“You run from me, you bitch? I ought to break your fucking legs. You fat sow. You cunt!”
“Please, Stephen. The baby…”
It was her only card.
He was pacing the cellar, the studded whip in hand, slapping it against his jeans. Screaming at her.
“Fuck the baby! Fuck you! You know what I ought to do? You know what I really ought to do? I ought to kill you, you little bitch. I ought to kill you right now and to hell with the baby. You try to run from me? You want to go get a cop? You want to put the cops on me? Four months you been here. Four fucking months I put up with you and your bullshit and this is what I get? You little cunt. I ought to kill you and fuck the baby, to hell with the baby, screw the fucking baby.”
He threw the whip at her. The heavy knotted handle struck her in the eye. He moved swiftly to the worktable and came back with the red Swiss army knife in his hand open to the cutting blade. His eyes glittered.
“You want to fuck around? You want to call the cops on me? Well how ’bout we give ’em something. How ’bout we really give ’em something? How ’bout we do this?”
He stabbed her. The soft flesh below her left shoulder.
She felt the sudden punch of the thing and the searing burst of pain.
“How ’bout we do this?”
He shoved the knife into her inner thigh. The pain was a hammer and a snake-bite. Her body slammed back against the X-frame and she screamed. Through the sudden panic she saw where he was going. The hand drew back. Pointed at her swollen abdomen.
“How ’bout we…”
“STEPHENNOPLEEEASETHEBABY!” she wailed.
He stopped. Stared at her.
His face went pale. He staggered once and lowered the knife and then looked away from her, looked down at the floor as though studying something there and then walked slowly over to the worktable and folded back the blade of the knife and put it carefully down. Then just stood there staring at the table. Blood was rolling down her side over her hip and down her thigh across her calf and pooling at her foot. She hung there shaking. Sobbing, watching him.
“I better clean you up,” he murmured. “I better clean up the mess you made. Before Kath comes home.”
Now, a month later, those were practically his last words to her.
He seemed to have lost interest.
She was damn well glad of that but worried as to why. He moped around the house, drank too much beer at night in front of the TV. Mornings Kath would let her out of the Long Box and half the time he’d be still in bed or only just getting up. She’d see the empty bottles. There were times beads of sweat would break out over his forehead, for no apparent reason. He walked with a kind of stoop. His muscle tone seemed to have gone slack. He seemed almost as depressed as she was. Kath said he was worried about money, with taxes and mortgage payments being what they were. But Sara thought it was something else.
She didn’t know why she should be worried. So what if he was depressed? Why should she care? The man had almost killed her. She didn’t know what it signified or why it should concern her but it did.
Her apprehension resolved itself into something infinitely worse the week before Halloween when she went up into the attic looking for a replacement bag for the vacuum cleaner. And saw what they’d stored there.
“When this is over I want to find another,” he said.
They were lying in bed back to back. She guessed he couldn’t sleep.
She knew what he meant and she didn’t like it one bit. The baby was supposed to be the glue. The baby was supposed to be sufficient. How long did he think this was going to go on? With how many? “Jesus, Stephen. With a baby in the house?”
He snorted. “The baby won’t know.”
“What about us? What about our lives? What about our friends? The baby’s got to have friends and so do we.”
“The baby isn’t going to need any friends the first year or two. I want somebody younger this time, Kath. She’s too fucking old. She doesn’t do it for me. She’s fucking disgusting.”
He was serious for god’s sake. She thought back to Shawna, the first one. She’d been younger all right. Sixteen.
Buried in back a few feet away from McCann.
He’d been playing with electricity. They hadn’t known she had a bad heart.
How many?
“Stephen, I want my life back. I want to have Gail over. I want to go out to dinner and a movie sometimes. I mean, is that a lot to ask?”
“I’m talking about a year or two. Once the baby’s older I’ll… settle down.”
Sure. Sure you will.
“We’ll take it easy for a while. But right now, you know. I’ve got needs!”
Like his needs were the most ordinary, matter-of-fact thing in the world.
“Stephen…”
“Look. You want it to be you again? Is that what you want?”
She did not.
But she didn’t want this either.
“We’re going to get caught. You know that. We try again, we’re gonna get caught.”
“That’s paranoid. We just have to be careful, that’s all. Like always.”
She turned to him.
“Do you realize how close we came? With McCann? What if Elsie or somebody else had seen us and not just him? We’re lucky we didn’t get caught right there.”
“Unlucky, Kath. McCann was a one-in-a-million shot for chrissake. Besides, we won’t be taking her in front of some crowd at an abortion clinic. We’ll be taking her off the street. Any street. It’ll be completely anonymous. Just like Shawna was.”
She couldn’t believe he was saying this.
“Listen to yourself. Don’t you get it? You fucking killed Shawna!” He turned and got up on one elbow and pointed his finger at her inches from her face. Jabbing at her.
“Don’t talk to me like that, Kath. You hear me? Not ever.”
He stared at her a long moment and then rolled over again.
“I’m your husband. You married me better or worse. You’ll do as I say.”
He was sick of her. Sick of her whining and sick of her sloppy body and sloppy habits. He wondered what the hell kind of mother she was going to make. He thought that maybe he’d been wrong about this all along. Right from the start. That maybe a kid was going to be one great big pain in the ass, period.
He was even more sick of Sara Foster. Her body repulsed him. The swollen blue-veined breasts, the stretch marks, the varicose veins in the backs of her knees. Even her hair had lost its sheen. And the belly itself — the thing itself. She was living with a parasite inside her body for god’s sake. How could a woman do that? He wouldn’t tell Kath this but experience was the best teacher and he’d privately decided that the Movement was all wrong. It wasn’t a kid in there, not yet. Once it was born it would be, sure. But for now it was nothing more than a tiny parasite feeding off her and depending on her for everything from its oxygen and food to dumping its piss and shit.
The whole damn thing was gross.
He couldn’t kill her, hell, he couldn’t even play with her now the way he’d played with her before, it was ashes with her body being what it was and ashes in the face of what he really wanted to do because he couldn ’t wait to kill her. It was the only thing left he hadn’t done to the bitch when you came right down to it and he knew he’d come then which he hadn’t lately, hadn’t really come.
They’d cut and pull and tear it out of her and that’d be the end of the miserable fucking life of Sara Foster.
That in mind, he slept.
FIFTEEN
“Kath. Please. What is this?”
There in the attic.
A stainless steel cart on wheels. Sponges. Sterile pads, gauze pads. Scalpels and forceps. A box of disposable syringes. Packages of sterile drapes. An IV drip. The question was rhetorical. The need to ask it, frightening.