Page 3 of Gone Tomorrow


  ‘Just like that?’

  ‘More or less.’

  ‘Why?’

  ‘How would I know?’

  ‘Where and when?’

  ‘On the run-in to the station. Whenever that was.’

  The guy processed the information. Suicide by gunshot. The subway was the NYPD’s responsibility. The deceleration zone between 41st and 42nd was the 14th Precinct’s turf. His case. No question. He nodded. Said, ‘OK, please all of you exit the car and wait on the platform. We’ll need names and addresses and statements from you.’

  Then he keyed his collar microphone and was answered by a loud blast of static. He answered that in turn with a long stream of codes and numbers. I guessed he was calling for paramedics and an ambulance. After that it would be up to the transportation people to get the car unhooked and cleaned and the schedule back on track. Not difficult, I thought. There was plenty of time before the morning rush hour.

  We got out into a gathering crowd on the platform. Transport cops, more regular cops arriving, subway workers clustering all around, Grand Central personnel showing up. Five minutes later an FDNY paramedic crew clattered down the stairs with a gurney. They came through the barrier and stepped on the train and the first-response cops stepped off. I didn’t see what happened after that because the cops started moving through the crowd, looking around, making ready to find a passenger each and walk them away for further inquiries. The big sergeant came for me. I had answered his questions on the train. Therefore he made me first in line. He led me deep into the station and put me in a hot stale white-tiled room that could have been part of the transport police facility. He sat me down alone in a wooden chair and asked me for my name.

  ‘Jack Reacher,’ I said.

  He wrote it down and didn’t speak again. Just hung around in the doorway and watched me. And waited. For a detective to show up, I guessed.

  SEVEN

  The detective who showed up was a woman and she came alone. She was wearing pants and a grey short-sleeved shirt. Maybe silk, maybe man-made. Shiny, anyway. It was untucked and I guessed the tails were hiding her gun and her cuffs and whatever else she was carrying. Inside the shirt she was small and slim. Above the shirt she had dark hair tied back and a small oval face. No jewellery. Not even a wedding band. She was somewhere in her late thirties. Maybe forty. An attractive woman. I liked her immediately. She looked relaxed and friendly. She showed me her gold shield and handed me her business card. It had numbers on it for her office and her cell. It had an NYPD e-mail address. She said the name on it out loud for me. The name was Theresa Lee, with the T and the h pronounced together, like theme or therapy. Theresa. She wasn’t Asian. Maybe the Lee came from an old marriage or was an Ellis Island version of Leigh, or some other longer and more complicated name. Or maybe she was descended from Robert E.

  She said, ‘Can you tell me exactly what happened?’

  She spoke softly, with raised eyebrows and in a breathy voice brimming with care and consideration, like her primary concern was my own post-traumatic stress. Can you tell me? Can you? Like, can you bear to relive it? I smiled, briefly. Midtown South was down to low single-digit homicides per year, and even if she had dealt with all of them by herself since the first day she came on the job, I had still seen more corpses than she had. By a big multiple. The woman on the train hadn’t been the most pleasant of them, but she had been a very long way from the worst.

  So I told her exactly what had happened, all the way up from Bleecker Street, all the way through the eleven-point list, my tentative approach, the fractured conversation, the gun, the suicide.

  Theresa Lee wanted to talk about the list.

  ‘We have a copy,’ she said. ‘It’s supposed to be confidential.’

  ‘It’s been out in the world for twenty years,’ I said. ‘Everyone has a copy. It’s hardly confidential.’

  ‘Where did you see it?’

  ‘In Israel,’ I said. ‘Just after it was written.’

  ‘How?’

  So I ran through my résumé for her. The abridged version. The U.S. Army, thirteen years a military policeman, the elite 110th investigative unit, service all over the world, plus detached duty here and there, as and when ordered. Then the Soviet collapse, the peace dividend, the smaller defence budget, suddenly getting cut loose.

  ‘Officer or enlisted man?’ she asked.

  ‘Final rank of major,’ I said.

  ‘And now?’

  ‘I’m retired.’

  ‘You’re young to be retired.’

  ‘I figured I should enjoy it while I can.’

  ‘And are you?’

  ‘Never better.’

  ‘What were you doing tonight? Down there in the Village?’

  ‘Music,’ I said. ‘Those blues clubs on Bleecker.’

  ‘And where were you headed on the 6 train?’

  ‘I was going to get a room somewhere or head over to the Port Authority to get a bus.’

  ‘To where?’

  ‘Wherever.’

  ‘Short visit?’

  ‘The best kind.’

  ‘Where do you live?’

  ‘Nowhere. My year is one short visit after another.’

  ‘Where’s your luggage?’

  ‘I don’t have any.’

  Most people ask follow-up questions after that, but Theresa Lee didn’t. Instead her eyes changed focus again and she said, ‘I’m not happy that the list was wrong. I thought it was supposed to be definitive.’ She spoke inclusively, cop to cop, as if my old job made a difference to her.

  ‘It was only half wrong,’ I said. ‘The suicide part was right.’

  ‘I suppose so,’ she said. ‘The signs would be the same, I guess. But it was still a false positive.’

  ‘Better than a false negative.’

  ‘I suppose so,’ she said again.

  I asked, ‘Do we know who she was?’

  ‘Not yet. But we’ll find out. They tell me they found keys and a wallet at the scene. They’ll probably be definitive. But what was up with the winter jacket?’

  I said, ‘I have no idea.’

  She went quiet, like she was profoundly disappointed. I said, ‘These things are always works in progress. Personally I think we should add a twelfth point to the women’s list, too. If a woman bomber takes off her headscarf, there’s going to be a suntan clue, the same as the men.’

  ‘Good point,’ she said.

  ‘And I read a book that figured the part about the virgins is a mistranslation. The word is ambiguous. It comes in a passage full of food imagery. Milk and honey. It probably means raisins. Plump, and possibly candied or sugared.’

  ‘They kill themselves for raisins?’

  ‘I’d love to see their faces.’

  ‘Are you a linguist?’

  ‘I speak English,’ I said. ‘And French. And why would a woman bomber want virgins anyway? A lot of sacred texts are mistranslated. Especially where virgins are concerned. Even the New Testament, probably. Some people say Mary was a first-time mother, that’s all. From the Hebrew word. Not a virgin. The original writers would laugh, seeing what we made of it all.’

  Theresa Lee didn’t comment on that. Instead she asked, ‘Are you OK?’

  I took it to be an inquiry as to whether I was shaken up. As to whether I should be offered counselling. Maybe because she took me for a taciturn man who was talking too much. But I was wrong. I said, ‘I’m fine,’ and she looked a little surprised and said, ‘I would be regretting the approach, myself. On the train. I think you tipped her over the edge. Another couple of stops and she might have gotten over whatever was upsetting her.’

  We sat in silence for a minute after that and then the big sergeant stuck his head in and nodded Lee out to the corridor. I heard a short whispered conversation and then Lee came back in and asked me to head over to West 35th Street with her. To the precinct house.

  I asked, ‘Why?’

  She hesitated.

  ‘Formality,