THE TALL GUY stood back and let Reacher walk in front of him. The corridor dog-legged left, and then right. Reacher pieced together the geography from what little he had seen. He figured the main office was around three more corners. Still some distance away. Before that would come the small square lobby, with the locked quarantine doors, and the clerk, and the rear door to the outside. Before that would come the interview rooms, on both sides of a short stretch of corridor all its own. The scuffed spaces for cops and suspects would be on the right, and on the left would be the slightly grander spaces he had seen on his way to the cells. There were two of them. His destination, he assumed. Higher quality, for conferences between lawyers and clients. They had windows in their doors, narrow vertical rectangles of wired glass, set off-centre above the handles.
He walked straight past the first door, glancing in the window but pretending not to, seeing Sullivan in there, seated on the left side of a table, in her neat Class A uniform, hands folded on top of her closed briefcase, and he kept on walking, to the second door, where he stopped and glanced in the window quite openly.
The second room was empty.
No client, and no lawyer, male or otherwise.
Neither heads nor tails.
Not yet.
Behind him the tall guy said, ‘Hold up, major. You’re in this one back here.’
Reacher turned around and tracked back. The door wasn’t locked. The tall guy just turned the handle and opened it up. Reacher listened to the sounds it made. A solid metallic click from the handle, a cursive precision grind from the hinges, an air-locked swish from the silicone seals. Not loud, but distinctive. Reacher stepped inside. Sullivan looked up. The tall guy said, ‘Buzz when you’re done, counsellor.’
Reacher sat down opposite Sullivan, and the tall guy closed the door and walked away. The door was not locked because there was no handle on the inside. Just a flat expanse, with something missing, unexpected, like a face without a nose. There was a doorbell button next to the jamb.
Sullivan kept her briefcase closed, and her hands clasped on top of it. She said, ‘I won’t represent you in the Moorcroft assault. In fact I really don’t want you as a client at all.’
Reacher didn’t answer. He was checking what he could hear from the corridor. Which wasn’t much, but was maybe enough.
Sullivan said, ‘Major?’
Reacher said, ‘I’m what they’re giving you, so get used to it.’
‘Colonel Moorcroft is a friend of mine.’
‘Your old teacher?’
‘One of them.’
‘Then you know what those guys are like. In their heads they’re never out of the classroom. Socratic, or whatever they call it. He was yanking my chain, for the sake of it. He was arguing for the fun of it, because that’s what they do. You left, and then he said he was going to file the paperwork as soon as he finished his toast. He intended to all along. But straight answers aren’t his style.’
‘I don’t believe you. No paperwork was filed this morning.’
‘The last I saw of him he was walking out of the dining room. About two minutes after you.’
‘So you’re denying this one too?’
‘Think about it, counsellor. My aim was to get Major Turner out of her cell. How would attacking Moorcroft help me? It would set me back at least a day, if not two or three.’
‘Why do you care so much about Major Turner?’
‘I liked her voice on the phone.’
‘Maybe you were angry with Moorcroft.’
‘Did I look angry?’
‘A little.’
‘You’re wrong, major. I didn’t look angry at all. Because I wasn’t angry. I was sitting there quite patiently. He wasn’t the first classroom guy I ever met. I went to school, after all.’
‘I felt uncomfortable.’
‘What did you tell Podolski?’
‘Just that. There was a dispute, and I felt uncomfortable.’
‘Did you tell him it was heated?’
‘You confronted him. You argued.’
‘What was I supposed to do? Stand up and salute? He’s not exactly the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.’
‘The evidence against you appears to be considerable. The clothes, in particular. That’s classic.’
Reacher didn’t answer. He was listening again. He heard footsteps in the corridor. Two people. Both men. Low voices. Short, uncontroversial sentences. A succinct and everyday exchange of information. The footsteps moved on. There were no door sounds. No click, no grind, no swish.
Sullivan said, ‘Major?’
Reacher said, ‘Do you have a wallet in your briefcase?’
‘What?’
‘You heard me.’
‘Why would I?’
‘Because you’re not carrying a purse, and if you don’t mind me saying so, your uniform is tailored very close to your figure, and there are absolutely no bulges in your pockets.’
Sullivan kept her hands on her briefcase and said, ‘Yes, I have a wallet in here.’
‘How much money is in it?’
‘I don’t know. Thirty dollars, maybe.’
‘How much was your last ATM withdrawal?’
‘Two hundred.’
‘Got a cell phone in there too?’
‘Yes.’