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“Yes, sir,” Howard said.

“Absolutely, sir,” said Marty.

“Good,” Owen said. “But keep the abilities I mentioned in mind, and don’t confine your search to little gray men. Look for someone… some thing… a little more human.”

LUBBOCK, TEXAS, JULY 17, 1947

Sally entered the room quietly, determined not to wake John if he were still asleep. But he stirred as she entered, and she felt the odd sensation that he’d sensed her presence, saw her without using his eyes.

“How are you feeling?” she asked.

John turned to face her. “I’m much better.”

She handed him the tray she’d brought for him. “Breakfast.”

He hardly looked at the food. “Maybe in a few minutes.”

“I put some towels out,” Sally told him. “And a shirt and some pants. My husband’s.” She smiled. “Before he put on weight.”

“That’s very kind,” John said. He seemed to study her a moment. “Your husband doesn’t appreciate your kindness. He doesn’t see your sadness either, but you’ve stopped wanting him to. I think you’re right. There are some things you don’t share with an uncaring person.”

Sally felt as if some part of her had been peeled away and now lay exposed before him. It was as if John had somehow pierced all the protective layers of her life and touched its tender core.

“What happened to you?” she asked.

“I was in an accident,” John said.

“What kind of accident?”

“Farming.”

“You have a farm around here?”

“No, I… someone gave me a ride.”

A sudden pain streaked across Sally’s brow. She winced.

“What’s wrong?” John asked.

“Just a headache.”

Again, she sensed that the man was studying her in a way she could not grasp. It wasn’t the way some of her customers looked at her, and it didn’t make her feel un-comfortable or on display. Instead, it was a kind of inner probing, and she felt it like millions of tiny invisible wires, each simultaneously penetrating her skin and making infinitely small connections.

“You were telling me about your accident,” Sally said.

She could tell that he didn’t want to talk about it.

“I’m sorry, would you mind letting me rest for a while?” he said.

“Of course,” Sally said. “I’ll leave the tray in case you wake up hungry.” She started to leave, then felt herself drawn back to him. “You were right, you know. He doesn’t appreciate…” She stopped, astonished that such words had broken from her. “I mean…” She laughed nervously. “Anyway, get some rest.”

She rushed from the room, the pain in her head now almost more than she could bear, a hard, steady pounding. For a moment, she leaned against the door, then pulled herself up again and went to the bathroom. The medicine cabinet was already open, though she didn’t remember leaving it that way, the bottle of aspirin clearly visible, as if waiting for her. She opened the bottle, took out two aspirin and quickly swallowed them. It was only then that she saw the trickle of blood that oozed from her nose.

FORTBLISS, EL PASO, TEXAS, JULY 17, 1947

Russell made his way between two lines of empty beds. Distantly, he could see the one bed that was still occupied. The figure who lay in it did not move as he drew near.

“I brought you something,” he said.

Johnson’s eyes drifted over to him.

Russell showed him the photograph of Rita Hayworth, then propped it against the water jug on the table beside Johnson’s bed.

“What do they say is wrong with you?” Russell asked.

“No one knows,” Johnson answered weakly. “They say it’s in my head. A psychological thing. From the war maybe.”

“All the others are dead,” Russell said bleakly.

“Except you,” Johnson said. He smiled quietly. “And me… for now.”

“Do you remember what happened?” Russell asked him.

A strange terror gripped Johnson’s face.

Russell bent forward. “Tell me. Because except for these dreams I’ve been having, I don’t remember a thing.”

Johnson hesitated, his eyes now searching the room, as if for a way out. “Whatever they did to us, they did it for a long time,” he said.

“What did they do?”

“I don’t know.” Johnson’s face trembled slightly. “But whatever it was, they did it to you, too.”

“How do you know?”

“Because you were on the cot next to mine.”

And instantly, Russell was there, on his back, tossing in pain, his anguished gaze boring into the German soldiers who stood idly within the tent. He felt himself roll out of the cot and onto the floor, knocking over oxygen tanks and hospital trays, rolling desperately until he found himself behind the ball turret gun of the B-17, his hand reaching for the trigger, firing and firing, spraying doctors and nurses and the idling soldiers with a hail of bullets, filling the tent with acrid blue smoke until the gun finally went silent and he lay in the quiet, with no sense of who he was or where he was, but only that the gun had stopped and that everyone was dead, and suddenly he and his men were all in a French field.

“You and I both know it wasn’t Germans you killed that day. It wasn’t Germans at all,” Johnson said. “What did they do to us, Captain?” he pleaded. “What did they do?” He looked at Russell, drew in a labored breath, then suddenly began to twitch, his eyes rolling upward as his body went slack.

“Johnson,” Russell called. “Johnson.”

But he was dead.

Chapter Five

LUBBOCK, TEXAS, JULY 17, 1947

Sally pulled into the driveway, retrieved the grocery bags from the backseat, and headed into the house.

“Tom,” she called. “Becky.”

Odd, she thought, when they didn’t come dashing out of their rooms to greet her. She glanced across the empty living room to the door of Tom’s room. It was closed, but she could hear laughter coming from behind it.

She walked to the door, opened it and saw Becky floating three feet in the air, John standing beside her, passing his arms around her at all angles to demonstrate that there were no strings attached.

“How do you feel?” John asked her.

“Like I’m floating,” Becky answered.

“No headaches?”

“No.”

“That’s good,” John said, then caught Sally in his eye, and with a wave of his arm softly returned Becky to the floor.

“That was amazing,” Becky cried.

Tom shrugged. “Levitation’s easy,” he said sullenly.

Becky glared at him. “I’ve never seen you do it.”

At dinner, Sally couldn’t get the sight of Becky floating in the air out of her mind. It had not looked like a magician’s trick, but something else, a… power. She looked at the stranger who sat across from her, hardly touching his food.

“You’re not hungry?” she asked.

“Breakfast lasted me all day,” John answered.

“You didn’t eat any of it,” Tom said accusingly. “I saw your plate.”

John kept his eyes on Sally. “Your headache?” he asked.

“It’s gone.”

John smiled. He looked curiously relieved. “That’s good,” he said.

For the next few minutes, Sally cautiously asked a few questions. She found out that John was from Des Moines, that he’d been working here and there at whatever job he could find. His answers were carefully thought out, and she sensed that he was checking some invisible notebook before each answer, making sure that it was right, and only then giving it: a process done at lightning speed, and yet, a process.