The Woman in the Window(79)



Quieter still now. “The doctor said—he told me that the medication you’re on can cause hallucinations.”

And depression. And insomnia. And spontaneous combustion. But these aren’t hallucinations. They’re—

“And maybe that’s okay by you. I know it’d be okay by me.”

Norelli breaks in. “Jane Russell—”

But Little lifts his other hand, without looking away from me, and Norelli stops talking.

“She checks out,” he says. “The lady in two-oh-seven. She is who she says she is.” I don’t ask how they know. I don’t care anymore. So, so tired. “And this lady you thought you met—I think you . . . didn’t.”

To my surprise, I feel myself nod. But then how . . .

Except he’s already there: “You said she helped you in off the street. But maybe that was you. Maybe you . . . I don’t know, dreamed it.”

If I dream things when I’m awake . . . Where have I heard that?

And I can picture it, like it’s a film, in living color: me, hauling my body off the stoop, rock-climbing those front steps. Dragging myself into the hall, into the house. I can almost remember it.

“And you said she was here playing chess with you and drawing pictures. But again . . .”

Yes, again. Oh, God. Again I see it: the bottles; the pill canisters; the pawns, the queens, the advancing two-tone armies—my hands reaching across the chessboard, hovering like helicopters. My fingers, stained with ink, a pen pinched between them. I’d practiced that signature, hadn’t I, scrawling her name on the shower door, amid the steam and the spray, the letters bleeding down the glass, vanishing before my eyes.

“Your doctor said he hadn’t heard about any of this.” He pauses. “I was thinking that maybe you didn’t tell him because you didn’t want him to . . . talk you out of it.”

My head shakes, nods.

“I don’t know what that scream you heard was . . .”

I do. Ethan. He never claimed otherwise. And that afternoon I saw him with her in the parlor—he wasn’t even looking at her. He was looking into his lap, not at the empty seat beside him.

I glance at him now, see him gently deposit Punch on the floor. His eyes never leave mine.

“I’m not sure about this photo business. Dr. Fielding said that sometimes you act out, and maybe this is how you ask for help.”

Did I do that? I did do that, didn’t I? I did it. Of course: guess who—that’s how I greet Ed and Livvy. Greeted. guesswhoanna.

“But as for what you saw that night . . .”

I know what I saw that night.

I saw a movie. I saw an old thriller resurrected, brought to bloody Technicolor life. I saw Rear Window; I saw Body Double; I saw Blow-Up. I saw a showreel, archive footage from a hundred peeping-Tom thrillers.

I saw a killing without a killer, without a victim. I saw an empty sitting room, a vacant sofa. I saw what I wanted to see, what I needed to see. Don’t you get lonely up here? Bogey had asked Bacall, asked me.

I was born lonely, she’d answered.

I wasn’t. I was made lonely.

If I’m deranged enough to talk to Ed and Livvy, I can certainly stage a murder in my mind. Especially with some chemical help. And haven’t I been resisting the truth all along? Didn’t I bend and bash and break the facts?

Jane—the real Jane, flesh-and-blood Jane: Of course she is who she says she is.

And of course the earring in David’s room belongs to Katherine, or whomever.

And of course no one came into my house last night.

It crashes through me like a wave. Slams my shores, cleanses them; leaves behind only streaks of silt, pointing like fingers toward the sea.

I was wrong.

More than that: I was deluded.

More than that: I was responsible. Am responsible.

If I dream things when I’m awake, I’m going out of my mind. That was it. Gaslight.

Silence. I can’t even hear Little breathe.

Then:

“So that’s what’s going on.” Alistair is shaking his head, his lips parted. “I—wow. Christ.” He looks at me hard. “I mean, Christ.”

I swallow.

He stares a moment longer, opens his mouth again, closes it. One more shake of the head.

At last he motions to his son, heads for the door. “We’re leaving.”

As Ethan follows him into the hall, he glances up, eyes shining. “I’m so sorry,” he says, his voice small. I want to cry.

Then he’s gone. The door cracks shut behind them.

Just the four of us now.

David steps forward, speaking to his toes. “So the kid in that picture downstairs—she’s dead?”

I don’t answer.

“And when you wanted me to save those blueprints, those were for a dead guy?”

I don’t answer.

“And . . .” He points to the stepladder braked against the basement door.

I say nothing.

He nods, as though I’ve spoken. Then he hitches his bag farther up his shoulder, turns, and walks out the door.

Norelli watches him leave. “Do we need to talk to him?”

“He bothering you?” Little asks me.

I shake my head.

“Okay,” he says, releasing my hand. “Now. I’m not really . . . qualified to deal with what happens next. My job is to shut all this down and make it safe for everyone to move ahead. Including you. I know that this has been hard for you. Today, I mean. So I want you to give Dr. Fielding a call. I think it’s important.”

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