“Come on.”
Crouching to see inside, John shook his head. “Thanks. But a deal’s a deal. You go on ahead and make your reservations. I’ll find something else to do till five.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yeah. You don’t need me hanging around all the time.”
“Okay. See you later, then.”
“See you, pal.”
Owen drove on. In the side mirror, he saw John standing on the sidewalk, watching him.
The beeping alarm on his wristwatch woke Owen up. He was lying on top of a bed. The room was almost dark, but a strip of sunlight came in through a gap where the curtains didn’t quite meet.
Still on his back, he raised his arm.
The luminous numbers on his wristwatch showed 4:30.
He shut off the alarm.
But he didn’t get up.
No big hurry, he thought. It’ll only take five or ten minutes to drive over to the photo shop.
No law says I have to go and pick up the pictures. I can just stay here. That’d be the end of my troubles with John, at least for today. Deal with him tomorrow.
Turning his head, Owen looked at the telephone.
She probably won’t call at all, he thought. She wouldn’t go out with a guy like me. Her date’s with somebody else. A strong, handsome, suntanned jock.
Anyway, if she
He imagined her stepping up to the door of his motel room and knocking on it. In his mind, she was wearing her guide uniform. A couple of the top buttons were unfastened. “Just thought I’d drop by and see how you’re doing, Owen.”
“Would you like to come in?”
“Thought you’d never ask.” She stepped into his room and wrapped her arms around him and pulled him against her body. “I know we just met,” she said, “but I haven’t been able to stop thinking about...”
Someone knocked on the door of Owen’s room.
He bolted upright, his heart suddenly thudding.
It can’t be Dana, he thought as he scurried off the bed.
No way. That sort of thing just doesn’t happen. Not to me.
He jerked open the door.
“Hey, pal, how’s our room?”
“What’re you doing here?”
“Look what
“They were all full.”
“Yeah, bet they go fast. Everybody wants to be in the section where stuff really happened. Guess we were lucky to get anything.” this was the last room available,” Owen said.
“I know, I know. I saw ’em turn on the No Vacancy sign right after you went in the office.”
“What the hell did you do,
“Shit, no. You
“Real nice.”
“But please note, I did
“Yeah. Thanks a lot.”
John spread the curtains wide, and afternoon sunlight flooded the room.
“Not bad, not bad. A queen and a single, huh? Who gets the queen?” He sat down on the queen-sized mattress and bounced.
“I do.”
“I’m bigger than you. Don’t you think
“No. I’m paying. And what makes you think I’m going to let you stay?”
“What’re you gonna do, throw me out? If you throw me out, I take
“Let me see.”
“Who gets the queen?”
“Oh, for the...”
“I can always leave.”
“You really are a jerk.”
“I’m the jerk with guts enough to take photos of your secret honey.”
“Okay. Fine. You win. Take the queen.”
“Thank you.”
Chapter Thirty-five
WARREN’S PLACE
“You’re out of uniform,” Warren said as he met Dana in front of the ticket booth.
“Had a little mishap.”
“So I heard.” He smiled at her. For a moment, she thought he might reach out and take her hand. But he didn’t. “Sounds like the gal deserved what she got,” he said.
“Well, I didn’t exactly premeditate the attack. Talk about
“Looks good,” Warren said.
“Well, thanks.”
“Ready to go?”
“Sure.”
Staying by Warren’s side, she stepped to the edge of Front Street. Traffic was coming from both directions. Warren’s head turned from side to side as if he were watching a tennis match.
Glancing Dana’s way, he caught her looking at him. He smiled.
Then came a break in the traffic and they hurried across.
They stopped just short of the high, chain link fence in front of the Kutch property.
Dana stared at the house.
“Have you ever been in there?” she asked.
“Not in the house itself. I’ve trespassed on the grounds, though. I was hoping to get a look inside.”