Lee Child - A Wanted Man

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Nebraska – and Jack Reacher, huge, hulking and with a freshly busted nose, is still trying to hitch a ride east to Virginia. He's picked up by three strangers – two men and a woman.
Immediately he knows they're all lying about something – and then they run into a police roadblock on the highway. But they get through. Because the three are innocent? Or because the three are now four?
Is Reacher a decoy?

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‘You’re not convincing me. You’re not helping your personal situation.’

‘Why am I calling you?’

‘Maybe you want a deal.’

‘I don’t. I don’t need a deal. I need to help Delfuenso if I can, and then I need to go to Virginia.’

‘Why would you need to help Delfuenso?’

‘Why wouldn’t I? I’m a human being.’

No answer from Sorenson.

Reacher asked, ‘What did those guys do, anyway?’

‘I think I won’t discuss that with you. Not yet.’

‘I know they jacked Delfuenso’s car. I know they had blood on their clothes.’

‘How do you know that? They bought shirts and changed.’

‘Delfuenso told me.’

‘You talked?’

‘She blinked it out. In secret. A simple letter code.’

‘Smart woman. Brave woman, too.’

‘I know,’ Reacher said. ‘She warned me about the guns. I let her down.’

‘Evidently.’

‘You didn’t do so great either, with the two-man APB.’

‘One would think a BOLO for two men would logically include more than two. By a simple inference.’

‘Troopers don’t infer things. They don’t take the initiative. Nine times out of ten it gets them in trouble.’

Sorenson asked, ‘How is Delfuenso doing?’

Reacher said, ‘She’s not exactly having the time of her life.’

‘She has a kid back home.’

‘I know,’ Reacher said. ‘She told me.’

Sorenson asked, ‘Do you have access to a vehicle?’

Reacher said, ‘Not really. There are a couple here I might be able to borrow, but it’s pointless anyway. Those guys could be anywhere by now.’

‘What’s your name?’

‘Not yet.’

‘OK, stay right where you are. I’ll see you when I get there.’

‘You might,’ Reacher said. ‘Or you might not.’

Drive faster still , the nasal guy had said, and Sorenson tried very hard to. She eased up to nearly a hundred miles an hour, which was outside her personal comfort zone. But the road was straight and wide and empty. I never saw them before , he had said. I was hitching rides . Did she believe him? Maybe. Or maybe not. It was a very neat and comprehensive explanation of the facts. Therefore perhaps suspicious in itself. Because real life was neither neat nor comprehensive. Not usually. And who hitchhiked any more? Especially in the wintertime? The guy sounded educated. And not noticeably young. Not a normal hitchhiking demographic. Statistics. The Bureau found them to be a useful guide.

And: They shot at me . But: They missed . Either extreme good fortune, or extremely good playacting. Getting shot at by the indisputably guilty helped build credibility. Perhaps all concerned had figured that out well ahead of time.

Then her low-fuel warning pinged at her and a little lamp lit up yellow. Dumb. Not a great time to run out of gas. Not a great place, either. Iowa was a lonely state. Exits were many miles apart. Each one was an event in its own right. She took the next she saw, a no-name turn a little east of Des Moines. She could see gas station lights ahead, blue and white in the mist. The ramp led to a two-lane county road, and she saw the gas station itself a hundred feet away to the south. It was a big place, set up for trucks as well as cars. The car part had six pumps. There was a small pay hut, and a bathroom block standing alone on the edge of the lot. Across the street was a long barn-shaped building with Food And Drink All Day All Night painted in white on the slope of its roof.

She pumped the gas and heard the nasal voice in her head again: I’ve lost them anyway. The roads out here are impossible. I’m going to have to come at this from a different direction . Twenty-two words. Resignation, frustration, and then a new resolution. The first-person singular, used twice. The instinctive assumption of individual personal responsibility for the fate of another. And determination. And knowledge, too. She had said One would think a BOLO for two men would logically include more than two . A BOLO. A be-on-the-lookout. He hadn’t needed to ask what it meant. He already knew. Then he had said: Troopers don’t infer things. They don’t take the initiative. Nine times out of ten it gets them in trouble . Which was a perceptive comment. As was: I think they were expecting roadblocks and they wanted cover . Which matched her own thinking exactly.

Resolute, responsible, determined, knowledgeable, and perceptive.

Driving two murderers in a stolen car.

With a hostage.

Why am I calling you?

Who the hell was this guy?

THIRTY-TWO

REACHER SPILLED BROCHURES out of the tourist-attraction rack in the lobby until he found one with something approximating a map. It was not an outstanding example of the cartographer’s art. But it was the best the place had to offer. It was basically a hand-drawn rectangle with Kansas City at the bottom left, and St Louis at the bottom right, and Des Moines at the top left, and Cedar Rapids at the top right. In between those four anchoring cities was a lot of white space, with a bunch of little icons describing things Reacher wasn’t interested in.

He was interested in the white space itself, particularly the upper half of it. The Iowa half. Thirtieth out of fifty in population, twenty-sixth out of fifty in land area, but Iowa had a quarter of America’s best-grade topsoil all to itself, and therefore it was at the head of the list when it came to corn and soybeans and hogs and cattle. Which meant spare, sparse habitation, and miles between neighbours, and lonely isolated buildings of uncertain purpose, and a kind of live-and-let-live lack of curiosity about who was doing what, and where and when and how and why they were doing it at all.

The two worst places to search were densely populated cities, and wide open countryside. Reacher had succeeded in those environments many times, but he had failed there too. Also many times.

Behind him the fat man said, ‘Who’s going to pay for the hole in my wall?’

Reacher said, ‘Not me.’

‘Well, someone will have to.’

‘What are you, a socialist? Pay for it yourself. Or fix it yourself. It isn’t brain surgery. Two minutes and a tub of spackle will take care of it.’

‘It’s not right that a person should just burst in here and do a thing like that.’

Reacher said, ‘I’m busy.’

‘Doing what?’

‘I’m thinking.’

‘You’re looking at a blank sheet of paper.’

‘You got a better map?’

‘It wasn’t right.’

‘Shit happens. Get over it.’

‘That bullet could have come through the wall and hit me.’

‘Are you kidding? Look where it is.’

‘But whoever fired it didn’t know I was short. Not in advance. How could they? It was completely reckless. It was totally irresponsible.’

‘You think?’

‘I could have been hurt.’

‘But you weren’t. So don’t worry about it.’

‘I could have been killed.’

‘Look where it is,’ Reacher said again. ‘It would have missed if you were standing on your own shoulders.’

Then the phone rang in the office and the guy ducked back in to answer it. He came straight back out and said, ‘It’s the FBI, for the man with the broken nose. That would be you, I suppose.’

Reacher said, ‘Pretty soon it could be either one of us, if you don’t stop yapping at me.’

He took the map with him to the desk and picked up the receiver. It was the Scandinavian woman again. Originally from Minnesota. Julia Sorenson. She said, ‘You’re still there.’

‘Evidently,’ Reacher said.

‘Why?’

‘I told you why. The roads here are like graph paper. Pointless trying to follow anyone more than two minutes ahead.’

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