Lee Child - [Jack Reacher 01-16]

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Lee Child - [Jack Reacher 01-16] Page 442

by Jack Reacher Series (epub)


  Then he made Berenson take him upstairs and perform a certain sexual act on him. To seal their understanding, he said.

  Then he went out and sank a few more baskets with her son.

  Then he drove away.

  Reacher believed her. In his life he had listened to people telling lies, and less often to people telling the truth. He knew how to distinguish between the two. He knew what to trust and what to distrust. He was a supremely cynical man, but his special talent lay in retaining a small corner of open-mindedness. He believed the basketball part, and the prison reference, and the sex act. People like Margaret Berenson didn’t make up that kind of stuff. They couldn’t. Their frames of reference weren’t wide enough. He took the kitchen knife and cut the duct tape off her. Helped her to her feet.

  “So who knew?” he asked.

  “Lamaison,” Berenson said. “Lennox, Parker, and Saropian.”

  “That’s all?”

  “Yes.”

  “What about the other four ex-LAPD?”

  “They’re different. From a different era and a different place. Lamaison wouldn’t really trust them on a thing like this.”

  “So why did he hire them?”

  “Warm bodies. Numbers. And he trusts them on everything else. They do what he tells them.”

  “Why did he hire Tony Swan? Swan was always going to be a rod for his back.”

  “Lamaison didn’t hire Swan. He didn’t want him. But I convinced our CEO we needed some diversity of background. It wasn’t healthy to have all of them from the same place.”

  “So you hired him?”

  “Basically. I’m sorry.”

  “Where did all the bad stuff happen?”

  “Highland Park. The helicopter is there. And there are outbuildings. It’s a big place.”

  “Is there somewhere you can go?” Reacher asked.

  “Go?” Berenson said.

  “For a couple of days, until this is over.”

  “It won’t be over. You don’t know Lamaison. You can’t beat him.”

  Reacher looked at Neagley.

  “Can we beat him?” he asked.

  “Like a drum,” she said.

  Berenson said, “But there are four of them.”

  “Three,” Reacher said. “Saropian is already down. Three of them, four of us.”

  “You’re crazy.”

  “They’re going to think so. That’s for damn sure. They’re going to think I’m completely psychotic.”

  Berenson was quiet for a long moment.

  “I could go to a hotel,” she said.

  “When does your son get home?”

  “I’ll go get him out of school.”

  Reacher nodded. “Pack your bags.”

  Berenson said, “I will.”

  “Who flew?” Reacher asked.

  “Lamaison, Lennox, and Parker. Just the three of them.”

  “Plus the pilot,” Reacher said. “That’s four.”

  Berenson went upstairs to pack and Reacher put the kitchen knife away. Then he put Swan’s rock back in his pocket and pulled the Evian bottle off the Glock.

  “Would that really have worked?” Neagley asked. “As a silencer?”

  “I doubt it,” Reacher said. “I read it in a book once. It worked on the page. But in the real world I imagine it would have exploded and blinded me with shards of flying plastic. But it looked good, didn’t it? It added an extra element. Better than just pointing the gun.”

  Then his phone rang. His Radio Shack pay-as-you-go, not Saropian’s cell from Vegas. It was Dixon. She and O’Donnell had been on station in Highland Park for four and a half hours. They had seen all they were going to see, and they were starting to feel conspicuous.

  “Head home,” Reacher said. “We’ve got what we need.”

  Then Neagley’s phone rang. Her personal cell, not her pay-as-you-go. Her Chicago guy. Ten-thirty in LA, lunch time in Illinois. She listened, not moving, not asking questions, just absorbing information. Then she clicked off.

  “Preliminary data from the LAPD grapevine,” she said. “In twenty years Lamaison fought eighteen Internal Affairs investigations and won all of them.”

  “Charges?”

  “You name it. Excessive force, bribery, corruption, missing dope, missing money. He’s a bad guy, but smart.”

  “How does a guy like that get a job with a defense contractor?”

  “How does he get one with the LAPD in the first place? And then promotions on top? By putting up a front and working hard to keep his record clean, that’s how. And by having a partner who knew when and how to keep quiet.”

  “His partner was probably just as bad. It usually works that way.”

  “You should know,” Neagley said.

  Forty minutes later Berenson came downstairs with two bags. An expensive black leather carry-on, and a bright green nylon duffel with a sports logo on it. Hers, and the kid’s, Reacher guessed. She loaded them into the Toyota’s trunk. Reacher and Neagley walked down to get their cars and drove them back and formed up into a close protection convoy. Same basic method as surveillance, different purpose. Neagley stayed tight, and Reacher hung back. After a mile he decided O’Donnell had been wrong about the tricked-out Hondas being the most invisible cars in California. The Toyota fit that bill better. He was staring right at it and could barely see it.

  Berenson stopped at a school. It was a big tan spread with the kind of black-hole silence around it that schools get when all the kids are inside working. After twenty minutes she came back out with a brown-haired boy in tow. He was small. He barely reached her shoulder. He looked a little puzzled, but happy enough to be dragged away from class.

  Then Berenson drove a little ways on the 110 and came off in Pasadena and headed for an inn on a quiet street. Reacher approved of her choice. The place had a lot in back where the Toyota wouldn’t be seen from the road, and a bellman at the door, and two women behind a counter inside. Plenty of vigilant eyes before the elevators and the rooms. Better than a motel.

  Reacher and Neagley stayed on site to give Berenson and her kid time to settle in. They figured ten minutes would do it. They used the time getting lunch, in a bar off the lobby. Club sandwiches, coffee for Reacher, soda for Neagley. Reacher liked club sandwiches. He liked the way he could pick his teeth afterward with the tasseled thing that had held the sandwich together. He didn’t want to be talking to people with chicken fibers caught in there.

  His phone rang as he was finishing up his coffee. Dixon again. She was back at the motel, with O’Donnell. There was an urgent message waiting at the desk. From Curtis Mauney.

  “He wants us up at that place north of Glendale,” Dixon said. “Right now.”

  “Where we went for Orozco?”

  “Yes.”

  “Because they found Sanchez?”

  “He didn’t say. But Reacher, he didn’t tell us to meet him at the morgue. He said meet him at the hospital across the street. So if it’s Sanchez, he’s still alive.”

  68

  Dixon and O’Donnell were starting from the Dunes Motel and Reacher and Neagley were starting from the inn in Pasadena. Both locations were exactly equidistant from the hospital north of Glendale. Ten miles, along different sides of the same shallow triangle.

  Reacher expected that he and Neagley would get there first. The way the freeways lined up with the flanks of the San Gabriel mountains gave them a straight shot on the 210. Dixon and O’Donnell would be heading northeast, at right angles to the freeways, a difficult trip battling surface congestion all the way.

  But the 210 was jammed. Within a hundred yards of the ramp it was completely static. A river of stalled cars curved ahead into the distance, winking in the sun, burning gas, going nowhere. A classic LA panorama. Reacher checked his mirror and saw Neagley’s Honda right behind him. Hers was a Civic, white, about four model-years old. He couldn’t see her behind the wheel. The screen was tinted too dark. It had a band of plastic across the top, dark blue with th
e words No Fear written across it in jagged silver script. Very appropriate, he thought, for Neagley.

  He called her on the phone.

  “Accident up ahead,” she said. “I heard it on the radio.”

  “Terrific.”

  “If Sanchez made it this far, he can make it a few minutes more.”

  Reacher asked, “Where did they go wrong?”

  “I don’t know. This wasn’t the toughest thing they ever faced.”

  “So something tripped them up. Something unpredictable. Where would Swan have started?”

  “With Dean,” Neagley said. “The quality control guy. His behavior must have been the trigger. Bad numbers on their own don’t necessarily mean much. But bad numbers plus a stressed-out quality control guy mean a lot.”

  “Did he get the whole story out of Dean?”

  “Probably not. But enough to join the dots. Swan was a lot smarter than Berenson.”

  “What was his next step?”

  “Two steps in parallel,” Neagley said. “He secured Dean’s situation, and he started the search for corroborating evidence.”

  “With help from the others.”

  “More than help,” Neagley said. “He was basically subcontracting. He had to, because his office situation was insecure.”

  “So he didn’t talk to Lamaison at any point?”

  “Not a chance. First rule, trust no one.”

  “So what tripped them up?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “How would Swan have secured Dean’s situation?”

  “He’d have talked to the local cops. Asked for protection, or at least asked for a car to swing by on a regular basis.”

  “Lamaison is ex-LAPD. Maybe he still has buddies on the job. Maybe they tipped him off.”

  “Doesn’t work,” Neagley said. “Swan didn’t talk to the LAPD. Dean lived over the hill. Outside of LAPD jurisdiction.”

  Reacher paused a beat.

  “Which actually means that Swan didn’t talk to anyone,” he said. “Because that’s Curtis Mauney’s kingdom up there, and he didn’t know anything about Dean or New Age. Or even anything about Swan, except through Franz.”

  “Swan wouldn’t leave Dean unprotected.”

  “So maybe Dean wasn’t the trigger. Maybe Swan didn’t know anything about him. Maybe he found a different way in.”

  “Which was?” Neagley asked.

  “No idea,” Reacher said. “Maybe Sanchez will be able to tell us.”

  “You think he’s alive?”

  “Hope for the best.”

  “But plan for the worst.”

  They clicked off. Their lane moved a little. In a minute and a quarter of conversation they had covered about five car lengths. In the next five minutes of silence they covered about ten more, six times slower than walking. All around them people were enduring. They were talking on the phone, reading, shaving, applying makeup, smoking, eating, listening to music. Some were tanning. They were hitching up their sleeves and holding their arms out their open windows.

  Reacher’s pay-as-you-go rang. Neagley again.

  “More from Chicago,” she said. “We’re into parts of the LAPD mainframe. Lennox and Parker were about as bad as Lamaison. The two of them were partners together. They resigned rather than face their twelfth IA inquiry in twelve years. They must have been out of work about a week before Lamaison hired them on at New Age.”

  “I’m glad I don’t hold New Age stock.”

  “You do. It’s all Pentagon money. Where do you think it comes from?”

  “Not from me,” Reacher said.

  Two hundred yards later the freeway straightened and rose in front of them and they saw the source of the delay, in the far distance, in the haze. There was a broken-down car in the left lane. A trivial blockage, but the whole road was at a standstill. Reacher clicked off with Neagley and called Dixon.

  “You there yet?” he asked.

  “Maybe ten minutes away.”

  “We’re stuck in traffic. Call us if there’s good news. Call us if there’s bad news too, I guess.”

  It took another quarter of an hour to reach the stalled car and some bold lane changes to get past it. Then the flow freed up and everyone continued on their way at seventy miles an hour like nothing had happened. Reacher and Neagley were at the county facility ten minutes later. Ten miles in forty minutes. Average speed, fifteen miles an hour. Not great.

  They ignored the morgue and parked in the hospital’s visitor lot. They walked through the sun to the main entrance. Reacher saw O’Donnell’s Honda in the lot, and then Dixon’s. The main entrance gave onto a lobby full of red plastic chairs. Some of them were occupied. Most of them weren’t. The place was fairly quiet. There was no sign of Dixon or O’Donnell. Or Curtis Mauney. There was a long desk with people behind it. Not nurses. Just clerks. Reacher asked one of them for Mauney and got no response. He asked for Jorge Sanchez and got no response. He asked about emergency John Doe admissions and got redirected to another desk around a corner.

  The new desk reported no recent John Doe admissions and knew nothing about a patient named Jorge Sanchez or an LA County sheriff named Curtis Mauney. Reacher pulled out his phone but was asked not to use it inside the building in case its signal upset delicate medical equipment. He stepped out to the lot and called Dixon.

  No reply.

  He tried O’Donnell’s number.

  No reply.

  Neagley said, “Maybe they’re switched off. Because they’re in an ICU or something.”

  “Who with? They never heard of Sanchez here.”

  “They have to be here somewhere. They just got here.”

  “This feels wrong,” Reacher said.

  Neagley took Mauney’s card out of her pocket. Handed it over. Reacher dialed Mauney’s cell number.

  No answer.

  His landline.

  No answer.

  Then Neagley’s phone rang. Her personal cell, not her pay-as-you-go. She answered. Listened. Her face went pale. Literally bloodless, like wax.

  “That was Chicago,” she said. “Curtis Mauney was Allen Lamaison’s partner. They were together twelve years in the LAPD.”

  69

  Something tripped them up. Something unpredictable. Neagley had been right, but only half-right. Dean had been a major factor, but not the original trigger. Swan had gotten to him much later in the process, some different way, after the others were already on board. No other way to explain the scale of the disaster. Reacher stood in the hospital lot and closed his eyes and pictured the scene. Saw Swan talking to Dean, the final part of the puzzle, at home, north of the mountains, out in the desert near Palmdale, a city refugee’s paradise, a sanctuary, a young girl moving silently past an open doorway, fear on Dean’s face, concern on Swan’s. Reacher saw Swan extracting the whole story, as always reassuring and solid and confident. Then Reacher saw Swan driving straight to some dusty sheriff’s office, talking to Mauney, explaining, asking for help, demanding it. Then he saw Swan leaving, and Mauney picking up a phone. Sealing Swan’s fate right there and then. And Franz’s, and Orozco’s, and Sanchez’s.

  Something unpredictable.

  Reacher opened his eyes and said, “We’re not going to lose another two. Not while I live and breathe.”

  They abandoned Neagley’s Civic in the hospital lot and used Reacher’s Prelude. They had nowhere to go. They were just moving for the sake of moving. And talking for the sake of talking. Neagley said, “They knew we’d show up sooner or later. The suspense was killing them. So they manipulated the timeline to suit themselves. Mauney pushed Angela Franz into calling me. He spun the bait story to keep Thomas Brant on board. He was tracking us every step of the way and feeding us things we already knew to keep us close and asking us what else we’d found out and waiting to see if we’d give up and get out of their hair. And when we never did, they decided to go ahead and take us out. First Vegas, and then now.”

  They swung back onto the 210. It wa
s flowing fast and free.

  “Plan?” Neagley asked.

  “No plan,” Reacher said.

  The phone directory that Dixon had captured was in O’Donnell’s room at the motel, but they didn’t want to go anywhere near Sunset Boulevard. Not at that point. So they pieced together half-remembered fragments of the manufacturing plant’s Highland Park address and headed in that direction.

  They found Highland Park easily enough. It was a decent place full of streets and houses and business parks and small clean hi-tech manufacturing enterprises. It was harder to find New Age’s specific location. They weren’t expecting a billboard and didn’t get one. Instead they looked for unmarked buildings and serious fences and helipads. They found several. It was that kind of a neighborhood.

  “Dixon called the helicopter a Bell 222,” Reacher said. “Could you recognize one of those if you saw one?”

  “I’ve seen three in the last five minutes,” Neagley said.

  “She said it was white.”

  “Two in the last five minutes.”

  “Where?”

  “The second one was a mile back. Two lefts and a right. The first one was three places before that.”

  “Both places with fences?”

  “Check.”

  “Outbuildings?”

  “Both of them.”

  Reacher braked and pulled an illegal U across the full width of the road and headed back the way they had come. He took two lefts and a right and slowed and Neagley pointed at a collection of gray metal buildings squatting behind a fence that would have looked right at home outside a supermax prison. It was at least eight feet tall and close to four feet thick, two faces of tight barbed wire with giant coils of razor wire heaped between them and huge concertinas of the same stuff piled on top. It was one hell of a barrier. There were four buildings behind it. One was a large shed and three were smaller constructions. There was a huge concrete rectangle with a long-nosed helicopter parked on it, white, still, and quiet.

 

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