“Was the note typed?”
“No. It was handwritten. And signed. No red flags there.”
“What makes you think it’s genuine?”
Harewood retrieved his file, took out two sheets of paper, and handed them to Reacher. “The first is her most recent job application. The company she works—worked—for makes all their candidates fill in these forms by hand. Supposedly that reveals all kinds of hidden stuff about people’s personalities. Helps to weed out sociopaths and other undesirable characters. The second is her note.”
Reacher started with the job form. He didn’t have much experience with employment paperwork but what he read struck him as generic and banal. The first box was headedPlease state your reasons for seeking this position.Angela’s writing was large and rounded and a little childish. She had claimed she wanted to help people. To build on the skills she had developed in previous roles. To make a contribution to the community at large. There was nothing to suggest she had been a stand-out candidate. Or that she was looking towork in a prison. It could have been an application for work as a dog warden. Or at a candy store.
The second sheet had no structure. No questions to answer or information to provide. It had started life as a regular piece of blank paper. The kind that gets used in printers and copiers in homes and offices all over the country. All over the world. Pumped out of giant factories by the million. Used and filed and forgotten. Or thrown away. Or shredded. Only this one had not wound up as something ordinary. Something trivial. The words began about an eighth of the way down, close to the edge.If you’re reading this, I’m sorry, but it’s because I’m dead…
Reacher compared the samples. The way the letters were formed. The size and the shape and the spacing. The punctuation. The phrasing. He factored in the passage of time. The effect of stress. He was no expert but he had to admit they did look like the work of the same person. He tucked the note back under the form where he wouldn’t have to look at it anymore, passed both pages to Harewood and said, “OK. Motive?”
“A love affair gone bad.”
“How do you figure?”
“Angela was an admin assistant at a prison. When we notified the local PD they contacted her work. It’s a private company. They have the right to monitor their employees’ personal email. It’s a security thing. Built into their contracts. Most people don’t know it’s there. Or they forget about it. So their IT guy pulled up her account. Standard procedure in the event of a sudden death. He found a message chain going back a few weeks. Evidently Angela wanted to rekindle an old flame. With an old boyfriend who lived near here. A guy named Roth. They set a rendezvous for Tuesday. Yesterday. She implied in her last email that if it didn’t work out, she didn’t want to live anymore. A little passive-aggressive, if you ask me.”
“Livednear here?”
“What?”
“You said the boyfriendlived.”
Harewood nodded. “Roth’s DOA. He had a heart attack.”
“When?”
“Monday night. Late. Maybe around midnight.”
“So this guy Roth died less than twelve hours before Angela was killed. You buy that as a coincidence?”
Harewood shrugged.
Reacher said, “Who found the body?”
“His ex-wife.”
“Where?”
“At his apartment. Yesterday morning. He was a big guy. As in ripped. Not fat. He had a home gym. He’d been working out. Which he did regularly. And then,bang.Game over. Just like that.”
“Steroids? Or whatever the latest thing is?”
“No indication of any.”
“Why was his ex-wife at his apartment?”
“For breakfast.”
“Is that normal?”
“For them, yes, apparently.”
“How did she get inside?”
“She has a key.”