Authors: Cornell Woolrich
He reached slowly into his pocket, began to sift through envelopes and papers, while the two of them stared, transfixed.
"I've been up there myself, not once but several times. I've talked to her. You can hardly tell it in her manner. Just a little vaeue, dreamy. But she can't remember yesterday, the past is blurred, all fogged out. She would have been no good to us. no good at all; she couldn't have testified. That's why I had to keep it to myself, play the thing out the way we did. It was our only chance, to get him to convict himself out of his own mouth, by substituting someone for her." "How long—?"
"She was committed within three weeks after that night with you. It had been intermittent up to then, then the curtain dropped for good." "How did you?"
"In a roundabout way. that doesn't really matter now any more. The hat showed up by itself, in one of these bundle shops. You know, thrift shops where they sell things for a few cents. One of my men spotted it. We traced it back link by link, just as he did later, working in the opposite direction. Some old hag had picked it up out of an ashcan, peddled it to the thrift shop. We canvassed all the houses in the vicinity after she'd pointed out the general site of the ashcan to us. It took weeks. Finally we found a maid who had thrown it out. Her employer had been committed to an asylum not long before. I questioned her husband, the members of her family. Nobody knew of the exact incident with
you but herself, but they told me enough to show it was she, all right. She'd been behaving erratically like that for some time past, staying out alone all night, going to hotels by herself. Once they found her sitting on a park bench at daybreak.
"I got this from them."
He handed Henderson a snapshot. A snapshot of a woman.
Henderson looked at it long and hard. He nodded finally, but more to himself than to them. "Yes," he said softly, "yes—I guess so."
Carol took it away from him suddenly. "Don't look at her any more. She's done enough to you for one lifetime. Stay as you are, keep her unremembered. Here, here's your snapshot back."
"It helped, of course," Burgess said, putting it away again, "when we were getting Carol ready that night to go in and pinch-hit for her. The make-up man was able to give her a superficial resemblance to this person. Enough to fool him, anyway. He'd only seen her at a distance and in uncertain light that night."
"What was her name?" Henderson asked.
Carol made a quick pass with her hand. "No, don't tell him. I don't want her with us. We're starting out new—no ghosts."
"She's right," Burgess said. "It's over. Bury it."
Even so, they fell silent for a few moments, the three of them, thinking about her, as they would probably continue to think about her every so often for the rest of their lives. It was one of those things that stays with you.
At the door when they were leaving, Carol's arm linked to his, Henderson turned back to Burgess for a minute, his forehead querulously creased. "But there should be some lesson in the whole thing, some reason. You mean she and I went through all we did—for nothing? There must be some moral in it somewhere."
Burgess gave him an encouraging slap on the back to speed him on his way. "If you've got to have a moral, I give you this: don't ever take strangers to the theater unless you've got a good memory for faces."