about is that he was able to use peanuts to manufacture gasoline and explosives.”

“Gas from peanuts?”

“Sure. Just like any other plant-based ethanol-like kaysev ethanol, if you want a good example. Winter’s set us back, but I’m confident we’ll be manufacturing clean-burning ethanol by summer. But anyway, if you look at the way history’s been depicted in our country, there’s this relentlessly pacifist bent to it that isn’t helpful. I mean, peanut butter’s great for cheap nutrition and all-in a way it’s kind of a parallel for kaysev, I guess-but real societal change doesn’t come without firepower, without fuel and weapons and engagement. And casualties. Lots of casualties.”

Cass focused on keeping her expression neutral while the woman talked about her theory of progress. All the while, it was becoming increasingly clear to her that Mary was dangerously out of touch, maybe even crazy, speaking as casually of rebellion and violence as if she was discussing her grocery list. How had such a woman become a leader of the Rebuilders? How did she command their loyalty?

They had reached the end of a tour of the second-floor operating rooms, and though they had run into half a dozen staff and one groggy-looking patient being treated for a broken arm, Cass had seen no recovery rooms, no evidence of the ill or injured. The casualties she was talking about could well include the survivors of the attack on the library-including Sammi, if she’d been injured.

“What’s on the third floor? I mean, you were saying they’re doing the vaccine research here. Is that upstairs?”

Mary’s expression shifted, a hint of darkness settling around her eyes. “We’re just using it for storage at the moment. We’ll be expanding to fill up everything around here soon. But there’s something else I’d like to show you now.”

She led the way down the stairs, past the first floor, down to the cement-slab basement. In the stairwell there were no openings to let in natural light, and a single bulb, inadequate for the job, lit the space just enough to prevent them from stumbling. There was a smell here, something earthy and unpleasant and hard to place. The paint was stained and peeling, and someone had used a marker on the wall to sketch grossly exaggerated anatomical rendering of genitalia with an indecipherable caption.

“You know, Cass, that I am very hopeful about the role you can play here in Colima,” Mary said, ignoring both the images and the smell. “But Evangeline has some…concerns, I suppose you might say, that I would like to put to rest. She has nothing to do with research, but I have found that it’s best to address this sort of thing quickly. And decisively. You know, without a lot of fussing around and double-talking. What do you think of Evangeline, by the way?”

“I-uh, well, I don’t really know her,” Cass hedged. Was Mary questioning one of her top lieutenants? Or was it possible that Evangeline wasn’t as powerful as she wanted people to think? “I met her at the library, and-”

“Evangeline tells me you were traveling with Edward Schaffer, whom I believe is also known as Smoke.”

The uneasiness Cass had been carrying throughout the day tightened in her stomach. “I mean, yes, I was traveling with him but we had just met that day, at the, uh, school where he was sheltering. He was just, he offered to escort me to the library and I was glad to have him along.”

“You know that he is an enemy to our work, our vision. That he murdered some of our people who were on a peaceful mission.”

“I…had heard, later.”

She forced herself to stay completely still, giving away nothing, as Mary watched her, frowning. At last, the deep-etched lines on her forehead relaxed, and she sighed.

“I suppose you couldn’t have known that when you met him. I have to say, it’s a real shame that the people at that school engaged my team and made bloodshed unavoidable. Of course we would have liked to accommodate all of them. But more to the point, the school was a more than serviceable shelter, and they had laid in enough stores to last through the winter.”

Cass’s uneasiness intensified; she had little doubt that those stores had been taken and brought to Colima along with Sammi and the few other survivors of the battle. And she was equally sure that the bloodshed there could have been avoided if the Rebuilders hadn’t unilaterally attacked the shelter and brutalized the people living there. But she forced herself to remain quiet.

“Anyway, perhaps I should just show you what I brought you here to see, instead of talking on and on and on. Ha!”

And with that odd punctuation, they had reached the bottom of the stairs.

Mary took a key from her pocket and unlocked the scarred metal door before them. She pushed it open and stepped out of Cass’s way, giving her an unobstructed view of a large, open, murky corridor lined with half a dozen hospital cots and a couple of straight-backed chairs. Men in Rebuilder uniforms rose from the chairs. People lay in several of the cots, motionless and covered with blankets, their forms but lumpy masses in the dark. Doors leading off the corridor opened into a mechanical room, where the building’s HVAC equipment sat silent and still.

“We reserve this little area for our special cases-our patients who are headed for detention, assuming they survive.”

Cass took a closer look at the beds. A large man lay on his side at an awkward angle; it took Cass a moment to realize he was handcuffed to the bed frame. His eyes were closed and his lips were dry and rimed with crusted spittle, and a soiled white bandage wound around the top of his skull. His chest rose and fell with quick, shallow breaths, but otherwise he didn’t stir. It seemed likely that he needed more care than he was getting.

Neither of the uniformed men made any move to join Mary and Cass. One stood with his feet planted a few feet apart, hands clasped behind his back; the other slouched against the wall, eyes roving back and forth over the beds as though he expected their occupants to make a run for it at any moment.

“Are these guys doctors?” Cass asked, already knowing the answer.

Mary barked a short laugh. “Hardly, but they’re Detail One, the highest security rank. Alvin, come here a moment, if you’d be so kind.”

The slouching guard ambled over with the clumsy gait of the extremely muscular. His neck was so thick he couldn’t button his khaki shirt all the way, and his sleeves were tight over his biceps.

“This is Cassandra Dollar. She’s an outlier.”

Alvin nodded. “Ma’am.”

“I believe she will have a particular interest in the patient in bed number two. He’s still out, I take it?”

“Yes, Doc dosed him again ’bout an hour ago. They’re keeping them all quiet for us.”

“Can’t question the wisdom of that decision,” Mary said dryly, but the irony seemed lost on the guard. “If you’ll be so kind, I think we’d like to see the patient for ourselves.”

She led the way to the end of the row, Cass staring at the cots as they passed. One of them held a woman with greasy black hair that fell past what was left of an eye, now little more than a sunken socket. Both her arms were casted, so there seemed no need for shackles, but as they passed Cass saw that her ankles were circled by metal cuffs. A thin trail of red-tinged drool leaked from the corner of her mouth and a fly buzzed around her motionless head.

Cass wondered if she was dead.

When they reached the last cot, Alvin carefully folded down the blanket and sheet covering the man lying there. A weak moan escaped his lips and a tremor racked his body.

One arm was bent at an unnatural angle across his chest, the hand splayed against a torn and filthy shirt. The fabric was ripped in several places, and a long gash of his exposed arm was crusted with grit and seamed with yellow pus, the wound extending under the fabric of what remained of the shirt. As Cass’s gaze traveled down the wounded arm, she saw that the hand had been badly mangled, the little finger and part of the next one missing, the stumps ragged and oozing, black with dried blood.

Cass drew in her breath. “Why…?”

“This is a special case,” Mary said, and there was something odd and breathy about her voice, a sense of anticipation, of excitement. “One of the ones who was injured in the skirmish yesterday up north, brought in on the truck. I’m a little surprised he’s still with us, to be frank. In our charter it’s written that we do not provide aid or succor to perpetrators of war crimes on either side of an engagement, and you can witness that we haven’t. He has received no pain medication, no antibiotics, no dressing for his wounds. He was tried in absentia at the time of his crimes, and he would already be in detention except that the nature of his crime calls for solitary confinement and we didn’t quite have that ready for him-he’ll be our first such prisoner and there’s a bit of urgency to get this one

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