"Where are we?" he murmured.
"I thought I heard you moving back there. We're south of Poughkeepsie. Did you sleep okay?"
"Yes." He slowly sat up. The headlights passing on the opposite side of the highway hurt his eyes.
"How's the shoulder?"
"Stiff. I passed out?"
"You passed out."
"And you said I was tough."
"Are you thirsty? The bottles of water are on the floor back there."
Cavanaugh peered down and saw them in the shadows. He opened one.
"Hungry?" Jamie asked.
"For a thin woman, you sure think a lot about food."
"Just for that, you can't have any doughnuts."
"Doughnuts?"
"Chocolate-covered. You can't expect me to drive all night without something to eat to keep me awake."
"What time is it?"
"Around one."
"Did you have any trouble cleaning the motel room?"
"Nope. I did what you told me and put all the bloody towels and clothes into the garbage bags I got from Wal-Mart. I threw the bags in a Dumpster at a construction site. The towels don't have the motel's name on them, so nobody can trace them to us."
"Fingerprints?"
"I wiped the room clean and left the key, along with a tip. Just the way you told me."
Cavanaugh studied the sporadic traffic. "Tired?"
"Getting there."
"Find a place where we can switch places. I'll drive for a while."
"Are you able to?"
"I can steer with my right arm. Once we get into New Jersey, we'll find another motel."
"And then?"
"As soon as I get organized, I'm going after Prescott."
3
"Good God, what happened to this car?" the automobile paint shop's owner said.
The question was rhetorical. Red and green Day-Glo paint had been sprayed over most of the Taurus.
"Damned kids," Cavanaugh said, although he himself had done the spraying.' "I leave it on the street for a half hour, and this is what I find when I get back."
"The whole thing'll have to be repainted."
"Don't I know it, and the dealership says vandalism isn't covered under the warranty. They want a fortune to repaint it."
The owner got interested. "How much?"
Cavanaugh named so high a figure that the guy would make out like a bandit even if he gave a discount.
"How does a hundred and fifty cheaper sound?" the owner asked.
"Better than I was going to have to pay. But I need the job done in a hurry."
"Sure, sure. What color do you want? The original dark blue?"
"From the day I chose that color, my wife hated it. She says I she wants gray."
4
"Sam Murdock," Cavanaugh told the Philadelphia bank clerk.
"Sign here, Mr. Murdock."
Cavanaugh did.
The clerk compared the signature with the one that the bank had on file and entered a date next to where Cavanaugh had signed. "I see it's been a while since you came here."
"Last year. Too bad. I always say, when you have to go to your safe-deposit box, you've got trouble."
The clerk gave Cavanaugh a sympathetic look, obviously attributing the scrapes on Cavanaugh's face to the trouble he referred to. "May I have your key?"
Cavanaugh, who wore a suit and tie and who'd gotten his hair cut short to get rid of the singe marks, gave it to him.
"Will you be needing a cubicle?"
"Yes."
The clerk led Cavanaugh and Jamie down marble steps to a barred metal gate, which he unlocked. Beyond, in a brightly lit vault, were walls of small gleaming stainless-steel hatches. The clerk glanced at the number on the key Cavanaugh had given him. He went to a wall on the right, put the key in a ten-bytwelve-inch hatch near the bottom, inserted another key, this one from a group he carried on a ring, and turned both keys simultaneously.
After opening the hatch, he pulled out a safe-deposit box and handed it to Cavanaugh. "The cubicles are just outside."
"Thank you."
Cavanaugh randomly chose the second on the right and went inside with Jamie, closing the door. In the process, without seeming to, he checked the walls and ceiling for hidden cameras, doubting there were any but maintaining his habits all the same. He set the box on a counter and leaned over it, as did Jamie, so that their backs concealed the box's contents.
The raised lid revealed two thick manila envelopes and a blue cloth pouch, the bulging halves of which were zipped together. Cavanaugh put everything in a briefcase that he'd bought in a store down the street a few minutes before entering the bank.
Jamie opened the door. Managing to hold the briefcase in his left hand without indicating that his arm was compromised, Cavanaugh returned the safe-deposit box to the clerk, who put it back in its slot in the vault, closed the hatch, rotated the keys to their original positions, and gave Cavanaugh's key back to him.
"Thank you," Cavanaugh said.
5
In a cash-not-unusual motel, Cavanaugh waited while Jamie closed the blinds. Then he put the contents of the briefcase on the bed. The first stuffed manila envelope contained five thousand dollars in twenties.
"I see you've been saving for a rainy day," Jamie said.
The second manila envelope contained a birth certificate, credit card, passport, and Pennsylvania driver's license for Samuel Murdock. The driver's license and passport had Cavanaugh's photograph. "A present from Karen five years ago." Memories of her made him pause. "As she reminded me, you never know when another identity might come in handy. I'm on the eastern seaboard a lot, so it's easy to come to Philadelphia once a year. I take the credit card from the safe-deposit box and use it to buy a few things so the account remains open. I also renew the driver's license."
"Why Philadelphia?"
"It's convenient. Halfway between New York and Washington, cities where I often work."
"Where do you get the bills for the credit card?"
"They're sent to a private mailbox-rental business here in Philadelphia."
"Which forwards them to a private mailbox you rent in Jackson Hole under the name of Sam Murdock but that you never told me about," Jamie said.
Because of his stitched shoulder, Cavanaugh resisted the urge to shrug. "A benign secret."
"I just love getting to know you better. Does Global Protective Services know about this other identity?"
"Nobody does."
"What's in the pouch?"
"A present for you."
"Gee."
Cavanaugh unzipped the pouch.
Jamie picked up what was inside. "What's that joke you once told me about the compliment men most like to hear from women? 'Oh, honey, I just love it when you tinker with engines and bring home electronics, power tools, and firearms.'"
The object Jamie held was a match to Cavanaugh's Sig Sauer 9-mm pistol. Like Cavanaugh's, it had been modified. Its factory-equipped sights had been replaced with a wide-slotted rear sight and a front sight with a green luminous dot that made aiming easy. All the interior moving parts had been filed and then coated with a permanent friction reducer to discourage jamming. The exterior had been comparably smoothed so there weren't any sharp edges to snag on anything. A flat black epoxy finish prevented light from reflecting.