What happened to her face was hell to watch when you remembered how lovely Cindy had been. She looked suddenly old, with her rouged cheeks pulled down into shadowed hollows, the corners of her mouth shaking.
Quinn Norman stood up.
“Where — how did you — get here?” she whispered.
“The service entrance. The fire escape. I had to crack a pane in one of your windows to get it unlocked.”
He took a step toward her. “After all, Cindy, you’ve had five years. Five years on my money while I sat in prison. Cindy, even you must have known five years wouldn’t last forever.”
He put his hands on her shoulders. She trembled, sucked in a breath and swallowed hollowly, but she didn’t move.
His fingers closed at the base of her throat. The small pulse, like a tiny heart, pounded out its terror against him. Her throat felt as it had in all his nightmares these five years of waiting for this moment.
His haggard face drawn with hatred, he stared down into her eyes. What was he seeking? Repentance? Regret? Sorrow at what she had done to their lives? None of it was there. Only self-pity, and agony and fear. That was her face.
Suddenly he flung her from him to the floor. She pulled herself back against the wall, trying to dig herself into it, to get away from him. He looked at her. His breathing was a whispered sound.
“I guess the laugh is on me, Cindy. In five years I never stopped to think you weren’t worth the effort it would take to kill you.”
He heard the door latch click, twisted to see the door swing open.
The man at the door was smiling suavely, and his perfect teeth glittered. Then Breen stiffened, mirroring the astonishment in Norman’s face.
Breen was fast. The small automatic was out of his pocket before Quinn could move. Breen stepped into the room and kicked the door closed with the toe of his expensive oxford.
Quinn stood there with his shoulders pulled round, his mouth parted as he stared at Breen. But Breen had died in the nightclub fire five years ago! I ought to know, Norman thought crazily, I paid the penalty for killing him.
“As you can see, Norman, any reports of my death are grossly exaggerated,” Breen said evenly. “I suppose it’s all very clear to you now?”
Quinn nodded numbly. He looked at Cindy, who had pulled herself up from the floor and was straightening her blonde hair before the mirror.
Norman said, “You and Cindy. You planned it. You fired the club and got away with my money.”
Breen laughed sharply, remembering. “We got rid of Rudy Mackalvain, too, and his prying. All it cost me, Quinn, was a very expensive wrist watch. Mackalvain dies, everybody thinks it’s me, and Cindy and I are on our way with a fortune. Simple?”
He cut a glance at Cindy. “Now that he knows, we’ll take Quinn where it’s quieter — someplace where he can get lost — for good.”
Quinn Norman dragged in a deep breath. If they got him out of this apartment, out of this building where the sound of a small automatic might go unnoticed, he would emulate the proverbial snowball in hell.
As Cindy turned away from the end table, Quinn faded. He clutched at her.
Cindy screamed. Breen flipped the automatic smoothly in his fist and clubbed at Norman’s head. Quinn felt it rake a red, hot path across the back of his skull.
He kept moving. Clutching Cindy’s arm, he thrust her between them, shoved her against Breen and followed in fast. He closed his fingers on Breen’s gun arm.
Breen tried to wrench free. They reeled back, slammed against the wall.
There was a sharp, sudden pop, and the acrid gray gun smoke wreathed up between them. Quinn staggered back. The gun clattered to the floor from Breen’s hand, and rolled off the rug.
Cindy scooped it up. She moved fast, away from Quinn, covering him with the gun. He heard the loose, dull sound of Breen’s sliding down the wall to the floor.
“He’s dead,” Cindy said. “You’ve killed him, Quinn!” The words weren’t screamed, but they had that effect.
“Stand there,” Cindy said, her face contorted. “You’ve killed the only man I ever loved. I’m going to call the police. This time you’ll rot in jail forever!”
Quinn Norman looked at her empty, angry eyes. What did I ever see in her?
“Sure,” Quinn said, “call your cops, and explain how Breen got here. I killed him five years ago in Miami, remember? And I’ve already paid the bill. Sweetheart, this time you figure a way to get rid of the body!”
The last time he looked at Cindy, her eyes had lost all contact with reality. She stood staring down at Ansel Breen with a slow, hard shaking beginning to crawl over her...
By the time Quinn reached the silent street, he was feeling better. Free. Clean. Wonderful. He began to take long, rapid strides toward that apartment house and the open, bright door on the second landing. In his mind he could already hear Judy’s cheery calclass="underline"
“Coffee, Quinn?”