Somehow he managed to tuck it away.
For the time being.
He bought a few things at a store, a little bodega, which he picked because he knew his picture wouldn't be looping on the news every five minutes; he was right, the tiny set showed only a Spanish-language soap opera.
Pell met up with Jennie in Asilomar, the beautiful park, which featured a crescent of beach for die-hard surfers and, closer toward Monterey, an increasingly rugged shoreline of rocks and crashing spray.
"Everything all right?" she asked cautiously.
"Fine, lovely. We're doing fine."
She led him through the quiet streets of Pacific Grove, a former Methodist retreat, filled with colorful Victorian and Tudor bungalows. In five minutes she announced, "Here we are." She nodded at the Sea View Motel. The building was brown, with small lead windows, a wood shingle roof and plaques of butterflies above the doors. The village's claim to fame, other than being the last dry town in California, was the monarchs--tens of thousands of the insects would cluster here from fall to spring.
"It's cute, isn't it?"
Pell guessed. Cute didn't mean anything to him. What mattered was that the room faced away from the road and there were driveways off the back parking lot that would be perfect escape routes. She'd gotten exactly the kind of place she was supposed to.
"It's perfect, lovely. Just like you."
Another smile on her smooth face, though half-hearted; she was still shaken by the incident at Jack's restaurant. Pell didn't care. The bubble within him had started expanding once more. He wasn't sure whether Kathryn was driving it, or Jennie.
"Which one's ours?"
She pointed. "Come on, honey. I have a surprise for you."
Hm. Pell didn't like surprises.
She unlocked the door.
He nodded toward it. "After you, lovely."
And reached into his waistband, gripping the pistol. He tensed, ready to push her forward as a sacrificial shield and start shooting at the sound of a cop's voice.
But it wasn't a setup. The place was empty. He looked around. It was even nicer than the outside suggested. Ritzy. Expensive furniture, drapes, towels, even bathrobes. Some nice paintings too. Seashores, the Lonesome Pine and more goddamn butterflies.
And candles. Lots of them. Everywhere you could put a candle there was a candle.
Oh, that was the surprise. They weren't, thank God, lit. That's all he'd need--come back from an escape to find his hideaway on fire.
"You have the keys?"
She handed them to him.
Keys. Pell loved them. Whether for a car, a motel room, a safe deposit box or a house, whoever possesses the keys is in control.
"What's in there?" she asked, glancing at the bag. She'd been curious earlier, when they met on the beach not long ago, he knew. Purposely he hadn't told her.
"Just some things we needed. And some food."
Jennie blinked in surprise. "You bought food?"
What, was this the first time her man had bought her groceries?
"I could've done that," she said quickly. Then nodding at the kitchenette, she added a perfunctory, "So. I'll cook you a meal."
Odd phrase. She's been taught to think that. By her ex, or one of the abusive boyfriends. Tim the biker.
Shut up and go cook me a meal. . . .