prove?â
âI donât mean he could prove anything,â Allie said. âBut he doesnât have to.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âIf he wanted, he could notify Haller-Davis I have a roommate and get us both evicted.â
âWould they believe him?â
âTheyâd send someone to look over the apartment, and theyâd see there are two people living there. No way you can conceal that from somebody looking for it.â
âWhat if we didnât let them in?â
âTheyâd sneak in with a passkey. Then theyâd serve an eviction notice, and itâd be up to me to prove I was living alone. Theyâd know I couldnât do that.â Allie wasnât sure that was exactly how the eviction would go, but she was sure Haller-Davis could and would force her out.
She remembered how Sam had noticed the beige dress, how heâd said he recognized Hedra from when sheâd answered the knock on the apartment door. He was letting Allie know that he knew: Hedra was her secret roommate. She didnât like that at all. There was no way to predict what might happen; divorces, from affairs as well as marriages, could take unexpected bitter turns.
The elevator arrived on their floor and the doors rumbled open, admitting a press of warm air from the hall.
A vision of the countless street people she passed every day invaded Allieâs mind. The ones the rest of the human race avoided thinking about, even avoided seeing, with a convenient selective blindness. She might become one of them. Sam had it in his power to do that to her. A Svengali in jogging shoes. That was what really ate at her, the knowledge that he could do it.
Absurd! she told herself. Iâm self-supporting and every bit as capable as Sam. My lifeâs in my own hands.
Hedra stopped halfway down the hall and stared incredulously at Allie. âSam wouldnât really turn you in to the management company, would he?â
âI donât know,â Allie said. âA month ago I wouldnât have thought so, but heâs full of surprises. All men seem to be full of surprises.â
âNot to me.â
Allie smiled. âI know what you mean, Hedra.â
But she didnât.
In the apartment, the phone rang and Allie absently answered it, still thinking about Sam.
âAllie?â A manâs voice. Not Samâs.
âYes?â There was only silence on the line. âHello?â
A steady buzzing erupted in her ear. Whoever was on the other end of the connection had hung up.
12
At Fortune Fashions, Mayfair sat at his wide desk, before his IBM computer, and went through the routine taught to him by Allie Jones. His fingers pecked at the gray keys with dexterity now, sure of themselves. Sheâd done an excellent job of setting up the programs. Inventory, payroll, graphics for sales and manufacturing projections, all reduced to relatively simple commands. She was about fifty percent through the project, sheâd told Mayfair. Which meant it was time for him to do what heâd intended from the first moment heâd seen Allie Jones. And why not? You were vice president of a company like this, certain perks were implied.
Allie had too much time invested to give up the Fortune Fashions account now, and she stood to lose too much money. Without a doubt sheâd be vulnerable to pressure. And sheâd recently broken up with whatever guy had been balling her; Sam something, he thought sheâd called him. So Mayfair figured she was ripe enough to fall. Ah, timing was so important in life.
Not that heâd explain the facts to her in such crude terms. He was too practiced for that. But in varied and subtle ways, Mayfair would let her know that now he had enough knowledge to call some other programmer in to finish what Allie had started. Even his secretary Elaine must be getting proficient with a computer by now. The basic software systems were online, so