CHAPTER TWELVE SCREEN LANGUAGE-1
tell me again,quot; said Dr. Oliver Payne, in ttle laboratory overlooking t;Eit alking nonsense. A c;
quot;ts s nonsense, but listen to it, Oliver, ; said Dr. Mary Malone. quot;S S—s Dust, but its ts
our sicles. And Im telling you, extraordinary display on tures, symbols .... Srument too, a sort of compass t symbols all around the rim.
And s in t tate of mind, too—s intimately.quot;
It urned from Geneva, ient to ical, and preoccupied.
quot;And t old me about some skulls in tt-Rivers Museum. S t;
quot;ait a minute. Give me some sort of structure are you saying? You saying s selling us somet;
quot;Bot kno suppose somety, forty ticles around before t ts at our level, t imagine it involved evolution.
time, lots after sested old me thing.
Im saying is t around t time, tion process. Suddenly ;
Dr. Payne tilted ic mug and drank t of his coffee.
quot; icularly at t time?quot; ;y-five t;
quot;O paleontologists. I dont kno speculating. Dont you ts at least possible?quot;
quot;And tell me about ;
Dr. Malone rubbed ;ers,quot; s; t ics or somet;
terrorism, subversion, intelligence... all t. Go on. did ? ;
quot;Because of t t tell me ;
telep. it do;eve got a visitor.quot;
quot;;
quot;Not a name I knoen, Mary, Im off, you realize t, dont you?quot;
quot;t;
quot;Yes. Ive got to take it. You must see t.quot;
quot;ell, ts t;