Make me a jack reacher n.., p.36

  Make Me_A Jack Reacher Novel, p.36

   part  #20 of  Jack Reacher Series

Make Me_A Jack Reacher Novel
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  The guy gurgled, a lone tubercular cough, very loud, and blood foamed and sprayed from his wound. For a second he stayed upright, just a guy leaning on a rail, and then everything gave way all at once, and he went down like liquid, in a sprawled puddle, all arms and legs and jeans and hair.

  Reacher said, “Where were you aiming?”

  Chang said, “Center mass.”

  Reacher smiled.

  “Can’t beat center mass,” he said.

  He walked twenty feet, and found the guy’s collar, and the back of his belt, and he hoisted him up, and he dumped him over the fence.

  The hogs came running.

  Chapter 59

  They didn’t want to take the crew-cab back to town, because they didn’t want to sit where those guys had sat, so they rode the backhoe, as before, Westwood driving, Reacher and Chang face to face above his head, but this time on the dirt road. Which was slow, but more comfortable. They parked in the dealer’s lot. The salesman came out. The backhoe was examined. It was a little stained by crushed wheat, and a little scratched on the sides. There was a little dirt caked on. And the front bucket had a dimple, where the bullet had struck. Not new anymore. Not exactly. Reacher gave the guy five grand from their leftover money. Easy come, easy go.

  Then they walked south through the plaza. The sun was warm. A kid threw a ball against a building, and hit the rebound with a stick. The same kid they had seen before. They stopped by the motel office, where Westwood booked a whole bunch of rooms. For himself, and his photographers, and all kinds of assistants and interns. The new help at the desk was a teenage girl. Maybe ready for college. She was fast and efficient. She was cheerful and bright.

  Reacher asked her, “Why is this town called Mother’s Rest?”

  She said, “I’m not supposed to tell you.”

  “Why?”

  “The farmers don’t like it. They’ve done their best to bury it.”

  “I won’t tell them you told me.”

  “It’s a corruption of the old Arapaho Indian name. One word, but it sounds like two. It means the place where bad things grow.”

  Westwood gave Chang the key to his rental car, and said goodbye. Reacher walked with her to the diner, where the red Ford was parked.

  She said, “You were headed for Chicago.”

  He said, “Yes, I was.”

  “You wanted to get there before the weather turned cold.”

  “Always a good idea, with Chicago.”

  “You could take the seven o’clock train. Eat lunch in the diner. Sleep all afternoon in the sun. In a lawn chair. I saw you, the very first day.”

  “You saw me?”

  “I was walking by.”

  “I told you. I was in the army. I can sleep anywhere.”

  “Are you going to follow up with a doctor?”

  “Maybe.”

  “I’m driving to Oklahoma City. I’ll drop the car at the airport. I guess Westwood’s interns will bring him another. I can fly home from there.”

  He said nothing.

  She said, “You OK?”

  He said, “We were just in Chicago. Maybe I should go someplace else.”

  She smiled. “Go visit Milwaukee. All thirty-six blocks.”

  He paused a beat.

  She said, “You OK?”

  “Will you come with me?”

  “To Milwaukee?”

  “Just a couple of days. Like a vacation. We earned one. We could do what people do.”

  She was quiet for a long moment, five or six seconds, right to the edge of discomfort, and then she said, “I don’t want to answer that question here. Not in Mother’s Rest. Get in the car.”

  He did, and she did, and she started the engine. She put the lever in gear, and turned the wheel, and they drove away from the diner, and the dry goods store, to the old wagon train trail, where they turned left and headed west, with the road running straight on ahead of them through the wheat, forever, until it disappeared in the golden haze on the far horizon, at that point as narrow as a needle.

  For Darley Anderson,

  twenty years my agent, with thanks

  By Lee Child

  Killing Floor

  Die Trying

  Tripwire

  Running Blind

  Echo Burning

  Without Fail

  Persuader

  The Enemy

  One Shot

  The Hard Way

  Bad Luck and Trouble

  Nothing to Lose

  Gone Tomorrow

  61 Hours

  Worth Dying For

  The Affair

  A Wanted Man

  Never Go Back

  Personal

  Make Me

  Stories

  Second Son

  Deep Down

  High Heat

  Not a Drill

  Small Wars

  About the Author

  LEE CHILD is the author of twenty New York Times bestselling Jack Reacher thrillers, with ten having reached the #1 position. All have been optioned for major motion pictures; the first of which, Jack Reacher, was based on One Shot. Foreign rights to the Reacher series have sold in almost a hundred territories. A native of England and a former television director, Child lives in New York City.

  leechild.com

  Facebook.com/LeeChildOfficial

  @LeeChildReacher

  To inquire about booking Lee Child for a speaking engagement, please contact the Penguin Random House Speakers Bureau at speakers@penguinrandomhouse.com.

 


 

  Lee Child, Make Me_A Jack Reacher Novel

 


 

 
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