Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief

Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief by James Hadley Chase

Book: Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief by James Hadley Chase Read Free Book Online
Authors: James Hadley Chase
close to her, watching her anxiously as he wiped his sweating hands with a handkerchief.
    She was looking tired and a little irritable, he thought. Anyway, if he went about it in the right way it'd be all right.
    In the early days of marriage he would come in from work, sweep her off her feet into the bedroom, leaving the supper to burn. She'd always protested, but he knew she was pleased as he was when it was over.
    The elevator stopped at the sixth floor, and Sadie walked out. On the opposite passage Tootsie Mendetta had his apartment.
    It always made Benny mad to think that a rich guy like Mendetta should live just across his passage, and he'd never set eyes on him. He knew he was there, but he'd never seen him. Anyway, right at this minute, he didn't give Mendetta a thought.
    He fumbled at the keyhole, making two attempts before he sank the key. His hands shook a little.
    Inside the small apartment he let her take off her hat and coat, and then he sidled up behind her. He put his arms round her from behind. “I love you, honey,” he said, his voice shaking.
    “Put me down!” There was a snap in her voice that jolted him. He put her down and turned her. The cold, hostile look she gave him brought him up short, just like he'd rammed his face against a brick wall.
    “Say, what's wrong? I got to thinkin' of you in the car. I thoughtI thought maybe we could go back a couple of years.”
    She said, “Think again.”

    “What the hell is this?” he said, his disappointment making him suddenly mad with her.
    She walked back into the sitting−room. He saw her put her hand to her eyes.
    He wandered after her, feeling a suppressed rage welling up in him. He leant against the door−post. “What is it?” he asked.
    She said, “You know what it is.” Her voice sounded full of tears.
    “Don't talk in riddles. If you've got anythin' to beef about, why not save it? Listen, honey,” Benny said urgently, “this ain't the time to start fightin'. Come on with me. We'll have a good time togetherhow's that?
    You'll feel fine”
    She said, interrupting him: “Wait a minute. You've got a one−track mind. That floosie's got you burnt up, and you think you can take it out of me.
    'Pretty−daughter−sitting−on−father's−knee−makes−it−hard−for−mother' complex. Not this mother, it doesn't.”
    Benny took off his hat and threw it across the room. He was mad. “What the hell's come over you?” he demanded, his voice rising.
    Sadie went over and sat on the sofa. “I'm sick of the way you look at women. I've stood as much of it as I'm going to stand. Every woman who walks past you, you must look at. You're not content with just looking.
    You must tell me. All right, if you want every dame in the street, go and have her, but I shan't be around.”
    Benny rubbed his nose. “So that's it, is it?” he said, suddenly very quiet. “You're jealous, that's what you are. Listen, I haven't put my hands on one single dame since I married you. Why shouldn't I look at 'em?
    What's the harm in it, anyway? I'm not doin' anythin' wrong, just looking, am I?”
    “That's the way you look at it. I can't do a thing about it. So I've got to walk along the street with you and watch you gape at every girl for the rest of my life, have I?”
    Benny sat in a chair opposite her. With a great effort he tried to control his patience. In a patronizing tone he said: “Now, don't be screwy, honey. This is just crazy talk. You're feeling low. Tomorrow, we'll laugh about this. Get all these ideas out of your head and you'll have everything.”
    “No, I won't.”
    “You'll have everything.”
    “No, I won't.”
    “Now, don't go on like that. I said you'll have everything, and I mean you'll have everything.”
    Sadie sat up stiffly. “Shall I tell you what? When I said I won't, I mean I shan't have what I want. I'll have what you give me.”
    Benny felt the blood mounting to his face. “Okay, if that's the way you feel. You'll have what I

Similar Books

Don't Try This at Home

Kimberly Witherspoon, Andrew Friedman

Seven Deadly Samovars

Morgan St James and Phyllice Bradner

Far North

Marcel Theroux

2Rakehell

Debra Glass