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He was studying her too. “I don’t know you,” he said. “The phone is off the hook. They record every conversation.”

It seemed an odd prelude to their discussion, a warning. “Okay,” she said.

“They said you are a writer, a novelist. Are you going to write about me?”

“I am writing about someone like you.”

“There is no one like me.”

“I am writing about someone who is in a position similar to yours.”

“A black man in prison.”

“A leader. A prince among criminals.”

“A man of revolution. A criminal to your society but an innocent in the eyes of the true man, the eternal man: the warrior.”

Trait’s unusual eyes bore none of the recalcitrance of a sociopath, but instead his gaze drew her more intimately into the encounter. He was like a thick wire humming with electricity. He emanated power. She felt his radiation working on her. His voice was deep and commanding, and she gave in to it because she was safe. There were guards and cameras.

“At Marion,” he said, “the warden would parade visitors by my cell. Nobody wanted to leave the zoo without seeing the lion. The king of the jungle is safe in his cage and all is well.”

“That’s not why I’m here,” she said.

“This so-called dungeon: It is my temple. It was built to worship the warrior Luther Trait. For six thousand years the civilized man, the weak man, the modern intellectual, has constructed laws in order to protect himself. He has branded the warrior a criminal in order to confine the dominant male who would otherwise be his master. You see before you a strong man in an age where strength is feared. How do you punish the unpunishable? I am a riddle they cannot solve. That is why they watch me constantly: to study me, to learn from me. All of mankind’s worthiest impulses, shut up in this museum buried in the frozen earth. Everything you see here — this table, these guards, these bars, and walls — it’s all about one thing.”

“What’s that?”

“You. It’s all about you. Imprisonment is population control. The dominant male is the mate attractor. You, the female, are the great prize.”

“A prize?” she said. He was just pushing her buttons, seeking her out. “Is that what I am?”

“Take away these chains, these jails, and laws. Turn every man loose in the world to fend for himself. Where would you be then? Who would you run with for shelter, for protection, for survival? A smart man? A cultured man? You would align yourself with a criminal.” He leaned closer, dragging a few links of steel over the edge of the table. “You would run with a warrior. You would run with me.”

“Oh,” she said, sputtering now, offended. “Please.”

“You have something for me,” he said.

He was leaning close to her. He wore a musk of confidence.

He was waiting.

“I don’t understand,” she said.

He said again, “You have something for me.”

She wanted to dismiss this as horny bravado, but could not ignore the pale sulfur of his eyes. In them were scrutiny and insistence, and she was struck cold. She sat still, forgetting her quickened pulse rate transmitting through the body alarm. For the moment there was no one else in the room and no warden watching them on camera. There was no one else in the penitentiary.

It was as though he knew something she did not. All she could think was that there had been some gross mis-communication regarding the circumstances of her visit.

“Maybe there was some mistake, I—”

“There was no mistake.”

His stare was different now, more probing than provocative, more evaluative than involving. He finally sat back, and there was perhaps a hint of relief in his eyes. None of this meant anything to Rebecca. But like a plug pulled from a wall, the connection between them — at once so forceful and immediate — was broken.

Rebecca was mystified. “What is it that I could possibly have for you?”

Trait stood abruptly. His chair scraped violently against the floor and his surprising agility froze Rebecca.

“I’m done here,” he said.

He doubled over before he could finish speaking. He dropped to the floor as though struck on the back of the head. He lay on his side, grunting and twitching, chains rattling as he contorted.

The two nearest guards moved in immediately. A Clear order was issued, and they reached for his armpits, jerking him to his feet. The group leader opened the door, muttering into his headset.

Trait had not made a move for her, as far as Rebecca could tell. Still, she wasn’t sorry they had dropped him, only that the interview was over.

Trait’s livid brown eyes found her. His face was proud. He bore the abuse nobly, shaking off the electric charge that had humbled him and assuming his former poise. The guards released him and his hands trembled as he stood to full height.

“Next time we meet,” he said, through gritted teeth, “it will be on my terms.”

The guards fell in around Trait as he turned and strode unassisted to the door, the chains slithering like serpents at his feet.

Chapter 4

Trait came off the stairs into the bleak silence of the underground corridor and walked the range of granite and steel, his handlers keeping stride with him like the five points of his star. His thoughts were divided. As usual, he was measuring the distance of the hallway in paces, counting off the steel doors, watching the hacks and how they signaled to the cameras to rack up the steel grilles. He didn’t get out of E-Unit more than three or four times a year and made the most of every opportunity. He listened attentively to the click of the automatic door locks. He studied the camera positions and observed the sight lines down each range. He noted the way the hacks communicated by hand gestures in observance of E-Unit’s regimen of silence, and thought of the various ways that this could benefit him.

They walked him to the examining room inside the E-Unit entrance trap. The doctor was waiting but nothing happened right away — no strip search, no examination — and Trait realized who they were waiting for.

In the other half of his mind, Luther Trait was not in the penitentiary at all. He was a Nubian king strolling along the banks of the River Nile with his wartime advisors under the beating African sun. He was the leader of a complicated system of tribes that reigned over a powerful seventh-century empire stretching from modern-day Egypt into modern-day Ethiopia, descendants of the early Nubian kingdoms who battled with Egyptians for power in the vast Lower Nile region, long before the campaigns of Alexander and the age of Christ.

This was not a dream. His thoughts represented a spiritual journey to the source of his strength and will, a pilgrimage to his inner homeland. The bars and walls around him had reality in space but no reality in time, and freedom from the senses of his immediate environment unlocked the universal. Anywhere he wished to go, he freely went. In an instant he reassembled the kitchen of his early youth. He was kneeling on a chair at the gouged wooden table by the window. He picked up a Dixie cup, felt the texture of the ribbed place mat underneath his forearm, smelled the food stains hardened in the grooves. He shredded a paper napkin into thin strips. He reached across the table and tasted a pinch of sugar from the chipped bowl as he looked out the steamed window, its grime etched into his brain like a Rorschach blot. He walked to the closet in his mother’s bedroom, the one he had spent so many hours of so many days locked inside. The padlock was nothing to him now. He opened the door for the little boy sitting on the musty shoeboxes beneath the hanging old coats, squinting into the sudden light.