9
MARILYN STONE MISSED lunch because she was busy,
but didn’t mind because she was happy about the way the place was
starting to look. She found herself regarding the whole business in
a very dispassionate manner, which surprised her a little, because
after all it was her home she was getting
ready to sell, her own home, the place she’d chosen with care and
thought and excitement not so many years ago. It had been the place
of her dreams. Way bigger and better than anything she’d ever
expected to have. It had been a physical thrill back then, just
thinking about it. Moving in felt like she’d died and gone to
heaven. Now she was just looking at the place like a showpiece,
like a marketing proposition. She wasn’t seeing rooms she’d
decorated and lived in and thrilled to and enjoyed. There was no
pain. No wistful glances at places where she and Chester had fooled
around and laughed and ate and slept. Just a brisk and businesslike
determination to bring it all up to a whole new peak of
irresistibility.
The furniture movers had arrived first, just as
she’d planned. She had them take the credenza out of the hallway,
and then Chester’s armchair out of the living room. Not because it
was a bad piece, but because it was definitely an extra piece. It
was his favorite chair, chosen in the way men choose things, for
comfort and familiarity rather than for style and suitability. It
was the only piece they’d brought from their last house. He’d put
it next to the fireplace, at an angle. Day to day, she rather liked
it. It gave the room a comfortable lived-in quality. It was the
touch that changed the room from a magazine showpiece to a family
home. Which was exactly why it had to go.
She had the movers carry out the butcher’s block
table from the kitchen, too. She had thought long and hard about
that table. It certainly gave the kitchen a no-nonsense look. Like
it was a proper workplace, speaking of serious meals planned and
executed there. But without it, there was an uninterrupted
thirty-foot expanse of tiled floor running all the way to the bay
window. She knew that with fresh polish on the tile, the light from
the window would flood the whole thirty-foot span into a sea of
space. She had put herself in a prospective buyer’s shoes and asked
herself: Which would impress you more? A serious kitchen? Or a
drop-dead spacious kitchen? So the butcher’s block was in the
mover’s truck.
The TV from the den was in there, too. Chester
had a problem with television sets. Video had killed the home-movie
side of his business and he had no enthusiasm for buying the latest
and best of his competitors’ products. So the TV was an obsolete
RCA, not even a console model. It had shiny fake chrome around the
screen, and it bulged out like a gray fishbowl. She had seen better
sets junked on the sidewalk, looking down from the train when it
eased into the 125th Street station. So she’d had the movers clear
it out of the den and bring the bookcase down from the guest suite
to fill its space. She thought the room looked much better for it.
With just the bookcase and the leather couches and the dark
lampshades, it looked like a cultured room. An intelligent room. It
made it an aspirational space. Like a buyer would be buying a
lifestyle, not just a house.
She spent some time choosing books for the
coffee tables. Then the florist arrived with flat cardboard boxes
full of blooms. She had the girl wash all her vases and then left
her alone with a European magazine and told her to copy the
arrangements. The guy from Sheryl’s office brought the for-sale
sign and she had him plant it in the shoulder next to the mailbox.
Then the garden crew arrived at the same time the movers were
leaving, which required some awkward maneuvering out on the
driveway. She led the crew chief around the garden, explaining what
had to be done, and then she ducked back inside the house before
the roar of the mowers started up. The pool boy came to the door at
the same time as the cleaning service people arrived. She was
caught glancing left and right between them, momentarily overcome
and unsure of who to start first. But then she nodded firmly and
told the cleaners to wait and led the boy around to the pool and
showed him what needed doing. Then she ran back to the house,
feeling hungry, realizing she’d missed her lunch, but glowing with
satisfaction at the progress she was making.
THEY BOTH MADE it down the hallway to see him leave. The old man worked on the oxygen long enough to get himself up out of his chair, and then he wheeled the cylinder slowly ahead of him, partly leaning on it like a cane, partly pushing it like a golf trolley. His wife rustled along in front of him, her skirt brushing both doorjambs and both sides of the narrow passageway. Reacher followed behind them, with the leather folder tucked up under his arm. The old lady worked the lock on the door and the old man stood panting and gripping the handle of the cart. The door opened and sweet fresh air blew in.
“Any of Victor’s old friends still around here?”
Reacher asked.
“Is that important, Major?”
Reacher shrugged. He had learned a long time ago
the best way to prepare people for bad news was by looking very
thorough, right from the start. People listened better if they
thought you’d exhausted every possibility.
“I just need to build up some background,” he
said.
They looked mystified, but like they were ready
to think about it, because he was their last hope. He held their
son’s life in his hands, literally.
“Ed Steven, I guess, at the hardware store,” Mr.
Hobie said eventually. “Thick as thieves with Victor, from
kindergarten right through twelfth grade. But that was thirty-five
years ago, Major. Don’t see how it can matter now.”
Reacher nodded, because it didn’t matter
now.
“I’ve got your number,” he said. “I’ll call you,
soon as I know anything.”
“We’re relying on you,” the old lady said.
Reacher nodded again.
“It was a pleasure to meet you both,” he said.
“Thank you for the coffee and the cake. And I’m very sorry about
your situation.”
They made no reply. It was a hopeless thing to
say. Thirty years of agony, and he was sorry about their situation?
He just turned and shook their frail hands and stepped back outside
onto their overgrown path. Picked his way back to the Taurus,
carrying the folder, looking firmly ahead.
He reversed down the driveway, catching the
vegetation on both sides, and eased out of the track. Made the
right and headed south on the quiet road he’d left to find the
house. The town of Brighton firmed up ahead of him. The road
widened and smoothed out. There was a gas station and a fire-house.
A small municipal park with a Little League diamond. A supermarket
with a large parking lot, a bank, a row of small stores sharing a
common frontage, set back from the street.
The supermarket’s parking lot seemed to be the
geographic center of the town. He cruised slowly past it and saw a
nursery, with lines of shrubs in pots under a sprinkler which was
making rainbows in the sun. Then a large shed, dull red paint,
standing in its own lot: Steven’s Hardware. He swung the Taurus in
and parked next to a timber store in back.
The entrance was an insignificant door set in
the end wall of the shed. It gave onto a maze of aisles, packed
tight with every kind of thing he’d never had to buy. Screws,
nails, bolts, hand tools, power tools, garbage cans, mailboxes,
panes of glass, window units, doors, cans of paint. The maze led to
a central core, where four shop counters were set in a square under
bright fluorescent lighting. Inside the corral were a man and two
boys, dressed in jeans and shirts and red canvas aprons. The man
was lean and small, maybe fifty, and the boys were clearly his
sons, younger versions of the same face and physique, maybe
eighteen and twenty.
“Ed Steven?” Reacher asked.
The man nodded and set his head at an angle and
raised his eyebrows, like a guy who has spent thirty years dealing
with inquiries from salesmen and customers.
“Can I talk to you about Victor Hobie?”
The guy looked blank for a second, and then he
glanced sideways at his boys, like he was spooling backward all the
way through their lives and far beyond, back to when he last knew
Victor Hobie.
“He died in ‘Nam, right?” he said.
“I need some background.”
“Checking for his folks again?” He said it
without surprise, and there was an edge of weariness in there, too.
Like the Hobies’ problems were well known in the town, and gladly
tolerated, but no longer exciting any kind of urgent
sympathy.
Reacher nodded. “I need to get a feel for what
sort of a guy he was. Story is you knew him pretty well.”
Steven looked blank again. “Well, I did, I
guess. But we were just kids. I only saw him once, after high
school.”
“Want to tell me about him?”
“I’m pretty busy. I’ve got unloading to see
to.”
“I could give you a hand. We could talk while
we’re doing it.”
Steven started to say a routine no, but then he
glanced at Reacher, saw the size of him, and smiled like a laborer
who’s been offered the free use of a forklift.
“OK,” he said. “Out back.”
He came out from the corral of counters and led
Reacher through a rear door. There was a dusty pickup parked in the
sun next to an open shed with a tin roof. The pickup was loaded
with bags of cement. The shelves in the open shed were empty.
Reacher took his jacket off and laid it on the hood of the
truck.
The bags were made of thick paper. He knew from
his time with the pool gang that if he used two hands on the middle
of the bags, they would fold themselves over and split. The way to
do it was to clamp a palm on the comer and lift them one-handed.
That would keep the dust off his new shirt, too. The bags weighed a
hundred pounds, so he did them two at a time, one in each hand,
holding them out, counterbalanced away from his body. Steven
watched him, like he was a side-show at the circus.
“So tell me about Victor Hobie,” Reacher
grunted.
Steven shrugged. He was leaning on a post, under
the tin roof, out of the sun.
“Long time ago,” he said. “What can I tell you?
We were just kids, you know? Our dads were in the chamber of
commerce together. His was a printer. Mine ran this place, although
it was just a lumberyard back then. We were together all the way
through school. We started kindergarten on the same day, graduated
high school on the same day. I only saw him once after that, when
he was home from the Army. He’d been in Vietnam a year, and he was
going back again.”
“So what sort of a guy was he?”
Steven shrugged again. “I’m kind of wary about
giving you an opinion.”
“Why? Some kind of bad news in there?”
“No, no, nothing like that,” Steven said.
“There’s nothing to hide. He was a good kid. But I’d be giving you
one kid’s opinion about another kid from thirty-five years ago,
right? Might not be a reliable opinion.”
Reacher paused, with a hundred-pound bag in each
hand. Glanced back at Steve. He was leaning on his post in his red
apron, lean and fit, the exact picture of what Reacher assumed was
a typical cautious small-town Yankee businessman. The sort of guy
whose judgment might be reasonably solid. He nodded.
“OK, I can see that. I’ll take it into
account.”
Steven nodded back, like the ground rules were
clear. “How old are you?”
“Thirty-eight,” Reacher said.
“From around here?”
Reacher shook his head. “Not really from around
anywhere.”
“OK, couple of things you need to understand,”
Steven said. “This is a small small suburban town, and Victor and I
were born here in ‘48. We were already fifteen years old when
Kennedy got shot, and sixteen before the Beatles arrived, and
twenty when there was all that rioting in Chicago and L.A. You know
what I’m saying here?”
“Different world,” Reacher said.
“You bet your ass it was,” Steven said back. “We
grew up in a different world. Our whole childhood. To us, a real
daring guy was one who put baseball cards in the wheels of his
Schwinn. You need to bear that in mind, when you hear what I
say.”
Reacher nodded. Lifted the ninth and tenth bag
out of the pickup bed. He was sweating lightly, and worrying about
the state of his shirt when Jodie next saw it.
“Victor was a very straight kid,” Steven said.
“A very straight and normal kid. And like I say, for comparative
purposes, that was back when the rest of us thought we were the
bee’s knees for staying out until half past nine on a Saturday
night, drinking milk shakes.”
“What was he interested in?” Reacher
asked.
Steven blew out his cheeks and shrugged. “What
can I tell you? Same things as all the rest of us, I guess.
Baseball, Mickey Mantle. We liked Elvis, too. Ice cream, and the
Lone Ranger. Stuff like that. Normal stuff.”
“His dad said he always wanted to be a
soldier.”
“We all did. First it was cowboys and Indians,
then it was soldiers.”
“So did you go to ‘Nam?”
Steven shook his head. “No, I kind of moved on
from the soldier thing. Not because I disapproved. You got to
understand, this was way, way before all that longhair stuff
arrived up here. Nobody objected to the military. I wasn’t afraid
of it, either. Back then there was nothing to be afraid of. We were
the U.S., right? We were going to whip the ass off those
slanty-eyed gooks, six months maximum. Nobody was worried about
going. It just seemed old-fashioned. We all respected it, we all
loved the stories, but it seemed like yesterday’s thing, you know
what I mean? I wanted to go into business. I wanted to build my
dad’s yard up into a big corporation. That seemed like the thing to
do. To me, that seemed like more of an American thing than going
into the military. Back then, it seemed just as patriotic.”
“So you beat the draft?” Reacher asked.
Steven nodded. “Draft board called me, but I had
college applications pending and they skipped right over me. My dad
was close to the board chairman, which didn’t hurt any, I
guess.”
“How did Victor react to that?”
“He was fine with it. There was no issue about
it. I wasn’t antiwar or anything. I supported Vietnam, same as
anybody else. It was just a personal choice, yesterday’s thing or
tomorrow’s thing. I wanted tomorrow’s thing, Victor wanted the
Army. He kind of knew it was kind of, well, staid. Truth is, he was
pretty much influenced by his old man. He was four-F in World War
Two. Mine was a foot soldier, went to the Pacific. Victor kind of
felt his family hadn’t done its bit. So he wanted to do it, like a
duty. Sounds stuffy now, right? Duty? But we all thought like that,
back then. No comparison at all with the kids of today. We were all
pretty serious and old-fashioned around here, Victor maybe slightly
more than the rest of us. Very serious, very earnest. But not
really a whole lot out of the ordinary.”
Reacher was three-quarters through with the
bags. He stopped and rested against the pickup door. “Was he
smart?”
“Smart enough, I guess,” Steven said. “He did
well in school, without exactly setting the world on fire. We had a
few kids here, over the years, gone to be lawyers or doctors or
whatever. One of them went to NASA, a bit younger than Victor and
me. Victor was smart enough, but he had to work to get his grades,
as I recall.”
Reacher started with the bags again. He had
filled the farthest shelves first, which he was glad about, because
his forearms were starting to burn.
“Was he ever in any kind of trouble?”
Steven looked impatient. “Trouble? You haven’t
been listening to me, mister. Victor was straight as an arrow, back
when the worst kid would look like a complete angel today.”
Six bags to go. Reacher wiped his palms on his
pants.
“What was he like when you last saw him? Between
the two tours?”
Steven paused to think about it. “A little
older, I guess. I’d grown up a year, it seemed like he’d grown up
five. But he was no different. Same guy. Still serious, still
earnest. They gave him a parade when he came home, because he had a
medal. He was real embarrassed about it, said the medal was
nothing. Then he went away again, and he never came back.”
“How did you feel about that?”
Steven paused again. “Pretty bad, I guess. This
was a guy I’d known all my life. I’d have preferred him to come
back, of course, but I was real glad he didn’t come back in a
wheelchair or something, like a lot of them did.”
Reacher finished the work. He butted the last
bag into position on the shelf with the heel of his hand and leaned
on the post opposite Steven.
“What about the mystery? About what happened to
him?”
Steven shook his head and smiled, sadly.
“There’s no mystery. He was killed. This is about two old folks
refusing to accept three unpleasant truths, is all.”
“Which are?”
“Simple,” Steven said. “Truth one is their boy
died. Truth two is he died out there in some godforsaken
impenetrable jungle where nobody will ever find him. Truth three is
the government got dishonest around that time, and they stopped
listing the MIAs as casualties, so they could keep the numbers
reasonable. There were what? Maybe ten boys on Vic’s chopper when
it went down? That’s ten names they kept off the nightly news. It
was a policy, and it’s too late for them to admit to anything
now.”
“That’s your take?”
“Sure is,” Steven said. “The war went bad, and
the government went bad with it. Hard enough for my generation to
accept, let me tell you. You younger guys are probably more at home
with it, but you better believe the old folk like the Hobies are
never going to square up to it.”
He lapsed into silence, and glanced absently
back and forth between the empty pickup and the full shelves.
“That’s a ton of cement you shifted. You want to come in and wash
up and let me buy you a soda?”
“I need to eat,” Reacher said. “I missed
lunch.”
Steven nodded, and then he smiled, ruefully.
“Head south. There’s a diner right after the train station. That’s
where we used to drink milk shakes, half past nine Saturday night,
thinking we were practically Frank Sinatra.”
THE DINER HAD obviously changed many times since daring boys with baseball cards in the wheels of their bicycles had sipped milk shakes there on Saturday nights. Now it was a seventies-style eaterie, low and square, a brick facade, green roof, with a nineties-style gloss in the form of elaborate neon signs in every window, hot pinks and blues. Reacher took the leather-bound folder with him and pulled the door and stepped into chilly air smelling of freon and burgers and the strong stuff they squirt on the tables before wiping them down. He sat at the counter and a cheerful heavy girl of twenty-something boxed him in with flatware and a napkin and handed him a menu card the size of a billboard with photographs of the food positioned next to the written descriptions. He ordered a half-pounder, Swiss, rare, slaw and onion rings, and made a substantial wager with himself that it wouldn’t resemble the photograph in any way at all. Then he drank his ice water and got a refill before opening the folder.
He concentrated on Victor’s letters to his
folks. There were twenty-seven of them in total, thirteen from his
training postings and fourteen from Vietnam. They bore out
everything he’d heard from Ed Steven. Accurate grammar, accurate
spelling, plain, terse phrasing. The same handwriting used by
everybody educated in America between the twenties and the sixties,
but with a backward slant. A left-handed person. None of the
twenty-seven letters ran more than a few lines over the page. A
dutiful person. A person who knew it was considered impolite to end
a personal letter on the first page. A polite, dutiful,
left-handed, dull, conventional, normal person, solidly educated,
but no kind of a rocket scientist.
The girl brought him the burger. It was adequate
in itself, but very different from the gigantic feast depicted in
the photograph on the menu. The slaw was floating in whitened
vinegar in a crimped paper cup, and the onion rings were bloated
and uniform, like small brown automobile tires. The Swiss was
sliced so thin it was transparent, but it tasted like cheese.
The photograph taken after the passing-out
parade down at Rucker was harder to interpret. The focus was off,
and the peak of his cap put Victor’s eyes into deep shadow. His
shoulders were back, and his body was tense. Bursting with pride,
or embarrassed by his mother? It was hard to tell. In the end,
Reacher voted for pride, because of the mouth. It was a tight line,
slightly down at the edges, the sort of mouth that needs firm
control from the facial muscles to stop a huge joyful grin. This
was a photograph of a guy at the absolute peak of his life so far.
Every goal attained, every dream realized. Two weeks later, he was
overseas. Reacher shuffled through the letters for the note from
Mobile. It was written from a bunk, before sailing. Mailed by a
company clerk in Alabama. Sober phrases, a page and a quarter.
Emotions tightly checked. It communicated nothing at all.
He paid the check and left the girl a two-dollar
tip for being so cheerful. Would she have written home a
page-and-a-quarter of tight-assed nothingness the day she was
sailing off to war? No, but she would never sail off to war.
Victor’s helicopter went down maybe seven years before she was
born, and Vietnam was just something she had suffered through in
eleventh-grade history class.
It was way too early to head straight back to
Wall Street. Jodie had said seven o’clock. At least two hours to
kill, minimum. He slid into the Taurus and put the air on high to
blow the heat away. Then he flattened the Hertz map on the stiff
leather of the folder and traced a route away from Brighton. He
could take Route 9 south to the Bear Mountain Parkway, the Bear
east to the Taconic, the Taconic south to the Sprain, and the
Sprain would dump him out on the Bronx River Parkway. That road
would take him straight down to the Botanical Gardens, which was a
place he had never been, and a place he was pretty keen to
visit.
MARILYN GOT TO her lunch a little after three o’clock. She had checked the cleaning crew’s work before she let them leave, and they had done a perfect job. They had used a steam-cleaner on the hall rug, not because it was dirty, but because it was the best way of raising up the dents in the pile left by the credenza’s feet. The steam swelled the wool fibers, and after a thorough vacuuming nobody was ever going to know a heavy piece of furniture had once rested there.
She took a long shower and wiped out the stall
with a kitchen towel to leave the tiling dry and shiny. She combed
her hair and left it to air-dry. She knew the June humidity would
put a slight curl in it. Then she got dressed, which involved one
garment only. She put on Chester’s favorite thing, a dark pink silk
sheath which worked best with nothing on underneath. It came just
above the knee, and although it wasn’t exactly tight, it clung in
all the right places, as if it had been made for her, which in fact
it had been, although Chester wasn’t aware of that. He thought it
was just a lucky off-the-peg accident. She was happy to let him
think that, not because of the money, but because it felt a little,
well, brazen to admit to having such a sexy thing custom-made. And
the effect on him was, frankly, brazen. It was like a trigger. She
used it when she thought he needed rewarding. Or deflecting. And he
was going to need deflecting tonight. He was going to arrive home
and find his house up for sale and his wife in charge. Any old way
she looked at it, it was going to be a difficult evening, and she
was prepared to use any advantage she could to get through it,
brazen or not.
She chose the Gucci heels which matched the
sheath’s color and made her legs look long. Then she went down to
the kitchen and ate her lunch, which was an apple and a square of
reduced-fat cheese, and then she went back upstairs and brushed her
teeth again and thought about makeup. Being naked under the dress
and with her hair down in a natural style, the way to go was really
no makeup at all, but she was prepared to admit she was just a
little way past being able to get away with that, so she set out on
the long haul of making herself up so she would look like she
hadn’t troubled to.
It took her twenty minutes; and then she did her
nails, toes too, because she felt that counted when it was likely
her shoes would be coming off early. Then she dabbed her favorite
perfume on, enough to be noticed without being overwhelming. Then
the phone rang. It was Sheryl.
“Marilyn?” she said. “Six hours on the market,
and you’ve got a nibble!”
“I have? But who? And how?”
“I know, the very first day, before you’re even
listed anywhere, isn’t it wonderful? It’s a gentleman who’s
relocating with his family, and he was cruising the area, getting a
feel for it, and he saw your sign. He came straight over here for
the particulars. Are you ready? Can I bring him right over?”
“Wow, right now? Already? This is quick, isn’t
it? But yes, I guess I’m ready. Who is it, Sheryl? You think he’s a
serious buyer?”
“Definitely I do, and he’s only here today. He
has to go back west tonight.”
“OK, well, bring him on over, I guess. I’ll be
ready.”
She realized she must have been rehearsing the
whole routine, unconsciously, without really being aware of it. She
moved fast, but she wasn’t flustered. She hung up the phone and ran
straight down to the kitchen and switched the oven on low. Spooned
a heap of coffee beans onto a saucer and placed them on the middle
shelf. Shut the oven door and turned to the sink. Dropped the apple
core into the waste disposal and stacked the plate in the
dishwasher. Wiped the sink down with a paper towel and stood back,
hands on hips, scanning the room. She walked to the window and
angled the blind until the light caught the shine on the
floor.
“Perfect,” she said to herself.
She ran back up the stairs and started at the
top of the house. She ducked into every room, scanning, checking,
adjusting flowers, angling blinds, plumping pillows. She turned
lamps on everywhere. She had read that to turn them on after the
buyer was already in the room was a clear message the house was
gloomy. Better to have them on from the outset, which was a clear
message of cheerful welcome.
She ran back down the stairs. In the family
room, she opened the blind all the way to show off the pool. In the
den, she turned on the reading lamps and tilted the blind almost
closed, to give a dark, comfortable look. Then she ducked into the
living room. Shit, Chester’s side-table was still there. right next
to where his armchair had been. How could she have missed that? She
grabbed it two-handed and ran with it to the basement stairs. She
heard Sheryl’s car on the gravel. She opened the basement door and
ran down and dumped the table and ran back up. Closed the door on
it and ducked into the powder room. Straightened the guest towel
and dabbed at her hair and checked herself in the mirror. God! She
was wearing her silk sheath. With nothing underneath. The silk was
clinging to her skin. What the hell was this poor guy going to
think?
The doorbell rang. She was frozen. Did she have
time to change? Of course not. They were at the door, right now,
ringing the bell. A jacket or something? The doorbell rang again.
She took a breath and shook her hips to loosen the fabric and
walked down the hall. Took another breath and opened the
door.
Sheryl beamed in at her, but Marilyn was already
looking at the buyer. He was a tallish man, maybe fifty or
fifty-five, gray, in a dark suit, standing side-on, looking out and
back at the plantings along the driveway. She glanced down at his
shoes, because Chester always said wealth and breeding shows up on
the feet. These looked pretty good. Heavy Oxfords, polished to a
shine. She started a smile. Was this going to be it? Sold within
six hours? That would be a hell of a thing. She smiled a quick
conspirator’s smile with Sheryl and turned to the man.
“Come in,” she said brightly, and held out her
hand.
He turned back from the garden to face her. He
stared straight at her, frankly and blatantly. She felt naked under
his gaze. She practically was naked. But she found herself staring
right back at him, because he was terribly burned. One side of his
head was just a mass of shiny pink scars. She kept her polite smile
frozen in place and kept her hand extended toward him. He paused.
Brought his hand up to meet it. But it wasn’t a hand. It was a
shining metal hook. Not an artificial hand, not a clever prosthetic
device, just a wicked metal curve made of gleaming steel.
REACHER WAS AT the curb outside the sixty-story building on Wall Street ten minutes before seven o’clock. He kept the motor running and scanned a triangle that had its point on the building’s exit door and spread sideways across the plaza past the distance where somebody could get to her before he could. There was nobody inside the triangle who worried him. Nobody static, nobody watching, just a thin stream of office workers jostling out to the street, jackets over their arms, bulky briefcases in their hands. Most of them were making a left on the sidewalk, heading for the subway. Some of them were threading through the cars at the curb, looking for cabs out in the traffic stream.
The other parked cars were harmless. There was a
UPS truck two places ahead, and a couple of livery vehicles with
drivers standing next to them, scanning for their passengers.
Innocent bustle, at the weary end of a busy day. Reacher settled
back in his seat to wait, his eyes flicking left and right, ahead
and behind, always returning to the revolving door.
She came out before seven, which was sooner than
he expected. He saw her through the glass, in the lobby. He saw her
hair, and her dress, and the flash of her legs as she skipped
sideways to the exit. He wondered for a second if she had just been
waiting up on her high floor. The timing was plausible. She could
have seen the car from her window, gone straight to the elevator.
She pushed the door and spilled out onto the plaza. He got out of
the car and moved around the hood to the sidewalk and stood
waiting. She was carrying the pilot’s case. She skipped through a
shaft of sun and her hair lit up like a halo. Ten yards from him,
she smiled.
“Hello, Reacher,” she called.
“Hello, Jodie,” he said.
She knew something. He could see it in her face.
She had big news for him, but she was smiling like she was going to
tease him with it.
“What?” he asked.
She smiled again and shook her head. “You first,
OK?”
They sat in the car and he ran through
everything the old couple had told him. Her smile faded and she
turned somber. Then he gave her the leather-bound folder and left
her to scan through it while he fought the traffic in a narrow
counterclockwise square that left them facing south on Broadway,
two blocks from her place. He pulled in at the curb outside an
espresso bar. She was reading the reconnaissance report from Rutter
and studying the photograph of the emaciated gray man and the Asian
soldier.
“Incredible,” she said, quietly.
“Give me your keys,” he said back. “Get a coffee
and I’ll walk up for you when I know your building’s OK.”
She made no objection. The photograph had shaken
her up. She just went into her bag for her keys and got out of the
car and skipped straight across the sidewalk and into the coffee
shop. He watched her inside and then eased south down the street.
He turned directly into her garage. It was a different car, and he
figured if anybody was waiting down there they would hesitate long
enough to give him all the advantage he would need. But the garage
was quiet. Just the same group of parked vehicles, looking like
they hadn’t moved all day. He put the Taurus in her slot and went
up the metal stairs to the lobby. Nobody there. Nobody in the
elevator, nobody in the fourth-floor hallway. Her door was
undamaged. He opened it up and stepped inside. Quiet, still air.
Nobody there.
He used the fire stairs to get back to the lobby
and went out the glass doors to the street. Walked the two blocks
north and ducked into the coffee shop and found her alone at a
chrome table, reading Victor Hobie’s letters, an espresso untouched
at her elbow.
“You going to drink that?” he asked.
She stacked the jungle photograph on top of the
letters.
“This has big implications,” she said.
He took that for a no, and pulled the cup over
and swallowed the coffee in one mouthful. It had cooled slightly
and was wonderfully strong.
“Let’s go,” she said. She let him carry her case
and took his arm for the two-block walk. He gave back her keys at
the street door and they went in through the lobby together and up
in the elevator in silence. She unlocked the apartment door and
went inside ahead of him.
“So it’s government people after us,” she
said.
He made no reply. Just shrugged off his new
jacket and dropped it on the sofa under the Mondrian copy.
“Has to be,” she said.
He walked to the windows and cracked the blinds.
Shafts of daylight poured in and the white room glowed.
“We’re close to the secret of these camps,” she
said. “So the government is trying to silence us. CIA or
somebody.”
He walked through to the kitchen. Pulled the
refrigerator door and took out a bottle of water.
“We’re in serious danger,” she said. “You don’t
seem very worried about it ”
He shrugged and took a swallow of water. It was
too cold. He preferred it room temperature.
“Life’s too short for worrying,” he said.
“Dad was worrying. It was making his heart
worse.”
He nodded. “I know. I’m sorry.”
“So why aren’t you taking it seriously? Don’t
you believe it?”
“I believe it,” he said. “I believe everything
they told me.”
“And the photograph proves it, right? The place
obviously exists.”
“I know it exists,” he said. “I’ve been
there.”
She stared at him. “You’ve been there? When?
How?”
“Not long ago,” he said. “I got just about as
close as this Rutter guy got.”
“Christ, Reacher,” she said. “So what are you
going to do about it?”
“I’m going to buy a gun.”
“No, we should go to the cops. Or the
newspapers, maybe. The government can’t do this.”
“You wait for me here, OK?”
“Where are you going?”
“I’m going to buy a gun. Then I’ll buy us some
pizza. I’ll bring it back.”
“You can’t buy a gun, not in New York City, for
God’s sake. There are laws. You need ID and permits and things and
you’ve got to wait five days anyway.”
“I can buy a gun anywhere,” he said. “Especially
New York City. What do you want on the pizza?”
“Have you got enough money?”
“For the pizza?”
“For the gun,” she said.
“The gun will cost me less than the pizza,” he
said. “Lock the door behind me, OK? And don’t open it unless you
see it’s me in the spy hole.”
He left her standing in the center of the
kitchen. He used the fire stairs to the lobby and stood in the
bustle on the sidewalk long enough to get himself lined up with the
geography. There was a pizza parlor on the block to the south. He
ducked inside and ordered a large pie, half anchovies and capers,
half hot pepperoni, to go in thirty minutes. Then he dodged traffic
on Broadway and struck out east. He’d been in New York enough times
to know what people say is true. Everything happens fast in New
York. Things change fast. Fast in terms of chronology, and fast in
terms of geography. One neighborhood shifts into another within a
couple of blocks. Sometimes, the front of a building is a
middle-class paradise, and around the back bums are sleeping in the
alley. He knew a fast ten-minute walk was going to take him worlds
away from Jodie’s expensive apartment block.
He found what he was looking for in the shadows
under the approach to the Brooklyn Bridge. There was a messy tangle
of streets crouching there, and a giant housing project sprawling
to the north and east. Some ragged cluttered stores, and a
basketball court with chains under the hoops instead of nets. The
air was hot and damp and filled with fumes and noise. He turned a
comer and stood leaning on the chain-link with the basketball
noises behind him, watching two worlds collide. There was a rapid
traffic flow of vehicles driving and people walking fast, and an
equal quantity of cars stopped and idling and people standing
around in bunches. The moving cars tacked around the stopped ones,
honking and swerving, and the walking people pushed and complained
and dodged into the gutter to pass the knots of loiterers.
Sometimes a car would stop short and a boy would dart forward to
the driver’s window. There would be a short conversation and money
would change hands like a conjuring trick and the boy would dart
back to a doorway and disappear. He would reappear a moment later
and hustle back to the car. The driver would glance left and right
and accept a small package and force back into the traffic in a
burble of exhaust and a blast of horns. Then the boy would return
to the sidewalk and wait.
Sometimes the trade was on foot, but the system
was always the same. The boys were the cut-outs. They carried the
money in and the packages out, and they were too young to go to
trial. Reacher was watching them use three doorways in particular,
spaced out along the block frontage. The center of the three was
doing the busiest trade. About two-to-one, in terms of commercial
volume. It was the eleventh building, counting up from the south
corner. He pushed off the fence and turned east. There was a vacant
lot ahead which gave him a glimpse of the river. The bridge soared
over his head. He turned north and came up behind the buildings in
a narrow alley. Scanned ahead as he walked and counted eleven fire
escapes. Dropped his glance to ground level and saw a black sedan
jammed into the narrow space outside the eleventh rear entrance.
There was a boy of maybe nineteen sitting on the trunk lid, with a
mobile phone in his hand. The back-door guard, one step up the
promotion ladder from his baby brothers shuttling back and forward
across the sidewalk.
There was nobody else around. The boy was on his
own. Reacher stepped into the alley. The way to do it is to walk
fast and focus on something way beyond your target. Make the guy
feel like he’s got nothing to do with anything. Reacher made a show
of checking his watch and glancing far ahead into the distance. He
hustled along, almost running. At the last minute, he dropped his
gaze to the car, like he was suddenly dragged back into the present
by the obstacle. The boy was watching him. Reacher dodged left,
where he knew the angle of the car wouldn’t let him through. He
pulled up in exasperation and dodged right, turning with the
pent-up fury of a hurrying man balked by a nuisance. He swung his
left arm with the turn and hit the kid square in the side of the
head. The kid toppled and he hit him again, right-handed, just a
short-arm jab, relatively gentle. No reason to put him in the
hospital.
He let him fall off the trunk lid unaided, to
see how far away he’d put him. A conscious person will always break
his fall. This kid didn’t. He hit the alley floor with a dusty
thump. Reacher rolled him over and checked his pockets. There was a
gun in there, but it wasn’t the sort of thing he was going to bear
home in triumph. It was a Chinese .22, some imitation of a Soviet
imitation of something that was probably useless to start with. He
pitched it out of reach under the car.
He knew the back door of the tenement would be
unlocked, because that’s the point of a back door when you’re doing
a roaring trade about 150 yards south of Police Plaza. They come in
the front, you need to be able to get out the back without fumbling
for the key. He inched it open with his toe and stood gazing into
the gloom. There was an inner door off the back hallway, leading to
the right, into a room with a light on inside. It was about ten
paces away.
No point in waiting. They weren’t about to take
a dinner break. He walked ahead ten paces and stopped at the door.
The building stank of decay and sweat and urine. It was quiet. An
abandoned building. He listened. There was a low voice inside the
room. Then an answer to it. Two people, minimum.
Swinging the door open and standing and taking
stock of the scene inside is not the way to do it. The guy who
pauses even for a millisecond is the guy who dies earlier than his
classmates. Reacher’s guess was the tenement was maybe fifteen feet
wide, of which three were represented by the hallway he was
standing in. So he aimed to be the other twelve feet into the room
before they even knew he was there. They would still be looking at
the door, wondering who else was coming in after him.
He took a breath and burst through the door like
it wasn’t there at all. It crashed back against the hinge and he
was across the room in two huge strides. Dim light. A single
electric bulb. Two men. Packages on the table. Money on the table.
A handgun on the table. He hit the first guy a wide swinging
roundhouse blow square on the temple. The guy fell sideways and
Reacher drove through him with a knee in the gut on his way back to
the second man, who was coming up out of his chair with his eyes
wide and his mouth open in shock. Reacher aimed high and smacked
him with a forearm smash exactly horizontal between his eyebrows
and his hairline. Do it hard enough, and the guy goes down for an
hour, but his skull stays in one piece. This was supposed to be a
shopping trip, not an execution.
He stood still and listened through the door.
Nothing. The guy in the alley was sleeping and the noise on the
street was occupying the kids on the sidewalk. He glanced at the
table and glanced away again, because the handgun lying there was a
Colt Detective Special. A six-shot, .38-caliber revolver in blued
steel with black plastic grips. Stubby little two-inch barrel. No
good at all. Nowhere near the sort of thing he was looking for. The
short barrel was a drawback, and the caliber was a disappointment.
He remembered a Louisiana cop he’d met, a police captain from some
small jurisdiction out in the bayou. The guy had come to the
military police for firearms advice and Reacher had been detailed
to deal with him. The guy had all kinds of tales of woe about the
.38-caliber revolvers his men were using. He said you just can’t rely on them to put a guy down, not if
he’s coming at you all pumped up on angel dust. He told a story
about a suicide. The guy needed five shots to the head with a .38
to put himself away. Reacher had been impressed by the guy’s
unhappy face and he had decided then and there to stay away from
.38s, which was a policy he was not about to change now. So he
turned his back on the table and stood still and listened again.
Nothing. He squatted next to the guy he’d hit in the head and
started through his jacket.
The busiest dealers make the most money, and the
most money buys the best toys, which was why he was in this
building, and not in one of the slower rivals up or down the
street. He found exactly what he wanted in the guy’s left-hand
inner pocket. Something a whole lot better than a puny .38
Detective Special. It was a big black automatic, a Steyr GB, a
handsome nine-millimeter which had been a big favorite of his
Special Forces friends through most of his career. He pulled it out
and checked it over. The magazine had all eighteen shells in it and
the chamber smelled like it had never been fired. He pulled the
trigger and watched the mechanism move. Then he reassembled the gun
and jammed it under his belt in the small of his back and smiled.
Stayed down next to the unconscious guy and whispered, “I’ll buy
your Steyr for a buck. Just shake your head if you’ve got a problem
with that, OK?”
Then he smiled again and stood up. Peeled a
dollar bill off his roll and left it weighted down on the tabletop
under the Detective Special. Stepped back to the hallway. All
quiet. He made the ten paces to the back and came out into the
light. Checked left and right up and down the alley and stepped
over to the parked sedan. Opened the driver’s door and found the
lever and popped the trunk. There was a black nylon sports bag in
there, empty. A small cardboard box of nine-millimeter reloads
under a tangle of red and black jump leads. He put the ammunition
in the bag and walked away with it. The pizza was waiting for him
when he arrived back on Broadway.
IT WAS SUDDEN. It happened without warning. As soon as they were inside and the door was closed, the man hit Sheryl, a vicious backhand blow to the face with whatever was inside his empty sleeve. Marilyn was frozen with shock. She saw the man twisting violently and the hook swinging through its glittering arc and she heard the wet crunch as his arm hit Sheryl’s face and she clamped both hands over her mouth as if it were somehow vitally important she didn’t scream. She saw the man spinning back toward her and reaching up under his right armpit and coming out with a gun in his left hand. She saw Sheryl going over backward and sprawling on the rug, right where it was still damp from the steam cleaning. She saw the gun arcing at her along the exact same radius he had used before, but in the reverse direction, coming straight at her. The gun was made of dark metal, gray, dewed with oil. It was dull, but it shone. It stopped level with her chest, and she stared down at its color, and all she could think was: that’s what they mean when they say gunmetal.
“Step closer,” the man said.
She was paralyzed. Her hands were clamped to her
face and her eyes were open so wide she thought the skin on her
face would tear.
“Closer,” the man said again.
She stared down at Sheryl. She was struggling up
on her elbows. Her eyes were crossed and blood was running from her
nose. Her top lip was swelling and the blood was dripping off her
chin. Her knees were up and her skirt was rucked. She could see her
panty hose change from thin to thick at the top. Her breathing was
ragged. Then her elbows gave way again and slid forward and her
knees splayed out. Her head hit the floor with a soft thump and
rolled sideways.
“Step closer,” the man said.
She stared at his face. It was rigid. The scars
looked like hard plastic. One eye was hooded under an eyelid as
thick and coarse as a thumb. The other was cold and unblinking. She
stared at the gun. It was a foot away from her chest. Not moving.
The hand that held it was smooth. The nails were manicured. She
stepped forward a quarter step.
“Closer.”
She slid her feet forward until the gun was
touching the fabric of her dress. She felt the hardness and the
coldness of the gray metal through the thin silk.
“Closer.”
She stared at him. His face was a foot away from
hers. On the left the skin was gray and lined. The good eye was
webbed with lines. The right eye blinked. The eyelid was slow and
heavy. It went down, then up, deliberately, like a machine. She
leaned forward an inch. The gun pressed into her breast.
“Closer.”
She moved her feet. He answered with matching
pressure on the gun. The metal was pressing hard into the softness
of her flesh. It was crushing her breast. The silk was yielding
into a deep crater. It was pulling her nipple sideways. It was
hurting her. The man raised his right arm. The hook. He held it up
in front of her eyes. It was a plain steel curve, rubbed and
polished until it shone. He rotated it slowly, with an awkward
movement of his forearm. She heard leather inside his sleeve. The
tip of the hook was machined to a point. He rotated the tip away
and laid the flat of the curve against her forehead. She flinched.
It was cold. He scraped it down her forehead and traced the curve
of her nose. In under her nose. He pressed it against her top lip.
Brought it down and in and pressed until her mouth opened. He
tapped it gently against her teeth. It caught on her bottom lip,
because her lip was dry. He dragged her lip down with the steel
until the soft rubbery flesh pulled free. He traced over the curve
of her chin. Down under her chin to her throat. Up again an inch,
and back, under the shelf of her jaw, until he was forcing her head
up with the strength in his shoulder. He stared into her
eyes.
“My name is Hobie,” he said.
She was up on tiptoes, trying to take the weight
off her throat. She was starting to gag. She couldn’t remember
taking a breath since she had opened the door.
“Did Chester mention me?”
Her head was tilting upward. She was staring at
the ceiling. The gun was digging into her breast. It was no longer
cold. The heat of her body had warmed it. She shook her head, a
small urgent motion, balanced on the pressure of the hook.
“He didn’t mention me?”
“No,” she gasped. “Why? Should he have?”
“Is he a secretive man?”
She shook her head again. The same small urgent
motion, side to side, the skin of her throat snagging left and
right against the metal.
“Did he tell you about his business
problems?”
She blinked. Shook her head again.
“So he is a secretive man.”
“I guess,” she gasped. “But I knew
anyway.”
“Does he have a girlfriend?”
She blinked again. Shook her head.
“How can you be sure?” Hobie asked. “If he’s a
secretive man?”
“What do you want?” she gasped.
“But I guess he doesn’t need a girlfriend.
You’re a very beautiful woman.”
She blinked again. She was up on her toes. The
Gucci heels were off the ground.
“I just paid you a compliment,” Hobie said.
“Oughtn’t you say something in response? Politely?”
He increased the pressure. The steel dug into
the flesh of her throat. One foot came free of the ground.
“Thank you,” she gasped.
The hook eased down. Her eye line came back to
the horizontal and her heels touched the rug. She realized she was
breathing. She was panting, in and out, in and out.
“A very beautiful woman.”
He dropped the hook away from her throat. It
touched her waist. Traced down over the curve of her hip. Down over
her thigh. He was staring at her face. The gun was jammed hard in
her flesh. The hook turned, and the flat face of the curve lifted
off her thigh, leaving just the point behind. It traced downward.
She felt it slide off the silk onto her bare leg. It was sharp. Not
like a needle. Like a pencil point. It stopped moving. It started
back up. He was pressing with it, gently. It wasn’t cutting her.
She knew that. But it was furrowing against the firmness of her
skin. It moved up. It slid under the silk. She felt the metal on
the skin of her thigh. It moved up. She could feel the silk of her
dress bunching and gathering in the radius of the hook. The hook
moved up. The back of the hem was sliding up the backs of her legs.
Sheryl stirred on the floor. The hook stopped moving and Hobie’s
awful right eye swiveled slowly across and down.
“Put your hand in my pocket,” he said.
She stared at him.
“Your left hand,” he said. “My right
pocket.”
She had to move closer and reach over and down
between his arms. Her face was close to his. He smelled of soap.
She felt around to his pocket. Darted her fingers inside and closed
them over a small cylinder. Slid it out. It was a used roll of duct
tape, an inch in diameter. Silver. Maybe five yards remaining.
Hobie stepped away from her.
“Tape Sheryl’s wrists together,” he said.
She wriggled her hips to make the hem of her
dress fall down into place. He watched her do it and smiled. She
glanced between the roll of silver tape and Sheryl, down on the
floor.
“Turn her over,” he said.
The light from the window was catching the gun.
She knelt next to Sheryl. Pulled on one shoulder and pushed on the
other until she flopped over on her front.
“Put her elbows together,” he said.
She hesitated. He raised the gun a fraction, and
then the hook, arms wide, a display of superior weaponry. She
grimaced. Sheryl stirred again. Her blood had pooled on the rug. It
was brown and sticky. Marilyn used both hands and forced her elbows
together, behind her back. Hobie looked down.
“Get them real close,” he said.
She picked at the tape with her nail and got a
length free. Wrapped it around and around Sheryl’s forearms, just
below her elbows.
“Tight,” he said. “All the way up.”
She wound the tape around and around, up above
her elbows and down to her wrists. Sheryl was stirring and
struggling.
“OK, sit her up,” Hobie said.
She dragged her into a sitting position with her
taped arms behind her. Her face was masked in blood. Her nose was
swollen, going blue. Her lips were puffy.
“Put tape on her mouth,” Hobie said.
She used her teeth and bit off a six-inch
length. Sheryl was blinking and focusing. Marilyn shrugged
unhappily at her, like a helpless apology, and stuck the tape over
her mouth. It was thick tape, with tough reinforcing threads baked
into the silver plastic coating. It was shiny, but not slippery,
because of the raised crisscross threads. She rubbed her fingers
side to side across them to make it stick. Sheryl’s nose started
bubbling and her eyes opened wide in panic.
“God, she can’t breathe,” Marilyn gasped.
She went to rip the tape off again, but Hobie
kicked her hand away.
“You broke her nose,” Marilyn said. “She can’t
breathe.”
The gun was pointing down at her head. Held
steady. Eighteen inches away.
“She’s going to die,” Marilyn said.
“That’s for damn sure,” Hobie said back.
She stared up at him in horror. Blood was
rasping and bubbling in Sheryl’s fractured airways. Her eyes were
staring in panic. Her chest was heaving. Hobie’s eyes were on
Marilyn’s face.
“You want me to be nice?” he asked.
She nodded wildly.
“Are you going to be nice back?”
She stared at her friend. Her chest was
convulsing, heaving for air that wasn’t there. Her head was shaking
from side to side. Hobie leaned down and turned the hook so the
point was rasping across the tape on Sheryl’s mouth as her head
jerked back and forth. Then he jabbed hard and forced the point
through the silver. Sheryl froze. Hobie moved his arm, left and
right, up and down. Pulled the hook back out. There was a ragged
hole left in the tape, with air whistling in and out. The tape
sucked and blew against her lips as Sheryl gasped and panted.
“I was nice,” Hobie said. “So now you owe me,
OK?”
Sheryl’s breathing was sucking hard through the
hole in the tape. She was concentrating on it. Her eyes were
squinting down, like she was confirming there was air in front of
her to use. Marilyn was watching her, sitting back on her heels,
cold with terror.
“Help her to the car,” Hobie said.