“You’ll wake up Connie.”
Chris stopped.
“If it made you so miserable,” she said, “why did you do it”?
He sank down on one of the arm chairs. He put a hand across his eyes. “I was afraid to tell you,” he said. “Afraid I might lose you. Afraid I might—”
“—have to go to prison?”
“Thank you,” he murmured.
“Well, what do you expect?” Helen turned her head and looked away from him. Suddenly, it occurred to her that she’d never been married. To the world, she was Mrs. Helen Martin; but there was no such person. There was no Christopher Martin and no Connie Martin either. All of them were illusions.
“I thought I’d never have to tell you,” Chris said. “I never thought he’d find me. Then that—picture had to be taken. It’s fantastic,” he went on. “A secret I’ve kept for almost fifteen years. Ended in a second because some kids won a baseball game!” His laugh was closer to a sob. “It’s practically hilarious,” he said.
Helen closed her eyes. Now it was as if the other end of the balance—his end—were being weighted. He had risked his life for Connie. He had planned to intercept the man. Wasn’t it possible that he’d been less motivated by a desire to hide his secret than by a wish to protect his wife and child? That Chris loved them was beyond denial
Chris got up and headed for the hall.
“Where are you going?” she asked, suddenly frightened.
He turned in the hall doorway. “To call the police,” he said.
She stared at him. “And then?” she asked.
“I’ll be arrested.”
She couldn’t stop the cold knotting in her throat and upper chest.
His hands closed slowly into fists.
“I’ll go to prison. Helen,” he said.
He stood motionless for a few seconds. Then he walked over to the sofa and sat down beside her. “Do you mean that?” he asked.
“What?”
”That you don’t want me to go to prison?”
“That you’re willing to—to consider doing something else besides call the police?”
Abruptly she was thrust back into nightmare again. Now it was a penny thriller, absurd and ghastly. A murdered man sprawled in the kitchen, her husband sitting beside her. asking her if she was willing to consider— “I don’t know,” she said, unable to keep her voice from breaking, “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Listen to me,” he said. “If the body isn’t found, there’ll be no way for anyone to know what happened.”
Helen stared at him blankly. She didn’t understand.
Christ looked down at his clenching hands.
“I could take him into the hills,” he said in a voice that sounded hideously calm to her. “I could bury him. No one would ever find out.”
He looked at her.
“It’s either that,” he said, or call the police.”
She couldn’t answer him. “Well?”
“Chris, I—”
“Do you want me to go to prison, Helen?” he asked. “I’ve lived a decent life ever since it happened. You know that. I’ve done everything I could to atone for my past. Is that all to end because of—
“Helen.” His fingers tightened in hers. “Thank you.”
“Don’t.”
“What?”
“I mean—” She shuddered fitfully. “Oh, God, let’s get it over with.” she said.
The folded newspaper page fell from the man’s pocket as Chris was lifting him. Helen picked it up and was about to throw it in the wastebasket when she noticed the story outlined in pencil.
Three convicts sentenced to life imprisonment for a 1943 murder escaped last night from—
Helen looked up, shocked.
When Chris saw the expression on her face, he put the body down. Helen handed him the paper and he looked at it.
“Helen, I had nothing to do with it,” he said.
She stared at him.
“I had nothing to do with it.”
She lowered her gaze from his. “All right, Chris.”
“Helen, if you don’t believe me—”
“All
He stood quietly for a moment, then put down the paper and went back to the body. Helen heard the man’s heels scraping slightly on the linoleum, then the door bumping against him as Chris opened it.
She listened to the sound of the body being dragged down the alley and into the garage through the side door. When the door was closed, she lifted the dishwasher again and reloaded it. Then, turning to the sink, she opened one of the doors beneath it. Taking out the pail, she poured in a mound of soap powder, then ran hot water over it, watching it billow into cloud-like suds.
When Chris came back, she was running the mop back and forth across the puddle of blood on the linoleum, her lips pressed together, her eyes looking straight ahead.
“Here, I’ll do it,” Chris took the mop from her.
“What about—?”
“What, Helen?”
She cleared her throat. “The—knife,” she said.
“I left it in him.”
“Oh.”
She heard Chris wringing out the mop and found herself imagining how the water in the pail looked. Teeth on edge, she moved past Chris and walked into the living room. She sat until she heard the pail being emptied and rinsed out.
She stood as Chris came in.
“I’ll be back as soon as possible,” he said.
”I’m going with you,” she said.
“What about Connie?”
“We tan take her.”
“I’d rather you stayed.” he said. “It’s not going to be pretty.”
“What about the other two?” she asked.
“Cliff couldn’t have shown them that photograph,” he said. “If he had they wouldn’t have let him come. They’re hunted men They haven’t got the lime for vendettas.”
She didn’t look convinced
“What if Connie woke up and saw him.” he asked.
Helen shuddered. “All right,” she said, “but what do I do?”