The Housemaid: Part 3 – Chapter 60
The Housemaid: An absolutely addictive psychological thriller with a jaw-dropping twist
If I leave this house, it will be in handcuffs. I canât see any other way around it.
I remain on my leather sofa, clutching my knees, wondering if it will be the last time I sit here, while I wait for the detective to come back downstairs. My purse is sitting on the coffee table, and I grab it impulsively. I probably should just be sitting here quietly, like a good little murder suspect, but I canât help it. I pull out my phone and bring up my list of recent calls. I select the first number on the list.
âNina? What is going on?â Enzoâs voice is filled with concern. âWhat is happening over there?â
âThe police are still here,â I choke out. âIâ¦Â it doesnât look good. For me. They thinkâ¦â
I donât want to say the words out loud. They think I killed Andy. And I didnât kill him outright. He died of dehydration. But they think I am responsible.
I could end this. I could tell them about Millie. But I wonât.
âIâll testify for you,â he says. âWhat he did to you. I saw you locked up there.â
He means it. Heâll do anything he can to help me. But how meaningful will testimony be from a man who will almost certainly be painted as my secret lover? And I canât even deny it. I did sleep with Enzo.
âIs Cece okay?â I ask.
âSheâs fine.â
I close my eyes, trying to steady my breathing. âIs she watching TV?â
âTV? No, no, no. I teach her Italian. She is a natural.â
Despite everything, I laugh. Although itâs a weak sound. âCan I speak to her?â
Thereâs a pause and Cece comes on the other line. â
!â
I swallow. âHello, sweetheart. How are you?â
â
. When are you coming to pick me up?â
âSoon,â I lie. âJust keep working on your Italian, and Iâll be there as soon as I can.â I take a breath. âIâ¦Â I love you.â
âI love you too, Mom!â
Detective Connors is descending the stairs, his footsteps like gunshots. I shove my phone back into my purse and drop it back down on the coffee table. Apparently, heâs taken a closer look at Andyâs body. And Iâm sure he has a whole new set of questions. I can see it all over his face as he sits down again across from me.
âSo,â he says. âDo you know anything about the bruising on your husbandâs body?â
âBruising?â I ask, genuinely confused. I know about the missing teeth, but I didnât press Millie for further details about what happened in that attic room.
âThere are deep purple bruises all over his lower belly,â Connors says. âAnd all over hisâ¦Â genitals. Theyâre almost black.â
âOhâ¦â
âHow do you think they got there?â
I raise my eyebrows. âDo you think I beat him up?â The idea is laughable. Andy was taller than me by quite a bit, and his body was solid muscle. Mine is not.
âI have no idea what happened up there.â His eyes meet mine, and I try not to look away. âYour story is that your husband must have gotten locked in the attic accidentally, and you somehow didnât realize he was gone. Is that right?â
âI thought he was on a business trip,â I say. âHe usually takes a taxi to the airport.â
âAnd there were no text messages or calls between the two of you during this time, but that didnât concern you,â he points out. âFurthermore, in talking to his parents, it sounds like he had asked you to move out last week.â
I canât deny that part. âYes, thatâs right. Thatâs why we didnât talk.â
âAnd what about this Wilhelmina Calloway?â He pulls a small pad of paper out of his pocket and consults his note. âShe was working for you, wasnât she?â
I lift a shoulder. âI gave her the week off. My daughter was off at camp, so I felt like we didnât need her. I havenât seen her all week.â
Iâm sure theyâre going to try to contact Millie, but Iâm trying to take her off the suspect list as best I can. Itâs the least I can do after what I did to her.
âSo youâre telling me that a grown man managed to get himself locked in a room in the atticâwithout his phoneâeven though the room only locks from the outside?â Connorsâ eyebrows inch up to his hairline. âAnd while he was in the room, he randomly decided to pull out four of his teeth?â
When he says it that wayâ¦
âMrs. Winchester,â the detective says. âDo you really believe your husband is the sort of man who would do something like that?â
I lean back against the sofa, trying not to let on how much my body is trembling. âMaybe. You didnât know him.â
âActually,â he says, âthat isnât entirely true.â
I look up sharply. âExcuse me?â
Oh God. This just gets worse and worse. The detective with his graying hair is the right age to be another of Andyâs fatherâs golfing buddies. Or some other recipient of the familyâs amazing generosity. My wrists start to tingle, anticipating the handcuffs being snapped around them.
âI never knew him personally,â Connors says. âBut my daughter did.â
âYourâ¦Â daughter?â
He nods. âHer name is Kathleen Connors. Actually, small worldâshe and your husband were engaged a long time ago.â
I blink at him. Kathleen. The fiancée who Andy broke up with before the two of us got together. The one I tried to find so many times, but kept coming up empty-handed. Kathleen is this manâs daughter. But what does that mean?
He lowers his voice several notches until I have to strain to hear. âThe breakup was rough on her. She wouldnât talk about it. Still wonât. She moved far away after that and she even changed her name. She hasnât been out on a date with a man since.â
My heart speeds up. âOh. Iâ¦â
âI always wondered what exactly Andrew Winchester did to my daughter.â He presses his lips together until they form a straight line. âSo when I transferred out here about a year ago and started poking around, I thought it was interesting that you claimed he had been locking you up in the attic, but nobody could verify your story was real. Although truthfully, it looks like nobody did very much to try. The Winchesters used to have a lot of pull out here before they moved down to Florida, especially with some of the cops.â He pauses. âBut not me.â
My mouth is too dry to get any words out. I just stare at him, my jaw hanging open.
âIf you ask me,â he says, âthat attic is a hazard. Seems like itâs far too easy to get locked up there.â He leans back again, his voice returning to a normal volume. âItâs a shame that happened to your husband. Iâm sure my buddy in the coronerâs office will also agree. Itâll have to be a cautionary tale, wonât it?â
âYes,â I finally manage. âA cautionary tale.â
Detective Connors gives me one last long look. And then he goes back upstairs to join his colleagues. And I realize something incredible.
Iâm not going to walk out of here in handcuffs after all.