'Good. Now let me add a couple of things. They seem to be trying to take you rather than kill you. That means they have to trap you. Look for anything you might use to break out of a trap. Sometimes there are valet- parking attendants who take your car when you arrive and bring it back when you leave. As you go by them, watch to see where they put the keys. A lot of the time it's just a box with hooks in it. During slow times there's often one guy on duty, and when he runs to get a car, there's nobody.'
'You're telling me to steal a car?'
'You'd take it just long enough to get out of here, and ditch it before anybody really knows enough to call the cops. The other thing to look for is a weapon. Obviously the car is the best one.'
'I remember.'
'There are always others. They're often better than a weapon concealed on you, because once you notice them, they're in plain sight where you can simply pick them up and use them without carrying them around.'
'What kind?'
'Suppose you're in the dining room at the buffet. There are steak knives and big, sharp forks. There are coffeepots and soup kettles and servers full of hot liquids. A gallon of coffee won't kill anybody, but it could send him to the hospital. Around the building there will be gardeners with pruning shears, shovels, and rakes. Inside there are often handymen with hammers, linoleum knives, heavy wrenches. In the bar you can break off a bottle and kill somebody with it. The point isn't to make a list. It's to walk through the world with your eyes open. You'll see danger ahead of time, and you'll see ways to escape.'
They entered the lobby, and Christine waited while Jane went to the desk and registered with a credit card in the name of Carol Stevens. The transaction was uneventful, as Jane had known it would be. The five years since she had used any of her homegrown identities for anything risky had added depth to them. She met Christine at the elevator and punched the three button.
'Why the third floor? Did you pick it?'
'Yes. Normally I like to be a bit higher up if I'm trying to be invisible. But the people we're worried about wouldn't hesitate to set something off to smoke us out or cause a distraction. Hotels are a nasty place to be if there's a fire, and no fire department in the world has a ladder that reaches above the fifth floor.'
'But they don't know where we are.'
'In the town where I live, there hasn't been anyone who came to find me in five years, and there hasn't been a murder in at least seven. Every night I lock all the doors and set the alarm. Then I make sure the shotgun is where I left it—loaded, with the safety on.'
'Am I going to have to do all that?'
'Not the same things. You'll take other precautions that fit your situation. The point is to take every one that's available.'
The elevator doors opened, and Christine noticed that Jane was holding her suitcase differently, resting it comfortably on her hip and gripping it in both hands. Christine could see it protected her torso, and she could throw it if she wanted to. She leaned forward to look to the left and right in the hall before she stepped out, carrying the suitcase by its handle.
The room was a suite at the far end of the hall. Jane unlocked the door and looked around before she moved inward to admit Christine.
Christine went to the farther double bed, near the window. 'What a nice room. I'm so glad to be here. I feel like we've been traveling for weeks.'
Jane stood at the side of the window and opened the curtain a couple of inches. 'I see a better place to put the car. Lock everything, and I'll be back in a couple of minutes.' She walked out, and Christine closed the door, bolted it, and put the chain in its slot.
She went to the window and looked out. After another minute she saw Jane drive the dark gray Town Car around the building. There was only a single line of spaces, most of which were filled. Christine could see there were signs in front of the first six spaces. She guessed that they were reserved for people who worked at the hotel, but the rest of the spaces were unmarked. Jane pulled into one of them, got out, and went to a door in the side of the building.
Christine let the curtain swing closed again, went to the door, and looked out through the peephole at the empty hallway. From this room she could see all the way up the hall to the elevators. She watched for Jane, but she was startled when Jane suddenly slid into view right in front of the peephole and reached up to knock. Christine opened the door, then closed it behind Jane and engaged the locks again. 'Where did you come from?'
'Just now? The stairs. This is just like any other place we've stopped. You look for entrances and exits, and then if you can, you try a couple.'
'Is that the best way out?'
'Probably, if we have to leave in a hurry. Parking there will also give us the chance to check on the car once in a while. If someone is watching it, or getting in position to block it in, we'll be able to see.' She paused. 'Would you like a nap before dinner?'
'I think so, if it's okay.'
'Sure. I'm going to go take a look around the hotel. Lock up again, okay?'
'Okay.'
'When you lock everything from inside, my key won't work, so you'll have to let me in again. But don't open the door unless you can look through the peephole and see me.'
Christine locked the door behind her, and then lay on the bed by the window and fell into a deep, dreamless sleep. She awoke to the sound of Jane's knock. It was sharp and insistent, and Christine had an indistinct memory of a quieter, more tentative knock that had not seemed quite real. When she opened the door, Jane came in carrying a rubberized canvas tote bag.
'Sorry to wake you,' said Jane.
'Your hair is wet. Did you go swimming?'
'Yes.' She opened her bag, held up a black nylon swimming suit, and hung it on the towel rack in the bathroom. 'I bought the suit and goggles and some shorts at the gift shop. I went to the gym, and after that I got into the pool. They're always overchlorinated, so my new black suit will probably be gray, but a swim always feels good.'
'I admire you. Even before I was pregnant I wouldn't have done that.'
'Later on, after the baby, you should try to get into the habit. Do it while you're young. It gives you energy, fights off depression, keeps you healthy. Part of beating these people is making a life that works.'
'I don't find it easy to think that far ahead right now.'
'Then don't,' said Jane. 'Keep your mind on today, and we'll do just fine. Let's go have dinner.'
The next morning they checked out of the hotel at nine, drove out on Interstate 90 and switched to 94. They were in St. Paul in the middle of the afternoon, and then crossed over into Minneapolis.
After a few minutes Christine said, 'Wow. This is so beautiful, so green. I love all the little lakes right in town.'
'I was thinking of this as a place to stop. What would you think of spending the next three or four months here?'
'I don't know. Doesn't it get awfully cold?'
'Colder than you can imagine. But from now until September you're more likely to complain because it's hot and humid. The idea is to be someplace where nobody expects you to be and there are good doctors and hospitals during your pregnancy. Your due date is in September, right? We could leave here a few weeks after that, before winter sets in.'
'Do you know the city?'
'Pretty well. I would sometimes stop here because a man who lived here used to sell me things.'
'Like the one in New York?'
'This one was different. He was a fixer, a go-between. He knew people who would supply forged papers, but also cars with several sets of plates, or guns, or whatever else someone would pay for. You would come to him, and he would go to them.'
'Is he still here?'
'No. He wasn't selective about the people he would deal with. Some of the people who came to him were pretty scary, so he lived in a big old house on a hill overlooking a nice little park with a lake on it, and had