Tripwire by Lee Child

‘Take the bitch to the hospital,’ he said sourly.

‘Chester goes with them,’ Marilyn said. ‘For verification. He needs to see her go inside to the ER, alone. I stay here, as surety.’

Hobie stopped tapping. Looked at her and smiled. ‘Don’t you trust me?’

‘No, I don’t trust you. We don’t do it this way, you’ll just take Sheryl out of here and lock her up someplace else.’

Hobie was still smiling. ‘Farthest thing from my thoughts. I was going to have Tony shoot her and dump her in the sea.’

There was silence again. Marilyn was shaking inside.

‘You sure you want to do this?’ Hobie asked her. ‘She says one word to the hospital people, she gets you killed, you know that, right?’

Marilyn nodded. ‘She won’t say anything to

anybody. Not knowing you’ve still got me here.’

‘You better pray she doesn’t.’

‘She won’t. This isn’t about us. It’s about her. She needs to get help.’

She stared at him, leaning back, feeling faint. She was searching his face for a sign of compassion. Some acceptance of his responsibility. He stared back at her. There was no compassion in his face. Nothing there at all, except annoyance. She swallowed and took a deep breath.

‘And she needs a skirt. She can’t go out without one. It’ll look suspicious. The hospital will get the police involved. Neither of us wants that. So Tony needs to go out and buy her a new skirt.’

‘Lend her your dress,’ Hobie said. ‘Take it off and give it to her.’

There was a long silence.

‘It wouldn’t fit her,’ Marilyn said.

‘That’s not the reason, is it?’

She made no reply. Silence. Hobie shrugged.

‘OK,’ he said.

She swallowed again. ‘And shoes.’

‘What?’

‘She needs shoes,’ Marilyn said. ‘She can’t go without shoes.’

‘Jesus,’ Hobie said. ‘What the hell next?’

‘Next, we deal. Soon as Chester is back here and tells me he saw her walk in alone and unharmed, then we deal.’

Hobie traced the curve of his hook with the fingers of his left hand.

‘You’re a smart woman,’ he said.

I know I am, Marilyn thought. That’s the first of your complications.

Reacher placed the sports bag on the white sofa underneath the Mondrian copy. He unzipped it and turned it over and spilled out the bricks of fifties. Thirty-nine thousand three hundred dollars in cash. He split it in half by tossing the bricks alternately left and right to opposite ends of the sofa. He finished up with two very impressive stacks.

‘Four trips to the bank,’ Jodie said. ‘Under ten thousand dollars, the reporting rules don’t apply, and we don’t want to be answering any questions about where we got this from, right? We’ll put it in my account and cut the Hobies a cashier’s check for nine-teen-six-fifty. Our half, we’ll access through my gold card, OK?’

Reacher nodded. ‘We need airfare to St Louis, Missouri, plus a hotel. Nineteen grand in the bank, we can stay in decent places and go business class.’

‘It’s the only way to fly,’ she said. She put her arms around his waist and stretched up on tiptoes and kissed him on the mouth. He kissed her back, hard.

‘This is fun, isn’t it?’ she said.

‘For us, maybe,’ he said. ‘Not for the Hobies.’

They made three trips together to three separate banks and wound up at a fourth, where she made the final deposit and bought a cashier’s check made out to Mr T. and Mrs M. Hobie in the sum of $19,650. The bank guy put it in a creamy envelope and she zipped it into her pocketbook. Then they walked back to Broadway together, holding hands, so she could pack for the trip. She put the bank envelope in her bureau and he got on the phone and established that United from JFK was the best bet for St Louis, that time of day.

‘Cab?’ she asked.

He shook his head. ‘We’ll drive.’

The big V-8 made a hell of a sound in the basement garage. He blipped the throttle a couple of times and grinned. The torque rocked the heavy vehicle, side to side on its springs.

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