He paused for a moment of dramatic emphasis, enjoying the moment fully. "I went over to their house," he said. "They made their payment and I told them where their son was." He pointed at the clipping. "He was found, as you see-down in an abandoned well shaft. With a broken pelvis."
"Do you really-?"
"-expect you to believe all this?" Greg completed her thought. "Not completely; no one ever does at first. Let me tell you what you're thinking right now. You're thinking that we cut out these newspaper items and made up this story to fit them. You're entitled to believe that if you want to-" his face hardened "-but, if you do, you'll have a dead son by the middle of the month, you can count on that."
He smiled cheerfully. "I don't believe you'd enjoy hearing how it's going to happen," he said.
The smile began to fade. "And it is going to happen, Mrs. Wheeler, whether you believe it or not."
The woman, still too dazed by fright to be completely sure of her suspicion, watched Greg as he turned to Carrie. "Well?" he said.
"I don't-"
"Let's have it," he demanded.
Carrie bit her lower lip and tried to restrain the sob.
"What are you going to do?" the woman asked.
Greg turned to her with a smile. "Make our point," he said. He looked at Carrie again. "Well?"
She answered, eyes closed, voice pained and feeble. "There's a throw rug by the nursery door," she said. "You'll slip on it while you're carrying the baby."
Greg glanced at her in pleased surprise; he hadn't known there was a baby. Quickly, he looked at the woman as Carrie continued in a troubled voice, "There's a black widow spider underneath the playpen on the patio, it will bite the baby, there's a-"
"Care to check these items, Mrs. Wheeler?" Greg broke in. Suddenly, he hated her for her slowness, for her failure to accept. "Or shall we just walk out of here," he said, sharply, "and let that blue convertible drag Paul's head along the street until his brains spill out?"
The woman looked at him in horror. Greg felt a momentary dread that he had told her too much, then relaxed as he realized that he hadn't. "I suggest you check," he told her, pleasantly. The woman backed away from him a little bit, then turned and hurried toward the patio door. "Oh, incidentally," Greg said, remembering. She turned. "That dog out there will try to save your son but it won't succeed; the car will kill it, too."
The woman stared at him, as if uncomprehending, then turned away and, sliding open the patio door, went outside. Greg saw the collie frisking around her as she moved across the patio. Leisurely, he returned to the sofa and sat down.
"Greg-?"
He frowned grimacingly, jerking up his hand to silence her. Out on the patio, there was a scraping noise as the woman overturned the playpen. He listened intently. There was a sudden gasp, then the stamping of the woman's shoe on concrete, an excited barking by the dog. Greg smiled and leaned back with a sigh. Bingo.
When the woman came back in, he smiled at her, noticing how heavily she breathed. "That could happen any place," she said, defensively.
"Could it?" Greg's smile remained intact. "And the throw rug?"
"Maybe you looked around while I was in the kitchen."
"We didn't."
"Maybe you guessed."
"And maybe we didn't," he told her, chilling his smile. "Maybe everything we've said is true. You want to gamble on it?"
The woman had no reply. Greg looked at Carrie. "Anything else?" he asked. Carrie shivered fitfully. "An electric outlet by the baby's crib," she said. "She has a bobby pin beside her, she's been trying to put it in the plug and-"
"Mrs. Wheeler?" Greg looked inquisitively at the woman. He snickered as she turned and hurried from the room. When she was gone, he smiled and winked at Carrie. "You're really on today, baby," he said. She returned his look with glistening eyes. "Greg, please don't make it too much," she murmured.
Greg turned away from her, the smile withdrawn. Relax, he told himself; relax. After today, you'll be free of her. Casually, he slipped the notebook back into his topcoat pocket.
The woman returned in several minutes, her expression now devoid of anything but dread. Between two fingers of her right hand she was carrying a bobby pin. "How did you know?" she asked. Her voice was hollow with dismay.
"I believe I explained that, Mrs. Wheeler," Greg replied. "My wife has a gift. She knows exactly where and when the accident will occur. Do you care to buy that information?"
The woman's hands twitched at her sides. "What do you want?" she asked.