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She hadn’t been back to Jeff’s grave in nearly half a year.

Proton snorted and pulled back, dissatisfied and looking for something to do. The reins held, and he tilted his head up to eye Elizabeth.

She stared down the length of the canyon. There, she could see the rough path she and Jeff had used to descend to the canyon floor, coming in behind the fences and waiting for the Los Alamos security men to depart, waiting for the time when they could destroy the equipment.

Elizabeth hated everything that had made their actions necessary.

She saw the mound of rocks she had piled over Jeff’s body. No one would ever come to take him away. Some of the rocks had been disturbed, possibly by coyotes or birds, but the grave seemed to be intact. A drifting of snow clung to it now; the storm would cover his burial place like a shroud.

Elizabeth didn’t want to go closer. She hated to be afraid to come near Jeff, but she didn’t want to see what was left of his body. She wanted to remember him sleeping beside her, making love to her in anxious desperation on the night before the Livermore demonstration. She wanted to remember kissing him, brushing tongues on the canyon rim as they planned their descent and sabotage. She wanted to remember him holding the sledgehammer high like… Conan the Peace Activist.

Elizabeth squeezed her eyes shut. She didn’t like to think of hauling him to his grave, his eyes closed and burned from within, his skin melted from being caught on the edge of the explosion that had hurled her half a century back in time. She didn’t want to think of Jeff dead because of her, because of fighting the juggernaut of weapons research. All of it had started here, and now, in Los Alamos during World War II.

She hunkered down on the cold ground and picked up a handful of loose stones. As if trying to wake Jeff, she tossed them toward the indentation in the cliff wall, scattering the pebbles on his cairn. His sacrifice had not made much difference.

She remembered the Livermore protest. It hadn’t made any difference either.

She had tried more and more desperate acts. Here in 1943, in the heart of the Manhattan Project, she had done even more. Her miscalculations had led to the death of Edward Teller. But the Project still moved along. The war still went on, unchanged as far as she could tell. Berlin was being bombed, endless fighting was going on in the Pacific, Russia was surging back and recovering terrain lost to the Nazis. All of that would be insignificant once the atomic bomb came onto the scene.

How much more would it take?

“You have to think of your future,” Jeff had told her when she first considered volunteering to be arrested. “Your actions have consequences, Elizabeth. Think about what you’re doing.”

She didn’t know what to think anymore.

Graham Fox, who reminded her of Jeff in many ways, had said,’ ‘Oppenheimer is the fulcrum on which everything pivots. Without him, this Project would fall flat on its face.”

As the snow picked up once more, Elizabeth recalled the documentary clip she had seen, the grainy black-and-white picture of Oppenheimer grinning after the Trinity test, reciting, “I am become death, the shatterer of worlds….”

Oppenheimer had known what he was unleashing! He recognized the consequences, the destruction of his creation. And still he went ahead! If that wasn’t evil, she didn’t know what was.

Elizabeth squeezed her eyes shut. Everything felt silent, as if the world were holding its breath, waiting for her decision.

She had asked Ted Walblaken for advice once—she couldn’t even remember now what the problem had been, but it was before he had known about the cancer, back when he would have punched out any “smelly longhair” who spoke a bad word about United Atomics or the defense industry. But Elizabeth remembered the answer Ted gave her, hearing the words in his own voice as if he could stand there right now and talk in her ear.

“You gotta do what you gotta do,” Ted had said, “and damn the consequences.”

She tossed more stones at Jeff’s grave. Melting snow-flakes made tracks along her cheeks, like tears. But Jeff said nothing, gave her no suggestions from his silent grave.

How much more would it take? The answer, difficult as it seemed, stared her in the face. As she turned to go, Elizabeth realized she had to do what she had to do. It wouldn’t be hard to steal one of the hunting rifles back at the Project. She made plans to return the next day.

Dawn came late in Frijoles Canyon. The sun shed light onto the canyon floor a full hour before the clear rays poured over the sheer walls, illuminating the sparkling new snow.

Elizabeth stirred in the abandoned cliff dwelling where she had spent the night, shivered, and sat up. She blinked, then rubbed a hand under her eyes. The cold snapped her awake and she shook her head.

Taking the stolen hunting rifle in hand, she leaned forward to the adobe window opening. She had to be ready at any time. She didn’t know when Oppenheimer would come riding through.

It had snowed all night, making her solitary vigil hushed and cold. She had slept in one of the crumbling Anasazi ruins in Bandelier, curled in the corner and trying to stay warm. She didn’t dare light a fire; she wanted to leave as little evidence as possible. Elizabeth had thought that far ahead at least.

In her time, all the cliff ruins of the Long House had been restored and reinforced to withstand the depredations of tourists. The Park Service had rebuilt joints with concrete instead of crumbling adobe; steps and trail markers had been cut into the path; safety guardrails lined all the dangerous ledges.

Not now, though—she lay awake in the ruins; rodents sought shelter in corners, and snow piled in ledges on the rocks. It felt like spending a night in a haunted house. Somehow, that seemed appropriate.

Late the previous afternoon, she had ridden back to the stable, returned Proton to Roger and thanked him. She went to the women’s dorm, telling Mrs. Canapelli she might be working odd hours for the next day or two, then had gone to bed early.

After midnight she crept out again, stole a different horse from the stables—Roger might suspect it was her if she took Proton again—and snatched one of the hunting rifles.

She would be hunting something far more important than a rabbit.

Everything seemed so easy, which she found to be a bizarre contradiction of the insipid propaganda posters warning of spies. The Project workers seemed so comfortable in their trappings of security, they couldn’t believe anyone would try the smallest action against them.

Oppenheimer would learn otherwise.

The canyon floor remained deserted early in the morning. Up near the mouth of the canyon a curl of smoke rose from the ranger’s station. Frijoles Canyon Lodge sat on the other side of the creek, a place for the Project scientists to stay when they needed to escape for an evening. It had been run by a civilian family before the war, but the Army had appropriated it when they took over the mountain site.

Morning birds began to sing in the trees, fluttering in the pines and cottonwoods below. From her vantage partway up the slope, she could see the only entrance to the canyon. Some of the adobe structures had been partly excavated a few decades before, when the National Forest Service had run the park. She could see wall lines and piled bricks from the ancient, rounded plaza of the Tyuonyi ruin, highlighted by the snow.

Scrub juniper, pinon pines, and mesquite poked up on the floor and the canyon walls. Above her the beige tuff wall rose straight and unmarred, unscalable over the line of cliff dwellings, but she had toiled down a different trail that reached the ruins. She had left her horse tethered for the night near some scrub grass on the rim. She realized she might need to escape quickly.