“Do you like her?”
“What are you, my mom?”
“You should have listened to her more.”
“Who?”
“Your mom. She was French. Those ladies have got it going on.”
“What exactly are we talking about here?”
But Neagley didn’t answer that, because the room phone rang. Griezman. Reacher put him on speaker. Griezman said his people were in position, and that surveillance could be considered officially active as of that moment. The apartment house lobby fed six separate units, one to the left and one to the right of the walk-up stairwell, on each of the second, third and fourth floors. Records showed a Turkish family and an Italian family also in residence, both diplomatic households, plus three German families, all of them prosperous and solidly middle class. There was a service entrance in back of the building, and it was covered by a supplementary car, just in case, but it likely wouldn’t be used as a pedestrian exit. Not the local custom, as the sleepers would surely know. Presumably they made conscious efforts to fit in, and not stand out.
“Thank you,” Reacher said. “Good hunting.”
Griezman asked, “How long do you expect to need us?”
“Forty-eight hours or less.”
“Any news on the fingerprint?”
Reacher paused a beat.
He said, “Not yet.”
Griezman said, “Why does it take so long?”
“We’ll get it soon.”
“I know,” Griezman said. “I trust you.”
Chapter 21
In the Educational Solutions building in McLean, Virginia, it was six hours earlier, still morning, and Waterman and Landry were working together on the background check. They had Wiley’s service number, which in the modern way was the same as his Social Security number. Which unlocked a lot of database doors. First up and most obvious were four felony arrests in the 1980s, in Sugar Land, Texas, south and west of Houston. Clearly none of the arrests had led to a conviction. A guy who had gone down the first time wouldn’t have been around to collect the next three. But, no smoke without fire. Landry dug into the details. All four arrests had been for selling stolen property. Allegedly. All four cases had failed for lack of evidence. The prosecutors had declined to prosecute. The witnesses had been vague. Possibly for real. There was no proof of threats or tampering. Wiley was a lucky man. Or subtle. After his last arrest there was nothing in his criminal record for five straight years. Then he joined the army.
“We should tell Sinclair,” Landry said. “We have confirmation. This guy steals stuff and sells it. That’s his MO.”
Waterman said, “Except that Reacher claims they have nothing there worth a hundred million dollars.”
“They must have.”
“Not stealable by a single guy. Not portable. Not operable by people who live in caves.”
“Intelligence, then.”
“Accessible to a private soldier?”
“So he’s in the army because he’s a patriot?”
“Maybe a judge advised him to get out of town and serve his country. As an alternative.”
“To what?”
“A fifth go-round with the prosecutors. Maybe Wiley figured he couldn’t stay lucky forever.”
Landry said, “There’s nothing in the arrest record three years ago.”
“There wouldn’t be. It would have been a quiet word in the ear. It happened that way all the time.”
“This is the 1990s.”
“Maybe not in Sugar Land.”
“The guy met with the Saudi. Now he’s meeting with him again. Has to be a reason.”
—
Neagley left, and Reacher stayed in his room alone, because that was where Griezman would call first. No doubt about that. Purely as a courtesy. Just simple detectives, hoping for favors, one to the other. Sinclair would be called second. But the phone didn’t ring. Reacher’s neck itched, like it did after every haircut. He took off his new T-shirt and shook it out. Then he stripped completely and took another shower, with the door open, and one ear or the other out of the water stream. The phone didn’t ring. He toweled off and dressed again and looked out the window. Then he sat down in a green velvet chair. The phone didn’t ring.
There was a knock at the door.
Sinclair.
Taller than the average, but no wider.
The dress, the pearls, the nylons, the shoes.
The face and the hair.
“I assume this is the best place to wait,” she said. “I assume Griezman will call you first.”
Not dumb, either.
“I should apologize,” Reacher said. “I made two errors of judgment. No disrespect was intended.”
She said, “May I come in?”
“Of course.”
He stepped aside, and she walked in past him. He smelled her perfume. She looked at the phone, and then she sat down in the same chair he had been using.
She said, “I didn’t take offense. We drafted you to get things done. There’s no buyer’s remorse. Ultimately it’s you I’m worried about.”