Tripwire by Lee Child

the strain and made it impossible for the hook to be separated from the stump. He pulled until the gagging turned to fractured wheezing and the redness in the guy’s face began to turn blue. Then he eased off an inch and bent close to the guy’s ear.

‘He had a big bruise on his face. What the hell was that about?’

The guy was wheezing and gesturing wildly. Hobie twisted the hook, which relieved the pressure on the guy’s voice box, but brought the tip up into the soft area under his ear.

‘What the hell was that about?’ he asked again.

The guy knew that with the hook at that angle any extra rearward pressure was going to put the tip right through his skin into that vulnerable triangle behind the jaw. He didn’t know much about anatomy, but he knew he was half an inch away from dying.

‘I’ll tell you,’ he wheezed. ‘I’ll tell you.’

Hobie kept the hook in position, twisting it every time the guy hesitated, so that the whole true story took no longer than three minutes, beginning to end.

‘You failed me,’ Hobie said.

‘Yes, we did,’ the guy gasped. ‘But it was his fault. He got all tangled up behind the screen door. He was useless.’

Hobie jerked the hook.

‘As opposed to what? Like he’s useless and you’re useful?’

‘It was his fault,’ the guy gasped again. ‘I’m still useful.’

‘You’re going to have to prove that to me.’

‘How?’ the guy wheezed. ‘Please, how? Just tell me.’

‘Easy. You can do something for me.’

‘Yes,’ the guy gasped. ‘Yes, anything, please.’

‘Bring me Mrs Jacob,’ Hobie screamed at him.

‘Yes,’ the guy screamed back.

‘And don’t screw up again,’ Hobie screamed.

‘No,’ the guy gasped. ‘No, we won’t, I promise.’

Hobie jerked the hook again, twice, in time with his words.

‘Not we. Just you. Because you can do something else for me.’

‘What?’ the guy wheezed. ‘Yes, what? Anything.’

‘Get rid of your useless partner,’ Hobie whispered. ‘Tonight, on the boat.’

The guy nodded as vigorously as the hook would allow his head to move. Hobie leaned forward and slipped the hook away. The guy collapsed sideways, gasping and retching into the fabric on the sofa.

‘And bring me his right hand,’ Hobie whispered. ‘To prove it.’

They found that the clinic Leon had been attending was not really a place in its own right, but just an administrative unit within a giant private hospital facility serving the whole of lower Putnam County. There was a ten-storey white building set in parkland, with medical practices of every description clustered around its base. Small roads snaked through tasteful landscaping and led to little culs-de-sac ringed with low offices for the doctors and the dentists. Anything the professions couldn’t handle in the offices got transferred to rented beds inside the main building. Thus the cardiology clinic was a notional entity, made up of a changing population of doctors and patients depending on who was sick and how bad they were. Leon’s own correspondence showed he had been seen in several different physical locations, ranging from

the ICU at the outset, to the recovery ward, then to one of the outpatient offices, then back to the ICU for his final visit.

The name of the supervising cardiologist was the only constant feature throughout the paperwork, a Dr McBannerman, who Reacher pictured in his mind as a kindly old guy, white hair, erudite, wise and sympathetic, maybe of ancient Scottish extraction, until Jodie told him she had met with her several times and she was a woman from Baltimore aged about thirty-five. He was driving Jodie’s jeep around the small curving roads, while she was scanning left and right for the correct office. She recognized it at the end of a cul-de-sac, a low brick structure, white trim, somehow glowing with an antiseptic halo like medical buildings do. There were half a dozen cars parked outside, with one spare slot which Reacher backed into.

The receptionist was a heavy old busybody who welcomed Jodie with a measure of sympathy. She invited them to wait in McBannerman’s inner office, which earned them glares from the other patients in the waiting room. The inner office was an inoffensive place, pale and sterile and silent, with a token examination table and a large coloured cutaway diagram of the human heart on the wall behind the desk. Jodie was staring up at it like she was asking so which part finally failed? Reacher could feel his own heart, huge and muscular and thumping gently in his chest. He could feel the blood pumping and the pulses ticking in his wrists and his neck.

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