"Maybe one month," Rory said. "When the aliens don't destroy us out of hand."
"Which they may still do." He checked his watch. "Almost time for Whittier, Howard."
"What, with her you made an appointment?"
He nodded. "We don't have a key to heroffice," the FBI man said.
She followed them down the hall and turned into the lounge, where Marya was watching the cube, by herself, snacking on cheese and crackers from the machine.
Marya
"That didn't take long." She offered Rory some cheese and crackers.
Rory shook her head—"No appetite"—and got a ball of juice from the wall dispenser and poured it into a plastic cup. "Not much to tell them. That conference this morning didn't go five minutes, and that's what they were interested in—evidently the White House scrambling is pretty sophisticated; the CIA didn't have a clue what went on, and they're the ones who installed the descrambler here."
"You told them the truth, of course."
Rory eased back onto a worn couch. "Yeah, that our late great president was a demented fruitcake, which seems to have been news to the FBI man."
"They ask you about Pauling? That's what CNN's obsessing on now."
"A little. The CIA guy even admitted that someday he might be seen as a hero, a martyr."
"That's not what they're saying here. They've dug up men and women who were in the service with him, going on about how fanatical and unpredictable he was."
"That's probably why LaSalle picked him. Like unto like." She took a sip of juice and frowned at it. "Warm. He didn't come on that way, though. He was the reasonable one, trying to keep dear Carly from courting votes by destroying the human race."
Marya looked at her watch. "They want me to do a five-minute spot sometime today. It won't be live; we can wait awhile."
Rory dumped the cup in the recycler next to the couch. "Crew downstairs?"
"Better be."
"Let's just do it and go put our feet up at my place. Turn on the cube and watch Washington get nuked."
"Is there anything you don't want me to ask you?"
"No." Rory stood and stretched. "God, no. I have a feeling truth, is going to be in short supply for a while. Anything we can do to keep Davis from launching those weapons, we ought to do."
"They didn't tell you not to talk about this morning?"
"I don't really give a shit. What can they do to me?" She pushed open the door. "Rhetorical question. They can pull off my toenails and make me eat them. But I don't think they will."
They took the elevator down to the first floor, where two cameramen were watching CNN on a small portable cube. "Let's gear up, guys. Five-minute spot."
She looked at the large flatscreen that provided the interview backdrop. It had the logo of the Committee on the Coming, two concentric Cs with a question mark inside. "Don't want this one, Deeb. You got one of the White House ruins?"
"Just take a minute. I'll run back and snatch one from CNN. You want to thumbprint it?"
"Sure." When the picture appeared, Marya put her thumb in a box in the lower right corner. A list of options appeared and she touched the first one, one-time reproduction rights. It chimed and the list and box disappeared.
Rory was already seated at one of two black leather chairs that faced one another across a low table in front of a blue screen. Marya whistled at the cameras. "Position A, all three." She stepped aside while one of the small cameras rolled onto its mark. The man who wasn't Deeb set down glasses of ice water.
She dropped into the other chair and looked at herself in the screen, patting her hair reflexively. She could be a frazzled mess and the editor would automatically fix the image. "No pressure, but let's try for one take and bust outta here. Deeb, when I look at you, maybe four minutes thirty, we want the logo back, and then segue into the deep space shot."
"Got it," he said. "Editor on line now."
"Good." She took a page of scribbled notes out of a breast pocket and smoothed it on the table. She looked at the wall clock behind Rory. "Eight seconds." She shook her head. "No, wait. Cameras off. We're two minutes from the hour. Rory, if I can clear it, do you mind if we go live?"
"I'm a teacher. I usually go live."
She smiled and pushed a button on her phone. "Fez, this is Marya. Scramble." She pushed another button. "Loud and clear. Look, you got the feds there? Figures. Look, I've got a White House angle that we don't want reviewed; they'd gut it or even cancel it." She nodded. "Dr. Bell down here talked with LaSalle and Pauling this morning. Can you give me five live ninety seconds after the hour?" She laughed. "Owe you one, babe." She set the phone down and looked at the cameraman. "You didn't hear that, right?"
"Hear what?" Deeb said.
"Yeah, well, go take a leak for about a minute. Be back by two." They hustled out. "Rory, the broadcasts are going through a White House censor with a five-second delay. What they can do in New York is accidentally push the wrong buttons and leave the room. So this interview, scheduled for seven, comes in live instead, on a circuit that's not controlled by the White House remote.
"I don't know how long we'll have before they're able to cut us off. So I'll ask the most important questions first."
"We might not even get on," Rory said. "This room is probably bugged by the CIA."
"Hmm. They probably wouldn't have anybody live listening in, though. We'll find out." The two men came back in and she whistled the cameras to start. She looked at the main camera. "We're going to take five minutes, commencing fourteen-oh-one-thirty."
Rory twisted around to look at the clock and then settled into an interviewee posture.
Marya faced the camera and her expression became serious, then grim: "Good evening. This is Marya Washington coming to you from Gainesville, Florida. This afternoon I talked with Professor Aurora Bell, who is chief administrator of the Committee on the Coming.
"This morning, Dr. Bell had a VR conference call from the White House. Were there other witnesses to the call, Professor?"
"Oh, yes. The governor of Florida, the chancellor of this university, and ... another professor. And science adviser Grayson Pauling."
"Did anything happen between the president and Pauling that might have presaged today's tragic events?"
"In retrospect, yes." She shook her head at the memory. "She blew up at him. At all of us, actually."
"What did you say?"
"LaSalle talked about orbiting three antimissile weapons, to destroy the alien spaceship if it made a wrong move. I think it was the DOD's idea, but she was behind it a hundred percent.
"This was beforethe new message came in. Even so, we argued that it would be suicide. The aliens' technology is so superior to ours that we would be like mice attacking an elephant. Ants."
Rory's phone was buzzing; she took it out of her pocket and skimmed it across the room.
"And Pauling was on your side?"
"As any reasonable person would be. She was annoyed at him, and then openly angry. Pauling implied that the rationale for orbiting these weapons was to have them flying over Europe. Over France, in case we did decide to enter the war. If the war happens."
"Do you agree?"
"I don't know much about politics. If I were French I'd be nervous. But the issue isn't Earth politics."
"Especially in light of the new message."