The store owner wouldn’t sell it to him.
The guy said, “I don’t want your business. You’re not welcome here.”
Reacher said nothing. The guy was a stringy individual, maybe sixty years old. He had caved-in cheeks covered in white stubble, and thin gray hair, unwashed and too long, and tufts in his ears, and fur on his neck. He was wearing two shirts, one on top of the other. He said, “So run along now. This is private property.”
Reacher said, “You got health insurance?”
Chang put her hand on his arm. The first time she had touched him, he thought, apropos of nothing.
The guy said, “You threatening me?”
Reacher said, “Pretty much.”
“This is a free country. I can choose who I sell to. The law says so.”
“What’s your name?”
“None of your business.”
“Is it Maloney?”
“No.”
“Can you give me change for a dollar?”
“Why?”
“I want to use your pay phone.”
“It isn’t working today.”
“You got your own phone in back?”
The guy said, “You can’t use it. You’re not welcome here.”
“OK,” Reacher said, “I get the message.” He checked the tags on the items in front of him. A dollar for the socks, a dollar for the undershorts, a dollar for the T-shirt, nineteen ninety-nine for the pants, and seventeen ninety-nine for the shirt. Subtotal, forty dollars and ninety-eight cents, plus probably seven percent sales tax. Total damage, forty-three dollars and eighty-five cents. He peeled off two twenties and a five and butted them together. He creased them lengthwise to correct their curl. He placed them on the counter.
He said, “Two choices, pal. Call the cops and tell them commerce has broken out in town. Or take my money. Keep the change, if you like. Maybe put it toward a shave and a haircut.”
The guy didn’t answer.
Reacher rolled his purchases together and jammed them under his arm. He followed Chang out the store and stopped in the vestibule to check the pay phone. No dial tone. Just breathy silence, like a direct connection to outer space, or the blood pulsing in his head.
Chang said, “Coincidence?”
Reacher said, “I doubt it. The guy probably disconnected the wires. They want us isolated.”
“Who did you want to call?”
“Westwood, in LA. I had a thought. And then another thought. But first I think we better check the motel.”
“The motel guy won’t let us use his phone.”
“No,” Reacher said. “I think we can pretty much guarantee that.”
They approached the motel’s horseshoe from the south, so the first thing they saw was the wing with the office in it. There were three things on the sidewalk under its window. The first was the plastic lawn chair, unoccupied, but still in its overnight position.
The second thing was Keever’s battered valise, last seen in room 215, now repacked and waiting, all bulging and forlorn.
The third thing was Chang’s own suitcase, zipped up, its handle raised, also repacked and waiting.
Chapter 21
Chang stopped walking, like a reflex, and Reacher stopped alongside her. He said, “No room at the inn.”
She said, “Their next move.”
They walked on, getting closer, changing the geometry, seeing deeper inside the horseshoe, seeing groups of men, just standing around and waiting, filling the empty parking slots, kicking the curbs, standing in the traffic lanes. Maybe thirty guys in total, including whichever Moynahan it was who had gotten kicked in the nuts. He looked a little pale, but no smaller than before. His hapless relative wasn’t there. Probably still in bed, dosed up on painkillers.
Reacher said, “We’ll go straight to my room.”
Chang said, “Are you nuts? We’ll be lucky to get as far as the car.”
“I bought new clothes. I need to change.”
“Bring them with you. You can change later.”
“It was already a concession not to change in the store. I don’t like carrying stuff around.”
“We can’t fight thirty people.”
They moved on, and stopped twenty feet from the staircase they needed. There were three guys near it. All of them were looking toward the office, where the one-eyed guy was coming out, and hustling across, waving and gesturing. When he arrived he said, “Mr. Keever’s booking has come to an end. As has his associate’s, therefore. And I’m afraid they can’t be renewed. At this time of year I take empty rooms out of circulation for a day or two, for necessary maintenance. Ready for the harvest.”
Reacher said nothing. We can’t fight thirty people. To which Reacher’s natural response was: Why the hell not? It was in his DNA. Like breathing. He was an instinctive brawler. His greatest strength, and his greatest weakness. He was well aware of that, even as he ran through the mechanics of the problem in his mind, one against thirty. The first twelve were easy. He had fifteen rounds in the Smith, and wouldn’t miss with more than three. And assuming Chang took the hint, she could add another six. Or thereabouts. She was white collar, but on the other hand the range was short and the targets were numerous. Which would leave maybe twelve remaining, after the guns jammed empty, which was more than he could remember taking on before, all at once, but which had to be feasible. A lot would depend on shock, he supposed, which would be considerable, presumably. The noise, the muzzle flashes, the shell cases arcing through the bright morning sunlight, the guys going down.
It had to be feasible.
But it wasn’t. He couldn’t fight thirty people. Not at that point. Not without better information. He had no probable cause.
He said, “When is check-out time?”
The one-eyed guy said, “Eleven o’clock,” and then he clammed up, visibly, like he wished he had never spoken.
Reacher said, “And what time is it now?”
The one-eyed guy didn’t answer.
“It’s three minutes to nine,” Reacher said. “We’ll be gone well before eleven o’clock. That’s a promise. So everyone can relax now. There’s nothing to see here.”
The one-eyed guy stood still, deciding. Eventually he nodded. The three men near the stairs stood back, just half a pace, but their intention was clear. They weren’t going anywhere, but they weren’t going to do anything, either. Not yet.
Reacher went up the stairs behind Chang, and unlocked his door, and stepped inside his room. Chang said, “Are we really leaving? At eleven o’clock?”
“Before eleven,” Reacher said. “In ten minutes, probably. There’s no point in staying here. We don’t know enough.”
“We can’t just abandon Keever.”
“We need to go somewhere we can at least use a phone.” He dumped his new clothes on the bed, and opened the plastic packets and pulled off the tags. He said, “Maybe I should take a shower.”
“You took a shower two hours ago. I heard you through the wall.”
“Did you?”
“You’re fine. Just get dressed.”
“You sure?”
She nodded and locked the door from the inside, and put the chain across. He carried his stuff to the bathroom and took off the old and put on the new. He put the Smith in one pocket and his toothbrush in the other, and his cash, and his ATM card, and his passport. He rolled up the old stuff and jammed it in the trash receptacle. He glanced in the mirror. He smoothed his hair with his fingers. Good to go.
Chang called through, “Reacher, they’re coming up the stairs.”
He called back, “Who are?”
“About ten guys. Like a deputation.”
He heard her step back. He heard pounding on the door, angry and impatient. He came out the bathroom and heard the lock rattling and the chain jiggling. He saw figures outside the window, on the walkway, a press of guys, some of them looking in through the glass.
Chang said, “What are we going to do?”
“Same as we always were,” he said. “We’re going to hit the road.”