Bad Luck and Trouble
them they were. He wasn’t sure what difference the seventeen days were going to make. Didn’t know where in the process she was going to be.
“What’s her name?” he asked.
“Angela,” Neagley said.
“OK.”
“The kid is called Charlie. A boy.”
“OK.”
“Four years old.”
“OK.”
They stepped up on the porch and Neagley found a bell push and laid a fingertip on it, gently, briefly, respectfully, as if the electric circuit could sense deference. Reacher heard the sound of a muted bell inside the house, and then nothing. He waited. About a minute and a half later the door was opened. Apparently by nobody. Then Reacher looked down and saw a little boy stretching up to the handle. The handle was high and the boy was small and his stretch was so extreme that the arc of the door’s travel was pulling him off his tiptoes.
“You must be Charlie,” Reacher said.
“I am,” the boy said.
“I was a friend of your dad’s.”
“My dad’s dead.”
“I know. I’m very sad about that.”
“Me too.”
“Is it OK to be opening the door all by yourself?”
“Yes,” the boy said. “It’s OK.”
He looked exactly like Calvin Franz. The resemblance was uncanny. The face was the same. The body shape was the same. The short legs, the low waist, the long arms. The shoulders were just skin and bone under a child’s T-shirt but somehow they already hinted at the simian bulk they would carry later. The eyes were Franz’s own, exactly, dark, cool, calm, reassuring. Like the boy was saying, Don’t worry, everything will turn out fine.
Neagley asked him, “Charlie, is your mom home?”
The boy nodded.
“She’s in back,” he said. He let the handle go and stepped away to let them enter. Neagley went first. The house was too small for any one part of it to be really in back of any other part. It was like one generous room divided into four quadrants. Two small bedrooms on the right with a bathroom between, Reacher guessed. A small living room in the left front corner and a small kitchenette behind it. That was all. Tiny, but beautiful. Everything was off-white and pale yellow. There were flowers in vases. The windows were shaded with white wooden shutters. Floors were dark polished wood. Reacher turned and closed the door behind him and the street noise disappeared and silence clamped down over the house. A good feeling, once upon a time, he thought. Now maybe not so good.
A woman stepped out of the kitchen area, from behind a half-wide dividing wall so abbreviated that it couldn’t have offered accidental concealment. Reacher felt she must have gone and hidden behind it, deliberately, when the doorbell rang. She looked a lot younger than him. A little younger than Neagley.
Younger than Franz had been.
She was a tall woman, white blonde, blue-eyed like a Scandinavian, and thin. She was wearing a light V-neck sweater and the bones showed in the front of her chest. She was clean and made up and perfumed and her hair was brushed. Perfectly composed, but not relaxed. Reacher could see wild bewilderment around her eyes, like a fright mask worn under the skin.
There was awkward silence for a moment and then Neagley stepped forward and said, “Angela? I’m Frances Neagley. We spoke on the phone.”
Angela Franz smiled in an automatic way and offered her hand. Neagley took it and shook it briefly and then Reacher stepped forward and took his turn. He said, “I’m Jack Reacher. I’m very sorry for your loss.” He took her hand, which felt cold and fragile in his.
“You’ve used those words more than a few times,” she said. “Haven’t you?”
“I’m afraid so,” Reacher said.
“You’re on Calvin’s list,” she said. “You were an MP just like him.”
Reacher shook his head. “Not just like him. Not nearly as good.”
“You’re very kind.”
“It’s how it was. I admired him tremendously.”
“He told me about you. All of you, I mean. Many times. Sometimes I felt like a second wife. Like he had been married before. To all of you.”
“It’s how it was,” Reacher said again. “The service was like a family. If you were lucky, that is, and we were.”
“Calvin said the same thing.”
“I think he got even luckier afterward.”
Angela smiled again, automatically. “Maybe. But his luck ran out, didn’t it?”
Charlie was watching them, Franz’s eyes half-open, appraising. Angela said, “Thank you very much for coming.”
“Is there anything we can
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