Blue Moon - Lee Child Page 0,12
rush toward the middle class. She herself had been born a year later, like the lawn showed in the photograph, and she had grown up there, and then her parents died and she met her husband all in the same year. He was a machine tool operator, very skilled, raised nearby. An essential occupation, so he was never drafted for Vietnam. They had a daughter within a year, just the same as her parents had, and the daughter grew up there, the second generation to do so. She did well in school, and got a job. Never married, no grandchildren, but hey. Reacher noticed their tone changed the nearer the story got to the present day. It got bleaker, and strangled, as if there were things they couldn’t say.
The clock in his head hit five. A mile was fifteen minutes for him, and twenty for most other people, but at Shevick’s pace it was going to be close to the full hour.
“It’s time,” he said. “Let’s go.”
Chapter 5
Once again Reacher helped Shevick down the far curb, and across the street, and up the near curb, and across the sidewalk to the door. Once again he went in first. For the same reason. An unknown guy coming in immediately before a target was ten times less subconsciously connected than an unknown guy coming in immediately after. Human nature. Mostly bullshit, but sometimes it rang a bell.
The same fat guy was behind the bar. There were now nine other customers. Two pairs, and five singletons alone at separate tables. One of the singletons had been in the same spot six hours previously. Another was a woman about eighty years old. She was cradling a glass full of clear liquid. Probably not water.
There was a guy at the four-top in the far back corner.
He was a big slab of a man, maybe forty years old, so pale he looked luminescent in the gloom. He had pale eyes, and pale eyelashes, and pale eyebrows. He had hair the color of corn silk, buzzed so short it glittered. He had thick white wrists resting on the edge of the table, and big white hands resting on a large black ledger. He wore a black suit, a white shirt, and a black silk tie. He had a tattoo coming up out of the neck of the shirt. Some kind of writing. A foreign alphabet. Not Russian. Something else.
Reacher sat down without ordering. A minute later Shevick limped in. Once again he glanced ahead at the table in the far back corner. Once again he stopped in surprise. He shuffled sideways and sat down at an empty four-top next to Reacher’s.
He whispered, “That’s not Fisnik.”
“You sure?”
“Fisnik has dark skin and black hair.”
“Have you ever seen this other guy before?”
“Never. It was always Fisnik.”
“Maybe he’s indisposed. Maybe that’s what the phone call was about. He needed to find a replacement, which he couldn’t, not before six o’clock.”
“Maybe.”
Reacher said nothing.
“What?” Shevick whispered.
“You sure you never saw this guy before?”
“Why?”
“Because then he never saw you before. All he has is an entry in a book.”
“What are you suggesting?”
“I could be you. I could go pay this guy for you, and get all the details squared away.”
“You mean if he asks for more?”
“I could attempt to persuade him. Most people do the right thing in the end. That’s been my experience.”
Now Shevick said nothing.
“I would need to be sure of something,” Reacher said. “Otherwise I’ll look stupid.”
“Sure of what?”
“Is this the end of it? Twenty-two-five and you’re done?”
“That’s what we owe them.”
“Give me the envelope,” Reacher said.
“This is nuts.”
“You’ve had a hard day. Take a load off.”
“What Maria said was right. You won’t be here tomorrow.”
“I won’t leave you with a problem. He’ll either agree or he won’t. If he doesn’t, you won’t be any worse off. But it’s your call. Either way is fine with me. I’m not looking for trouble. I like a quiet life. That said, you could save yourself the walk there and back. That knee still looks pretty bad.”
Shevick sat still and said nothing for a long moment. Then he gave Reacher the envelope. He took it out of his pocket and slid it across, low and furtive. Reacher took it from him. Three quarters of an inch thick. Heavy. He put it in his own pocket.
“Sit tight,” he said.
He stood up and walked toward the far back corner. He considered himself a modern man, born in the twentieth century, living in the