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The rest of the trip to Bragg had been a nightmare the like of which he had never experienced—not during the entire aftermath of the war.

He couldn’t talk; if he opened his mouth he was going to start screaming; he just stared out the window at the sparse lights below and listened in his radiation hood’s phones to Ashmead’s people bantering; even though he should have been trying to pinpoint a moment in time at which Ashmead’s team could change history, he didn’t bother. Nye’s plan seemed like a hopeless, absurd game, the only result of which would be more death: his, Ashmead’s, Slick’s, Thoreau’s. And Nye’s, but that was okay because Nye didn’t care any more.

He kept seeing a death’s head grin on Slick’s beautiful face and Ashmead with only half a head of hair and wondering if he was finally going mad.

But he wasn’t that lucky. He calmed down and the cowboy talk around him became no more than an annoyance as his body cycled him into a different phase of shock, in which he could float, detached, superior and at ease: he knew what was going to happen; none of these macho types around him had any idea what lay in store for them.

At Bragg, among the Delta and Ranger personnel on post, life seemed almost normal except for the radiation precautions—respirators and gloves and raincoats and boots, no worse than Jerusalem had been: Bragg, due to serendipity and favorable winds, was a low-risk survivable zone.

Bragg’s commanding officer had them to dinner and showed Beck’s dignitaries that life at an American military base could be civilized. NATO General Dugard had retrieved his uniform and strutted around happily, at ease in his bailiwick, and his gratefully gleeful mood infected everyone but the Japanese: Zenko Tsutsumi remembered Nagasaki and Hiroshima and his eyes were full of ghosts as he came up to Beck and pulled him aside.

“Secretary Beck,” the Japanese trade minister said, “I apologize most sincerely for my boorish comments and my insensitivity of yesterday. We will do all we can to help your people, even though…” Tsutsumi squeezed his eyes shut; his pockmarked cheeks quivered. Then he opened them and said: “I have a confession to make. I had expected to enjoy this, to see your country suffer as it made my country suffer. But revenge is sour when one stands eye to eye with such horror. Accept my apologies and the condolences of my people, please.”

“Accepted and understood, Minister. We’re all a little shaken,” Beck said gently, his mouth on diplomatic autopilot while his mind dwelled on his own problems, of which the little Japanese didn’t then seem a part. “Try to distance yourself from it. It sounds heartless, but it’s all we can do. From now on, you’ll just be overflying sites, not staring casualties in the face. In fact, for most of the rest of your time here, radiation suits will be optional except when directly over red zones: the Black Hawk’s hardened and there’s no reason for you or any of the others to feel apprehensive. It should be easier from here on in, but we had to prove to you we aren’t pulling any punches. If you’d simply take our word for it that we’ve lost both coasts but that the country is by-and-large intact, it would be easier still—on everybody. Have a pleasant evening, Sir.

Walking away, Beck caught Ashmead’s eye and the two of them retired to a corner, drinks in hand, of the officers’ mess. “I have to talk to you, Rafic.”

“Talk.”

There was low music playing, the chatter of men and even a few officers’ wives.

“If we had it to do over again—the interdiction of the Islamic Jihad and their bomb—what would be the last possible moment at which you could have turned things around?”

Ashmead’s brooding eyes measured Beck soberly. Then he said: “Hypothetically? Twenty-two hours before that plane took off from Riyadh, Slick and I were sitting in our hotel room with the team deployed and Elint called in and I had to tell him we’d gotten a pull-back order. Three hours after that we were in our Jetstream on the way to Nicosia. That close enough for you?”

“Rafic, I need numbers—a spread of time, 0600 to 0900, or whatever. That sort of thing.”

“Fuck all, Beck, are you asking what I think you’re asking?”

“Probably. Can you give it to me?”

“Can you tell me if giving it to you is going to do any good, or just end us up digging through hot rubble in Langley?”

“Certainly the latter; as to the former… who the fuck knows? Didn’t Watkins brief you?”

“Not on this, which is a good sign. Okay, let me get my two boys and we’ll see if we can’t get down to hours, minutes, and seconds for you.”

Ashmead turned away to do just that.

“Rafic,” Beck called softly.

Ashmead came back, hands on hips: “Yeah?”

“Tell me it’s not worth the risk and I’ll blow it off. I still can—I’m the only one who can.”

“Why should I tell you that? You’re the walking brain trust. Let’s give it a go.”

Ashmead gave him a thumb’s-up and began col lecting his operations team from the video games in one corner of the officers’ mess.

Four hours later, after the team had left his room and Beck was trying to fall asleep in the stuffy guest room whose air purifier sounded like a Formula-1 car, there was a knock at his door.

In just his briefs, he opened it: he’d been told to sleep fully clothed, but he was still full of grief and resentful, questioning everything, especially whether he wanted to undertake a foray into Langley for CIA, Nye or no Nye, second strike or no second strike.

When he opened it, Ashmead was standing there with Chris Patrick, who was as white as her radiation suit.

“I thought you two ought to have a talk before we split up tomorrow. Unless Chris is coming with us?” Ashmead’s voice was gruff but his eyes were smiling.

“You bastard. All right. Come in, Chris. This is terrible security, Rafic.”

“Tsk, tsk,” said Ashmead as he reached in to pull the door shut after Chris had stepped inside.

“What is it?” she whispered, obviously terrified. “This morning Rafic was going to move heaven and earth to keep me off that diplomatic Black Hawk, now everything’s changed. What’s happening? What do I have to know that he couldn’t tell me and Slick wouldn’t tell me?”

“A number of things. Sit down, please, Chris.” Beck could have strangled Ashmead with his bare hands. He remembered Slick’s warning that when Ashmead wasn’t telling him something, he was telling him something. Beck had no idea how much Ashmead knew of what Nye had told Beck, or what he expected Beck to tell Chris Patrick. But Beck wasn’t going to tell her any more than she needed to know. He didn’t have the heart for it.

“Oh, Christ, don’t give me that State Department voice. You’re scaring me half to death.”

“On the bed, okay?” He sat beside her and slapped a cassette into the tape deck on the nightstand without bothering to see which one it was. “Do you still have your lighter?”

She fumbled in her purse for it with a plucky grin and lit a cigarette before she showed him its green light. “Safe as can be, see?”

“First, I have to explain about the shot that Elint gave both of us in Jerusalem,” he said quietly.

When he’d done that and she finally realized that she’d been given a dose of serum which, augmented by reasonable precautionary measures on her part, would reduce her chances of developing cancer to even less than they had been before the Forty-Minute War, she was overcome with joy, effusive in her gratitude, ready to crawl into his lap: “So we do have a chance—for a normal life, I mean,” she exulted. “You and me. That is, if you’re… if your family… oh, Christ, you know what I mean…”