Tripwire by Lee Child

Five minutes there and five minutes back add up to ten, but at least twenty minutes passed. Hobie paced and checked his watch a dozen times. Then he walked

through into reception and the guy with the shotgun followed him to the office door. He kept the weapon pointed into the room, but his head was turned, watching his boss.

‘Is he planning to let us go?’ Curry whispered.

Jodie shrugged and lifted up on to her fingertips, hunching her shoulders and ducking her head to ease the pain.

‘I don’t know,’ she whispered back.

Marilyn had her forearms pinched tight together, with her head resting on them. She looked up and shook her head.

‘He killed two cops,’ she whispered. ‘We were witnesses.’

‘Stop talking,’ the guy called from the door.

They heard the whine of the elevator again and the faint bump through the floor as it stopped. There was a moment’s quiet and then the lobby door opened and suddenly there was noise in reception, Tony’s voice, and then Hobie’s, loud and fuelled with relief. Hobie came back into the office carrying a white package and smiling with the mobile half of his face. He clamped the package under his right elbow and tore it open as he walked and Jodie saw more engraving on thick parchment. He took the long way around to the desk and dumped the certificates on top of the three hundred he already had. Stone followed Tony like he had been forgotten and stood gazing at the life’s work of his ancestors piled casually on the scarred wood. Marilyn looked up and walked her fingers backward across the glass, jacking herself upright with her hands because she had no strength left in her shoulders.

‘OK, you got them all,’ she said quietly. ‘Now you can let us go.’

Hobie smiled. ‘Marilyn, what are you, a moron?’

Tony laughed. Jodie looked from him to Hobie. She saw they were very nearly at the end of some long process. Some goal had been in sight, and now it was very close. Tony’s laughter was about release after days of strain and tension.

‘Reacher is still out there,’ she said quietly, like a move in a game of chess.

Hobie stopped smiling. He touched the hook to his forehead and rubbed it across his scars and nodded.

‘Reacher,’ he said. ‘Yes, the last piece of the puzzle. We mustn’t forget about Reacher, must we? He’s still out there. But out where, exactly?’

She hesitated.

‘I don’t know, exactly,’ she said.

Then her head came up, defiant.

‘But he’s in the city,’ she said. ‘And he’ll find you.’

Hobie met her gaze. Stared at her, contempt in his face.

‘You think that’s some kind of threat?’ he sneered. ‘Truth is I want him to find me. Because he has something I require. Something vital. So help me out, Mrs Jacob. Call him and invite him right over.’

She was silent for a moment.

‘I don’t know where he is,’ she said.

‘Try your place,’ Hobie said back. ‘We know he’s been staying there. He’s probably there right now. You got off the plane at eleven-fifty, right?’

She stared at him. He nodded complacently.

‘We check these things. We own a boy called Simon, who I believe you’ve met. He put you on the seven o’clock flight from Honolulu, and we called JFK and they told us it landed at eleven-fifty exactly. Old Jack Reacher was all upset in Hawaii, according to our boy

Simon, so he’s probably still upset. And tired. Like you are. You look tired, Mrs Jacob, you know that? But your friend Jack Reacher is probably in bed at your place, sleeping it off, while you’re here having fun with the rest of us. So call him, tell him to come over

and join you.’

She stared down at the table. Said nothing. ‘Call him. Then you can see him one more time

before you die.’

She was silent. She stared down at the glass. It was smeared with her handprints. She wanted to call him. She wanted to see him. She felt like she had felt a million times over fifteen long years. She wanted to see him again. His lazy, lopsided grin. His tousled hair. His arms, so long they gave him a greyhound’s grace even though he was built like the side of a house. His eyes, cold icy blue like the Arctic. His hands, giant battered mitts that bunched into fists the size of footballs. She wanted to see those hands again. She wanted to see them around Hobie’s throat.

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