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Running Blind

Page 34

by Child, Lee


  She knocked on the door.

  “Are you done?” she called. “I need my clothes.”

  He unfolded the towel and wrapped it around his waist.

  “OK, come in,” he called.

  “Just pass them out,” she called back.

  He bunched them into his hand and lifted them off the hook. Cracked the door and passed them through. She took them and walked away. He toweled himself almost dry and dressed, awkward in the narrow space. Combed his hair with his fingers. He stood still for a minute. Then he rattled the door handle and came out. She was standing by the bed, wearing some of her clothes. The rest of them were folded over the back of the dresser chair. Her hair was combed back. Her phone was closed, lying next to the ice bucket.

  “What did you tell him?” he asked.

  “Just what you said. We’re meeting some guy in the morning, noting specific.”

  She was wearing the shirt, but the tie was draped over the chair. So was the bra. And the suit trousers.

  “He have anything to say?” he asked.

  “Poulton’s in Spokane,” she said. “The Hertz thing came to nothing, just some woman on business. But the UPS guy is coming through with stuff. They’re talking tonight, but they’re three hours behind, so we won’t hear anything until morning, probably. But they identified the date from the baseball thing and UPS is pulling the records.”

  "Won’t say LaSalle Kruger on the paperwork, that’s for sure.”

  “Probably not, but that doesn’t matter anymore, does it? We found him.”

  She sat down on the edge of the bed, her back to him.

  “Thanks to you,” she said. “You were absolutely right, a smart guy with a good solid plain-vanilla motive. ”

  She stood up again, restless. Paced the small area between the bed and the table. She was wearing the underpants. He could see that, through the shirttails. Her ass was wonderful. Her legs were lean. And long. Her feet were small and delicate, for her height.

  “We should celebrate,” she said.

  Reacher propped the pillows on the far side of the bed and leaned back against them. Looked up at the ceiling and concentrated on the sound of the rain battering on the roof.

  “No room service in a place like this,” he said.

  She turned to face him. The first two buttons on her shirt were undone. Thing like that, the effect depends on how far apart the buttons are. If they’re close together, it doesn’t mean much. But these were well spaced out, maybe three or four inches between each of them.

  “It’s Jodie, isn’t it?” she said.

  He nodded. “Of course it is.”

  “Wasn’t for her, you’d want to, right?”

  “I do want to,” he said.

  Then he paused.

  “But I won’t,” he said. “Because of her.”

  She looked at him, and then she smiled.

  “I like that in a guy, I guess,” she said.

  He said nothing.

  “Steadfastness,” she said.

  He said nothing. There was silence. Just the sound of the rain on the roof, relentless and insistent.

  “It’s an attractive characteristic,” she said.

  He looked at the ceiling.

  “Not that you’re short of attractive characteristics,” she said.

  He listened to the rain. She sighed, just a tiny sound. She moved away, just an inch. But enough to ease the crisis.

  “So you’re going to stick around New York,” she said.

  He nodded again. “That’s the plan.”

  “She’ll be pissed about the house. Her father willed it to you.”

  “She might be,” he said. “But she’ll have to deal with it. The way I see it, he left me a choice, more than anything. The house, or the money I’d get for it. My choice. He knew what I was like. He wouldn’t be surprised. Or upset either.”

  “But it’s an emotional issue.”

  “I don’t see why,” he said. “It wasn’t her childhood home or anything. They never really lived there. She didn’t grow up there. It’s just a wooden building.”

  “It’s an anchor. That’s how she sees it.”

  “That’s why I’m selling it.”

  “Therefore naturally she’ll worry.”

  He shrugged. “She’ll learn. I’ll stick around, house or no house.”

  The room went quiet again. The rain was easing. She sat down on the bed, opposite him. Tucked her bare knees up under her.

  “I still feel like celebrating,” she said.

  She put her hand palm down in the space between them and leaned over.

  “Celebration kiss,” she whispered. “Nothing more, I promise.”

  He looked at her and reached around with his left arm and pulled her close. Kissed her on the lips. She put her hand behind his head and pushed her fingers into his hair. Tilted her head and opened her mouth. He felt her tongue on his teeth. In his mouth. He closed his eyes. Her tongue was urgent. Deep in his mouth. It felt good. He opened his eyes and saw hers, too close to focus on. They were shut tight. He let her go and pulled away, full of guilt.

  “Something I need to tell you,” he said.

  She was breathless, and her hair was a mess.

  “What?”

  “I’m not being straight with you,” he said.

  “How not?”

  “I don’t think Kruger’s our guy.”

  “What?”

  There was silence. They were inches apart, on the bed. Her hand was still laced behind his head, in his hair.

  “He’s Leighton’s guy,” Reacher said. “I don’t think he’s ours. I never really did.”

  “What? You always did. This was your theory, Reacher. Why back away from it now?”

  “Because I didn’t really mean it, Harper. I was just thinking aloud. Bullshitting, basically. I’m very surprised there even is such a guy.”

  She pulled her hand away, astonished.

  “But this was your theory,” she said again.

  He shrugged. “I just made it up. I didn’t mean any of it. I just wanted some kind of a plausible excuse to get me out of Quantico for a spell.”

  She stared at him. “You made it up? You didn’t mean it?”

  He shrugged. “It was halfway convincing, I guess. But I didn’t believe in it.”

  “So why the hell say it?”

  “I told you. I just wanted to get out of there. To give myself time to think. And it was an experiment. I wanted to see who would support it and who would oppose it. I wanted to see who really wants this thing solved.”

  “I don’t believe this,” she said. “Why?”

  “Why not?”

  “We all want it solved,” she said.

  “Poulton opposed it,” Reacher said.

  She stared at him, from a foot away.

  “What is this to you? A game?” she said.

  He said nothing. She was silent, a minute, two, three.

  “What the hell are you doing?” she said. “There are lives at stake here.”

  Then there was pounding at the door. Loud, insistent knocking. She pulled away from him. He let her go and put his feet on the floor and stood up. Ran his hand through his hair and walked toward the door. A new barrage started up. A heavy hand, knocking hard.

  “OK,” he called. “I’m coming.”

  The pounding stopped. He opened the door. There was an Army Chevrolet parked at an angle outside the room. Leighton was standing on the stoop, his hand raised, his jacket open, raindrops on the shoulders.

  “Kruger’s our guy,” he said.

  He pushed past, inside the room. Saw Harper buttoning her shirt.

  “Excuse me,” he said.

  “It’s hot in here,” she said, looking away.

  Leighton looked down at the bed, like he was surprised.

  “He’s our guy, for sure,” he said. “Everything fits like a glove.”

  Harper’s mobile started ringing. It was over by the ice bucket, on the dresser, squawk
ing like an alarm clock. Leighton paused. Gestured I can wait. Harper scrambled over the bed and flipped the phone open. Reacher heard a voice, feathery and distorted and faraway. Harper listened to it and Reacher watched the color drain out of her face. Watched her close the phone and put it down like it was fragile as crystal.

  “We’re recalled to Quantico,” she said. “Effective immediately. Because they got Caroline Cooke’s full record. You were right, she was all over the place. But she was never anywhere near weapons. Not ever. Not within a million miles, not for a minute.”

  “That’s what I’m here to tell you,” Leighton said. “Kruger’s our guy, but he isn’t yours.”

  Reacher just nodded.

  26

  LEIGHTON WALKED THE length of the room and sat down at the table, in the right-hand chair. Same chair as Reacher had used. He put his elbows on the table and his head in his hands. Same gesture.

  “First thing, there was no list,” he said. He looked up at Harper. “You asked me to check thefts where the women worked, so I needed a list of the women to do that, obviously, so I tried to find one, but I couldn’t, OK? So I made some calls, and what happened was when your people came to us a month ago, we had to generate a list from scratch. It was a pain in the ass, trawling through all the records. So some guy had a bright idea, took a shortcut, called one of the women herself, some bullshit pretext. We think it was actually Alison Lamarr, and she supplied the list. Seems they’d set up a big support group among themselves, couple of years ago.”

  “Scimeca called them her sisters,” Reacher said. “Remember that? She said four of my sisters are dead.”

  “It was their own list?” Harper said.

  “We didn’t have one,” Leighton said again. “And then Kruger’s records started coming in, and the dates and places didn’t match. Not even close.”

  “Could he have falsified them?”

  Leighton shrugged. “He could have. He was an ace at falsifying his inventories, that’s for damn sure. But you haven’t heard the kicker yet.”

  “Which is?”

  “Like Reacher said, Special Forces to supply battalion needs some explaining. So I checked it out. He was a top boy in the Gulf. Big star, a major. They were out in the desert, behind the lines, looking for mobile SCUD launchers, small unit, bad radio. Nobody else had any real clear idea of where they were, hour to hour. So they start the artillery barrage and Kruger’s unit gets all chewed up under it. Friendly fire. Bad casualties. Kruger himself was seriously hurt. But the Army was his life, so he wanted to stay in, so they gave him the promotion all the way up to bird colonel and stuck him somewhere his injuries wouldn’t disqualify him, hence the desk job in supply. My guess is we’ll find he got all bitter and twisted afterward and started running the rackets as a kind of revenge or something. You know, against the Army, against life itself.”

  “But what’s the kicker?” Harper asked.

  Leighton paused.

  “The friendly fire,” he said. “The guy lost both his legs.”

  Silence.

  “He’s in a wheelchair.”

  “Shit,” she said.

  “Yeah, shit. No way he’s running up and down any stairs to any bathrooms. Last time he did that was ten years ago.”

  She stared at the wall.

  “OK,” she said slowly. “Bad idea.”

  “I’m afraid so, ma’am. And they’re right about Cooke. I checked her too, and she never held anything heavier than a pen, her whole short career. That was something else I was going to have to tell you.”

  “OK,” she said again.

  She examined the wall.

  “But thanks anyway,” she said. “And now we’re out of here. Back to Quantico, face the music.”

  “Wait,” Leighton said. “You need to hear about the paint.”

  “More bad news?”

  “Weird news,” Leighton said. “I started a search for reports about missing camo green, like you asked me to. Only definitive thing was hidden in a buried file, closed-access. A theft of a hundred and ten three-gallon cans.”

  “That’s it,” Harper said. “Three hundred thirty gallons. Eleven women, thirty gallons each.”

  “Evidence was clear,” Leighton said. “They fingered a supply sergeant in Utah.”

  “Who was he?”

  “She,” Leighton said. “She was Sergeant Lorraine Stanley.”

  Total silence.

  “But that’s impossible,” Harper said. “She was one of the victims.”

  Leighton shook his head. “I called Utah. Got hold of the investigating officer. I got him out of bed. He says it was Stanley, no doubt about it. Means and opportunity. She’d tried to cover her tracks, but she wasn’t smart enough about it. It was clear-cut. They didn’t proceed against her because it was politically impossible right then. She’d just come off of the harassment thing, not long before. No way were they going to start in on her at that point. So they just watched her, until she quit. But it was her.”

  “One victim stole the paint?” Reacher said. “And another provided the list of names?”

  Leighton nodded, somber. “That’s how it was, I promise you. And you know I wouldn’t bullshit one of Garber’s boys.”

  Reacher just nodded.

  THERE WAS NO more conversation. No more talk. The room went silent. Leighton sat at the table. Harper dressed mechanically. Reacher put his coat on and found the Nissan keys in Harper’s jacket. Went outside and stood in the rain for a long moment. Then he unlocked the car and slid inside. Started the motor and waited. Harper and Leighton came out together. She crossed to the car and he walked back to his. He waved, just a brief motion of his hand. Reacher put the Nissan in drive and pulled slowly out of the lot.

  “Check the map for me,” he said.

  “I-295 and then the Turnpike,” she said.

  He nodded. “I know it after that. Lamarr showed me.”

  “Why the hell would Lorraine Stanley steal the paint?”

  “I don’t know,” he said.

  “And you want to tell me why?” she asked. “You knew this Army thing was nothing, but you made us spend thirty-six hours on it. Why?”

  “I already told you,” he said. “It was an experiment, and I needed time to think.”

  “About what?”

  He didn’t answer. She went quiet for a spell.

  “Good job we didn’t go all the way celebrating,” she said.

  He didn’t reply to that either. Didn’t speak again, the whole way. He just found the right roads and drove on through the rain. He had new questions in his head, and he tried to think of some answers, but nothing would come. The only thing in his mind was the feel of her tongue in his mouth. It felt different from Jodie’s. Tasted different. He guessed everybody’s was different.

  HE DROVE FAST and it took a fraction under three hours from the outskirts of Trenton all the way back to Quantico. He turned in at the unmarked road off 95 and drove through the Marine checkpoints in the dark and waited at the vehicle barrier. The FBI sentry shone a flashlight on their badges and their faces and raised the striped pole and waved them through. They eased over the speed bumps and wound slowly through the empty parking lots and pulled up opposite the glass doors. It had stopped raining back in Maryland. Virginia was dry.

  “OK,” Harper said. “Let’s go get our asses chewed.” Reacher nodded. Killed the motor and the lights and sat in the silence for a beat. Then they looked at each other and slid out of the car and stepped to the doors. Took a deep breath. But the atmosphere inside the building was very calm. It was quiet. Nobody was around. Nobody was waiting for them. They went down in the elevator to Blake’s underground office. Found him sitting in there at his desk with one hand resting on the telephone and the other holding a curled sheet of fax paper. The television was playing silently, political cable, men in suits at an impressive table. Blake was ignoring it. He was staring at a spot on his desk equidistant from the fax paper and the phone and his face was totall
y blank. Harper nodded to him, and Reacher said nothing.

  “Fax in from UPS,” Blake said. His voice was gentle. Amiable, even benign. He looked crestfallen, adrift, confused. He looked beaten.

  “Guess who sent the paint to Alison Lamarr?” he said.

  “Lorraine Stanley,” Reacher said.

  Blake nodded.

  “Correct,” he said. “From an address in a little town in Utah, that turned out to be a self-storage facility. And guess what else?”

  “She sent all of it.”

  Blake nodded again. “UPS has got eleven consecutive consignment numbers showing eleven identical cartons going to eleven separate addresses, including Stanley’s own place in San Diego. And guess what else?”

  “What?”

  “She didn’t even have her own place when she first put the paint in the storage facility. She waited the best part of a year until she was settled, then she went back up to Utah and dispatched it all. So what do you make of that?”

  “I don’t know,” Reacher said.

  “Neither do I,” Blake said.

  Then he picked up the phone. Stared at it. Put it down again.

  “And Poulton just called,” he said. “From Spokane. Guess what he had to say?”

  “What?”

  “He just got through interviewing the UPS driver. The guy remembers pretty well. Isolated place, big heavy box, I guess he would.”

  “And?”

  “Alison was there when he called. She was listening to the ball game too, radio on in the kitchen. She asked him inside, gave him coffee, they heard the grand slam together. A little hollering, a little dancing around, another coffee, he tells her he’s got a big heavy box for her.”

  “And?”

  “And she says oh, good. He goes back out and wheels it off the tail lift on a hand truck, she clears a space for it in the garage, he brings it in, he dumps it, and she’s all smiles about it.”

 

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