Part 7 (1/2)

Thurlow yanked off his polarized gla.s.ses. The cloud-like cylinder disappeared. In its place was a vague, foggy shape with tiny movements in it. He could see the corner of the building through it. He replaced the gla.s.ses. Again, there was a cylinder with two figures on a lip projecting from it. The figures were now pointing their tube toward the building's entrance.

”There he comes!” It was a shout from their left.

Lee almost knocked Thurlow down pus.h.i.+ng past Mossman to aim the camera at the building's entrance. Officers surged forward.

Thurlow stood momentarily alone as a short, stocky, partly bald man in a blue suit appeared in the spotlight glare at the street doors of the Murphey Building. The man threw one hand across his eyes as the spotlights centered on him and the strobe light flared. Thurlow blinked in the glare of light His eyes watered.

Deputies engulfed the man at the doors.

Lee darted off to one side, lifted the camera overhead, pointing it down at the milling group. ”Let me see his face!” Lee called. ”Open up there a little.”

But the officers ignored him.

Again, the strobe flared.

Thurlow had one more glimpse of the captive -- small eyes blinking in a round florid face. How curiously intense the eyes -- unafraid. They stared out at the psychologist, recognizing him.

”Andy!” Murphey shouted. ”Take care of Ruthy! You hear? Take care of Ruthy!”

Murphey became a jerking bald spot hustled along in a crowd of hats. He was pushed into a car off near the corner on the right. Lee still hovered on the outskirts firing his strobe light.

Thurlow took a shuddering breath. There was a sense of charged air around him, a pack smell mingled with exhaust ga.s.ses as the cars were started. Belatedly, he remembered the cylinder at the window, looked up in time to see it lift away from the building, fade into the sky.

There was a nightmare feeling to the vision, the noise, the shouted orders around him.

A deputy paused beside Thurlow, said: ”Clint says thanks. He says you can talk to Joe in a coupla hours -- after the D.A. gets through with him, or in the morning if you'd rather.”

Thurlow wet his lips with his tongue, tasted acid in his throat. He said: ”I . . . in the morning, I think. I'll check the probation department for an appointment.”

”Isn't going to be much pretrial nonsense about this case,” the deputy said. ”I'll tell Clint what you said.” He got into the car beside Thurlow.

Lee came up, the camera now on a strap around his neck. He held a notebook in his left hand, a stub pencil in his right.

”Hey, Doc,” he said, ”is that right what Mossman said? Murphey wouldn't come out until you got here?”

Thurlow nodded, stepped aside as the patrol car backed out. The question sounded completely inane, something born of the same kind of insanity that left him standing here in the street as cars sped off around the corner in a wake of motor sounds. The smell of unburned gas was sharp and stinging in his nostrils.

Lee scribbled in the notebook.

”Weren't you pretty friendly with Murphey's daughter once?” Lee asked.

”We're friends,” Thurlow said. The mouth that spoke the words seemed to belong to someone else.

”You see the body?” Lee asked.

Thurlow shook his head.

”What a sweet, b.l.o.o.d.y mess,” Lee said.