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People began to file out. It was ten-twenty A.M.

It was late in the day, nearly five, and dark clouds had converged over the city, turning the sky and the area all around Police Plaza One into a grim, dismal, charcoal painting. Rain threatened and in the distance the rumble of thunder gave everyone a catlike sixth sense of impending danger while radio and TV announcers called for a besotted and blackened city. Everyone paused over their work, some staring out at the coming storm.

Rychman was going between offices when he saw Jessica Coran coming down the hall. He went to greet her.

“ All finished for the day?” he asked.

“ Pretty much, yeah. I was about to call a cab, try to beat the storm.”

“ Don't. I'll have Lou send a radio car around for you. You know your way to the garage?”

“ I passed a sign for it, yeah.”

“ So what do you think of Luther Darius' operation?”

“ Excellent lab, terrified people.”

“ Terrified?”

“ Nervous, let's say. Course I haven't met Darius himself yet.”

“ Yeah, I understand he's under doctor's care.”

“ A euphemism for what?” she asked pointedly.

Rychman shrugged, his eyes alert. “Just talk… Some say he has Parkinson's, others say it's cancer. Some say he has both.”

“ Poor man. I didn't know.” She thought momentarily of the debilitating disease that had claimed her father, made him a prisoner within his own body. “Think I'd rather go quickly and cleanly.”

“ Agreed. Luther's lab people are extremely loyal to him,” he confided. “They weren't likely to discuss his condition, I'm sure, but his problems have had an ill effect on the lab. Reports aren't as timely or complete as they once were, mistakes have been made with the handling of evidence. You know how that looks. I don't suppose his people would have revealed a thing about that, either, so… Oh, and here's the report on the Hamner woman.”

“ So my dealings will almost certainly be with Dr. Archer,” she replied, taking the report and watching for his reaction.

“ You could do worse,” he said. “Perkins, for instance.”

“ Yeah, I heard about Perkins quitting.”

“ Quitting? He actually quit?”

“ I thought you were about to tell me!”

“ I was just going to tell you he was an asshole.”

“ From what I've heard of him, I'd have to agree. Lou tells me you slammed him into a wall at the crime scene? Sounds like clever crime scene tactics, a boys' fight over the corpse? Really… I'm sure the integrity of the evidence-gathering wasn't compromised.”

“ You certainly have a way with sarcasm, Doctor.”

“ I was reared on it, sorry. Well, I'd best run. I didn't bring an umbrella.”

“ Lou,” he shouted suddenly, spying Pierce. “See to it someone gets Dr. Coran back to where she's staying.”

Pierce shouted back, “You got it. Captain.”

“ Just wander down to the garage. Someone'11 be along in a moment.”

People with papers in their hands were streaming by them in the hallway, some trying to get his attention. He continued to stare at her until he said, “Your examination of the Hamner woman? Did it tell you anything I should know?”

“ Nothing new, no… sorry.”

“ Well… keep me informed.”

“ What about an arrest? Has your task force come up with any suggestions?”

“ Several, but we took the mayor's advice and arrested only one. Shaw the Claw, they're calling him. Detaining him on charges other than murder at this point, but letting it be known that he is suspected of the killings. Press is doing as expected, eating it up.”

“ That should cool the brew a bit. Later, then, Captain.”

“ Right, later.”

He turned and hurried fullback fashion to the confines of his new office, Jessica staring after, watching him go and wondering what had changed their relationship so drastically. Had it to do with her being on his side against the C.P. and the mayor? Adversity made for strange bedfellows. As for her, when she had read about his troubled divorce, she'd come to realize why he posed as such a hard-ass. She sensed that deep below the surface he was repressing a great deal of pain and grief.

Her ankles throbbed and twitched, a nervous reaction that she'd come to know as a sign that she'd been standing too damned long. She found the police garage where a young, aggressive reporter had somehow penetrated the barricades, and now rushed up to her and said, “You're with the FBI, aren't you?”

“ And who are you?”

“ I'm with the Times, and I'm just interested in you. I understand you're the agent who ended the career of that crazy guy in Chicago who thought he was a vampire?”

“ I was one of a team, Mr. ahh…”

“ Drake, Jim Drake.”

She recognized his name from the byline accompanying the twisted-knife story on Rychman. “I'd like you to stand away from me,” she said firmly.

“ You're a hero-heroine-what you did in Chicago.” He glanced at the cane, his eyes glued there long enough to embarrass her. “You're big news, and now you're here to help the NYPD find the Claw, aren't you? Aren't you?”

A uniformed police guard rushed over to them just as her car pulled up. The driver was Lou Pierce, who got out and joined the other uniformed man to help usher the reporter out of the restricted area, shouts filling the basement garage.

She got into the car, kicked off her shoes and massaged her ankles.

Lou returned and settled into the driver's seat, a broad smile, sandy-brown hair and blue eyes forming a pleasant demeanor. “We drew straws who'd get you, and I won,” he said triumphantly as he put the car in gear and started from the garage, the car tilting almost straight up on the exit ramp.

It was overcast out and there was a picket line in front of the precinct. The picketers carried signs, denouncing the police as fools, and they chanted, “The Claw controls the city… the Claw controls the city…” They had no idea just how true the slogan was.

Just as the car was turning out, a camera was all but slammed against the back window and Jessica saw a flash, realizing that Jim Drake had gotten his photographer to capture her before she could get away.

“ Damn, damn,” she muttered.

Lou was cursing under his breath, too. “Bloody reporters can be like camel shit on your shoe, Dr. Coran.”

“ How's that, Lou?”

“ Ever try to kick camel shit off your shoe, ma'am?”

She laughed for the first time that day.

“ You sure got one beautiful smile, Dr. Coran,” he said.

She smiled wider. “Thanks, I'm glad you won the draw.”

“ Oh, there was no question of it, ma'am.”

“ No?”

“ I cheated, ma'am. Had to pull this duty. You know, a lot of us guys see a pretty woman, and we just can't help ourselves.”

“ You're very flattering, Lou… Thanks.” Something had told her there'd been no drawing.

“ Some of us think a lot of what you did in Chicago, ma'am… really. That took some guts.”

She dropped her head, her eyes pinned on her sore ankles, her mind returning to that awful room where Matisak had begun to drain her of her blood, where Otto Boutine had come crashing through a window to her rescue, getting himself killed for her. “I lost my partner in Chicago,” she said.

“ Yes, ma'am… I know, ma'am.”

The rain started, slowly at first, like fairies appearing from nowhere on the windshield and the windows, and then suddenly the fairies were deluged by a thick, heavy, angry downpour as if the powers of heaven meant to destroy their own. Sometimes nature was as much at war with itself, she felt, as was the human psyche, filled with rage, chaos, violence, deposited there by some unseen and unknowable force. The human propensity for murder seemed to her quite closely akin to the universe's propensity to create black holes and violent, explosive stars. The dark New York landscape, sheathed in a slick downpour, made her cold inside, despite how warm and dry it was in the radio car. There was a steady, unending stream of human outbursts, turmoil and entanglements being reported over the police band. Not even nature's storm could quell the human fury of the large metropolis.