Jupiter’s Bones. Faye Kellerman
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Название: Jupiter’s Bones

Автор: Faye Kellerman

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика

Серия: Peter Decker and Rina Lazarus Series

isbn: 9780008293581

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ that it has rises and falls, peaks and troughs. Okay so far?”

      “I’m with you.”

      “Quantum theory says light is not a wave, but discreet packets or bundles made up of particles called photons. Two contradictory theories—light as wave, light as particles.”

      “Dare I ask? Which one is right?”

      “They both are. Sometimes light behaves as a wave, sometimes it behaves like photons. If you thought relativity was bad at pinning things down, you don’t even want to know about Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle. It says that although you can make predictions on how these photons will behave over the long run, you can never say exactly how they will behave over the short run. At any given moment, you have no way of knowing which energy state any given photon will occupy. Are you with me?”

      “No. Can I ask what photons have to do with teleportation?”

      “You’re a single-minded man, Lieutenant.”

      “A bad physicist, but a decent cop.”

      “Photons, sir, have been one of the links implicated in instantaneous travel. Before Dad dropped out, he was one of the few men who was trying to prove that photons originating from the same packet of light had this instantaneous link between them. Whatever was happening to photon one was also happening with photon two no matter what the distance between them was. All because once they had shared the same light bundle. Are you with me?”

      “Instant communication.”

      “Instantaneous communication,” Europa corrected. “Now, since mass can convert to energy at the speed of light—E equals MC squared—then atoms—like the kind that make up your body—can be converted to electromagnetic energy or light in the form of photons. And since there is an eternal, instantaneous link between photons from the same packet, you can transport your atoms—now in photon form—instantaneously from one position in space to another using this superluminal link. Which is considered a scientific lost cause. Although things can move faster than light, they can’t seem to transport meaningful information … things like organized atoms. Which is what my father spent his scientific life trying to prove. He hit walls, but that didn’t stop him. When he couldn’t do it as Emil Euler Ganz, he went metaphysical and tried to prove it as Jupiter.”

      She frowned. “But you know how things get messed up going from theory to actuality. Sometimes we physicists predict it right on—like with the atom bomb. We knew the math way before we had the technology. But most of the time, we sit there and wallow in our own mistakes. Like a baby with a dirty diaper, just crying and squirming while waiting for someone who knows better to clean it up.”

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      Oliver said, “I can buy the thing about time slowing down. Ever been to an opera?”

      Decker laughed, but Marge said, “I like opera.”

      “That’s ’cause you’re a woman.” Oliver bit into an egg roll. “Sure you don’t want one, Deck? They’re vegetarian.”

      “No thanks.” He added sugar to his tea. “So when are you two meeting with the death certificate guy … what’s his name? Omni?”

      “Nova,” Marge said. “We found out he’s a podiatrist.”

      Decker made a face. “A podiatrist signed Ganz’s death certificate?”

      “Maybe Jupiter’s feet were cold.” Oliver polished off a wonton.

      “I’m sure they were if he was dead,” Marge said. “For your information, Scott, there are plenty of men who enjoy opera.”

      “None of them heterosexual.”

      “That’s ridiculous!”

      Oliver thought it over. “Okay. Maybe there are a few effete Englishmen who like opera. But I dare you to find one straight guy who likes ballet.”

      Decker tried again. “What time are you meeting Nova the podiatrist?”

      “Six-thirty,” Oliver said.

      Decker looked at his watch. “That’s in a half hour.”

      Oliver pointed to Marge’s entree. “Put a dent in your cashew chicken or we’ll never make it.”

      “I’ll take the rest to go. The soup filled me up.”

      Oliver said, “That’s another gay thing—soup. Straight guys would never get filled up by soup. Straight guys don’t even eat soup. Soup is a broad thing.”

      Marge said, “Were you always this concrete or am I just noticing it more?”

      Oliver rolled his eyes. To Decker, he said, “So Ganz was a schmuck. Doesn’t surprise me. All these cult leaders are megalomaniacs.” He attacked the remnants of his Mongolian chicken. “I mean look what he was into—time machines, alternative universes … instant travel through space. Playing God basically. Good sci-fi, but for a man of Ganz’s stature … he was freaking out.” He turned to Marge. “You know, the whacked-out ideas combined with the headaches that Venus told you about … maybe he had a brain tumor.”

      Decker said, “When Europa spoke to him, she said he was still scientifically sharp.”

      “That’s her opinion,” Oliver said.

      “I found it interesting that Ganz had made enemies.”

      “It’s irrelevant, Deck. Unless one of them sneaked into the Order and laced his vodka with cyanide.”

      Decker said, “You never know when the past can come back to haunt. Besides, Ganz wasn’t completely divorced from his former life. He kept in contact with Europa, his significant other was Europa’s girlhood friend—”

      “What?” Marge broke in. “You said that Europa’s around forty.”

      “She is.”

      “Venus looks about thirty.”

      “So she looks young,” Decker answered. “Europa said she was a pretty girl.” He told them Jilliam’s background.

      Marge said, “So Ganz was the father Jilliam never had. Where have I heard that one before?”

      “And she was also a young piece of ass,” Oliver said. “Yes, it’s the same-old, same-old. But so what? Why the fascination with the past, Deck? Do you have a former associate of Ganz who you think was out to get him?”

      Decker admitted he didn’t. “This Bob—the one who dated Europa—she said he was obsessed with Emil Ganz the scientist.”

      “But Bob met Ganz after he had become Jupiter, right?”

      “Right.”

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