Echo Burning
delicate motion of her wrist, and she left the engine idling and the air roaring.
“My name is Carmen Greer,” she said. “And I need your help.”
2
“It wasn’t an accident I picked you up, you know,” Carmen Greer said.
Reacher’s back was pressed against his door. The Cadillac was listing like a sinking ship, canted hard over on the shoulder. The slippery leather seat gave him no leverage to struggle upright. The woman had one hand on the wheel and the other on his seat back, propping herself above him. Her face was a foot away. It was unreadable. She was looking past him, out at the dust of the ditch.
“You going to be able to drive off this slope?” he asked.
She glanced back and up at the blacktop. Its rough surface was shimmering with heat, about level with the base of her window.
“I think so,” she said. “I hope so.”
“I hope so, too,” he said.
She just stared at him.
“So why did you pick me up?” he asked.
“Why do you think?”
“I don’t know,” he said. “I thought I just got lucky. I guess I thought you were a kind person doing a stranger a favor.”
She shook her head.
“No, I was looking for a guy like you,” she said.
“Why?”
“I must have picked up a dozen guys,” she said. “And I’ve seen hundreds. That’s about all I’ve been doing, all month long. Cruising around West Texas, looking at who needs a ride.”
“Why?”
She shrugged the question away. A dismissive little gesture.
“The miles I’ve put on this car,” she said. “It’s unbelievable. And the money I’ve spent on gas.”
“Why?” he asked again.
She went quiet. Wouldn’t answer. Just went into a long silence. The armrest on the door was digging into his kidney. He arched his back and pressed with his shoulders and adjusted his position. Found himself wishing somebody else had picked him up. Somebody content just to motor from A to B. He looked up at her.
“Can I call you Carmen?” he asked.
She nodded. “Sure. Please.”
“O.K., Carmen,” he said. “Tell me what’s going on here, will you?”
Her mouth opened, and then it closed again. Opened, and closed.
“I don’t know how to start,” she said. “Now that it’s come to it.”
“Come to what?”
She wouldn’t answer.
“You better tell me exactly what you want,” he said. “Or I’m getting out of the car right here, right now.”
“It’s a hundred and ten degrees out there.”
“I know it is.”
“A person could die in this heat.”
“I’ll take my chances.”
“You can’t get your door open,” she said. “The car is tilted too much.”
“Then I’ll punch out the windshield.”
She paused a beat.
“I need your help,” she said again.
“You never saw me before.”
“Not personally,” she said. “But you fit the bill.”
“What bill?”
She went quiet again. Came up with a brief, ironic smile.
“It’s so difficult,” she said. “I’ve rehearsed this speech a million times, but now I don’t know if it’s going to come out right.”
Reacher said nothing. Just waited.
“You ever had anything to do with lawyers?” she asked. “They don’t do anything for you. They just want a lot of money and a lot of time, and then they tell you there’s nothing much to be done.”
“So get a new lawyer,” he said.
“I’ve had four,” she said. “Four, in a month. They’re all the same. And they’re all too expensive. I don’t have enough money.”
“You’re driving a Cadillac.”
“It’s my mother-in-law’s. I’m only borrowing it.”
“You’re wearing a big diamond ring.”
She went quiet again. Her eyes clouded.
“My husband gave it to me,” she said.
He looked at her. “So can’t he help you?”
“No, he can’t help me,” she said. “Have you ever gone looking for a private detective?”
“Never needed one. I was a detective.”
“They don’t really exist,” she said. “Not like you see in the movies. They just want to sit in their offices and work with the phone. Or on their computers, with their databases. They won’t come out and actually do anything for you. I went all the way to Austin. A guy there said he could help, but he wanted to use six men and charge me nearly ten thousand dollars a week.”
“For what?”
“So I got desperate. I was really panicking. Then I got this idea. I figured if I looked at people hitching rides, I might find somebody. One of them might turn out to be the righttype of person, and
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