C H A P T E R   2  Reacher was on his way to them because of a woman. He had spent  Friday night in South Beach, Miami, in a salsa club, with a dancer from a cruise  ship. The boat was Norwegian, and so was the girl.  Reacher guessed she was too tall  for ballet, but she was the right size for everything else. They met on the beach  in the afternoon. Reacher was working on his tan. He felt better brown. He didn’t  know what she was working on. But he felt her shadow fall across his face and opened  his eyes to find her staring at him. Or maybe at his scars. The browner he got, the  more they stood out, white and wicked and obvious. She was pale, in a black bikini.  A 
small black bikini. He pegged her for a dancer long before she told him. It was  in the way she held herself. 
 They ended up having a late dinner together and then  going out to the club. South Beach salsa wouldn’t have been Reacher’s first choice,  but her company made it worthwhile. She was fun to be with. And she was a great dancer,  obviously. Full of energy. She wore him out. At four in the morning she took him  back to her hotel, eager to wear him out some more. Her hotel was a small Art Deco  place near the ocean. Clearly the cruise line treated its people well. Certainly  it was a much more romantic destination than Reacher’s own motel. And much closer.  
 And it had cable television, which Reacher’s place didn’t. He woke at eight on  Saturday morning when he heard the dancer in the shower. He turned on the TV and  went looking for ESPN. He wanted Friday night’s American League highlights. He never  found them. He clicked his way through successive channels and then stopped dead  on CNN because he heard the chief of an Indiana police department say a name he knew:  
James Barr. The picture was of a press conference. Small room, harsh light. Top of  the screen was a caption that said: 
Courtesy NBC. There was a banner across the bottom  that said: 
Friday Night Massacre. The police chief said the name again, 
James Barr, and then he introduced a homicide detective called Emerson. Emerson looked tired.  Emerson said the name for a third time: 
James Barr. Then, like he anticipated the  exact question in Reacher’s mind, he ran through a brief biography: 
Forty-one years  old, local Indiana resident, U.S. Army infantry specialist from 1985 to 1991, Gulf  War veteran, never married, currently unemployed.
  Reacher watched the screen. Emerson  seemed like a concise type of a guy. He was brief. No bullshit. He finished his statement  and in response to a reporter’s question declined to specify what if anything James  Barr had said during interrogation. Then he introduced a District Attorney. This  guy’s name was Rodin, and he wasn’t concise. Wasn’t brief. He used plenty of bullshit.  He spent ten minutes claiming Emerson’s credit for himself. Reacher knew how 
that worked. He had been a cop of sorts for thirteen years. Cops bust their tails, and  prosecutors bask in the glory. Rodin said 
James Barr a few more times and then said  the state was maybe looking to fry him.
 For what?
 Reacher waited.
 A local anchor  called Ann Yanni came on. She recapped the events of the night before. Sniper slaying.  Senseless slaughter. An automatic weapon. A parking garage. A public plaza. Commuters  on their way home after a long workweek. Five dead. A suspect in custody, but a city  still grieving.
 Reacher thought it was Yanni who was grieving. Emerson’s success  had cut her story short. She signed off and CNN went to political news. Reacher turned  the TV off. The dancer came out of the bathroom. She was pink and fragrant. And naked.  She had left her towels inside.
 “What shall we do today?” she said, with a wide  Norwegian smile.
 “I’m going to Indiana,” Reacher said. 
 He walked north in the  heat to the Miami bus depot. Then he leafed through a greasy timetable and planned  a route. It wasn’t going to be an easy trip. Miami to Jacksonville would be the first  leg. Then Jacksonville to New Orleans. Then New Orleans to St. Louis. Then St. Louis  to Indianapolis. Then a local bus, presumably, south into the heartland. Five separate  destinations. Arrival and departure times were not well integrated. Beginning to  end, it was going to take more than forty-eight hours. He was tempted to fly or rent  a car, but he was short of money and he liked buses better and he figured nothing  much was going to happen on the weekend anyway.
 What happened on the weekend was  that Rosemary Barr called her firm’s investigator back. She figured Franklin would  have a semiindependent point of view. She got him at home, ten o’clock in the morning  on the Sunday.
 “I think I should hire different lawyers,” she said.
 Franklin said  nothing.
 “David Chapman thinks he’s guilty,” Rosemary said. “Doesn’t he?
 So he’s  already given up.”
 “I can’t comment,” Franklin said. “He’s one of my employers.”
 Now Rosemary Barr said nothing.
 “How was the hospital?” Franklin asked.
 “Awful.  He’s in intensive care with a bunch of prison deadbeats. They’ve got him handcuffed  to the bed. He’s in a 
coma, for God’s sake. How do they think he’s going to escape?”
 “What’s the legal position?”
 “He was arrested but not arraigned. He’s in a kind  of limbo.
 They’re assuming he wouldn’t have gotten bail.”
 “They’re probably right.”
 “So they claim under the circumstances it’s like he actually 
didn’t get bail. So  he’s 
theirs. He’s in the system. Like a twilight zone.”
 “What would you like to  happen?”
 “He shouldn’t be in handcuffs. And he should be in a VA hospital at least.  But that won’t happen until I find a lawyer who’s prepared to help him.”
 Franklin  paused. “How do you explain all the evidence?”
 “I know my brother.”
 “You moved  out, right?”
 “For other reasons. Not because he’s a homicidal maniac.”
 “He blocked  off a parking space,” Franklin said. “He premeditated this thing.”
 “You think he’ s guilty, too.”
 “I work with what I’ve got. And what I’ve got doesn’t look good.”
 Rosemary Barr said nothing.
 “I’m sorry,” Franklin said.
 “Can you recommend another  lawyer?”
 “Can you make that decision? Do you have a power of attorney?”
 “I think  it’s implied. He’s in a coma. I’m his next of kin.”
 “How much money have you got?”
 “Not much.”
 “How much has 
he got?”
 “There’s some equity in his house.”
 “It won’ t look good. It’ll be like a kick in the teeth for the firm you work for.”
 “I can’ t worry about that.”
 “You could lose everything, including your job.”
 “I’ll lose  it anyway, unless I help James. If he’s convicted, they’ll let me go. I’ll be notorious.  By association. An embarrassment.”
 “He had your sleeping pills,” Franklin said.
 “I gave them to him. He doesn’t have insurance.”
 “Why did he need them?”
 “He has  trouble sleeping.”
 Franklin said nothing.
 “You think he’s guilty,” Rosemary said.
 “The evidence is overwhelming,” Franklin said.
 “David Chapman isn’t really trying,  is he?”
 “You have to consider the possibility that David Chapman is right.”
 “Who  should I call?”
 Franklin paused.
 “Try Helen Rodin,” he said.
 “Rodin?”
 “She’s  the DA’s daughter.”
 “I don’t know her.”
 “She’s downtown. She just hung out her  shingle. She’s new and she’s keen.”
 “Is it ethical?”
 “No law against it.”
 “It  would be father against daughter.”
 “It was going to be Chapman, and Chapman knows  Rodin a lot better than his daughter does, probably. She’s been away for a long time.”
 “Where?”
 “College, law school, clerking for a judge in D.C.”
 “Is she any good?”
 “I think she’s going to be.”  
 Rosemary Barr called Helen Rodin on her office  number. It was like a test. Someone new and keen should be at the office on a Sunday.
 Helen Rodin was at the office on a Sunday. She answered the call sitting at her  desk. Her desk was secondhand and it sat proudly in a mostly empty two-room suite  in the same black glass tower that had NBC as the second-floor tenant. The suite  was rented cheap through one of the business subsidies that the city was throwing  around like confetti. The idea was to kick-start the rejuvenated downtown area and  clean up later with healthy tax revenues.
 Rosemary Barr didn’t have to tell Helen  Rodin about the case because the whole thing had happened right outside Helen Rodin’ s new office window. Helen had seen some of it for herself, and she had followed  the rest on the news afterward. She had caught all of Ann Yanni’s TV appearances.  She recognized her from the building’s lobby, and the elevator.
 “Will you help my  brother?” Rosemary Barr asked.
 Helen Rodin paused. The smart answer would be 
No  way. She knew that. Like 
No way, forget about it, are you out of your mind? Two reasons.  One, she knew a major clash with her father was inevitable at some point, but did  she need it 
now? And two, she knew that a new lawyer’s early cases defined her. Paths  were taken that led down fixed routes. To end up as a when-all-else-fails criminal-defense  attorney would be OK, she guessed, all things considered. But to start out by taking  a case that had offended the whole city would be a marketing disaster. The shootings  weren’t being seen as a 
crime. They were being seen as an 
atrocity. Against humanity,  against the whole community, against the rejuvenation efforts downtown, against the  whole idea of being from Indiana. It was like LA or New York or Baltimore had come  to the heartland, and to be the person who tried to excuse it or explain it away  would be a fatal mistake. Like a mark of Cain. It would follow her the rest of her  life.
 “Can we sue the jail?” Rosemary Barr asked. “For letting him get hurt?”
 Helen  Rodin paused again. Another good reason to say no. 
An unrealistic client.
  “Maybe  later,” she said. “Right now he wouldn’t generate much sympathy as a plaintiff. And  it’s hard to prove damages, if he’s heading for death row anyway.”
 “Then I can’t  pay you much,” Rosemary Barr said. “I don’t have money.”
 Helen Rodin paused for  a third time. 
Another good reason to say no. It was a little early in her career  to be contemplating pro bono work.
 But. But. But.
 The accused deserved representation.  The Bill of Rights said so. And he was innocent until proven guilty. And if the evidence  was as bad as her father said it was, then the whole thing would be little more than  a supervisory process. She would verify the case against him independently. Then  she would advise him to plead guilty. Then she would watch his back as her father  fed him through the machine. That was all. It could be seen as honest dues-paying.  A constitutional chore. She hoped.
 “OK,” she said.
 “He’s innocent,” Rosemary Barr  said. “I’m sure of it.” 
 They always are, Helen Rodin thought.
 “OK,” she said again.  Then she told her new client to meet her in her office at seven the next morning.  It was like a test. A sister who really believed in her brother’s innocence would  show up for an early appointment.  
 Rosemary Barr showed up right on time, at seven  o’clock on Monday morning. Franklin was there, too. He believed in Helen Rodin and  was prepared to defer his bills until he saw which way the wind was blowing. Helen  Rodin herself had already been at her desk for an hour. She had informed David Chapman  of the change in representation on Sunday afternoon and had obtained the audiotape  of his initial interview with James Barr. Chapman had been happy to hand it over  and wash his hands. She had played the tape to herself a dozen times Sunday night  and a dozen more that morning. It was all anyone had of James Barr. Maybe all anyone  was ever going to get. So she had listened to it carefully, and she had drawn some  early conclusions from it.
 “Listen,” she said.
 She had the tape cued up and ready  in an old-fashioned machine the size of a shoe box. She pressed 
Play and they all  heard a hiss and breathing and room sounds and then David Chapman’s voice: 
I can’ t help you if you won’t help yourself. There was a long pause, full of more hiss,  and then James Barr spoke: 
They got the wrong guy. . . . They got the wrong guy, he said again. Then Helen watched the tape counter numbers and spooled forward to  Chapman saying: 
Denying it is not an option. Then Barr’s voice came through: 
Get  Jack Reacher for me. Helen spooled onward to Chapman’s question: 
Is he a doctor? Then there was nothing on the tape except the sound of Barr beating on the interview  room door.
 “OK,” Helen said. “I think he really believes he didn’t do it. He claims  as much, and then he gets frustrated and terminates the interview when Chapman doesn’ t take him seriously. That’s clear, isn’t it?”
 “He 
didn’t do it,” Rosemary Barr  said.
 “I spoke with my father yesterday,” Helen Rodin said. “The evidence is all  there, Ms. Barr. He did it, I’m afraid. You need to accept that a sister maybe can’ t know her brother as well as she’d like. Or if she once did, that he changed for  some reason.”
 There was a long silence.
 “Is your father telling you the truth about  the evidence?” Rosemary asked.
 “He has to,” Helen said. “We’re going to see it all  anyway. There’s the discovery process. We’re going to take depositions. There would  be no sense in him bluffing at this point.”
 Nobody spoke.
 “But we can still help  your brother,” Helen said in the silence. “He believes he didn’t do it. I’m sure  of that, after listening to the tape.
 Therefore he’s delusional now. Or at least  he was on Saturday.
 Therefore perhaps he was delusional on Friday, too.”
 “How does  that help him?” Rosemary Barr asked. “It’s still admitting he did it.”
 “The consequences  will be different. If he recovers. Time and treatment in an institution will be a  lot better than time and 
no treatment in a maximum security prison.”
 “You want to  have James declared insane?”
 Helen nodded. “A medical defense is our best shot.  And if we establish it right now, it might improve the way they handle him before  the trial.”
 “He might die. That’s what the doctors said. I don’t want him to die  a criminal. I want to clear his name.”
 “He hasn’t been tried yet. He hasn’t been  convicted. He’s still an innocent man in the eyes of the law.”
 “That’s not the same.”
 “No,” Helen said. “I guess it isn’t.”
 There was another long silence.
 “Let’s meet  back here at ten-thirty,” Helen said. “We’ll thrash out a strategy. If we’re aiming  for a change of hospitals, we should try for it sooner rather than later.”
 “We need  to find this Jack Reacher person,” Rosemary Barr said.
 Helen nodded. “I gave his  name to Emerson and my father.”
 “Why?”
 “Because Emerson’s people cleared your brother’ s house out.
 They might have found an address or a phone number. And my father needed  to know because we want this guy on our witness list, not the prosecution’s. Because  he might be able to help us.”
 “He might be an alibi.”
 “Maybe an old army buddy,  at best.”
 “I don’t see how,” Franklin said. “They were different ranks and different  branches.”
 “We need to find him,” Rosemary Barr said. “James asked for him, didn’ t he? That has to mean something.”
 Helen nodded again. “I’d certainly like to find  him. He might have something for us. Some exculpatory information, possibly. Or at  least he might be a link to something we can use.”
 “He’s out of circulation,” Franklin  said.  
 He was two hours away, in the back of a bus out of Indianapolis. The trip  had been slow, but pleasant enough. He had spent Saturday night in New Orleans, in  a motel near the bus depot. He had spent Sunday night in Indianapolis. So he had  slept and fed himself and showered. But mostly he had rocked and swayed and dozed  on buses, watching the passing scenes, observing the chaos of America, and surfing  along on the memory of the Norwegian. His life was like that. It was a mosaic of  fragments. Details and contexts would fade and be inaccurately recalled, but the  feelings and the experiences would weave over time into a tapestry equally full of  good times and bad. He didn’t know yet exactly where the Norwegian would fall. At  that point he thought of her as a missed opportunity. But she would have sailed away  soon anyway. Or he would have. CNN’s intervention had shortened things, but maybe  only by a fraction.
 The bus was doing 55 on Route 37, heading south. It stopped  in Bloomington. Six people got out. One of them left the Indianapolis paper behind.  Reacher picked it up and checked the sports. The
 Yankees were still ahead in the  East. Then he flipped to the front and checked the news. He saw the headline: 
Sniper  Suspect Hurt in Jail Attack. He read the first three paragraphs: 
Brain injury. Coma.
 Uncertain prognosis. The journalist seemed torn between condemning the Indiana Board  of Corrections for its lawless prisons and applauding Barr’s attackers for doing  their civic duty. 
 This might complicate things, Reacher thought.
 The later paragraphs  carried a reprise of the original crime story, plus updated background, plus new  facts. Reacher read them all.
 Barr’s sister had moved out of his house some months  before the incident. The journalist seemed to think that was either a cause or an  effect of Barr’s evident instability. Or both. The bus moved out of Bloomington.  Reacher folded the paper and propped his head against the window and watched the  road. It was a black ribbon, wet with recent rain, and it unspooled beside him with  the center line flashing by like an urgent Morse code message. Reacher wasn’t sure  what it was saying to him. He couldn’t read it.  
 The bus pulled into a covered  depot and Reacher came out into the daylight and found himself five blocks west of  where a raised highway curled around behind an old stone building. Indiana limestone,  he guessed. The real thing. It would be a bank, he thought, or a courthouse, or maybe  a library. There was a black glass tower beyond it. The air was OK. It was colder  than Miami but he was still far enough south that winter felt safely distant. He  wasn’t going to have to refresh his wardrobe because of weather. He was in white  chino pants and a bright yellow canvas shirt. Both were three days old. He figured  he would get another day out of them. Then he would buy replacements, cheap. He had  brown boat shoes on his feet. No socks. He felt he was dressed for the boardwalk  and thought he must look a little out of place in the city.
 He checked his watch.  Nine-twenty in the morning. He stood on the sidewalk in the diesel fumes and stretched  and looked around. The city was one of those heartland places that are neither large  nor small, neither new nor old. It wasn’t booming and it wasn’t decrepit.
 There was  probably some history. Probably some corn and soybean trading. Maybe tobacco. Maybe  livestock. There was probably a river, or a railhead. Maybe some manufacturing. There  was a small downtown area. He could see it ahead of him, east of where he stood.  Taller structures, some stone, some brick, some billboards. He figured the black  glass tower would be the flagship building. No reason to build it anyplace else than  the heart of downtown.
 He walked toward it. There was a lot of construction under  way.
 Repairs, renewals, holes in the road, gravel piles, fresh concrete, heavy trucks  moving slow. He crossed in front of one and hit a side street and came out along  the north side of a half-finished parking garage extension. He recalled Ann Yanni’ s fevered breaking-news recap and glanced up at it and then away from it to a public  square. There was an empty ornamental pool with a fountain spout sticking up forlornly  in the center. There was a narrow walkway between the pool itself and a low wall.  The walkway was decorated with makeshift funeral tributes. There were flowers, with  their stems wrapped in aluminum foil. Photographs under plastic, and small stuffed  animals, and candles. There was a dusting of leftover sand. The sand had soaked up  the blood, he guessed. Fire engines carry boxes of sand for accidents and crime scenes.  And stainless steel shovels for removal of body parts. He glanced back at the parking  garage. Less than thirty-five yards, he thought. Very close.
 He stood still. The  plaza was silent. The whole city was quiet. It felt stunned, like a limb briefly  paralyzed after a massive bruising blow. The plaza was the epicenter. It was where  the blow had landed. It was like a black hole, with emotion compressed into it too  tight to escape.
 He walked on. The old limestone building was a library. 
That’s  OK, he thought. 
Librarians are nice people. They tell you things, if you ask them. He asked for the DA’s office. A sad and subdued woman at the checkout desk gave him  directions. It wasn’t a long walk. It wasn’t a big city. He walked east past a new  office building that had signs for the DMV and a military recruitment center. Behind  it was a block of off-brand stores and then a new courthouse building. It was a plain  flat-roof off-the-shelf design dressed up with mahogany doors and etched glass. It  could have been a church from some weird denomination with a generous but strapped  congregation.
 He avoided the main public entrance. He circled the block until he  came to the office wing. He found a door labeled 
District Attorney.
 Below it on a  separate brass plate he found Rodin’s name. 
An elected official, he thought. 
They  use a separate plate to make it cheaper when the guy changes every few Novembers. Rodin’s initials were 
A. A. He had a law degree.
 Reacher went in through the door  and spoke to a receptionist at a counter. Asked to see A. A. Rodin himself. “About  what?” the receptionist asked, quietly but politely. She was middle-aged, well cared  for, well turned out, wearing a clean white blouse. She looked like she had worked  behind a desk all her life. A practiced bureaucrat. But stressed. She looked like  she was carrying all the town’s recent troubles on her shoulders.
 “About James Barr,”  Reacher said.
 “Are you a reporter?” the receptionist asked.
 “No,” Reacher said.
 “May I tell Mr. Rodin’s office your connection to the case?”
 “I knew James Barr  in the army.”
 “That must have been some time ago.”
 “A long time ago,” Reacher said.
 “May I have your name?”
 “Jack Reacher.”
 The receptionist dialed a phone and spoke.  Reacher guessed she was speaking to a secretary, because both he and Rodin were referred  to in the third person, like abstractions. 
Can he see a Mr. Reacher about the case? Not the Barr case. Just 
the case. The conversation continued. Then the receptionist  covered the phone by clamping it to her chest, below her collarbone, above her left  breast.
 “Do you have information?” she asked. 
 The secretary upstairs can hear your  heart beating, Reacher thought.
 “Yes,” he said. “Information.”
 “From the army?”  she asked.
 Reacher nodded. The receptionist put the phone back to her face and continued  the conversation. It was a long one. Mr. A. A. Rodin had an efficient pair of gatekeepers.  That was clear. No way of getting past them without some kind of an urgent and legitimate  reason. That was clear, too. Reacher checked his watch. Nine-forty in the morning.  But there was no rush, under the circumstances. Barr was in a coma. Tomorrow would  do it. Or the next day. Or maybe he could get to Rodin through the cop, if need be.  What was his name? Emerson?
 The receptionist hung up the phone.
 “Please go straight  up,” she said. “Mr. Rodin is on the third floor.” 
 I’m honored, Reacher thought.  The receptionist wrote his name on a visitor pass and slipped it into a plastic sleeve.  He clipped it on his shirt and headed for the elevator. Rode it to the third floor.  The third floor had low ceilings and internal corridors lit by fluorescent tubes.  There were three doors made of painted fiberboard that were closed and one set of  double doors made of polished wood that were open. Behind those was a secretary at  a desk. The second gatekeeper. She was younger than the downstairs lady but presumably  more senior.
 “Mr. Reacher?” she asked.
 He nodded and she came out from behind her  desk and led him to where the windowed offices started. The third door they came  to was labeled 
A. A. Rodin.
  “What’s the 
A. A. for?” Reacher asked.
 “I’m sure Mr.  Rodin will tell you if he wants to,” the secretary said.
 She knocked on the door  and Reacher heard a baritone reply from inside. Then she opened the door and stood  aside for Reacher to go in past her.
 “Thanks,” he said.
 “You’re most welcome,”  she said.
 Reacher went in. Rodin was already on his feet behind his desk, ready  to welcome his visitor, full of reflexive courtesy. Reacher recognized him from the  TV. He was a guy of about fifty, fairly lean, fairly fit, gray hair cut short. In  person he looked smaller. He was maybe an inch under six feet and a pound under two  hundred. He was dressed in a summer-weight suit, dark blue. He had a blue shirt on,  and a blue tie. His eyes were blue. Blue was his color, no doubt about it. He was  immaculately shaved and wearing cologne. He was a very squared-away guy, no question.  
As opposed to me, Reacher thought. It was like a study in contrasts. Next to Rodin,  Reacher was an unkempt giant. He was six inches taller and fifty pounds heavier.  His hair was two inches longer and his clothes were a thousand dollars cheaper.
 “Mr. Reacher?” Rodin said.
 Reacher nodded. The office was government-basic, but  neat. It was cool and quiet. No real view from the window. Just the flat roofs of  the off-brand stores and the DMV office, with all the ductwork showing. The black  glass tower was visible in the distance. There was a weak sun in the sky. At a right  angle to the window there was a trophy wall behind the desk, with college degree  certificates and photographs of Rodin with politicians. There were framed newspaper  headlines reporting guilty verdicts in seven different cases. On another wall was  a photograph of a blonde girl wearing a mortarboard and a gown and holding a degree  scroll. She was pretty. Reacher looked at her for a moment longer than he needed  to.
 “That’s my daughter,” Rodin said. “She’s a lawyer, too.”
 “Is she?” Reacher  said.
 “She just opened her own office here in town.”
 There was nothing in his tone.  Reacher wasn’t sure whether he was proud, or disapproving.
 “You’re due to meet with  her, I think,” Rodin said.
 “Am I?” Reacher said. “Why?”
 “She’s defending James  Barr.”
 “Your daughter? Is that ethical?”
 “There’s no law against it. It might not  be sensible, but it’s not unethical.”
 He said 
sensible with emphasis, hinting at  a number of meanings. Not smart to defend a notorious case, not smart for a daughter  to take on her father, not smart for 
anyone to take on A. A. Rodin. He sounded like  a very competitive guy.
 “She put your name on her provisional witness list,” he  said.
 “Why?”
 “She thinks you have information.”
 “Where did she get my name?”
 “I don’t know.”
 “From the Pentagon?”
 Rodin shrugged. “I’m not sure. But she got  it from somewhere.
 Therefore people have been looking for you.”
 “Is that why I got  in here?”
 Rodin nodded.
 “Yes, it is,” he said. “That’s exactly why. Generally I  don’t encourage walk-ins.”
 “Your staff seems to be on board with that policy.”
 “I certainly hope so,” Rodin said. “Sit down, please.”
 Reacher sat in the visitor  chair and Rodin sat behind his desk. The window was on Reacher’s left and Rodin’s  right. Neither man had the light in his eyes. It was an equitable furniture arrangement.  Different from some prosecutors’ offices Reacher had known.
 “Coffee?” Rodin asked.
 “Please,” Reacher said.
 Rodin made a call and asked for coffee.
 “Naturally I’m  interested in why you came to see me first,” he said. “The prosecution, I mean, rather  than the defense.”
 “I wanted your personal opinion,” Reacher said.
 “On what?”
 “On how strong a case you’ve got against James Barr.”
 Rodin didn’t answer immediately.  There was a short silence and then there was a knock at the door and the secretary  came in with coffee. She had a silver tray with the works on it. A French press,  two cups, two saucers, a sugar bowl, a tiny pitcher of cream, two silver spoons.  The cups were fine china. 
Not government issue, Reacher thought. 
Rodin likes his  coffee done right. The secretary put the tray on the edge of the desk, so that it  was exactly halfway between the desk chair and the visitor chair.
 “Thanks,” Reacher  said.
 “You’re most welcome,” she said, and left the room.
 “Help yourself,” Rodin  said. “Please.”
 Reacher pushed the plunger down and poured himself a cup, no cream,  no sugar. It smelled dark and strong. Coffee, done right.
 “The case against James  Barr is exceptionally good,” Rodin said.
 “Eyewitnesses?” Reacher asked.
 “No,” Rodin  said. “But eyewitness testimony can be of random value. I’m almost glad we don’t  have eyewitnesses. Because what we’ve got instead is exceptional physical evidence.  And science doesn’t lie. It doesn’t get confused.”
 “Exceptional?” Reacher said.
 “A complete rock-solid evidence trail that ties the man to the crime.”
 “How solid?”
 “As good as it gets. The best I’ve ever seen. I’m completely confident.”
 “I’ve  heard prosecutors say that before.”
 “Not this one, Mr. Reacher. I’m a very cautious  man. I don’t prosecute capital cases unless I’m certain of the outcome.”
 “Keeping  score?”
 Rodin gestured above and behind him at his trophy wall.
 “Seven for seven,”  he said. “One hundred percent.”
 “In how long?”
 “In three years. James Barr will  make it eight for eight. If he ever wakes up.”
 “Suppose he wakes up damaged?”
 “If  he wakes up with any brain function at all, he’s going to trial. What he did here  can’t be forgiven.”
 “OK,” Reacher said.
 “OK what?”
 “You’ve told me what I wanted  to know.”
 “You said you had information. From the army.”
 “I’ll keep it to myself  for now.”
 “You were a military policeman, am I right?”
 “Thirteen years,” Reacher  said.
 “And you knew James Barr?”
 “Briefly.”
 “Tell me about him.”
 “Not yet.”
 “Mr. Reacher, if you have exculpatory information, or anything to add at all, you  really need to tell me now.”
 “Do I?”
 “I’ll get it anyway. My daughter will submit  it. She’ll be looking for a plea bargain.”
 “What does the 
A. A. stand for?”
 “Excuse  me?”
 “Your initials.”
 “Aleksei Alekseivitch. My family came from Russia. But a  long time ago. Before the October Revolution.”
 “But they keep up traditions.”
 “As  you can see.”
 “What do people call you?”
 “Alex, of course.”
 Reacher stood up.  “Well, thanks for your time, Alex. And the coffee.”
 “Are you going to see my daughter  now?”
 “Is there any point? You seem pretty sure of yourself.”
 Rodin smiled an indulgent  smile.
 “It’s a matter of procedure,” he said. “I’m an officer of the court, and  you’re on a witness list. I’m obliged to point out that you’re obliged to go. Anything  less would be unethical.”
 “Where is she?”
 “In the glass tower you can see from  the window.”
 “OK,” Reacher said. “I guess I could drop by.”
 “I still need whatever  information you have,” Rodin said. Reacher shook his head.
 “No,” he said. “You really  don’t.”  
 He returned his visitor pass to the woman at the reception desk and headed  back to the public plaza. Stood in the cold sun and turned a complete circle, getting  a sense of the place. All cities are the same, and all cities are different. They  all have colors. Some are gray. This one was brown. Reacher guessed the brick was  made from local clay and had carried the color of old farmland into the facades.  Even the stone was flecked with tan, like it carried deposits of iron. There were  accents of dark red here and there, like old barns. It was a warm place, not busy,  but it was surviving. It would rebound after the tragedy. There was progress and  optimism and dynamism. All the new construction proved it. There were work zones  and raw concrete curbs everywhere. Lots of planning, lots of rebuilding. Lots of  hope.
 The new parking garage extension anchored the north end of the downtown strip.  It suggested commercial expansion. It was south and slightly west of the kill zone.  Very close. Directly west and maybe twice as distant was a length of the raised highway.  It ran free and clear through a curve for maybe thirty yards before curling in behind  the library. Then it curled some more and passed behind the black glass tower. The  tower was due north of the plaza. It had an NBC sign near the door, on a black granite  slab. Ann Yanni’s workplace, Reacher guessed, as well as Rodin’s daughter’s. East  of the plaza was the office building with the DMV and the recruiting office. That  was where the victims had come from. They had spilled out the door. What had Ann  Yanni said? At the end of a long workweek? They had hustled west across the plaza  toward their parked cars or the bus depot and had stumbled into a nightmare. The  narrow walkway would have slowed them down and lined them up. Like shooting fish  in a barrel.
 Reacher walked the length of the empty ornamental pool to the revolving  door at the base of the tower. He went in and checked the lobby for a directory.  There was a glassed-in board made of ridged black felt with press-in white letters.  NBC was on the second floor. Some of the other suites were empty, and Reacher guessed  the rest changed hands fast enough to make it worth holding on to the press-in letter  system. 
Law Offices of Helen Rodin was listed on four. The letters were a little  misaligned and the spacing was off. 
Rockefeller Center it ain’t, Reacher thought.
 He waited for the elevator in a queue of two, him and a pretty blonde woman. He  looked at her and she looked at him. She got out on two and he realized it was Ann  Yanni. He recognized her from the broadcast. Then he figured all he needed to do  was meet Emerson from the local PD and he would have brought the whole breaking news  tableau to life.
 He found Helen Rodin’s suite. It was at the front of the building.  Her windows were going to overlook the plaza. He knocked. Heard a muffled reply and  went in. There was an empty reception room with a secretary’s desk. The desk was  unoccupied. It was secondhand, but not recently used. 
No secretary yet, Reacher thought.  
Early days.
 He knocked on the inner office door. Heard the same voice make a second  reply. He went in and found Helen Rodin at another secondhand desk. He recognized  her from her father’s photograph. But face-to-face she looked even better. She was  probably no more than thirty, quite tall, lightly built. Slim, in an athletic sort  of a way. Not anorexic. Either she ran or played soccer or had been very lucky with  her metabolism. She had long blonde hair and her father’s blue eyes. There was intelligence  behind them. She was dressed all in black, in a pantsuit with a tight stretch top  under the coat. 
Lycra, Reacher thought. 
Can’t beat it.
  “Hello,” she said.
 “I’m  Jack Reacher,” he said.
 She stared at him. “You’re kidding. Are you really?”
 He  nodded. “Always have been, always will be.”
 “Unbelievable.”
 “Not really. Everybody’ s somebody.”
 “I mean, how did you know to come? We couldn’t find you.”
 “I saw it  on the TV. Ann Yanni, Saturday morning.”
 “Well, thank God for TV,” she said. “And  thank God you’re here.”
 “I was in Miami,” he said. “With a dancer.”
 “A dancer?”
 “She was Norwegian,” he said.
 He walked to the window and looked out. He was four  stories up and the main shopping street ran away directly south, down a hill, emphasizing  his elevation. The ornamental pool was placed with its long axis exactly lined up  with the street. The pool was 
on the street, really, except they had blocked the  street off to make the plaza. Someone returning from a long spell away would be surprised  to find a big tank of water where once there had been roadway. The pool was much  longer and narrower than it had looked from ground level. It looked sad and empty,  with just a thin layer of mud and scum on the black tile. Beyond it and slightly  to the right was the new parking structure. It was slightly downhill from the plaza.  Maybe half a story’s difference.
 “Were you here?” Reacher asked. “When it happened?”
 “Yes, I was,” Helen Rodin said quietly.
 “Did you see it?”
 “Not at first. I heard  the first three gunshots. They came very fast. The first, and then a tiny pause,  and then the next two. Then another pause, a little longer, but just a split second,  really. I stood up in time for the last three. Horrible.”
 Reacher nodded. 
Brave  girl, he thought. 
She hears gunshots, and she stands up. She doesn’t dive under the  desk. Then he thought: 
The first, and then a tiny pause. That was the sound of a  skilled rifleman watching where his first cold shot went. So many variables. The  cold barrel, the range, the wind, the zeroing, the sighting-in.
 “Did you see people  die?” he asked.
 “Two of them,” she said behind him. “It was awful.”
 “Three shots  and two people?”
 “He missed once. Either the fourth or the fifth shot, they’re not  sure. They found the bullet in the pool. That’s why it’s empty. They drained it.”
 Reacher said nothing.
 “The bullet is part of the evidence,” Helen said. “It ties  the rifle to the crime.”
 “Did you know any of the dead people?”
 “No. They were  just people, I guess. In the wrong place at the wrong time.”
 Reacher said nothing.
 “I saw flames from the gun,” Helen said. “Way over there, in the shadows, in the  dark. Little spits of flame.”
 “Muzzle flashes,” Reacher said.
 He turned back from  the window. She held out her hand.
 “I’m Helen Rodin,” she said. “I’m sorry, I should  have introduced myself properly.”
 Reacher took her hand. It was warm and firm.
 “Just Helen?” he said. “Not Helena Alekseyovna or something?”
 She stared at him  again. “How the hell did you know that?”
 “I met your dad,” he said, and let go of  her hand.
 “Did you?” she said. “Where?”
 “In his office, just now.”
 “You went to  
his office? Today?”
 “I just left there.”
 “Why did you go to 
his office? You’re  
my witness. He shouldn’t have seen you.”
 “He was very keen to talk.”
 “What did  you tell him?”
 “Nothing. I asked questions instead.”
 “What questions?”
 “I wanted  to know how strong his case was. Against James Barr.”
 “I’m representing James Barr.  And you’re a defense witness. You should have been talking to me, not him.”
 Reacher  said nothing.
 “Unfortunately the case against James Barr is very strong,” she said.
 “How did you get my name?” Reacher asked.
 “From James Barr, of course,” she said.  “How else?”
 “From 
Barr? I don’t believe it.”
 “Well, listen,” she said.
 She turned  away to the desk and pressed a key on an old-fashioned cassette player. Reacher heard  a voice he didn’t recognize say: 
Denying it is not an option. Helen touched the 
Pause key and kept her finger on it.
 “His first lawyer,” she said. “We changed representation  yesterday.”
 “How? He was in a coma yesterday.”
 “Technically my client is James  Barr’s sister. His next of kin.”
 Then she let go of the 
Pause key and Reacher heard  room sounds and hiss and then a voice he hadn’t heard for fourteen years. It was  exactly how he remembered it. It was low, and tense, and raspy. It was the voice  of a man who rarely spoke. It said: 
Get Jack Reacher for me.
  He stood there, stunned.
 Helen Rodin pressed the 
Stop key.
 “See?” she said.
 Then she checked her watch.
 “Ten-thirty,” she said. “Stick around and join in the client conference.”  
 She  unveiled him like a conjurer on a stage. Like a rabbit out of a hat.
 First in was  a guy Reacher immediately took for an ex-cop. He was introduced as Franklin, a freelance  investigator who worked for lawyers.
 They shook hands.
 “You’re a hard man to find,”  Franklin said.
 “Wrong,” Reacher said. “I’m an impossible man to find.”
 “Want to  tell me why?” There were instant questions in Franklin’s eyes. A cop’s questions.  Like, 
How much use is this guy going to be as a witness? What is he? A felon? A fugitive?  Will he have credibility on the stand?
  “Just a hobby,” Reacher said. “Just a personal  choice.”
 “So you’re cool?”
 “You could skate on me.”
 Then a woman came in. She  was in her mid- to late thirties, probably, dressed for an office, and stressed and  sleepless. But behind the agitation she wasn’t unappealing. She looked like a kind  and decent person. Even pretty. But she was clearly James Barr’s sister. Reacher  knew that even before they were introduced. She had the same coloring and a softer,  feminized, older version of the same face.
 “I’m Rosemary Barr,” she said. “I’m so  glad you found us. It feels providential. Now I really feel we’re getting somewhere.”
 Reacher said nothing at all.
 The law offices of Helen Rodin didn’t run to a conference  room. Reacher figured that would come later. Maybe. If she prospered. So all four  people crowded into the inner office. Helen sat at her desk. Franklin perched on  a corner of it. Reacher leaned on the windowsill. Rosemary Barr paced, nervously.  If there had been a rug, she would have worn holes in it.
 “OK,” Helen said. “Defense  strategy. At the minimum we want to pursue a medical plea. But we’ll aim higher than  that. How high we eventually get will depend on a number of factors. In which connection,  first, I’m sure we all want to hear what Mr. Reacher has to say.”
 “I don’t think  you do,” Reacher said.
 “Do what?”
 “Want to hear what I’ve got to say.”
 “Why wouldn’ t we?”
 “Because you jumped to the wrong conclusion.”
 “Which is?”
 “Why do you think  I went to see your father first?”
 “I don’t know.”
 “Because I didn’t come here to  help James Barr.”
 Nobody spoke.
 “I came here to bury him,” Reacher said.
 They  all stared.
 “But why?” Rosemary Barr asked.
 “Because he’s done this before. And  once was enough.”								
									 Copyright © 2005 by Lee Child. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.