"You're on our side?" I said.
"Sides. I don't think you have a snowball's chance. But yes, I want to be part of it."
"He's more committed than you are," Mendez said.
"Committed but not convinced?"
"Julian," Jefferson said, "with all due respect for your years as a mechanic, and all the suffering you've gone through for what you've seen ... for having killed that boy ... it may be that I know more about war and its evil than you do. Secondhand knowledge, admittedly." He scraped sweat off his forehead with the blade of his hand. "But the fourteen years I've spent trying to put soldiers' lives back together make me a pretty good recruit for this army."
I wasn't really surprised at that. A patient doesn't get too much unguarded feedback from his therapist-it's like a one-way jack with a few controlled thoughts and feelings seeping back-but I knew how much he hated the killing, and what the killing did to the killers.
AMELIA SHUT DOWN HER machine for the day and was stacking papers, ready to go home, long bath and a nap, when a short bald man tapped on her office door. "Professor Harding?"
"What can I do for you?"
"Cooperate." He handed her an unsealed plain envelope. "My name is Harold Ingram, Major Harold Ingram. I'm an attorney for the army's Office of Technology Assessment."
She unfolded three pages of fine print. "So would you care to tell me in plain English what this is all about?"
"Oh, it's very simple. A paper that you co-authored for the Astrophysical Journal was found to contain material germane to weapons research."
"Wait. That paper never got past peer review. It was rejected. How could your office hear of it?"
"I honestly don't know. I'm not on the technical end."
She scanned the pages. "'Cease and desist'? A subpoena?"
"Yes. In a nutshell, we need all of your records pertaining to this research, and a statement that you have destroyed all duplicates, and a promise that you will discontinue the project until you hear from us."
She looked at him and then back at the document. "This is a joke, right?"
"I assure you it is not."
"Major... this is not some sort of gun we're designing. It's an abstraction."
"I don't know anything about that."
"How on God's green earth do you think you can stop me from thinking about something?"
"That's not my business. I just need the records and the statement."
"Did you get them from my co-author? I'm really just a hired hand, called in to verify some particle physics."
"I understand that he's been taken care of."
She sat down and put the three pages on the desk in front of her. "You can go. I have to study these and consult with my department head."
"Your department head is in full cooperation with us."
"I don't believe that. Professor Hayes?"
"No. It was J. MacDonald Roman who signed – "
"Macro? He's not even in the loop."
"He hires and fires people like you. He's about to fire you, if you aren't cooperative." He was completely still, and didn't blink. It was his big line.
"I have to talk to Hayes. I have to see what my boss – "
"It would be better if you just signed both documents," he said mildly, theatrically, "and then I could come by tomorrow for the records."
"My records," she said, "cover the spectrum from meaningless to redundant. What does my collaborator have to say about all this?"
"I wouldn't know. I believe that was the Caribbean branch."
"He disappeared in the Caribbean. You don't suppose your department killed him."
"What?"
"Sorry. The army doesn't kill people." She got up. "You can stay here or come along. I'm going to copy these pages."
"It would be better if you didn't copy them."
"It would be lunacy if I didn't."
He stayed in her office, probably to snoop around. She walked past the copy room and took the elevator down to the first floor. She stuffed the papers into her purse and jumped into the lead cab at the stand across the street. "Airport," she said, and considered her diminishing options.
All of her travel to and from D.C. had been on Peter's open account, so she had plenty of credits to get to North Dakota. But did she want to leave a trail pointing directly to Julian? She would call him from the airport public phone.
But wait; think. She couldn't just get on a plane and sneak off to North Dakota. Her name would be on the passenger list, and somebody would be waiting for her when she got off the plane. "Change destination," she said. "Amtrak station." The cab's voice verified the change and it made a U-turn.
Not many people traveled long distances by train, mostly people phobic about heights or just determined to do things the hard way. Or people who wanted to go someplace without leaving a document trail. You bought train tickets by machine, with the same kind of anonymous entertainment chits you used for cabs. (Bureaucrats and moralists would love to have had the clumsy system replaced with plastic, like the old cash cards, but voters would just as soon not have the government know what they were doing when, and with whom. The individual coupons made barter and hoarding simple, too.)
Amelia's timing was perfect; she ran for the 6:00 Dallas shuttle and it pulled out just as she sat down.
She turned on the screen on the back of the seat in front of her and asked for a map. If she touched two cities, the screen would show departure and arrival times. She jotted down a list; she could go from Dallas to Oklahoma City to Kansas City to Omaha to Seaside in about eight hours.
"Who you runnin' from, honey?" An old woman with white hair in short spikes was sitting next to her. "Some man?"
"Sure am," she said. "A real bastard."
The old woman nodded and pursed her lips. "Best you get some good food to carry while you in Dallas. You don' wanna be livin' on the crap they serve in that lounge car."
"Thank you. I'll do that." The woman went back to her soap opera and Amelia punched through the Amtrak magazine, See America! Not much she wanted to see.
She pretended to nap the half hour to Dallas. Then she said good-bye to the spike-coiffed lady and dove into the crowd. She had more than an hour before the train to Kansas City, so she bought a change of clothing-a Cowboys sweatshirt and loose black exercise pants-and some wrapped sandwiches and wine. Then she called the North Dakota number Julian had left her.
"Jury change its mind?" he asked.
"More interesting than that." She told him about Harold Ingram and the threatening paperwork.
"And no word from Peter?"
"No. But Ingram knew that he was in the Caribbean. That's when I decided I had to run."
"Well, the army's tracked me down, too. Just a second." He left the screen and came back. "No, it's just Dr. Jefferson, and nobody knows he's here. He's pretty much joined us." The phone camera tracked him as he sat down. "This Ingram didn't mention me?"
"No, your name's not on the paper."
"But it's only a matter of time. Even not connecting me with the paper, they know that we live together and will find out I'm a mechanic. They'll be here in a few hours. Do you have to change trains anywhere?"
"Yes." She checked her sheet. "The last one is Omaha. I'm supposed to get there just before midnight... eleven forty-six Central Time."
"Okay. I can get there by then."
"But then what?"
"I don't know. I'll talk it over with the Twenty."
"The twenty whats?"
"Marty's bunch. Explain later."
She went to the machine and, after a moment's hesitation, just bought a ticket as far as Omaha. No need to guide them any farther, if she was being followed.
Another calculated risk: two of the phones had data jacks. She waited until a couple of minutes before the train was going to leave, and called her own database. She downloaded a copy of the Astrophysical Journal article into her purse notebook. Then she instructed the database to send copies to everyone in her address book with *phys or *astr in their ID lines. That would be about fifty people, more than half of them involved with the Jupiter Project in some way. Would any of them read a twenty-page draft that was mostly pseudo-operator math, with no introduction, no context?