment, and at
least she could dream.
THE GUY GOT less than three hours in the sack, by the time he sailed the boat single-handed back to the slip and closed it down and got back across town to bed. He was up again at six and back on the street by six-twenty, with a quick shower and no breakfast. The hand was wrapped in the plastic, parceled up in yesterday’s Post and carried in a Zabar’s bag he had from the last time he bought ingredients and made his own dinner at home.
He used the black Tahoe and made quick time past
all the early-morning delivery people. He parked underground and
rode up to the eighty-eighth floor. Tony the receptionist was
already at the brass-and-oak counter. But he could tell from the
stillness nobody else was in. He held up the Zabar’s bag, like a
trophy.
“I’ve got this for the Hook,” he said.
“The Hook’s not here today,” Tony said.
“Great,” the guy said, sourly.
“Stick it in the refrigerator,” Tony said.
There was a small office kitchen off the
reception lobby. It was cramped and messy, like office kitchens
are. Coffee rings on the counters, mugs with stains on the inside.
The refrigerator was a miniature item under the counter. The guy
shoved milk and a six-pack aside and folded the bag into what space
was left.
“Target for today is Mrs. Jacob,” Tony said. He
was now in the kitchen doorway. “We know where she lives. Lower
Broadway, north of City Hall. Eight blocks from here. Neighbors say
she always leaves at seven-twenty, walks to work.”
“Which is where exactly?” the guy asked.
“Wall Street and Broadway,” Tony said. “I’ll
drive, you grab her.”
CHESTER STONE HAD driven home at the normal time and said nothing to Marilyn. There was nothing he could say. The speed of the collapse had left him bewildered. His whole world had turned inside out in a single twenty-four-hour period. He just couldn’t get a handle on it. He planned to ignore it until the morning and then go see Hobie and try and talk some sense. In his heart he didn’t believe he couldn’t save himself. The corporation was ninety years old, for God’s sake. Three generations of Chester Stones. There was too much there for it all to disappear overnight. So he said nothing and got through the evening in a daze.
Marilyn Stone said nothing to Chester, either.
Too early for him to know she had taken charge. The circumstances
had to be right for that discussion. It was an ego thing. She just
bustled about, doing her normal evening things, and then tried to
sleep while he lay awake beside her, staring at the ceiling.
WHEN JODIE PLACED her palms flat on the dividing wall. Reacher was in the shower. He had three distinct routines worked out for showering, and every morning he made a choice about which one to use. The first was a straight shower, nothing more. It took eleven minutes. The second was a shave and a shower, twenty-two minutes. The third was a special procedure, rarely used. It involved showering once, then getting out and shaving, and then showering all over again. It took more than a half hour, but the advantage was moisturization. Some girl had explained the shave was better if the skin was already thoroughly moisturized. And she had said it can’t hurt any to shampoo twice.
He was using the special procedure. Shower,
shave, shower. It felt good. Jodie’s guest bathroom was big and
tall, and the showerhead was set high enough for him to stand
upright under it, which was unusual. There were bottles of shampoo,
neatly lined up. He suspected they were brands she had tried and
hadn’t liked, relegated to the guest room. But he didn’t care. He
found one that claimed to be aimed at dry, sun-damaged hair. He
figured that was exactly what he needed. He ladled it on and
lathered up. Scrubbed his body all over with some kind of yellow
soap and rinsed. Dripped all over the floor as he shaved at the
sink. He did it carefully, right up from his collarbones, around
the bottom of his nose, sideways, backward, forward. Then back into
the shower all over again.
He spent five minutes on his teeth with the new
toothbrush. The bristles were hard, and it felt like they were
doing some good in there. Then he dried off and shook the creases
out of his new clothes. Put the pants on without the shirt and
wandered through to the kitchen for something to eat.
Jodie was in there. She was fresh from the
shower, too. Her hair was dark with water and hanging straight
down. She was wearing an oversize white T-shirt that finished an
inch above her knees. The material was thin. Her legs were long and
smooth. Her feet were bare. She was very slender, except where she
shouldn’t be. He caught his breath.
“Morning, Reacher,” she said.
“Morning, Jodie,” he said back.
She was looking at him. Her eyes were all over
him. Something in her face.
“That blister,” she said. ”Looks worse.”
He squinted down. It was still red and angry.
Spreading slightly, and puffy.
“You put the ointment on?” she asked.
He shook his head.
“Forgot,” he said.
“Get it,” she said.
He went back to his bathroom and found it in the
brown bag. Brought it back to the kitchen. She took it from him and
unscrewed the cap. Pierced the metal seal with the plastic spike
and squeezed a dot of the salve onto the pad of her index finger.
She was concentrating on it, tongue between her teeth. She stepped
in front of him and raised her hand. Touched the blister gently and
rubbed with her fingertip. He stared rigidly over her head. She was
a foot away from him. Naked under her shirt. Rubbing his bare chest
with her fingertip. He wanted to take her in his arms. He wanted to
lift her off her feet and crush her close. Kiss her gently,
starting with her neck. He wanted to turn her face up to his and
kiss her mouth. She was rubbing small gentle circles on his chest.
He could smell her hair, damp and glossy. He could smell her skin.
She was tracing her finger the length of the burn. A foot away from
him, naked under her shirt. He gasped and clenched his hands. She
stepped away.
“Hurting?” she asked.
“What?”
“Was I hurting you?”
He saw her fingertip, shiny from the
grease.
“A little,” he said.
She nodded.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “But you needed
it.”
He nodded back.
“I guess,” he said.
Then the crisis was past. She screwed the cap
back on the tube and he moved away, just to be moving. He pulled
the refrigerator door and took a bottle of water. Found a banana in
a bowl on the counter. She put the tube of ointment on the
table.
“I’ll go get dressed,” she said. “We should get
moving.”
“OK,” he said. “I’ll be ready.”
She disappeared back into her bedroom and he
drank the water and ate the fruit. Wandered back to his bedroom and
shrugged the shirt on and tucked it in. Found his socks and shoes
and jacket. Strolled through to the living room to wait. He pulled
the blind all the way up and unlocked the window and pushed it up.
Leaned right out and scanned the street four floors below.
Very different in the early daylight. The shiny
neon wash was gone, and the sun was coming over the buildings
opposite and bouncing around in the street. The lazy nighttime
knots of people were gone, too, replaced by purposeful striding
workers heading north and south with paper cups of coffee and
muffins clutched in napkins. Cabs were grinding down through the
traffic and honking at the lights to make them change. There was a
gentle breeze and he could smell the river.
The building was on the west side of lower
Broadway. Traffic was one-way, to the south, running left to right
under the window. Jodie’s normal walk to work would give her a
right turn out of her lobby, walking with the traffic. She would
keep to the right-hand sidewalk, to stay in the sun. She would
cross Broadway at a light maybe six or seven blocks down. Walk the
last couple of blocks on the left-hand sidewalk and then make the
left turn, east down Wall Street to her office.
So how would they aim to grab her up? Think like
the enemy. Think like the two guys. Physical, unsubtle, favoring a
direct approach, willing and dangerous, but not really schooled
beyond the point of amateur enthusiasm. It was pretty clear what
they would do. They would have a four-door vehicle waiting in a
side street maybe three blocks south, parked in the right lane,
facing east, ready to swoop out and hang the right on Broadway.
They would be waiting together in the front seats, silent. They
would be scanning left to right through the windshield, watching
the crosswalk in front of them. They would expect to see her
hurrying across, or pausing and waiting for the signal. They would
wait a beat and ease out and make the right turn. Driving slow.
They would fall in behind her. Pull level. Pull ahead. Then the guy
in the passenger seat would be out, grabbing her, opening the rear
door, forcing her inside, cramming himself in after her. One
smooth, brutal movement. A crude tactic, but not difficult. Not
difficult at all. More or less guaranteed to succeed, depending on
the target and the level of awareness. Reacher had done the same
thing, many times, with targets bigger and stronger and more aware
than Jodie. Once, he had done it with Leon himself at the
wheel.
He bent forward from the waist and put his whole
upper body out through the window. Craned his head around to the
right and gazed down the street. Looked hard at the corners, two
and three and four blocks south. It would be one of those.
“Ready,” Jodie called to him.
THEY RODE DOWN ninety floors together to the underground garage. Walked through to the right zone and over to the bays leased along with Hobie’s office suite.
“We should take the Suburban,” the enforcer
said. “Bigger.”
“OK,” Tony said. He unlocked it and slid into
the driver’s seat. The enforcer hoisted himself into the passenger
seat. Glanced back at the empty load bed. Tony fired it up and
eased out toward the ramp to the street.
“So how do we do this?” Tony asked.
The guy smiled confidently. “Easy enough. She’ll
be walking south on Broadway. We’ll wait around a corner until we
see her. Couple of blocks south of her building. We see her pass by
on the crosswalk, we pull around the comer, get alongside her, and
that’s that, right?”
“Wrong,” Tony said. “We’ll do it
different.”
The guy looked across at him. “Why?”
Tony squealed the big car up and out into the
sunlight.
“Because you’re not very smart,” he said. “If
that’s how you’d do it, there’s got to be a better way, right? You
screwed up in Garrison. You’ll screw up here. She’s probably got
this Reacher guy with her. He beat you there, he’ll beat you here.
So whatever you figure is the best way to do it, that’s the last
thing we’re going to do.”
“So how are we going to do it?”
“I’ll explain it to you real careful,” Tony
said. “I’ll try to keep it real simple.”
REACHER SLID THE window back down. Clicked the
lock and rattled the blind down into position. She was standing
just inside the doorway, hair still darkened by the shower, dressed
in a simple sleeveless linen dress, bare legs, plain shoes. The
dress was the same color as her wet hair, but would end up darker
as her hair dried. She was carrying a purse and a large leather
briefcase, the size he had seen commercial pilots using. It was
clearly heavy. She put it down and ducked away to her garment bag,
which was on the floor against a wall, where he had dumped it the
previous night. She slid the envelope containing Leon’s will out of
the pocket and unclicked the lid of the briefcase and stowed it
inside.
“Want me to carry that?” he asked.
She smiled and shook her head.
“Union town,” she said. “Bodyguarding doesn’t
include drayage around here.”
“It looks pretty heavy,” he said.
“I’m a big girl now,” she replied, looking at
him.
He nodded. Lifted the old iron bar out of its
brackets and left it upright. She leaned past him and turned the
locks. The same perfume, subtle and feminine. Her shoulders in the
dress were slim, almost thin. Small muscles in her left arm were
bunching to balance the heavy case.
“What sort of law you got in there?” he
asked.
“Financial,” she said.
He eased the door open. Glanced out. The hallway
was empty. The elevator indicator was showing somebody heading down
to the street from three.
“What sort of financial?”
They stepped across and called the
elevator.
“Debt rescheduling, mostly,” she said. “I’m more
of a negotiator than a lawyer, really. More like a counselor or a
mediator, you know?”
He didn’t know. He had never been in debt. Not
out of any innate virtue, but simply because he had never had the
opportunity. All the basics had been provided for him by the Army.
A roof over his head, food on his plate. He had never gotten into
the habit of wanting much more. But he’d known guys who had run
into trouble. They bought houses with mortgages and cars on time
payment plans. Sometimes they got behind. The company clerk would
sort it out. Talk to the bank, deduct the necessary provision
straight from the guy’s paycheck. But he guessed that was
small-time, compared to what she must deal with.
“Millions of dollars?” he asked.
The elevator arrived. The doors slid open.
“At least,” she said. “Usually tens of millions,
sometimes hundreds.”
The elevator was empty. They stepped
inside.
“Enjoy it?” he asked.
The elevator whined downward.
“Sure,” she said. “A person needs a job, it’s as
good as she’s going to get.”
The elevator settled with a bump.
“You good at it?”
She nodded.
“Yes,” she said simply. “Best there is on Wall
Street, no doubt about that.”
He smiled. She was Leon’s daughter, that was for
damn sure.
The elevator doors slid open. An empty lobby,
the street door sucking shut, a broad woman heading slowly down the
steps to the sidewalk.
“Car keys?” he said.
She had them in her hand. A big bunch of keys on
a brass ring.
“Wait here,” he said. “I’ll back it up to the
stairs. One minute.”
The door from the lobby to the garage opened
from the inside with a push bar. He went through and down the metal
steps and scanned ahead into the gloom as he walked. Nobody there.
At least, nobody visible. He walked confidently to the wrong car, a
big dark Chrysler something, two spaces from Jodie’s jeep. He
dropped flat to the floor and looked across, under the intervening
vehicles. Nothing there. Nobody hiding on the floor. He got up
again and squeezed around the Chrysler’s hood. Around the next car.
He dropped to the floor again, jammed up in the space between the
Oldsmobile’s tailgate and the wall. Craned his head down and looked
for wires where there shouldn’t be wires. All clear. No booby
traps.
He unlocked the door and slid in. Fired it up
and eased into the aisle. Backed up level with the bottom of the
stairs. Leaned across inside and sprang the passenger door as she
came through from the lobby behind him. She skipped down the steps
and climbed straight in the car, all one smooth fluid movement. She
slammed the door and he took off forward and made the right up the
ramp and the right on the street.
The morning sun in the east flashed once in his
eyes, and then he was through it, heading south. The first corner
was thirty yards ahead. Traffic was slow. Not stopped, just slow.
The light caught him three cars back from the turn. He was in the
right lane, and he had no angle to see into the mouth of the cross
street. Traffic poured right to left out of it, ahead of him, three
cars away. He could see the far stream was slowed, spilling around
some kind of obstacle. Maybe a parked vehicle. Maybe a parked
four-door, just waiting there for something. Then the sideways flow
stopped, and the light on Broadway went green.
He drove across the intersection with his head
turned, half an eye ahead, and the rest of his attention focused
sideways. Nothing there. No parked four-door. The obstruction was a
striped sawhorse placed against an open manhole. There was a power
company truck ten yards farther down the street. A gaggle of
workmen on the sidewalk, drinking soda from cans. The traffic
ground on. Stopped again, for the next light. He was four cars
back.
This was not the street. The traffic pattern was
wrong. It was flowing west, left to right in front of him. He had a
good view out to his left. He could see fifty yards down the
street. Nothing there. Not this one. It was going to be the next
one.
Ideally he would have liked to do more than just
drive straight by the two guys. A better idea would be to track
around the block and come up behind them. Ditch the jeep a hundred
yards away and stroll up on them from the rear. They would be
craning forward, watching the crosswalk through the windshield. He
could take a good look at them, as long as he wanted. He could even
get right in their car with them. The rear doors would be unlocked,
for sure. The guys would be staring straight ahead. He could slip
in behind them and plant a hand on the side of each head and bang
them together like a bandsman letting rip with the cymbals. Then he
could do it again, and again, and again, until they started
answering some basic questions.
But he wasn’t going to do that. Concentrate on the job in hand was his rule. The job
in hand was getting Jodie to her office, safe and secure.
Bodyguarding was about defense. Start mixing offense in with it,
and neither thing gets done properly. Like he had told her, he used
to do this for a living. He was trained in it. Very well trained,
and very experienced. So he was going to stay defensive, and he was
going to count it a major victory to see her walking in through her
office door, all safe and secure. And he was going to stay quiet
about how much trouble she was in. He didn’t want her worrying
about it. No reason why whatever Leon had started should end up
giving her any kind of anguish. Leon would not have wanted that.
Leon would have just wanted him to handle everything. So that was
how he was going to do it. Deliver her to the office door, no long
explanations, no gloomy warnings.
The light went green. The first car took off,
then the second. Then the third. He eased forward. Checked the gap
ahead of him and craned his head right. Were they there? The cross
street was narrow. Two lanes of stopped traffic, waiting at the
light. Nothing parked up in the right lane. Nothing waiting. They
weren’t there. He moved slowly through the whole width of the
intersection, scanning right. Nobody there. He breathed out and
relaxed and faced forward. There was a huge metallic bang. A
tremendous loud metallic punch in his back. Tearing sheet metal,
instant violent acceleration. The jeep was hurled forward and
smashed into the vehicle ahead and stopped dead. The airbags
exploded. He saw Jodie bouncing off her seat and crashing against
the tension of her belt, her body stopping abruptly, her head still
cannoning forward. Then it was bouncing backward off the airbag and
whipping and smashing into the headrest behind her. He noticed her
face was fixed in space exactly alongside his, with the inside of
the car blurring and whirling and spinning past it, because his
head was doing exactly the same things as hers.
The twin impacts had torn his hands off the
wheel. The airbag was collapsing in front of him. He dragged his
eyes to the mirror and saw a giant black hood buried in the back of
the jeep. The top of a shiny chrome grille, bent out of shape. Some
huge four-wheel-drive truck. One guy in it, visible behind the
tinted screen. Not a guy he knew. Cars were honking behind them and
traffic was pulling left and steering around the obstruction. Faces
were turning to stare. There was a loud hissing somewhere. Steam
from his radiator, or maybe ringing from his ears after the
enormous sudden sounds. The guy behind was getting out of the
four-wheel-drive. Hands held up in apology, worry and fright in his
face. He was folding himself around his door, out there in the slow
traffic stream, walking up toward Reacher’s window, glancing
sideways at the tangle of sheet metal as he passed. A woman was
getting out of the sedan in front, looking dazed and angry. The
traffic was snarling around them. The air was shimmering from
overheated motors and loud with horns blasting. Jodie was upright
in her seat, feeling the back of her neck with her fingers.
“You OK?” he asked her.
She thought about it for a long moment, and then
she nodded.
“I’m OK,” she said. “You?”
“Fine,” he said.
She poked at the collapsed airbag with her
finger, fascinated.
“These things really work, you know that?”
“First time I ever saw one deploy,” he
said.
“Me too.”
Then there was rapping on the driver’s-side
window. The guy from behind was standing there, knocking urgently
with his knuckles. Reacher stared out at him. The guy was gesturing
for him to open up, urgently, like he was anxious about
something.
“Shit,” Reacher yelled.
He stamped on the gas. The jeep struggled
forward, pushing against the woman’s wrecked sedan. It made a yard,
slewing to the left, sheet metal screeching.
“Hell are you doing?” Jodie screamed.
The guy had his hand on the door handle. His
other hand in his pocket.
“Get down,” Reacher shouted.
He found reverse and howled back the yard he’d
made and smashed into the four-wheel-drive behind. The new impact
won him another foot. He shoved the selector into drive and spun
the wheel and barged left. Smashed into the rear quarter of the
sedan in a new shower of glass. Traffic behind was swerving and
slewing all over again. He glanced right and one of the guys he’d
seen in Key West and Garrison was at the window with his hand on
Jodie’s door. He stamped on the gas and hurled the jeep backward,
spinning the wheel. The guy kept tight hold, jerked backward by his
arm, flung off his feet by the violent motion. Reacher smashed all
the way backward into the black truck and bounced off again
forward, screaming the motor, spinning the wheel. The guy was up
again, still gripping the door handle, jerking and hauling, spare
arm and legs flailing, like he was a wrangler and the jeep was a
wild young steer in a desperate fight out of a trap. Reacher mashed
the pedal and angled out forward close to the rear comer of the
woman’s wrecked sedan and scraped the guy off against the trunk.
The fender took him at the knees and he somersaulted and his head
came down on the rear glass. In the mirror Reacher saw a blur of
flailing arms and legs as his momentum carried him up over the
roof. Then he was gone, sprawling back to the sidewalk.
“Watch out!” Jodie screamed.
The guy from the truck was still there at the
driver’s window. Reacher was out in the traffic stream, but the
traffic stream was slow and the guy was just running fast beside
him, struggling to free something from his pocket. Reacher swerved
left and came in parallel to a panel truck in the next lane. The
guy was still running, skipping sideways, holding the door handle,
coming out with something from his pocket. Reacher jammed left
again and thumped him hard against the side of the truck. He heard
a dull boom as the guy’s head hit the metal and then he was gone.
The truck jammed to a panic stop and Reacher hauled left and got in
front of it. Broadway was a solid mass of traffic. Ahead of him was
a shimmering patchwork of metallic colors, sedan roofs winking in
the sun, dodging left, dodging right, crawling forward, fumes
rising, horns blasting. He hauled left again and turned and went
through a crosswalk against the light, a crowd of jostling people
skittering out of his way. The jeep was juddering and bouncing and
pulling hard to the right. The temperature gauge was off the scale.
Steam was boiling up through the gaps around the buckled hood. The
collapsed airbag was hanging down to his knees. He jerked forward
and hauled left again and jammed into an alley full of restaurant
waste. Boxes, empty drums of cooking oil, rough wooden trays piled
with spoiled vegetables. He buried the nose in a pile of cartons.
They spilled down on the wrecked hood and bounced off the
windshield. He killed the motor and pulled the keys.
He had put it too close to the wall for Jodie’s
door to open. He grabbed her briefcase and her purse and threw them
out through his door. Squeezed out after them and turned back for
her. She was scrambling across the seats behind him. Her dress was
riding up. He grabbed her around the waist and she ducked her head
to his shoulder and he lifted her through the gap. She clung on
hard, bare legs around his waist. He turned and ran her six feet
away. She weighed nothing at all. He set her on her feet and ducked
back for her bags. She was smoothing her dress over her thighs.
Breathing hard. Damp hair all over the place.
“How did you know?” she gasped. “That it wasn’t
an accident?”
He gave her the purse and carried the heavy
briefcase himself. Led her by the hand back down the alley to the
street, panting with adrenaline rush.
“Talk while we walk,” he said.
They turned left and headed east for Lafayette.
The morning sun was in their eyes, the river breeze in their faces.
Behind them, they could hear the traffic snarl on Broadway. They
walked together fifty yards, breathing hard, calming down.
“How did you know?”
“Statistics, I guess. What were the chances we’d
be in an accident on the exact same morning we figured there were
guys out looking for us? Million to one, at best.”
She nodded. A slight smile on her face. Head up,
shoulders back, recovering fast. No trace of shock. She was Leon’s
daughter, that was for damn sure.
“You were great,” she said. “You reacted so
fast.”
He shook his head as he walked.
“No, I was shit,” he said. “Dumb as hell. One
mistake after another. They changed personnel. Some new guy in
charge. I never even thought about that. I was figuring what the
original pair of assholes might do, never even thought about them
putting in somebody smarter. And whoever that guy was, he was
pretty smart. It was a good plan, almost worked. I never saw it
coming. Then when it happened, I still wasted a shitload of time
talking to you about the damn airbags deploying.”
“Don’t feel bad,” she said.
“I do feel bad. Leon had a basic rule: Do it
right. Thank God he wasn’t there to see that screwup. He’d have
been ashamed of me.”
He saw her face cloud over. Realized what he’d
said.
“I’m sorry. I just can’t make myself believe
he’s dead.”
They came out on Lafayette. Jodie was at the
curb, scanning for a cab.
“Well, he is,” she said, gently. “We’ll get used
to it, I guess.”
He nodded. “And I’m sorry about your car. I
should have seen it coming.”
She shrugged. “It’s only leased. I’ll get them
to send another one just like it. Now I know it stands up in a
collision, right? Maybe a red one.”
“You should report it stolen,” he said. “Call
the cops and say it wasn’t there in the garage when you went for it
this morning.”
“That’s fraud,” she said.
“No, that’s smart. Remember I can’t afford for
the cops to be asking me questions about this. I don’t even carry a
driver’s license.”
She thought about it. Then she smiled. Like a kid sister smiles when she’s forgiving her big
brother for some kind of waywardness, he thought.
“OK,” she said. “I’ll call them from the
office.”
“The office? You’re not going to the damn
office.”
“Why not?” she said, surprised.
He waved vaguely west, back toward Broadway.
“After what happened there? I want you where I can see you,
Jodie.”
“I need to go to work, Reacher,” she said. “And
be logical. The office hasn’t become unsafe just because of what
happened over there. It’s a completely separate proposition, right?
The office is still as safe now as it always was. And you were
happy for me to go there before, so what’s changed?”
He looked at her. He wanted to say everything’s changed. Because whatever Leon started
with some old couple from a cardiology clinic has now got
halfway-competent professionals mixed in with it. Halfway-competent
professionals who were about half a second away from winning this
morning. And he wanted to say: I love you and you’re in danger and
I don’t want you anyplace I can’t be looking out for you. But he
couldn’t say any of that. Because he had committed himself to
keeping it all away from her. All of it, the love and the danger.
So he just shrugged, lamely.
“You should come with me,” he said.
“Why? To help?”
He nodded. “Yes, help me with these old folks.
They’ll talk to you, because you’re Leon’s daughter.”
“You want me with you because I’m Leon’s
daughter?”
He nodded again. She spotted a cab and waved it
down.
“Wrong answer, Reacher,” she said.
HE ARGUED WITH her, but he got nowhere. Her mind was made up, and she wouldn’t change it. The best he could do was to get her to solve his immediate problem and rent him a car, with her gold card and her license. They took the cab up to midtown and found a Hertz office. He waited outside in the sun for a quarter hour and then she came around the block in a brand-new Taurus and picked him up. She drove all the way back downtown on Broadway. They passed by her building and passed by the scene of the ambush three blocks south. The damaged vehicles were gone. There were shards of glass in the gutter and oil stains on the blacktop, but that was all. She drove on south and parked next to a hydrant opposite her office door. Left the motor running and racked the seat all the way back, ready for the change of driver.
“OK,” she said. “You’ll pick me up here, about
seven o’clock?”
“That late?”
“I’m starting late,” she said. “I’ll have to
finish late.”
“Don’t leave the building, OK?”
He got out on the sidewalk and watched her all
the way inside. There was a broad paved area in front of the
building. She skipped across it, bare legs flashing and dancing
under the dress. She turned and smiled and waved. Pushed sideways
through the revolving door, swinging her heavy case. It was a tall
building, maybe sixty stories. Probably dozens of suites rented to
dozens of separate firms, maybe hundreds. But the situation looked
like it might be safe enough. There was a wide reception counter
immediately inside the revolving door. A line of security guys
sitting behind it, and behind them was a solid glass screen, wall
to wall, floor to ceiling, with one opening in it, operated by a
buzzer under their counter. Behind the screen were the elevators.
No way in, unless the security guys saw fit to let you in. He
nodded to himself. It might be safe enough. Maybe. It would depend
on the diligence of the doormen. He saw her talking to one of them,
head bent, blond hair falling forward. Then she was walking to the
door in the screen, waiting, pushing it. She went through to the
elevators. Hit a button. A door slid open. She backed in, levering
her case over the threshold with both hands. The door slid
shut.
He waited out on the paved area for a minute.
Then he hurried across and shouldered in through the revolving
door. Strode over to the counter like he did it every day of his
life. Picked on the oldest security guy. The oldest ones are
usually the most sloppy. The younger ones still entertain hopes of
advancement.
“They want me up at Spencer Gutman,” he said,
looking at his watch.
“Name?” the old guy asked.
“Lincoln,” Reacher said.
The guy was grizzled and tired, but he did what
he was supposed to do. He picked a clipboard out of a slot and
studied it.
“You got an appointment?”
“They just paged me,” Reacher said. “Some kind
of a big hurry, I guess.”
“Lincoln, like the car?”
“Like the president,” Reacher said.
The old guy nodded and ran a thick finger down a
long list of names.
“You’re not on the list,” he said. “I can’t let
you in, without your name on the list.”
“I work for Costello,” Reacher said. “They need
me upstairs, like right now.”
“I could call them,” the guy said. “Who paged
you?”
Reacher shrugged. “Mr. Spencer, I guess. He’s
who I usually see.”
The guy looked offended. Placed the clipboard
back in its slot.
“Mr. Spencer died ten years ago,” he said. “You
want to come in, you get yourself a proper appointment, OK?”
Reacher nodded. The place was safe enough. He
turned on his heel and headed back to the car.
MARILYN STONE WAITED until Chester’s Mercedes was out of sight and then she ran back to the house and got to work. She was a serious woman, and she knew a possible six-week gap between listing and closing was going to need some serious input.
Her first call was to the cleaning service. The
house was already perfectly clean, but she was going to move some
furniture out. She took the view that presenting a house slightly
empty of furniture created an impression of spaciousness. It made
it seem even larger than it was. And it avoided trapping a
potential buyer into preconceptions about what would look good, and
what wouldn’t. For instance, the Italian credenza in the hallway
was the perfect piece for that hallway, but she didn’t want a
potential buyer to think the hallway wouldn’t work any other way.
Better to just have nothing there, and let the buyer’s imagination
fill the gap, maybe with a piece she already had.
So if she was going to move furniture out, she
needed the cleaning service to attend to the spaces left behind. A
slight lack of furniture created a spacious look, but obvious gaps
created a sad look. So she called them, and she called the moving
and storage people, too, because she was going to have to put the
displaced stuff somewhere. Then she called the pool service, and
the gardeners. She wanted them there every morning until further
notice, for an hour’s work every day. She needed the yard looking
absolutely at its best. Even at this end of the market, she knew
curb appeal was king.
Then she tried to remember other stuff she’d
read, or things people had told her about. Flowers, of course, in
vases, all over the place. She called the florist. She remembered
somebody saying saucers of window cleaner neutralized all the
little stray smells any house generates. Something to do with the
ammonia. She remembered reading that putting a handful of coffee
beans in a hot oven made a wonderful welcoming smell. So she put a
new packet in her utensil drawer, ready. She figured if she put
some in the oven each time Sheryl called to say she was on her way
over with clients, that would be timing it about right, in terms of
aroma.