Arden was Tim’s major professor, she explained, and his signa
ture on Tim’s dissertation was all that stood between Tim and a Ph.D.—and the postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard that he longed for. She herself thought the dissertation was more than good enough; she and the third member of Tim’s dissertation committee, a professor named Slivovitz, had already signed off on it, but Arden was driving Tim crazy with it, sending him back to the drawing board again and again. And again.
Gideon thoroughly sympathized. His own graduate years were not far enough behind him to make him forget what the ordeal of the dissertation had been like. “That’s tough, all right. Will Arden ever go along, or is it hopeless?”
Maggie shrugged. “Oh, I suppose he’ll go along eventually. It’s not that his criticisms are necessarily invalid, it’s just that they’re . . . well, quibbles: style, punctuation, chapter organization, that kind of thing. But between us, Tim’s material is certainly no worse than what you find in the published journals. Personally, I think it’s a damn shame, and I’ve said so to Arden. But Arden’s his own man, and where I come from, what Arden says goes.”
“Arden’s the department chair?” Gideon asked.
“The director. Formally, we’re an institute, not a department, although we come under Biological Sciences. That is to say, we
“And what will happen to you, Maggie?” John asked. “Where will you be?”
“Well, technically I’m still a contender for that one slot, but that’s never going to happen, and nobody’s pretending that it will. So, in an
swer to your first question, I’m out. In answer to the second, it looks
like I’ll be moving down here.”
“To the
“To the Huallaga Valley, a few hundred miles south of here. Much the same jungle ecosystem, but a few hundred feet higher, so maybe not
“That sounds like a terrific opportunity for someone in your field,” he said with as much enthusiasm as he could muster. “For an ethnobotanist, it must be paradise.”
He heard her chuckle, a single arid note, as she got to her feet. “All things considered,” she said with a side- of-the-mouth twang, “I’d rather be in Iowa City. Goodnight, all.”
“Well, Doc,” said John, watching her leave, “as far as your theory of aggravating Scofield goes, at least there’s one problem it doesn’t have.”
“Namely?”
John laughed. “Shortage of motives.”
THIRTEEN
OFthe entire trip, this was the moment that
Well, he was wide awake right now, but it seemed to him that the thumping in his chest was loud enough to be heard ten feet away— even the leaping of his shirt front with each beat must surely be visible—and his uniform, the best, cleanest whites he had, was al
ready dark under the arms and at the small of his back, and spotty streaks were starting to show on the front.
Scofield had laughingly assured him that there was nothing to worry about, that nothing could possibly go wrong, but Vargas had heard those words before from others, spoken in the same carefree manner, and he had observed that disaster had a way of almost invariably following them. Scofield, after all, had never dealt with the volatile, hard-drinking, unpredictable Colonel Malagga, a hard case if there ever was one, and a greedy, vulgar grafter besides. And Scofield wasn’t the owner and captain of the
He stared ruefully at the haggard face in the mirror—why had he let himself get talked into this; was he crazy? His heart couldn’t stand it; he wasn’t a young man any more. Making a final adjustment to his cap, the good one with the gold braid that was hardly corroded at all, he murmured a final prayer to the effect that Malagga would not be on duty at the border checkpoint today, and stepped out on deck.
An hour earlier, at a little after four in the afternoon, after cruising most of the day, he had swung the