Zero Game - Brad Meltzer [125]
“I’ve never met you before,” he finally blurts.
“Andy Defresne,” I say, introducing myself. “And this is—”
“Catherine,” Viv says, refusing my aid.
“One of our interns,” I jump in, guaranteeing that he’ll never look twice at her.
“Dr. Arnold Minsky,” he says, shaking Viv’s hand. “My cat’s name was Catherine.”
Viv nods as pleasantly as possible, checking out the rest of his office in an attempt to avoid further conversation.
He’s got an upholstered sofa, a matching set of end chairs, and an outstanding view of downtown Arlington outside the plate-glass windows that line the entire right side of his office. Forever the academic, Minsky goes straight to his desk, which is covered with meticulous size-order stacks of papers, books, and magazine articles. Like his work, every molecule is accounted for. As I take the seat directly across from him, Viv slides into the chair that’s next to the window. It’s got a perfect view of the busy street out front. She’s already searching for Janos.
I check the walls, hunting for anything else that’ll give me a read. To my surprise, unlike the usual D.C. ego shrine, Minsky’s walls aren’t covered with diplomas, famous-person photos, or even a single framed newspaper clipping. That’s not the commodity here. He’s done proving he belongs.
Still, every universe has its own currency. The walls on both sides of Minsky’s desk are covered with built-in bookcases, floor to ceiling, filled with hundreds of books and academic texts. The spines are all worn, which I quickly realize is the point. In Congress, the golden ring is fame and stature. In science, it’s knowledge.
“Who’s that with you in the photo?” Viv asks, pointing to a tasteful silver frame of Minsky standing next to an older man with curly hair and a quizzical expression.
“Murray Gell-Mann,” Minsky says. “The Nobel Prize winner . . .”
I roll my tongue inside my cheek. Stature plays everywhere.
“So what can I help you with today?” Minsky asks.
“Actually,” I say, “we were wondering if we could ask you a few questions about neutrinos . . .”
65
YOU SAW THEM?” Janos asked, holding his cell phone in one hand and gripping the steering wheel of the black sedan with the other. The morning traffic wasn’t bad, even for Washington, but at this point, even a moment’s delay was enough to get him raging. “How’d they look?” he demanded.
“They’re lost,” his associate said. “Harris could barely get a sentence out, and the girl . . .”
“Viv.”
“Angry little thing. You could see it in the air. She was ready to take his head off.”
“Did Harris say anything?”
“Nothing you don’t know.”
“But they were there?” Janos asked.
“Absolutely. Even went up to the boss’s office—not that it did them any good,” the man said.
“So you took care of everything?”
“Everything you asked.”
“And they believed it?”
“Even the Dinah stuff. Unlike Pasternak, I see things through to the end.”
“You’re a real hero,” Janos said wryly.
“Yeah, well . . . don’t forget to tell your boss that. Between the loans, the surgeries, and all my other debts . . .”
“I’m well aware of your financial situation. That’s why—”
“Don’t say it’s the money—screw money; it’s more than that. They asked for this. They did. The snubs . . . the shrug-offs . . . People think it goes unnoticed.”
“As I was saying, I completely sympathize. That’s why I approached you in the first place.”
“Good, because I didn’t want you to think every lobbyist is in it for the cash. That’s a hurtful stereotype.”
Janos was silent. In many ways, his colleague was no different from the shiny sedan he was driving—overhyped and barely adequate. But as he reasoned when he first picked out the car, some things are necessary to blend in in Washington. “Did they say where