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The Essential Jack Reacher 12-Book Bundle

Page 217

by Lee Child


  “OK.”

  “Are we clear?”

  “Yes.”

  “Completely?”

  “Yes.”

  “Crystal?”

  “Yes.”

  “Yes what?”

  “Yes. Sir.”

  “You’ve got sixty seconds to get started, or I’ll break your arm.”

  The guy made a phone call while still standing and then used a walkie-talkie and fifty seconds later there were three guys in the hallway. Dead on sixty seconds a fourth guy joined them. A minute later they had buckets and mops out of a maintenance closet and a minute after that the buckets were full of water and all five guys were casting about, as if facing an immense and unfamiliar task. Reacher left them to it. He walked back to the car and set off in pursuit of Vaughan.

  He caught up with her a mile down the DoD road. She slid in next to him and he drove on, retracing their route, through the pines, through the hills. She said, “Thank you for coming.”

  “No problem,” he said.

  “You know why I wanted you to?”

  “Yes.”

  “Tell me.”

  “You wanted someone to understand why you live like you live and do what you do.”

  “And?”

  “You wanted someone to understand why it’s OK to do what you’re going to do next.”

  “Which is what?”

  “Which is entirely up to you. And either way is good with me.”

  She said, “I lied to you before.”

  He said, “I know.”

  “Do you?”

  He nodded at the wheel. “You knew about Thurman’s military contract. And the MP base. The Pentagon told you all about them, and the Halfway PD, too. Makes sense that way. I bet it’s right there in your department phone book, in your desk drawer, M for military police.”

  “It is.”

  “But you didn’t want to talk about it, which means that it’s not just any old military scrap getting recycled there.”

  “Isn’t it?”

  Reacher shook his head. “It’s combat wrecks from Iraq. Has to be. Hence the New Jersey plates on some of the incoming trucks. From the port facilities there. Why would they bypass Pennsylvania and Indiana for regular scrap? And why would they put regular scrap in closed shipping containers? Because Thurman’s place is a specialist operation. Secret, miles from nowhere.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  “Don’t be. I understand. You didn’t want to talk about it. You didn’t even want to think about it. That’s why you tried to stop me from ever going there. Get over it, you said. Move on. There’s nothing to see.”

  “There are blown-up Humvees there,” she said. “They’re like monuments to me. Like shrines. To the people who died. Or nearly died.”

  Then she said, “And to the people who should have died.”

  They drove on, across the low slopes of the mountains, back to I-70, back toward the long loop near the Kansas line. Reacher said, “It doesn’t explain Thurman’s taste for secrecy.”

  Vaughan said, “Maybe it’s a respect thing with him. Maybe he sees them as shrines, too.”

  “Did he ever serve?”

  “I don’t think so.”

  “Did he lose a family member?”

  “I don’t think so.”

  “Anyone sign up from Despair?”

  “Not that I heard.”

  “So it’s not likely to be respect. And it doesn’t explain the MPs, either. What’s to steal? A Humvee is a car, basically. Armor is plain steel sheet, when it’s fitted at all. An M60 wouldn’t survive any kind of a blast.”

  Vaughan said nothing.

  Reacher said, “And it doesn’t explain the airplane.”

  Vaughan didn’t answer.

  Reacher said, “And nothing explains all these young guys.”

  “So you’re going to stick around?”

  He nodded at the wheel.

  “For a spell,” he said. “Because I think something is about to happen. That crowd impressed me. Would they have that much passion for the beginning of something? Or the middle of something? I don’t think so. I think they were all stirred up because they’re heading for the end of something.”

  52

  They hit Hope at five in the afternoon. The sun was low. Reacher pulled off First Street and headed down to Third, to the motel. He stopped outside the office. Vaughan looked at him inquiringly and he said, “Something I should have done before.”

  They went in together. The nosy clerk was at the counter. Behind her, three keys were missing from their hooks. Reacher’s own, for room twelve, plus Maria’s, room eight, plus one for the woman with the large underwear, room four.

  Reacher said, “Tell me about the woman in room four.”

  The clerk looked at him and paused a second, like she was gathering her thoughts, like she was under pressure to assemble an accurate capsule biography. Like she was in court, on the witness stand.

  “She’s from California,” she said. “She’s been here five days. She paid cash for a week.”

  Reacher said, “Anything else?”

  “She’s a fuller-figured person.”

  “Age?”

  “Young. Maybe twenty-five or -six.”

  “What’s her name?”

  The clerk said, “Mrs. Rogers.”

  Back in the car Vaughan said, “Another one. But a weird one. Her husband wasn’t arrested until yesterday, but she’s been here five whole days? What does that mean?”

  Reacher said, “It means our hypothesis is correct. My guess is they were on the road together up until five days ago, he found the right people in Despair and went into hiding, she came directly here to wait it out, then he got flushed out by the mass mobilization yesterday and bumped into the wrong people and got picked up. The whole town was turned upside down. Every rock was turned over. He was noticed.”

  “So where is he now?”

  “He wasn’t in a cell. So maybe he got back with the right people again.”

  Vaughan said, “I knew I had heard the name. His wife came in with the supermarket delivery guy. He drives in from Topeka, Kansas, every few days. He gave her a ride. He mentioned it to me. He told me her name.”

  “Truck drivers check in with you?”

  “Small towns. No secrets. Maria came in the same way. That’s how I knew about her.”

  “How did Lucy Anderson come in?”

  Vaughan paused a beat.

  “I don’t know,” she said. “I never heard of her before the Despair PD dumped her at the line. She wasn’t here before.”

  “So she came in from the west.”

  “I guess some of them do. Some from the east, some from the west.”

  “Which raises a question, doesn’t it? Maria came in from the east, from Kansas, but she asked the old guy in the green car to let her out at the MP base west of Despair. How did she even know it was there?”

  “Maybe Lucy Anderson told her. She would have seen it.”

  “I don’t think they talked at all.”

  “Then maybe Ramirez told her about it. Maybe on the phone to Topeka. He came in from the west and saw it.”

  “But why would he notice it? Why would he care? Why would it be a topic of conversation with his girlfriend?”

  “I don’t know.”

  Reacher asked, “Is your watch commander a nice guy?”

  “Why?”

  “Because he better be. We need to borrow his car again.”

  “When?”

  “Later tonight.”

  “Later than what?”

  “Than whatever.”

  “How much later?”

  “Eight hours from now.”

  Vaughan said, “Eight hours is good.”

  Reacher said, “First we’re going shopping.”

  They got to the hardware store just as it was closing. The old guy in the brown coat was clearing his sidewalk display. He had wheeled the leaf blowers inside and was starting in on the wheelbarr
ows. Reacher went in and bought a slim flashlight and two batteries and a two-foot wrecking bar from the old guy’s wife. Then he went back out and bought the trick stepladder that opened to eight different positions. For storage or transport it folded into a neat package about four feet long and a foot and a half wide. It was made of aluminum and plastic and was very light. It fit easily on the Crown Vic’s rear bench.

  Vaughan invited him over for dinner, at eight o’clock. She was very formal about it. She said she needed the intervening two hours to prepare. Reacher spent the time in his room. He took a nap, and then he shaved and showered and cleaned his teeth. And dressed. His clothes were new, but his underwear was past its prime, so he ditched it. He put on his pants and his shirt and raked his fingers through his hair and checked the result in the mirror and deemed it acceptable. He had no real opinion about his appearance. It was what it was. He couldn’t change it. Some people liked it, and some people didn’t.

  Fifty yards from Vaughan’s house, he couldn’t see the watch commander’s car. Either it was in the driveway, or Vaughan had given it back. Or gotten an emergency call. Or changed her plans for the evening. Then from thirty yards away, he saw the car right there on the curb. A hole in the darkness. Dull glass. Black paint, matte with age. Invisible in the gloom.

  Perfect.

  He walked through the plantings on her stepping-stone path and touched the bell. The average delay at a suburban door in the middle of the evening, about twenty seconds. Vaughan got there in nine flat. She was in a black knee-length sleeveless A-line dress, and black low-heel shoes, like ballet slippers. She was freshly showered. She looked young and full of energy.

  She looked stunning.

  He said, “Hello.”

  She said, “Come in.”

  The kitchen was full of candlelight. The table was set with two chairs and two places and an open bottle of wine and two glasses. Aromas were coming from the stove. Two appetizers were standing on the counter. Lobster meat, avocado, pink grapefruit segments, on a bed of lettuce.

  She said, “The main course isn’t ready. I screwed up the timing. It’s something I haven’t made for a while.”

  “Three years,” Reacher said.

  “Longer,” she said.

  “You look great,” he said.

  “Do I?”

  “The prettiest view in Colorado.”

  “Better than Pikes Peak?”

  “Considerably. You should be on the front of the guide book.”

  “You’re flattering me.”

  “Not really.”

  She said, “You look good, too.”

  “That’s flattery for sure.”

  “No, you clean up well.”

  “I try my best.”

  She asked, “Should we be doing this?”

  He said, “I think so.”

  “Is it fair to David?”

  “David never came back. He never lived here. He doesn’t know.”

  “I want to see your scar again.”

  “Because you’re wishing David had come back with one. Instead of what he got.”

  “I guess.”

  Reacher said, “We were both lucky. I know soldiers. I’ve been around them all my life. They fear grotesque wounds. That’s all. Amputations, mutilations, burns. I’m lucky because I didn’t get one, and David is lucky because he doesn’t know he did.”

  Vaughan said nothing.

  Reacher said, “And we’re both lucky because we both met you.”

  Vaughan said, “Show me the scar.”

  Reacher unbuttoned his shirt and slipped it off. Vaughan hesitated a second and then touched the ridged skin, very gently. Her fingertips were cool and smooth. They burned him, like electricity.

  “What was it?” she asked.

  “A truck bomb in Beirut.”

  “Shrapnel?”

  “Part of a man who was standing closer.”

  “That’s awful.”

  “For him. Not for me. Metal might have killed me.”

  “Was it worth it?”

  Reacher said, “No. Of course not. It hasn’t been worth it for a long time.”

  “How long a time?”

  “Since 1945.”

  “Did David know that?”

  “Yes,” Reacher said. “He knew. I know soldiers. There’s nothing more realistic than a soldier. You can try, but you can’t bullshit them. Not even for a minute.”

  “But they keep on showing up.”

  “Yes, they do. They keep on showing up.”

  “Why?”

  “I don’t know. Never have.”

  “How long were you in the hospital?”

  “A few weeks, that’s all.”

  “As bad a place as David is in?”

  “Much worse.”

  “Why are the hospitals so bad?”

  “Because deep down to the army a wounded soldier that can’t fight anymore is garbage. So we depend on civilians, and civilians don’t care either.”

  Vaughan put her hand flat against his scar and then slid it around his back. She did the same with her other hand, on the other side. She hugged his waist and held the flat of her cheek against his chest. Then she raised her head and craned her neck and he bent down and kissed her. She tasted of warmth and wine and toothpaste. She smelled like soap and clean skin and delicate fragrance. Her hair was soft. Her eyes were closed. He ran his tongue along the row of unfamiliar teeth and found her tongue. He cradled her head with one hand and put the other low on her back.

  A long, long kiss.

  She came up for air.

  “We should do this,” she said.

  “We are doing it,” he said.

  “I mean, it’s OK to do this.”

  “I think so,” he said again. He could feel the end of her zipper with the little finger of his right hand. The little finger of his left hand was down on the swell of her ass.

  “Because you’re moving on,” she said.

  “Two days,” he said. “Three, max.”

  “No complications,” she said. “Not like it might be permanent.”

  “I can’t do permanent,” he said.

  He bent and kissed her again. Moved his hand and caught the tag of her zipper and pulled it down. She was naked under the dress. Warm, and soft, and smooth, and lithe, and fragrant. He stooped and scooped her up, one arm under her knees and the other under her shoulders. He carried her down the hallway, to where he imagined the bedrooms must be, kissing her all the way. Two doors. Two rooms. One smelled unused, one smelled like her. Her carried her in and put her down and her dress slipped from her shoulders and fell. They kissed some more and her hands tore at the button on his pants. A minute later they were in her bed.

  Afterward, they ate, first the appetizer, then pork cooked with apples and spices and brown sugar and white wine. For dessert, they went back to bed. At midnight, they showered together. Then they dressed, Reacher in his pants and shirt, Vaughan in black jeans and a black sweater and black sneakers and a slim black leather belt.

  Nothing else.

  “No gun?” Reacher asked.

  “I don’t carry my gun off duty,” she said.

  “OK,” he said.

  At one o’clock, they went out.

  53

  Vaughan drove. She insisted on it. It was her watch commander’s car. Reacher was happy to let her. She was a better driver than him. Much better. Her panic one-eighty had impressed him. Backward to forward, at full speed. He doubted if he could have done it. He figured if he had been driving the mob would have caught them and torn them apart.

  “Won’t they be there again?” Vaughan asked.

  “Possible,” he said. “But I doubt it. It’s late, on the second night. And I told Thurman I wouldn’t be back. I don’t think it will be like yesterday.”

  “Why would Thurman believe you?”

  “He’s religious. He’s accustomed to believing things that comfort him.”

  “We should have planned to take the long wa
y around.”

  “I’m glad we didn’t. It would have taken four hours. It wouldn’t have left time for dinner.”

  She smiled and they took off, north to First Street, west toward Despair. There was thick cloud in the sky. No moon. No stars. Pitch black. Perfect. They thumped over the line and a mile before the top of the rise Reacher said, “It’s time to go stealthy. Turn all the lights off.”

  Vaughan clicked the headlights off and the world went dark and she braked hard.

  “I can’t see anything,” she said.

  “Use the video camera,” he said. “Use the night vision.”

  “What?”

  “Like a video game,” he said. “Watch the computer screen, not the windshield.”

  “Will that work?”

  “It’s how tank drivers do it.”

  She tapped keys and the laptop screen lit up and then stabilized into a pale green picture of the landscape ahead. Green scrub on either side, vivid boulders, a bright ribbon of road spearing into the distance. She took her foot off the brake and crawled forward, her head turned, staring at the thermal image, not the reality. At first she steered uncertainly, her hand-eye coordination disrupted. She drifted left and right and overcorrected. Then she settled in and got the hang of the new technique. She did a quarter-mile perfectly straight, and then she sped up and did the next quarter a little faster, somewhere between twenty and thirty.

  “It’s killing me not to glance ahead,” she said. “It’s so automatic.”

  “This is good,” Reacher said. “Stay slow.” He figured that at twenty or thirty there would be almost no engine noise. Just a low purr, and a soft burble from the pipes. There would be surface noise at any speed, from the tires on the grit, but that would get better closer to town. He leaned left and put his head on her shoulder and watched the screen. The landscape reeled itself in, silent and green and ghostly. The camera had no human reactions. It was just a dumb unblinking eye. It didn’t glance left or right or up or down or change focus. They came over the rise and the screen filled with blank cold sky for a second and then the nose of the car dipped down again and they saw the next nine miles laid out in front of them. Green scrub, scattered rocks glowing lighter, the ribbon of road, a tiny flare of heat on the horizon where the embers of the police station were still warm.

 

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