3
THEY HAD BEEN on the road an hour and
thirty-three minutes. Some urban crawling, then an acceleration to
a steady cruise. Maybe sixty miles covered. But in the noisy
darkness inside the panel truck Reacher had no idea which direction
those sixty miles were taking him.
He was handcuffed to the young woman with the bad
leg and within the first few minutes of their forced acquaintance
they had worked out how to get as comfortable as they were ever
going to get. They had crabbed around inside the truck until they
were sitting sideways on the floor, legs straight out, propped
against the big wheel well on the right, braced against the motion.
The woman sat against the rear side and Reacher sat on the forward
side. Their cuffed wrists lay together on the flat top of the metal
bulge like they were lovers idling their time away in a café.
At first, they hadn’t spoken. They just sat for a
long time in stunned silence. The immediate problem was the heat.
It was the middle of the last day of June in the Midwest. They were
shut into an enclosed metal space. There was no ventilation.
Reacher figured the rush of air over the outside of the truck’s
body must be cooling it to an extent, but nowhere near
enough.
He just sat there in the gloom and used the hot
dead time thinking and planning like he was trained to do. Staying
calm, staying relaxed, staying ready, not burning his energy away
with useless speculation. Assessing and evaluating. The three guys
had shown a measure of efficiency. No great talent, no real
finesse, but no significant mistakes. The jumpy guy with the second
Glock was the weakest component of the team, but the leader had
covered for him pretty well. An efficient threesome. Not at all the
worst he’d ever seen. But at that point, he wasn’t worrying. He’d
been in worse situations and survived them. Much worse situations,
and more than once. So he wasn’t worrying yet.
Then he noticed something. He noticed that the
woman was not worrying yet, either. She was calm, too. She was just
sitting there, swaying, cuffed to his wrist, thinking and planning
like maybe she was trained to do, as well. He glanced across at her
in the gloom and saw her looking steadily at him. A quizzical
stare, calm, in control, faintly superior, faintly disapproving.
The confidence of youth. She met his gaze. Held it for a long
moment. Then she stuck out her cuffed right hand, which jarred his
left wrist, but it was an encouraging gesture. He reached around
and shook her hand and they smiled brief ironic smiles together at
their mutual formality.
“Holly Johnson,” she said.
She was assessing him carefully. He could see her
eyes traveling around his face. Then they flicked down to his
clothing, and back up to his face. She smiled again, briefly, like
she had decided he merited some kind of courtesy.
“Nice to meet you,” she said.
He looked back at her. Looked at her face. She was
a very good-looking woman. Maybe twenty-six, twenty-seven. He
looked at her clothes. A line from an old song ran through his
head: hundred-dollar dresses, that I ain’t paid for yet. He waited
for the next line, but it didn’t come. So he smiled back at her and
nodded.
“Jack Reacher,” he said. “Pleasure’s all mine,
Holly, believe me.”
It was difficult to speak, because the truck was
cruising noisily. The sound of the engine was fighting with the
roar from the road. Reacher would have been happy to sit quiet for
a time, but Holly wasn’t.
“I need to get rid of you,” she said.
A confident woman, well in control of herself. He
made no reply. Just glanced at her and glanced away. The next line
was: cold, cold-blooded woman. A dying fall, a sad poignant line.
An old Memphis Slim song. But the line was not right for her. Not
right at all. This was not a cold-blooded woman. He glanced over
again and shrugged at her. She was staring at him. Impatient with
his silence.
“You understand exactly what’s happening?” she
asked him.
He watched her face. Watched her eyes. She was
staring straight at him. Astonishment on her face. She thought she
was stuck in there with an idiot. She thought he didn’t understand
exactly what was happening.
“It’s pretty clear, right?” he said. “From the
evidence?”
“What evidence?” she said. “It was all over in a
split second.”
“Exactly,” he said. “That’s all the evidence I
need, right? Tells me more or less what I need to know.”
He stopped talking and started resting again. Next
opportunity to get away would be the next time the truck stopped.
Could be some hours away. He felt he could be in for a long day.
Felt he should be prepared to conserve his resources.
“So what do you need to know?” the woman
said.
Her eyes were steady on his.
“You’ve been kidnapped,” he said. “I’m here by
accident.”
She was still looking at him. Still confident.
Still thinking. Still not sure whether or not she was cuffed to an
idiot.
“It’s pretty clear, right?” he said again. “It
wasn’t me they were after.”
She made no reply. Just arched a fine
eyebrow.
“Nobody knew I was going to be there,” he said. “I
didn’t even know I was going to be there. Until I got there. But it
was a well-planned operation. Must have taken time to set up. Based
on surveillance, right? Three guys, one in the car, two on the
street. The car was parked exactly level. They had no idea where I
was going to be. But obviously they knew for sure where you were
going to be. So don’t be looking at me like I’m the idiot here.
You’re the one made the big mistake.”
“Mistake?” the woman said.
“You’re too regular in your habits,” Reacher said.
“They studied your movements, maybe two or three weeks, and you
walked right into their arms. They weren’t expecting anybody else
to be there. That’s clear, right? They only brought one set of
handcuffs.”
He raised his wrist, which raised hers too, to make
his point. The woman went quiet for a long moment. She was revising
her opinion of him. Reacher rocked with the motion of the vehicle
and smiled.
“And you should know better,” he said. “You’re a
government agent of some sort, right? DEA, CIA, FBI, something like
that, maybe a Chicago PD detective? New in the job, still fairly
dedicated. And fairly wealthy. So somebody is either looking for a
ransom, or you’ve already become a potential problem to somebody,
even though you’re new, and either way you should have taken more
care of yourself.”
She looked across at him. Nodded, eyes wide in the
gloom. Impressed.
“Evidence?” she asked.
He smiled at her again.
“Couple of things,” he said. “Your dry cleaning? My
guess is every Monday lunch break you take last week’s clothes in
to get them cleaned, and you pick up this week’s clothes to wear.
That means you must have about fifteen or twenty outfits. Looking
at that thing you got on, you’re not a cheap dresser. Call it four
hundred bucks an outfit, you’ve got maybe eight grand tied up in
things to wear. That’s what I call moderately wealthy, and that’s
what I call too regular in your habits.”
She nodded slowly.
“OK,” she said. “Why am I a government
agent?”
“Easy enough,” he said. “You had a Glock 17 shoved
at you, you were bundled into a car, you were thrown in a truck,
handcuffed to a complete stranger and you’ve got no idea where the
hell they’re taking you, or why. Any normal person would be falling
apart over all that, screaming the place down. But not you. You’re
sitting there quite calmly, which suggests some kind of training,
maybe some kind of familiarity with upsetting or dangerous
situations. And maybe some kind of sure knowledge there’ll be a
bunch of people looking to get you back soon as they can.”
He stopped and she nodded for him to
continue.
“Also, you had a gun in your bag,” he said.
“Something fairly heavy, maybe a thirty-eight, long barrel. If it
was a private weapon, a dresser like you would choose something
dainty, like a snub twenty-two. But it was a big revolver, so you
were issued with it. So you’re some kind of an agent, maybe a
cop.”
The woman nodded again, slowly.
“Why am I new in the job?” she asked.
“Your age,” Reacher said. “What are you?
Twenty-six?”
“Twenty-seven,” she said.
“That’s young for a detective,” he said. “College,
a few years in uniform? Young for the FBI, DEA, CIA, too. So
whatever you are, you’re new at it.”
She shrugged.
“OK,” she said. “Why am I fairly dedicated?”
Reacher pointed, left-handed, rattling their shared
handcuff.
“Your injury,” he said. “You’re back to work after
some kind of an accident, before you’re really recovered. You’re
still using that crutch for your bad leg. Most people in your
position would be staying home and drawing sick pay.”
She smiled.
“I could be handicapped,” she said. “Could have
been born this way.”
Reacher shook his head in the gloom.
“That’s a hospital crutch,” he said. “They loaned
it to you, short-term, until you’re over your injury. If it was a
permanent thing, you’d have bought your own crutch. Probably you’d
have bought a dozen. Sprayed them all different to match all your
expensive outfits.”
She laughed. It was a pleasant sound above the
drone and boom of the truck’s engine and the roar of the
road.
“Pretty good, Jack Reacher,” she said. “I’m an FBI
Special Agent. Since last fall. I just ripped up my cruciate
ligaments playing soccer.”
“You play soccer?” Reacher said. “Good for you,
Holly Johnson. What kind of an FBI agent since last fall?”
She was quiet for a beat.
“Just an agent,” she said. “One of many at the
Chicago office.”
Reacher shook his head.
“Not just an agent,” he said. “An agent who’s doing
something to somebody who maybe wants to retaliate. So who are you
doing something to?”
She shook her head back at him.
“I can’t discuss that,” she said. “Not with
civilians.”
He nodded. He was comfortable with that.
“OK,” he said.
“Any agent makes enemies,” she said.
“Naturally,” he replied.
“Me as much as anybody,” she said.
He glanced across at her. It was a curious remark.
Defensive. The remark of a woman trained and eager and ready to go,
but chained to a desk since last fall.
“Financial section?” he guessed.
She shook her head.
“I can’t discuss it,” she said again.
“But you already made enemies,” he said.
She gave him a half-smile which died fast. Then she
went quiet. She looked calm, but Reacher could feel in her wrist
that she was worried for the first time. But she was hanging in
there. And she was wrong.
“They’re not out to kill you,” he said. “They could
have killed you in that vacant lot. Why haul you away in this damn
truck? And there’s your crutch, too.”
“What about my crutch?” she said.
“Doesn’t make any sense,” he said. “Why would they
toss your crutch in here if they’re going to kill you? You’re a
hostage, Holly, that’s what you are. You sure you don’t know these
guys? Never saw them before?”
“Never,” she said. “I don’t know who the hell they
are, or what the hell they want from me.”
He stared at her. She sounded way too definite. She
knew more than she was telling him. They went quiet in the noise.
Rocked and bounced with the movement of the truck. Reacher stared
into the gloom. He could feel Holly making decisions, next to him.
She turned sideways again.
“I need to get you out of here,” she said
again.
He glanced at her. Glanced away and grinned.
“Suits me, Holly,” he said. “Sooner the
better.”
“When will somebody miss you?” she asked.
That was a question he would have preferred not to
answer. But she was looking hard at him, waiting. So he thought
about it, and he told her the truth.
“Never,” he said.
“Why not?” she asked. “Who are you, Reacher?”
He looked across at her and shrugged.
“Nobody,” he said.
She kept on looking at him, quizzically. Maybe
irritated.
“OK, what kind of nobody?” she asked.
He heard Memphis Slim in his head: got me working
in a steel mill.
“I’m a doorman,” he said. “At a club in
Chicago.”
“Which club?” she asked.
“A blues place on the South Side,” he said. “You
probably don’t know it.”
She looked at him and shook her head.
“A doorman?” she said. “You’re playing this pretty
cool for a doorman.”
“Doormen deal with a lot of weird situations,” he
said.
She looked like she wasn’t convinced and he put his
face down near his wristwatch to check the time. Two-thirty in the
afternoon.
“And how long before somebody misses you?” he
asked.
She looked at her own watch and made a face.
“Quite a while,” she said. “I’ve got a case
conference starting at five o’clock this afternoon. Nothing before
then. Two and a half hours before anybody even knows I’m
gone.”