month and park it somewhere new. Pay cash. Wear a
baseball cap. Easy enough.
So that’s just an example. Of patience, planning, and
ingenuity. I am pleased with myself; I have three hours more
until I reach the thick of the Missouri Ozarks and my
destination, a small archipelago of cabins in the woods that
accepts cash for weekly rentals and has cable TV, a must. I
plan to hole up there the first week or two; I don’t want to be
on the road when the news hits, and it’s the last place Nick
would think I’d hide once he realizes I’m hiding.
This stretch of highway is particularly ugly. Middle-
America blight. After another twenty miles, I see, up on the
off-ramp, the remains of a lonesome family gas station,
vacant but not boarded up, and when I pull to the side, I see
the women’s restroom door swung wide. I enter – no
electricity, but there’s a warped metal mirror and the water
is still on. In the afternoon sunlight and the sauna heat, I
remove from my purse a pair of metal scissors and bunny-
brown hair dye. I shear off large chunks of my hair. All the
blond goes into a plastic bag. Air hits the back of my neck,
and my head feels light, like a balloon – I roll it around a few
times to enjoy. I apply the color, check my watch, and linger
in the doorway, looking out over miles of flatland pocked
with fast-food restaurants and motel chains. I can feel an
Indian crying. (Nick would hate that joke. Derivative! And
then he’d add, ‘although the word
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