a stern, unforgiving demeanor. “Your name, please?”
“Alida Blaine.” She answered in a flat monotone. “Should I be calling the family lawyer?”
“You promised to cooperate,” he said sternly. There was a long silence and then he softened. “Look, Alida, I just want to ask some simple questions.”
She smirked. “Are Keds the new FBI uniform?”
“It’s a temporary assignment.”
“Temporary? So what do you do normally? Play in a rock band?”
Maybe Fordyce had been right about his dress. “I’m a physicist.”
Her eyebrows shot up. Gideon didn’t like how she kept turning the conversation on him as a subject, and he quickly followed with a question. “Can you tell me what your relationship is to Simon Blaine?”
“Daughter.”
“Age?”
“Twenty-seven.”
“Where’s your father now?”
“At the movie set.”
“Movie set?”
“They’re making a film of one of his books, shooting it at the Circle Y Movie Ranch south of town.”
“When will he be home?”
She looked at her watch. “Any time now. So what’s this about?”
Gideon made an effort to relax, smile. Guilt was starting to creep over him. He just wasn’t cut out to be a cop. “We’re trying to find out more about Reed Chalker, the man involved in the terrorist plot.”
“Oh, so
Gideon thought of bumming, decided that would not be a cool move. She really was beautiful, and he was having trouble maintaining the cool demeanor. He forced himself back to the business at hand. “We think your father knew Reed Chalker.”
“I doubt it. I keep my father’s schedule. I’d never heard that man’s name until I read it in the newspaper.”
“Chalker had a complete collection of your father’s books. All signed.”
“So?”
“It was the way they were signed.
At this, Alida leaned back and laughed harshly, exhaling smoke. “Oh man, are you guys barking up the wrong tree! He signs all his books like that. Thousands of them. Tens of thousands.”
“With his first name?”
“It saves time. It’s also why he only uses the first names of the people he’s signing for. When you’ve got five hundred people in line, each with several books in hand, you can’t be signing your full name. This guy Chalker, he worked up at Los Alamos, right? That’s what the papers are saying.”
“That’s right.”
“So it wouldn’t have been a big deal for him to get to my father’s signings.”
Gideon felt a creeping sense of failure. Fordyce had been right: this was a dead end, and he was making a royal fool of himself.
“Do you have evidence of that?” he asked as gamely as he could.
“Go ask down at the bookstore. He does a local signing there every year, they’ll confirm it. He signs all his books
“I see.”
“Is this the kind of half-assed investigation you people are running?” she said, all hostility gone now, leaving amusement and scorn in their place. “And you’re up against terrorists with a nuke? That scares the shit out of me.”
“We have to follow up every lead,” said Gideon. He took out Chalker’s picture. “If you could just look at this and see if you recognize it?”
She looked at it, squinted, then looked more closely. Her whole face changed. “What do you know. I do recognize him. He used to come to all my father’s book signings in town. Kind of a groupie, buttonholed him, tried to engage him in conversation with a hundred people in line behind him. My father humored him because that’s his job, really, and he would never be rude to a reader.” She handed the picture back. “But I can tell you my father was
“Is there anything else you can tell me about him?”
She shook her head. “No.”
“What did they talk about?”
“I really don’t recall. Probably the usual stuff. Why don’t you ask my father?”
As if on cue, the door slammed and a man walked into the room. For a famous author, Simon Blaine was disarmingly small, with a head of white curls and a smiling, pixie-like face, as smooth and unlined as a boy’s, with a button nose, ruddy cheeks, and friendly, dancing eyes. A large smile broke out when he saw his daughter. He went over, gave her a hug as she rose—she was several inches taller than him—and then turned to Gideon as he rose in turn, extending his hand. “Simon Blaine,” he said, as if Gideon wouldn’t know who he was. He wore an ill-fitting suit a size too large for his slender frame, and it flapped as he shook Gideon’s hand with enthusiasm. “Who is your new friend, MD?” His voice, incongruously, was deep and compelling—although it held traces of a Liverpudlian accent, making the man sound ever so faintly like a baritone Ringo Starr.
“I’m Gideon Crew.” He glanced from father to daughter and back again. “MD? She’s a doctor?”
“No, no, that’s my nickname for her. Miracle Daughter.” And Blaine looked at Alida with evident affection.
“Crew’s not a friend of mine,” said Alida hastily, stubbing out the cigarette. “He’s an investigator for the FBI. Looking into the nuclear terrorist business in New York.”
Blaine’s eyes widened in surprise. They were a deep hazel-brown, flecked with bits of gold: a most unusual color. “Well, well, now. How interesting!” He took Gideon’s ID, examined it, returned it. “How can I be of help?”
“I have a few questions, if you don’t mind.”
“Not at all. Please, sit down.”
They all sat down. Alida spoke first. “Daddy, the nuclear terrorist who died in New York, Reed Chalker, collected your books. He came to all your book signings. You remember him?” She shook another cigarette out of the pack, tapped it on the table, lit up.
Blaine frowned. “Can’t say I do.”
Gideon handed him the picture and Blaine examined it. He looked almost like a leprechaun, his lower lip protruding in concentration, his white curls sticking out in tufts from either side of his head.
“You remember, he was the guy who used to bring a whole bagful of books, came to every signing, always at the front of the line.”
The lower lip suddenly retracted and the bushy eyebrows went up. “Yes, yes, I do! Good Lord, that was Reed Chalker, the terrorist from Los Alamos?” He handed the photo back. “To think he was a reader of mine!” He did not seem displeased.
“What did you talk about with Chalker?” Gideon asked.
“It’s hard to say. I do a book signing every year at Collected Works in Santa Fe, and we often get four, five hundred people. They go by in a sort of blur, really. Mostly they talk about how much they love the books, who their favorite characters are—and sometimes they want me to read a manuscript or they ask questions about how to break into writing.”
“And they often talk about what a shame it was that Daddy didn’t win that Nobel,” said Alida forcefully. “Which I happen to agree with.”