Echo burning. A Jack Reacher Novel. Lee Child

One of the chairs was occupied by a woman. She looked to be somewhere in her middle fifties. She was the sort of person who still dresses the same way she always did despite her advancing age. She was wearing tight jeans with a belt and a blouse with a Western fringe. She had a young woman’s hairstyle, colored a bright shade of orange and teased up off her scalp above a thin face. She looked like a twenty-year-old prematurely aged by some rare medical condition. Or by a shock. Maybe the sheriff had sat her down and given her some awkward news. She looked preoccupied and a little confused. But she showed a measure of vitality, too. A measure of authority. There was still vigor there. She looked like the part of Texas she owned, rangy and powerful, but temporarily laid low, with most of her good days behind her.

“What did the sheriff want?” Carmen asked again.

“Something happened,” the woman said, and her tone meant it wasn’t something good. Reacher saw a flicker of hope behind Carmen’s eyes. Then the room went quiet and the woman turned to look in his direction.

“His name is Reacher,” Carmen said. “He’s looking for work.”

“Where’s he from?”

Her voice was like rawhide. I’m the boss here, it said.

“I found him on the road,” Carmen answered.

“What can he do?”

“He’s worked with horses before. He can do blacksmithing.”

Reacher looked out of the window while she lied about his skills. He had never been closer to a horse than walking past the ceremonial stables on the older army bases that still had them. He knew in principle that a blacksmith made horseshoes, which were iron things horses had nailed to their feet. Or their hoofs. Hooves? He knew there was a charcoal brazier involved, and a bellows, and a great deal of rhythmic hammering. An anvil was required, and a trough of water. But he had never actually touched a horseshoe. He had seen them occasionally, nailed up over doors as a superstition. He knew some cultures nailed them upward, and some downward, all to achieve the same good luck. But that was all he knew about them.

“We’ll talk about him later,” the woman said. “Other things to talk about first.”

Then she remembered her manners and sketched a wave across the table.

“I’m Rusty Greer,” she said.

“Like the ballplayer?” Reacher asked.

“I was Rusty Greer before he was born,” the woman said. Then she pointed at Bobby. “You already met my boy Robert Greer. Welcome to the Red House Ranch, Mr. Reacher. Maybe we can find you work. If you’re willing and honest.”

“What did the sheriff want?” Carmen asked for the third time.

Rusty Greer turned and looked straight at her.

“Sloop’s lawyer’s gone missing,” she said.

“What?”

“He was on his way to the federal jail to see Sloop. He never got there. State police found his car abandoned on the road, south of Abilene. Just sitting there empty, miles from anywhere, keys still in it. Situation doesn’t look good.”

“Al Eugene?”

“How many lawyers you think Sloop had?”

Her tone added: you idiot. The room went totally silent and Carmen went pale and her hand jumped to her mouth, fingers rigid and extended, covering her lips.

“Maybe the car broke down,” she said.

“Cops tried it,” Rusty said. “It worked just fine.”

“So where is he?”

“He’s gone missing. I just told you that.”

“Have they looked for him?”

“Of course they have. But they can’t find him.”

Carmen took a deep breath. Then another.

“Does it change anything?” she asked.

“You mean, is Sloop still coming home?”

Carmen nodded weakly, like she was terribly afraid of the answer.

“Don’t you worry none,” Rusty said. She was smiling. “Sloop will be back here Monday, just like he always was going to be. Al being missing doesn’t change a thing. The sheriff made that clear. It was a done deal.”

Carmen paused a long moment, with her eyes closed, and her hand on her lips. Then she forced the hand down and forced the lips into a trembling smile.

“Well, good,” she said.

“Yes, good,” her mother-in-law said.

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