Part 10 (1/2)
Burke went for the bag but Reacher picked it up for him. It was heavy and wide, and easier for a big guy to manage. He carried it to the foyer and dropped it near the door where its predecessor had waited twelve hours before. It flopped and settled like the same dead animal.
Reacher took a seat and started counting off the minutes. Burke paced. Carter Groom drummed his fingers on the arm of a chair, frustrated. The Re-con Marine, beached. I'm all business, he had said. I'm nothing, away from the action. Next to him Gregory sat quiet, all British reserve. Next to him was Perez, the Latino, tiny. Next to him was Addison, with the scarred face. A knife, probably, Reacher thought. Then Kowalski, taller than the others but still small next to Reacher himself. Special Forces guys were usually small. They were usually lean, fast, and whippy. Built for endurance and stamina and full of smarts and cunning. Like foxes, not like bears.
n.o.body talked. There was nothing to talk about, except the fact that the end of a kidnap was always the period of greatest risk. What was there that compelled kidnappers to keep their word? Honour? A sense of business ethics? Why risk a complex transfer when a shallow grave and a bullet in the victim's head were a whole lot safer and simpler? Humanity? Decency? Reacher glanced at Kate Lane's picture next to the phone and went a little cold. She was closer to dead now than at any point in the last three days, and he knew it. He guessed they all knew it.
”Time,” Burke said. ”I'm going.”
”I'll carry the bag for you,” Reacher said. ”You know, down to the car.”
They rode down in the elevator. In the ground floor lobby a small dark woman in a long black coat swept past surrounded by tall men in suits, like staff or a.s.sistants or bodyguards.
”Was that Yoko?” Reacher said.
But Burke didn't answer. He just walked past the doorman and out to the curb. The black BMW was waiting there. Burke opened the rear door.
”Stick the bag on the back seat,” he said. ”Easier for me that way, for a seat-to-seat transfer.”
”I'm coming with you,” Reacher said.
That's stupid, man.”
”I'll be on the floor in back. It'll be safe enough.”
”What's the point?”
'We have to do something. You know as well as I do there's not going to be any cute little Checkpoint Charlie scene in this story. She's not going to come tottering toward us through the mist and the fog, smiling bravely, with Jade holding her hand. That's not going to happen. So we're going to have to get proactive at some point.”
”What are you planning to do?”
”After you've switched the bag I'll get out around the next corner. I'll double back and see what I can see.”
”Who says you'll see anything?”
”They'll have four and a half million bucks sitting in an unlocked car. My guess is they won't leave it there very long. So I'll see something.”
”Will it help us?”
”A lot more than sitting upstairs doing nothing will help us.”
”Lane will kill me.”
”He doesn't have to know anything about it. I'll be back well after you. You'll say you have no idea what happened to me. I'll say I went for a walk.”
”Lane will kill you if you screw it up.”
”I'll kill myself if I screw it up.”
”I'm serious. He'll kill you.”
”My risk.”
”Kate's risk.”
”You still banking on the Checkpoint Charlie scenario?”
Burke paused. Ten seconds. Fifteen.
”Get in,” he said.
CHAPTER 14
BURKE STUCK LANE'S cell phone in a hands-free cradle mounted on the BMW's dash and Reacher crawled into the rear footwell on his hands and knees. There was grit on the carpet. It was a rear-drive car and the transmission hump made it an uncomfortable location. Burke started up and waited for a hole in the traffic and then U-turned and headed south on Central Park West. Reacher squirmed around until the transmission tunnel was wedged above his hips and below his ribs.
”Don't hit any big b.u.mps,” he said.
”We're not supposed to talk,” Burke said.
”Only after they call.”
”Believe it,” Burke said. ”You see this?”
Reacher struggled a little more upright and saw Burke pointing at a small black bud on the drivers-side A-pillar up near the sun visor.
”Microphone,” Burke said. ”For the cell. Real sensitive. You sneeze back there, they'll hear you.”
”Will I hear them? On a speaker?”
”On ten speakers,” Burke said. ”The phone is wired through the audio system. It cuts in automatically.”
Reacher lay down and Burke drove on, slowly. Then he made a tight right turn.
Where are we now?” Reacher asked.
”Fifty-seventh Street,” Burke said. ”Traffic is murder. I'm going to get on the West Side Highway and head south. My guess is they'll want us downtown somewhere. That's where they've got to be. Street parking for the Jaguar would be impossible anyplace else right now. I can come back north on the East River Drive if they don't call before we get to the Battery.”
Reacher felt the car stop and start, stop and start. Above him the money bag rolled one way and then the other.
”You serious that this could be just one guy?” Burke asked.
”Minimum of one,” Reacher said.
”Everything's a minimum of one.”