Child, Lee – Without Fail

mistake.’

‘Stuyvesant needs to bring a surveillance helicopter too.

This angle is hopeless, but you could see everything from the

air.’

‘Armstrong won’t let him,’ Reacher said. ‘But we’ve got the

air. We’ve got the church tower.’

He turned and walked back towards it.

‘Forget the rooming house,’ he said. ‘his is where we’re

going to stay. We’ll see them coming, north or south, night or

day. It’ll all be over before Stuyvesant or Armstrong even get

here.’

They were ten feet from the church door when it opened and

a clergyman stepped out, closely followed by an old couple. The

clergyman was middle-aged and looked very earnest. The old

couple were both maybe sixty years old. The man was tall

and stooped, and a little underweight. The woman was still

good-looking, a little above average height, trim and nicely

dressed. She had short fair hair turning grey the way fair hair

does. Reacher knew exactly who she was, immediately. And she

knew who he was, or thought she did. She stopped talking and

stopped walking and just stared at him the same way her

daughter had. She looked at his face, confused, like she was

comparing similarities and differences against a mental image.

‘You?’ she said. ‘Or is it?’

Her face was strained and tired. She was wearing no makeup.

Her eyes were dry, but they hadn’t been for the last two

361

days. That was clear. They were rimmed with red and lined and

swollen.

‘I’m his brother,’ Reacher said. ‘I’m very sorry for your loss.’

‘You should be,’ she said. ‘Because this is entirely Joe’s fault.’

‘Is it?’

‘He made her change jobs, didn’t he? He wouldn’t date a

co-worker, so she had to change. He wouldn’t change. She went over to the dangerous side, while he stayed exactly where he

was, safe and sound. And now look what’s come of it.’

Reacher paused.

‘I think she was happy where she was,’ he said. ‘She could

have changed back, you know, afterwards, if she wasn’t. But

she didn’t. So I think that means she wanted to stay there. She

was a fine agent, doing important work.’

‘How could she change back? Was she supposed to see him

every day like nothing had happened?’

‘I meant she could have waited the year, and then changed

back.’

‘What difference does a year make? He broke her heart. How

could she ever work for him again?’

Reacher said nothing.

‘Is he coming here?’ she asked.

‘No,’ Reacher said. ‘He’s not.’

‘Good,’ she said. ‘Because he wouldn’t be welcome.’

‘No, I guess he wouldn’t,’ Reacher said.

‘I suppose he’s too busy,’ she said.

She walked off, towards the dirt road. The clergyman

followed her, and so did Froelich’s father. But then he hesitated

and turned back.

‘She knows it’s not really Joe’s fault,’ he said. ‘We both know

Mary Ellen was doing what she wanted.’

Reacher nodded. ‘She was terrific at it.’

‘Was she?’

‘Best they ever had.’

The old man nodded, like he was satisfied.

‘How is Joe?’ he asked. ‘I met him a couple of times.’

‘He died,’ Reacher said. ‘Five years ago. In the line of duty.’

There was quiet for a moment.

‘I’m very sorry,’ the old man said.

362

‘But don’t tell Mrs Froelich,’ Reacher said. ‘If it helps her not

to know.’

The old man nodded again and turned away and set off after

his wife with a strange loping stride.

‘See?’ Neagley said quietly. ‘Not everything is your fault.’

There was a notice board planted in the ground near the

church door. It was like a very slim cabinet mounted on sturdy

wooden legs. It had glass doors. Behind the doors was a square

yard of green felt with slim cotton tapes thumbtacked diagonally

all over it. Notices typed on a manual typewriter were

slipped behind the tapes. At the top was a permanent list of

regular Sunday services. The first was held every week at eight

o’clock in the morning. This was clearly a denomination that

demanded a high degree of commitment from its parishioners.

Next to the permanent list was a hastily typed announcement

that this Sunday’s eight o’clock service would be dedicated to

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