trials that followed.

Those trials are still ongoing. They’ll take years.

(5)

I missed most of this. The medivac chopper took me to a hospital in Florida. I was there for eleven days. I sustained a cracked cheekbone, five broken ribs, a torn ligament in my ankle, a hairline fracture of the jaw, and a skull fracture resulting in subdural hematoma. Late the next day the scans showed a dangerous buildup of blood in the inner meningeal layer of the dura, so they wheeled me into surgery and cut a hole in my skull to relieve the pressure. The doctors warned me that I would probably have some memory loss. I wish they’d been right about that, but I remember everything. Maybe one day I’ll be happy about that.

Top Sims was in the room next to me and was recovering from surgery to repair the compound fractures. It was uncertain if he would ever be fit enough to return to active fieldwork. Bunny was treated and released, but he stayed at the hospital for almost a week. Rudy, too. Friends from the DMS brought them changes of clothes and hot meals in Styro-foam containers.

They let me out for the day so I could attend the funeral, but I was scheduled for ankle surgery the following day.

After the service, when I was back in my room at the hospital, Rudy sat in one of the two visitors’ chairs. Mr. Church came and sat in the other chair.

“How much do you remember?”

“All of it.”

“Then you know Cyrus Jakoby is still alive,” Church said.

I nodded.

“You didn’t kill him.”

“No.”

“Why?”

“When he heals, after the damage is repaired, I want him to stand trial.”

Church nodded. “They will execute him.”

“They shouldn’t,” I said.

“Why not?”

“They should put him on display. In a zoo. In a freak show.”

“Will public humiliation redress the harm he’s done?”

“I don’t know. Go ask a philosopher.”

“I’m asking you.”

I didn’t answer. What could I say?

He stood up. “We’ll talk later.”

“No,” I said. “I’m done. I quit. I can’t do this anymore.”

He adjusted his tie. “We’ll talk later.”

When he left I saw that he’d put a pack of cookies on my nightstand. Oreos.

Rudy had been silent through all of this. He said, “Do you really want to quit?”

“I… have to,” I said. “I’m ruined.”

“Your injuries are bad, Joe, but they said you’d make a complete recovery.”

I looked away. “I’m ruined.”

(6)

On a beautiful morning in mid-September they wheeled me out of the hospital. Rudy was there with a car to take me to the airport. There was no sign of Mr. Church or anyone else from the DMS. Rudy was silent for most of the drive, then, “How are you doing, Cowboy?”

I shook my head.

“The war’s over,” he said. “The soldiers have come home from the battlefield. It’s time to talk.”

It took a long time for me to pick the right words. “Why do we do it, Rude?”

“Why do we fight? We fight because someone has to-”

“No,” I said. “Why do we hate?”

“I don’t know. There are long and short answers to that. Mostly people hate because people are different from them, or because they’re the same. It comes down to fear. Our species has always been motivated by fear. We fear what we don’t know or understand, we fear differences, and the primitive in our consciousness demonstrates fear through violence. It’s what makes us so aggressive. Fear, and greed.”

“Is that all? Is that everything that is necessary to explain monsters like Otto Wirths and Cyrus Jakoby?” Despite everything, I still thought of him by that name. As Jakoby he was a worse monster than he’d been as Mengele. “Those men loved what they were doing. They delighted in it. It wasn’t fear of other races… it was hatred.”

“It was evil, Joe. And there is no real definition of what evil is. The best we can do is try and recognize it when we see it, and then try to stop it.”

“That isn’t good enough, Rude.”

“I know,” he said.

(7)

While the records recovered from the Dragon Factory were being mined a clear link was made between the Jakobys and the Sunderland family. Harold Sunderland was arrested by police as he stepped off a plane in Sao Paolo. In light of his connection with the attempted mass genocide, there was no hesitation about extradition.

When FBI agents showed up at the office of J. P. Sunderland to serve a federal warrant, the senator suffered a massive coronary. He was pronounced dead on arrival at Georgetown University Hospital. A clear link was discovered between Sunderland and former deputy information analyst Stephen Preston, the man who had given the false information on which the Vice President acted. However, an exhaustive search of Sunderland’s paper and computer records could establish nothing that implicated the Vice President in any wrongdoing.

Vice President Bill Collins dodged the bullet, and nothing about his attempted dismantling of the DMS ever made it to the press. However, CNN was the first to observe that Collins and the President seemed cooler to each other than during their campaign, and Jon Stewart made some jokes about Collins being even more “off the public radar” than Dick Cheney had been.

The Vice President spent a lot of time out of Washington.

On one of his flights to his home state, the Vice President was alone aboard a small military jet. He put in his earbuds, turned on his iPod, and settled back to enjoy the trip. Twenty minutes into the flight someone reached over and turned off the iPod.

The VP woke up and started to demand what the hell was going on. But he never finished the sentence. A man sat across from him. Early sixties, tall and blocky, wearing tinted sunglasses. A slim briefcase lay on the seat next to him.

“What the hell are you doing here?”

Mr. Church opened his briefcase and removed a small pack of Nilla wafers. He selected a cookie and set the pack aside. He did not offer one to the Vice President.

“You’d better have a good goddamned explanation for-”

Church said, “Sunderland.”

“Bullshit,” Collins sneered. “I stand by my-”

“Shhhh,” Mr. Church said, placing a finger to his lips. “It would be better for you to listen.”

The curtain to the forward cabin opened and Linden Brierly leaned against the door frame. The newly appointed Director of the Secret service smiled thinly, but his eyes were as cold as ice.

“Mr. Vice President,” said Church, “we are going to have a long talk about your future in politics and your general health.”

(8)

Weeks later, when I could walk without crutches, I drove to the Warehouse to pack my stuff. Rudy had been

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