Wednesday, 26 February 2025

Tasty, Tasty, very, very Tasty —


The first step in the development 
of Taste is to be willing to credit 
your own opinion. 




She asked herself a simple Question that would have sounded corny to the career climbers inside the Beltway : 

How could she do exactly what she was sworn to do? 

How could she protect The Citizens and catch him if he came? 


Dr Lecter obviously had good papers and money. He was brilliant at concealing himself. Take the elegant simplicity of his first hideout after his escape from Memphis — he checked into a four-star hotel next door to a great plastic surgery facility in St Louis. Half the guests had their faces bandaged. He bandaged his own face and lived high on a dead man’s money. 


Among her hundreds of scraps of paper, she had his room service receipts from St Louis. Astronomical. A bottle of Bâtard-Montrachet one hundred twenty-five dollars. How good it must have tasted after all those years of jail food. 


She had asked for copies of everything from Florence and the Italians obliged. From the quality of the print, she thought they must copy with some kind of soot blower. There was no order anywhere


Here were Dr Lecter’s personal papers from the Palazzo Capponi. A few notes on Dante in his familiar handwriting, a note to the cleaning lady, a receipt from the Florentine fine grocer Vera dal 1926 for two bottles of Bâtard-Montrachet and some tartufi bianchi. 


Same wine again, and what was the other thing? Starling’s Bantam New College Italian & English Dictionary told her tartufi bianchi were white truffles


She called the chef at a good Washington Italian restaurant and asked him about them. She had to beg off the phone after five minutes as he raved about their taste. 


Taste. The wine, the truffles. Taste in all things was a constant between Dr Lecter’s lives in America and Europe, between his life as a successful medical practitioner and fugitive monster. His face may have changed but his tastes did not, and he was not a man who denied himself. Taste was a sensitive area to Starling, because it was in the area of taste that Dr Lecter first touched her in the quick, complimenting her on her pocketbook and making fun of her cheap shoes. What had he called her? 


A well-scrubbed hustling rube with a little taste. 


It was taste that itched at her in the daily round of her institutional life with its purely functional equipment in utilitarian settings. 


At the same time her faith in technique was dying and leaving room for something else. Starling was weary of technique. Faith in technique is the religion of the dangerous trades. 


To go up against an armed felon in a gunfight or to fight him in the dirt you have to believe perfect technique, hard training, will guarantee that you are invincible. This is not true, particularly in firefights. You can stack the odds in your favour, but if you get into enough gunfights, you will be killed in one. Starling had seen it. Having come to doubt the religion of technique, where could Starling turn? 


In her tribulation, in the gnawing sameness of her days, she began to look at the shapes of things. She began to credit her own visceral reactions to things, without quantifying them or restricting them to words. At about this time she noticed a change in her reading habits. Before, she would have read a caption before she looked at a picture. Not now. Sometimes she did not read captions at all. 


For years she had read couture publications on the sly, guiltily as though they were pornography. Now she began to admit to herself that there was something in those pictures that made her hungry. 


Within the framework of her mind, galvanized by the Lutherans against corrupting rust, she felt as though she were giving in to a delicious perversion. 


She would have arrived at her tactic anyway, in time, but she was aided by the sea change inside her: It sped her toward the idea that Dr Lecter’s taste for rarified things, things in a small market, might be the monster’s dorsal fin, cutting the surface and making him visible. 


Using and comparing computerized customer lists, Starling might be able to crack one of his alternate identities. To do this, she had to know his preferences. She needed to know him better than anyone in the world knew him. What are the things I know he likes? He likes music, wine, books, food. And he likes me. The first step in the development of taste is to be willing to credit your own opinion. In the areas of food and wine and music, Starling would have to follow the doctor’s precedents, looking at what he used in the past, but in one area she was at least his equal. Automobiles. Starling was a car buff, as anyone who saw her car could tell. 


Dr Lecter had owned a supercharged Bentley before his disgrace. Supercharged, not turbocharged. Custom supercharged with a Rootes-type positive displacement blower, so it had no turbo lag. She quickly realized that the custom Bentley market is so small, he would entail some risk going back to it. What would he buy now? She understood the feeling he liked. A blown, big displacement V8, with power down low, and not peaky. What would she buy in the current market? No question, an XJR Jaguar supercharged sedan. She faxed the East and West Coast Jaguar distributors asking for weekly sales reports. 


What else did Dr Lecter have a taste for, that Starling knew a lot about? 


He likes me, she thought. How quickly he had responded to her plight.

World Domination



Everything or nothing 007 documentary intro - 
All the james bonds in one...

Dr. Emil Julius No
The Americans are fools. 
I offered My Services; They refused
So did The East. Now they can 
both pay for Their mistake.

007
World Domination —
The same old dream. 

Our asylums are full of people who 
think they're Napoleon. Or God.








Sister Lily: 
Come in. Come in Come in. You poor dears. 
We simply didn’t know when to expect you. First it was teatime yesterday, and then dinner. And it was only half an hour ago we knew you were on your way.
Sister Rose:
Cigarette? There’s American, there’s English, and there’s Turkish. I’m Sister Rose. This is Sister Lily. We’re here to make your stay as pleasant as possible.

007 : 
That’s really most kind of you, but for the moment…
Sister Lily: Of course! You’ll be wanting to see your room! Breakfast is already ordered, and then you’ll want to sleep. The doctor left strict orders you’re not to be disturbed until this evening. He’ll be delighted if you join him for dinner. Shall I say you’ll be there?
007 : Tell him I also will be delighted.
Sister Lily: Splendid. I know he’ll be pleased. Here we are.

Sister Lily: This will be your room, Mr. Bond. This is your bathroom in here. And for you, young lady, this is your room. And you’ll find fresh clothes in here. I hope they fit. We didn’t get your sizes till last night. Don’t hesitate to ring if there’s anything else you want. Anything at all.
007 : Such as two air tickets to London?
Sister Lily: I’ll leave you two dear people in peace.

007 : Well, let’s have some breakfast.
Honey Ryder: How can you eat at a time like this?
007 : Because I’m hungry. We don’t know when we’ll get the chance to eat again. Here, take this. Careful. The whole place is probably wired for sound.
Honey Ryder: Have you…Have you any idea what they’re going to do with us?
007 : No idea. No door handles or windows, either.
Honey Ryder: It’s a prison, then.
007 : Mink-lined with first-class service. What’s the matter?
Honey Ryder: I don’t feel so good. I feel so sleepy.
007 : Damn coffee!

007 : How do you feel?
Honey Ryder: Sleepy. What made us pass out like that?
007 : In the coffee, it was drugged.

Sister Lily: It’s almost time for dinner. We don’t want to keep the doctor waiting, do we?
007 : That would never do. You ready, Honey?
Honey Ryder: I suppose so.

007 : You’re doing fine. Come on. Am I, uh, properly dressed for the occasion?

Sister Lily: 
Quite suitable.

007 : 
Suitable for what?

Sister Lily
This way, please.

Honey Ryder : 
I’m glad your hands 
are sweating, too.

007 : 
Of course I’m scared, too. 
So be natural and leave 
all the talking to me.

Sister Lily: 
In here, please. I hope you enjoy your dinner.

Honey Ryder: Come and look!
007 : Artificial light. We could be hundreds of feet beneath the sea here.

Honey Ryder: 
And look at that. Sea tulips. 
They do not grow above 200 feet.

No : 
One million dollars, Mr. Bond. 
You were wondering what it cost.

007 : 
As a matter of fact, I was.

No : 
Forgive my not shaking hands. It becomes a bit awkward with these. A misfortune. 
You were admiring my aquarium.
007 : Yes. It’s quite impressive.
No : A unique feat of engineering, if I may say so. I designed it myself. The glass is convex, ten inches thick, which accounts for the magnifying effect.
007 : Minnows pretending they’re whales. Just like you on this island, Dr. No.
No : It depends, Mr. Bond, on which side the glass you are. A medium dry martini, lemon peel, shaken, not stirred.
007 : Vodka?
No : Of course. We’ll have dinner at once. There’s so much to discuss, so little time.

007 : Well, Dr. No, you haven’t done badly, considering.
No : A handicap is what you make of it. I was the unwanted child of a German missionary and a Chinese girl of good family. Yet I became treasurer of the most powerful criminal society in China.

007 : 
It’s rare for the Tongs 
to trust anyone who isn’t 
completely Chinese.

No : I doubt they shall do so again. I escaped to America with ten million of their dollars in gold.


007 : 
That’s how you financed this operation. 
It was a good idea to use atomic power. I’m glad to see you can handle it properly. 
I’d hate to think your decontamination 
chamber wasn’t effective.


No : 
My work has given me a unique knowledge of 
radioactivity, but not without costs, as you see.

007 : 
Yes. Your power source 
had our organisation 
puzzled for some time.

No : 
They are still 
puzzled, Mr. Bond.

007 : 
Not any longer. 
I sent a complete report.

No
Bluff, Mr. Bond. You’ve not contacted your headquarters since you requested 
a Geiger counter.

007 : 
But there are so many files open on you already, Dr. No. Our own, the CIA’s…The one from the Tong society that you robbed. When trouble comes, you’ll find this is a very small and naked little island.

No
An expendable little island, Mr. Bond. 
When my mission here in Crab Key is accomplished, I destroy it and move on. But the habit of inquiry is consistent. I see you’re wondering why, where, when. I only gratify your curiosity because you’re the one man I’ve met capable of appreciating what I’ve done. And keeping it to himself.

007 : 
Just a minute. There’s no point in involving the 
girl at this stage. She has nothing to do with us. 
Let her go free. She’ll promise not to talk.

Honey Ryder: 
No, I won’t, I’m staying with you.

007 : 
I don’t want you here.

No : 
I agree. This is no 
place for The Girl
Take her away.

Honey Ryder: 
No! No!

No : 
I’m sure the guards will amuse her.

Honey Ryder: 
Let me go! No!

No : 
That’s a Dom Pérignon ’55. 
It would be a pity to break it
.
007 : 
I prefer the ’53 myself.

No : 
Clumsy effort, Mr. Bond. You disappoint me. I’m not a fool, so please do not treat me as one. And that table knife, please put it back.

007 : 
Well, we can’t all be geniuses, can we? 
Tell me, does the toppling of American missiles 
really compensate for having no hands?

No : Missiles are only the first step to prove our power.

007 : 
Our power? With your disregard for human life 
you must be working for The East.

No : 
East, West – just points of the compass, 
each as stupid as the other. 
I’m a member of SPECTRE.

007
SPECTRE?

No
SPECTRE  --
Special Executive for Counterintelligence, 
Terrorism, Revenge, Extortion --
The four great cornerstones of Power, 
headed by the greatest brains in the world.
007 : 
Correction : Criminal brains.

No : 
The successful criminal brain is always superior. It has to be.
007 : 
Well, why become criminal
I’m sure The West would welcome 
A Scientist of your… caliber.

No : 
The Americans are fools. I offered my services. They refused
So did The East. Now they can both pay for their mistake.

007 : 
World domination. That same old dream. Our asylums are full of people who think they’re Napoleon…or God.

No : 
You persist in trying to provoke me, Mr. Bond. 
I could’ve had you killed in The Swamp.

007 : And why didn’t you?

No : 
I thought you less stupid
Usually, when a man gets in my way…
But you were different

You cost me time, money, effort. 
You damaged my organization and my pride.

I was curious to see what 
kind of a man you were. 
I thought there might even be a place 
for you with SPECTRE

007 :  
Well, I’m flattered. I’d prefer the revenge department. 
Of course, my first job would be finding 
the man who killed Strangways and Quarrel.

 
No : 
Unfortunately, I misjudged you --
You are just a stupid policeman 
whose luck has run out --

Scientist: 
They’re waiting for you in the control room, Dr. No.

No
No hurry. They won’t have started their countdown check yet.

007 : 
You won’t get away with it, Dr. No. 
The Americans are prepared 
for any trouble.

No : 
I never fail, Mr. Bond.

Guard: 
What do we do with him?

No : 
Soften him up. I haven’t 
finished with him yet.

Sunday, 23 February 2025

The Phantom Victory

 





In The Past
Politicians promised 
to create A Better World. 

They had Different Ways 
of achieving this, but
Their Power and Authority 
came from the 
optimistic Visions 
they offered to Their People. 

Those Dreams FAILED. 

And Today, People have 
Lost Faith in Ideologies

Increasingly, 
Politicians are seen simply 
as Managers of Public Life. 

But now, They have 
Discovered a NEW Role 
that restores Their Power 
and Authority. 

Instead of Delivering Dreams, Politicians now promise 
to Protect Us from  NIGHTMARES

They Say that 
They will rescue Us,
from dreadful Dangers 
that We cannot See and 
DO Not Understand. 

And The Great 
Danger of All —






"So much of the news this year has been hopeless, depressing, and above all, confusing. To which the only response is to say, "Oh dear."

What this film is going to suggest is that that Defeatist Response has become a central part of a new system of political control. 



And to understand how this is happening, you have to look to Russia, to a man called Vladislav Surkov, who is A Hero of Our Time. 

Surkov is one of President Putin's advisers, and has helped him maintain his power for 15 years, but he has done it in a very new way. 

He came originally from the avant-garde art world, and those who have studied His Career, say that what Surkov has done, is to import ideas from conceptual art into the very heart of politics. 

His aim is to undermine peoples' perceptions of the world, so they never know what is really happening. 



Surkov turned Russian Politics into a bewildering, constantly changing piece of Theatre

He sponsored all kinds of groups, from neo-Nazi skinheads to liberal human rights groups. He even backed parties that were opposed to President Putin. 

But the key thing was, that Surkov then let it be known that this was what he was doing, which meant that no one was sure what was Real or Fake. As one journalist put it: "It is a strategy of power that keeps any opposition constantly confused." 

A ceaseless shape-shifting that is unstoppable because it is undefinable


It is exactly what Surkov is alleged to have done in The Ukraine this year. 

In typical fashion, as The War began, Surkov published a short story about something he called Non-linear War. A War where you never know what The Enemy are really up to, or even who they are

The underlying aim, Surkov says, is not to Win The War, but to use the conflict to create a constant state of destabilized perception, in order to manage and control.



But maybe, we have something similar emerging here in Britain. Everything we're told by journalists and politicians is confusing and contradictory

Of course, there is no Mr. Surkov in charge, but it is an odd, non-linear world that plays into the hands of Those in Power.

British troops have come Home from Afghanistan, but nobody seems to know whether it was A Victory or whether it was A Defeat. 

..

Aging disk jockeys are prosecuted for crimes they committed decades ago, while practically no one in The City of London is prosecuted for the endless financial crimes that have been revealed there. 

In Syria, We are Told that President Assad is The Evil Enemy, but then His Enemies turn out to be even more evil than him, so We Bomb Them, and by doing that, We Help keep Assad in Power. 

But the real epicenter of this non-linear world is The Economy, and the closest we have to our own shape-shifting Post-Modern Politician is George Osborne

He tells us proudly that The Economy is Growing, but at the same time, wages are going down

He says he is reducing The Deficit, but then it is revealed that The Deficit is going up

But the dark heart of this shape-shifting world is Quantitative Easing. 



The Government is insisting on taking billions of Pounds out of the economy through its austerity program, yet at the very same time it is pumping billion of Pounds into the economy through Quantitative Easing, the equivalent of 24,000 Pounds for every family in Britain. 

But it gets even more confusing, because the Bank of England has admitted that those billions of Pounds are not going where they are supposed to. 

A vast majority of that money has actually found its way into the hands of the wealthiest five percent in Britain. 

It has been described 
as the biggest 
transfer of wealth 
to The Rich in recent 
documented History

It could be 
a huge scandal, comparable 
to the greedy oligarchs 
in Russia — a ruthless elite, siphoning off billions 
in public money. 
But nobody seems to know



It sums up the strange mood 
of Our Time, where nothing really 
makes any coherent sense. 

We Live with 
a constant vaudeville 
of contradictory stories 
that makes it impossible 
for any real opposition 
to emerge, because 
they can't counter it 
with any coherent narrative 
of their own

And it means that We as Individuals become ever more powerless, unable to challenge anything, because We Live in a state of confusion and uncertainty

To which the 
only response, is : 
Oh Dear

But that is 
What They want 
You to Say.

Saturday, 22 February 2025

The Specimen



Let me make you a bundle



The Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History had been closed for hours, but Crawford had called ahead and a guard waited to let Clarice Starling in the Constitution Avenue entrance. The lights were dimmed in the closed museum and the air was still. Only the colossal figure of a South Seas chieftain facing the entrance stood tall enough for the weak ceiling light to shine on his face. 


Starling’s guide was a big black man in the neat turnout of the Smithsonian guards. She thought he resembled the chieftain as he raised his face to the elevator lights. There was a moment’s relief in her idle fancy, like rubbing a cramp. The second level above the great stuffed elephant, a vast floor closed to the public, is shared by the departments of Anthropology and Entomology. The anthropologists call it the fourth floor. The entomologists contend it is the third. A few scientists from Agriculture say they have proof that it is the sixth. Each faction has a case in the old building with its additions and subdivisions. 


Starling followed the guard into a dim maze of corridors walled high with wooden cases of anthropological specimens. Only the small labels revealed their contents. 


Thousands of people in these boxes,” the guard said. “Forty thousand specimens.” 


He found office numbers with his flashlight and trailed the light over the labels as they went along. Dyak baby carriers and ceremonial skulls gave way to Aphids, and they left Man for the older and more orderly world of Insects. Now the corridor was walled with big metal boxes painted pale green. 


“Thirty million insects—and the spiders on top of that. Don’t lump the spiders in with the insects,” the guard advised. “Spider people jump all over you about that. There, the office that’s lit. Don’t try to come out by yourself. If they don’t say they’ll bring you down, call me at this extension, it’s the guard office. I’ll come get you.” He gave her a card and left her. 


She was in the heart of Entomology, on a rotunda gallery high above the great stuffed elephant. There was the office with the lights on and the door open. 


“Time, Pilch!” A man’s voice, shrill with excitement. “Let’s go here. Time!” 


Starling stopped in the doorway. Two men sat at a laboratory table playing chess. Both were about thirty, one black-haired and lean, the other pudgy with wiry red hair. They appeared to be engrossed in the chessboard. If they noticed Starling, they gave no sign. If they noticed the enormous rhinoceros beetle slowly making its way across the board, weaving among the chessmen, they gave no sign of that either. Then the beetle crossed the edge of the board. 


“Time, Roden,” the lean one said instantly. The pudgy one moved his bishop and immediately turned the beetle around and started it trudging back the other way. 


If the beetle just cuts across the corner, is time up then?” Starling asked. 


Of course time’s up then,” the pudgy one said loudly, without looking up. “Of course it’s up then. How do you play? Do you make him cross the whole board? Who do you play against, a sloth?” 


“I have The Specimen Special Agent Crawford called about.” 


“I can’t imagine why we didn’t hear your siren,” the pudgy one said. “We’re waiting all night here to identify a bug for the FBI. Bugs’re all we do. Nobody said anything about Special Agent Crawford’s specimen. He should show his specimen privately to his family doctor. Time, Pilch!” 


“I’d love to catch your whole routine another time,” Starling said, “but this is urgent, so let’s do it now. Time, Pilch.” 


The black-haired one looked around at her, saw her leaning against the doorframe with her briefcase. He put the beetle on some rotten wood in a box and covered it with a lettuce leaf. When he got up, he was tall. “I’m Noble Pilcher,” he said. “That’s Albert Roden. You need an insect identified? We’re happy to help you.” Pilcher had a long friendly face, but his black eyes were a little witchy and too close together, and one of them had a slight cast that made it catch the light independently. He did not offer to shake hands. “You are …?” 


Clarice Starling.” 


“Let’s see what you’ve got.” Pilcher held the small jar to the light. 


Roden came to look. “Where did you find it? Did you kill it with your gun? Did you see its mommy?” It occurred to Starling how much Roden would benefit from an elbow smash in the hinge of his jaw. 


Shhh,” Pilcher said. “Tell us where you found it. Was it attached to anything — a twig or a leaf — or was it in the soil?” 


“I see,” Starling said. “Nobody’s talked to you.” 


“The Chairman asked us to stay late and identify a bug for the FBI,” Pilcher said. 


Told us,” Roden said. “Told us to stay late.” 


“We do it all the time for Customs and the Department of Agriculture,” Pilcher said. 


But not in the middle of the night,” Roden said. 


I need to tell you a couple of things involving a criminal case,” Starling said. “I’m allowed to do that if you’ll keep it in confidence until the case is resolved. It’s important. It means some lives, and I’m not just saying that. Dr Roden, can you tell me seriously that you’ll respect a confidence?” 


“I’m not a doctor. Do I have to sign anything?” 


“Not if your word’s any good. You’ll have to sign for the specimen if you need to keep it, that’s all.” 


“Of course I’ll help you. I’m not uncaring.” 


“Dr Pilcher?” 


“That’s true,” Pilcher said. “He’s not uncaring.” 


Confidence?” 


I won’t tell.” 


“Pilch isn’t a doctor yet either,” Roden said. “We’re on an equal educational footing. But notice how he allowed you to call him that.” 


Roden placed the tip of his forefinger against his chin, as though pointing to his judicious expression. “Give us all the details. What might seem irrelevant to you could be vital information to an expert.” 


This insect was found lodged behind the soft palate of a murder victim. I don’t know how it got there. Her body was in the Elk River in West Virginia, and she hadn’t been dead more than a few days.” 


“It’s Buffalo Bill, I heard it on the radio,” Roden said. 


“You didn’t hear about the insect on the radio, did you?” Starling said. 


“No, but they said Elk River — are you coming in from that today, is that why you’re so late?” 


Yes,” Starling said. 


You must be tired, do you want some coffee?” Roden said. 


“No, thank you.” 


Water?” 


“No.” 


A Coke?” 


“I don’t believe so. We want to know where this woman was held captive and where she was killed. We’re hoping this bug has some specialised habitat, or it’s limited in range, you know, or it only sleeps on some kind of  treewe want to know where this insect is from. I’m asking for your confidence because — if The Perpetrator put the insect there deliberately — then only he would know that fact and we could use it to eliminate false confessions and save time. He’s killed six at least. Time’s eating us up.” 


Do you think he’s holding another woman right this minute, while we’re looking at his bug?” Roden asked in her face. His eyes were wide and his mouth open. She could see into his mouth, and she flashed for a second on something else. “I don’t know.” A little shrill, that. 


I don’t know,” she said again, to take the edge off it. “He’ll do it again as soon as he can.” 


“So we’ll do this as soon as we can,” Pilcher said. “Don’t worry, we’re good at this. You couldn’t be in better hands.” He removed the brown object from the jar with a slender forceps and placed it on a sheet of white paper beneath the light. He swung a magnifying glass on a flexible arm over it. 


The insect was long and it looked like a mummy. It was sheathed in a semitransparent cover that followed its general outlines like a sarcophagus. The appendages were bound so tightly against the body, they might have been carved in low relief. The little face looked wise. 


In the first place, it’s not anything that would normally infest a body outdoors, and it wouldn’t be in the water except by accident,” Pilcher said. “I don’t know how familiar you are with insects or how much you want to hear.” 


“Let’s say I don’t know diddly. I want you to tell me the whole thing.” 


“Okay, this is a pupa, an immature insect, in a chrysalis — that’s the cocoon that holds it while it transforms itself from a larva into an adult,” Pilcher said. 


Obtect pupa, Pilch?” Roden wrinkled his nose to hold his glasses up. 


“Yeah, I think so. You want to pull down Chu on the immature insects? Okay, this is the pupal stage of a large insect. Most of the more advanced insects have a pupal stage. A lot of them spend the winter this way.” 


“Book or look, Pilch?” Roden said. 


“I’ll look.” Pilcher moved the specimen to the stage of a microscope and hunched over it with a dental probe in his hand. “Here we go : No distinct respiratory organs on the dorsocephalic region, spiracles on the mesothorax and some abdominals, let’s start with that.” 


“Ummhumm,” Roden said, turning pages in a small manual. “Functional mandibles?


 “Nope.” 


Paired galeae of maxillae on the ventro meson?” 


“Yep, yep.” 


“Where are the antennae?” 


“Adjacent to the mesal margin of the wings. Two pairs of wings, the inside pair are completely covered up. Only the bottom three abdominal segments are free. Little pointy cremaster — I’d say Lepidoptera.” 


That’s what it says here,” Roden said. “It’s the family that includes the butterflies and moths. Covers a lot of territory,” Pilcher said. 


“It’s gonna be tough if the wings are soaked. I’ll pull the references,” Roden said. “I guess there’s no way I can keep you from talking about me while I’m gone.” 


“I guess not,” Pilcher said. 


Roden’s all right,” he told Starling as soon as Roden left the room. 


“I’m sure he is.” 


Are you now?” Pilcher seemed amused. “We were undergraduates together, working and glomming any kind of fellowship we could. He got one where he had to sit down in a coal mine waiting for proton decay. He just stayed in the dark too long. He’s all right. Just don’t mention proton decay.” 


“I’ll try to talk around it.” 


Pilcher turned away from the bright light. “It’s a big family, Lepidoptera. Maybe thirty thousand butterflies and a hundred thirty thousand moths. I’d like to take it out of the chrysalis — I’ll have to if we’re going to narrow it down.” 


“Okay. Can you do it in one piece?” 


“I think so. See, this one had started out on its own power before it died. It had started an irregular fracture in the chrysalis right here. This may take a little while.” Pilcher spread the natural split in the case and eased the insect out. The bunched wings were soaked. Spreading them was like working with a wet, wadded facial tissue. No pattern was visible. 


Roden was back with the books. “Ready?” Pilcher said. “Okay, the prothoracic femur is concealed.” 


“What about pilifers?” 


No pilifers,” Pilcher said. 


“Would you turn out the light, Officer Starling?” She waited by the wall switch until Pilcher’s penlight came on. He stood back from the table and shined it on The Specimen. The insect’s eyes glowed in the dark, reflecting the narrow beam. 


Owlet,” Roden said. 


Probably, but which one?” Pilcher said. “Give us the lights, please. It’s a Noctuid, Officer Starling — a night moth. How many Noctuids are there, Roden?” 


“Twenty-six hundred and … about twenty-six hundred have been described.” 


“Not many this big, though. Okay, let’s see you shine, my man.” 


Roden’s wiry red head covered the microscope. 


“We have to go to chaetaxy now — studying the skin of the insect to narrow it down to one species,” Pilcher said. “Roden’s the best at it.” 


Starling had the sense that a kindness had passed in the room. Roden responded by starting a fierce argument with Pilcher over whether the specimen’s larval warts were arranged in circles or not. It raged on through the arrangement of the hairs on the abdomen. 


Erebus odora,” Roden said at last. 


Let’s go look,” Pilcher said. 


They took The Specimen with them, down in the elevator to the level just above the great stuffed elephant and back into an enormous quad filled with pale green boxes. What was formerly a great hall had been split into two levels with decks to provide more storage for the Smithsonian’s insects. They were in Neo-tropical now, moving into Noctuids. 


Pilcher consulted his notepad and stopped at a box chest-high in the great wall stack. “You have to be careful with these things,” he said, sliding the heavy metal door off the box and setting it on the floor. “You drop one on your foot and you hop for weeks.” He ran his finger down the stacked drawers, selected one, and pulled it out. In the tray Starling saw the tiny preserved eggs, the caterpillar in a tube of alcohol, a cocoon peeled away from a specimen very similar to hers, and the adult — a big brown-black moth with a wingspan of nearly six inches, a furry body, and slender antennae. 


“Erebus odora,” Pilcher said. “The Black Witch Moth.” 


Roden was already turning pages. “‘A tropical species sometimes straying up to Canada in the fall,’” he read. “‘The larvae eat acacia, catclaw, and similar plants. Indigenous West Indies, Southern US, considered a pest in Hawaii.’” 


Fuckola, Starling thought. 

Nuts,” she said aloud. “They’re all over.” 


“But they’re not all over all the time.” Pilcher’s head was down. 

He pulled at his chin. “Do they double-brood, Roden?” 


“Wait a second … yeah, in extreme south Florida and south Texas.” 


When?” 


May and August.” 


I was just thinking,” Pilcher said. “Your specimen’s a little better developed than the one we have, and it’s fresh. It had started fracturing its cocoon to come out. In the West Indies or Hawaii, maybe, I could understand it, but it’s winter here. In this country it would wait three months to come out. Unless it happened accidentally in a greenhouse, or somebody raised it.” 


“Raised it how?” 


In a cage, in a warm place, with some acacia leaves for the larvae to eat until they’re ready to button up in their cocoons. It’s not hard to do.” 


“Is it a popular hobby? Outside professional study, do a lot of people do it?” 


No, primarily it’s entomologists trying to get a perfect specimen, maybe a few collectors. There’s the silk industry too, they raise moths, but not this kind.” 


Entomologists must have periodicals, professional journals, people that sell equipment,” Starling said. 


“Sure, and most of the publications come here.” 


Let me make you a bundle,” Roden said. “A couple of people here subscribe privately to the smaller newsletters — keep ’em locked up and make you give them a quarter just to look at the stupid things. I’ll have to get those in the morning.” 


“I’ll see they’re picked up, thank you, Mr Roden.” 


Pilcher photocopied the references on Erebus odora and gave them to her, along with the insect. 


“I’ll take you down,” he said. 

They waited for the elevator. 


Most people love butterflies and hate moths,” he said. “But moths are more — interesting, engaging.” 


“They’re destructive.” 


Some are, a lot are, but they live in all kinds of ways. Just like we do.” Silence for one floor. “There’s a moth, more than one in fact, that lives only on tears,” he offered. “That’s all they eat or drink.” 


“What kind of tears? Whose tears?” 


The tears of large land mammals, about our size. The old definition of moth was ‘anything that gradually, silently eats, consumes, or wastes any other thing.’ It was a verb for destruction too … Is this what you do all the time — hunt Buffalo Bill?” 


“I do it all I can.” 


Pilcher polished his teeth, his tongue moving behind his lips like a cat beneath the covers. “Do you ever go out for cheeseburgers and beer or the amusing house wine?” 


“Not lately.”


“Will you go for some with me now? It’s not far.” 


“No, but I’ll treat when this is over — and Mr Roden can go too, naturally.” 


There’s nothing natural about that,” Pilcher said. And at the door, “I hope you’re through with this soon, Officer Starling.” 


She hurried to the waiting car. Ardelia Mapp had left Starling’s mail and half a Mounds candy bar on her bed. Mapp was asleep. Starling carried her portable typewriter down to the laundry room, put it on the clothes-folding shelf and cranked in a carbon set. She had organised her notes on Erebus odora in her head on the ride back to Quantico, and she covered that quickly. 


Then she ate the Mounds and wrote a memo to Crawford suggesting they cross-check the entomology publications’ computerised mailing lists against The FBI’s known-offender files and the files in the cities closest to the abductions, plus felon and sex-offender files of Metro Dade, San Antonio, and Houston, the areas where the moths were most plentiful. 


There was another thing, too, that she had to bring up for a second time : Let’s ask Dr Lecter why he thought the perpetrator would start taking scalps. She delivered the paper to the night duty officer and fell into her grateful bed, the voices of the day still whispering, softer than Mapp’s breathing across the room. On the swarming dark she saw the moth’s wise little face. Those glowing eyes had looked at Buffalo Bill. 


Out of the cosmic hangover the Smithsonian leaves came her last thought and a coda for her day : 

Over this odd world, this half of the world that’s dark now, I have to hunt a thing that lives on tears.




CHAPTER 59 


Jame Gumb was news for weeks after he was lowered into his final hole. 


Reporters pieced together his history, beginning with the records of Sacramento County : His mother had been carrying him a month when she failed to place in the Miss Sacramento Contest in 1948. The “Jame” on his birth certificate apparently was a clerical error that no one bothered to correct. When her acting career failed to materialise, his mother went into an alcoholic decline; Gumb was two when Los Angeles County placed him in a foster home. 


At least two scholarly journals explained that this unhappy childhood was the reason he killed women in his basement for their skins. 

The words crazy and evil do not appear in either article. 


The film of the beauty contest that Jame Gumb watched as an adult was real footage of his mother, but the woman in the swimming pool film was not his mother, comparative measurements revealed. 


Gumb’s grandparents retrieved him from an unsatisfactory foster home when he was ten, and he killed them two years later. Tulare Vocational Rehabilitation taught Gumb to be a tailor during his years at the psychiatric hospital. He demonstrated definite aptitude for the work. 


Gumb’s employment record is broken and incomplete. Reporters found at least two restaurants where he worked off the books, and he worked sporadically in the clothing business. It has not been proven that he killed during this period, but Benjamin Raspail said he did. He was working at the curio store where the butterfly ornaments were made when he met Raspail, and he lived off the musician for some time. It was then that Gumb became obsessed with moths and butterflies and the changes they go through. 


After Raspail left him, Gumb killed Raspail’s next lover, Klaus, beheaded and partially flayed him. Later he dropped in on Raspail in The East. Raspail, ever thrilled by bad boys, introduced him to Dr Lecter. This was proven in the week after Gumb’s death when the FBI seized from Raspail’s next of kin the tapes of Raspail’s therapy sessions with Dr Lecter. 


Years ago, when Dr Lecter was declared insane, the therapy-session tapes had been turned over to the families of the victims to be destroyed. But Raspail’s wrangling relatives kept the tapes, hoping to use them to attack Raspail’s will. They had lost interest listening to the early tapes, which are only Raspail’s boring reminiscences of school life. 


After the news coverage of Jame Gumb, the Raspail family listened to the rest. When the relatives called the lawyer Everett Yow and threatened to use the tapes in a renewed assault on Raspail’s will, Yow called Clarice Starling. The tapes include the final session, when Lecter killed Raspail. More important, they reveal how much Raspail told Lecter about Jame Gumb : Raspail told Dr Lecter that Gumb was obsessed with moths, that he had flayed people in the past, that he had killed Klaus, that he had a job with the Mr Hide leather-goods company in Calumet City, but was taking money from an old lady in Belvedere, Ohio, who had made linings for Mr Hide, Inc. One day Gumb would take everything the old lady had, Raspail predicted. 


“When Lecter read that the first victim was from Belvedere and she was flayed, he knew who was doing it,” Crawford told Starling as they listened together to the tape. “He’d have given you Gumb and looked like a genius if Chilton had stayed out of it.” 


“He hinted to me by writing in the file that the sites were too random,” Starling said. “And in Memphis he asked me if I sew. What did he want to happen?” 


“He wanted to amuse himself,” Crawford said. “He’s been amusing himself for a long, long time.” No tape of Jame Gumb was ever found, and his activities in the years after Raspail’s death were established piecemeal through business correspondence, gas receipts, interviews with boutique owners. When Mrs Lippman died on a trip to Florida with Gumb, he inherited everything—the old building with its living quarters and empty storefront and vast basement, and a comfortable amount of money. He stopped working for Mr Hide, but maintained an apartment in Calumet City for a while, and used the business address to receive packages in the John Grant name. He kept favored customers, and continued to travel to boutiques around the country, as he had for Mr Hide, measuring for custom garments he made in Belvedere. He used his trips to scout for victims and to dump them when they were used up—the brown van droning for hours on the Interstate with finished leather garments swaying on racks in the back above the rubberized body bag on the floor. He had the wonderful freedom of the basement. Room to work and play. At first it was only games—hunting young women through the black warren, creating amusing tableaux in remote rooms and sealing them up, opening the doors again only to throw in a little lime. 


Fredrica Bimmel began to help Mrs Lippman in the last year of the old lady’s life. Fredrica was picking up sewing at Mrs Lippman’s when she met Jame Gumb. Fredrica Bimmel was not the first young woman he killed, but she was the first one he killed for her skin. Fredrica Bimmel’s letters to Gumb were found among his things. Starling could hardly read the letters, because of the hope in them, because of the dreadful need in them, because of the endearments from Gumb that were implied in her responses: “Dearest Secret Friend in my Breast, I love you!—I didn’t ever think I’d get to say that, and it is best of all to get to say it back.” 


When did he reveal himself? Had she discovered the basement? How did her face look when he changed, how long did he keep her alive? Worst, Fredrica and Gumb truly were friends to the last; she wrote him a note from the pit. The tabloids changed Gumb’s nickname to Mr Hide and, sick because they hadn’t thought of the name themselves, virtually started over with the story. 


Safe in the heart of Quantico, Starling did not have to deal with the press, but the tabloid press dealt with her. From Dr Frederick Chilton, the National Tattler bought the tapes of Starling’s interview with Dr Hannibal Lecter. The Tattler expanded on their conversations for their “Bride of Dracula” series and implied that Starling had made frank sexual revelations to Lecter in exchange for information, spurning an offer to Starling from Velvet Talks : The Journal of Telephone Sex. People magazine did a short, pleasant item on Starling, using yearbook pictures from the University of Virginia and from the Lutheran Home at Bozeman. The best picture was of the horse, Hannah, in her later years, drawing a cart full of children. Starling cut out the picture of Hannah and put it in her wallet. It was the only thing she saved. 


She was healing.