Echo Burning
looked expensive. It was sleeveless and finished above her knees. Her arms and legs were dark and smooth, like they had been polished.
“So, where are you headed?” she asked.
Then she paused and smiled wider. “No, I already asked you that. You didn’t seem very clear about where you want to go.”
Her accent was pure American, maybe more western than southern. She was steering two-handed, and he could see rings on her fingers. There was a slim wedding band, and a platinum thing with a big diamond.
“Anywhere,” Reacher said. “Anywhere I end up, that’s where I want to go.”
She paused and smiled again. “Are you running away from something? Have I picked up a dangerous fugitive?”
Her smile meant it wasn’t a serious question, but he found himself thinking maybe it ought to have been. It wasn’t too far-fetched, in the circumstances. She was taking a risk. The sort of risk that was killing the art of hitching rides, as a mode of transportation.
“I’m exploring,” he said.
“Exploring Texas? They already discovered it.”
“Like a tourist,” he said.
“But you don’t look like a tourist. The tourists we get wear polyester leisure suits and come in a bus.”
She smiled again as she said it. She looked good when she smiled. She looked assured and self-possessed, and refined to the point of elegance. An elegant Mexican woman, wearing an expensive dress, clearly comfortable with talking. Driving a Cadillac. He was suddenly aware of his short answers, and his hair and his stubble and his stained shirt and his creased khaki pants. And the big bruise on his forehead.
“You live around here?” he asked, because she’d said the tourists we get, and he felt he needed something to say.
“I live south of Pecos,” she said. “More than three hundred miles from here. I told you, that’s where I’m headed.”
“Never been there,” he said.
She went quiet and waited at a light. Took off again through a wide junction and hugged the right lane. He watched her thigh move as she pressed on the gas pedal. Her bottom lip was caught between her teeth. Her eyes were narrowed. She was tense about something, but she had it under control.
“So, did you explore Lubbock?” she asked.
“I saw the Buddy Holly statue.”
He saw her glance down at the radio, like she was thinking this guy likes music, maybe I should put some on .
“You like Buddy Holly?” she asked.
“Not really,” Reacher said. “Too tame for me.”
She nodded at the wheel. “I agree. I think Ritchie Valens was better. He was from Lubbock, too.”
He nodded back. “I saw him in the Walk of Fame.”
“How long were you in Lubbock?”
“A day.”
“And now you’re moving on.”
“That’s the plan.”
“To wherever,” she said.
“That’s the plan,” he said again.
They passed the city limit. There was a small metal sign on a pole on the sidewalk. He smiled to himself. City Police, theshield on the cop car had said. He turned his head and watched danger disappear behind him.
The two men sat in the front of the Crown Victoria, with the tall fair man driving to give the small dark man a break. The woman sat in the back. They rolled out of the motel lot and picked up speed on I-20, heading west, toward Fort Worth, away from Dallas. Nobody spoke. Thinking about the vast interior of Texas was oppressing them. The woman had read a guidebook in preparation for the mission that pointed out that the state makes up fully seven percent of America’s land mass and is bigger than most European countries. That didn’t impress her. Everybody knew all that standard-issue Texas-is-real-big bullshit. Everybody always has. But the guide book also pointed out that side-to-side Texas is wider than the distance between New York and Chicago. That information had some impact. And it underlined why they were facing such a long drive, just to get from one nowhere interior location to another.
But the car was quiet and cool and comfortable, and it was as good a place to relax as any motel room would be. They had a little time to kill, after all.
The woman slowed and made a shallow right, toward New Mexico, then a mile later a left, straight south, toward old Mexico. Her dress was creased across the middle, like maybe she was wearing it a second day. Her perfume was subtle, mixed into the freezing air from the dashboard vents.
“So is Pecan worth seeing?” Reacher asked, in the silence.
“Pecos,” she said.
“Right,
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