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			 Part 
			1 - THE JACK PARSONS’ MYSTERY 
			I first heard about Jack Parsons from a fellow named Homer Nilmot, 
			back in Philadelphia, around 1987. That was the time of my aborted 
			attempt to get out of stock broking and make a living as a private 
			detective. I can’t tell you who Homer Nilmot was, or what I did for 
			him, but I can tell you what I found out about Jack Parsons. All the 
			sources here are real. Look them up for yourself. But be forewarned 
			that your view of how the world works may never be the same again. 
			Mine hasn’t been.
 
			Homer Nilmot was holding the folder close to his chest, as though 
			fearful I might make a grab for it. The label read "Pasadena".
 
				
				"Mythological 
				control," he said. "The myth makes the man. Lyndon Johnson used 
				to say about that old windbag Hubert Humphrey, `I’ve got his 
				pecker in my pocket.’ Well you get hold their mixed-up little 
				minds and you’ve got their peckers and a lot more."  
			We were setting at an 
			open air table at Downey’s at the end of South Street in 
			Philadelphia. He had been rambling for an hour, feeling me out or 
			perhaps just putting on a show. He would come to the point 
			eventually. 
 I looked out across Front Street to the Delaware and the barge being 
			towed up river. A jogger trotted past in the direction of the Ben 
			Franklin Bridge.
 
				
				"Them endorphin 
				addicts can’t ever get enough," he observed, nodding at the 
				jogger. 
 "How’d you vote, last election," he added as an afterthought.
 
 "I voted for Clint Eastwood."
 
 "We didn’t find any record you’d registered." He enunciated 
				"registered" carefully, with hardly a trace of Texas accent.
 
 "Clint didn’t run, last election."
 
 "You a Republican, Democrat, Shi`ite on a Shingle, what?"
 
			Fair enough. It was his 
			money. He could ask what he wanted and I would prevaricate when 
			necessary. I assumed he already knew the answers to the questions he 
			was asking. He was just measuring my responses against what he 
			already knew.  
				
				"I’m a Sunni in a 
				Subaru," I said. "I’m a libertarian. I don’t think it’s any of 
				the government’s business how I spend my money or who I go to 
				bed with. The first makes liberals apoplectic and the other 
				raises self-righteous indignation in neo-conservatives. I say a 
				pox on both their Houses." And yours, too, I thought. 
 "You gonna vote for Russell Means and Ron Paul?"
 
			I played along.  
				
				"Gorbochev says he’s 
				a Democrat. It doesn’t mean he’ll carry Chicago. The Libertarian 
				Party has about as much to do with libertarianism as the 
				president of Coca Cola has to do with the cocaine trade. The 
				connection is at best historical and etymological, and there are 
				differences in marketing." 
 I added: "Of course some people who snort the one also like to 
				drink the other. Anyway Means and Paul aren’t running 
				together--they’re competitors, at least until the party caucus. 
				Paul was a Republican until recently."
 
 "And Means was an Injun," he said.
 
 "On the other hand, anyone who calls the IRS `the Gestapo’ has 
				got my sympathetic attention."
 
 He reflected on this. Then: "Ever hear of Jack Parsons?"
 
 "Jack Parsons?"
 
 "He and a feller named Theodore von Karman started the 
				Jet 
				Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. You know, those Jupiter 
				probes and all that."
 
 "I’ve heard of von Karman," I said. "If the data doesn’t fit 
				your theory, take logs; and if that doesn’t work, take log logs, 
				and then the data will fit any theory whatsoever."
 
			Homer looked at me 
			suspiciously.  
				
				"Just something I 
				read in grad school," I said. "Von Karmen said that, according 
				to Granger and Morgenstern in a book about stock market prices. 
				What about Parsons?" 
 "Parsons died in the 50s. We want you to find out who killed 
				him."
 
 "Parsons was murdered?"
 
 "It was alleged an accident. We have reason to think 
				differently. Here are some clippings about the death. You can 
				read them later."
 
 "Could I ask why?" I asked, taking the envelope.
 
 "Why he was murdered? That’s what you’re to find out."
 
 "Why you’re interested in Jack Parsons."
 
 "Maybe later. Now it’s best if you just look without any 
				prejudice."
 
			It was the summer of ’87 
			and if the End was nigh, it was not nigh enough to notice. The Seven 
			Years of Plenty were symbolized by Merrill Lynch’s theriomorphic 
			Sarapis. The country was high on money, congressional soap operas, 
			and impending doom. The Apocalypse heralded by books like The Great 
			Depression of 1990 and Blood in the Streets made all the sweeter the 
			preceding spasm, the Twentieth Century’s last great money-making 
			opportunity. In accordance with Elliot Wave V, an exuberant public 
			mood was lifting stock prices and women’s skirts. 
 Or at least that’s what I had said in my last report. It was a study 
			for an investment bank on the correlation between stock market 
			prices and trends in popular culture. A golden opportunity for theriomorphic bullshit.
 
 I strolled up South Street on the way back to the office. The 
			designer punk mirrored the cracks in the Zeitgeist. It was a 
			rebellion of nostalgia. The Beatles, a bull market band, were back 
			in vogue. Aging yuppies saw a new puberty, but now with cash to 
			follow their noses. I had just read an article written for Rolling 
			Stone by P.J. O’Rourke, the famed author of "How to Drive Fast on 
			Drugs While Getting Your Wing-Wang Squeezed and Not Spill Your 
			Drink." He was sufficiently smitten by deja vu to recommend LSD: Let 
			the Sixties Die. To an ontological detective like myself, it seemed 
			he had nothing to fear. It was the death of the Eighties that 
			worried me.
 
 My office was located in a renovated girl’s school on Christian 
			Street. It was non-obtrusive, inexpensive, with plenty of room for 
			files. Anyway I never met clients there. The electronic gate was 
			intended to prevent car theft, but it kept visitors out too.
 
 Sheri, my assistant, was reading a book. Sheri was a member of the 
			Church of the SubGenius, and had a picture of "Bob", tacked to the 
			wall behind her. Bob was smiling with his customary pipe clenched 
			between his teeth. There was also a poster advertising "Gimme 
			Slack," the recent hit single by Doktors for Bob. Sheri was devoted 
			to frop, which she discreetly kept out of sight, in the lower 
			left-hand desk drawer.
 
				
				"Herm, listen to 
				this," she said. "This was the most popular book in America 
				before the American Revolution. You’ll enjoy this. Here is a 
				description of some of those who get smashed by the Prince of 
				Peace, when he returns one day, all unexpectedly."  
			She quoted:  
				
					
						
						Adulterers 
						and Whoremongers were there, with all unchast;
 There Covetous and Ravenous,
 that riches got too fast:
 Who us’d vile ways themselves to raise
 t’Estates and worldly wealth,
 Oppression by or knavery,
 by force, or fraud, or stealth.
 
				"No corporate 
				raiders in the Kingdom?" I asked. 
 "Nor much of anyone else," Sheri said. "Listen to these virtuous 
				types:
 
					
						
						Then were 
						brought nigh a Company of Civil honest Men,
 That lov’d true dealing and hated stealing,
 ne’er wrong’d their Bretheren;
 Who pleaded thus: "Thou knowest us
 that we were blameless livers; ...
 
 "Our way was fair, our dealing square,
 we were no wasteful spenders,
 No lewd toss-pots, no drunken sots,
 no scandalous offenders."
 
				"Sound like fine 
				Philadelphians to me. Not your average lewd toss-pots. I would 
				guess a Caribbean Island, a legion of angels, and a long 
				vacation for each, not to mention blessedness and glory." 
 "Wrong, Hermes," she said. "They get cast into Hell along with 
				the others. They had the wrong attitude. They were just noble 
				because they wanted a reputation for virtue and honesty. It was 
				all an ego trip."
 
 "Hard man, that Jesus. If this was the most popular book around 
				at the time of the Revolution, it makes you wonder how business 
				ever became the business of America, much less how we arose out 
				of the swamp to sign the Bill of Rights."
 
 "The Founding Fathers were mostly Deists," Sheri said, shifting 
				to professorial mode. "They didn’t believe in this God’s Wrath 
				nonsense. They thought religion was something naturally inborn, 
				which made them oppose crimes committed in the name of God, 
				Revelation, or the Church. Tom Jefferson and his free-thinking 
				dinners. "
 
 Sheri paused to grin at her own little speech. "Makes you proud 
				to be an American," she laughed.
 
			The book was entitled 
			The Day of Doom: or, A Poetical Description of the Great and Last 
			Judgment, with a Short Discourse About Eternity, by one Michael Wigglesworth of Harvard University. It was first published in 1662.
			 
				
				"It would seem 
				Wigglesworth was playing the classic guilt game," I suggested. 
				"If you cheat, your methods are evil; and if you’re honest, your 
				attitude is evil. Everything you do is wrong. You are inherently 
				defective and you had better do what the guru says." 
 "Yeah, these cults are all alike," Sheri said. "They want to 
				wash your brain with a filthy Brillo pad. Speaking of which, two 
				pink boys were here earlier. They wanted to ask you some 
				questions. They looked like Xist Agents to me, but were dressed 
				somewhat better than that."
 
			Sheri called all 
			government employees Xist Agents. "They got through the gate?" I 
			asked. The only door to the office opened directly into the parking 
			lot with its surrounding fence.  
				
				"They followed 
				someone in. Or maybe they flew in by phantom helicopter. They 
				could have been the three Men in Black, except there were only 
				two of them. One of them was a fat little fellow. Greasy black 
				hair, smooth talker. The other was medium build, skinny face, 
				pasty, like he had just climbed out of a cemetery. I told them 
				you had gone to New York on business, and would be back in a 
				week. I didn’t know what hotel. You never tell me anything. They 
				left a number for you to call."  
			I took the phone number 
			and went into my office. The first thing I wanted to do was read the 
			clippings on Jack Parsons that Homer Nilmot had given me. I leaned 
			back in my chair, put my feet on the desk, and looked out the 
			window. The construction debris across the street didn’t keep my 
			attention for long, so I opened up the envelope. 
 The first article was from the late news edition of the Los Angeles 
			Times, Wednesday, June 18, 1952. The banner headline on the front 
			page read:
 
				
				ROCKET SCIENTIST 
				KILLED IN PASADENA EXPLOSION
 
				-------- Tragedy Drives His
 Mother to Suicide
 --------
 Cripple Is
 Helpless
 Eyewitness
 
 
				A brilliant Pasadena 
				rocket propulsion expert met death in an explosion that ripped 
				his garage laboratory yesterday and as a tragic aftermath his 
				mother committed suicide by taking sleeping pills while an 
				elderly crippled woman watched helplessly. 
 John W. Parsons, 31, former Caltech scientist and instructor and 
				one of the founders of the school’s famed Arroyo Seco jet 
				propulsion laboratory, was killed when two explosions, which 
				occurred almost simultaneously, demolished the laboratory on the 
				grounds of the former Busch estate at 1071 S. Orange Grove Ave., 
				Pasadena.
 
 Parson’s mother, Mrs. Ruth Virginia Parsons, 58, of 21 W. Glenarm St., Pasadena, took 45 pills after she was notified of 
				her son’s death at the Huntington Memorial Hospital about an 
				hour after the explosion. The two women were in a home at 424 
				Arroyo Terrace, Pasadena, at the time.
 
 Her elderly friend, Mrs. Helen Rowan, a cripple confined to a 
				chair, saw the woman take the pills from a bottle left on a 
				table after she had taken two capsules on order of a physician. 
				Moments later, another friend, Mrs. Neilie Smith, a nurse, 
				arrived at the home to console Mrs. Parsons in her bereavement. 
				She found her slumped in a chair in the living room and Mrs. 
				Rowan sitting helplessly nearby. Three pills were left in the 
				bottle.
 
 Mrs. Nedia Kibart, 59, of 320 Waverly Drive, Pasadena was in 
				another room of the house at the time Mrs. Parsons took the 
				bottle in her hands and began taking the capsules. The mother of 
				the chemist had told Mrs. Kibart that she `couldn’t stand it 
				anymore’ and that she would `kill herself,’ according to 
				Pasadena Police Lt. John C. Elliot.
 
 He said Mrs. Rowan lived with Mrs. Parsons at the W. Glenarm St. 
				address.
 
 Parsons was recognized as one of the foremost authorities on 
				rocket propulsion since leaving Caltech in 1946. He had been 
				employed as a consultant by many firms, his brother-in-law 
				Robert Cameron, 28, of 125 N. Rampart Blvd., told newsmen. 
				Parsons and Dr. Theodore Von Karmine had founded the Caltech jet 
				laboratory in the Arroyo Seco.
 
 The explosives expert was preparing for a trip to Mexico on a 
				job assignment, the nature of which was very secretive, Cameron 
				said. Parsons was last employed by the Burmite Powder Co. in 
				Saugus.
 
 Parsons was apparently packing bottled explosives in a box to 
				take with him on the trip today when the explosion occurred. It 
				was followed immediately by a second and larger explosion, 
				setting off other explosives stored in the room, according to 
				Lt. Elliot.
 
 Remnants of bottles marked "Explosives!" were found on the 
				floor. Walls, doors, partitions, the ceiling and floor of the 
				garage were demolished and a bathtub was toppled over. The body 
				of Parsons was found lying near the tub.
 
 The death of Mrs. Parsons was reported at 9.06 p.m. almost four 
				hours after the explosion shattered the made-over garage. Dr. J. 
				H. Huntsman pronounced her dead. He had been summoned by Mrs. 
				Smith, the nurse.
 
 Four tenants residing in the building above the garage 
				laboratory were uninjured but were routed from their apartments. 
				Salvatori Ganci, an artist who occupies the unit directly above 
				the laboratory, said the blast ripped a large hole in the floor 
				and broke a leg of his grand piano.
 
 Army ordinance experts from Ft. McArthur were called to the 
				scene by Pasadena Police to inspect the debris and to determine 
				the cause of the blast. They were also to inspect Parsons’ 
				temporary residence at 424 Arroyo Seco, home of Mr. and Mrs. 
				Frank Carpenter, who were out of town, for any additional 
				explosives stored there.
 
 The building which contained the garage was at one time a 
				servants quarters for the estate and recently had been converted 
				to a multiple unit.
 
 The bodies of Parsons and his mother were taken to the 
				Turner-Stevens Mortuary pending funeral arrangements.
 
			I mentally reviewed what 
			I had just read. Parsons was an expert on rocket propulsion. He was 
			active during and immediately after the Second World War. He had had 
			a position at Caltech and was a founder of the Jet Propulsion 
			Laboratory. He had been working as a consultant for the Burmite 
			Powder Co., according to his brother-in-law. 
 Brother-in-law. No quote from his wife. Where was she? Parsons was 
			preparing to make a trip to Mexico. On a "secretive" job assignment. 
			Parsons had stored explosives in his garage. Would an explosives 
			expert do that? An explosion had killed Parsons and demolished the 
			garage, but had not done major damage to the apartment above. The 
			explosion had occurred in two parts. A small explosion had 
			apparently ignited other explosives.
 
 By some unknown sequence of events Parsons had been delivered to 
			Huntington Memorial Hospital and had been pronounced dead. Parsons 
			was unexpectedly young, only 31. Most of the article was about 
			Parsons mother. She heard the news, took a bottle of sleeping pills, 
			and died while a crippled friend watched. Both deaths had occurred 
			Tuesday, June 17.
 
 The article had been written hurriedly. Von Karman’s name was 
			misspelled. There were no quotes from Parsons’ colleagues or 
			employers. No quotes from CalTech or JPL or the Army Ordinance 
			Experts.
 
 The second clipping was the next day’s follow-up article, on 
			Thursday, June 19. Parsons’ age had increased by six years, and "Burmite" 
			had become Bermite.
 
				
				Scientist’s Fatal
				Blast Explained
 
 Police theorized last night that the explosion which took the 
				life of John W. Parsons, 37-year old rocket and jet- propulsion 
				expert, in his Pasadena laboratory Tuesday resulted from his 
				dropping a can of fulminate of mercury.
 
 Pasadena Police Chemist Don M. Harding, completing his 
				examination of the remnants of the blast, said it was definitely 
				established that the fulminate of mercury, a sensitive explosive 
				used only as a detonator, was set off by a shock at floor level.
 
 Harding said the quantity of fulminate of mercury could not be 
				determined but he reported that the coffee can in which Parsons 
				apparently was mixing the batch was shredded into shrapnel. 
				There was a large quantity of other types of explosives in the 
				laboratory, many of an experimental nature, Harding said.
 
 Police said it had been reported that Parsons was manufacturing 
				small quantities of the fulminate of mercury for commercial 
				purposes.
 
 The blast on the grounds of the former F. G. Crickshank estate 
				at 1071 S. Orange Grove Ave., Pasadena, shattered the garage 
				laboratory and inflicted injuries on Parsons that caused his 
				death an hour later.
 
 The scientist’s mother, Mrs. Ruth Virginia Parsons, 58, of 21 W. Glenarm St., Pasadena, swallowed 45 sleeping pills and died 
				after hearing of the tragedy.
 
 Parsons was identified as one of the nation’s leading 
				authorities on explosives and jet propulsion. With five other 
				original shareholders, he founded Aerojet Engineering Corp. in 
				1942, but sold out his interest three years later.
 
 `He was a loner,’ recalled T.E. Reehan, secretary- treasurer of 
				Aerojet. `He liked to wander. But he was one of the top men in 
				the field.’
 
 Many of the basic patents for JATO (jet assisted take-off) were 
				obtained under Parsons’ name. While a vice-president of Aerojet 
				he headed the solid propellant development project. Associates 
				said he was not known to have done any work on atomic power.
 
 Parsons had been with the Bermite Powder Co. of Saugus for a 
				year until last Friday, when he left intending to go to Mexico. 
				There, he told associates, he intended to do further research 
				with explosives and miniature special effects for motion 
				pictures.
 
 At the Saugus firm Parsons headed one of the rocket propellant 
				detonation and pyrotechnic short interval delay projects, a 
				confidential research and development project.
 
 `He stayed until Friday to finish his project,’ said J.H.Arnold, 
				treasurer and superintendent of Bermite. `I tried to get him to 
				stay for the tests, but he was anxious to get to Mexico. He had 
				been working hard.’
 
 Parsons was extremely safety conscious, Arnold said. He worked 
				carefully, had a thorough knowledge of his job and was 
				scrupulously neat, the superintendent recalled.
 
 Arnold was surprised that Parsons had explosives in the small 
				make-shift laboratory near his home--a violation of the Pasadena 
				fire-ordinance. The superintendent said, however, that Parsons 
				had a powder magazine near Rialto and six or eight months ago 
				had planned to go into the dynamite business.
 
 Harding said enough explosives remained in the laboratory to 
				`blow up half the block’.
 
 The explosives had been stored there for six months or longer, 
				police learned.
 
 Examination of the blast scene disclosed that the explosion was 
				concentrated in a small area. Apparently Parsons received the 
				full, terrible force directly against his body. A hole was blown 
				through the floor directly under the section upon which Parsons 
				presumably was standing.
 
 The blast broke windows in an adjoining estate, owned by W.W. 
				Burris. Martin Foshaug, his mother, Mrs. Alta Foshaug, Sal Ganci, 
				an artist, and Jo Anne Price, a model were on the second floor 
				of the converted barn at the time of the explosion.
 
 `Everything fell off the walls,’ Ganci said. `The piano was 
				knocked over, its leg broken. We were staggered.’
 
 Ganci said he had expected `something to happen’ as a result of 
				Parsons’ preoccupation with explosives. The chemist frequently 
				warned neighbors that his experimental materials were unstable.
 
 Harding was so skeptical of the chemicals left he shielded them 
				from flash bulbs as photographers took pictures.
 
			I skimmed some 
			irrelevances. Then:  
				
				Parsons, it was 
				disclosed, attained his eminence as an explosives expert 
				principally by self-training. Born here, he was graduated from 
				high school but took only two years of night study at SC. 
 Although Parsons had no formal degree he went from SC to Caltech 
				as a research associate in astronautics and with Dr. Theodore 
				von Karman founded the Caltech jet laboratory.
 
 He was a member of the American Chemical Society, the Institute 
				of Aeronautical Science, the Army Ordinance Association and 
				Sigma Xi fraternity. He had refused a number of honorary 
				degrees.
 
			Well, anyway you looked 
			at it, Parsons was a remarkable individual. He had become a research 
			associate at Caltech without formal training, established himself as 
			one of the foremost experts on jet propulsion, co-founded the Jet 
			Propulsion Laboratory, and had also been a founder of Aerojet. He 
			had made his own way from nowhere to the top of his field. It was 
			not surprising to find he was a loner. 
 The newsmen’s curiosity had been easily satisfied. There were many 
			unanswered questions. Parsons was described by a co- worker as 
			careful and scrupulously neat, yet he had stored explosives for six 
			months in a building with four upstairs tenants. Was this 
			uncharacteristic carelessness?
 
 The four tenants who lived in the top floor of the converted 
			garage/barn were apparently aware of Parsons’ laboratory below, yet 
			were content to remain where they were. There were supposedly enough 
			explosives left in the lab to `blow up half the block.’ Was this 
			just police hype? The blast that did occur managed to destroy the 
			floor, ceiling, walls, and door of the lab without setting the other 
			explosives off. There also was a conflict with the first article, in 
			which a police lieutenant had described two explosions. Now, 
			according to the second article, there was a single blast from the 
			dropped fulminate of mercury.
 
 Again there were no quotes from Parsons’ wife or colleagues at JPL 
			or Caltech. Just brief comments from the company officials at 
			Aerojet and Bermite. Where were the characteristic expressions of 
			grief and admiration for a departed co-worker?
 
 Why did Parsons need to go to Mexico to do further explosives 
			research? What was special about Mexico? Or was the "trip" a cover 
			story to account for time that would be spent elsewhere?
 
 These questions were thirty-five years late. Homer Nilmot needed a 
			professional historian, not a detective. But I had known that from 
			the start, and it hadn’t prevented me from taking the project. 
			Necessity is the mother of pretension.
 
 I went over to the sink in the corner of my office and poured some 
			expresso beans into the coffee grinder. I put fresh water into the 
			kettle and turned on the hot plate.
 
 It felt good to have a client. Homer was my second. The first had 
			enabled me to rent the office, such as it was.
 
 Most of the wall space was covered with bookshelves. Filing cabinets 
			filled the interior. It was a loose-leaf compendium of American 
			fringe beliefs. The collection had started as a hobby, arising from 
			a general preoccupation with what people believed and why they 
			believed it. Political beliefs, scientific beliefs, religious 
			beliefs, economic beliefs--these were now my stock in trade. Long 
			ago I had come to the conclusion that the outliers in the data, the 
			odd items that didn’t appear to fit, were the ones that told the 
			real story.
 
 At the moment Sheri was in the outer office combing the ads in 
			obscure publications in search of new material. I had hired her 
			because she was already a walking encyclopedia in certain areas, and 
			she seemed reasonably happy to do the job at not very much pay.
 
 I ground the beans into a fine powder, dumped the black dust into 
			the strainer, and poured in hot water. After a minute I pressed out 
			the grounds, transferred the liquid to a mug labelled Personal 
			Paradigms Inc., and added some half-and-half. When coffee-drinking 
			had arrived in Europe in the seventeenth century, the Catholic 
			Church had dubbed the black brew an evil drug. A prince of Waldeck 
			offered ten thalers to anyone who denounced a coffee drinker. By 
			contrast, Johann Sebastian Bach, the notorious drug pusher and 
			author of the Coffee Cantata, had written: "Coffee, coffee, how I 
			love its flavor, and if you would win my favor, yes! yes! let me 
			have coffee, let me have my coffee strong." I was decidedly in the 
			Bachian camp on this issue. Just Say No to weak coffee.
 
 Under the influence of fresh caffeine, I turned to the last 
			clipping. From the Los Angeles Times two days later, Saturday June 
			21:
 
				
				Mystery Angel Enters
				Scientist Death Blast
 -----
 Prober’s Advance Belief `Someone Else’
 Handled Waste in Parsons’ Laboratory
 -----
 Evidence of the careless handling of dangerous explosive waste 
				materials at the scene of last Tuesday’s fatal Pasadena 
				explosion yesterday was described by a former associate as 
				completely `out of character’ with the scientific background of 
				John W. Parsons, 37, who was killed by the blast.
 
 George W. Santmyers, Los Angeles chemical engineer associated 
				with Parsons in a Naval Ordinance Department research project 
				since Jan. 1 said that from the evidence gathered at the scene, 
				1071 S. Orange Grove Ave., he would conclude that `someone else’ 
				had put quantities of explosive refuse into exposed trash and 
				garbage containers in the rear of the Pasadena scientist’s 
				laboratory.
 
 Don Harding, Pasadena police criminologist reported finding in 
				the trash can six filter papers containing inflammable residue 
				of fulminate of mercury. This is believed to have been the 
				explosive that took Parsons’ life.
 
 The cans, mixed with a content of beer tins and kitchen refuse, 
				were nearly collected by Pasadena rubbish trucks. In addition to 
				the filter papers, Harding also found some 500 grams of cordite, 
				an ammunition compound.
 
 `For Parsons to have disposed of such materials in that manner,’ 
				Santmyers said, `would be in the same category as a highly 
				skilled surgeon to operate with dirty hands. And I knew Parsons 
				as an exceptionally cautious and brilliant scientific 
				researcher.’
 
 The article went on to say that Parsons would not have tried to 
				hastily dispose of such material at the last minute before his 
				trip, nor would he carry such a hazardous primer in an 
				automobile. Then:
 
 At the time of his death, Parsons was definitely on the trail of 
				a completely new explosive substance `far superior to any 
				existing commercial blasting material,’ Santmyers told police. . 
				. .
 
 Rumors that Parsons had been involved in mystic cults some years 
				ago were discounted by Santmyers.
 
			Curiouser and curiouser. 
			If Parsons was involved in classified work, it would explain some of 
			the information gaps in the first reports. Facts would be withheld 
			because government secrets were involved. 
 It could also be a PR job. If Parsons had embarrassed the government 
			and his colleagues by sloppy handling of explosives, the 
			introduction of a `mystery angel’ would allow government personnel 
			to save face and maintain the image of scientific impeccability. And 
			the story would hold up if federal investigators had squeezed out 
			the Pasadena police under the guise of official secrecy.
 
 On the other hand, Homer Nilmot thought Parsons had been murdered. 
			Who would have had a motive to kill Parsons? I knew where to start 
			and why Homer had hired me.
 
 I re-read the last line. Rumors of mystic cults discounted. Right. I 
			called Sheri.
 
				
				"We have anything on 
				Jack Parsons? He was a jet propulsion expert in Pasadena who was 
				killed in an explosion in his garage laboratory in the early 
				50s. He was a member of some cult or another." 
 Sheri thought for a moment. "He was a member of Aleister 
				Crowley’s Ordo Templi Orientis. I don’t know anything about him, 
				but I have definitely heard or read the name in that 
				connection."
 
			Crowley. I knew a little 
			about 
			Aleister Crowley. He was an English occultist and magician. A 
			Cambridge graduate. He had claimed to put magic on a scientific 
			basis. This was magic in the anthropological sense, not in the stage 
			show sense. Real Magick. He spelled it with a k, magick. I recalled 
			that he also been given a channeled revelation, The Book of the Law, 
			in the early part of the century. Some journalist had called him the 
			"wickedest man alive". That had been a piece of journalistic 
			sensationalism, as I recalled, but Crowley was certainly 
			controversial. It would be enough to make Santmyers discount rumors 
			of Parsons’ involvement in mystic cults.  
				
				"Here’s what we 
				need," I told Sheri. "We need anything we have on Crowley that 
				might tell what was going on in California, particularly 
				Pasadena. We also need other sources of information on Parsons. 
				Go over to the University of Penn library and see if you can 
				find anything on the history of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory or 
				early rocket research at Cal Tech. Look up material on von Karman--there ought to be some references to Parsons. 
 "Also," I added, "we want to find out if Crowley had any 
				involvement with intelligence organizations. I doubt that Homer 
				Nilmot is paying money just out of intellectual curiosity about 
				the early history of rocketry."
 
			After Sheri had left, on 
			impulse I pulled out the Encyclopedia Britannica and looked up 
			Aleister Crowley. There was a two-word entry. "20th-century satanist," 
			it said. Well. You could always count on the Encyclopedia Britannica 
			for in-depth research and scholarly impartiality. Satanism (whatever 
			that was) was a standard term of abuse applied by certain groups to 
			anyone who disagreed with their religious beliefs. Some Protestants 
			called Catholics satanists. Some Catholics called Masons satanists. 
			Some termed satanic the adherents of the Moon Goddess or of other 
			nature religions. The encyclopedia might as well have described 
			Jesus as a "1st century blasphemer" based on the gossip 
			of the Sanhedrin. 
 Or maybe Crowley was really some sort of satanist. In Philadelphia 
			satanists were rebellious teenagers from religious homes, who 
			tattooed "666" on their bodies and sacrificed small animals. Which 
			reminded me of the two Men in Black.
 
 I looked at the phone number left behind by Sheri’s afternoon 
			visitors. It was Center City. When I punched in the number, I heard 
			a ring, a click, then a further ring with a different tone. Then the 
			line went dead.
 
 I hung up and took a sip of coffee. The phone rang.
 
				
				"Personal 
				Paradigms," I answered. 
 "We know," a voice said. "Good afternoon, Mr. Paradigms," said a 
				second voice.
 
 "May I help you?"
 
 "Yes," said the first voice. "Oh, that’s very good. He wants to 
				help us," said the second.
 
 The first voice continued: "We understand you are interested in 
				Jack Parsons, Mr. Paradigms. Is this true?"
 
 "Not at all," I said.
 
 "That’s good. That’s very good," said the second voice.
 
 "Jack Parsons was the cause of much trouble for a lot of people 
				recently, Mr. Paradigms. But it’s settled down now. We wouldn’t 
				want anyone mixing the pot."
 
 "Stirring the cauldron," the second voice corrected. 
				"Rejuvenating the remains. Roiling the ruckus."
 
 "Why do you care?" I asked.
 
 "We care."
 
 "We are very caring people," the second voice said.
 
 "Who do you work for?"
 
 "Let’s just say we work for the government." Voice No. 1.
 
 "We represent a government agency." Voice No. 2.
 
 "You will not have heard of us. We keep a low profile." No. 1.
 
 Laughter. No. 2: "That’s very good. We keep a low profile with 
				our high foreheads." More laughter.
 
			The line went dead. 
 I took another sip of coffee.
 
 
 
			Leaving the office, Sheri was a blur of motion. She always felt that 
			if she could only move fast enough, the world would spin out behind 
			her like a treadmill. She had the key in the switch of the Volvo 
			while still closing the door with her left hand, started the 
			electronic gate on its ponderous rise while sliding out of the 
			parking space in a deft parabola, then shot through the opening with 
			barely an inch to spare. She turned right in the direction of 
			Lombard.
 
 Holy Crowley schmowley. She checked her watch. It was 2:32. She 
			decided she would stop at Harvest, by the Stock Exchange, on her way 
			over to campus. Frank would likely be there in a few minutes. Like 
			some of the other foreign currency options traders, he liked to pop 
			up for a beer right after the close. Frank had told her about a 
			psych professor he had had who was into Crowley.
 
 From 22nd Street Sheri cut back down Market toward the Exchange and 
			slid into a parkplatz on the street as a car pulled out. The driver 
			in a second car waiting to back into the same space stuck his head 
			out the window. "You bitch!" he yelled. Sheri flashed him a smile as 
			she put a quarter in the meter. She entered the Exchange building on 
			the 20th Street side, walked through the atrium past the Exchange 
			entrance, and into Harvest.
 
 Frank wasn’t there, so she sat down and ordered two beers. She was 
			nearly finished with hers before Frank came in with some other 
			traders. Sheri waved him over.
 
				
				"Ola, mi chulo. Your 
				beer is waiting. I see you can use one. Tell me about it." 
 "I was getting blown out of the water all day by the Swiss 
				franc." Frank took a seat and downed half the beer.
   
				"In the morning I 
				was delta neutral, fully hedged you know, intending just to buy 
				and sell a few and suck out the spread. But then the Swiss 
				started to rally. It ran up a hundred points and I was sitting 
				on negative gamma so I kept buying spot to stay hedged. I was 
				losing money all the way up. And then it turned around and 
				dropped two hundred points. My position kept getting longer the 
				more it dropped, so now I had to sell back in the interbank 
				market all the spot I had just bought, at a position loss at 
				that because you couldn’t keep the option prices in line. 
				Everyone was yelling and shoving and I had a splitting headache. 
				I went back in the restroom for some energy, but I was so shook 
				up I spilled most of the coke on the floor. I wasn’t gone more 
				than a few minutes, but when I came back the Swiss had rallied 
				almost seven-five points, and Kinsky was yelling at me where the 
				fuck had I been. We took a good hit and he acts like firing me. 
				And the Swissie closed unchanged. 
 "It wasn’t a good day," he concluded.
 
 Sheri nodded sympathetically. "Negative gamma can do that to 
				you." She wondered what it was.
 
 "You can say that again," Frank agreed. He was off in his own 
				world, staring out at pedestrians on 19th.
 
 She leaned forward and ran her fingers lightly along the inside 
				of his left thigh. "Been getting any lately, Frank?"
 
 "What?" His eyes swung to her and jerked abruptly back into 
				focus.
 
 "Remind me who that psychology professor was you had at Penn. 
				The one who you said was into occult and magical groups."
 
 "Wilson. David Wilson. Yeah. What about him?"
 
 "You were telling me about an exchange in class one day. He was 
				talking about Aleister Crowley."
 
 "Crowley. Yeah. Wilson gave us a reading assignment in this book 
				about the psychology of possession. I think it was saying that 
				people, like holy rollers, who go into a trance and speak in 
				tongues, or you know voodoo rituals that use music and drugs, or 
				people who have certain terrifying experiences in war. There was 
				a common psychology in all these."
 
 "The psychology of sex, drugs, and rock-and-roll?"
 
 "Something like that, I guess. Anyway one day he was talking 
				about Crowley. I think he knew some students on campus who 
				thought Crowley was hot shit. Crowley said something about doing 
				your own thing ... "
 
 "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law," Sheri 
				prompted.
 
 "Yeah. He was saying they seemed to think it meant doing 
				whatever the hell they wanted to."
 
 "What did he think it meant?"
 
 "He said Crowley meant you should find the one thing you really 
				wanted to do in life, and to do that. Find your true will. Don’t 
				try to be a frigging accountant when you’re really a guitar 
				player at heart. There was this guy that was asking him a number 
				of hostile questions. Someone told me after class that he--this 
				guy--was a member of a magical group. I don’t really know if he 
				was or not."
 
 Frank looked out the window. Once again lost in thought.
 
 "Thanks, Frank. Got to go. Listen, call me some time. We’ve got 
				to stop meeting like this."
 
 "Yeah." He turned momentarily to watch her leave. Strange girl, 
				he thought, but fun. Sort of like foreign currency options. The 
				puzzle was half the pleasure.
 
 
			Sheri returned around six with a few items from the library. She 
			said there was a psychology professor at Penn named David Wilson who 
			had the reputation of being something of a Crowley expert.
 
 I called his office but he had left for the day. I decided to do the 
			same.
 
 On the way out I picked up The Day of Doom from Sheri’s desk and 
			paged through it. It was filled with family values:
 
				
				"The godly Wife 
				conceives no grief, nor can she shed a tear
 For the sad state of her dear Mate,
 when she his doom doth hear. . . .
 
 The pious Father had now much rather
 his graceless Son should lie
 In Hell with Devils, for all his evils,
 burning eternally,
 Than God most High should injury
 by sparing him sustain;
 And doth rejoice to hear Christ’s voice,
 adjudging him to pain."
 
 "Damned sinners deserve no pity," I said to Sheri.
 
 "Amnesty International can’t help you in Hell," she replied.
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