Child, Lee – Without Fail

Armstrong opened the door and climbed in beside him.

‘Morning, M. E.,’ he said.

‘Morning, sir,’ she replied. ¢Fhese are associates of mine,

Jack Reacher and Frances Neagley.’

Neagley half turned and Armstrong threaded a long arm over

the seat to shake her hand.

‘I know you,’ he said. ‘I met you at the party on Thursday

evening. You’re a contributor, aren’t you?’

‘She’s a security person, actually,’ Froelich said. ‘We had a

little cloak-and-dagger stuff going there. An efficiency analysis.’

‘I was impressed,’ Neagley said.

‘Excellent,’ Armstrong said to her. ‘Believe me, ma’am, I’m

very grateful for the care everybody takes of me. Way more

than I deserve. Really.’

He was magnificent, Reacher thought. His voice and his

face and his eyes spoke of nothing but boundless fascination

with Neagley alone. Like he would rather talk to her than do

anything else in the whole world. And he had one hell of a

visual memory, to place one face in a thousand from four days

ago. That was clear. A born politician. He turned and shook

Reacher’s hand and lit up the car with a smile of genuine

pleasure.

‘Pleased to meet you, Mr Reacher,’ he said..

‘Pleasure’s all mine,’ Reacher said. Then he found himself

smiling back. He liked the guy, immediately. He had charm to

burn. There was charisma coming off him like heat. And even if

125

you discounted ninety-nine per cent of it as political bullshit you

could still like the fragment that was left. You could like it a lot.

‘You in security too?’ Armstrong asked him.

‘Adviser,’ Reacher said.

‘Well, you guys do a hell of a great job. Glad to have you

aboard.’

There was a tiny sound from Froelich’s earpiece and she

took off down the street and made her way towards Wisconsin

Avenue. Merged into the traffic stream and headed south and

east for the centre of town. The sun had disappeared again

and the city looked grey through the deep tint in the windows.

Armstrong made a little sound like a happy sigh and looked out

at it, like he was still thrilled with it. Under the raincoat he was

immaculate in a suit and a broadcloth shirt and a silk tie. He

looked larger than life. Reacher had five years and three inches

and fifty pounds on him but felt small and dull and shabby in

comparison. But the guy also looked real. Very genuine. You

could forget the suit and the tie and picture him in a torn old

plaid jacket, out there splitting logs in his yard. He looked like a

very serious politician, but a fun guy, too. He was tall and wired

with energy. Blue eyes, plain features, unruly hair flecked with

gold. He looked fit. Not with the kind of polish a gym gives you,

but like he was just born strong. He had good hands. A slim

gold wedding ring and no others. Cracked, untidy nails.

‘Ex-military, am I right?’ he asked. The ?’ Neagley said.

‘Both of you, I should think. You’re both a little wary. He’s

checking me out and you’re checking the windows, especially at

the lights. I recognize the signs. My dad was military.’

‘Career guy?’

Armstrong smiled. ‘You didn’t read my campaign bios? He

planned on a career, but he was invalided out before I was born

and started a lumber business. Never lost the look, though. He always walked the wal, that’s for sure.’

Froelich came off M Street and headed parallel with

Pennsylvania Avenue, past the Executive Office Building, past

the front of the White House. Armstrong craned to look out at

it. Smiled, with the laugh lines deepening around his eyes.

‘Unbelievable, isn’t it?’ he said. ‘Out of everybody who’s

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surprised I’m going to be a part of that, I’m the most surprised

of all, believe me.’

Froelich drove straight past her own office in the Treasury

Building and headed for the Capitol dome in the distance.

‘Wasn’t there a Reacher at Treasury?’ Armstrong asked. Hell of a memory for names too, Reacher thought.

‘My elder brother,’ he said.

‘Small world,’ Armstrong said.

Froelich made it onto Constitution Avenue and drove past

the side of the Capitol. Made a left onto First Street and headed

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