Part 47 (1/2)

When their lips met, he wondered if she'd bite him instead of kissing. But her malice was subtler than that. She put everything she had into the kiss, reminding him of what he wouldn't be getting any more. She held him tight as if no clothes separated them, grinding her crotch into his.

”Jesus!” he said, his voice hoa.r.s.e, when he had to take his mouth away from Anne's to breathe. She laughed, delighted with the effect she'd created. His hand cupped her breast. ”Last lay before I go, too?”

”No,” Anne said deliberately, and knocked the hand away. ”Good-bye, Roger.”

Rage ripped through him. ”Why, you G.o.dd.a.m.n little tease,” he rasped, and shoved her against the bed. She let out a startled squeak as she landed on her back. ”I'll give you something to remember me by-see if I don't.” He sprang on her.

Years before, he'd realized trying to take her by force wasn't a good idea. Since then, he never had tried. He'd never needed or wanted to try. Now...If she thought he'd just walk away after that kiss, she could d.a.m.n well think again. Whatever he'd realized years before was dead as the Ericsson Ericsson, dead as Tom Brearley.

It shouldn't have been, for his fury overpowered not only good sense but also caution. Anne might have been startled when he pushed her onto the bed, but she didn't stay that way longer than a heartbeat. With exquisite timing, her knee came up between his legs and caught him exactly where it did her the most good.

He howled and doubled up and clutched at himself, as any wounded animal might have done. Anne twisted away from him. He couldn't possibly have stopped her, not for the first few seconds there. ”Now I think you'd better go,” she said coolly.

He didn't want to take her any more. He wanted to kill her. But when he looked up, he discovered she'd had more in her handbag than a one-dollar banknote. She aimed a revolver straight at his head. He hadn't the least doubt she would pull the trigger if he moved in any way that did not suit her.

”Get off the bed,” she said. He had to obey, though he still walked doubled over. The pistol tracked him. She'd killed before, helping to put down the Negro rebellion. No, she wouldn't hesitate now. Iron in her voice, she went on, ”Go to the door, get out, and never come back.”

At the door, he paused. ”Can I wait till I can straighten up?” he asked, not wanting to publish his humiliation to the world.

He thought she'd send him out in anguish, but she nodded and let him have a couple of minutes. Then she gave a peremptory gesture with the pistol. Out he went. He still wasn't moving well-he felt like b.l.o.o.d.y h.e.l.l-but, if he walked like an old man, he didn't walk like a wounded old man.

He made his slow, painful way back to his flat without meeting anyone he knew, for which he thanked G.o.d. ”That would be just what I need,” he muttered as he walked spraddle-legged up the stairs, ”to run into Potter and Delamotte again.” He grunted. Anne had hurt him worse than they had when he brawled with them-not in so many places, but worse.

He poured himself a tall whiskey, and then ran the bath half full of cold water. He s.h.i.+vered when he sat down in it, but the steam radiator made the apartment tolerably warm and the whiskey made him tolerably warm, so he didn't think he'd come down with pneumonia or the Spanish influenza. And the cold water helped numb his poor, abused b.a.l.l.s-or maybe that was the whiskey, too.

At last, he let the water run down the drain. After cautiously drying, he put on the loosest drawers and baggiest trousers he owned. Then he went back to the kitchen and poured out some more whiskey. He didn't want food. The knee Anne had given him still left him faintly nauseated.

He drank from the second gla.s.s of whiskey. ”Stupid b.i.t.c.h,” he said, as if someone in the room might disagree. ”Miserable stupid b.i.t.c.h.” He took another big sip from the gla.s.s. He wished he'd wrung her neck, back there at the hotel. But he hadn't got the chance. Say what you would about her, Anne Colleton took a back seat to n.o.body when it came to nerve.

The gla.s.s was empty again. He refilled it. Might as well get drunk, Might as well get drunk, he thought. he thought. What else have I got to do? What else have I got to do? Even if he never saw Anne again, he'd have no trouble getting laid. He knew that. He'd never had any trouble getting laid. Why, then, did he feel like a man whose tongue kept exploring the empty spot where a wisdom tooth had been before the dentist got his forceps on it? Even if he never saw Anne again, he'd have no trouble getting laid. He knew that. He'd never had any trouble getting laid. Why, then, did he feel like a man whose tongue kept exploring the empty spot where a wisdom tooth had been before the dentist got his forceps on it?

”Dammit, we were two of a kind,” he muttered. ”We are are two of a kind. She's just being stupid about the Party, that's all. She'll come around.” He nodded. ”She gives me half a chance-h.e.l.l, she gives me even a quarter of a chance-I'll horn her into coming around.” With better than two gla.s.ses of whiskey in him, it not only sounded simple, it sounded inevitable. two of a kind. She's just being stupid about the Party, that's all. She'll come around.” He nodded. ”She gives me half a chance-h.e.l.l, she gives me even a quarter of a chance-I'll horn her into coming around.” With better than two gla.s.ses of whiskey in him, it not only sounded simple, it sounded inevitable.

Someone knocked on the door. Kimball hurried to open it. ”There she is already, by G.o.d!” he said happily. Of course she wouldn't stay away.

But the woman who stood in the hallway was darker and plainer and tireder than Anne Colleton. ”You are Mr. Roger Kimball, the naval officer?” she asked.

”That's right,” he answered. Only after the words were out of his mouth did he realize she had a Yankee accent-she sounded a little like Clarence Potter.

”Oh, good,” she said. ”I'm so glad I found you.” As Anne had before, she reached into her purse. And, as Anne had before, she pulled out a pistol. Two bullets had slammed into Roger Kimball's chest before she said, ”My husband was on the Ericsson Ericsson.” She kept firing till the revolver was empty, but Kimball never heard the last few shots.

Sylvia Enos sat in a Charleston, South Carolina, jail cell, wondering what would happen to her next. Looking back on it, she decided she shouldn't have shot Roger Kimball. Now she would have to pay for what she'd done. Try as she would, though, she couldn't make herself sorry she'd done it.

She shared the small women's wing of the Charleston city jail with a couple of drunks and a couple of streetwalkers. They all kept sending her awestruck looks because she was locked up on a murder charge. She hadn't imagined anything like that. It was funny, if you looked at it the right way.

A matron with a face like a clenched fist came down the hall and stopped in front of Sylvia's cell. ”Your lawyer is here,” she said, and unlocked the door. Then she quickly stepped back, as if afraid Sylvia might overpower her and escape. Sylvia found that pretty funny, too.

Her lawyer was a chubby, white-mustached, very pink man named Bishop Polk Magrath. He insisted that she call him Bish. She'd never called anyone Bish in her life, but didn't argue. He sat on one side of a table in a tiny visiting room, she on the other. The matron stood close by to make sure they didn't pa.s.s anything back and forth.

”I still don't understand why you're helping me,” she said. She'd said that before, and hadn't got any kind of answer that made sense to her.

Now she did, after a fas.h.i.+on. Magrath's blue, blue eyes sparkled. ”You don't seem to have realized what a cause celebre cause celebre your case has become, ma'am,” he said. ”I'll draw more notice for defending you than I would in ten years of ordinary cases.” your case has become, ma'am,” he said. ”I'll draw more notice for defending you than I would in ten years of ordinary cases.”

”I don't see how you'll draw notice for defending me and losing,” Sylvia said. ”I did it.” She hadn't tried to run after shooting Kimball. She'd given her revolver to the first man who stuck his head out the door of another apartment and waited for the police to come arrest her.

”Let's just put it like this, Mrs. Enos,” the lawyer said: ”There are a good many people in this town who think Mr. Kimball deserved what you gave him, a good many people who aren't the least bit sorry he's dead. If we can get enough of them on a jury, you might just see Rhode Island again.”

”Ma.s.sachusetts,” Sylvia said automatically. She scratched her head. ”I don't follow you at all. Isn't-wasn't-Roger Kimball a hero down here for sinking the Ericsson Ericsson?”

”Oh, he is, ma'am. To some people, he is,” Magrath said. By the expression on the matron's face, she might well have been one of those people. The lawyer went on, ”But he's not a hero to everybody in the Confederate States, not after what happened last June he's not.”

”Oh,” Sylvia said softly. At last, a light went on in her head. ”Because he was a Freedom Party bigshot, you mean.”

”What a clever lady you are, Mrs. Enos.” Magrath beamed at her. ”That's right. That's just exactly right. There are people in this country-there are people in this town-who would be happy if the same thing that happened to Roger Kimball would happen to the whole Freedom Party.”

One of those people, whoever they might be, was without a doubt paying Bishop Polk Magrath's fees. Sylvia certainly wasn't. She'd spent more than she could afford getting a pa.s.sport and a one-way ticket down to Charleston. She hadn't expected she'd be going back to Boston. Maybe she'd been wrong.

”Time's up for this visit,” the tough-looking matron said. Sylvia obediently got to her feet. The lawyer started to reach across the table to shake hands with her. A glance from the matron stopped him. He contented himself with tipping his derby instead. ”Come along,” the matron told Sylvia, and Sylvia came.

Halfway back to her cell, she asked, ”Will supper be more of that cornmeal mush?” It didn't taste like much of anything, but it filled her stomach.

As if she hadn't spoken, the matron said, ”You d.a.m.nyankees killed my husband and my son, and my brother's got a hook where his hand used to be.”

”I'm sorry,” Sylvia said. ”I haven't got a brother, and my son's too young to be a soldier. But the man I shot snuck up on my husband and more than a hundred other sailors after the war was over, and he didn't just kill them-he murdered them like he'd shot them in the back.”

The matron said nothing more till they got back to Sylvia's cell. As she locked Sylvia inside once more, she remarked, ”Grits for supper again, yes,” and went on her way.

”What's your lawyer got to say?” one of the streetwalkers called to Sylvia. ”A lawyer-G.o.d almighty.” She sounded as if she never expected to enjoy a lawyer's professional services, though a lawyer might enjoy hers.

Two days later, the hard-faced matron marched up to Sylvia's cell and announced, ”You've got another visitor.” Disapproval congealed on her like fat in a pan cooling on the stove.

”Is it-Bish?” Sylvia still had to work to say that. The matron shook her head. Sylvia frowned in confusion. Now that Kimball was dead, her lawyer was the only person she knew or even knew of in Charleston. ”Who is it, then?”

Through tight lips, the matron said, ”Just come on.” Sylvia came. Sitting in an iron cage staled very quickly.

Waiting for her in the visitors'room was a blond woman about her own age whose sleek good looks, coiffure, and clothes all shouted Money! Money! ”Mrs. Enos, my name is Anne Colleton.” ”Mrs. Enos, my name is Anne Colleton.”

That meant nothing to Sylvia-and then, to her dismay, it did. She'd seen the name in a couple of the newspaper stories that talked about Kimball. ”You're one of the people who helped the Freedom Party,” she said. Maybe Bishop Polk Magrath had been talking through that derby of his.

Anne nodded. ”I was one of those people, yes, Mrs. Enos. And I was a friend of Roger Kimball's, too-I was, up till his last day on earth.”

Sylvia heard, or thought-hoped-she heard, a slight stress on the past tense. ”Were you?” she asked, with her own slight stress.

Maybe that was approval in Anne Colleton's eyes. ”You listen, don't you?” the woman from the Confederate States said. ”In fact, I'm not telling you any great secret when I say that Roger Kimball and I were more than friends, up till his last day on earth.”

Whatever hope Sylvia had went up in smoke. It hadn't been approval after all. It must have been well-bred, well-contained fury. ”Have you come here to gloat at me in jail, then?” she asked with gloomy near-certainty.