Child, Lee – Without Fail

it would be seen that they had died protecting democracy itself,

not just himself in person. He hoped their families might

take some small measure of comfort from that, as well as a

great deal of justified pride. He promised swift and certain

retribution against the perpetrators of the outrage. He assured

America that no amount of violence or intimidation could deter

the workings of government, and that the transition would

continue unaffected. But he finished by saying that as a mark of

his absolute respect, he was remaining in Washington and

cancelling all engagements until he had attended a memorial

service for his personal friend and protection team leader. He

said the service would be held on Sunday morning, in a small

country church in a small Wyoming town called Grace, where

no finer metaphor for America’s enduring greatness could be

found.

‘Guy’s full of shit,’ the duty officer said.

‘No, he’s OK,’ Reacher said.

The bulletin cut to first-quarter football highlights. The duty

officer muted the sound and turned away. Reacher closed his

eyes. Thought of Joe, and then of Froelich. Thought of them

together. Then he rehearsed his upward glance once again. The

curved spray of Froelich’s blood, the curve of the shooter’s

shoulder, retreating, swinging away, swooping away. The coat

flowing with him. The coat. He ran it all again, like the TV

station had rerun its tape. He froze on the coat. He knew. He

opened his eyes wide.

‘Figured how yet?’ he asked.

‘Can’t get past Bannon’s take,’ Neagley answered.

‘Say it.’

‘Crosetti saw somebody he knew and trusted.’

‘Man or woman?’

‘Man, according to you.’

‘OK, say it again.’

Neagley shrugged. ‘Crosetti saw some man he knew and

trusted.’

290

Reacher shook his head. Fwo words short. Crosetti saw

some type of man he knew and trusted.’

‘Who?’ she asked.

‘Who can get in and out of anywhere without suspicion?’

Neagley looked at him. ‘Law enforcement?’

Reacher nodded. Fhe coat was long, kind of reddish-brown,

faint pattern to it. Too thin for an overcoat, too thick for a

raincoat, flapping open. It swung as he ran.’

‘As who ran?’

I’hat Bismarck cop. The lieutenant or Whatever he was. He

ran over to me after I came out of the church. It was him on the

warehouse roof.’

‘It was a cop?’

ffnat’s a very serious allegation,’ Bannon said. ‘Based on

a quarter-second of observation from ninety yards during

extreme mayhem.’

They were back in the FBI’s conference room. Stuyvesant

had never left it. He was still in his pink sweater. The room was still impressive.

‘It was him,’ Reacher said. ‘No doubt about it.’

‘Cops are all fingerprinted,’ Bannon said. ‘Condition of

employment.’

‘So his partner isn’t a cop,’ Reacher said. ie guy on the

garage video.’

Nobody spoke.

‘It was him,’ Reacher said again.

‘How long did you see him for in Bismarck?’ Bannon asked.

‘en seconds, maybe,’ Reacher said. ‘He was heading for the

church. Maybe he’d seen me inside, ducked out, saw me leave,

turned round, got ready to go back in.’

ff’en and a quarter seconds total,’ Bannon said. ‘Both times in

panic situations. Defence counsel would eat you up.’

‘It makes sense,’ Stuyvesant said. ‘Bismarck is Armstrong’s

home town. Home towns are the places to look for

feuds.’

Bannon made a face. ‘Description?’

‘all,’ Reacher said. ‘Sandy hair going grey. Lean face, lean

body. Long coat, some kind of a heavy twill, reddish-brown,

291

open. Tweed jacket, white shirt, tie, grey flannel pants. Big

old shoes.’

‘Age?’

‘Middle or late forties.’

‘Rank?’

‘He showed me a gold badge, but he stayed twenty feet away.

I couldn’t read it. He struck me as a senior guy. Maybe a

detective lieutenant, maybe even a captain.’

‘Did he speak?’

‘He shouted from twenty feet away. Couple of dozen words,

maybe.’

‘Was he the guy on the phone?’

‘No.’

‘So now we know both of them,’ Stuyvesant said. ‘A shorter

squat guy in a herringbone overcoat from the garage video and

a tall lean cop from Bismarck. The squat guy spoke on the

phone, and it’s his thumbprint. And he was in Colorado with

the machine gun because the cop is the marksman with the

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