
“Never,” he said.
“Why not?” she asked. “Who are you, Reacher?”
He looked across at her and shrugged.
“Nobody,” he said.
She kept on looking at him, quizzically. Maybe irritated.
“OK, what kind of nobody?” she asked.
He heard Memphis Slim in his head: got me working in a steel mill.
“I’m a doorman,” he said. “At a club in Chicago.”
“Which club?” she asked.
“A blues place on the South Side,” he said. “You probably don’t know it.”
She looked at him and shook her head.
“A doorman?” she said. “You’re playing this pretty cool for a doorman.”
“Doormen deal with a lot of weird situations,” he said.
She looked like she wasn’t convinced and he put his face down near his wristwatch to check the time. Two-thirty in the afternoon.
“And how long before somebody misses you?” he asked.
She looked at her own watch and made a face.
“Quite a while,” she said. “I’ve got a case conference starting at five o’clock this afternoon. Nothing before then. Two and a half hours before anybody even knows I’m gone.”
4
RIGHT INSIDE THE shell of the second-floor room, a second shell was taking shape. It was being built from brand-new softwood two-by-fours, nailed together in the conventional way, looking like a new room growing right there inside the old room. But the new room was going to be about a foot smaller in every dimension than the old room had been. A foot shorter in length, a foot narrower in width, and a foot shorter in height.
The new floor joists were going to be raised a foot off the old joists with twelve-inch lengths of the new softwood. The new lengths looked like a forest of short stilts, ready to hold the new floor up. More short lengths were ready to hold the new framing a foot away from the old framing all the way around the sides and the ends. The new framing had the bright yellowness of new wood. It gleamed against the smoky honey color of the old framing. The old framing looked like an ancient skeleton which was suddenly growing a new skeleton inside itself.
