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They fell silent, looking over the backyard, the children, the dogs, the lights glowing brighter in the encroaching dusk. "We'll get him."

"Will we?" she asked.

"Yep. He'll make a mistake. They always do."

"I don't know. He's something different. Don't you feel that?"

"No. He's not different. He's just more." Michael O'Neil--the most widely read person she knew--had surprisingly simple philosophies of life. He didn't believe in evil or good, much less God or Satan. Those were all abstractions that deflected you from your job, which was to catch people who broke rules that humans had created for their own health and safety.

No good, no bad. Just destructive forces that had to be stopped.

To Michael O'Neil, Daniel Pell was a tsunami, an earthquake, a tornado.

He watched the children playing, then said, "I gather that guy you've been seeing . . . It's over with?"

Brian called. . . .

"You caught that, hm? Busted by my own assistant."

"I'm sorry. Really."

"You know how it goes," Dance said, noting she'd spoken one of those sentences that were meaningless flotsam in a conversation.

"Sure."

Dance turned to see how her mother was coming with dinner. She saw O'Neil's wife looking at the two of them. Anne smiled.

Dance smiled back. She said to O'Neil, "So, let's go join the sing-along."

"Do I have to sing?"

"Absolutely not," she said quickly. He had a wonderful speaking voice, low with a natural vibrato. He couldn't stay on key under threat of torture.

After a half-hour of music, gossip and laughter, Edie Dance, her daughter and granddaughter set out Worcestershire-marinated flank steak, salad, asparagus and potatoes au gratin. Dance sat beside Winston Kellogg, who was holding his own very well among strangers. He even told a few jokes, with a deadpan delivery that reminded her of her late husband, who had shared not only Kellogg's career but his easy-going nature--at least once the federal ID card was tucked away.

The conversation ambled from music to Anne O'Neil's critique of San Francisco arts, to politics in the Middle East, Washington and Sacramento, to the far more important story of a sea otter pup born in captivity at the aquarium two days ago.

It was a comfortable gathering: friends, laughter, food, wine, music.

Though, of course, complete comfort eluded Kathryn Dance. Pervading the otherwise fine evening, like the moving bass line of Martine's old guitar, was the thought that D

aniel Pell was still at large.

WEDNESDAY

Chapter 27

Kathryn Dance was sitting in a cabin at the Point Lobos Inn--the first time she'd ever been in the expensive place. It was an upscale lodge of private cabins on a quiet road off Highway 1, south of Carmel, abutting the rugged and beautiful state park after which the inn was named. The Tudor-style place was secluded--a long driveway separated it from the road--and the deputy in the Monterey Sheriff's Office car stationed in front had a perfect view of all approaches, which was why she'd picked it.

Dance checked in with O'Neil. At the moment he was following up on a missing person report in Monterey. Calls to TJ and Carraneo too. TJ had nothing to tell her, and the rookie agent said he was still having no luck finding a cheap motel or boardinghouse where Pell might be staying. "I've tried all the way up to Gilroy and--"

"Cheap hotels?"

A pause. "That's right, Agent Dance. I didn't bother with the expensive ones. Didn't think an escapee'd have much money to spend on them."

Dance recalled Pell's secret phone conversation in Capitola, the reference to $9,200. "Pell's probably thinking that's exactly what you're thinking. Which means . . ." She let Carraneo pick up her thought.

"That it'd be smarter for him to stay in an expensive one. Hm. Okay. I'll get on it. Wait. Where are you right now, Agent Dance? Do you think he--?"


Tags: Jeffery Deaver Kathryn Dance Mystery