storage capacity.”
“What do we do with it?”
“We plug it into one of my computers and we see what’s on it.”
“Just like that?”
“Unless it’s password-protected. Which it probably will be.”
“Isn’t there software to help with that?”
“There used to be. But not anymore. Things get better all the time. Or worse, depending on your point of view.”
“So what do we do?”
“We spend the drive time making mental lists. Likely choices for his password. The old-fashioned way. My guess is we’ll get three tries before the files erase themselves.”
She started the motor and eased away from the curb. Pulled a neat U-turn in the strip mall’s fire lane and headed back north to La Cienega.
The man in the dark blue suit watched them go. He was low down behind the wheel of his dark blue Chrysler sedan, forty yards away, in a slot that belonged to the pharmacy. He opened his cell phone and dialed his boss.
“This time they ignored Franz’s place completely,” he said. “They talked to the landlord instead. Then they were in the post office a long time. I think Franz must have been mailing the stuff to himself. That’s why we couldn’t find it. And they’ve probably got it now.”
15
Neagley plugged the flash memory into a socket on the side of her laptop computer. Reacher watched the screen. Nothing happened for a second and then an icon appeared. It looked like a stylized picture of the physical object she had just attached. It was labeled No Name. Neagley ran her forefinger over the touch pad and then tapped it twice.
The icon blossomed into a full-screen demand for a password.
“Damn,” she said.
“Inevitable,” he said.
“Ideas?”
Reacher had busted computer passwords many times before, back in the day. As always, the technique was to consider the person and think like them. Be them. Serious paranoids used long complex mixes of lower-case and upper-case letters and numbers that meant nothing to anyone, including themselves. Those passwords were effectively unbreakable. But Franz had never been paranoid. He had been a relaxed guy, serious about but simultaneously a little amused by security demands. And he was a words guy, not a numbers guy. He was a man of interests and enthusiasms. Full of affections and loyalties. Middlebrow tastes. A memory like an elephant.
Reacher said, “Angela, Charlie, Miles Davis, Dodgers, Koufax, Panama, Pfeiffer, M*A*S*H, Brooklyn, Heidi, or Jennifer.”
Neagley wrote them all down on a new page in her spiral-bound notebook.
“Why those?” she asked.
“Angela and Charlie are obvious. His family.”
“Too obvious.”
“Maybe. Maybe not. Miles Davis was his favorite music, the Dodgers were his favorite team, and Sandy Koufax was his favorite player.”
“Possibilities. What’s Panama?”
“Where he was deployed at the end of 1989. I think that was the place he had the most professional satisfaction. He’ll have remembered it.”
“Pfeiffer as in Michelle Pfeiffer?”
“His favorite actress.”
“Angela looks a little like her, doesn’t she?”
“There you go.”
“M*A*S*H?”
“His all-time favorite movie,” Reacher said.
“More than ten years ago, when you knew him,” Neagley said. “There have been a lot of good movies since then.”
“Passwords come from down deep.”
“It’s too short. Most software asks for a minimum of six characters now.”
“OK, scratch M*A*S*H.”
“Brooklyn?”
“Where he was born.”
“I didn’t know that.”
“Not many people did. They moved west when he was little. That’s what would make it a good password.”
“Heidi?”
“His first serious girlfriend. Hot as hell, apparently. Terrific in the sack. He was crazy about her.”
“I didn’t know anything about that. Clearly I was excluded from the guy talk.”
“Clearly,” Reacher said. “Karla Dixon was, too. We didn’t want to look emotional.”
“I’m crossing Heidi off the list.