Dog Tags
meant that Donovan himself was going to die. And living in this exotic, out-of-the-way locale would
     not protect him at all. These were the kind of people that would find you no matter where you were hiding.
    He never should have confided in Erskine.
    Donovan had no way of knowing whether the story was itself dated. The
Nassau Advocate
would sometimes run pieces days after picking them up from mainland newspapers. If this was one of those cases, then those
     who’d be after him already had a head start.
    Not that they would need it.
    Donovan wasn’t feeling fear, though he assumed that would come later. His dominant emotion was sadness. He was finally living
     the life he always wanted, but never thought possible. And now it was over.
    Donovan wasn’t going to give up; that wasn’t his style. And he certainly wasn’t going to go to the cops and tell them what
     he knew, or what he had done. That would simply guarantee a prison sentence, and that would be the easiest place of all for
     his killers to find him.
    What he would do would be to run, and to hide, and he was good at both. It would make things easier that he had so much money;
     there would be no need to get a job and risk exposure in that way. He had concocted better plans for the money, but that was
     now in the past.
    Donovan briefly considered whether to spend the rest of the afternoon on the beach, since it would be the last time he was
     there. He decided against it. Time was not something he had the luxury of wasting; it might be too late already.
    He walked up the beach toward his house, a sprawling one-level place sitting on a small cliff overlooking the water. It was
     an absolutely spectacular setting. He was renting it with an option to buy, an option he had been about to exercise. Now he
     was glad he hadn’t yet done so, since the process of selling it would no doubt provide clues to his whereabouts.
    At this point, Donovan himself did not have any idea as to the location of those future whereabouts. It would have to be someplace
     unexciting, and modest, where he would be unlikely to attract attention. It would be boring, but he would be alive, until the moment that he wasn’t alive anymore.
    There would not be any flights off the island until the next morning, so he called and reserved a seat. He would pack right
     away, so that all he’d have to do in the morning would be to wake up and leave.
    Donovan took his loaded gun out of the desk drawer and put it in his pocket. He hadn’t carried it in a while; there wasn’t
     any need, and it was illegal. Now it made him feel more comfortable, more secure, as it always had in the past.
    But he knew that the feeling of comfort was illusory. When they came at him, it wouldn’t be a gunfight at high noon in the
     center of town. He wouldn’t see them coming until it was too late to do anything but die.
    Donovan had finished packing and was carrying the suitcases out to the car when the first bullet penetrated his brain. He
     never felt it, nor the two that followed.
    And he never saw his killer.

“A RE YOU OUT OF YOUR MIND?” is the greeting that Eli Morrison gives me instead of hello. He’s just arrived in court and come straight over to me at the
     defense table.
    “Fine, how are you, Eli?”
    “A bail hearing for a dog?”
    “Justice works in strange and wonderful ways.”
    “I understand you have fun with this stuff, but some of us have important work to do,” he says.
    “Eli, let me ask you something. Are you aware that there is an armed guard stationed around Milo twenty-four hours a day?”
    “What?” he asks, though he doesn’t mean that he didn’t hear what I said. It’s clear by his face and tone that he had no idea
     about the armed guard, nor can he imagine why it would be done.
    “If Milo is important enough to be guarded, he’s damn sure important enough to have a bail hearing.”
    I can tell that Eli has more questions, none of which he has the time to ask, or I have

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