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The Woman in the Window by A. J. Finn (25)

“I’ve got Mr. Russell with me,” Detective Norelli announces, unnecessarily.

Her voice is slight, girlish, a bad fit for the high-rise sweater, the bitch-on-wheels leather coat. She sweeps the room with a single glance, then trains a glass-cutting gaze on me. Doesn’t introduce herself. She is Bad Cop, no doubt about it, and with disappointment I realize that Little’s aw-shucks shtick must be just smoke.

Alistair trails her, fresh and crisp in khakis and sweater, although there’s a ridge of flesh drawn bowstring-taut at his throat. Maybe it’s always there. He looks at me, smiles. “Hi,” he says, with faint surprise.

I wasn’t expecting that.

I sway. I’m uneasy. My system is still sluggish, like an engine clotted with sugar; and now my neighbor has just back-footed me with a grin.

“You okay?” Little closes the hall door behind Alistair, moves to my side.

I swirl my head. Yes. No.

He hooks a finger beneath my elbow. “Let’s get you—”

“Ma’am, are you all right?” Norelli’s frowning.

Little raises a hand. “She’s good—she’s good. She’s under sedation.”

My cheeks simmer.

He guides me toward the kitchen alcove, sits me down at the table—the same table where Jane blew through an entire matchbox, where we played sloppy chess and talked about our kids, where she told me to photograph the sunset. The same table where she spoke of Alistair and her past.

Norelli moves to the kitchen window, phone in hand. “Ms. Fox,” she says.

Little interrupts her: “Dr. Fox.”

She glitches, then reboots. “Dr. Fox, I understand from Detective Little that you saw something last night.”

I flick a glance at Alistair, still wallflowered by the hall door.

“I saw my neighbor get stabbed.”

“Who’s your neighbor?” Norelli asks.

“Jane Russell.”

“And you saw this through the window?”

“Yes.”

“Which window?”

I point past her. “That one.”

Norelli follows my finger. She’s got moonless eyes, flat and dark; I watch them scope the Russell house, left to right, as though she’s reading lines of text.

“Did you see who stabbed your neighbor?” Still looking outside.

“No, but I saw her bleeding, and I saw something in her chest.”

“What was in her chest?”

I shift in the chair. “Something silver.” What does it matter?

“Something silver?”

I nod.

Norelli nods, too; turns, looks at me, then past me, into the living room. “Who was with you last night?”

“No one.”

“So that whole setup on the table is yours?”

I shift again. “Yes.”

“Okay, Dr. Fox.” But she’s watching Little. “I’m going to—”

“His wife—” I begin, raising a hand, as Alistair moves toward us.

“Wait a moment.” Norelli steps forward, places her phone on the table in front me. “I’m going to play for you the 911 call you placed at ten thirty-three last night.”

“His wife—”

“I think it answers a lot of questions.” She slashes the screen with one long finger, and a voice blasts my ears, speakerphone-tinny: “911, what is—”

Norelli starts, thumbs the volume control, dials it down.

“—your emergency?”

“My neighbor.” Shrill. “She’s—stabbed. Oh, God. Help her.” It’s me, I know—my words, anyway—but not my voice; I sound slurred, melted.

“Ma’am, slow down.” That drawl. Maddening even now. “What’s your address?”

I look at Alistair, at Little. They’re watching Norelli’s phone.

Norelli is watching me.

“And you say your neighbor was stabbed?”

Yes. Help. She’s bleeding.” I wince. Almost unintelligible.

“What?”

“I said help.” A cough, wet, spluttery. Near tears.

“Help is on the way, ma’am. I need you to calm down. Could you give me your name?”

“Anna Fox.”

“All right, Anna. What’s your neighbor’s name?”

“Jane Russell. Oh, God.” A croak.

“Are you with her now?”

“No. She’s across—she’s in the house across the park from me.”

I feel Alistair’s gaze on me. I return it, level.

“Anna, did you stab your neighbor?”

A pause. “What?”

“Did you stab your neighbor?”

“No.”

Now Little is watching me, too. All three of them, staring me down. I lean forward, look at Norelli’s cell. The screen fades to black as the voices continue.

“All right.”

“I looked through the window and saw her get stabbed.”

“All right. Do you know who stabbed her?”

Another pause, longer.

“Ma’am? Do you know who—”

A rasp and a rumble. The dropped phone. Up there on the study carpet—that’s where it must remain, like an abandoned body.

“Ma’am?”

Silence.

I crane my neck, look at Little. He isn’t watching me anymore.

Norelli bends over the table, drags a finger across her screen. “The dispatcher stayed on the line for six minutes,” she says, “until the EMTs confirmed they were on the scene.”

The scene. And what did they find at the scene? What’s happened to Jane?

“I don’t understand.” Suddenly I feel tired, hollowed-out tired. I cast a slow glance around the kitchen, at the cutlery bristling in the dishwasher, at the ruined bottles in the bin. “What’s happened to—”

“Nothing’s happened, Dr. Fox,” says Little, softly. “To anyone.”

I look at him. “What do you mean?”

He hitches his trousers at the thighs, squats beside me. “I think,” he tells me, “that with all that nice merlot you were drinking and the medication you were taking and the movie you were watching, you maybe got a little excited and saw something that wasn’t there.”

I stare at him.

He blinks at me.

“You think I imagined this?” My voice sounds pinched.

Shaking his massive head now: “No, ma’am, I think you were just overstimulated, and it all went to your head a little.”

My mouth has swung open.

“Does your medication have any side effects?” he presses me.

“Yes,” I say. “But—”

“Hallucinations, maybe?”

“I don’t know.” Even though I do know, I know it does.

“The doctor at the hospital said that hallucinations can be a side effect of the medication you’re taking.”

“I wasn’t hallucinating. I saw what I saw.” I struggle to my feet. The cat bolts from beneath the chair, streaks into the living room.

Little raises his hands, his worn palms broad and flat. “Now, you heard the phone call just now. You were having a pretty tough time talking.”

Norelli steps forward. “When the hospital checked, you had a blood-alcohol level of point two-two,” she tells me. “That’s almost three times the legal limit.”

“So?”

Behind her, Alistair’s eyes are ping-ponging between us.

“I wasn’t hallucinating,” I hiss. My words tumble as they flee my mouth, land on their sides. “I wasn’t imagining things. I’m not insane.”

“I understand your family doesn’t live here, ma’am?” Norelli says.

“Is that a question?”

“That’s a question.”

Alistair: “My son says you’re divorced.”

“Separated,” I correct him, automatically.

“And from what Mr. Russell tells us,” says Norelli, “no one in the neighborhood ever sees you. Seems you don’t go outside very often.”

I say nothing. I do nothing.

“So here’s another theory,” she continues. “You were looking for some attention.”

I step back, bump into the kitchen counter. My robe flaps open.

“No friends, family’s wherever, you have too much to drink and decide to raise a little ruckus.”

“You think I made this up?” I pitch forward, bellowing.

“That’s what I think,” she confirms.

Little clears his throat. “I think,” he says, his voice soft, “that you were maybe going a little stir-crazy in here, and—we’re not saying you did this on purpose . . .”

“You’re the ones imagining things.” I point a wobbly finger at them, wave it like a wand. “You’re the ones making things up. I saw her covered in blood through that window.”

Norelli closes her eyes, sighs. “Ma’am, Mr. Russell says his wife has been out of town. He says you’ve never met her.”

Silence. The room feels electrified.

“She was in here,” I say, slowly and clearly, “twice.”

“There’s—”

“First she helped me off the street. Then she visited again. And”—glaring at Alistair now—“he came looking for her.”

He nods. “I was looking for my son, not my wife.” He swallows. “And you said no one had been here.”

“I lied. She sat at that table. We played chess.”

He looks at Norelli, helpless.

“And you made her scream,” I say.

Now Norelli turns to Alistair.

“She says she heard a scream,” he explains.

“I did hear a scream. Three days ago.” Is that accurate? Maybe not. “And Ethan told me it was her.” Not strictly true, but close.

“Let’s leave Ethan out of it,” Little says.

I stare at them, ranged around me, like those three kids hurling eggs, those three little shits.

I’m going to lay them out flat.

“So where is she?” I ask, snapping my arms across my chest. “Where’s Jane? If she’s fine, bring her over here.”

They share a glance.

“Come on.” I gather my robe around me, yank the sash, cross my arms again. “Go get her.”

Norelli turns to Alistair. “Will you . . .” she murmurs, and he nods, recedes into the living room, pulling his phone from his pocket.

“And then,” I say to Little, “I want all of you out of my house. You think I’m delusional.” He flinches. “And you think I’m lying.” Norelli doesn’t react. “And he’s saying I never met a woman I met twice.” Alistair mutters into the phone. “And I want to know exactly who went where in here when where—” Snarling myself in my words. I pause, recover. “I want to know who else has been in here.”

Alistair walks back toward us. “It’ll just take a moment,” he says, slipping the phone into his pocket.

I lock eyes with him. “I bet this’ll be a long moment.”

No one speaks. My eyes roam the room: Alistair, inspecting his watch; Norelli, placidly observing the cat. Only Little watches me.

Twenty seconds pass.

Twenty more.

I sigh, unfold my arms.

This is ridiculous. The woman was—

The buzzer stutters.

My head swerves toward Norelli, then Little.

“Let me get that,” says Alistair, as he turns toward the door.

I watch, stock-still, as he presses the buzzer button, twists the knob, opens the hall door, stands to one side.

A second later, Ethan slopes into the room, eyes cast low.

“You’ve met my son,” Alistair says. “And this is my wife,” he adds, shutting the door after her.

I look at him. I look at her.

I’ve never seen this woman in my life.

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