that. Tried not to show it.”
Abby gave him the second Ukrainian phone. The one Reacher didn’t throw out the car window. Vantresca read through the string of new texts. He said, “They know the Albanians are wiped out. They think they’re both being attacked by Russian organized crime. They’ve gone to Situation C. They’re tightening the guard. They’re taking up defensive positions. They’re saying, let no one pass. With an exclamation point. Very dramatic. Sounds like a slogan on an old Eastern Bloc billboard.”
“Any mention of Trulenko?” Reacher asked.
“Nothing. Presumably he’s part of tightening the guard.”
“But they’re not shutting him down.”
“Doesn’t say so.”
“Therefore what he does can’t be interrupted. Even for a war with Russian organized crime. That should tell us something.”
“What?”
“I don’t know,” Reacher said. “Did you stop by your office?”
Vantresca nodded. He pulled a slip of paper out of his back pants pocket. He handed it over. A name, and a number. Barbara Buckley. The Washington Post. A D.C. area code.
“Waste of time,” Vantresca said. “She won’t talk to you.”
Reacher took the captured phone from him. He dialed the number. The phone rang. The call was answered.
He said, “Ms. Buckley?”
“Not here,” a voice said. “Try later.”
The phone went down again. Almost noon. The day half over. They rode the empty freight elevator down to the basement, where they found Barton and Hogan setting up. They had two friends on stage with them. A guy who played guitar, and a woman who sang. A regular lunchtime date for all of them, once a week.
Reacher hung back in the shadows. The room was large, but low. No windows, because it was a basement. There was a bar all the way across the right-hand wall, and a rectangle of parquet dance floor, and some chairs and tables, and some standing room only. There were maybe sixty people already inside. With more filing in. Past a guy in a suit on a stool. He was in the far left corner of the room. Not exactly a doorman. More like a bottom-of-the-stairs man. But his role was identical. Counting heads, and looking tough. He was a big individual. Broad shoulders, wide neck. Black suit, white shirt, black silk necktie. In the near left corner of the room was a double-wide corridor, that led to the restrooms, and a fire exit, and the freight elevator. It was the way they had come in. There were wide hoops of colored spotlights fixed to the ceiling, all trained inward on the stage. Not much else in the way of illumination. A dim fire exit sign at the head of the corridor, and another behind the man on the stool.
All good.
Reacher drifted back to the stage. The gear was all set up. It was humming and buzzing gently. Barton’s Precision Bass was leaning against his monster cabinet. Ready for action. His back-up instrument was on a stand next to it. Ready for emergencies. Barton himself was at a table close by. Eating lunch. A hamburger. He said the band got free food. Whatever they wanted off the menu, to a max of twenty bucks.
Reacher asked him, “What kind of stuff are you going to play?”
“Covers, mostly,” he said. “Maybe a couple of our own songs.”
“Are you loud?”
“If we want to be.”
“Do people dance?”
“If we want them to.”
“Make them dance the third number,” Reacher said. “Make it loud. Every eye on you.”
“That part usually comes at the end.”
“We don’t have time.”
“We have a rock and roll medley. Everyone dances to that. I guess we could bring it in early.”
“Works for me,” Reacher said. “Thank you.”
All good.
Plan made.
* * *
—
The house lights went down and the stage lights came up and the band kicked into its opening number, which was a mid-tempo rocker with a sad verse and an exuberant chorus. Reacher and Abby drifted away to the near right corner of the room, diagonally opposite the man on the stool. They drifted through the crowd at the bar, following the right-hand wall, aiming for the far right corner. They got there just as the band started its second number, which was faster and hotter than the first. They were warming up the crowd. Getting them ready for the rock and roll medley coming next. They were pretty good at it. They were hitting the spot. Absurdly Reacher wanted to stop and dance. Something about the pulse of the beat. He could see Abby felt the same way. She was walking ahead of him. He could see