Reacher said, "Why don't you just show me his picture?"
"Whose picture?"
"Your boyfriend's."
"Why would I do that?"
"Your boyfriend is missing. As in, you can't find him. That was Officer Vaughan's impression, anyway."
"You trust cops?"
"Some of them."
"I don't have a picture."
"You've got a big bag. Probably all kinds of things in there. Maybe a few pictures."
She said, "Show me your wallet."
"I don't have a wallet."
"Everyone has a wallet."
"Not me."
"Prove it."
"I can't prove a negative."
"Empty your pockets."
Reacher nodded. He understood.The boyfriend is some kind of a fugitive. She asked about my job. She needs to know I'm not an investigator. An investigator would have compromising ID in his wallet. He lifted his butt off the bench and dug out his cash, his old passport, his ATM card, his motel key. His toothbrush was in his room, assembled, standing upright in a plastic glass next to the sink. The girl looked at his stuff and said, "Thanks."
He said, "Now show me his picture."
"He's not my boyfriend."
"Isn't he?"
"He's my husband."
"You're young, to be married."
"We're in love."
"You're not wearing a ring."
Her left hand was on the table. She withdrew it quickly, into her lap. But there had been no ring on her finger, and no tan line.
"It was kind of sudden," she said. "Kind of hurried. We figured we'd get rings later."
"Isn't it a part of the ceremony?"
"No," she said. "That's a myth. I'm not pregnant either, just in case that's what you're thinking."
"Not for a minute."
"Good."
"Show me the picture."
She hauled the gray messenger bag into her lap and rooted around for a moment and came out with a fat leather wallet. There was a billfold part straining against a little strap, and a change-purse part. There was a plastic window on the outside with a California driver's license behind it, with her picture on it. She unpopped the little strap and opened the billfold and riffled through a concertina of plastic photograph windows. Slid a slim fingertip into one of them and eased a snapshot out. She passed it across the table. It had been cut down out of a standard six-by-four one-hour print. The edges were not entirely straight. It showed the girl standing on a street with golden light and palm trees and a row of neat boutiques behind her. She was smiling widely, vibrant with love and joy and happiness, leaning forward a little as if her whole body was clenching with the onset of uncontrollable giggles. She was in the arms of a guy about her age. He was very tall and blond and heavy. An athlete. He had blue eyes and a buzz cut and a dark tan and a wide smile.
"This is your husband?" Reacher asked.
The girl said, "Yes."
15
Reacher squared the snapshot on the tabletop in front of him. Looked at the girl across from him and asked, "How old is this photo?"
"Recent."
"May I see your driver's license?"
"Why?"
"Something I need to check."
"I don't know."
"I already know your name isn't Anne. I know you don't go to school in Miami. My guess would be UCLA. This photograph looks like it was taken somewhere around there. It has that LA kind of feel."
The girl said nothing.
Reacher said, "I'm not here to hurt you."
She paused and then slid her wallet across the table. He glanced at her license. Most of it was visible behind the milky plastic window. Her name was Lucy Anderson. No middle name. Anderson, hence Anne, perhaps.
"Lucy," he said. "I'm pleased to meet you."
"I'm sorry about not telling you the truth."
"Don't worry about it. Why should you?"
"My friends call me Lucky. Like a mispronunciation. Like a nickname."
"I hope you always are."
"Me too. I have been so far."
Her license said she was coming up to twenty years old. It said her address was an apartment on a street he knew to be close to the main UCLA campus. He had been in LA not long before. Its geography was still familiar to him. Her sex was specified as female, which was clearly accurate, and her eyes were listed as blue, which was an understatement.
She was five feet eight inches tall.
Which made her husband at least six feet four. Maybe six feet five. He towered over her. He was huge. He looked to be well over two hundred pounds. Maybe Reacher's own size. Maybe even bigger. His arms were as thick as the palm trunks behind him.
Not the guy in the dark. Not even close. Way too big. The guy in the dark had been Lucy Anderson's size.
Reacher slid the wallet back across the table. Followed it with the photograph.
Lucy Anderson asked, "Did you see him?"
Reacher shook his head.
"No," he said. "I didn't. I'm sorry."
"He has to be there somewhere."
"What's he running from?"
She looked to the right. "Why would he be running from something?"
"Just a wild guess," Reacher said.
"Who are you?"
"Just a guy."
"How did you know my name wasn't Anne? How did you know I'm not in school in Miami?"
"A long time ago I was a cop. In the military. I still know things."
Her skin whitened behind her freckles. She fumbled the photograph back into its slot and fastened the wallet and thrust it deep into her bag.
"You don't like cops, do you?" Reacher asked.
"Not always," she said.
"That's unusual, for a person like you."
"Like me?"
"Safe, secure, middle class, well brought up."
"Things change."
"What did your husband do?"
She didn't answer.
"And who did he do it to?"
No answer.
"Why did he go to Despair?"
No response.
"Were you supposed to meet him there?"
Nothing.
"Doesn't matter, anyway," Reacher said. "I didn't see him. And I'm not a cop anymore. Haven't been for a long time."
"What would you do now? If you were me?"
"I'd wait right here in town. Your husband looks like a capable guy. He'll probably show up, sooner or later. Or get word to you."
"I hope so."
"Is he in school, too?"
Lucy Anderson didn't answer that. Just secured the flap of her bag and slid off the bench sideways and stood up and tugged the hem of her skirt down. Five-eight, maybe one-thirty, blonde and blue, straight, strong, and healthy.
"Thank you," she said. "Good night."
"Good luck," he said. "Lucky."
She hoisted her bag on her shoulder and walked to the door and pushed out to the street. He watched her huddle into her sweatshirt and step away through the cold.
He was in bed before two o'clock in the morning. The motel room was warm. There was a heater under the window and it was blasting away to good effect. He set the alarm in his head for six-thirty. He was tired, but he figured four and a half hours would be enough. In fact they would have to be enough, because he wanted time to shower before heading out for breakfast.
16
It was a cliche that cops stop in at diners for doughnuts before, during, and after every shift, but cliches were cliches only because they were so often true. Therefore Reacher slipped into the same back booth at five to seven in the morning and fully expected to see Officer Vaughan enter inside the following ten minutes.