Perez nodded. "I thought of that, too."
"And?"
"And I interviewed all of the Tosoks today. But one of them looked different from any of the ones I’d seen on TV. You know they all had blue or gray hides, right?"
Ajax nodded.
"Well, this one had a silver-white hide."
"Like it had bleached itself clean?"
"More than that," said Perez. "I’m told it had shed its skin."
"Like a bloody snake, eh?"
"Yes, sir. Like a bloody snake."
The DA considered. "You know," he said slowly, "there is another possibility."
"What’s that?"
"A frame-up." Ajax paused. "Not everybody liked Calhoun."
"If it
Ajax nodded. "True. Better check into their backgrounds." A pause. "Start with Smathers."
"Smathers?"
"I saw Calhoun show him up on national TV. That’s got to sting."
"Will do."
"Be thorough, Perez. If I’m going to have to lay charges against an alien, I want to be dead certain we’re right."
Frank was walking across the USC campus, passing by the Von KleinSmid Center. He looked up briefly at the one-hundred-and-seventy-six-foot tower visible through the portico; the tower was crowned by a five-thousand-pound gridwork globe, like a world picked clean.
Frank knew all about being picked clean; he had been divorced for five years, and his twelve-year-old daughter was with his ex-wife in Maryland.
It was the day before Christmas; the campus was almost deserted. Frank was used to it being cold at Christmas; he’d grown up in Canandaigua, New York, where winters were marked by bitter temperatures and hip-deep snow. But the path he was on was lined with palm trees, and Frank was more than warm enough in his black nylon windbreaker with the NASA logo on its back.
Christmases were the worst; Frank never got Maria at Christmas. He’d actually been looking forward to this one — Clete had no family, either, and so they’d planned to mark the day together. They’d even been planning to exchange presents; Frank had bought Clete a trio of pewter starships from the Franklin Mint — a classic
And now—
He made it a few more paces before he realized what was happening. If this had been upstate New York — if this had been proper Christmas weather — his breath might have escaped in great shuddering clouds, but here, in this warmth, palm trees obscenely decorated with Christmas lights, his sobs were escaping invisibly.
Clete and Frank had met in grad school; they’d been friends for twenty years.
God, how he’d miss him.
Frank found a bench beneath a palm, and lowered himself on to it, cutting his face in his hands.
Merry Christmas, he thought.
And cried some more.
Three hours later Perez returned to DA Ajax’s office. "Okay, I’ve got the scoop on Smathers."
"Go."
"When PBS was contemplating making a new astronomy series, they wanted someone who could fill Carl Sagan’s shoes. Their first choices were Cletus Calhoun… and Packwood Smathers."
"Why’d they go with Calhoun?"
"It depends who you ask. One executive I spoke to there said it was his just-plain-folks image: PBS was under a lot of fire from Congress, you know. They were calling it an elitist service. The network was doing everything it could to appear more populist, in hopes of not getting its appropriation slashed further."
"Makes sense," said Ajax. "Heck, even I watched
"Right. But the other guy I talked to said they’d heard Smathers was difficult to work with, and that there were some improprieties in his research. He’d been a little too liberal, supposedly, with taking credit for work done not just by his grad students — which is par for the course, apparently — but also by other professors. They were afraid that might come out.
"Okay. So?"
"So the executive I spoke to at PBS said the source of the information about Smathers was Calhoun himself."
"Are the allegations true?"
"Apparently so. And if Smathers had learned that it was Calhoun who made PBS aware of them, costing him the host’s job—"
"All right," said Ajax. "Let’s bring Smathers in for questioning."
Parker Center was a large beige building two blocks from the Criminal Courts Building. Out front there was a black granite fountain dedicated to all the officers who had died in the line of duty. Part of the building was held up by a series of columns; behind these columns the main entrance was constantly guarded by armed cops.