‘I’ll move on today,’ Reacher said. ‘I don’t want to cause him any trouble.’
‘I’m afraid it’s you that will have the trouble. How do you plan to move on?’
‘I’ll hitch a ride. I’ll set up south of the crossroads. I’ve done it before.’
‘Will the first car you see stop?’
‘It might.’
‘What are the chances?’
‘Low.’
‘The first car you see won’t stop. Because almost certainly the first car you see will be a local resident, and that person will get straight on the phone and tell the Duncans exactly where you are. We’ve had our instructions. The word is out. So the second car you see will be full of the Duncans’ people. And the third, and the fourth. You’re in trouble, sir. The land is flat here and it’s wintertime. There’s nowhere to hide.’
THE HOUSEKEEPER MOVED THROUGH THE ROOM IN AN ORDERLY, preprogrammed way, following a set routine, ignoring the anomaly represented by an illicit guest seated on the bed. She checked the bathroom, as if assessing the size of the task ahead of her, and then she butted the tub armchair with her thigh, moving it back an inch to the position decreed for it by the dents in the carpet.
Reacher asked, ‘You got a cell phone?’
The woman said, ‘Sure. Some minutes on it, too.’
‘You going to rat me out?’
‘Rat who out? This is an empty room.’
Reacher asked, ‘What’s to the east of here?’
‘Nothing worth a lick to you,’ the woman said. ‘The road goes to gravel after a mile, and doesn’t really take you anywhere.’
‘West?’
‘Same thing.’
‘Why have a crossroads that doesn’t lead anywhere, east or west?’
‘Some crazy plan,’ the woman said. ‘About fifty years ago. There was supposed to be a strip right here, all commercial, a mile long, with houses east and west. A couple of farms were sold for the land, but that’s about all that happened. Even the gas station went out of business, which is pretty much the kiss of death, wouldn’t you say?’
‘This motel is still here.’
‘By the skin of its teeth. Most of what Mr Vincent earns comes from feeding whiskey to the doctor.’
‘Big cash flow right there, from what I saw last night.’
‘A bar needs more than one customer.’
‘He’s paying you.’
The woman nodded. ‘Mr Vincent is a good man. He helps where he can. I’m a farmer, really. I work the winters here, because I need the money. To pay the Duncans, basically.’
‘Haulage fees?’
‘Mine are higher than most.’
‘Why?’
‘Ancient history. I wouldn’t give up.’
‘On what?’
‘I can’t talk about it,’ the woman said. ‘It’s a forbidden subject. It was the start of everything bad. And I was wrong, anyway. It was a false allegation.’
Reacher got up off the bed. He headed for the bathroom and rinsed his face with cold water and brushed his teeth. Behind him the woman stripped the bed with fast practised movements of her wrists, sheets going one way, blankets the other. She said, ‘You’re heading for Virginia.’
Reacher said, ‘You know my Social Security number too?’
‘The doctor told his wife you were a military cop.’
‘Were, as in used to be. Not any more.’
‘So what are you now?’
‘Hungry.’
‘No breakfast here.’
‘So where?’
‘There’s a diner an hour or so south. In town. Where the county cops get their morning coffee and doughnuts.’
‘Terrific.’
The housekeeper stepped out to the path and took fresh linens from a cart. Bottom sheet, top sheet, pillowcases. Reacher asked her, ‘What does Vincent pay you?’
‘Minimum wage,’ she said. ‘That’s all he can afford.’
‘I could pay you more than that to cook me breakfast.’
‘Where?’
‘Your place.’
‘Risky.’
‘Why? You a terrible cook?’
She smiled, briefly. ‘Do you tip well?’
‘If the coffee’s good.’
‘I use my mother’s percolator.’
‘Was her coffee good?’
‘The best.’
‘So we’re in business.’
‘I don’t know,’ the woman said.
‘They’re not going to be conducting house-to-house searches. They expect to find me out in the open.’
‘And when they don’t?’
‘Nothing for you to worry about. I’ll be long gone. I like breakfast as much as the next guy, but I don’t take hours to eat it.’
The woman stood there for a minute, unsure, a crisp white pillowcase held flat across her chest like a sign, or a flag, or a defence. Then she said, ‘OK.’
Four hundred and fifty miles due north, because of the latitude, dawn came a little later. The grey panel truck sat astride the sandy path, hidden, inert, dewed over with cold. Its driver woke up in the dark and climbed down and took a leak against a tree, and then he drank some water and ate a candy bar and got back in his sleeping bag and watched the pale morning light filter down through the needles. He knew at best he would be there most of the day, or most of two days, and at worst most of three or four days. But then would come his share, of money and fun, and both things were worth waiting for.
He was patient by nature.
And obedient.
* * *
Reacher stood still in the middle of the room and the housekeeper finished up around him. She made the bed tight enough to bounce a dime, she changed the towels, she replaced a tiny vial of shampoo, she put out a new morsel of paper-wrapped soap, she folded an arrowhead into the toilet roll. Then she went to get her truck. It was a pick-up, a battered old item, very plain, with rust and skinny tyres and a sagging suspension. She looped around the wrecked Subaru and parked with the passenger door next to the cabin door. She checked front and rear, long and hard, and then she paused. Reacher could see she wanted to forget the whole thing and take off without him. It was right there in her face. But she didn’t. She leaned across the width of the cab and opened the door and flapped her hand. Hurry up.
Reacher stepped out of the cabin and into the truck. The woman said, ‘If we see anyone, you have to duck down and hide, OK?’
Reacher agreed, although it would be hard to do. It was a small truck. A Chevrolet, grimy and dusty inside, all worn plastic and vinyl, with the dash tight against his knees and the window into the load bed tight against the back of his seat.
‘Got a bag?’ he asked.
‘Why?’
‘I could put it on my head.’
‘This isn’t funny,’ she said. She drove off, the worn old transmission taking a second to process her foot’s command, something rattling under the hood, a holed muffler banging away like a motorcycle. She turned left out of the lot and drove through the crossroads and headed south. There was no other traffic. In the daylight the land all around looked flat and featureless and immense. It was all dusted white with frost. The sky was high and blank. After five minutes Reacher saw the two old buildings in the west, the sagging barn and the smaller shed with the captured pick-up in it. Then three minutes later they passed the Duncans’ three houses standing alone at the end of their long shared driveway. The woman’s hands went tight on the wheel and Reacher saw she had crossed her fingers. The truck rattled onward and she watched the mirror more than the road ahead and then a mile later she breathed out and relaxed.
Reacher said, ‘They’re only people. Three old guys and a skinny kid. They don’t have magic powers.’
‘They’re evil,’ the woman said.
They were in Jonas Duncan’s kitchen, eating breakfast, biding their time, waiting for Jacob to come out with it. He had a pronouncement to make. A decision. They all knew the signs. Many times Jacob had sat quiet and distracted and contemplative, and then eventually he had delivered a nugget of wisdom, or an analysis that had cut to the heart of the matter, or a proposal that had killed three or four birds with one stone. So they waited for it, Jonas and Jasper patiently enjoying their meal, Seth struggling with it a little because chewing had become painful for him. Bruising was spreading out from under his aluminium mask. He had woken up with two black eyes the size and colour of rotting pears.
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