After a moment's silence, a toast; Alan promised that he would soon break away and visit, for the first time in his life, the nation's Capital, “Now that I've got my own personal guide,” he'd finished.
“ If you make a promise to me, mister, I expect it to be fulfilled. I hope you know that.”
“ Count on it.”
“ I'll count the days.”
“ Soon as we put this Claw thing to rest for good.”
She looked off into the distance, chewed a bit on her “tiger-striped” grilled chicken and then dropped her head.
Rychman, reading her body language, asked, “What's troubling you, Jess?”
“ Nothing.”
“ Nothing or everything?”
“ All right, Alan, I still think Leon's only half the equation, and I think… I think…”
“ And you think everybody else is rushing this thing over the falls? Is that it?”
“ Damn straight that's it.”
“ Everybody's got their teeth into this, Jess.”
“ And that means the bite's on you? I know how important being commissioner is to you, Alan, but this isn't the way to do it.”
He stared coldly at her, his anger rising. “I haven't cut any deals on that score with anybody, kid, and you can take that to the bank.”
“ Have I said that?” She backed off a bit, sorry for getting into this the night before she planned to leave.
“ No, but it's what you're thinking. You give me something other than a lot of suppositions and questionable circumstantial evidence, and I'll move on it, Jess. You know that as well as I do.”
Frustrated, Jessica sipped at her wine, shaking her head, saying, “I know that, Alan… I know.”
“ You're some kind of holdout, Jess. You're the only one who still thinks that Leon had an accomplice.”
“ I'm not the only one who thinks so.”
His eyebrows rose. “Who else thinks so?”
“ Forget it.”
“ Who?” he demanded.
“ A nurse,” she said. “A nurse who knew Archer when he was interning at St. Stephen's Hospital in '65.”
“ All right, tell me the whole story.”
She took Alan carefully through the paper trail that led to Felona Hankersen. She told him how impressed she'd been with the woman's sincerity and how unimpressed she was with the hospital's paperwork, citing odd discrepancies. Finally she told him about Rodney's story, of his fear of a doctor he'd seen in the morgue, feeding on a human heart wrenched from a cadaver.
“ Okay, Jess, is that it?” he said in a tone that spoke of fatigue and disappointment. “The secondhand story of a dead boy from a sad old woman fired from her job? You know what you can do with that kind of evidence. And what're you saying here? How've you gone from Archer's being a petty and jealous assistant to Darius, trying to make himself look good, to a… to a cannibal… to Leon Helfer's accomplice… to being the Claw? It's just too outrageous, Jess. No one would believe it.”
“ Least of all you,” she said coldly.
“ Look, if you had anything corroborative, any hard evidence-”
“ Felona Hankersen isn't the only one who thinks he's a ghoul. You've heard the hallway gossip about Archer.”
He shook his head, saying, “Don't you think I've heard the same about you, especially since word's out we're seeing each other?”
This took her aback and she shook her head repeatedly. “Word's out how?” she wanted to know.
“ Damned if I know, but it is, and so every jerk in the department wants to know what it's like, seeing… someone like you… after hours. Point is I've heard the same nasty crap about you as I've heard about Archer: about how you like cutting thin slices of organ meat for a quick sandwich over the autopsy table. All crap, Jess, and you know it.”
“ Just the same, Felona Hankersen's not the only one who thinks Simon Archer is a fiend.”
“ And just who else is there, Jess? The night janitor at the lab?”
“ Never mind. Guess I've said too much already,” she whispered in her whiskey voice, leaning back into the cushion of the booth.
“ Who else?” he insisted.
“ Never you fucking mind. It's no one you'd approve of, anyway.”
He stared in dismay and she muttered, “Not sure I do myself, it's just… Well, the more I learn about Archer, the more twists and turns I-”
His eyes lit with an unexpected fire she could not at first fathom. He looked about to explode, about to smash the table with his fists.
“ Christ, it's Matisak again, isn't it? I thought you wrote that bastard off? What can a madman in a cell hundreds of miles away possibly know that we don't, Jess?”
She took in a great breath of air and shivered as if a draft passed over her. “I don't know how he does it, Alan, but Matisak has shadowed my every move, my every hunch on this case.”
“ He's just got you spooked.”
“ He's creepy, all right, uncanny.”
“ Bastard's just got you confused, Jess. You must see that.”
“ Confused? Hysterical is what you mean, isn't it?” She looked sternly up at him, her eyes fiery. “That's so convenient for you, Alan: chalk my suspicions up to those of a hysterical woman. Damn you.”
“ I'm just saying that this creep's gotten into your head, maybe.”
“ That's bullshit, Alan, pure-”
“ All right, all right,” he said, trying to calm her. “So you harbor doubts. Tell me about them. Talk to me, Jess.”
She calmed, dabbed with her napkin at a spot of wine she'd spilled and said evenly, “I still think there's something to this Dr. Casadessus at the Street Hospital you got a line on. Where has that led you?”
He scratched his head and said apologetically, “Nowhere, I'm afraid. The guy disappeared like smoke, without a trace.”
“ So you've given up?”
“ I still have men working on it.”
“ Have you ever considered the not so remote possibility that this Dr. Casadessus might be someone close to the case?”
“ You're back to Simon Archer.”
“ I am. Alan, you realize it was rather a convenient coincidence for Archer that Jim Drake was killed by a hit-and-run?”
“ Drake's death is still under investigation.”
“ Have you checked Archer's car for recent repairs?”
“ We have, and it led nowhere.”
“ Then maybe he's got two cars?”
“ You're reaching, Jess.”
“ And what about Dr. Darius?”
“ What about him?”
“ His so-called suicide. Also overseen by Simon Archer.”
“ Jess, you sound like… like-”
“ Don't say it, Alan.”
“- like you've got some sort of vendetta against Archer.”
“ My vendetta is against the Claw, Alan, and in my book a Leon Helfer isn't capable on his own of the damage done by the Claw. He's told us that he fashioned the murder weapon while under the spell of this other man, and that it was designed by the other. He was very specific. He told us that the killer had two claws made but used only one, normally, reserving the kill for himself.”
“ Nobody, Jess, believes what Helfer has had to say.” He put his hand over hers and added, “I know how hard you took Darius' death, but to think that Archer actually helped him out that hospital window, Jess… Well, there's not one speck of evidence to support that contention. I know you got close to Darius. Maybe it's clouded your judgment-”
“ Clouded, confused woman, huh? So we're back to that.”
“ You do admit to being human, to being emotionally involved?” She did not answer this, stubbornly persisting in her own questions instead. “So what're you saying? Helfer killed his boss and his dentist as well?”
“ It seems much more likely that Helfer did these men than Simon Archer, Jess. Look, I'm… we are continuing investigations into both Parke's and Malthuesen's deaths. We have good reason to believe both were murdered, but that leaves Leon as prime suspect in these deaths, and this morning, Leon confessed to both murders.”