Part 2 (2/2)
”Yet you have a bank balance?”
”Savings,” Reacher said. ”Plus occasional casual labor.”
The guy made another big check mark. Two vertical scratches, two horizontal. Then he asked, ”Where did you stay last night?”
”In Hope,” Reacher said. ”In a motel.”
”And your bags are still there?”
”I don't have any bags.”
The guy made another check mark.
”You walked here?” he asked.
”Yes,” Reacher said.
”Why?”
”No buses, and I didn't find a ride.”
”No. Why here?”
”Tourism,” Reacher said again.
”What had you heard about our little town?”
”Nothing at all.”
”Yet you decided to visit?”
”Evidently.”
”Why?”
”I found the name intriguing.”
”That's not a very compelling reason.”
”I have to be somewhere. And thanks for the big welcome.”
The guy made a fourth big check mark. Two vertical lines, two horizontal. Then he skipped his pen down his list, slowly and methodically, fourteen answers, plus four diversions to the margin for the check marks. He said, ”I'm sorry, but I find you to be in contravention of one of Despair's town ordinances. I'm afraid you'll have to leave.”
”Leave?”
”Leave town.”
”What ordinance?”
”Vagrancy,” the guy said.
7
Reacher said, ”There's a vagrancy ordinance here?”
The judge nodded and said, ”As there is in most Western towns.”
”I never came across one before.”
”Then you've been very lucky.”
”I'm not a vagrant.”
”Homeless for ten years, jobless for ten years, you ride buses or beg rides or walk from place to place performing occasional casual labor, what else would you call yourself?”
”Free,” Reacher said. ”And lucky.”
The judge nodded again, and said, ”I'm glad you see a silver lining.”
”What about my First Amendment right of free a.s.sembly?”
”The Supreme Court ruled long ago. Munic.i.p.alities have the right to exclude undesirables.”
”Tourists are undesirable? What does the Chamber of Commerce think about that?”
”This is a quiet, old-fas.h.i.+oned town. People don't lock their doors. We don't feel the need. Most of the keys were lost years ago, in our grandparents' time.”
”I'm not a thief.”
”But we err on the side of caution. Experience elsewhere shows that the itinerant jobless have always been a problem.”
”Suppose I don't go? What's the penalty?”
”Thirty days' imprisonment.”
Reacher said nothing. The judge said, ”The officer will drive you to the town line. Get a job and a home, and we'll welcome you back with open arms. But don't come back until you do.”
The cop took him downstairs again and gave him back his cash and his pa.s.sport and his ATM card and his toothbrush. Nothing was missing. Everything was there. Then the cop handed over his shoelaces and waited at the booking desk while he threaded them through the eyelets in his shoes and pulled them tight and tied them off. Then the cop put his hand on the b.u.t.t of his gun and said, ”Car.” Reacher walked ahead of him through the lobby and stepped out the street door. It was late in the day, late in the year, and it was getting dark. The cop had moved his cruiser. Now it was parked nose-out.
”In the back,” the cop said.
Reacher heard a plane in the sky, far to the west. A single engine, climbing hard. A Cessna or a Beech or a Piper, small and lonely in the vastness. He pulled the car door and slid inside. Without handcuffs he was a lot more comfortable. He sprawled sideways, like he would in a taxi or a Town Car. The cop leaned in after him, one hand on the roof and one on the door, and said, ”We're serious. You come back, we'll arrest you, and you'll spend thirty days in that same cell. Always a.s.suming you don't look at us cross-eyed and we shoot you for resisting.”
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