The Craving

This is the first chapter of a suspense novel "The Craving." Here, I introduce you to the three main characters, but be forewarned--this story will take numerous sharp turns, all the way until the very final scene. Little is what is first appears to be.

I will be adding chapters as they arise, so let me know what you think of each section as I release it.

 

Part 1: A Victim of Circumstance

I

Their convoy gradually slowed as they neared the crowded marketplace. For the last three months, this place had been marked as a black route on every pre-mission brief. But as the only road between Camp Victory to a police station on the far west side of Abu Ghraib district, the squad had no choice other than to run it, regardless of the risks. The insurgents knew this, which is why Dan got the infamous “ass pucker” on every mission through here. Even in its well-armored MRAPs, the squad maintained its proper twenty-meter spacing while in the danger area, reflecting their experience—newbies tended to bunch up when they slowed, making them easy prey for an ambush.

    Dan hoped that the other three teams' gunners resisted the tendency to focus on the most obvious threat, the crowded marketplace and gas station, neglecting their designated sectors of fire, especially to the rear. Tunnelvision can get you killed, by being too focused on any one direction, say by looking only for a traditional improvised explosive device, like an artillery shell buried under a pressure plate or triggered by a trip wire. The new favorite among the bad hajis was a sticky IED, where a suicidal insurgent runs up to the vehicle and places a magnetic bomb to the metal of a hatch or wheel well. It was hard for a soldier to keep watching the rear sector when he could hear everyone else shooting, but it was absolutely critical. Especially in the marketplace, where guns and bombs could materialize out of each shadowy doorway and from under every burqa and robe. Dan looked down from the turret and saw his team leader in the right seat gripping his pistol as he monitored the radio. To his left, the driver was resting his free hand on the M-4 that now sat in his lap.

    As the line of armored vehicles neared the gas station on the right, the lead vehicle slowed to a crawl. There was a long line of cars waiting for fuel, as was typical, but something was off. The lead MRAP moved to the left edge of the road, crossing what specks remained of a yellow center line in the crumbled concrete, giving Alpha team an extra few yards of visibility. Dan's driver drifted in the same direction but not quite as far, creating a slight stagger to the line of armored vehicles. Parked just past the gas pumps was a white fuel truck, abandoned too close to the roadway. Although he didn't see any wires or other indications that it had been weaponized, its proximity was reason enough for the squad to shy away from it.

    Dan was in the convoy's second vehicle, so his sector was two-to-six o'clock, and the MRAP behind him had the six-to-ten. He was glad that the squad had been issued the lighter, more agile Caiman MRAPs—although the older Buffaloes had thicker protective armor, but they were as maneuverable as their namesake animal. Both vehicles' primary defense against the notorious improvised explosive devices was a V-shaped steel plate on the vehicle's underside, which was supposed to force the IED blast around the passenger compartment, like the prow of a speedboat pushing water aside. So despite MRAP being an acronym for “Mine Resistant Ambush Protected,” it was a misnomer—more like “Blast Evading Ambush Surviving, Hopefully”—but who wants to ride in a “BEASH”? On missions through crowded areas like this, Dan valued the Caiman's evasiveness to the Buffalo's sheer bulk. Instead of trying to withstand the blast of an IED, better to never run over one at all. Vigilance was crucial—what did firepower matter if you never saw what killed you?

    Some of the guys in the platoon griped that they hadn't seen any action in weeks, but war stories were only useful for entertaining drunks and wannabees. Dan referred to Purple Hearts as 'enemy marksmanship badges,' and his goal was to never earn one. His squad had gone six straight weeks without an attack, and if they could make it through a few more safely, they'd all get home safe. As this was his final deployment, Dan's main goal was to be the drunk at the bar who bored everyone with stories about his safe missions through Baghdad and all the gruesome things he didn't see. He would then conclude his tales with a flourish, stumbling out at the bar on a pair of wobbly but unscathed legs.

    Today's mission might ruin his plans. They'd made it out to the police station without incident, and did their usual song and dance of “advising” the Iraqi police without actually telling them what to do. Brigade knew that most MPs and infantry types were generally Type-A, so they were adamant that they only guide the Iraqi police toward sensible procedures—Dan must have heard the phrase “respect their cultural differences” a hundred times in briefings. But why should they have respect for people who did nothing? He'd never met a group who needed more to be told what to do than these so-called police.

    Dan's job was to assist and advise the investigations unit, so every visit he'd ask about the status of active cases. Captain Ali always had the same answer: “Sorry, no witnesses have come forward yet.” Dan was tired of these futile trips, especially with a new Status of Forces Agreement, or SOFA, going into effect in two weeks. That agreement allowed US troops to move through Baghdad only if escorted by Iraqi military or police; this was the same as banning US troops from Iraqi streets, since the Iraqis preferred to do their patrolling from inside barricaded police stations—he'd gone on a single joint patrol this entire tour. Dan liked to say that reason the Iraqis agreed to the SOFA agreement was that they thought they were literally getting a new piece of furniture to take naps on.

    The one group that understood what the SOFA really meant was the bad guys. Once it went into effect, there'd be no more American infidels to bomb and shoot at, and they wanted to get their parting shots in before their favorite targets vanished from Baghdad's roads. Attacks had been skyrocketing as the SOFA deadline neared, and Dan was on the wrong side of that trend.

    As the lead vehicle passed beside the gas station and neared the ominous fuel truck, and Dan's MRAP tight on its tail, the machine-gunners sat taut in their turrets with the lead gun pointed in the direction of travel—Dan stayed focused on the potential threats to the right. Next was the third MRAP with its gunner swiveling between six- and ten-o'clock, and only ten feet off its back hatch, the trail Humvee followed so close that it looked like it was being towed. The squad's last vehicle ordinarily pulled rear security, with its machine gun perpetually aimed backwards. But with the Hummer trailing like a cyclist drafting a peloton, the third Caiman had to also cover six-o'clock, since its higher guns could shoot over the entire Humvee at targets sneaking from behind, particularly suicide bombers.

    The disadvantage of the Caiman's height was that its 50-caliber machine guns couldn't shoot down to street level, so an insurgent with a death wish could sneak right up and under the huge vehicles' defenses. The guys in the trailing Hummer prevented such close-in attacks by driving close to the crowd, M-4s pointed out the windows, ready in a split-second to send a foolish insurgent to a date with his seventy-two virgins. This wasn't official Army doctrine, but his platoon changed tactics after other convoys had been attacked with RKG-3s, Soviet armor-piercing grenades smuggled in from Chechnya. Recognizing that a Caiman's armor and firepower was ineffective against near threats, insurgents could scurry like mice between an elephant's legs, biting their balls off. So his platoon used Humvees as a rear escort, like cruisers escorting aircraft carriers through enemy seas.

    Something was definitely different today, but he couldn't put his finger on it. He felt that knot in his gut that signaled the good kind of fear, the kind that made you more alert and ready to act. The streets weren't completely empty—an obvious tip-off that an attack was imminent—but pedestrians weren't milling around the market like usual. The lack of a possible near-threat should have been comforting. Was today some Muslim holy day that the intel officer had failed to brief them on? Dan also thought he smelled something fragrant like roasted apples or maybe those figs the locals seemed to go apeshit over—but how could that get in through the MRAP's ventilation and filtering system?  Today, nobody was within fifty feet of the road, but things smelled out of place. He should have been happy at the lack of civilians, which made everyone's job easier, but he just couldn't muster the optimism. Knowing that a thousand people would celebrate your death in the streets can do that.

    Dan would rather see Iraqis scatter when US soldiers appeared, like the good old days of his first tour. Now, the American convoys were now so common that the locals barely noticed. Half the time his driver had to honk the air horn or shoot a green warning-laser to shoo kids who wandered too close. If it wasn't for an occasional sign in Arabic, the street could easily be mistaken for a set of an old western movie: unforgiving sun directly overhead, yellowed brick buildings, sand kicked up with each gust of wind. Dan could almost imagine a tumbleweed rolling across the desolate road, and he whistled a few bars of the theme from his favorite movie, “The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly.”

    That's what was wrong, he realized. Everyone was away from the road, and there wasn't a single kid running near the vehicles, waving their arms and gesturing for water or MREs, crying “meestah, meestah . . . .” For that matter, there weren't any ghosts either—the soldiers' nickname for the burqa-clad women who, feet invisible under flowing black robes, seemed to float like the bad guys chasing Pac-man.

    Dan heard on the radio what he guessed was the lead Caiman, since it sounded like Sully: “Everybody stay alert! Something ain't riii—” when his MRAP lurched suddenly to the left, followed a split-second later by a deep, rumbling hiss on his right, like someone had popped the cap off a gigantic bottle of beer. Rotating in the turret toward that side, he saw something had hit vehicle three on the passenger side, a smoking hole on the hood in front of the team leader's now-shattered windshield.

    His peripheral vision caught the follow-through of a figure in jeans and a black t-shirt, his body pulled forward by the momentum of his throw, right hand still extended, almost touching the ground. In an instant, Dan registered that it must have been a RKG-3 exploding, not an IED or rocket-propelled grenade, which was why the blast was so focused, without excess smoke and flames. As the thrower came up and straightened, he made the mistake of pausing to admire his handiwork—he might even as smiled a little. It was just the slight hesitation Dan needed, and the .50-cal moved just a few degrees as his thumbs slid the safety off, an action that he'd practiced a thousand times to build muscle memory. The big gun already had rounds chambered, despite standard operating procedure was that all .50s stay on yellow status. Everyone who actually went outside the wire ignored these paper orders—they didn't have the luxury of an extra half-second to pull back on the .50's charging handle to chamber a round. His squad was in red status, fully locked and loaded, the second they were out of sight of the main gate. 

    The grenade thrower was standing bolt upright when the first burst of automatic fire ripped through his midsection. Dan was shocked at how much red sprayed in all directions at impact. He'd always thought that the thick rounds would go right through a person at such close range, but the seven- or eight-round burst tore the thrower in half, literally. His torso toppled back and to the right, his arms moving spasmodically, and a quickly expanding red puddle formed in the dust beneath him. The half of his body containing the legs and lower torso had fallen directly in Dan's line of sight, so he saw a bright red, oozing smudge just above what looked like a belt. Oddly, very little blood seemed to flow out of that area. Perhaps gravity kept it all pooled in the legs.

    For a second, his throat tightened and gagged at the horrific sight, but just for a moment. Dan heard distant gunfire ring out and he knew they were under attack from all directions. He elevated the barrel of the machine gun and started spraying suppressive fire at some nearby building where he'd seen flashes with his peripheral visions. Yet even as he shot at those targets a hundred meters away, Dan's eyes locked onto those of the dying man, transfixed by his death throes. He couldn't look away, but squeezed the trigger and held it on auto, spraying toward the sounds of gunfire in the distance, yet never taking his eyes off the dying man's face. He could smell the familiar scent of burnt gunpowder, crisp and smoky, but now mixed with the aroma well-roasted beef, almost burned. As round after round poured through his .50-cal, the barrel got so hot that he could feel the warmth on his cheeks as he looked down its sights. Yet still he stared into the glassy eyes of the dead insurgent, firing as if by instinct. He knew he was hitting the enemy by their agonized screams, which started as a high-pitched background buzz and escalated, second by second, until it crescendoed into a hysterical 100-decibel mechanical howl.

    Dan kept firing, and the Iraqis in the distance kept screaming. The grenade-thrower's upper torso twitched in agony, his convulsions slowing, but without his eyes ever leaving Dan's own. The burned meat smell turned acrid, searing his throat and lungs, now like smoldering tires. The distant screams of the Iraqis became deep, transforming into moans and guttural roars, and he felt a wetness that must be blood on his face and shoulders: first a mist, then a spray, finally a deluge. He realized that it had begun raining, and the gunshots of the squad had tapered off into silence, but still he couldn't stop squeezing the trigger or break the dying man's gaze, even after the long chain of ammunition had long run out. The rain was warm at first, but now it fell sharp and hard and freezing, and the chill ran down his spine, making him shudder. This cold dampness ran into his eyes and made him shake his head to clear his vision. This sudden motion at last forced him to look away from the now-still thrower, his frozen torso looking like those little plastic soldiers he'd played with as a boy. With one violent, final jerk to fling the water from his eyes so he could see, Dan smacked his head against something, and he awoke, soaked in sweat. He looked up, confused, and it took a few seconds before he realized that he had thrown himself completely out of bed.

II

    This dream—he refused to call it a nightmare, because he was the bogeyman, after all, not the insurgents—had only happened a few times since the attack, and Dan didn't understand why. The dream re-enacted the first half of the ambush in perfect detail, but quickly got deviated from the actual incident. After he'd blown the young man into two large pieces, Dan had been able to look away, laying down suppressive fire that chewed up the gravel and allowed the other teams to dismount. Under the protection of his mammoth machine gun, the rest of the squad was able to pursue the attackers into and beyond the gas station. The squad took out five or six of the main attackers, including two who were aiming an RPG into their stationary MRAPs. Once the dismounts had found cover on the ground, Dan turned his attention to AK-47 fire coming from an apartment building several hundred yards away. Since his rounds could pierce the soft clay walls of Iraqi masonry, the .50 nearly chewed the window into a door—he must have killed a few more guys up there. The squad's response had been textbook: each kill was an insurgent who had directly participated in the ambush, with no collateral damage or dead civilians.

    Of course, the townspeople claimed that Dan’s squad opened fire for no reason: every corpse was a law-abiding student that just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. They said the guy who'd tossed the grenade to start the ambush was a fifteen-year-old honor student, walking his sister home from school. The next morning, his parents appeared at the main gate demanding financial compensation for his death, as was the custom. Brigade seemed to side with the locals, but should have known better. Abu Ghraib District was a Bundt cake of sectarian conflict, with seams of Sunni extremism winding through a majority Shia neighborhood.

    His squad had been up for twenty hours straight when they returned to base, but were taken straight to company headquarters to write up sworn statements: first at battalion HQ, two hours later at brigade, then finally the boys from Criminal Investigations Division. Dan's squad wasn't debriefed as much as interrogated. It was clear that the higher-ups were more interested in avoiding bad press than discovering the truth; the questioning was a real cover-your-ass session. Higher-up was looking for any deviation from SOPs or rules of engagement so they could blame it on our own people; some of the CID guys said they doubted the squad had ever taken fire.

    The locals' claims had a superficial appeal: not a single dead Iraqi had a weapon on them, and CID couldn't find a single shell-casing from an AK or other foreign weapon. But the townspeople had been too industrious in gathering up the evidence: they dragged away the shot-up cars and donkey-carts, mopped the blood from the streets and doorways, and removed or replaced every shattered window—but where were the thousand-odd shell-casings from the American's guns? If the Iraqis had never fired, where did all those AK-47 holes in the Caimans come from, much less the molten hole in vehicle three's engine block?

    The inquiry dragged on for weeks, until two months later they received a fax—a freaking fax!—from brigade that there had been “no finding of misconduct.” The Iraqi Army Public Affairs office later apologized for initially claiming that the Americans had attacked, as if any of Dan's guys gave a fuck what the Iraqis thought. The whole fiasco only hardened Dan's cynical view of the military—you could only count on the guys next to you in a firefight, and expect higher-up to buddy-fuck you if anything goes wrong or it will help their chances of promotion.

    The results confirmed what Dan new deep in his gut: that he was entirely justified in ripping that guy apart with his 50-cal. Once the kid decided to kill him and his buddies, he forfeited any right to life, or to Dan's remorse. So why was he having these crazy dreams?

    It wasn't guilt. Dan felt none for shooting people who attacked his brothers with an armored-piercing grenade. Yeah, it was too bad that he was so damn young, but aren't suicide bombers always kids? Wizened imams, spouting the glories of jihad and the afterlife, never strap explosives to their chests, even though they have lived long, full lives. No, war is always old men convincing young men to die for a noble cause, be it a religion or a country.

    Politics aside, when someone points a gun at you with intent to do harm, man or woman, young or old, there is only one question: will I be a victim or a survivor? The equation was unequivocal, and the math was not of Dan's making. Awake, he believed this to the core of his being, without a wisp of conscious guilt. Why was it so different in his dreams?

*   *   *   *   *

    Once he got back in-country at Fort Drum, Dan considered telling his dream to the Army psychiatrist. His entire squad was required to meet with him after the attack, and every soldier demobilizing had to do it again to be cleared to go home. He'd had enough experience dealing with incompetent military doctors to be skeptical, but maybe this doc could offer some insight into why his superego seemed to manifest itself so vividly in his dreams. Major Cromwell had jump wings and a prior service patch, so he wasn't a complete pussy or fobbit; maybe he'd seen some shit too. Dan especially hated the patronizing tone most officers used with grunts, as if a college degree was something so rare or valuable these days. But Dan worried that if he didn't at least appear to confide in the shrink, Cromwell could put something in his records that would tag him as a head case, killing any shot of promotion. He'd play along.

    Some of the soldiers treated by Cromwell were legit: they had seen awful things and it stuck with them. Often it was the medics, who had to deal with guys blown to ground beef, talking to them as they fought desperately to hang on—Doc said it was their eyes that stuck with him the most. Worse still were the ones that had done the awful shit, caught up in the fury of the moment, or trying to show how the other guys how hardcore they were. These guys got home from the sandbox and slowly it would sink in that they had sinned, deeply, and they too would remember the eyes of those they'd hurt.

    At least his infantry brethren had an outlet for their frustration, as they humped Iraq's dusty streets and kicked down doors with an explosiveness that only hinted at the fury buried within. That anger never really went away, but instead simmered and grew stronger, waiting for an excuse to be released.

    Stateside, these demons burst loose when a door slammed loudly, they saw piles of trash on the roadside, or had one too many beers. Their girlfriends discovered quickly how little fun it was to hang out with a guy who screamed or cried randomly; their wives weren't much more loyal, having gone months and years apart, with only emails and video-chats to remind them of what it was that first drew them together. Many times it was sex for the soldier and military benefits for the spouse—not great, but better than they could do in a minimum-wage job in the ghettos outside of the Fort Bennings or Camp Lejeunes. They even had a word for it: “dependapottamus.” For guys that returned with psychological chips on their shoulders, realizing that their marriage or soulmate was a lie became just another reason to dive into the abyss.

    But the slide down was slow and numbing. Unlike Dan's dreams, these soldiers' dark visions followed them when they awoke; they tried to dull them with booze, video games, or jerking off. Even if Dan had some residual issues from the attack, and even if Dr. Cromwell could help him, he was too afraid of being lumped in with that bunch. Not only by his peers, but by himself.

    Sully was a classic PTSD basket case, and not just from that last ambush. This was his third tour in four years, so the sandbox had become his new normal—his problem was returning home. Sully hit the clubs every night they got back, which meant everyone else had to kick his ginger Bahston-Irish ass out of bed to make formation each morning, or cover for him to the platoon sergeant, which was getting old. At first going hard every night was fun, chasing the all-too-willing off-post women, or participating in the sausage-fest at the NCO club. Their status as returning veterans made them minor celebrities to the bored townies, who viewed a potential husband and military benefits as good reasons to blow a guy in the restroom. But after banging the three or four decent chicks that came to the club, the falloff was pretty steep, and casual sex with such calculating partners felt like a business negotiation for Dan.

    But for Sully, the NCO Club was a Victoria's Secret runway. He was constantly babbling about how many chicks he'd hooked up with and how hot they were. Most guys had fallen victim to the overseas beauty index, where consistent with the laws of supply and demand, a female soldier you'd consider a 5 in the states became a perfect 10 on deployment. But he and Sully had managed to stave off this impulse while in Iraq, so why had his friend fallen victim to the less potent strain of pussy-goggles now that he was home? Coupled with the constant drinking, Dan worried that Sully had been more deeply affected by his combat experiences than he could admit.

    Dan and Sully were the perfect wingman for each other, their tastes in women as disparate as their physical appearance. Sully looked the part of a classic South Boston brawler: short, wide, and muscular, his bulky triceps and biceps jutting out akimbo from a fire-hydrant stout torso. He kept a shock of bright orange hair aggressively groomed within regulation, the side of his head razored smooth, with a boot heel of half-inch buzzcut serving as his rooster’s crown. Nature reserves the brightest plumage for its most dangerous creatures, the psychedelic pastels a warning to the other animals to avoid contact—so it was with Sully’s do-not-fuck-with-me scalp. A champion wrestler in high school who learned to box in the service, Sully looked strong and tough, and his appearance underestimated his abilities.

    In contrast, Dan was tall, dark, and lanky. He’d read once that Abe Lincoln was so freakishly strong that he earned side money wagering on wrestling matches and feats of strength against other bargemen on the Mississippi to fund his education; on the campaign trail, Honest Abe once held a ____ with an outstretched arm longer than anyone else, astounding the corwd of voters. Dan might have been a direct descendant: at six-four, he was a foot taller than Sully, but just as wily a grappler. Unlike his buddy, whose very presence counseled caution, Dan’s soft face and inquisitive eyes invited both conversation and confrontation from those wanting to prove their mettle. Where Sully moved with the power and deliberateness of a Sherman tank, Dan was all crouches, spins, and arms that sliced the air like daggers. Sully would savor his fights and slowly crush an opponent into surrender, while Dan’s foes were usually pinned or pummeled into submission before the look of shock had left their faces.

Unlike Sully’s straight GI crewcut, Dan tried to keep as much of his dark brown hair, letting it grow perilously close to his earlobes and collar as the regs allowed. He’d already been ordered once to get a haircut already since he’d been stateside, and he didn’t plan to cut it a second time until ordered again—so he might be smoked with ten minutes of pushups, he could do two hundred while yawning, the lean and taut muscles not much to look at, but equally as functional and powerful as Sully’s guns. After a few early scuffles with some loudmouths in a neighboring company, other soldiers gave Dan as wide a berth as Sully despite his demeanor.

The two worked so well as wingmen because neither shared the same taste in women, and few women were attracted to both of the romantically polar opposites. The cerebral Dan was a master of the rap, needing enough quiet to converse if he was to seduce a woman, whereas Sully was all id, eyes, and muscle who knew that his forceful personality was either to a lady’s taste or not. He rarely chased women that didn’t want to chase him, unlike Dan who seemed to gravitate toward women who were smart enough to intrigue him, but too smart to fall for his Lotharian lines. Mirroring their own coloring, Dan liked brunettes while Sully loved blondes and redheads. Just as on the battlefield, the pair was more formidable as a team then solo.

    Although he and Sully held the same rank and were in the same squad, their experiences differed. This was the third deployment for their unit, but Sully's first in combat—he'd broken his leg in Ranger school right before the unit's first trip to Iraq, so he had desk duty in Kuwait; during their second, Sully was recycling through Ranger school and by time he caught up with the unit, they were assigned as customs inspectors on base. Although Sully earned the coveted Ranger tab and was considered one of the best soldiers in the company, the fact that everyone else had bonded through the crucible of combat made him a bit of an outsider, as someone who'd yet to be tested under fire.

    Sully instinctively felt this, so to prove himself, he was usually the first one to jump out during mounted patrols or break down a suspected insurgent's door. Dan had been shot at dozens of times, so he was free to do things that an outsider might view as overcautious: bound only from one covered position to another, call EOD for suspected mines, and only assault forward when the squad had fire superiority. In contrast, Sully was the stereotypical Hollywood war hero—he'd charge across open streets upright, daring someone to shoot him, he'd blow suspected IEDs with machine-gun fire, which didn't always work, and he'd bitch about waiting for reinforcements before assaulting an objective. Even though they were both twenty-five years old with six years on active duty, Dan had assumed the role of the war-weary veteran, while Sully got to be the wild child who chafed under authority.

    That wasn't the other difference. When Dan had been away on leave—a drinking tour of German breweries and damen—there'd been a real bad car bomb attack. Dan's squad hadn't been hit, but a VW bus with its trunk filled with explosives had driven right up to a checkpoint manned by some MPs from California, detonating yards from three Humvees of napping soldiers. His squad was closest, and everyone heard the Medivac call over the radio—basically a lot of guys screaming over each other on the same frequency. The GIs that weren't instantly turned to sawdust by the explosive were knocked out by the blast and ignited; the guys said that every MP they pulled out had third-degree burns.

    Sully lived up to his legend that day, earning a Bronze Star with 'V' device. He charged into the molten vehicles and dragged out three guys, by then barely functioning torsos. He'd never gone into the grisly details with Dan, but Sully was clearly shaken by the sight of those charred appendages. “If I was one of those guys and knew that I had to live with stumps, I wouldn't want to be rescued,” Sully confided to Dan one night drinking. “One round in the temple, no more pain.” The memory of those words spooked him. When Sully was out barhopping, Dan started checking his room for live rounds.

III

    For the first few weeks at Drum, Dan settled into a routine of shadowing Sully by acting as his wingman. He could never keep up with his Irish friend's consumption of all things whiskey, but he could keep a respectable pace downing beers. After the first week, he'd almost weened Sully off the NCO Club, reminding him that there was a reason “Go Ugly Early” was written over the exit doorway of the mens' room. Although the club's proximity and drink prices couldn't be beat, Dan convinced him to go into Watertown with the lure of women who didn't weigh more than he could bench press. That's how they ended up becoming regulars at the most elegant dive in all of Watertown, New York: “Hopper's.”

    First off, the place had some history, for chrissakes, unlike the usual faux Cheers-clone bars with fake memorabilia and mass-produced sports photos on the walls. Hopper was at least 70 now, and unlike every other business owner within 50 miles of Fort Drum, he freely admitted that he'd never served in the military. He'd been born too late for WWII or Korea, and had been too lucky for Vietnam. He'd been recruited by the government in 1967 as an intelligence analyst due to his degree in Far East History, but since he'd written college papers that too candidly analyzed U.S. foreign policy toward China and Korea, the DoD felt he was a little too familiar with communism and blackballed him.

    Around twenty years ago, after losing his umpteenth job for being too smart for his bosses, Hopper had renovated basement of his corner rowhouse in the old part of Watertown. The house dated to somewhere in the colonial era, and there were stories that it had served as headquarters for one Revolutionary War general or another. Despite his unusual background, Hopper couldn't be pigeonholed as liberal or conservative, neither gung-ho military nor hippie pacifist—just really smart, and smart-ass. As a result, every weirdo, ne'er-do-well, and outcast naturally gravitated to his bar. Representatives of every night-owl community made the place home: cops, strippers, drug dealers, hospital workers, they all showed up around 10 each night and lingered as long as they could still drink, at least until 4 a.m. The cops never shut him down because Hopper made it a private club, so you had to pay a $20 membership fee the first time you came. Law enforcement seemed to appreciate that Hopper's concentrated the town's late-night drinkers into one spot, which made their job easier. Plus, few nights passed without at least a captain getting a taxi home.

    You'd get the occasional college professor or student—there were four decent colleges within 20 miles—but few had the taste for meeting the real, unvarnished versions of characters that they'd profess to love in a Bukowski story. Hopper's patrons could be ugly drunks, with a tendency to throw down at the slightest insult or kiss you at the first opening, but he screened these folks out skillfully. All soldiers loved a brawl, which is why at bars near military bases, fights break out like zits on a teenager. But Hopper's bouncers didn't try to break up such tussles; instead, they'd shoot both brawlers with tasers and laugh as they made them “ride the lightning.” These bouncers were selected as much for psychological skill as size: they could smell a bad attitude a mile away, and would deny them admission without explanation—at least one out of four who sought entrance were turned away. The result was a bar full of happy wiseasses who were more likely to break out in “Rocky Mountain High” than a donnybrook.

    The friendly vibe extended to the refined brand of female who flocked to Hopper's expatriate watering hole—just as male-on-male dominance rituals were quickly quashed via taser, male-on-female misbehavior was dealt with an equally firm hand. Hopper knew that a woman-free bar meant grim dudes sucking down $2.50 drafts, as well as an overall less fun atmosphere, so he made sure that everyone from a solo lass reading Sartre to a bachelorette party would have their personal space protected from unwelcome incursion—and that those seeking welcome incursions would have that decision respected as well. Hopper had taken his favorite line from Lonesome Dove, famously uttered by Tommy Lee Jones, and mounted it about the bar: “I hate rude behavior in a man. I won't tolerate it!” It was no empty boast.

    Dan and Sully had fallen in love with Hopper's on their first night back at Fort Drum. Even though statistically their chances of getting lucky seemed remote, due to the few women present that night, they quickly saw that what Hopper's lacked in quantity of women, it made up for in quality. And nothing confirmed the Darwinian nature of its female winnowing than spectacular representative of the gender that was Rita.

    The phrase “tall, dark and handsome” is generally used to describe men, but boy did it fit her: six-feet-plus in knee-high leather boots; dressed in a black linen workshirt, its long sleeves rolled tightly up to the elbow, which only heightened the sinew of her lean arms; faded but not tattered Levis (which is sadly the fashion now) that, while not exactly form-fitting, certainly didn't hide her alluring profile. Dan couldn't decide whether he liked the final piece of Rita's fashion puzzle because it was stylish or nerdy: black-and-white checkerboard cat-eye sunglasses that would have been appropriate on either a library or dominatrix. The overall effect was that Rita stood out like a Bentley at a tractor pull.

    The first evening they saw her, Sully made a beeline for the open bar stool next to Rita. Minutes later, he sat down next to Dan, his ego tucked between his legs. “What happened, Romeo?” Dan asked.

    “Well Brainy Smurf, I got two big problems: first, she is wicked hawt; second, she is wicked smaht.” Dan loved Sully's south Boston accent so much, he stopped ribbing his buddy over his pronunciation for fear he'd tone it down. “As you know, I only give a faaack about one of dose things.”

    Sully didn't do well with the intellectual types, so he focused on the sexy ones, as epitomized by his motto “if I'm getting shot down, it's going to be by the top ace.” One reason they got along so well was they were never interested in the same woman. Sully's approach was loud and laughing, while Dan did the whole silent, brooding thing—the lack of romantic competition between them reduced the chance of a fight between them by 90%.

    “Sully, there's no reason to give up on her solely based on intelligence—physical attraction can be as powerful as an intellectual or emotional connection,” Dan offered as token consolation. “Where's that legendary ginger sex appeal?”

    “That's what I kept telling her!” Sully lowered his head in resignation and shook it back and forth. “But she wasn't buyin' my brand of shit tonight.” His freckled face perked up and he broke out into a broad grin. “I bet she'd looove hearing you tawk about that philosophy and literature bullshit you are always goin' awn about, Brainy!”

    Sully was the only one who still called Dan “Brainy,” his first nickname at the unit—sometimes he abbreviated it to “BS.” When the platoon sergeant learned Dan had attended Tulane for two years before enlisting, he called him “Brainy” to mock him for not getting a direct commission at Officer Candidate School. The other privates figured that two years of college made Dan a genius, even though they had no idea where or what Tulane was—to them, Harvard, Tulane, and community college were equally unattainable and therefore worthy of awe. One of the mechanics actually asked him how much it cost, thinking that it was a vocational school named “Tool Lane.”

    Despite his friend's encouragement, he didn't immediately take his friend's place in the chair next to Rita. He wasn't in the mood for bar banter, consumed by worry over Sully's self-destructiveness and pondering his own long-term psychological prospects. Try as he might, Dan couldn't disconnect the emotions felt by his brain and the hormonal rumblings of his genitals. So he remained at his corner table, watching Sully get shot down again and again, nursing a glass of Guinness and Bass and half-watching the TV as his Orioles got pummeled by the despised Yankees. His sullen reverie was broken when Rita came over to him and, her bar knowledge showing, asked “Drinking black and tans, soldier boy?”

    Dan nodded yes and, a reflex from years spent haunting bars, asked what she was having. “I'll have the same, but hold the tan. Make mine monochromatic.”

    Dan gestured to Hopper to bring her a Guinness and him another round. The old man knew the proper, deliberate way to pour the heavy stout over a spoon so it wouldn't mix with the lighter Bass; it took him three minutes to bring the beers over, barely concealing a leer that said “if I was 40 years younger. . .” By then, Dan and Rita were already on to their third topic, the irony of people of Irish descent liking the drink, despite the brutal actions of the British paramilitary Black and Tans in Ireland that shared its name with the beverage.

    A few minutes into their conversation, Rita said, “I want to thank you for not making some dumb reference to either the Beatles song or the drink.” She confessed, “I hate stereotyping people based on a single comment, but a single 'lovely Rita' or 'I'll take you with salt' fatally ruins a person for me.”

    Dan smiled and pointed at her wrap-around sunglasses. “I did start humming 'I Wear My Sunglasses at Night,” but it sort of segued into 'Never Surrender' – I can never tell those two apart.” He bragged, “I was a charter member of the Corey Hart fan club.” Rita's blank stare confirmed that she hadn't caught his cultural reference to the Eighties two-hit-wonder, a look of bewilderment that Dan was familiar with.

    Rita defended her fashion statement: “I hate to carry a purse as much as losing a great pair of shades, so I've found that keeping them tucked in hair is both practical and alluring,” and she pushed the shades atop her head like a plastic 60s headband. She smirked, “Plus, it gives me that Jackie O look without having to fuck a dried up Greek billionaire.” Dan laughed at her historical reference, surprised that someone her age would know that JFK's widow married Aristotle Onassis, much less the First Lady's sartorial habits. Rita might not know cheese pop from the 1980s, but she knew history.

    “I skipped the chow hall this evening—it was meatloaf night.” Glancing at the file-card-sized menu, he said “I'm going to get a burger. You hungry?”

    “I'm always hungry. But if I ate every time I wanted to, I'd look like Hopper—mind if I steal a few bites of yours? Didn't Plato or Aristotle say something like 'hunger is the greatest spice'? I guess I'm trying to stay spicy.”

    Dan laughed, “again with the dead Greek guys. Shall I order some hummus and some Ouzo instead?”

    “It won't be the first time I've had that nasty licorice juice,” she answered. “But let's make it Sambuca—I prefer Roman realism over Greek idealism.”

    “You do seem rather pragmatic,” noted Dan. “Don't you ever just do something out of visceral impulse?” he asked, hoping she'd get his point.

    She shook her head from side to side. “I find lust to be an unsophisticated emotion. It's basically an adult version of a baby's tantrum or a teenager's desire to dry hump. I prefer to savor my cravings.” She looked him straight in the eyes. “Like any other fine indulgence, desire must be enjoyed slowly, relished, even toyed with . . . prolonged until it builds to maximum gratification. Lust is a chugging a beer; craving is sipping a glass of 20-year-old Macallan single malt—served neat.”

    The bartender brought two shotglasses filled to the rim with Sambuca. Rita reached over and took a piece of ice out of Dan's water glass. Rubbing it between her fingers, she held it over the shot glass until a few drops of water melted from it. She stirred the mixture with her pinky, and Dan watched as it transformed from clear liquor into a milky white solution. She slowed her stirring then stopped, placing her still-dripping finger between her ruby red lips. She slowly pulled it out, grabbed the shot, and downed the anise-flavored liquid as quickly as swatting a fly.

    Dan noticed that his breathing had slowed and his muscles were taut. Overcoming his momentary disorientation, he continued to make small talk for a few minutes, equal parts flirtation and audition. Each of them was making sure the other was up to the verbal thrust-and-parry they required, a prelude to more traditional thrusts and parries. Assured that he met her standard, she issued her verdict, “I've got to head out of here pretty soon, would you like to chaperone me to my apartment?” 

    Despite Dan's concern for his friend, the desire for Rita instantly pushed Sully's welfare from the forefront of his thoughts. Yet despite his dry spell and carnal pull, Dan's sense of duty bitch-slapped his libido as he told Rita, likely as astonished he was as, “I'd love to but can't. I'm keeping an eye on my friend over there who's going through a rough time.” He nodded toward Sully, who was engaged in a heated debate over the designated hitter rule. Dan realized that he was chaperoning the wrong person home tonight.

    Rita seemed more impressed than offended. “That's OK, I respect loyalty. Another time, then.” She got up from the chair, grabbed her black leather coat, and sauntered gracefully out of the bar as lithe as a ballerina exiting stage left after finishing her solo. Her movements reminded him a little of the way those 'ghosts' in Iraq moved without really moving, but Rita was much taller, elegant, and truth be told, more haunting.

Love, Death, and Other Quantum Entanglements.

The first section of my masters thesis project, "Love, Death, and Other Quantum Entanglements."

 

Prologue: Relativity

Li-Peng Jingwei– Nanking, China

(December 25, 1968-the day before Mao’s birthday)

Peng watched the group of children running around the courtyard, with the smallest boy waving his arms and moving slowly, growling every now and then, pretending to be a monster chasing the others for his meal. It was an odd way to play the game, he thought, not very likely that a lumbering creature would ever catch any of the children who taunted him. A girl silently got behind the little boy and tapped him on his back, and he whirled, making a guttural noise that caused her to squeal in delight as she receded. His attention diverted by the rear attack, a larger boy ran up and slapped the monster on his knee, with the same result: the boy turned and growled, and the big boy screamed in mock horror and fled. This pattern repeated itself for half an hour, with the small boy never catching a single tormenting child, as they dive-bombed him like a band of bluejays. Peng wondered why the boy didn’t break character and sprint to tag another child, so he would win and be freed from playing such a powerless, hobbled creature.

Finally, the large boy timed one of his attacks poorly, so that just when he went to slap the monster’s shoulder, he was already turning around, and the boy tripped over his own feet and went down after only one step. The monster staggered over him, inexorably moving what must have been imaginary claws toward the cowering boy, broad grins on their faces as each played their role in ending the sport. It was the perfect game for the small boy: by playing the sun in that heliocentric system, he was the focus of the others’ attentions, even if it was their fear and aggression. Maybe the boy liked the touching and running away, the children testing speed against fear, little toreadors pricking a make-believe bull, a ritual test of courage, but perhaps also one of community. Peng realized that the same game was being played throughout China every day, packs of citizens alternately joining and betraying each other, trying to survive the purges that could reduce the powerful to a pariah with a few words from the wrong person. His caution in all things, which his wife Wen chafed under and mocked, had kept them safe these last years. If they could maintain that vigilance for three more days, it would be worth all the sacrifice and cowering, and they would be free of this cauldron of ignorance about to boil over.

Peng was pleased to see that none of the children played in the far back corner of the courtyard, which had grown thick with weeds, now tilting brown tassels sucked dry and colorless by the weak winter sun, a melancholy collage of dead grass, gray rock, mud and shadow. He inhaled deeply, savoring that crisp scent of charred wood that made you think someone was burning leaves nearby, but he knew was the scent of gradual decomposition. Peng’s grandfather had taught him how to build a tight layer of rotting leaves on the roof and pile more against the walls of his ancient hut each fall, the extra heat of decay critical in a region where wood was scarce. For his grandfather, it was a rural tradition, but his curious grandson would learn the formula for the chemical reaction in his first-year chemistry class. When Peng proudly explained the process to the old man, scrawling the equation on the dirt floor, his grandfather laughed and exclaimed “so now you are a sorcerer!” The fading daylight of fall and winter, along with the attendant smells of the seasons, made him nostalgic, another forbidden emotion in a nation obsessed with great leaps forward.

The shady corner of the courtyard had been his favorite spot as a young boy—it practically exploded with flowers, tiered in a series of miniature terraces, so the lilies towered over the marigolds, which oversaw the chrysanthemums, all of them below a row of sunflowers. Back then, a small shrine sat in the corner with a plump Buddha atop a cement pedestal, the perfect symbol of his family’s satisfaction and contentment in their lavish home. It had been destroyed years ago—Buddhism was a seductive opiate that dulled the masses to injustice. Even the concrete pedestal was gone, most likely crushed into gravel for use in a new “people’s road” or seized to decorate the garden of a party official, an amusing reminder of the misguided piety of the masses.

The lack of activity in that corner meant that he could dig there without interruption, but his very presence there would also look more out of place, and therefore suspicious. In this China, any deviation from the norm was assumed to be a condemnation of egalitarianism, and by extension, the proletariat. Uniformity was patriotic, and anything that set one apart was an endorsement of capitalist exceptionalism, and therefore reactionary and counter-revolutionary, the worst possible crime. Peng knew that neither he nor Wen could survive the re-education camps, especially with her pregnant; the only lessons taught there were how to starve and endure torture. He could not afford to draw attention to himself without having an airtight explanation for his actions.

Before the revolution, this apartment complex of open-air rooms had been his family’s home. Peng had taken great precautions against this being discovered, using his second name instead of the traditional first. He did not return to this neighborhood until last year, avoiding anyone who might recognize remnants of a young boy’s smile in the young man’s grimace. He changed his hair dramatically by shaving it almost to the scalp. He had even taken a knife and carved from the top of his right cheekbone down to the cleft of his chin—sometimes he had nightmares where he relived the act, the warm trickle of blood diagonally down his face more jarring than the cut of the knife. He explained the scar in a dramatic story where he was slashed by a wealthy shopkeeper—even Peng’s lies were dictated by party doctrine.

It took him three years of slow maneuvers to return here—favors, bureaucratic ploys, trading black market goods, even outright bribes. Finally, he was back at the house where he’d been born, and which held his and Wen’s only means of freedom. Peng’s father had been the official printer for the provincial governor, so he would throw extravagant parties for the ministers and department heads who paid him so well for his services, and in turn who he bribed generously. They jokingly called him “The Paper Wizard” because of his ability to place words and images onto paper better and more cheaply than anyone else. Peng could almost see his mother in a long silk gown, filling champagne flutes as she flitted around the courtyard, tiled in marble imported from Italy. Those tiles had been “repatriated by the proletariat,” more than a decade ago, and that should have been a sign to his parents.

But his parents’ stubbornness was as unyielding as the heavy silk they continued to wear, and when they were finally arrested and sent away for re-education, his last sight of his mother was in a tattered tunic that was so covered in grime that he almost didn’t recognize it as her sleeping gown—they must have taken them at night.

Peng was lucky not to join them in jail, but he was away at university, or at least the small section of the school that continued to function despite the unrest and daily denunciations. The engineers at the school had convinced the mobs of young revolutionaries that they were not intellectuals, but rather simple workers, whose work was critical to keeping the city’s function. This perceived status kept them largely immune to harassment, so long as the water and electricity flowed.

He met Wen when she worked as a receptionist in the office next to the physics lab. Ordinarily, a science lab would be an oasis for a pretty girl who wanted to be left alone to read, the other denizens being socially awkward scientists immersed in their work. Peng was bold by his colleagues’ standards, having the temerity to chat with the pensive beauty and even ask her to tea. Not out for a real “date,” for dating was an outdated and decadent Western practice, but a meeting to discuss their roles in the ongoing revolution. Peng knew he’d found a kindred soul when in her absence he opened one of the treatises on communist doctrine she was always poring over, and discovered poems by Du Fu and Li Bo slipped between its pages.

They had gone for tea at one of the few small cafes still open in the city, but a few days later, he came down with an illness that sent him to the hospital—within hours, he was barely conscious. The doctor suspected one of the diseases that swept through Nanking during that time of civic instability, so Peng sat in quarantine for a week. By the time his fever broke and ended his delirium, he awoke to a new one: the university was burning, his parents had been arrested, and their house seized and made into group housing. Peng found himself a highly educated, twenty-six-year-old son of class traitors. It was a death sentence worse than cholera or influenza.

His reverie of his parents was broken as their coal-black cat brushed against his shoulder. Wen had named her Ash, but he hated naming animals, as it suggested a sentimentality that was inappropriate during such difficult times. Pets were disfavored as an extravagance under the best conditions and on the same level of rats in the worst—how can one justify feeding scraps to animals when people go hungry? Cats and dogs were just another tapped-out food source in times of starvation, like the brutal Japanese occupation during World War II or the famines that swept through rural areas whose crops failed. Luckily, Ash had earned her keep: she was an excellent predator of vermin that could steal a day’s bread in an instant. The children had come to love Ash, despite an aloofness that was typical of the species, and even Wen’s crankiest neighbors were glad to have her patrol the grounds; their building might have been one of the only rat-free sites in the city. She’d become the building’s unofficial mascot, with some people stopping by just to see Ash. Peng tried not to ponder the insanity of a society where a cat had become more valued than a man with a PhD in plasma physics.

Ash purred as he stroked under her chin, and Peng calmed as much as she did. He concentrated on how he could dig in that corner without arousing attention. He had just three more days to act, and tomorrow would be hectic, with all the celebrations and noise of the Chairman’s birthday—that might provide him some cover. The rhythm of his strokes made Ash’s purring louder, until Peng froze, realizing that he literally held the answer to their problems in his hands.

 

*   *   *   *   *

Cecile Claire Sampson – Nashville, Tennessee

(November 11, 1981-Veterans Day)

 

    She was sulking, again. Kevin hoped her pouting had been ignited by another case of someone telling her she couldn’t do something, his daughter’s ego being triggered by yet another barrier that made no sense to her, or him, for that matter. But Cecile was almost thirteen, so he feared that this might be the day that his daughter’s attention finally turned to boys, and his job as a single father would become immeasurably more miserable. He thought that he’d been doing a good job as a dad since Dolores died four years ago, but he dreaded the advent of adolescence, where a hug and unflagging support was not enough to deal with the problems of cascading hormones, changing bodies, and peer pressure.

Cecile was as much a late bloomer physically as she was an early one intellectually, the two combined to make it especially hard to fit in at school. It was fortunate that he and Dolores had passed their over-six-foot height on to her; she was always the tallest kid in her classes, even with puberty not having started yet. Cecile’s athleticism and confrontational nature meant that the taunts never got physical, but words could be more invidious than a punch, and she hadn’t learned how to dodge their sting; hell, neither had he.

Kevin was less combative than his energetic daughter, and over the years learned to avoid circles where he was unwelcome before they could ostracize him. He gradually found people he liked spending time with and felt the same of him, but he didn’t really hit his stride until college. High school wasn’t an agony, but he’d survived primarily by keeping his head down as much as possible, knowing that college meant he could recreate himself any way he wanted. Somewhere in the attic was the cardboard box of yearbooks, school pictures, photo albums, and science fair trophies that he packed up the morning after graduation. He never opened it since.

    Hearing drawers being slammed open and shut, Kevin cautiously drew open the door. Her bedroom was a study in contrasts, a menagerie of stuffed animals sailing a sea of pink bedding and pillows, surrounded by posters of Bob Gibson, Dr. J, Heart, and Marie Curie, books and soccer cleats littering the floor. “What’s wrong, sweetie?”

    His lanky whirlwind of a daughter stomped around the room. “My teacher told me that I couldn’t be an army general. He said that I could stay home and take care of babies while the men got to be soldiers!” Cecile sat on the bed and hurriedly tied her bright purple sneakers.

    “I didn’t know that you wanted to be a soldier, honey.” Kevin was used to her changing what she wanted to be when she grew up, but the military was a new one. “It’s a terrible job and you’d be away from home a lot, I hope you really don’t want to be in the army. I thought you wanted to be an airline pilot.” Cecile talked his ear off about flying after they flew on a jet to Disneyland last summer.

    “I don’t know if I want to be in the army, not for sure, but if I decide later to, why can’t I? And why do I have to take care of babies? That’s boring.” Cecile drooped her head to her chest and pretended to snore loudly.

    He had been down this road before. “Honey, whatever you want to do, I will be there to back you up. Say the word and I’ll go down to that school and yell at your teacher until his ears burn off.” She stopped pretending to sleep and cracked a smile at him.

    “That’s okay, don’t bother. I just hate how so much of school is telling you what to do and think. Isn’t school supposed to be where we learn lots of information so we can pursue our dreams?” she asked.

    “It sure is. If you want to be a general, or a pilot, that’s what you’ll be,” he said. “You know I will always support you.”

Cecile perked up. “I don’t want to be either of those things. I want to be an artist, probably a painter, or if not, perhaps a scientist. Maybe even a chemist, like you.”

Kevin laughed at her unintentional humor. “Or you can be all three, like me, and become a chemist at a paint factory.”

Cecile wrinkled her nose. “Daddy, you know I love you, but I don’t want to do that. It sounds even more boring than having babies.”

He was stung by how easily his daughter could see how unfulfilled he was at work, but having been offered an opportunity to avoid the entire topic of having babies, Kevin grabbed it. “You’re right, my job is pretty boring, but I get lots of time with you. I never have emergencies that make me stay late at work, and we have every weekend off to go and do fun stuff.” Once the words left his mouth, Kevin realized that he had summed up the years since his wife’s death perfectly: he had traded his ambition and any prospect of professional fulfillment for time with his daughter. “Bring your baseball glove, we can go to the fields for some batting practice before it gets dark. Then we can go try that new restaurant—get this, it’s Mexican food. We’ve never had that before.”

Cecile grabbed her ball cap and glove and ran downstairs ahead of him. “What on earth do they eat in Mexico, daddy?”

He was proud of this eagerness. Dolores had resisted Cecile’s early pickiness over food, even as a baby, arguing that a child who wasn’t open to new food wouldn’t be open to new ideas either. “I don’t know exactly, but I hear it’s spicy.”

Cecile warned him, “I’ll try it, but if it’s gross, I can get a hamburger, right?” This was their standard deal, but one that he rarely had to honor.

“Of course.” As they headed to the car, Kevin worried about how aware she was that he hated his work. Perhaps as much as he was helping her by spending time with her after her mother’s death, he was also hurting her by not being a better example, professionally.

When he’d left the PhD program at Vanderbilt and taken the position at the factory in quality control three years ago, his colleagues tried to talk him out of it. Gently, of course, since nobody wants to argue with a grieving father. His mentor even offered Kevin a “secret leave of absence” where he’d keep paying him as long as he kept working in the lab—no classes to teach, no pressure to publish, just continue his research. But there was no joy in the work anymore. How could he feel any accomplishment when he couldn’t come home and tell Dolores about it? How he had figured out a molecule’s structure or managed to create another precursor molecule that brought them one step closer to building a complex protein? For all the praise he got from his colleagues and professors about being a golden boy, a scientific genius, what did it matter that he was so skillful at synthesizing chemicals, when he couldn’t make one to kill the cancer that slowly gnawed Dolores into oblivion?

 

*   *   *   *   *

 

Theodore Kent Riggins – Taos, New Mexico

(October 10, 1977-Columbus Day)

 

Margot held his hand as they walked, at almost a shuffle, barely lifting their feet so any surprise obstacle—a prairie dog hole or the thick roots of a desert sage bush—wouldn’t make them stumble. What was the point of strolling through the desert at midnight if you spend all your time looking at the ground? She’d brought a blanket for when they found the perfect spot, behind some boulder of rock face that would block the residual light from the town and highway. The crags in the distance looked about mile away, meaning that it was at least two. In no hurry, she just enjoyed the gentle sway of her legs, the whisper of their feet shushing away sand, it was so nice to walk slowly, without urgency or purpose, instead of rushing to clear dishes and top off coffees. The best part was the eager clenching of his hand around her fingers. Better cherish these moments, she thought, he won’t be this small or affectionate forever.

She glanced down at her son, his neck locked in intense concentration, oblivious to where he walked. He was entirely dependent on her to steer him about the occasional rock or rodent hole or scrub bush, as his eyes and head swept like a World War II searchlight, scanning the array of stars sprawling for incoming meteors or comets. Margot felt sorry for city folks who only knew of the Milky Way as a candy bar. Out here, it was a real thing, a speckled aurora that filled the sky like the gleaming exhaust from Apollo’s blazing chariot. Even after living in New Mexico for months, and having taken dozens of walks like this, the stars always astonished her, the grandeur and complexity of the heavens, each miniscule speck of light and raging furnace billions of miles distant; perhaps some alien parent on a distant world was walking with their child, looking a thousand light-years back at them and wondering if they were the only intelligent life that this vast universe had spawned.

She viewed Teddie as a similar miracle, if not proof of a loving god, at least evidence of an imaginative one. Her son made her laugh every day, by something he’d ask, or the face of pure wonder when he saw something for the first time, or just the way he would sleep sometimes, every muscle in his face relaxed, as innocent and calm as a Michelangelo pietá. He was so smart, her seven-year-old, that Margot started reading books simply to be able to keep pace with his questions, a barrage that never stopped and that she never wanted to stop. His curiosity wasn’t that “but why, mommy?” torture she’d seen some kids inflict upon their parents, but so sincere and insightful.

This afternoon, she’d pored over a book of constellations so she could trace out the outlines of the imaginary figures for Teddie. Exposed now to the majesty of the heavens, undiluted by obscuring lights, it was impossible to separate the bright stars that the Greeks and Romans had connected to form their religious pantheon. She was only certain of the Great Bear and its inverted doppelganger, the Big Dipper, along with the North Star, Polaris, the central point around which the entire sky rotated.

They were far enough away that the lingering diesel and rubber aroma of the highway had dissipated, replaced with a moist, almost pine scent. There were no trees for miles, only a sporadic cactus maybe a few feet tall, and the gray-green scrub bush that never reached above knee-level, but whose meandering branches sprawled sideways, collecting the blown sand into mini-dunes like outstretched arms hugging the earth. She found a nice flat area flanked by this scrub, down a gentle slope, so the town’s residual light was hidden behind the horizon. Once their eyes adjusted, a rich band of stars slathered overheard, so bright their light painted the ground like a streetlight.

She laid out their bedsheet with a sharp snap of her wrists, sending a rippling wave down the length of its tattered cotton. She found four fist-sized rocks to anchor the corners, and they lay on their backs to enjoy the light show. “That’s Orion,” Margot said, tracing with her finger the imaginary outline of a triumphant hunter holding pelts aloft. “That stretch of stars is his belt, and the bright one is called Betelgeuse, although it’s spelled different and pronounced ‘beetle juice.’” She tried to help Teddie with his pronunciations because he encountered so many foreign words in his above-grade-level reading that he often mispronounced them. It was so unfair—how is a seven-year-old supposed to know that the P is silent in “pseudonym” or that the “g is spoken in “agnostic” but silent in “gnostic”? It was hard enough for him being smaller than his classmates, due to him skipping first and fourth grade, without handing the bullies ammunition to mock him.

“I read that Betelgeuse is a red giant star, which is what our Sun is going to become in millions of years when it expands,” and Teddie threw his hands apart to demonstrate an explosion. “It’s also more than sixty light years away—that means that the light that we are seeing right now is actually sixty years old.”

“So if there was a mom and her son sitting on a planet near Betelgeuse looking at us, they’d see whatever was happening in 1917 down here?” she asked.

“Yep. I guess if they had super-vision, they could see grandma and grandpa, doing whatever they were doing back then.” The second the words left her mouth, she regretted them, and braced herself for the inevitable questions.

Without turning her head, she could feel Teddie’s face turning towards her as he asked, “How come we don’t see grandma and grandpa anymore?” The way his typically matter-of-fact voice trailed off made clear he wasn’t happy with the situation.

“Well, those were your daddy’s parents, and when he and I went our separate ways, so did they,” she explained. “I’m really sorry about that, but there was nothing that I could do.” She loved Robert’s parents, whose kindness meant so much to her when they were first married and she was all alone. But that same soft-heartedness meant that they’d never be able to keep her present location a secret from their son, whose violence and drinking confused them, as they had never indulged in either. Robert had made clear that Teddie was his son, even calling their boy “my property,” and she had no doubt that he’d treat him just as poorly as the parade of abandoned cars and unrepaired boats that littered his driveways over the years. The only things Robert was ever able to complete was to finish a bottle and a war, and when each one ended, he went looking for another. She sometimes wondered what he has doing now that Vietnam was long gone. But she was never curious enough to make any inquiries, because that’s how lost people get found.

“I sure miss them.” Although Teddie was only four when they took off, she was sure that his near-perfect memory contained many detailed recollections of the couple.

“Maybe one day I can try to find them again. Later, much later.” She regretted saying this too, because kids don’t understand that people throw around empty words as polite reassurances, saying whatever is convenient to get through to the next day. She knew that until she was certain Robert was dead or Teddie was eighteen, she could never risk looking for his grandparents; he’d interpret it as a long-broken promise to find grandpa and grandma. She had to start talking to Teddie like he was a teenager instead of a kid, not just in terms of vocabulary.

She pointed toward the handle of the Big Dipper. “Do you see that fuzzy star in the bend of the handle? That’s called Mizar. Do you know why it’s so special?” She could feel the sheet tug as he nodded his head from side to side. “It’s actually two stars, so close together that they look like one.”

“You mean like a binary star, where they rotate around a central point between them?” Teddie had definitely been reading the library’s astronomy books. “They say that most of the stars are in groups of two or more, but most of their companions are much smaller or less bright so we can never see them.”

“No, Mizar is different. The two stars are millions of miles apart, not in the same system at all. They are so lined up in a straight line, when we look at them, they just look like they’re right next to each other.” She handed him the small pair of binoculars. “This will help.”

Teddie sighed, “I can see them now. It’s just a trick of perspective.”

Hoping to stave off any other uncomfortable questions, she decided to ask some before he could. “So how was school today, hun? Learn anything interesting?” Margot had a variation of this conversation with her son every evening, and the simplest inquiry usually led to her son talking non-stop for an hour.

“It was Columbus Day, so we learned how he sailed in the Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria to the New World. I don’t get why they say that he discovered America, as if all of this wasn’t here until he found it. We learned about the Pueblo Indians last week, and they told us how they’ve been in this part of New Mexico at least nine thousand years—Columbus got here barely five hundred years ago.” He laughed, and said, “They must really think us kids are stupid, mama.”

    “I don’t think it’s that, Teddie,” she replied soothingly. “And you’re right that America was here whether or not Columbus ever found it. But when I was in school, they told us that Columbus was a hero because he had the courage to sail over here when everyone thought that the world was flat and you would die if you sailed over the edge.”

    Teddie burst out laughing like he was being tickled. “That’s silly, mama! The world isn’t flat, it’s round!”    

    “We know that now, but people weren’t as smart as we are today.” She swept her hand upward. “Back then, they didn’t even know that every star was a burning sun like our own, just very, very far away. And they didn’t know the earth is round either.”

    “But that’s crazy, mama. Anyone can see that the world is round.” Teddie’s breathing got louder, and she realized that the walk was much harder on his short legs, especially while talking. She saw a sizeable outcropping a dozen yards away and headed toward it.

“Sweetheart, I’m getting tired. Do you mind if we rest here for a bit?,” she asked, hoping he’d not try to be too brave and say no.

Gasping, the boy said “Okay mama, if that’s what you want, I’ll stop for a little.”

Margot was curious. “Okay, my little genius, why is it so terribly obvious that the world is round?”

This was another one of those little questions that opened wide Teddie’s verbal floodgates. He told her that even though we know the moon spins, it does so in such perfect harmony with the earth that the same side always faces us, and that there was a dark side of the moon that nobody had ever seen. He explained that as the moon went through its phases, the fact that the shadows on it were curved could only happen if the sun’s light was shining on a round object, and a crescent moon showed this best. If the moon was flat, there would always be straight lines as the sunlight shifted as the moon travelled around the earth, so it would look like a door slowly closing.

His voice rising in excitement, Teddie concluded that if the moon was round, than surely the earth was too, regardless of which revolved around the other. “And do you know the best way to see that the earth is round?” Transfixed, she nodded no. “An eclipse!” he shouted, and started giggling and stomping his feet. “You can see the round shadow of the earth as it passes over the moon. It’s like someone is shining a flashlight on it, just to prove to everyone down here that it’s round.”

Wanting to encourage a sense of the divine along with his book-smarts, Margot asked “So Einstein, are you saying that God invented eclipses to show us the world is round?”

Teddie laughed, then matter-of-factly replied, “No, silly. There’s no such thing as God.”

 

*   *   *   *   *

 

Suzanne Deborah Johnson– Annapolis, Maryland

(September 9, 1979)

 

Debbie Johnson sat in the bleachers staring intently ahead, primed to explode. Unlike the other parents, she wasn’t waiting for an unfavorable call by a referee or to chew out the coach for not giving their kid enough playing time. She was watching the sweeper, who on two previous plays had tried to trip Suzie when the ball was on the other side of the field. She had no problem with aggressive and physical play, absolutely not—she was notorious for throwing elbows on the Academy basketball courts. But cheap shots were a different matter entirely. Her daughter was more than able to defend herself, but not an attack that she couldn’t see coming.

“Keep your eyes open, ref, they’re mugging her out there,” she shouted through cupped hands. “Card him for that crap.”

A chubby man in a windbreaker in the visiting team’s colors turned and said loudly, pretending not to direct it towards her, “Call it both ways, no special treatment for pussies.”

Debbie stared at him, trying to let her anger subside. It wasn’t working. “Did you just call my daughter a pussy?”

The guy tried to be coy. “I wasn’t directing at anyone in particular.” He turned away from her, then changed his mind, apparently having thought up what he deemed a clever comeback. “But if I did, I don’t see why either one of you would be upset, seeing as you get to see a pussy every day.” Apparently assuming that she was as dense as he was, he pointed at his crotch for emphasis.

“Look, Porky, I know you’re cranky from being away from Bugs and your other cartoon pals, but don’t take it out on my kid,” she said. “Especially when they’re down by three goals . . . to a team with a girl on it.” She pointed to the scoreboard.

“Look lady, all I’m saying is, if your kid wants to play a man’s sport, she needs to learn to take it like a man. Unless she’s a lezbo, of course.” As he slid down the metal bench toward her, his condescending look morphed into a leer. “Speaking of taking it like a man, I could give it to you real good.” His hand reached over towards her lap.

The second his hand touched between her legs, she thought she’d just snap the thumb back until it broke, but four rows up in the bleachers was not an ideal place for a wrestling match. So with a sudden thrust, she drove her middle three fingers deep into the soft recess of his Adam’s apple. With the heel of her other hand, Debbie drove his chin straight upward, snapping his jaw shut on his tongue.

“You futhing bith!” he screamed. By now, there was enough distance between them that she could jam her heel into his solar plexus, leaving him gasping for breath. A trickle of blood leaked out from each side of his mouth. Looking for support from the other people in the stands, he grunted weakly “awnt you goin to hep me?” Instead, they pretended not to hear him and stared silently and more intently at their kids on the field.

“No, they aren’t going to do a damn thing, any more than they were going to do anything to help me,” she said. “They’re as pathetic as you are.” Debbie got up and started toward the goal where Suzie was nearest.

Having caught his breath enough, the man grunted “Ahm gonna call the copth! Ahm gonna sue you!”

She couldn’t resist. Debbie walked back to the bleachers, the man’s jacket now spotted with a few red droplets, and said “No need, I’m already here.” She leaned in and whispered, “and be sure to tell them that Sergeant Johnson, Badge # 622, just kicked your sorry ass.” She handed him a small towel that she had brought for Suzie and said, “Wipe your mouth off before you ruin someone else’s clothes. Unless you want me to go get my handcuffs, shut your mouth, watch the game, and never touch a woman like that again.”

 

*   *   *   *   *

Cecile Claire Sampson – Nashville, Tennessee

(April 11, 1984)

 

Kevin was trying to stay awake as he ran monthly diagnostics on the gas chromatographs. Insert a known sample, test it three times, calibrate to the mean, and do it for another known sample. Lather, rinse, repeat. Then he got a call from the main office telling him that he needed to go to the high school, immediately.

As he ran to his car in the plant parking lot, he saw a dozen other employees racing to their vehicles, and recognized several of them as having children at the same school. As a member of upper management, his parking spot was near the main entrance, so he got to his Impala and out the gate before anyone else, and ended up leading a rag-tag procession of cars speeding to the school. A half mile away, he could see blue and red lights flashing, with two fire trucks and a couple of police cars clustered together.

The police had placed traffic cones and yellow tape to block entry to the parking lot, so he parked on the shoulder and ran to the first officer he spotted. “What’s going on here?”

The officer, barely out of his teens himself, with a crew-cut that made him look even younger, was nonetheless calm and imposing. “Calm down, sir, and stay behind the barrier.” Seeing the panic in Kevin’s eyes, he added “It’s not as bad as it looks.”

What it looked like was there’d been a fire or similar emergency, and school officials were checking names before letting them leave. There were two large crowds of children about a hundred yards away. One group was sitting on the ground, and every few seconds one got up and ran or walked over to the parking lot to meet their parents.

The other group of kids was father away, and they seemed to be drawing all the firefighter and police interest. It looked like some of the kids were being sprayed down, not with the big firehoses, but small ones hooked to the school water. The odd thing was there seemed to be a dense gray cloud floating over that group. It was moving, hovering from side to side, sometimes dipping down into the crowd of children, which made some of them duck or jump to the ground. It reminded Kevin, of all things, of diagrams he’d seen of electron or molecular orbitals in his chemistry texts, statistical representations of the movements of electrons oscillating between hundreds of positions at near the speed of light. He knew it wasn’t that, but the way that the cloud seemed to continually ebb and flow, moving in conjunction with the children nearby, there was some connection between it and the kids. Whatever it was, it had scared the hell out of everyone, since the few kids being released from the cloud group, soaked to the skin from the hoses, were bawling their eyes out and looked terrified.

He was transfixed at the almost harmonic movement of the cloud when he heard Cecile’s voice call out, “Dad!”

He whirled and saw that she was dry, so she must not have been exposed to whatever toxin the hosed group was having washed off their body. “What the hell is going on here?”

Cecile hugged him tight, and she didn’t say another word until they were inside of the Impala. “Daddy, if I did something really stupid, will you promise me you won’t get mad?”

Nobody in the history of parenting had ever heard those words and not gotten angry. “Cici, I can’t make that promise, but I’ll stay as calm as I can and try to help you. What exactly did you do?”

“It was just supposed to be a prank, a little joke, Daddy. I didn’t mean to cause all this. I just wanted to get a little revenge on Mr. Gregson.”

Kevin was losing patience. “What. Did. You. Do.”

“You know how I was working on a chemistry project for the science fair, right? I stayed after school a few times to test the properties of different things in the human body.”

“Right, right, testing the heat content of fats, cholesterol, different types of sugars, things like that. You were supposed to finish up this week.”

Cecile’s voice became a whisper. “I made something slightly different. A pheromone. For Gypsy moths.”

Kevin was familiar with pheromones, the powerful sex-attracting chemicals used by many species of animals, especially insects, to find a ready mate. He knew that they were complicated molecules, not something easily made at a university-grade lab. He knew that Gypsy moths were a dangerous pest, one that infested trees, like a boll weevil that ate wood. If she somehow caused these damaging moths to swarm in their town, she could be in real trouble. “Get in the car right now, we have to leave.”

His daughter started to hyperventilate. “Am I going to go to jail?”

Glancing about to make sure no police officer was looking to stop them, they drove away, lost amid the caravan of parents leaving after being reunited with their children. “Cecile, I need you to tell me everything. After that, I need you to never, ever, ever tell anyone else about this.”

Once she was away from the school, she broke down. She saw a news story on TV about a Park Ranger who had accidentally been exposed to Gypsy moth pheromone—the government uses it as a lure in its eradication program—and a swarm of them followed the Ranger for six months. The segment was meant to be funny, as it showed the Ranger going about his duties in the forest with dozens of little moths fluttering wherever he went. Cecile figured she could make a little bit of the pheromone, get some of it on some boys as a prank, and that would be it. “Gypsy moths don’t live in Tennessee, but I knew some of the boys were going on Easter break in the northeast, where they’re common. I didn’t think it’d be the worst thing in the world to have bugs all around them for a few days—that’s how they make us girls feel most of the time.”

When they got home, Kevin did some more research about the substance used in his daughter’s prank. Gypsy moth antennae are so sensitive that a few molecules of the pheromone can be detected from more than a mile away, so a mere drop can make someone a bug magnet. The common name for the pheromone is disparlure, which means “destroyer,”, and it contains an internal ether segment, which is incredibly difficult to form. Instead of oxygen bonding in the middle of a chain of carbon atoms, as is the case for 90% of  ether compounds, the oxygen bonds at a sharp bend of a long strand of carbon atoms, with the ‘O’ forming a rigid elbow that locks the bend into place. This version of the molecule might make up 2-3% of a reaction product, so one could keep mixing the chains and painstakingly extract these trace amounts, but it would take forever, maybe producing one talcum-powder-sized crystal from each batch.

He called Cecile down from her room, where she had barricaded herself since getting home. “Have you told me everything about this? Some stuff doesn’t add up. How did you make the pheromone?”

Despite her fear of getting in trouble, she got excited as she explained her method. She knew that the school didn’t have the organic compounds or expensive catalysts to build such a large compound, so she figured she could break down more complex fats and use their pieces. Once she looked up the structure of cholesterol after she found a big jar of the crystalline form in the school’s chem supply closet, she knew she could bend and break it into disparlure. “It took me five tries to figure it out, but I tested its melting point and optical properties and knew it was the right pheromone.” Kevin was a little proud that his analytical gifts had been passed down with his height.

Somehow Cecile had broken the much larger and more complex cholesterol molecule into pieces and figured out a way to make the biggest piece remaining turn into disparlure. It was the equivalent of smashing an eighteen-wheeler in order to construct a bunch of Ford Pintos. “So how did you separate and purify it? I know your school doesn’t have the equipment for that.”

She seemed a little miffed and said, “Yeah, I knew that there was a lot of other stuff mixed in each batch that I couldn’t get out. So on later batches, I didn’t distill it as much out of fear of missing some of the stuff I wanted. I didn’t think those small amounts would make much difference in the mix, and it was easier for me to collect almost an ounce.”

Now Kevin understood why her compound had drawn insects when Gypsy moths were hundreds of miles away. Other insect species must have had pheromones that were chemically similar, as a result of a similar evolution or a common ancestor. The various permutations of the disparlure had a weakened effect on other insects, so instead of attacking or sticking to the kids clothes, they were generally drawn to the area. It must have been terrifying to the children, as more and more lovesick bugs began to swarm around them, ignoring their swats and following them everywhere they went. As far as persistence and libido, the most hormone-charged teen had nothing on an insect so focused on passing on their genes that they were willing to mate and immediately die.

He asked, “I still don’t understand how it got on so many kids.’ He looked Cecile angrily in the eye. “Who were you really trying to prank?”

She turned rose and admitted, “Mr. Gregson. He a few months ago mentioned in class that he was going to Boston over Easter break. I figured he’d go up there, a few moths would follow him around, but it’d be all over with when he came back here.”

“The perfect crime,” he said. Kevin smirked at his daughter’s cleverness. “But why him? I thought he was one of your better teachers.”

“Don’t you remember? He was the one that told me I couldn’t join the military because I had to stay home.” Her jaw locked and she was getting angry just remembering it. “Mr. Gregson just kept making jokes about girls having to make babies. I asked him a bunch of times to stop, that it was mean to me and the other girls, but he wouldn’t—he made them even more. He told me that it was only a joke and that I needed a get better sense of humor.”

Kevin tried to conceal his sympathy for his daughter. “I guess this was a chance to see if he has a sense of humor.”

Cecile explained, “There’s a small men’s bathroom near his classroom that I’ve seen him go into. He’s kind of a neat freak, always washing his hands, so one day after school, I put a few drops of the pheromone into the liquid soap dispenser. I knew it would take a few days to work its way down, and it would take only a teeny amount to do the trick.”

“Didn’t you realize that other people would use that bathroom too?” he asked.

“Daddy, the boys at my school are so gross, I never dreamed that they actually washed their hands after they pee. A lot of them come out of the bathroom and tell the girls that they peed on their hands. Then they chase us on the playground trying to touch us.”

Kevin finally laughed. “Well, you managed to punish exactly the boys who did wash their hands, so you aren’t quite the evil genius supervillain you thought. Though I have to admit, making them the object of the insects’ affections is a good form of poetic justice.” He was more concerned with what she did to a teacher, so his voice grew stern. “Cecile, you can’t do this sort of thing to every person who makes you angry. Mr. Gregson may be a jerk, but you can’t take revenge against a teacher like this. Someone could have been seriously hurt, especially another student.”

She looked at him pleadingly. “Daddy, he thought it was funny.” She let her words sink in. “Mr. Gregson thought telling me and all the other girls, day after day, that we couldn’t have dreams was something to joke about, to make fun of.” She was so angry, her voice was wavering, and she began to cry. He pulled her against him and held her through the sobs, torn between his need to punish her for her actions and his understanding that somebody had already been hurt.

 

*   *   *   *   *

 

Li-Peng Jingwei– Nanking, China

(December 26, 1968-Chairman Mao’s birthday)

 

    He carefully dripped the wax into the cracks and seams in the wooden box, taking time to ensure that they filled completely, Peng couldn’t afford even the smallest hole. Wen was asleep, exhausted from both her job at the Agricultural Institute and carrying a baby that had finally started to push her flat stomach outward. It took him at least an hour to melt wax into every seam inside the box, and when he was finished, he did the same on the outside, just to be safe. He was pleased by his work, although the lid had to remain unsealed for now. He had at most another two hours to finish his work, before the first rays of dawn came across the river and into the open side of the courtyard. He also expected many of his fellow residents to awaken early, to prepare for the celebration and parades; they shouldn’t start the raucous banging of pots and pans until the afternoon, which would allow Wen to get much needed sleep for her and the baby, he hoped a son.

    All the time he sealed the box, he was watched by the loyal Ash, guarding him like a royal bodyguard. Peng went into the highest shelf of the pantry and removed a small container with a thumb-sized piece of salmon, wrapped in white cheesecloth. He broke off a small sliver and tasted it, perfectly salted and still fresh with flavor; he had saved it for today’s festivities. He held out another sliver of the fish to Ash, who scampered over and licked it as Peng held the piece, he could feel the raspy-rough tongue on his fingertips, in the silence he could hear the gentle “thfft, thfft, thfft” as the cat nibbled. Once Ash finished the treat, Peng stroked his head and under his chin until the cat walked onto his lap and lay down, ready to nap.

“How about a little more, my friend,” whispered Peng as he fed him an even smaller sliver of the salmon. Ash perked up and snapped the piece right into his mouth, licking his own lips this time. Now Peng took the whole piece of fish, held it a foot from the cat’s face, and gently placed it into the wooden box. Ash stood up, and to make sure that the cat didn’t grab the piece and run off, Peng carefully lifted him into the box, softly pressing his four feet together so that Ash settled inside the box fully. The cat set to licking the large piece of salmon, and Pend continued to stroke it while he did, the purring showing that he was relaxed in his new home. Quickly but not abruptly, to avoid startling the creature, he closed the lid firmly, and grabbing the lit candle, began sealing the fresh and uneven gaps. This time he moved glacially, so that plenty of wax would seep deep into the seams, only moving on when he saw the cracks fill. “I’m so sorry, my friend, and thank you.”

Later that afternoon, when the fireworks started and songs celebrating the revolution, workers, and the Chairman filled the building, Wen finally asked about the cat. Peng instinctively glanced at his cot, but realized the error and looked straight in her eyes when he said “all this noise is probably spooking him, he’s probably hiding somewhere until it stops.” Satisfied with his explanation, she asked nothing else. He was worried she might look around their apartment for Ash and spot the box under his bed, covered by an old towel. But Wen’s willingness to bend over now that she was in her fifth month was nonexistent, so she took him at his word.

He wondered how long to wait before he could safely open it. Cats didn’t need much air to survive, and the box wasn’t very large, but he had to be sure it was dead. He couldn’t have Ash waking from a stupor—that would ruin the whole plan. The whole point of the suffocation was to be a silent demise, and if he had to strangle even a groggy cat with his bare hands, it could make noise and draw his neighbors’ attention, if not Wen’s. The brutality of such an act disgusted Peng, but sometimes you have to do what is necessary to survive—if there was any lesson he’d learned in the last decade, it was that. He and Wen would surely miss the cat, he didn’t want to hurt it, in fact, he might even love the cat. But if it was necessary to protect his family, Peng would kill the cat.

 

*   *   *   *   *

Suzanne Deborah Johnson– Annapolis, Maryland

(September 9, 1979)

 

Debbie and Suzie Johnson sat in silence for most of the ride home. Finally, the girl said “Why do you have to draw attention to yourself wherever we go? Why can’t you be a normal parent?”

“I’m sorry honey, but I can’t just let a man grab my crotch.” She shook her head and added, “And I don’t want to hear anything about you wanting to be normal. Normal is average, average is typical, and the average, typical person is fat, lazy, and dumb. I want more for you than to be merely normal.”

The girl was weeping now, the wind from the open window pushing the tears into herky-jerky trickles that meandered over her cheekbones to her ears. “You may not like fitting in, but I do. You think it’s easy being the only girl on a boys soccer team?”

Debbie smiled. “That’s because you’re special. You should never be embarrassed to be as good or better than a boy. I’m not.”

“Yeah, but I’m not you.” She was tugging the bottom of her jersey up to wipe the tears, but it just smeared the reddish clay into rings around her eyes.

“Stop doing that, you’re making yourself look like a raccoon,” Debbie said, flipping the visor down so her daughter could see how she looked. “See?”

Suzie glanced up and started laughing—she did look like a raccoon or a lemur or some mother animal. But then she remembered that she was angry at her mother and got upset that she had been so easily distracted. “I’m serious, mom. I’m barely eleven, I don’t want all the attention and hassle of being the only girl. You’re good at that stuff, getting in people’s faces, making them back down, but I’m not.” She started crying softly again, and asked, “Seriously, do I have to stay on the team?

Debbie knew that what her child said was true. Suzie had inherited all of her athletic talent and intelligence, but none of her mental toughness, her relentless drive to prove doubters wrong—not having this characteristic wasn’t the worst thing in the world. In its place, her daughter possessed a real kindness, a sincere concern for other people that sometimes Debbie envied. Suzie could open up to people and make friends effortlessly, and that kind of emotional boldness required courage too.

“Honey, I’m so hard on you because I know how far you can go. Playing with the boys will make you better, and I only want the best for you. That’s why I have fought so hard to be treated as an equal, so you won’t have to.” The car pulled into the driveway at the end of the cul-de-sac, and Debbie reached over and unbuckled the seat belt as she spoke to her. “I don’t want you to be me. I want you to be you.” Her daughter leaned towards her and rested her head on Debbie’s arm.

“Let’s make a deal, mom. I’ll finish out this season, but next year we’ll find a girls soccer league for me to play in.” She held out her little finger, waiting for her mother to seal the deal with a pinky swear.

Debbie nodded yes, and said “As long as you promise me that you’ll play your best and raise hell in these next games, it’s a deal. Even if we have to drive to Virginia or Pennsylvania to find a team good enough for you.” She reached over and locked pinkies firmly, until her daughter yanked hers out with a flourish.

Suzie smiled and said “Don’t worry mom, I’m no quitter.”


 

*   *   *   *   *

Li-Peng Jingwei– Nanking, China

(December 26, 1968-Chairman Mao’s birthday)

 

He spent the night turning from side to side. After an hour of this, Wen started kicking him, so he got up from the thin pad that was their bed and curled up on a blanket on the floor. She had probably done him a favor, as it would be easier this way to rise without waking her. He needed to retrieve the wooden box, remove the hopefully now-dead cat, and hide Ash’s body somewhere he could discover it in Wen’s presence. He knew that she was emotional about such things, and her tears would lend needed authenticity, preventing the neighbors from questioning his subsequent actions.

If only he could know for certain if the cat was dead yet. He knew that as the air in the box depleted, Ash would grow drowsy, which in turn would slow her respiration, delaying her eventual suffocation. If the box wasn’t perfectly air-tight, could enough oxygen seep in to keep the cat alive through the night? Peng didn’t think so, but he didn’t want to risk opening the box and the sudden rush of air reviving Ash, allowing her to escape.

So with an hour before sunrise, he removed the box from its hiding place and took it to the top of the stairwell, careful that he didn’t wake anyone or was seen. He slid a knife blade under the lid, cutting through the wax, and pried the top off. There was a slight whistle as it opened, created by the vacuum from Ash’s consuming the box’s oxygen, and Peng pulled the cat from the box, her paws dangling as he grasped her waist. He placed her on his lap, but as soon as his cool fingers felt her soft fur, by muscle reflex he began stroking the hair. Ash was heavy and pliable, a little bit warm in the stomach, but the legs and feet more stiff. He was confident that she was dead, but he had to be sure, so he cupped the back of her head in his left hand and her chest in his right.

For a moment he hesitated, feeling the softest fur under Ash’s neck, remembering how she would rub the sides of her mouth against his hand, and purr. He suddenly twisted his hands in opposite directions, feeling a pop and seeing the cat’s face twisted in a grimace, the neck now frozen, forever looking over its shoulder. He put Ash back in the box, returned to the apartment to make sure Wen was still asleep, and silently slid the cat’s body in a far corner behind a bookshelf, a place that nobody would have reason to look behind, but where a cat could plausibly get hurt and die, peacefully, more peaceful in theory than in execution.

The afternoon went exactly as he’d hoped. He found and then mournfully carried Ash’s body to his wife, who couldn’t stop crying. Despite their feverish preparations for the Chairman’s birthday and the sporadic beating of pans and cheering that erupted around the city, several of their neighbors heard Wen’s cries and came over; they too began to weep—Ash was both adorable and an effective mouser. When Peng mentioned the need to “dispose” of Ash’s body, they wailed even louder, until he suggested burying Ash with the respect afforded such a popular creature. There was nowhere nearby to perform the deed, with sidewalk and concrete dominating that section of Nanking, so he delicately suggested that a remote corner of the courtyard would be appropriate; they quickly agreed. He borrowed a hand spade from a neighbor, and Peng headed toward the familiar corner and began hacking away at the weeds.

He had wrapped Ash in a small piece of burlap that covered everything except the ends of his paws, a sight that scared the children into moving their games to the other end of the courtyard. Peng mentally measured three hand-widths down each side of the cornered wall, making an imaginary grid, and he started scratching at the hard earth. He was positioned so his body shielded the hole from any onlookers, even those on the higher floors, and he took his time, forcing himself to take slow, even breaths despite his rising tension. When he had dug elbow-deep, and after several false alarms of hitting rocks, Peng struck what looked like the top of a dried onion. He brushed off the dirt and saw burlap, a more brittle version of what Ash was draped in. Delicately, he dug around the ball, softening the earth to avoid the metal striking it.

Once he had loosened enough earth that he would be able to pull the ball out, he slid Ash, still covered by the cloth, to a spot in front of his knees. He made a brief bow to the grave, knowing that anything more could be viewed as a prayer. Grasping the cat’s body through the burlap, he slid Ash over the hole, loosened his grip enough for her to fall in, and in the same motion reached in and grabbed the ball with the burlap, successfully masking the act of removing it. He gathered the cloth into a loose ball and left it on the far side of the hole as he quickly covered Ash with dirt, not willing to risk letting a curious or morbid child see the contents. He grabbed the object, balled-up burlap cloth, and spade all in one hand, which he held close to his waist, and quickly returned to his apartment, where Wen was still sobbing.

“Are you finished?” she asked. The tears had made widening streaks down her cheeks that radiated from her eyes. “Can we place a marker on the grave, something to remember him by?” Peng was a little surprised at the intensity of his wife’s grief, and at the same time he welcomed it as an indication of her greater compassion, a quality that would balance his own objective logic and would be necessary, as they would soon be raising a child.

Not wanting a long conversation, Peng assured her that he would find a nice flat stone that they could write Ash’s name on, but they would have to place it after the birthday festivities. He quickly washed his hands, placed the ball in one of his socks, then hid it near his underwear and shaving gear, and joined in the food and noise in the apartment courtyard, where the whole building had congregated for the special occasion.

Despite the myriad distractions, the day moved as slowly as a river barge. Wen went to bed early, exhausted from her sorrow, which allowed him to retrieve the item from his shoe. Carefully, Peng unwrapped the several layers of thick cloth that covered it, revealing a bright Russian nesting doll, perhaps as tall as the side of his hand. He patiently twisted the head back in forth until it broke free, and within it was a much smaller item, also wrapped in cloth—another nesting doll, maybe as tall as his pinky. He repeated the gentle twisting motion on the head, afraid that too much force might crack it and damage its contents, and bit by bit the head slid off the doll, revealing a thin rectangle, flat and covered in what looked like a tiny piece of silk.

Finally, Peng found the seam where the flaps of the silk had been pressed together, pulled them apart, and even in the dim light, the colors leapt out at him, the red border of the stamp contrasting with the image of an antique bi-plane flying upside-down. It was in perfect condition, as pristine and vibrant as when he’d sealed between two diaphanous panes of plastic those many years ago, after painstakingly desiccating it in the lab: the rare and beautiful 1918 Inverted Jenny, one of less than a hundred known to exist, an unassuming mix of paper and glue that held his family’s entire fortune, as well as its future, and that would transform the lives of Peng and his family by delivering them to a safer, freer life outside of the People’s Republic of China.