Without Fail (Page 18)

"Did I?" he said.

Stuyvesant nodded. "You asked about this specific threat. Well, it’s either an inside job or it’s an outside job. It’s got to be one or the other, obviously."

"We’re discussing this now?"

"Yes, we are," Stuyvesant said.

"Why? What changed?"

Stuyvesant ignored the question. "If it’s an outside job, should we necessarily worry? Perhaps not, because that’s like baseball, too. If the Yankees come to town saying they’re going to beat the Orioles, does that mean it’s true? Boasting about it is not the same thing as actually doing it."

Nobody spoke.

"I’m asking for your input here," Stuyvesant said.

Reacher shrugged.

"OK," he said. "You think it is an outside threat?"

"No, I think it’s inside intimidation intended to damage Froelich’s career. Now ask me what I’m going to do about it."

Reacher glanced at him. Glanced at his watch. Glanced at the wall. Twenty-five minutes, a Sunday evening, deep inside the D.C.-Maryland-Virginia triangle.

"I know what you’re going to do about it," he said.

"Do you?"

"You’re going to hire me and Neagley for an internal investigation."

"Am I?"

Reacher nodded. "If you’re worried about inside intimidation then you need an internal investigation. That’s clear. And you can’t use one of your own people, because you might hit on the bad guy by chance. And you don’t want to bring the FBI in, because that’s not how Washington works. Nobody washes their dirty linen in public. So you need some other outsider. And you’ve got two of them sitting right in front of you. They’re already involved, because Froelich just involved them. So either you terminate that involvement, or you choose to expand on it. You’d prefer to expand on it, because that way you don’t have to find fault with an excellent agent you just promoted. So can you use us? Of course you can. Who better than Joe Reacher’s little brother? Inside Treasury, Joe Reacher is practically a saint. So your ass is covered. And mine is too. Because of Joe I’ll get automatic credibility from the start. And I was a good investigator in the military. So was Neagley. You know that, because you just checked. My guess is you just spent twenty-five minutes talking to the Pentagon and the National Security Agency. That’s why you wanted those details. They ran us through their computers and we came out clean. More than clean, probably, because I’m sure our security clearances are still on file, and I’m sure they’re still way higher than you actually need them to be."

Stuyvesant nodded. He looked satisfied.

"An excellent analysis," he said. "You get the job, just as soon as I get hard copies of those clearances. They should be here in an hour or two."

"You can do this?" Neagley said.

"I can do what I want," Stuyvesant said. "Presidents tend to give a lot of authority to the people they hope will keep them alive."

Silence in the room.

"Will I be a suspect?" Stuyvesant asked.

"No," Reacher said.

"Maybe I should be. Maybe I should be your number-one suspect. Perhaps I felt forced to promote a woman because of contemporary pressures to do so, but I secretly resent it, so I’m working behind her back to panic her and thereby discredit her."

Reacher said nothing.

"I could have found a friend or a relative who had never been fingerprinted. I could have placed the paper on my desk at seven-thirty Wednesday evening and instructed my secretary not to notice it. She’d have followed my orders. Or I could have instructed the cleaners to smuggle it in that night. They’d have followed my orders, too. But they’d have followed Froelich’s orders equally. She should be your number-two suspect, probably. Maybe she has a friend or a relative with no prints on file either, and maybe she’s setting this whole thing up in order to deal with it spectacularly and earn some enhanced credibility."

"Except I’m not setting it up," Froelich said.

"Neither of you is a suspect," Reacher said.

"Why not?" Stuyvesant asked.

"Because Froelich came to me voluntarily, and she knew something about me from my brother. You hired us directly after seeing our military records. Neither of you would have done those things if you had something to hide. Too much risk."

"Maybe we think we’re smarter than you are. An internal investigation that missed us would be the best cover there is."

Reacher shook his head. "Neither of you is that dumb."

"Good," Stuyvesant replied. He looked satisfied. "So let’s agree it’s a jealous rival elsewhere in the department. Let’s assume he conspired with the cleaners."

"Or she," Froelich said.

"Where are the cleaners now?" Reacher asked.

"Suspended," Stuyvesant said. "At home, on full pay. They live together. One of the women is the man’s wife and the other woman is his sister-in-law. The other crew is working overtime to make up, and costing me a fortune."

"What’s their story?"

"They know nothing about anything. They didn’t bring in any sheet of paper, they never saw it, it wasn’t there when they were there."

"But you don’t believe them."

Stuyvesant was quiet for a long moment. He fiddled with his shirt cuffs and then laid his hands flat on the table again.

"They’re trusted employees," he said. "They’re very nervous about being under suspicion. Very upset. Frightened, even. But they’re also calm. Like we won’t be able to prove anything, because they didn’t do anything. They’re a little puzzled. They passed a lie-detector test. All three of them."

"So you do believe them."

Stuyvesant shook his head. "I can’t believe them. How can I? You saw the tapes. Who else put the damn thing there? A ghost?"

"So what’s your opinion?"

"I think somebody they knew inside the building asked them to do it, and explained it away as a routine test procedure, like a war game or a secret mission, said there was no harm in it, and coached them through what would happen afterward in terms of the video and the questioning and the lie detector. I think that might give a person enough composure to pass the polygraph. If they were convinced they weren’t in the wrong and there would be no adverse consequences. If they were convinced they were really helping the department somehow."

"Have you pursued that with them yet?"

Stuyvesant shook his head.

"That’ll be your job," he said. "I’m not good at interrogation."

Reacher said nothing.

He left as suddenly as he had arrived. Just upped and walked out of the room. The door swung shut behind him and left Reacher and Neagley and Froelich sitting together at the table in the bright light and the silence.

"You won’t be popular," Froelich said. "Internal investigators never are."

"I’m not interested in being popular," Reacher said.

"I’ve already got a job," Neagley said.

"Take some vacation time," Reacher said. "Stick around, be unpopular with me."

"Will I get paid?"

"I’m sure there’ll be a fee," Froelich said.

Neagley shrugged. "OK, I guess my partners could see this as a prestige thing. You know, government work? I could go back to the hotel, make some calls, see if they can cope without me for a spell."

"You want to get that dinner first?" Froelich asked.

Neagley shook her head. "No, I’ll eat in my room. You two get dinner."

They wound their way back through the corridors to Froelich’s office and she called a driver for Neagley. Then she escorted her down to the garage and came back upstairs to find Reacher sitting quiet at her desk.

"Are you two having a relationship?" she asked.

"Who?"

"You and Neagley."

"What kind of a question is that?"

"She was weird about dinner."

He shook his head. "No, we’re not having a relationship."

"Did you ever? You seem awful close."

"Do we?"

"She obviously likes you, and you obviously like her. And she’s cute."

He nodded. "I do like her. And she is cute. But we never had a relationship."

"Why not?"

"Why not? It just never happened. You know what I mean?"

"I guess."

"I’m not sure what it’s got to do with you, anyway. You’re my brother’s ex, not mine. I don’t even know your name."

"M. E.," she said.

"Martha Enid?" he said. "Mildred Eliza?"

"Let’s go," she said. "Dinner, my place."

"Your place?"

"Restaurants are impossible here on Sunday night. And I can’t afford them anyway. And I’ve still got some of Joe’s things. Maybe you should have them."

She lived in a small warm row house in an unglamorous neighborhood across the Anacostia River near Bolling Air Force Base. It was one of those city homes where you close the drapes and concentrate on the inside. There was street parking and a wooden front door with a small foyer behind it that led directly into a living room. It was a comfortable space. Wood floors, a rug, old-fashioned furniture. A small television set with a big cable box wired to it. Some books on a shelf, a small music system with a yard of CDs propped against it. The heaters were turned up high so Reacher peeled off his black jacket and dumped it on the back of a chair.