The Enemy
to hug a widow.”
I put my own Class As on again and called the motor pool for a sedan. I didn’t want to ride all the way to Virginia in a Humvee. Too noisy, too uncomfortable. A private brought me a new olive-green Chevrolet. I signed for it and drove it around to post headquarters and waited.
Lieutenant Summer came out halfway through the twenty-eighth minute of her allotted thirty. She paused a second and then walked toward the car. She looked good. She was very short, but she moved easily, like a willowy person. She looked like a six-foot catwalk model reduced in size to a tiny miniature. I got out of the car and left the driver’s door open. Met her on the sidewalk. She was wearing an expert sharpshooter badge with bars for rifle, small bore rifle, auto rifle, pistol, small bore pistol, machine gun, and submachine gun hanging on it. They made a little ladder about two inches long. Longer than mine. I only have rifle and pistol. She stopped dead in front of me and came to attention and fired off a perfect salute.
“Sir, Lieutenant Summer reports,” she said.
“Take it easy,” I said. “Informal mode of address, OK? Call me Reacher, or nothing. And no saluting. I don’t like it.”
She paused. Relaxed.
“OK,” she said.
I opened the passenger door and started to get in.
“I’m driving?” she asked.
“I was up most of the night.”
“Who died?”
“General Kramer,” I said. “Big tank guy in Europe.”
She paused again. “So why was he here? We’re all infantry.”
“Passing through,” I said.
She got in on the other side and racked the driver’s seat all the way forward. Adjusted the mirror. I pushed the passenger seat back and got as comfortable as I could.
“Where to?” she said.
“Green Valley, Virginia,” I said. “It’ll be about four hours, I guess.”
“That’s where the widow is?”
“Home for the holidays,” I said.
“And we’re breaking the news? Like, Happy New Year, ma’am, and by the way, your husband’s dead?”
I nodded. “Lucky us.” But I wasn’t really worried. Generals’ wives are as tough as they come. Either they’ve spent thirty years pushing their husbands up the greasy pole, or they’ve endured thirty years of fallout as their husbands have climbed it for themselves. Either way, there’s not much left that can get to them. They’re tougher than the generals, most of the time.
Summer took her cap off and tossed it onto the backseat. Her hair was very short. Almost shaved. She had a delicate skull and nice cheekbones. Smooth skin. I liked the way she looked. And she was a fast driver. That was for damn sure. She clipped her belt and took off north like she was training for NASCAR.
“Was it an accident?” she asked.
“Heart attack,” I said. “His arteries were bad.”
“Where? Our VOQ?”
I shook my head. “A crappy little motel in town. He died with a twenty-dollar hooker wedged somewhere underneath him.”
“We’re not telling the widow that part, right?”
“No, we’re not. We’re not telling anyone that part.”
“Why was he passing through?”
“He didn’t come to Bird itself. He was transiting D.C. Frankfurt to Dulles, then National to LAX twenty hours later. He was going out to Irwin for a conference.”
“OK,” she said, and then she went very quiet. We drove on. We got about level with the motel, but well to the west, heading straight for the highway.
“Permission to speak freely?” she said.
“Please,” I said.
“Is this a test?”
“Why would it be a test?”
“You’re from the 110th Special Unit, aren’t you?”
“Yes,” I said. “I am.”
“I have an application pending.”
“To the 110th?”
“Yes,” she said. “So, is this a covert assessment?”
“Of what?”
“Of me,” she said. “As a candidate.”
“I needed a woman partner. In case the widow is a hugger. I picked you out at random. The captain with the busted arm couldn’t have driven the car. And it would be kind of inefficient for us to wait until we had a dead general to conduct personnel assessments.”
“I guess,” she said. “But I’m wondering if you’re sitting there waiting for me to ask the obvious questions.”
“I’d expect any MP with a pulse to ask the obvious questions, whether or not they had a special unit transfer pending.”
“OK, I’m asking. General Kramer had a twenty-hour layover in the D.C. area and he wanted to get his rocks off and he didn’t mind paying
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