“You don’t think people should help each other?” Lamarr asked.

“Sure,” Reacher said. “But not if there’s an objective to capture first.”

“So if you and I were advancing together, you’d just leave me if I got wounded?”

Reacher smiled. “In your case, without a second thought.”

“How did you meet Amy Callan?” Deerfield asked.

“I’m sure you already know,” Reacher said.

“Tell me anyway. For the record.”

“Are we on the record?”

“Sure we are.”

“Without reading me my rights?”

“The record will show you had your rights, any old time I say you had them.”

Reacher was silent.

“Tell me about Amy Callan,” Deerfield said again.

“She came to me with a problem she was having in her unit,” Reacher said.

“What problem?”

“Sexual harassment.”

“Were you sympathetic?”

“Yes, I was.”

“Why?”

“Because I was never abused because of my gender. I didn’t see why she should have to be.”

“So what did you do?”

“I arrested the officer she was accusing.”

“And what did you do then?”

“Nothing. I was a policeman, not a prosecutor. It was out of my hands.”

“And what happened?”

“The officer won his case. Amy Callan left the service. ”

“But the officer’s career was ruined anyway.”

Reacher nodded. “Yes, it was.”

“How did you feel about that?”

Reacher shrugged. “Confused, I guess. As far as I knew, he was an OK guy. But in the end I believed Callan, not him. My opinion was he was guilty. So I guess I was happy he was gone. But it shouldn’t work that way, ideally. A not-guilty verdict shouldn’t ruin a career.”

“So you felt sorry for him?”

“No, I felt sorry for Callan. And I felt sorry for the Army. The whole thing was a mess. Two careers were ruined, where either way only one should have been.”

“What about Caroline Cooke?”

“Cooke was different.”

“Different how?”

“Different time, different place. It was overseas. She was having sex with some colonel. Had been for a year. It looked consensual to me. She only called it harassment later, when she didn’t get promoted.”

“How is that different?”

“Because it was unconnected. The guy was screwing her because she was happy to let him, and he didn’t promote her because she wasn’t good enough at her job. The two things weren’t connected.”

“Maybe she saw the year in bed as an implied bargain. ”

“Then it was a contractual issue. Like a hooker who gets bilked. That’s not harassment.”

“So you did nothing?”

Reacher shook his head. “No, I arrested the colonel, because by then there were rules. Sex between people of different rank was effectively outlawed.”

“And?”

“And he was dishonorably discharged and his wife dumped him and he killed himself. And Cooke quit anyway.”

“And what happened to you?”

“I transferred out of NATO HQ.”

“Why? Upset?”

“No, I was needed someplace else.”

“You were needed? Why you?”

“Because I was a good investigator. I was wasted in Belgium. Nothing much happens in Belgium.”

“You see much sexual harassment after that?”

“Sure. It became a very big thing.”

“Lots of good men getting their careers ruined?” Lamarr asked.

Reacher turned to face her. “Some. It became a witch-hunt. Most of the cases were genuine, in my opinion, but some innocent people were caught up. Plenty of normal relationships were suddenly exposed. The rules had suddenly changed on them. Some of the innocent victims were men. But some were women, too.”

“A mess, right?” Blake said. “All started by pesky little women like Callan and Cooke?”

Reacher said nothing. Cozo was drumming his fingers on the mahogany.

“I want to get back to the business with Petrosian,” he said.

Reacher swiveled his gaze the other way. “There is no business with Petrosian. I never heard of anybody called Petrosian.”

Deerfield yawned and looked at his watch. He pushed his glasses up onto his forehead and rubbed his eyes with his knuckles.

“It’s past midnight, you know that?” he said.

“Did you treat Callan and Cooke with courtesy?” Blake asked.

Reacher squinted through the glare at Cozo and then turned back to Blake. The hot yellow light from the ceiling was bouncing off the red tint of the mahogany and making his bloated face crimson.

“Yes, I treated them with courtesy.”

“Did you see them again after you turned their cases over to the prosecutor?”

“Once or twice, I guess, in passing.”

“Did they trust you?”

Reacher shrugged. “I guess so. It was my job to make them trust me. I had to get all kinds of intimate details from them.”

“You had to do that kind of thing with many women?”

“There were hundreds of cases. I handled a couple dozen, I guess, before they set up special units to deal with them all.”

“So give me a name of another woman whose case you handled.”

Reacher shrugged again and scanned back through a succession of offices in hot climates, cold climates, big desks, small desks, sun outside the window, cloud outside, hurt and outraged women stammering out the details of their betrayal.

“Rita Scimeca,” he said. “She would be a random example.”

Blake paused and Lamarr reached down to the floor and came up with a thick file from her briefcase. She slid it sideways. Blake opened it and turned pages. Traced down a long list with a thick finger and nodded.

“OK,” he said. “What happened with Ms. Scimeca?”

“She was Lieutenant Scimeca,” Reacher said. “ Fort Bragg, North Carolina. The guys called it hazing, she called it gang rape.”

“And what was the outcome?”

“She won her case. Three men spent time in military prison and were dishonorably discharged.”

“And what happened to Lieutenant Scimeca?”

Reacher shrugged again. “At first she was happy enough. She felt vindicated. Then she felt the Army had been ruined for her. So she mustered out.”

“Where is she now?”

“I have no idea.”

“Suppose you saw her again someplace? Suppose you were in some town somewhere and you saw her in a store or a restaurant? What would she do?”

“I have no idea. She’d probably say hello, I guess. Maybe we’d talk awhile, have a drink or something.”

“She’d be pleased to see you?”

“Pleased enough, I guess.”

“Because she would remember you as a nice guy?”

Reacher nodded. “It’s a hell of an ordeal. Not just the event itself, but the process afterward, too. So the investigator has to build up a bond. The investigator has to be a friend and a supporter.”

“So the victim becomes your friend?”

“If you do it right, yes.”

“What would happen if you knocked on Lieutenant Scimeca’s door?”

“I don’t know where she lives.”

“Suppose you did. Would she let you in?”

“I don’t know.”

“Would she recognize you?”

“Probably.”

“And she’d remember you as a friend?”

“I guess.”

“So you knock on her door, she’d let you in, right? She’d open up the door and see this old friend of hers, so she’d let you right in, offer you coffee or something. Talk a while, catch up on old times.”

“Maybe,” Reacher said. “Probably.”

Blake nodded and stopped talking. Lamarr put her hand on his arm and he bent to listen as she whispered in his ear. He nodded again and turned to Deerfield and whispered in turn. Deerfield glanced at Cozo. The three agents from Quantico sat back as he did so, just an imperceptible movement, but with enough body language in it to say OK, we’re interested. Cozo stared back at Deerfield in alarm. Deerfield leaned forward, staring straight through his glasses at Reacher.

“This is a very confusing situation,” he said.

Reacher said nothing back. Just sat and waited.

“Exactly what happened at the restaurant?” Deerfield asked.

“Nothing happened,” Reacher said.


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