Worth Dying For

Worth Dying For Read Free Page A

Book: Worth Dying For Read Free
Author: Lee Child
Ads: Link
the end of two long sticks. When they got there he clamped his fingers and held on tight, to relieve the pressure on his shoulders. He eased out of the lot and turned south. It was full dark. Nothing to see, but he knew the land was flat and infinite all around.
    ‘What grows here?’ he asked, just to keep the doctor awake.
    ‘Corn, of course,’ the guy said. ‘Corn and more corn. Lots and lots of corn. More corn than a sane man ever wants to see.’
    ‘You local?’
    ‘From Idaho originally.’
    ‘Potatoes.’
    ‘Better than corn.’
    ‘So what brought you to Nebraska?’
    ‘My wife,’ the guy said. ‘Born and raised right here.’
    They were quiet for a moment, and then Reacher asked, ‘What’s wrong with me?’
    The doctor said, ‘What?’
    ‘You claimed you knew what’s wrong with me. Physically, at least. So let’s hear it.’
    ‘What is this, an audition?’
    ‘Don’t pretend you don’t need one.’
    ‘Go to hell. I’m functioning.’
    ‘Prove it.’
    ‘I know what you did,’ the guy said. ‘I don’t know how.’
    ‘What did I do?’
    ‘You strained everything from your flexor digiti minimi brevis to your quadratus lumborum, both sides of your body, just about symmetrically.’
    ‘Try English, not Latin.’
    ‘You damaged every muscle, tendon and ligament associated with moving your arms, all the way from your little fingers to theanchor on your twelfth rib. You’ve got pain and discomfort and your fine motor control is screwed up because every system is barking.’
    ‘Prognosis?’
    ‘You’ll heal.’
    ‘When?’
    ‘A few days. Maybe a week. You could try aspirin.’
    Reacher drove on. He cracked his window an inch, to suck out the bourbon fumes. They passed a small cluster of three large homes, set close together a hundred yards off the two-lane road at the end of a long shared driveway. They were all hemmed in together by a post-and-rail fence. They were old places, once fine, still sturdy, now maybe a little neglected. The doctor turned his head and took a long hard look at them, and then he faced front again.
    ‘How did you do it?’ he asked.
    ‘Do what?’ Reacher said.
    ‘How did you hurt your arms?’
    ‘You’re the doctor,’ Reacher said. ‘You tell me.’
    ‘I’ve seen the same kind of symptoms twice before. I volunteered in Florida after one of the hurricanes. A few years ago. I’m not such a bad guy.’
    ‘And?’
    ‘People who get caught outside in a hundred-mile-an-hour wind either get bowled along the street, or they catch on to a cyclone fence and try to haul themselves to safety. Like dragging their own bodyweight against the resistance of a gale. Unbelievable stress. That’s how the injuries happen. But yours aren’t more than a couple of days old, judging by the way you look. And you said you came in from the north. No hurricanes north of here. And it’s the wrong season for hurricanes, anyway. I bet there wasn’t a hurricane anywhere in the world this week. Not a single one. So I don’t know how you hurt yourself. But I wish you well for a speedy recovery. I really do.’
    Reacher said nothing.
    The doctor said, ‘Left at the next crossroads.’
    * * *
    They got to the Duncan house five minutes later. It had exterior lighting, including a pair of spots angled up at a white mailbox, one from each side. The mailbox had
Duncan
written on it. The house itself looked like a restored farmhouse. It was modest in terms of size but immaculate in terms of condition. There was a front lawn of hibernating grass with an antique horse buggy parked on it. Tall spoked wheels, long empty shafts. There was a long straight driveway leading to an outbuilding big enough to have been a working barn back when work was done around the place. Now it was a garage. It had three sets of doors. One set was standing open, as if someone had left in a hurry.
    Reacher stopped the car level with a path that led to the front door.
    ‘Show time, doctor,’ he said. ‘If

Similar Books

The West End Horror

Nicholas Meyer

Shelter

Sarah Stonich

Flee

Ann Voss Peterson, J.A. Konrath

I Love You More: A Novel

Jennifer Murphy

Nefarious Doings

Ilsa Evans