“But why didn’t they have their driver? Why come on their own? I assume Marshall was at the funeral with them. But then they chose to drive more than three hundred miles by themselves? And more than three hundred back?”
“Maybe Marshall was unavailable,” I said.
“Marshall’s their blue-eyed boy,” she said. “He’s available when they say so.”
“Why did they come here at all? It’s a very long way for a very average dinner.”
“They came for the briefcase, Reacher. Norton’s wrong. She must be. Someone gave it to them. They left with it.”
“I don’t think Norton’s wrong. She convinced me.”
“Then maybe they picked it up in the parking lot. Norton wouldn’t have seen that. I assume she didn’t go out there in the cold and wave them off. But they left with it, for sure. Why else would they be happy to fly back to Germany?”
“Maybe they just gave up on it. They were due back in Germany anyway. They couldn’t stay here forever. They’ve got Kramer’s command to fight over.”
Summer said nothing.
“Whatever,” I said. “There’s no possible connection.”
“It’s a random universe.”
I nodded. “So they stay on the back burner. Carbone stays on the front.”
“Are we going back out to look for the yogurt pot?”
I shook my head. “It’s in the guy’s car, or in his trash.”
“Could have been useful.”
“We’ll work with the crowbar instead. It’s brand new. It was probably bought just as recently as the yogurt was.”
“We have no resources.”
“Detective Clark up in Green Valley will do it for us. He’s already looking for
“That’s a lot of extra work for him.”
I nodded. “We’ll have to offer him something. We’ll have to string him along. We’ll tell him we’re working on something that might help him.”
“Like what?”
I smiled. “We could fake it. We could give him Andrea Norton’s name. We could show her exactly what kind of a family we are.”
I called Detective Clark. I didn’t give him Andrea Norton’s name. I told him a few lies instead. I told him I recalled the damage to Mrs. Kramer’s door, and the damage to her head, and that I figured a crowbar was involved, and I told him that as it happened we had a rash of break-ins at military installations all up and down the Eastern seaboard that also seemed to involve crowbars, and I asked him if we could piggyback on the legwork he was undoubtedly already doing in terms of tracing the Green Valley weapon. He paused at that point, and I filled the silence by telling him that military quartermasters currently had no crowbars on general issue and therefore I was convinced our bad guys had used a civilian source of supply. I gave him some guff about not wanting to duplicate his efforts because we had a more promising line of inquiry to spend our time on. He paused again at that point, like cops everywhere, waiting to hear the proffered quid pro quo. I told him that as soon as we had a name or a profile or a description he would have it too, just as fast as stuff can travel down a fax line. He perked up then. Clark was a desperate man, staring at a brick wall. He asked what exactly I wanted. I told him it would be helpful to us if he could expand his canvass to a three-hundred-mile radius around Green Valley, and check hardware store purchases during a window that started late on New Year’s Eve and extended through, say, January fourth.
“What’s your promising line of inquiry?” he asked.
“There might be a military connection with Mrs. Kramer. We might be able to give you the guy on a plate all tied up with a bow.”
“I’d really like that.”
“Cooperation,” I said. “Makes the world go around.”
“Sure does,” he said.
He sounded happy. He bought the whole bill of goods. He promised to expand his search and copy me in. I hung up the phone and it rang again immediately. I picked it up and heard a woman’s voice. It sounded warm and intimate and Southern. It asked me to 10- 33 a 10-16 from the MP XO at Fort Jackson, which meant
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