Bones s04e19 Episode Script
The Science in the Physicist
Give everything, my darling.
Everything.
Utter dross to upper-class gloss.
All right? Keep her lit.
Keep her bathed in the glow.
All right.
Yes! Okay, good.
Now, look up.
All right.
Yes.
Nice.
Okay.
Right in front of you.
That's the future.
Yes.
Okay.
- What the hell is that? - Pigeons, blackbirds or crows- something along those lines.
- Telephoto.
- God, he has an idea! This is what we need! Caw! Caw! Yeah! Flap, flap, flap.
Yeah, yeah.
Give me more! Yes! Fierce aviary wings! Yes! Beaks! Caw, caw, caw, caw! Those creatures, they are death.
Flap your arms, chase death away, but remain beautiful.
You understand? Running through a vacant lot - at a bunch of birds in six-inch heels! Ooh! Excellent.
Good, good, good! You're a leopard! Leap! You're an angel! Oh, yes! Beautiful! Beautiful! Terror! Fear! Okay, gaze heavenward! Look at the beastly birds, my darling! Look up! Oh, I love it! Gaze heavenward, darling! Yes! Look at the beastly birds! Oh.
Okay, so what's it look like to you? - An ear.
- Did you just make a joke? - No.
- 'Cause that wouldn't be like you.
I didn't.
It looks like an ear.
- What do you make of the stuff in the blue bag there? - Looks like chili con carne.
Could this be the rest of the person who lost the ear? I don't know.
It looks like chili con carne.
There's no single piece here bigger than the skull of an Australopithecus.
Sports terms, Bones.
Remember we talked about this? Oh, um - Ah! Softball.
Good.
You're getting better.
Size of a softball.
At first guess, the total mass in this garbage bag does not add up to an entire human being.
- Right.
So I'll get Forensics to scour the entire lot.
- Yes.
Hey, would you even want to guess what happened to this human being? - No.
- I knew you'd say that.
I just had to ask.
All right, let's scour it up! Wow.
I've been a pathologist for 13 years, and I admit, I am a little nauseated.
It's going to fall to me to empty these bags, isn't it? All right, then, fine.
I may need a pot of tea waiting.
Maggots place time of death somewhere between 48 and 72 hours.
I'm gonna go with a wood chipper on this.
In that case, it was a gold wood chipper.
This looks like gold.
The ancient Sumerians were prone to spreading gold dust over the body during funeral rites.
Did the Sumerians chop up the body into little tiny bits first? Not to my knowledge.
- What is this? - A black pearl? Pearls, symbolizing eggs or rebirth and resurrection, were used in many South Seas funeral rites.
Did they chop up the bodies into little tiny bits first? I've begun to apprehend your point, Dr.
Saroyan.
Find out how many corpses we're dealing with.
I'll find out if these are really gold flecks and pearl fragments.
Celibacy is a lot like fasting.
So you've become sexually anorexic? At first you're out of sorts and agitated and then you sort of push through to a kind of clarity.
- Have you reached clarity? - No, I'm still at the agitated and horny stage.
Why are you fasting sexually? Sweets thinks it will do me good to put sex on the back burner in order to relate to people in other - Why are you listening to Sweets? Um - Angela, I asked, why are you listening to Sweets? Sweetie, can you pay for this? I have to go.
- Sure.
Why? - I have to save Hodgins's life.
Yeah.
I found something interesting on the cellular level.
I don't care about the cellular level.
No hemorrhagic tissue.
- What? - Means the victim was dead before being chopped up.
- You care about that, right? - No, not really.
- What I'm interested in is how this guy got chopped up.
- Now, this here shows that the cell burst from the inside out.
- Gives me nothing.
- Frostbite can do that.
- What, like climbing a mountain? - Yes.
Exactly.
The water in the cells crystallizes and explodes.
I have got an absolutely fascinating clue to tell you about.
Hey, hey, uh, you have to leave town.
- What? Why? - No.
Fascinating clue first.
The pearl we found in the victim wasn't a pearl.
Why do I have to leave town? - My father is here.
- What was it then? Carbonaceous chondrites.
It's what meteorites are made of.
Your father blames me for our breakup? Well, he has sort of a blind spot when it comes to me.
- So just get out of town until I can call him off.
- Stop.
Okay? Stop it.
- Dead guy.
What about the dead guy? - It's obvious.
He was frostbitten while climbing Everest then struck by a meteor, then dumped into a vacant lot in two garbage bags and eaten by crows.
All right.
Obvious.
That's so obvious.
Hey, it's a start.
The slowest meteorites travel at 25,000 miles per hour.
- Uh-huh.
- I'm not just spouting useless facts.
You do not have a chance of recreating those velocities with a glorified blow gun.
You simply want to fire a cannon at a dummy.
You staying or going? Another set of eyes and ears taking note can never be amiss.
What possible information could this experiment provide us that you couldn't get mathematically? Mathematics is theory.
This is a real-world recreation.
In order to prove what, exactly? That a, uh, frozen person struck by a meteorite would turn into chili con carne.
NASA has no record of a meteorite of this size and type striking North America at the time of death.
Oh.
According to NASA, a meteorite matching these characteristics is right here in D.
C.
Oh.
I'm all set up and everything.
Your experiment is not pertinent.
So, you found out where the meteor came from? From the solar nebula.
- Right.
Anything more current than that? - Fire in the hole! What the hell was that? We're okay! Everything's fine! We should get out of here before lockdown.
- Let Cam deal with it.
- Yeah! Hoo! You know you're grounded, right? So, you think the piece of meteor we found in the murder victim came from this.
Yeah.
It's an exact match.
The silicate-oxide ratios are indistinguishable.
- Well, you've heard of Landis Collar, right? - Sure, I have.
Mm-hmm.
Blind guy.
World's leading expert in superconductivity.
Do you even know what superconductivity is? I know it's better than normal conductivity.
Agent Booth, Dr.
Brennan, I'm Christopher Beaudette senior scholar here at the Collar.
- Shall we? - Yes! So, you work in superconductivity.
No, Agent Booth.
I'm doing research into generating power from earthquakes.
- Groundbreaking.
- That was a funny joke.
Yeah, and one I've never, ever heard before.
Are these people here smarter than you? That would depend on how one defines intelligence.
I'm Landis Collar.
- Thank you, Christopher.
- Landis.
I'm Special Agent Seeley Booth.
This here is - Dr.
Temperance Brennan.
Is that clicking noise attached to your blindness? Yes.
It's a prototype- sonic echo locator.
It allows me to apprehend my surroundings.
- Have you forgiven me? - Forgiven him? I was turned down for a fellowship here at the institute.
No, no, that is not true.
Your anthropological research was rejected because it looked to the past, not the future.
"To eternity, to glory, to the future.
" Right.
Then why say your motto in a dead, ancient language? Okay, Booth.
- How can I help you? - Uh, this - Uh, put your hand out.
I'll-There you go.
- What Agent Booth has given you - - I know what it is.
It's a piece of my meteorite.
That's impressive for a blind man.
- I know because I had it made for Diane.
- Diane? Dr.
Diane Sidman, my fiancée.
The meteorite was set in her engagement ring.
- Well, that would explain the gold flecks.
- Is Diane all right? - When was the last time you saw Diane? - A few days ago.
She was ill, which is understandable considering the pressure she's under.
- Pressure.
- She's editor-in-chief of the Collar Journal.
Perhaps the most important venue for scientific publishing in the world.
What has happened? We have discovered some human remains which contained what is most certainly your fiancée's engagement ring.
We'd like to talk to anyone who may have interacted with Diane before she disappeared.
Speak with Diane's students, chief among them Jennifer Keating and Milton Alvaredo.
I'll have Dr.
Beaudette bring them to you.
- Oh.
Well - - If you need anything else, I'll be in my office.
My God.
Dr.
Sidman is dead? We have not yet made a positive identification.
When was the last time you saw her, Milton? I suffer from a kind of chronological dyslexia which makes it very difficult for me to place discreet events accurately on a linear timeline.
Whew! This one's all yours.
What, exactly, are you working on? I'm endeavoring to find a way to transmit single-cell organisms, using common pond scum from one location to another.
Ever try a spoon? I've had some success vibrating two separate samples of single-cell scum in complete symmetry at a quantum level.
That's very impressive.
You wouldn't understand, Booth.
- Of course I do.
Beam me up, Scotty.
- Very good.
Yes, exactly.
Dr.
Sidman must have been eager to publish that in the journal.
Very excited, yes, pending a few questions.
- Is this publishing thing important? - Publish or perish.
- I mean, is it motive? - For a murder, you mean? Definitely.
- Definitely.
- But only on the level of vengeance.
Killing her would not reverse the decision unless, of course, the person who killed her wanted to take over her position.
I last saw Diane when Jennifer asked us to stop arguing so loudly.
- Jennifer Keating, Dr.
Sidman's other grad student? - Yes.
Jenny works in cosmogenic isotope research.
It can make her cranky.
This place is making me cranky.
I asked Milton to quiet down, not Diane.
- I would never get mad at Diane.
- Why? She's editor-in-chief of the journal.
Publish or perish.
Right? - What were they arguing about? - I have no idea.
Could've been about anything.
Landis encourages a free exchange of ideas, and it can get pretty intense.
You specialize in cosmogenic isotope research? "Cosmogenic"? It's a new way of dating artifacts using 14-C isotopes.
Through accelerated mass spectroscopy.
Oh.
That'd make me cranky too.
I can't imagine that your project excited Diane Sidman.
Veni, vidi, vici.
Look to the future.
Carbon-dating is all about the past.
You're right.
There was no way she was gonna publish me.
This time next year, I'll be looking for postgraduate work.
- Is that the last time you saw Diane Sidman? - Yes.
Three days ago.
Why? Is something wrong? It is possible that she is dead.
Bones account for approximately 15% of the mass of a human being.
Given that the total bone mass here comes to 8.
9 kilograms that would suggest a human being who weighed approximately One hundred and 31 pounds.
Well, that matches the victim's stats.
Oh, it's Diane Sidman, all right.
Dr.
Saroyan got D.
N.
A.
confirmation.
There are no other particulates outside of the gold flecks and meteorite.
What did I tell you? That we aren't allowed in the same room without supervision.
Why? Because we were stupid enough to fire a-a cannon indoors.
And? You know, you're here, which - which counts for supervision, so - I'll leave.
There's a deep pitting in these bones which may or may not be connected to the fractures.
- Also, I excluded wood chipper as a possibility.
- How? Whirling blades would create parallel and evenly-spaced fractures.
These patterns appear to be completely random.
Even more puzzling, they are unusually clean.
What if the cellular damage and the fractures were caused by the same thing? The cells could have burst as a result of ice microcrystals having formed if the body was rapidly frozen.
You mean, freeze the body and then shatter the bones.
Liquid nitrogen? You have my permission to confer with Dr.
Hodgins on the subject.
Oh, uh, in the same room, yes? - Just to be clear.
- Any damages come out of your pay.
As requested, Diane's work area.
Wow.
Looks like somebody cleaned it out.
Oh, no, Booth.
Dr.
Sidman was a theoretical physicist.
She didn't do experiments.
She figured everything out through equations.
Diane was a member of the Large Hadron Collider team.
Isn't that that thing in Europe that's gonna create a black hole and end the universe? There's only a very small chance of that actually occurring.
And yet Diane received a number of death threats.
Diane Sidman's role was important to the Large Hadron Collider team? The effort to find the Higgs boson will be set back months.
- The God particle.
- What's that? Uh, a theoretical particle which explains why matter has mass.
Mass and matter aren't the same? Don't look at each other like that.
I bet neither one of you know how to make your own beer.
You realize you just said "Don't look at each other" to a blind man.
Do you have records of threats made against her? Yes, ever since one of our scientists was attacked for his work in cloning.
Milton Alvaredo suggested that we look at whoever was going to replace Diane Sidman as editor-in-chief.
That would be the senior scholar, Christopher Beaudette.
You can understand how that makes him a suspect.
I'll tell Sweets to look into the threats and see if they're worth following up.
If it matters, Diane and Christopher were also enjoying a sexual relationship.
Whoa! "If it matters"? I thought you were going to marry her.
At which time, by mutual agreement Diane and Christopher's sexual relationship was to cease.
Completely rational.
Except for the completely insane part where somebody killed Diane Sidman.
I'll be right back, Dr.
Beaudette.
- It's a good thing they didn't accept you at that place.
- Why? It's creepy.
Everyone there is creepy.
Well, if you think they're creepy, then you must think I'm creepy.
Well, you have a creepy mode, Bones.
Very interesting man.
Highly self-aware.
Major-league smarty-pants.
Ah, right.
Little brain checks in, the big brain checks out.
I-I don't know what that means.
Little brain, big brain? He freely admits that he had an ongoing sexual relationship with the victim.
Oh! That little brain.
But he denies ever having been "in love" with her.
- What's with the hooked fingers? - Well, he said "in love" very sarcastically.
Like it was something that happened to "lower primates.
" Okay, who else was he sleeping with? - I didn't ask.
- What does that matter? Because maybe not everybody is so, you know, "adult," you know or "rational" or- hey- "clear-thinking" or "heartless" as him.
That was a lot of quotation marks.
So sexual relationships are pretty casual over there at the Collar Institute, right? We're young, close quarters.
We stimulate each other.
Mmm.
Who else were you sleeping with? Jennifer, who was also seeing Milton.
So, is it possible that Jennifer was trying to get rid of a romantic rival? By that retrograde manner of thought Landis could have killed Diane for sleeping with me.
Or I could have killed Diane for sleeping with Landis.
Or Milton could have killed Diane for sleeping with me and Landis.
Ladies and gentlemen what I propose to show you today is how our victim's skeletal structure came to shatter into tiny bits.
Mr.
Nigel-Murray.
He enjoys this way too much.
Basically, Hodgins sees himself as Dr.
Nemo.
Liquid nitrogen freezes at 63 degrees Kelvin which is minus 210 degrees Celsius or minus 346 degrees Fahrenheit.
It's, uh, unnecessary to say "degrees Celsius.
" - It's implicit.
- Shh.
When I drop this super-cooled turkey - Once again, technically not super-cooled.
it'll shatter into hundreds of bits on the concrete floor.
Shards are gonna fly in every direction, so- Ready? Three, two, one.
- Whoa! - Watch it! - I'm okay.
- Oh! Oh! Oh! It's just a glancing blow.
Is she all right? Dr.
Lance Sweets.
I work for the F.
B.
I.
as a psychological profiler.
Psychiatrist or psychologist? He's just a psychologist.
Uh, the point is, I looked through over You, Dr.
Mullins, were the only person I thought merited questioning.
- Using psychology.
- That's correct.
You might as well have picked my name from a hat.
Normally, I'd agree but your disapproval of Dr.
Sidman's work makes me wonder if you're a religious fanatic.
No.
Like most reasonable human beings, I'm an agnostic.
You have a doctorate in physics from Princeton, right? Yet you work as a welder? Welding is a real job, unlike psychology.
How can a reasonable human being with a physics degree honestly believe that a particle accelerator in Europe is going to create a black hole which will destroy the solar system? Would you like a list of Nobel Laureates who agree with me? The odds are one in 50 million - slight, I admit.
Too high when you consider the loss of not only humanity but the only planet in the cosmos that we know for certain is capable of generating and sustaining life.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Um, I hate to say it, but I'm totally with him on this one.
Would you kill someone on 50 million-to-1 odds? Kill someone? Who's dead? Diane Sidman.
Of the 800 threats I studied, Evidence indicates that Diane Sidman was frozen, using liquid nitrogen, after she was killed.
- Then her body was dropped and shattered.
- Ridiculous.
A frozen cadaver would simply bounce.
Any moron should know that.
The point is, as a welder, you have access to liquid nitrogen.
My I.
Q.
is 162.
What about it? I'm smart enough to know when to shut up and ask for a lawyer.
Except I've got one last thing to say.
Knowing that Diane Sidman is dead I'm going to sleep about I got here as soon as I could.
What's up? Lab results from the C.
B.
C.
and biopsy on our victim.
"Abnormal proliferation of leukocytes in the thoracic and lumbar bone marrow"? - These numbers are fatal.
- She died of leukemia? Diane Sidman had a full physical two weeks ago.
Guess what.
Clean bill of health.
How does a perfectly healthy young woman develop advanced leukemia in two weeks? Leukemia doesn't just appear in two weeks.
What about radiation? There's gotta be some source of radiation in that place that could cause cancer.
Someone accidentally irradiates this poor woman and then covers it up by freezing her and smashing her remains into little bits.
You know, ironically, intelligent people have been known to commit murders in ludicrously complicated ways, virtually ensuring their capture.
Isn't that- Uh, I-I-it's Angela's d-dad.
It's not uncommon for men to fear their lover's male parent.
You know what creeps me out? The way that English people say "lovah.
" Attacking Vincent like that clearly indicates that what he said is true.
The man is from Texas.
He told me that if I messed up- I don't remember what he said, but he mentioned the key "G-demolish" and it sounded pretty bad.
The blues is known as the devil's music because those most adept are thought to have made a pact with the devil and thus fear no earthly law because they're already doomed to eternity in hell.
Harsh.
Thank you, Vincent.
I-I feel much better now.
I happen to have a great deal of insight into the whole blues culture.
I could talk to him for you.
Yeah, thanks, but, uh, too late.
Have you found something? Posterior of the T7.
Looks very smooth.
This indentation could very well be the result of a tumor.
A possible source of Diane Sidman's leukemia.
A tumor this size over two weeks would require a radiation source of between 1,000 and 5,000 rems.
That would've burned the victim.
We would've seen that.
Must have been a steady exposure over time.
The woman spent almost all her time at work.
- Everything's coming up clean.
- Nothing? - Nope.
- There should still be some evidence of radioactivity.
There's nothing radioactive in this room.
Break it down.
Go for defoam.
God, I don't know how you wear these things.
Hot suits! - Whoa.
- What? Ooh, right there.
What are you doing, Bones? This stain here must have hit Diane Sidman almost exactly where the tumor formed.
Testing me on the cancer chair? But you're wearing a suit.
Plus, it's not radioactive anymore.
- We're gonna need to take this chair.
- No, no, no! You don't just go around doing human testing on people, Bones.
I gotta go to the bathroom.
Well, I touched it with my bare hands.
See? You may be wondering why I'm going through these bones again.
Probably because you feel bad that Dr.
Brennan found evidence of a tumor that you missed? The average chocolate bar has eight insect legs in it.
So, she said hopefully, metaphorically you're looking for insect legs? And I may have found some.
These cylindrical notches on the left clavicle.
See? - Two of them, yes.
- They may be stab wounds.
Okay, we'll have Dr.
Hodgins check them for microscopic particulates if he hasn't lit out for Timbuktu yet.
The discoloration in the fabric was not radioactive but because of your suspicion I tested for daughter isotopes.
Daughter isotopes? Daughter isotopes are what's left behind after radioactive isotopes decay.
So there was a radioactive isotope on Diane Sidman's chair.
Yeah, a strong one.
Is anyone at that place doing cancer research? No.
It's not that kind of place.
Yeah, right.
To eternity, to glory, to the future.
You disapprove of the Collar Institute? Up and forward are only two directions.
Science should look in all directions.
You taught me that.
- I did? - Every day.
Thank you.
- Go on.
Just get the door.
- What? - Get the door! - Now? You gotta be kidding me.
It's like Club Med Mensa around here.
What are you laughing at? You know, most people, you bust in on 'em having sex with a gun it kinda disrupts the mood.
Perhaps they decided to start all over again from the beginning.
It's just sex, Booth.
- It's not that.
I'm not a prude.
- Well, you have what they would call hang-ups.
You know, that guy Landis? Yes? - He's about to make a move on you.
- How do you know? Because it is the rational and smart thing to do, and he is all about that.
I see how he looks at you.
How he looks at me? He's blind.
That's too literal, Bones.
His fiancée was just murdered, and he's already moving on.
Well, she's gone.
He has accepted it.
Look, good people, they leave marks on each other.
The least we could do is let them fade away naturally, not, you know, scrape them off or paint over them with new marks.
- So you're not a prude? - Moi? Hey, I am a very fun and, uh very sexy guy.
So you just think that if two people care about each other they leave metaphorical marks which should be allowed to fade naturally? You heard me, but you just didn't understand me.
I wonder that about you all the time.
My apologies.
Were you looking for me? We need to see your radioactive isotopes.
Hey, how you doing, pal? Did you knock one out of the park? - I'll be off then, Jennifer.
- Good-bye, Milton.
Thank you very much.
You're more than welcome.
"Thank you, Milton.
" "No, thank you, Jennifer.
" Everyone is so polite here, except for the murder and cheating.
We can get a warrant for the isotopes, if that's what you require.
That won't be necessary.
I don't know what use you could have with these- I haven't used them for months - but - Something wrong? - Some of my vials are missing.
- Hmm? We'll need to know how many people, aside from yourself had access to them in the last month.
Everyone in the institute had access.
Everyone.
- This guy's good.
- He really is.
Whoo! Why would a guy like you play on a street corner? Well, I guess that depends on who, exactly, you think I am.
I'd like to speak to you about Hodgins.
- Uh-huh.
- I'd like to help.
No, thanks, son.
I can handle Hodgins all on my own.
Oh, no.
I mean, I'd like to help with the situation.
See, I'm a psychologist.
It's kinda my mojo.
You misunderstand the term.
What I meant was - Vincent pointed out each break appears to have happened at the weakest part in each bone.
X-rays bear me out on that.
The most damage was done to the weakest bones - the anvil, the hyoids, these points on the spine.
I don't get what that means.
Essentially, the skeleton broke apart at the weakest points.
The way a building would fall apart during an earthquake.
So, the victim was killed - we're not positive how yet- then frozen then shaken until all the bones fell apart? Not shaken.
Vibrated.
Vibrated until the frozen bones shattered like crystal.
Hodgins! Don't sneak up like that.
I could put out an eye on my microscope.
- You gotta run.
- You talked to Angela's father.
Oh, God.
W-What did he say? I have no idea.
But he was very- He's got a very disturbing effect- sinister.
I am not scared of him.
Okay.
Okay, you know that whole "sell your soul at the crossroads" thing? I'm buying it.
You gotta run for it, man.
I told you so.
Yeah.
Hey, you know what? I secretly had a thing for Angela.
Now it's gone.
Like, wiped from the memory banks.
- So, it had to be Milton Alvaredo, right? - Why? He's the one who's working on transporting matter through vibrations, right? - You understood that? - Hey! He kills Dr.
Sidman, flash-freezes her then tries to transport her to outer space, the moon, whatever.
Ends up frozen chili con carne.
- I'm very impressed.
- Well, I've learned a lot from you.
And a lot from watching the Discovery Channel with Parker.
- Milton Alvaredo is not our only suspect.
- Jennifer Keating.
Well, her only motive is revenge.
Like you say, that's just not logical and despite her being, you know, a sex kitten scientist, she's still logical.
No, not Jennifer Keating.
Chris Beaudette.
His project concerns extracting energy from earthquakes.
- Oh.
- Plus, Dr.
Collar's working on echo location for the blind.
So, basically, we're back to square one.
I suggest we find an apparatus capable of shattering a flash-frozen human cadaver.
Apparatus.
- Yep.
- Right.
Gotcha.
Hello.
Dr.
Earthquake? Okay, so, tell me what I'm looking for.
Any apparatus that might facilitate the creation of a sonic standing wave.
Right.
Tell me what I'm looking for again.
You're leaning on it.
Right.
I knew that.
All right.
Look at this.
Right.
I'll just get Forensics to look for blood.
No, there won't be any blood.
The remains are frozen solid by this point.
The natural frequency of the human body is between three and seven Hertz.
Humans have natural frequencies? Naturally, that would increase dramatically if the body is frozen - Whoa! Hey! Forget it, Booth! We're in a high-pressure chamber! That door can withstand the force of at least- - Oh, no.
- Oh, no? What, "oh, no"? - We have to get out of here.
- Or what? We'll explode? Aah! Booth, what we have to do here is we have to try to counteract the wavelength.
The what? It's not working! If we stop, our brains will turn to pudding.
Booth! Hello? Booth! Are you okay? Are you all right? Can you hear me? - What? - Are you all right? I'm all right! How about you? - I called paramedics.
They should be here any second.
- Landis pulled us out.
- I heard shots.
- Booth! Are you okay? It was my shooting that saved our lives.
Should have been dead in five to seven seconds.
- Bones, it was my gun! - My sonic interference idea worked! - It wasn't your siren - - Can you hear me? It was my gun! If I hadn't started interference, we'd be dead before you started shooting! You two might want to try resting before communicating.
- Don't need to be deaf as well as blind.
- What? - This notch you found in the clavicle? - Yeah.
I found minute traces of graphite, clay and copolymer.
- Pencil lead.
- Yeah.
Which, of course, is not lead at all.
Uh, is that even possible? All right, say a fairly heavy mechanical pencil, right? To the windpipe or the carotid.
Victim dies, is deep frozen and then shattered.
Uh, the freeze-dried chunks are swept into garbage bags and dumped for birds to eat.
- Mmm.
- Well - - Well - - Ooh! Oh, no, please, you keep it.
I don't think I could ever regard it in the same manner again since - Thank you very much.
I warned the man, Angie.
I told him that if he hurt you, he would have me to contend with.
Did you take off your glasses when you said it? I definitely did.
- It was a mutual breakup.
- Were you hurt? - Dad - - Could he have stopped it? Yeah.
Yeah.
But so could I.
Well, his daddy can come down and kick your ass.
I can't do everybody's job.
I wish you wouldn't.
Okay, sweet girl.
I will ameliorate my vengeful intentions.
"Ameliorate"? Honest? Honest.
Honest as a Texas sundown.
One of you killed Diane Sidman.
And tried to kill us.
I think we can rule out sexual jealousy as a motive for this murder.
- Of course we can.
- Yeah, of course we can.
Why? Because these robots don't feel like humans? No, because radiation poisoning is the opposite of a crime of passion.
Well, my people say that Diane Sidman was stabbed to death with a pencil.
Well, indicating that the murderer suddenly became impatient or approached a deadline.
You figure out that deadline, you'll figure out your murderer.
It has to be the publishing deadline from the journal.
Look at this, huh? Found blood in your resonance chamber.
- Obviously you can't see that, but it's right there.
- That's not blood.
- Luminol means blood.
- There's no evidence of smearing.
If the murderer had seen blood, he would've cleaned it up.
Luminol reacts with copper, iron, peroxides and cyanide.
Which provides for a number of false positives-vegetables, fruit pulp.
Cleaning agents, insecticides.
Various glues, rust remover, ketchup, seaweed, staph, algae.
Is this luminol stuff ever useful? I'm just asking because it - Yes? It is? Fine, I'll shut up.
Mm-hmm.
- Booth.
- What? Luminol reacts with pond scum.
So? Right! Right.
Pond scum Scotty.
You're our guy.
You're under arrest.
Knew it all along.
Let's go.
Come on.
Up.
God! Oww! That's for killing my fiancée.
One person to your left, Dr.
Collar.
My apologies, Agent Booth.
My echo locator must have malfunctioned.
This may not be the most apropos time, but - - Oh! Here we go! - Here we go, what? I was wondering, could I have your phone number? - Wow! - Told you.
Really? I have been considering how to respond if you asked and have decided upon no.
- Well - - I can go, right? - Yep.
- I have actual "save the world" work to do.
Dr.
Collar.
- You okay? - Yeah, I'm all right.
You know what? You're the only smart person I really like.
- Thank you.
- Oh, that's- W-What about- What about me? So, Diane Sidman agreed to publish Milton Alvaredo only if he shared credit with her.
Right.
She said that he was using his theories about the God particles - - Particle.
There's only one.
- Right.
Particle.
To vibrate the pond scum.
- He gives her cancer, but she lives too long.
- Wow.
Yeah.
Then he kills her with a pencil and feeds her to crows so he doesn't have to share a credit.
Wow, that is cold.
And creepy? - I didn't mean to call you creepy.
- You said I have a creepy mode.
I apologize.
Okay, look, I wasn't in my element.
- Every element is your element.
- No, that is not true.
Okay, listen we just gotta stop hanging out with geniuses because you're gonna figure out that I'm really stupid.
What? Don't worry about that.
- Mmm.
- I figured out a long time ago how stupid you are.
Hmm.
What I just said is true and yet it really sounded wrong.
What I should say is, I don't care how stupid you are.
That's not any better.
No.
No.
- Not at all.
It's not even rel - - Okay, well - There is intelligence, which I have and Mr.
Nigel-Murray.
Oh.
Thank you.
And Sweets, even though his is so misdirected as to be meaningless.
- Right.
- Wow.
Backhand full of knuckles with that compliment.
And Hodgins.
And Angela - Not so much, but she's very talented.
- Thank you very much.
- You're welcome.
Then there's another quality, which is the ability to use intelligence.
That is what you have.
Thanks, Bones.
Hey, wait a minute, speaking of Hodgins, has anybody seen Hodgins? No.
Oh, God.
# He was caught, he was bound in La Casa de Calaboose # # He was tried, he was found and readied for the noose # # But the break he would make # # It didn't turn out so well # What's that mean?
Everything.
Utter dross to upper-class gloss.
All right? Keep her lit.
Keep her bathed in the glow.
All right.
Yes! Okay, good.
Now, look up.
All right.
Yes.
Nice.
Okay.
Right in front of you.
That's the future.
Yes.
Okay.
- What the hell is that? - Pigeons, blackbirds or crows- something along those lines.
- Telephoto.
- God, he has an idea! This is what we need! Caw! Caw! Yeah! Flap, flap, flap.
Yeah, yeah.
Give me more! Yes! Fierce aviary wings! Yes! Beaks! Caw, caw, caw, caw! Those creatures, they are death.
Flap your arms, chase death away, but remain beautiful.
You understand? Running through a vacant lot - at a bunch of birds in six-inch heels! Ooh! Excellent.
Good, good, good! You're a leopard! Leap! You're an angel! Oh, yes! Beautiful! Beautiful! Terror! Fear! Okay, gaze heavenward! Look at the beastly birds, my darling! Look up! Oh, I love it! Gaze heavenward, darling! Yes! Look at the beastly birds! Oh.
Okay, so what's it look like to you? - An ear.
- Did you just make a joke? - No.
- 'Cause that wouldn't be like you.
I didn't.
It looks like an ear.
- What do you make of the stuff in the blue bag there? - Looks like chili con carne.
Could this be the rest of the person who lost the ear? I don't know.
It looks like chili con carne.
There's no single piece here bigger than the skull of an Australopithecus.
Sports terms, Bones.
Remember we talked about this? Oh, um - Ah! Softball.
Good.
You're getting better.
Size of a softball.
At first guess, the total mass in this garbage bag does not add up to an entire human being.
- Right.
So I'll get Forensics to scour the entire lot.
- Yes.
Hey, would you even want to guess what happened to this human being? - No.
- I knew you'd say that.
I just had to ask.
All right, let's scour it up! Wow.
I've been a pathologist for 13 years, and I admit, I am a little nauseated.
It's going to fall to me to empty these bags, isn't it? All right, then, fine.
I may need a pot of tea waiting.
Maggots place time of death somewhere between 48 and 72 hours.
I'm gonna go with a wood chipper on this.
In that case, it was a gold wood chipper.
This looks like gold.
The ancient Sumerians were prone to spreading gold dust over the body during funeral rites.
Did the Sumerians chop up the body into little tiny bits first? Not to my knowledge.
- What is this? - A black pearl? Pearls, symbolizing eggs or rebirth and resurrection, were used in many South Seas funeral rites.
Did they chop up the bodies into little tiny bits first? I've begun to apprehend your point, Dr.
Saroyan.
Find out how many corpses we're dealing with.
I'll find out if these are really gold flecks and pearl fragments.
Celibacy is a lot like fasting.
So you've become sexually anorexic? At first you're out of sorts and agitated and then you sort of push through to a kind of clarity.
- Have you reached clarity? - No, I'm still at the agitated and horny stage.
Why are you fasting sexually? Sweets thinks it will do me good to put sex on the back burner in order to relate to people in other - Why are you listening to Sweets? Um - Angela, I asked, why are you listening to Sweets? Sweetie, can you pay for this? I have to go.
- Sure.
Why? - I have to save Hodgins's life.
Yeah.
I found something interesting on the cellular level.
I don't care about the cellular level.
No hemorrhagic tissue.
- What? - Means the victim was dead before being chopped up.
- You care about that, right? - No, not really.
- What I'm interested in is how this guy got chopped up.
- Now, this here shows that the cell burst from the inside out.
- Gives me nothing.
- Frostbite can do that.
- What, like climbing a mountain? - Yes.
Exactly.
The water in the cells crystallizes and explodes.
I have got an absolutely fascinating clue to tell you about.
Hey, hey, uh, you have to leave town.
- What? Why? - No.
Fascinating clue first.
The pearl we found in the victim wasn't a pearl.
Why do I have to leave town? - My father is here.
- What was it then? Carbonaceous chondrites.
It's what meteorites are made of.
Your father blames me for our breakup? Well, he has sort of a blind spot when it comes to me.
- So just get out of town until I can call him off.
- Stop.
Okay? Stop it.
- Dead guy.
What about the dead guy? - It's obvious.
He was frostbitten while climbing Everest then struck by a meteor, then dumped into a vacant lot in two garbage bags and eaten by crows.
All right.
Obvious.
That's so obvious.
Hey, it's a start.
The slowest meteorites travel at 25,000 miles per hour.
- Uh-huh.
- I'm not just spouting useless facts.
You do not have a chance of recreating those velocities with a glorified blow gun.
You simply want to fire a cannon at a dummy.
You staying or going? Another set of eyes and ears taking note can never be amiss.
What possible information could this experiment provide us that you couldn't get mathematically? Mathematics is theory.
This is a real-world recreation.
In order to prove what, exactly? That a, uh, frozen person struck by a meteorite would turn into chili con carne.
NASA has no record of a meteorite of this size and type striking North America at the time of death.
Oh.
According to NASA, a meteorite matching these characteristics is right here in D.
C.
Oh.
I'm all set up and everything.
Your experiment is not pertinent.
So, you found out where the meteor came from? From the solar nebula.
- Right.
Anything more current than that? - Fire in the hole! What the hell was that? We're okay! Everything's fine! We should get out of here before lockdown.
- Let Cam deal with it.
- Yeah! Hoo! You know you're grounded, right? So, you think the piece of meteor we found in the murder victim came from this.
Yeah.
It's an exact match.
The silicate-oxide ratios are indistinguishable.
- Well, you've heard of Landis Collar, right? - Sure, I have.
Mm-hmm.
Blind guy.
World's leading expert in superconductivity.
Do you even know what superconductivity is? I know it's better than normal conductivity.
Agent Booth, Dr.
Brennan, I'm Christopher Beaudette senior scholar here at the Collar.
- Shall we? - Yes! So, you work in superconductivity.
No, Agent Booth.
I'm doing research into generating power from earthquakes.
- Groundbreaking.
- That was a funny joke.
Yeah, and one I've never, ever heard before.
Are these people here smarter than you? That would depend on how one defines intelligence.
I'm Landis Collar.
- Thank you, Christopher.
- Landis.
I'm Special Agent Seeley Booth.
This here is - Dr.
Temperance Brennan.
Is that clicking noise attached to your blindness? Yes.
It's a prototype- sonic echo locator.
It allows me to apprehend my surroundings.
- Have you forgiven me? - Forgiven him? I was turned down for a fellowship here at the institute.
No, no, that is not true.
Your anthropological research was rejected because it looked to the past, not the future.
"To eternity, to glory, to the future.
" Right.
Then why say your motto in a dead, ancient language? Okay, Booth.
- How can I help you? - Uh, this - Uh, put your hand out.
I'll-There you go.
- What Agent Booth has given you - - I know what it is.
It's a piece of my meteorite.
That's impressive for a blind man.
- I know because I had it made for Diane.
- Diane? Dr.
Diane Sidman, my fiancée.
The meteorite was set in her engagement ring.
- Well, that would explain the gold flecks.
- Is Diane all right? - When was the last time you saw Diane? - A few days ago.
She was ill, which is understandable considering the pressure she's under.
- Pressure.
- She's editor-in-chief of the Collar Journal.
Perhaps the most important venue for scientific publishing in the world.
What has happened? We have discovered some human remains which contained what is most certainly your fiancée's engagement ring.
We'd like to talk to anyone who may have interacted with Diane before she disappeared.
Speak with Diane's students, chief among them Jennifer Keating and Milton Alvaredo.
I'll have Dr.
Beaudette bring them to you.
- Oh.
Well - - If you need anything else, I'll be in my office.
My God.
Dr.
Sidman is dead? We have not yet made a positive identification.
When was the last time you saw her, Milton? I suffer from a kind of chronological dyslexia which makes it very difficult for me to place discreet events accurately on a linear timeline.
Whew! This one's all yours.
What, exactly, are you working on? I'm endeavoring to find a way to transmit single-cell organisms, using common pond scum from one location to another.
Ever try a spoon? I've had some success vibrating two separate samples of single-cell scum in complete symmetry at a quantum level.
That's very impressive.
You wouldn't understand, Booth.
- Of course I do.
Beam me up, Scotty.
- Very good.
Yes, exactly.
Dr.
Sidman must have been eager to publish that in the journal.
Very excited, yes, pending a few questions.
- Is this publishing thing important? - Publish or perish.
- I mean, is it motive? - For a murder, you mean? Definitely.
- Definitely.
- But only on the level of vengeance.
Killing her would not reverse the decision unless, of course, the person who killed her wanted to take over her position.
I last saw Diane when Jennifer asked us to stop arguing so loudly.
- Jennifer Keating, Dr.
Sidman's other grad student? - Yes.
Jenny works in cosmogenic isotope research.
It can make her cranky.
This place is making me cranky.
I asked Milton to quiet down, not Diane.
- I would never get mad at Diane.
- Why? She's editor-in-chief of the journal.
Publish or perish.
Right? - What were they arguing about? - I have no idea.
Could've been about anything.
Landis encourages a free exchange of ideas, and it can get pretty intense.
You specialize in cosmogenic isotope research? "Cosmogenic"? It's a new way of dating artifacts using 14-C isotopes.
Through accelerated mass spectroscopy.
Oh.
That'd make me cranky too.
I can't imagine that your project excited Diane Sidman.
Veni, vidi, vici.
Look to the future.
Carbon-dating is all about the past.
You're right.
There was no way she was gonna publish me.
This time next year, I'll be looking for postgraduate work.
- Is that the last time you saw Diane Sidman? - Yes.
Three days ago.
Why? Is something wrong? It is possible that she is dead.
Bones account for approximately 15% of the mass of a human being.
Given that the total bone mass here comes to 8.
9 kilograms that would suggest a human being who weighed approximately One hundred and 31 pounds.
Well, that matches the victim's stats.
Oh, it's Diane Sidman, all right.
Dr.
Saroyan got D.
N.
A.
confirmation.
There are no other particulates outside of the gold flecks and meteorite.
What did I tell you? That we aren't allowed in the same room without supervision.
Why? Because we were stupid enough to fire a-a cannon indoors.
And? You know, you're here, which - which counts for supervision, so - I'll leave.
There's a deep pitting in these bones which may or may not be connected to the fractures.
- Also, I excluded wood chipper as a possibility.
- How? Whirling blades would create parallel and evenly-spaced fractures.
These patterns appear to be completely random.
Even more puzzling, they are unusually clean.
What if the cellular damage and the fractures were caused by the same thing? The cells could have burst as a result of ice microcrystals having formed if the body was rapidly frozen.
You mean, freeze the body and then shatter the bones.
Liquid nitrogen? You have my permission to confer with Dr.
Hodgins on the subject.
Oh, uh, in the same room, yes? - Just to be clear.
- Any damages come out of your pay.
As requested, Diane's work area.
Wow.
Looks like somebody cleaned it out.
Oh, no, Booth.
Dr.
Sidman was a theoretical physicist.
She didn't do experiments.
She figured everything out through equations.
Diane was a member of the Large Hadron Collider team.
Isn't that that thing in Europe that's gonna create a black hole and end the universe? There's only a very small chance of that actually occurring.
And yet Diane received a number of death threats.
Diane Sidman's role was important to the Large Hadron Collider team? The effort to find the Higgs boson will be set back months.
- The God particle.
- What's that? Uh, a theoretical particle which explains why matter has mass.
Mass and matter aren't the same? Don't look at each other like that.
I bet neither one of you know how to make your own beer.
You realize you just said "Don't look at each other" to a blind man.
Do you have records of threats made against her? Yes, ever since one of our scientists was attacked for his work in cloning.
Milton Alvaredo suggested that we look at whoever was going to replace Diane Sidman as editor-in-chief.
That would be the senior scholar, Christopher Beaudette.
You can understand how that makes him a suspect.
I'll tell Sweets to look into the threats and see if they're worth following up.
If it matters, Diane and Christopher were also enjoying a sexual relationship.
Whoa! "If it matters"? I thought you were going to marry her.
At which time, by mutual agreement Diane and Christopher's sexual relationship was to cease.
Completely rational.
Except for the completely insane part where somebody killed Diane Sidman.
I'll be right back, Dr.
Beaudette.
- It's a good thing they didn't accept you at that place.
- Why? It's creepy.
Everyone there is creepy.
Well, if you think they're creepy, then you must think I'm creepy.
Well, you have a creepy mode, Bones.
Very interesting man.
Highly self-aware.
Major-league smarty-pants.
Ah, right.
Little brain checks in, the big brain checks out.
I-I don't know what that means.
Little brain, big brain? He freely admits that he had an ongoing sexual relationship with the victim.
Oh! That little brain.
But he denies ever having been "in love" with her.
- What's with the hooked fingers? - Well, he said "in love" very sarcastically.
Like it was something that happened to "lower primates.
" Okay, who else was he sleeping with? - I didn't ask.
- What does that matter? Because maybe not everybody is so, you know, "adult," you know or "rational" or- hey- "clear-thinking" or "heartless" as him.
That was a lot of quotation marks.
So sexual relationships are pretty casual over there at the Collar Institute, right? We're young, close quarters.
We stimulate each other.
Mmm.
Who else were you sleeping with? Jennifer, who was also seeing Milton.
So, is it possible that Jennifer was trying to get rid of a romantic rival? By that retrograde manner of thought Landis could have killed Diane for sleeping with me.
Or I could have killed Diane for sleeping with Landis.
Or Milton could have killed Diane for sleeping with me and Landis.
Ladies and gentlemen what I propose to show you today is how our victim's skeletal structure came to shatter into tiny bits.
Mr.
Nigel-Murray.
He enjoys this way too much.
Basically, Hodgins sees himself as Dr.
Nemo.
Liquid nitrogen freezes at 63 degrees Kelvin which is minus 210 degrees Celsius or minus 346 degrees Fahrenheit.
It's, uh, unnecessary to say "degrees Celsius.
" - It's implicit.
- Shh.
When I drop this super-cooled turkey - Once again, technically not super-cooled.
it'll shatter into hundreds of bits on the concrete floor.
Shards are gonna fly in every direction, so- Ready? Three, two, one.
- Whoa! - Watch it! - I'm okay.
- Oh! Oh! Oh! It's just a glancing blow.
Is she all right? Dr.
Lance Sweets.
I work for the F.
B.
I.
as a psychological profiler.
Psychiatrist or psychologist? He's just a psychologist.
Uh, the point is, I looked through over You, Dr.
Mullins, were the only person I thought merited questioning.
- Using psychology.
- That's correct.
You might as well have picked my name from a hat.
Normally, I'd agree but your disapproval of Dr.
Sidman's work makes me wonder if you're a religious fanatic.
No.
Like most reasonable human beings, I'm an agnostic.
You have a doctorate in physics from Princeton, right? Yet you work as a welder? Welding is a real job, unlike psychology.
How can a reasonable human being with a physics degree honestly believe that a particle accelerator in Europe is going to create a black hole which will destroy the solar system? Would you like a list of Nobel Laureates who agree with me? The odds are one in 50 million - slight, I admit.
Too high when you consider the loss of not only humanity but the only planet in the cosmos that we know for certain is capable of generating and sustaining life.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Um, I hate to say it, but I'm totally with him on this one.
Would you kill someone on 50 million-to-1 odds? Kill someone? Who's dead? Diane Sidman.
Of the 800 threats I studied, Evidence indicates that Diane Sidman was frozen, using liquid nitrogen, after she was killed.
- Then her body was dropped and shattered.
- Ridiculous.
A frozen cadaver would simply bounce.
Any moron should know that.
The point is, as a welder, you have access to liquid nitrogen.
My I.
Q.
is 162.
What about it? I'm smart enough to know when to shut up and ask for a lawyer.
Except I've got one last thing to say.
Knowing that Diane Sidman is dead I'm going to sleep about I got here as soon as I could.
What's up? Lab results from the C.
B.
C.
and biopsy on our victim.
"Abnormal proliferation of leukocytes in the thoracic and lumbar bone marrow"? - These numbers are fatal.
- She died of leukemia? Diane Sidman had a full physical two weeks ago.
Guess what.
Clean bill of health.
How does a perfectly healthy young woman develop advanced leukemia in two weeks? Leukemia doesn't just appear in two weeks.
What about radiation? There's gotta be some source of radiation in that place that could cause cancer.
Someone accidentally irradiates this poor woman and then covers it up by freezing her and smashing her remains into little bits.
You know, ironically, intelligent people have been known to commit murders in ludicrously complicated ways, virtually ensuring their capture.
Isn't that- Uh, I-I-it's Angela's d-dad.
It's not uncommon for men to fear their lover's male parent.
You know what creeps me out? The way that English people say "lovah.
" Attacking Vincent like that clearly indicates that what he said is true.
The man is from Texas.
He told me that if I messed up- I don't remember what he said, but he mentioned the key "G-demolish" and it sounded pretty bad.
The blues is known as the devil's music because those most adept are thought to have made a pact with the devil and thus fear no earthly law because they're already doomed to eternity in hell.
Harsh.
Thank you, Vincent.
I-I feel much better now.
I happen to have a great deal of insight into the whole blues culture.
I could talk to him for you.
Yeah, thanks, but, uh, too late.
Have you found something? Posterior of the T7.
Looks very smooth.
This indentation could very well be the result of a tumor.
A possible source of Diane Sidman's leukemia.
A tumor this size over two weeks would require a radiation source of between 1,000 and 5,000 rems.
That would've burned the victim.
We would've seen that.
Must have been a steady exposure over time.
The woman spent almost all her time at work.
- Everything's coming up clean.
- Nothing? - Nope.
- There should still be some evidence of radioactivity.
There's nothing radioactive in this room.
Break it down.
Go for defoam.
God, I don't know how you wear these things.
Hot suits! - Whoa.
- What? Ooh, right there.
What are you doing, Bones? This stain here must have hit Diane Sidman almost exactly where the tumor formed.
Testing me on the cancer chair? But you're wearing a suit.
Plus, it's not radioactive anymore.
- We're gonna need to take this chair.
- No, no, no! You don't just go around doing human testing on people, Bones.
I gotta go to the bathroom.
Well, I touched it with my bare hands.
See? You may be wondering why I'm going through these bones again.
Probably because you feel bad that Dr.
Brennan found evidence of a tumor that you missed? The average chocolate bar has eight insect legs in it.
So, she said hopefully, metaphorically you're looking for insect legs? And I may have found some.
These cylindrical notches on the left clavicle.
See? - Two of them, yes.
- They may be stab wounds.
Okay, we'll have Dr.
Hodgins check them for microscopic particulates if he hasn't lit out for Timbuktu yet.
The discoloration in the fabric was not radioactive but because of your suspicion I tested for daughter isotopes.
Daughter isotopes? Daughter isotopes are what's left behind after radioactive isotopes decay.
So there was a radioactive isotope on Diane Sidman's chair.
Yeah, a strong one.
Is anyone at that place doing cancer research? No.
It's not that kind of place.
Yeah, right.
To eternity, to glory, to the future.
You disapprove of the Collar Institute? Up and forward are only two directions.
Science should look in all directions.
You taught me that.
- I did? - Every day.
Thank you.
- Go on.
Just get the door.
- What? - Get the door! - Now? You gotta be kidding me.
It's like Club Med Mensa around here.
What are you laughing at? You know, most people, you bust in on 'em having sex with a gun it kinda disrupts the mood.
Perhaps they decided to start all over again from the beginning.
It's just sex, Booth.
- It's not that.
I'm not a prude.
- Well, you have what they would call hang-ups.
You know, that guy Landis? Yes? - He's about to make a move on you.
- How do you know? Because it is the rational and smart thing to do, and he is all about that.
I see how he looks at you.
How he looks at me? He's blind.
That's too literal, Bones.
His fiancée was just murdered, and he's already moving on.
Well, she's gone.
He has accepted it.
Look, good people, they leave marks on each other.
The least we could do is let them fade away naturally, not, you know, scrape them off or paint over them with new marks.
- So you're not a prude? - Moi? Hey, I am a very fun and, uh very sexy guy.
So you just think that if two people care about each other they leave metaphorical marks which should be allowed to fade naturally? You heard me, but you just didn't understand me.
I wonder that about you all the time.
My apologies.
Were you looking for me? We need to see your radioactive isotopes.
Hey, how you doing, pal? Did you knock one out of the park? - I'll be off then, Jennifer.
- Good-bye, Milton.
Thank you very much.
You're more than welcome.
"Thank you, Milton.
" "No, thank you, Jennifer.
" Everyone is so polite here, except for the murder and cheating.
We can get a warrant for the isotopes, if that's what you require.
That won't be necessary.
I don't know what use you could have with these- I haven't used them for months - but - Something wrong? - Some of my vials are missing.
- Hmm? We'll need to know how many people, aside from yourself had access to them in the last month.
Everyone in the institute had access.
Everyone.
- This guy's good.
- He really is.
Whoo! Why would a guy like you play on a street corner? Well, I guess that depends on who, exactly, you think I am.
I'd like to speak to you about Hodgins.
- Uh-huh.
- I'd like to help.
No, thanks, son.
I can handle Hodgins all on my own.
Oh, no.
I mean, I'd like to help with the situation.
See, I'm a psychologist.
It's kinda my mojo.
You misunderstand the term.
What I meant was - Vincent pointed out each break appears to have happened at the weakest part in each bone.
X-rays bear me out on that.
The most damage was done to the weakest bones - the anvil, the hyoids, these points on the spine.
I don't get what that means.
Essentially, the skeleton broke apart at the weakest points.
The way a building would fall apart during an earthquake.
So, the victim was killed - we're not positive how yet- then frozen then shaken until all the bones fell apart? Not shaken.
Vibrated.
Vibrated until the frozen bones shattered like crystal.
Hodgins! Don't sneak up like that.
I could put out an eye on my microscope.
- You gotta run.
- You talked to Angela's father.
Oh, God.
W-What did he say? I have no idea.
But he was very- He's got a very disturbing effect- sinister.
I am not scared of him.
Okay.
Okay, you know that whole "sell your soul at the crossroads" thing? I'm buying it.
You gotta run for it, man.
I told you so.
Yeah.
Hey, you know what? I secretly had a thing for Angela.
Now it's gone.
Like, wiped from the memory banks.
- So, it had to be Milton Alvaredo, right? - Why? He's the one who's working on transporting matter through vibrations, right? - You understood that? - Hey! He kills Dr.
Sidman, flash-freezes her then tries to transport her to outer space, the moon, whatever.
Ends up frozen chili con carne.
- I'm very impressed.
- Well, I've learned a lot from you.
And a lot from watching the Discovery Channel with Parker.
- Milton Alvaredo is not our only suspect.
- Jennifer Keating.
Well, her only motive is revenge.
Like you say, that's just not logical and despite her being, you know, a sex kitten scientist, she's still logical.
No, not Jennifer Keating.
Chris Beaudette.
His project concerns extracting energy from earthquakes.
- Oh.
- Plus, Dr.
Collar's working on echo location for the blind.
So, basically, we're back to square one.
I suggest we find an apparatus capable of shattering a flash-frozen human cadaver.
Apparatus.
- Yep.
- Right.
Gotcha.
Hello.
Dr.
Earthquake? Okay, so, tell me what I'm looking for.
Any apparatus that might facilitate the creation of a sonic standing wave.
Right.
Tell me what I'm looking for again.
You're leaning on it.
Right.
I knew that.
All right.
Look at this.
Right.
I'll just get Forensics to look for blood.
No, there won't be any blood.
The remains are frozen solid by this point.
The natural frequency of the human body is between three and seven Hertz.
Humans have natural frequencies? Naturally, that would increase dramatically if the body is frozen - Whoa! Hey! Forget it, Booth! We're in a high-pressure chamber! That door can withstand the force of at least- - Oh, no.
- Oh, no? What, "oh, no"? - We have to get out of here.
- Or what? We'll explode? Aah! Booth, what we have to do here is we have to try to counteract the wavelength.
The what? It's not working! If we stop, our brains will turn to pudding.
Booth! Hello? Booth! Are you okay? Are you all right? Can you hear me? - What? - Are you all right? I'm all right! How about you? - I called paramedics.
They should be here any second.
- Landis pulled us out.
- I heard shots.
- Booth! Are you okay? It was my shooting that saved our lives.
Should have been dead in five to seven seconds.
- Bones, it was my gun! - My sonic interference idea worked! - It wasn't your siren - - Can you hear me? It was my gun! If I hadn't started interference, we'd be dead before you started shooting! You two might want to try resting before communicating.
- Don't need to be deaf as well as blind.
- What? - This notch you found in the clavicle? - Yeah.
I found minute traces of graphite, clay and copolymer.
- Pencil lead.
- Yeah.
Which, of course, is not lead at all.
Uh, is that even possible? All right, say a fairly heavy mechanical pencil, right? To the windpipe or the carotid.
Victim dies, is deep frozen and then shattered.
Uh, the freeze-dried chunks are swept into garbage bags and dumped for birds to eat.
- Mmm.
- Well - - Well - - Ooh! Oh, no, please, you keep it.
I don't think I could ever regard it in the same manner again since - Thank you very much.
I warned the man, Angie.
I told him that if he hurt you, he would have me to contend with.
Did you take off your glasses when you said it? I definitely did.
- It was a mutual breakup.
- Were you hurt? - Dad - - Could he have stopped it? Yeah.
Yeah.
But so could I.
Well, his daddy can come down and kick your ass.
I can't do everybody's job.
I wish you wouldn't.
Okay, sweet girl.
I will ameliorate my vengeful intentions.
"Ameliorate"? Honest? Honest.
Honest as a Texas sundown.
One of you killed Diane Sidman.
And tried to kill us.
I think we can rule out sexual jealousy as a motive for this murder.
- Of course we can.
- Yeah, of course we can.
Why? Because these robots don't feel like humans? No, because radiation poisoning is the opposite of a crime of passion.
Well, my people say that Diane Sidman was stabbed to death with a pencil.
Well, indicating that the murderer suddenly became impatient or approached a deadline.
You figure out that deadline, you'll figure out your murderer.
It has to be the publishing deadline from the journal.
Look at this, huh? Found blood in your resonance chamber.
- Obviously you can't see that, but it's right there.
- That's not blood.
- Luminol means blood.
- There's no evidence of smearing.
If the murderer had seen blood, he would've cleaned it up.
Luminol reacts with copper, iron, peroxides and cyanide.
Which provides for a number of false positives-vegetables, fruit pulp.
Cleaning agents, insecticides.
Various glues, rust remover, ketchup, seaweed, staph, algae.
Is this luminol stuff ever useful? I'm just asking because it - Yes? It is? Fine, I'll shut up.
Mm-hmm.
- Booth.
- What? Luminol reacts with pond scum.
So? Right! Right.
Pond scum Scotty.
You're our guy.
You're under arrest.
Knew it all along.
Let's go.
Come on.
Up.
God! Oww! That's for killing my fiancée.
One person to your left, Dr.
Collar.
My apologies, Agent Booth.
My echo locator must have malfunctioned.
This may not be the most apropos time, but - - Oh! Here we go! - Here we go, what? I was wondering, could I have your phone number? - Wow! - Told you.
Really? I have been considering how to respond if you asked and have decided upon no.
- Well - - I can go, right? - Yep.
- I have actual "save the world" work to do.
Dr.
Collar.
- You okay? - Yeah, I'm all right.
You know what? You're the only smart person I really like.
- Thank you.
- Oh, that's- W-What about- What about me? So, Diane Sidman agreed to publish Milton Alvaredo only if he shared credit with her.
Right.
She said that he was using his theories about the God particles - - Particle.
There's only one.
- Right.
Particle.
To vibrate the pond scum.
- He gives her cancer, but she lives too long.
- Wow.
Yeah.
Then he kills her with a pencil and feeds her to crows so he doesn't have to share a credit.
Wow, that is cold.
And creepy? - I didn't mean to call you creepy.
- You said I have a creepy mode.
I apologize.
Okay, look, I wasn't in my element.
- Every element is your element.
- No, that is not true.
Okay, listen we just gotta stop hanging out with geniuses because you're gonna figure out that I'm really stupid.
What? Don't worry about that.
- Mmm.
- I figured out a long time ago how stupid you are.
Hmm.
What I just said is true and yet it really sounded wrong.
What I should say is, I don't care how stupid you are.
That's not any better.
No.
No.
- Not at all.
It's not even rel - - Okay, well - There is intelligence, which I have and Mr.
Nigel-Murray.
Oh.
Thank you.
And Sweets, even though his is so misdirected as to be meaningless.
- Right.
- Wow.
Backhand full of knuckles with that compliment.
And Hodgins.
And Angela - Not so much, but she's very talented.
- Thank you very much.
- You're welcome.
Then there's another quality, which is the ability to use intelligence.
That is what you have.
Thanks, Bones.
Hey, wait a minute, speaking of Hodgins, has anybody seen Hodgins? No.
Oh, God.
# He was caught, he was bound in La Casa de Calaboose # # He was tried, he was found and readied for the noose # # But the break he would make # # It didn't turn out so well # What's that mean?