Hadnât touched a drop in ten years. Dried himself out. Then, after the bitch was killed, he started drinking again. Heâd come home, he could hardly stand up, and Iâd say âYouâll kill yourself, you keep this up.â Heâd laugh and tell me I didnât know nothing. He said âI got everything figured out about that Cornell woman and her brother.â I asked him what, and he just laughed at me. Then I found out he wasnât drinking alone. He was running around with somebody.â
âWho?â
She paused, swallowed once, and blinked at the sky. âI donât know. He said it was Andy.â
âJenniferâs brother?â
She nodded.
âHe disappeared when Jennifer Cornell died.â
âI guess so,â she said. âI never saw him again anyway.â
âAnd your husband would go drinking with him.â
âBullshit.â She blinked again, several times, and McGuire realized she was crying. âHe was drinking with some woman. I figured it out. I could smell her on him. What the hell do you do with a man, after forty-three years, he sneaks away and goes drinking with some woman? I tell you what you do. You say âPiss on him!â So one night Iâm in bed alone and heâs late, heâs out with her I know, and I hear a crash, hell of a noise. I get up and get dressed and there he is at the bottom of the cellar steps. Broke his fool neck trying to carry a case of whisky down the stairs.â
McGuire stood up. âA whole case?â
âTwelve bottles of rye. All of them broken and him lying there with his neck . . .â She lowered her head and hid her face in her hands.
McGuire waited, listening to traffic noises from the street and muffled footsteps from the apartment above them. âDo you remember what happened the morning Miss Cornell was found dead?â he asked gently. âI mean, before the police arrived?â
Lifting her head, she frowned at her fingernails. âNothing.â
âWhere was your husband that night?â
âHe was here. In bed with me. Then he got up, maybe about four oâclock. I asked him what the hellâs wrong and he said he heard somebody on the fire escape. Thought maybe there were kids back there or them drug addicts from the Fens, they like to sit out there on the fire escape steps. Theyâre crazies. Should lock them all up. So he got up and looked and came back in about ten minutes. I asked him what it was and he said nothing. Told me to go back to sleep. So I did, and then I got up in the morning and told him to move his ass out of bed, he had chores to do.â
âWhat time would that be?â
âI get up six-thirty every morning. Always have. Him, heâd have his fat ass in bed until seven. Sleep all day if Iâd let him.â
âDid he ever explain who was on the fire escape?â
âNot to me he didnât. Told the cops he thought it was her brother, sneaking out the back way.â
âWhere did your husband get the money for the whisky?â
She shrugged. âI donât know. Never had enough money to buy me anything. I never saw none of it. Whatever he had, he spent on the woman.â
âWho was the woman?â
She exploded in fury, turning on him. âHow the hell should I know? I never cared. He could do whatever the hell he wanted, far as I was concerned. He could have ten women, the dummy, I wouldnât care.â
McGuire waited until she had calmed down. âAnd you never saw Andrew Cornell or the man in the BMW again?â
She had returned her gaze to the window, her chin on her hand, fingertips in her mouth. She shook her head.
McGuire pulled a card from his wallet and left it on a side table. âPlease call me at one of the numbers on my card if you think of anything else,â he said. Then he added, âIâm sorry about your husband.â
âWhy the hell should you feel sorry
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