17 A Wanted Man

17 A Wanted Man by Lee Child Read Free Book Online

Book: 17 A Wanted Man by Lee Child Read Free Book Online
Authors: Lee Child
said nothing.
    ‘Coffee,’ King said. ‘Two with cream and one spoonful of sugar, plus whatever Karen wants.’
    Delfuenso didn’t speak. There was a beat of silence, and King said, ‘Nothing for Karen, then.’
    Reacher climbed out of the car and headed across the two-lane.
    Sheriff Goodman’s call went straight to voice mail. He said, ‘The waitress’s phone is switched off.’
    ‘Of course it is,’ Sorenson said. ‘She’s fast asleep. She’s tired after a long evening’s work. Does she have a landline?’
    ‘The cell was the only number Missy Smith gave me.’
    ‘So call the Smith woman back and get an address. We’ll have to go bang on her door.’
    ‘I can’t call Missy Smith again.’
    ‘I think you can.’ But right then Sorenson’s own cell started ringing. A plain electronic sound. No tune. No download. She answered, and listened, and said, ‘OK,’ and clicked off again.
    ‘The Mazda was rented at the Denver airport,’ she said. ‘By a lone individual. My people say his DL and his credit card were phony.’
    ‘Why Denver?’ Goodman asked. ‘If you wanted to come here, wouldn’t you fly into Omaha and rent a car there?’
    ‘Denver is much bigger and much more anonymous. Their rental traffic must be twenty times Omaha’s.’
    Her phone rang again. The same plain electronic sound. She answered and this time Goodman saw her back go straight. She was talking to a superior. Universal body language. She said, ‘Say that again, please?’ Then she listened a little, and then she said, ‘Yes, sir.’
    And then she clicked off the call.
    She said, ‘Now this thing just got weird.’
    Goodman asked, ‘How?’
    ‘My guys over at your pumping station already transmitted the dead guy’s fingerprints. And they already came back. And along the way they lit up some computer at the State Department.’
    ‘The State Department? They aren’t your people. That’s foreign affairs. You belong to the Justice Department.’
    ‘I don’t belong to anyone.’
    ‘But why the State Department?’
    ‘We don’t know yet. The dead guy could be one of theirs. Or known to them.’
    ‘Like a diplomat?’
    ‘Or someone else’s diplomat.’
    ‘In Nebraska?’
    ‘They’re not chained to their desks.’
    ‘He didn’t look foreign.’
    ‘He didn’t look like anything. He was covered in blood.’
    ‘So what do we do?’
    ‘Maximum effort,’ Sorenson said. ‘That’s what they’re asking for. Where are the two guys now?’
    ‘Now? They could be in a million different places.’
    ‘So it’s time to gamble. Before I get taken off this thing. Or supervised. One or the other is sure to happen first thing in the morning. That’s what maximum effort means. So suppose the two guys are still on the road?’
    ‘But which road? There are a million roads.’
    ‘Suppose they stayed on the Interstate?’
    ‘Would they?’
    ‘They’re probably not local. They’re probably running home right now, which could be a big distance.’
    ‘In which direction?’
    ‘Either one.’
    ‘You said they might be travelling separately.’
    ‘It’s a possibility, but a small one. Statistics show most paired perpetrators stick together after the commission of a serious crime. Human nature. They don’t necessarily trust each other to deal with the aftermath.’
    ‘Statistics?’
    ‘We find them to be a useful guide.’
    ‘OK, if they’re still together, and if they’re still on the Interstate, and if they went west, they must be about a quarter of the way back to Denver by now. And if they went east, they must be well into Iowa.’
    ‘Speed?’
    ‘Close to eighty, probably. Most Highway Patrols don’t get very excited by anything less than that. Not around here. Unless there’s weather. But it’s pretty clear tonight.’
    Maximum effort. Gamble
. Sorenson thought hard for thirty seconds and then got back on her phone and called up two final Hail Mary roadblocks on the Interstate, both to be in place in

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