“I DON’T UNDERSTAND any of this, Tony. Why can’t you at least tell me where we’re going? Is that too much to ask?”
The truth—and Nicholson had only come to realize it that afternoon—was that he didn’t have the stomach for cold-blooded murder. Not by his own hand, anyway. He’d always believed that if he had to, he could easily put a pillow over Charlotte’s face or slip something lethal into her morning coffee, but that wasn’t going to happen, was it? And now it was too late to have her hit by someone else, which would have been a snap.
He threw a few last things into his duffel, while Charlotte harped at him from the far side of the bed. The Louis Vuitton bag he’d set out for her was still empty, and his patience was running out. He badly wanted to punch her in the face. But what good would that do?
“Darling.” The word nearly caught in his throat. “Just trust me here. We have a plane to catch. I’ll explain everything once we’re away. Now, pick out a few things and let’s go. Let’s go, sweetheart.” Before I get really angry and murder you with my bare hands.
“It’s about those men from the other night, isn’t it? I knew something wasn’t right with them. Do you owe somebody money—is that it?”
“Goddamnit, Charlotte, are you listening at all? It’s not safe here, dimmy. For either of us. The best we could hope for would be jail at this point. That’s the best, do you understand? It only gets worse from there.”
Depending on who gets to us first was the rest of his thought.
“We? What do you mean, we? I haven’t done anything to anyone.”
Nicholson rushed around the bed and threw an armful of clothes from her closet into the bag, hangers and all.
Then the red leather jewelry box he’d bought her in Florence, forever ago—a lifetime ago, when he’d been young, in love, and most definitely dumb as a bag of bricks with a hard-on.
“We’re leaving. Now.”
She trailed after him, more afraid of being alone than anything else, which he was counting on. That got them as far as the front hall before Charlotte melted down completely. He heard something between a moan and a scream, and turned to see her half-crouched on the polished slate floor. Black lines of makeup ran down her cheeks with the tears; she always wore too much of the stuff, like some kind of tart, and he should know.
“I’m so scared, Tony. I’m shaking all over. Can’t you see that? Can’t you see anything besides your own needs? Why are you being like this?”
Nicholson opened his mouth to say something bland and conciliatory, but what came out instead was “You really are too stupid for words, do you know that?”
He dropped her bag and took her up roughly by the arm, didn’t care if he yanked it from its socket. Charlotte pulled back, kicking and screaming, literally, as he started to drag her across the floor. All he had to do was get her to the car, and then she could pop an aneurysm for all he fucking cared about the dumb, stubborn cow his wife had become.
But then the first slam came at the front door.
Something—not someone—had just smashed into it from the outside, hard enough to leave a long, forked crack down the middle. Nicholson looked out a window just quickly enough to realize what it was—a battering ram. And he knew then that it was probably too late to save even himself.
The second vicious and powerful swing came right away. It popped the lock set and dead bolt like children’s toys, and the door exploded open.