a full description of me and copies of my passport, driver’s license, and ID card from University. You’ll see I’m not this man on your tape. Please hold on to the tape. Don’t surrender it to somebody who comes in and smiles and tells you he is the reincarnation of J. Edgar Hoover. And indeed, yes, I am Samuel Larkin, and when you speak to Martha Flanagan, please convey my sympathies to her. Don’t bother to call the San Francisco police about this. I will call.”
“You’re wasting your time, Doctor. If there’s been a misunderstanding, there was no way we could know that this man was not who he said he was. Just forget about the police because you know as well as I do…”
“Better find those records, Doctor. There have to be copies!”
He hung up before the young jerk could answer.
He was steaming. But he was also stunned. Flanagan was dead. Flanagan struck by a car crossing California Street. He couldn’t remember if he’d ever heard of anybody being killed downtown on that corner, unless it was an out-of-state driver on a rainy day who tried to race a cable car.
He looked at Ryan, but he volunteered nothing for the moment. Then he punched in the 415 area code again. And a number he knew by heart.
“Darlene,” he said, “this is Samuel Larkin. I need you to send flowers to Martha Flanagan. Right. Right. Nearly instantaneous. Not quite. That would be fine. Just sign it ‘Lark.’ Thank you.”
Ryan moved out of the shadows, turned his back on Larkin and walked into the conference room.
Lark waited for a moment. His face was wet and he was tired, and he could not think what he meant to do. There were so many conflicting thoughts in his head, so much outrage, so much impatience, so much…so much pure astonishment He and Mitch had made that dash together so many times, heading up to Grant Avenue to find their favorite little Gooey Louie’s for egg rolls and cheap fried rice, the kind they’d loved since the New York days and med school.
He stood up. He didn’t know what he was going to say. He didn’t know how to explain all this.
He heard the door behind him open, and he saw with relief that it was Lightner, and Lightner had a manila folder in his hand. He looked drawn and tired, about as out of sorts as he’d been in the car this afternoon on the way down here.
That seemed like centuries ago. Flanagan had died in the interim.
They went into the conference room together. How calm these people looked, how incredibly calm, both men and women red-eyed from crying, and all in their lawyerly tropical wool and oxford cloth.
“Well, this is…this is very disturbing news,” Lark said. He could feel the blood rushing to his face now. He laid his hands on the back of the leather chair. He didn’t want to sit down. He caught a disconcerting reflection of himself in the distant windows. The lights of the city were a smear beyond. What he saw was mainly all this—the floor lamps, the ring of high-backed leather chairs, the figure of Ryan standing in the corner.
“All the material is gone,” said Ryan, quietly and without recrimination.
“I’m afraid so. Dr. Flanagan is…is dead, and they can’t find the records. Also someone…and I can’t for the life of me…”
“We understand,” said Ryan. “The same thing happened in New York yesterday afternoon. All the genetic records were removed. Same thing at the Genetic Institute in Paris.”
“Well, then I am in a very very embarrassing position,” said Lark. “You have only my word that this creature exists, that the blood and tissues sampled revealed this mysterious genome…”
“We understand,” said Ryan.
“I wouldn’t blame you if you told me to get the hell out of this office and never come south of the Mason-Dixon Line again,” said Lark. “I wouldn’t blame you if…”
“We understand,” said Ryan and for the first time he forced an icy smile. He gestured for calm. “The superficial and immediate autopsy results on Edith Mayfair and Alicia Mayfair indicate they miscarried. The tissue is abnormal. There is every indication, even at this early stage, that it corroborates what you’ve told us about the material you received. I thank you for all your help.”
Lark was flabbergasted.
“That’s it?”
“We will of course pay you for your time, and all your expenses…”
“No, I mean, wait a minute, what are you going to do?”
“Well, what would you suggest we