No Middle Name

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No Middle Name Page 34

by Lee Child


  No pedestrians.

  It was summer, close to eleven at night, and still warm. Fifth Avenue was crossing Broadway right in front of him. Dead ahead was Chelsea, behind him was Gramercy, to his left was Union Square, and to his right the Empire State Building loomed over the scene like the implacable monolith it was. He should have seen a hundred people. Or a thousand. Or ten thousand. Guys in canvas shoes and T-shirts, girls in short summer dresses, some of them strolling, some of them hustling, to clubs about to open their doors, or bars with the latest vodka, or midnight movies.

  There should have been a whole big crowd. There should have been laughter and conversation, and shuffling feet, and the kind of hoots and yelps a happy crowd makes at eleven o’clock on a warm summer’s evening, and sirens and car horns, and the whisper of tires and the roar of engines.

  There was nothing.

  Reacher went back down the stairs, and under the tape again. He walked underground, north, to the site of his second attempt, and this time he stepped over the tape, because it was slung lower. He went up the stairs just as cautiously, but faster, now right on the street corner, with Madison Square Park ahead of him, fenced in black iron and packed with dark trees. But its gates were still open. Not that anyone was strolling in or strolling out. There was no one around. Not a soul.

  He stepped up to the sidewalk and stayed close to the railing around the subway stair head. A long block to the west he saw flashing lights. Blue and red. A police cruiser was parked sideways across the street. A roadblock. Do Not Enter. Reacher turned and looked east. Same situation. Red and blue lights all the way over on Park Avenue. Do Not Enter. 23rd Street was closed. As were plenty of other cross streets, no doubt, and Broadway and Fifth Avenue and Madison, too, presumably, at about 30th Street.

  No one around.

  Reacher looked at the Flatiron Building. A narrow triangle, sharp at the front. Like a thin wedge, or a modest slice of cake. But to him it looked most like the prow of a ship. Like an immense ocean liner moving slowly toward him. Not an original thought. He knew many people felt the same way. Even with the cowcatcher glasshouse on the front ground floor, which some said ruined the effect, but which he thought added to it, because it looked like the protruding underwater bulge on the front of a supertanker, visible only when the vessel was lightly loaded.

  Now he saw a person. Through two panes of the cowcatcher’s windows. A woman. She was standing on the Fifth Avenue sidewalk, staring north. She was wearing dark pants and a dark short-sleeved shirt. She had something in her right hand. Maybe a phone. Maybe a Glock 19.

  Reacher pushed off the subway railing and crossed the street. Against the light, technically, but there was no traffic. It was like walking through a ghost town. Like being the last human on Earth. Apart from the woman on Fifth Avenue. Who he headed for. He aimed at the point of the cowcatcher. His heels were loud in the silence. The cowcatcher had a triangular iron frame, a miniature version of the shape it was backing up against, like a tiny sailboat trying to outrun the liner chasing it. The frame was painted green, like moss, and it had gingerbread curlicues here and there, and what wasn’t metal was glass, whole panels of it, as long as cars, and tall, from above a person’s head to his knees.

  The woman saw him coming.

  She turned in his direction, but backed off, as if to draw him toward her. Reacher understood. She wanted to pull him south into the shadows. He rounded the point of the cowcatcher.

  It was a phone in her hand, not a gun.

  She said, “Who are you?”

  He said, “Who’s asking?”

  She turned her back and then straightened again, one fast fluid movement, like a fake-out on the basketball court, but enough for him to see FBI in yellow letters on the back of her shirt.

  “Now answer my question,” she said.

  “I’m just a guy.”

  “Doing what?”

  “Looking at this building.”

  “The Flatiron?”

  “No, this part in front. The glass part.”

  “Why?”

  Reacher said, “Have I been asleep for a long time?”

  The woman said, “Meaning what?”

  “Did some crazy old colonel stage a coup d’état? Are we living in a police state now? I must have blinked and missed it.”

  “I’m a federal agent. I’m entitled to ask for your name and ID.”

  “My name is Jack Reacher. No middle initial. I have a passport in my pocket. You want me to take it out?”

  “Very slowly.”

  So he did, very slowly. He used scissored fingers, like a pickpocket, and drew out the slim blue booklet, and held it away from his body, long enough for her to register what it was, and then he passed it to her, and she opened it.

  She said, “Why were you born in Berlin?”

  He said, “I had no control over my mother’s movements. I was just a fetus at the time.”

  “Why was she in Berlin?”

  “Because my father was. We were a Marine family. She said I was nearly born on a plane.”

  “Are you a Marine?”

  “I’m unemployed at the moment.”

  “After being what?”

  “Unemployed for many previous moments.”

  “After being what?”

  “Army.”

  “Branch?”

  “Military police.”

  She handed back the passport.

  She said, “Rank?”

  He said, “Does it matter?”

  “I’m entitled to ask.”

  She was looking past his shoulder.

  He said, “I was terminal at major.”

  “Is that good or bad?”

  “Bad, mostly. If I had been any good at being a major they would have made me stay.”

  She didn’t reply.

  He said, “What about you?”

  “What about me?”

  “Rank?”

  “Special agent in charge.”

  “Are you in charge tonight?”

  “Yes, I am.”

  “Outstanding.”

  She said, “Where did you come from?”

  He said, “The subway.”

  “Was there police tape?”

  “I don’t recall.”

  “You broke through it.”

  “Check the First Amendment. I’m pretty sure I’m allowed to walk around where I want. Isn’t that part of what makes America great?”

  “You’re in the way.”

  “Of what?”

  She was still looking past his shoulder.

  She said, “I can’t tell you.”

  “Then you should have told the train not to stop. Tape isn’t enough.”

  “I didn’t have time.”

  “Because?”

  “I can’t tell you.”

  Reacher said nothing.

  The woman said, “What’s your interest in the glass part of this building?”

  Reacher said, “I’m thinking of putting in a bid as a window washer. Might get me back on my feet.”

  “Lying to a federal agent is a felony.”

  “A million people every day look in these windows. Have you asked them?”

  “I’m asking you.”

  Reacher said, “I think Edward Hopper painted Nighthawks here.”

  “Which is what?”

  “A painting. Quite famous. Looking in through a diner’s windows, late at night, at the lonely people inside.”

  “I never heard of a diner called Nighthawks. Not here.”

  “The night hawks were the people. The diner was called Phillies.”

  “I never heard of a diner here called anything.”

  “I don’t think there was one.”

  “You just said there was.”

  “I think Hopper saw this place and made it a diner in his head. Or a lunch counter, at least. The shape is exactly the same. Looked at from right where we’re standing now.”

  “I think I know that picture. Three people, isn�
��t it?”

  “Plus the counterman. He’s kind of bent over, doing something in the well. There are two coffee urns behind him.”

  “First there’s a couple, close but not touching, and then one lonely guy all by himself. With his back to us. In a hat.”

  “All the men wear hats.”

  “The woman is a redhead. She looks sad. It’s the loneliest picture I’ve ever seen.”

  Reacher looked through the real-life glass. Easy to imagine bright fluorescent light in there, pinning people like searchlight beams, exposing them in a merciless way to the dark streets all around, except the streets all around were empty, so there was no one to see.

  In the painting, and in real life, too.

  He said, “What have I walked into?”

  The woman said, “You’re to stand still, right where you are, and don’t move until I tell you to.”

  “Or what?”

  “Or you’ll go to prison for interfering with a national security operation.”

  “Or you’ll get fired for continuing with a national security operation after it suddenly got a civilian in the way.”

  “The operation isn’t here. It’s in the park.”

  She looked diagonally across the wide junction, three major thoroughfares all meeting, at the mass of trees beyond.

  He said, “What have I walked into?”

  She said, “I can’t tell you.”

  “I’m sure I’ve heard worse.”

  “Military police, right?”

  “Like the FBI, but on a much lower budget.”

  “We have a target in the park. Sitting on a bench all alone. Waiting for a contact who isn’t coming.”

  “Who is he?”

  “A bad apple.”

  “From your barrel?”

  She nodded. “One of us.”

  “Is he armed?”

  “He’s never armed.”

  “Why isn’t his contact coming?”

  “He died an hour ago in a hit-and-run accident. The driver didn’t stop. No one got the plate.”

  “There’s a big surprise.”

  “He turned out to be Russian. The State Department had to inform their consulate. Which turned out to be where the guy worked. Purely by coincidence.”

  “Your guy was talking to the Russians? Do people still do that?”

  “More and more. And it’s getting more and more important all the time. People say we’re headed back to the 1980s. But they’re wrong. We’re headed back to the 1930s.”

  “So your guy ain’t going to win employee of the month.”

  She didn’t answer.

  He said, “Where are you going to take him?”

  She paused a beat. She said, “All that’s classified.”

  “All that? All what? He can’t be going to multiple destinations.”

  She didn’t answer.

  Now he paused a beat.

  He said, “Is he headed for the destination you want?”

  She didn’t answer.

  “Is he?”

  She said, “No.”

  “Because of suits higher up?”

  “As always.”

  “Are you married?”

  “What’s that got to do with anything?”

  “Are you?”

  “I’m hanging in there.”

  “So you’re the redhead.”

  “And?”

  “I’m the guy in the hat with his back to us, all alone.”

  “Meaning what?”

  “Meaning I’m going to take a walk. Like a First Amendment thing. Meaning you’re going to stay here. Like a smart tactical thing.”

  And he turned and moved away, before she had a chance to object. He rounded the tip of the cowcatcher and headed diagonally across the heart of the complex junction, moving fast, not breaking stride at the curbs and the painted lines, ignoring the Don’t Walk signs, not slowing at all, and finally straight into the park itself, by its southwest gate. Ahead was a dry fountain and a closed-up burger stall. Curving left was the main center path, clearly following some kind of a design scheme that featured large ovals, like running tracks.

  There were dim fancy lights on poles, and the Times Square glow was bouncing off the clouds like a magnesium flare. Reacher could see pretty well, but all he saw were empty benches, at least at the start of the curve. More came into sight as he walked, but they too stayed empty, all the way to the far tip of the oval, where there was another dry fountain, and a children’s playground, and finally the continuation of the path itself, curving down the other side of the oval, back toward the near tip. And it had benches, too.

  And one of them was occupied.

  By a big guy, all pink and fleshy, maybe fifty years old, in a dark suit. A pouchy face, and thinning hair. A guy who looked like his life had passed him by.

  Reacher stepped close and the guy looked up, and then he looked away, but Reacher sat down next to him anyway. He said, “Boris or Vladimir or whatever his name was isn’t coming. You’re busted. They know you’re not armed, but they’ve gone ahead and cleared about twenty square blocks, which means they’re going to shoot you. You’re about to be executed. But not while I’m here. Not with witnesses. And as it happens the SAC isn’t happy with it. But she’s getting pressure from above.”

  The guy said, “So?”

  Reacher said, “So here’s my good deed of the day. If you want to turn yourself in to her, I’ll walk with you. Every step of the way. You can tell her what you know, and you can get three squares a day in prison the rest of your life.”

  The guy didn’t answer.

  Reacher said, “But maybe you don’t want to go to prison the rest of your life. Maybe you’re ashamed. Maybe suicide by cop is better. Who am I to judge? So my super-good deed of the day is to walk away if you tell me to. Your choice.”

  The guy said, “Then walk away.”

  “You sure?”

  “I can’t face it.”

  “Why did you do it?”

  “To be somebody.”

  “What kind of stuff could you tell the SAC?”

  “Nothing important. Damage assessment is their main priority. But they already know what I had access to, so they already know what I told them.”

  “And you’ve got nothing worthwhile to add?”

  “Not a thing. I don’t know anything. My contacts aren’t stupid. They know this can happen.”

  “OK,” Reacher said. “I’ll walk away.”

  And he did, out of the park in its northeast corner, where he heard faint radio chatter in the shadows announcing his departure, and a deserted block up Madison Avenue, where he waited against the limestone base of a substantial building. Four minutes later he heard suppressed handguns, eleven or twelve rounds expended, a volley of thudding percussions like phone books slammed on desks.

  Then he heard nothing more. He pushed off the wall, and walked north on Madison, imagining himself back at the lunch counter, his hat in place, his elbows drawn in, nursing a new secret in a life already full of old secrets.

  By Lee Child

  Killing Floor

  Die Trying

  Tripwire

  Running Blind

  Echo Burning

  Without Fail

  Persuader

  The Enemy

  One Shot

  The Hard Way

  Bad Luck and Trouble

  Nothing to Lose

  Gone Tomorrow

  61 Hours

  Worth Dying For

  The Affair

  A Wanted Man

  Never Go Back

  Personal

  Make Me

  Night School

  Ebooks

  Second Son

  Deep Down

  High Heat

  Not a Drill

  Small Wars

  About the Author

  LEE CHILD is the author of twenty-one New York Times bestselling Jack Reacher thrillers, with twelve having reached the #1 position. All have been optioned for
major motion pictures—including Jack Reacher (based on One Shot) and Jack Reacher: Never Go Back. Foreign rights to the Reacher series have sold in one hundred territories. A native of England and a former television director, Child lives in New York City.

  leechild.com

  Facebook.com/​LeeChildOfficial

  Twitter: @LeeChildReacher

  To inquire about booking Lee Child for a speaking engagement, please contact the Penguin Random House Speakers Bureau at [email protected].

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