dead. But Ginelli came in at a quarter to six, so fully alive that he seemed somehow too big for the place. His clothes, face, and hands were splattered with mud that reeked of sea salt. He was grinning. That crazy light danced in his eyes.
'William,' he said, 'we're going to pack your things and move you out of Bar Harbor. Just like a government witness going to a safe house.'
Alarmed, Billy asked, 'What did you do?'
'Take it easy, take it easy! Just what I said I was going to do - no more and no less. But when you stir up a hornet's nest with a stick, it's usually a good idea to flog your dogs on down the road afterward, William, don't you think so?'
'Yes, but
'No time now. I can talk and pack your stuff at the same time.'
'Where?' Billy almost wailed.
'Not far. I'll tell you on the way. Now, let's get going. And maybe you better start by changing your shirt. You're a good man, William, but you are starting to smell a little ripe.
Billy had started up to the office with his key when Ginelli touched him on the shoulder and gently took it out of his hand.
'I'll just put this on the night table in your room. You checked in with a credit card, didn't you?'
'Yes. but -'
'Then we'll just make this sort of an informal checkout. No harm done, less attention attracted to us guys. Right?'
A woman jogging by on the berm of the highway looked casually at them, back at the road ... and then her head snapped back in a wide-eyed double-take that Ginelli saw but Billy mercifully missed.
'I'll even leave ten bucks for the maid,' Ginelli said. 'We'll take your car. I'll drive.'
'Where's yours?' He knew Ginelli had rented one, and was now realizing belatedly that he hadn't heard an engine before Ginelli walked in. All of this was going too fast for Billy's mind -he couldn't keep up with it.
'It's okay. I left it on a back road about three miles from here and walked. Pulled the distributor cap and left a note on the windshield saying I was having engine trouble and would be back in a few hours, just in case anybody should get nosy. I don't think anyone will. There was grass growing up the middle of the road, you know?'
A car went by. The driver got a look at Billy Halleck and slowed down. Ginelli could see him leaning over and craning his neck.
'Come on, Billy. People looking at you. The next bunch could be the wrong people.'
An hour later Billy was sitting in front of the television in another motel room - this the living room of a seedy little suite in the Blue Moon Motor Court and Lodge in Northeast Harbor. They were less than fifteen miles from Bar Harbor, but Ginelli seemed satisfied. On the TV screen, Woody Woodpecker was trying to sell insurance to a talking bear.
'Okay,' Ginelli said. 'You rest up the hand, William. I'm gonna be gone all day.'
'You're going back there?'
'What, go back to the hornet's nest while the hornets are still flying? Not me, my friend. No, today I'm gonna play with cars. Tonight'll be time enough for Phase Two. Maybe I'll get time enough to look in on you, but don't count on it.'
Billy didn't see Richard Ginelli again until the following morning at nine, when he showed up driving a dark blue Chevy Nova that had certainly not come from Hertz or Avis. The paint was dull and spotted, there was a hairline crack in the passenger-side window, and a big dent in the trunk. But it was jacked in the back and there was a supercharger cowling on the hood.
This time Billy had given him up for dead a full six hours ago, and he greeted Ginelli shakily, trying not to weep with relief. He seemed to be losing all control of his emotions as he lost weight ... and this morning, as the sun came up, he had felt the first unsteady racings of his heart. He had gasped for breath and pounded at his chest with one closed fist. The beat had finally smoothed out again, but that had been it: the first instance of arrhythmia.
'I thought you were dead,' he told Ginelli as he came in.
'You keep saying that and I keep turning up. I wish you would relax about me, William. I can take care of myself. I am a big