blues superstar long ago, except she was probably in the wrong place too many times and it had never happened for her. The old car had failed power steering to wrestle with and all kinds of ticks and rattles and whines under the hammer-heavy V-8 beat, and at about fifty miles an hour the noises all came together and sounded like a backing track. The radio was weak and picked up an endless succession of local AM stations for about twenty minutes each. The old woman sang along with them and the old guy kept completely quiet and slept most of the way on the backseat. Reacher drove eighteen hours a day for three solid days, and arrived in New Jersey feeling like he'd been on vacation.
The residency was at a fifth-rate lounge eight blocks from the boardwalk, and the manager wasn't the kind of guy you would necessarily trust to respect a contract. So Reacher made it his business to count the customers and keep a running total of the cash that should show up in the pay envelope at the end of the week. He made it very obvious and watched the manager grow more and more resentful about it. The guy took to making short cryptic phone calls with his hand shielding the receiver and his eyes locked on Reacher's face. Reacher looked straight back at him with a wintry smile and an unblinking gaze and stayed put. He sat through all three sets two weekend nights running, but then he started to get restless. And cold. The Mamas and the Papas were in his head: I'd be safe and warm, if I was in L.A. So on the Monday morning he was about to change his mind and get back on the road when the old keyboard player walked him back from breakfast and finally broke his silence.
"I want to ask you to stick around," he said. He pronounced it wanna ax, and there was some kind of hope in the rheumy old eyes. Reacher didn't answer.
"You don't stick around, that manager's going to stiff us for sure," the old guy said, like getting stiffed for money was something that just happened to musicians, like flat tires and head colds. "But we get paid, we got gas money to head up to New York, maybe get us a gig from B. B. King in Times Square, resurrect our careers. Guy like you could make a big difference in that department, count on it."
Reacher said nothing.
"Of course, I can see you being worried," the old guy said. "Management like that, bound to be some unsavory characters lurking in the background."
Reacher smiled at the subtlety.
"What are you, anyway?" the old guy asked. "Some kind of a boxer?"
"No," Reacher said. "No kind of a boxer."
"Wrestler?" the old guy asked. He said it wrassler. "Like on cable television?"
"No."
"You're big enough, that's for damn sure," the old guy said. "Plenty big enough to help us out, if you wanted to."
He said it he'p. No front teeth. Reacher said nothing.
"What are you, anyway?" the old guy asked again.
"I was a military cop," Reacher said. "In the Army, thirteen years."
"You quit?"
"As near as makes no difference."
"No jobs for you folks afterward?"
"None that I want," Reacher said.
"You live in L.A.?"
"I don't live anywhere," Reacher said. "I move around."
"So road folk should stick together," the old guy said. "Simple as that. Help each other. Keep it a mutual thing."
He'p each other.
"It's very cold here," Reacher said.
"That's for damn sure," the old guy said. "But you could buy a coat."
So he was on a windswept corner with the sea gale flattening his pants against his legs, making a final decision. The highway, or a coat store? He ran a brief fantasy through his head, La Jolla maybe, a cheap room, warm nights, bright stars, cold beer. Then: the old woman at B. B. King's new club in New York, some retro-obsessed young A amp;R man stops by, gives her a contract, she makes a CD, she gets a national tour, a sidebar in Rolling Stone, fame, money, a new house. A new car. He turned his back on the highway and hunched against the wind and walked east in search of a clothing store.
On that particular Monday there were nearly twelve thousand FDIC-insured banking organizations licensed and operating inside the United States and between them they carried over a thousand million separate accounts, but only one of them was listed against UNSUB's name and Social Security