Showing posts with label The Kamas Trilogy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Kamas Trilogy. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

"Exile Hunter" by Preston Fleming

EXCERPT
Exile Hunter
(The Kamas Trilogy Book 3)
by Preston Fleming


Exile Hunter is the third book in The Kamas Trilogy. It was recently awarded a Gold Medal in the Fiction - Suspense category of the 2014 Reader's Favorite Book Awards

Also available: Forty Days at Kamas (read my blog post) and Star Chamber Brotherhood.



For another book by Preston Fleming, see my blog post on Dynamite Fishermen, the first book in The Beirut Trilogy.

Description
Exile Hunter, the third book in the Kamas Trilogy, begins in 2023, one year before the Kamas revolt, in a dystopian America ruled by a tyrannical President-for-Life who turns America’s military and intelligence assets against his domestic enemies. The protagonist, an undercover officer specializing in targeting exiled political opponents, becomes the scapegoat for a failed operation and is sent to die in a corrective labor camp near the Arctic Circle. But, defying all odds, he survives, escapes and devotes his remaining energies to finding and aiding a woman whose family he has ruined.
Beirut, 2023: When undercover intelligence officer Warren Linder agrees to lure an exiled opponent of the President-for-Life back to impoverished, low-tech, post-Civil War II America, Linder is unaware that the target is his childhood sweetheart’s father. On learning this, he ignores his better instincts and plunges ahead. But a surprise encounter with the woman who rejected him years before triggers a change in Linder that derails the operation. His bosses, suspecting treachery, capture Linder along with the target and his daughter and spirit them back to the U.S. aboard a secret rendition flight. Linder’s ensuing journey takes him from Beirut to a Virginia interrogation center and on to an Arctic labor camp; then, after a nearly impossible winter escape, on a 2000-mile trek to the Utah Security Zone, where his onetime love was last held. Though he finds her, their respective ordeals have changed them. The story reaches a climax in the couple’s home town of Cleveland, where Linder aims to recover his former target’s last cache of rebel funds and use it to take his loved ones beyond the regime’s reach. Exile Hunter is a tragic yet life-affirming saga of a man who risks everything to set right past wrongs, regain lost love and resist the tyranny he once served.
In Exile Hunter, author Preston Fleming offers his most richly imagined vision yet of the future American dystopia introduced in Forty Days at Kamas, while endowing the story’s characters with complexity and a remarkable capacity for growth. Warren Linder's epic journey crackles with excitement at every step and leads to a deeply satisfying conclusion. Devoted Fleming readers will likely consider Exile Hunter the author's best work by far.

Excerpt
Who can protest and does not, is an accomplice in the act. ~ The Talmud
September, Thursday, West Beirut
Warren Linder stepped from the taxi onto the cobbled side street, felt the glaring heat of the midday sun, and nearly fell on the ice. Not sheet ice, for this was September in Beirut, but a layer of discarded ice cubes that some restaurant sous-chef had poured onto the curb. Seizing the taxi door with both hands, Linder regained his balance quickly, but for all his hardheaded worldliness, he had developed a superstitious streak of late and, rather than curse at the proximate cause of his near fall, pondered whether it might have a deeper meaning. And in that moment he wished he had never left his flat in the Cypriot resort town of Limassol, a mere hour’s flight away, where he had spent the previous night after a week on the road.
While he imagined himself back on his fourth floor balcony overlooking Akrotiri Bay, the taxi driver fetched his bags from the trunk, deposited them on the sidewalk, and awaited payment. Linder refocused in time to pull a wad of Lebanese banknotes from his jacket breast pocket and pay the jovial driver, adding a generous tip and a few words of appreciation.
Only then did he notice his reflection in the polished car window. The sight unnerved him: he looked every bit as dissipated as he felt. The dark circles under his bloodshot, puffy eyes, the gray streaks infiltrating his hair and whisker stubble, the furrows in his forehead and cheeks: these were all products of the past two years.
Though he exercised most days, ate reasonably well when he could, and made an effort to catch enough sleep and cut back on the booze, Linder knew his 38-year-old body had logged more than its share of mileage and stress during his dozen years of government service. He was nearing the end of his rope: the proof of it was in the mirror, and in the nightmares, and in the need for more and more alcohol to stave off his dread.
All at once he felt a powerful urge to pitch it all and board the next ferry to Larnaca and, from there, another boat to Turkey and then a bus or taxi to some obscure seaside or mountain village in Greece or the Balkans where he could buy time and figure out how to give his life a radical makeover.
He turned and called out to the driver.
“Is there still a daily ferry from Beirut to Cyprus these days?”
“Not daily, not weekly, siidi. To go by sea, you must hire a boat and a captain. Best to find them at Jounieh or Kaslik. Shall I take you?”
Linder hesitated.
“And to Syria? The same?”
“There are ships for carrying goods to Latakia, but none for the people.”
“Too bad. Maybe another time, then,” Linder replied, noticing the middle-aged doorman who had come to fetch his luggage. With a parting nod to the driver, Warren Linder followed the doorman and his bags into the lobby of the Hotel Cavalier.
The desk clerk was an unctuous twenty-something Lebanese with a receding hairline and ample paunch, likely the product of some European hotel-management school or apprenticeship, one of the generation of prematurely aged young fogeys who were rebuilding the new commercial city-state of Beirut from the ashes of its most recent conflagration. Linder greeted the clerk in French and handed him the alias passport that he occasionally used for the kind of undercover work that had brought him to Beirut. The clerk gave him a professional once-over, then proceeded to check him in.
As Linder pulled out his wallet, full of credit cards and IDs under his current alias, the urge to flee gripped him once more, and he wondered whether he had enough cash and credit in his two hands, right now, today, to vanish from sight. No, came the answer; it was impossible. Even if he took cash advances from all the credit cards before leaving Beirut, he would not get very far. Without having planned further ahead, he would likely be caught within days.
This sudden feeling of dread and unease puzzled him. Usually, he loved being on the road and arriving in a new city. Though he sometimes dreamed fondly of having a real home, of putting down roots somewhere with a wife and family, each time he returned to his flat in Limassol, or Basel, or London before that, or even Cleveland to visit his parents and sister, within days of arriving he would daydream of being on the road again.
The problem with being a self-starter and overachiever was that he could never quite bring himself to slow down. He felt rather like a shark that needed to constantly move to survive. The analogy was apt, not only because of the work he did, but also because it was true in a physical sense. His muscular, heavy-boned physique was so lean that he could literally lie flat on the bottom of a swimming pool without rising. From adolescence on, he had come to hate swimming because if he failed to swim fast, he sank.
After completing the check-in procedure, Linder took the self-service elevator to the hotel’s top floor and found his mini-suite at the end of the hall. It was as spacious and well appointed as the operations assistant at Beirut Base had described by email, with a view of the shimmering Mediterranean across a vast array of red-tiled roofs. Linder placed his suitcase on the folding luggage rack, opened it to retrieve his toiletries kit, and retired to the bathroom to freshen up after his travels. When he returned to the sitting room, he opened a tall bottle of sparkling mineral water, poured himself a glass, and downed it in a single draft. Next, he pulled out a tourist map of Beirut and had barely spread it across the coffee table when he heard a sharp rap at the door.
Quickly Linder refolded the map and closed his suitcase before walking quietly to the door. Through the peephole, he saw a familiar face, and, without hesitation, opened the door to let in Neil Denniston. Both men waited for the door to close before speaking.
Denniston, a gangling, narrow-shouldered figure dressed in dark tropical wool dress trousers and a tailored striped shirt unbuttoned to the breast bone, wore a confident grin as he offered his hand to Linder. His lush crop of flaxen hair had thinned on top since Linder had last seen him three summers before, and his deep-set eyes and thin-lipped mouth were surrounded by a few new wrinkles, but otherwise, Denniston looked much the same as he did a decade ago when the two men had worked together on a CIA-led counterterrorist team, also in Beirut.
Five years later, both left the Agency to join the newly formed Department of State Security at a time when nearly all American troops and intelligence operatives were being brought home for good. As with Vietnam-era counterinsurgency experts two generations earlier, Arabic-speaking counterterrorist officers now glutted the market as they filed through the crowded halls of the Pentagon and CIA Headquarters, searching in vain for onward assignments.
Then, as now, Denniston was always on the alert for career-advancing opportunities, always the first to pursue the next big thing, always hustling close friends and associates to team up with him on his next gig. And Denniston was nothing if not persuasive. He had a deceptively languid manner, speaking slowly and softly in a Kentucky Gentleman drawl that charmed many into underestimating his shrewdness and force of will. Similarly, by maintaining eye contact and lavishing praise, he made others feel as if there was no one else in the world he would rather talk to. Women, particularly the more vacuous ones, tended to find Denniston irresistible. In an earlier era, Linder could easily picture his friend as a Mississippi riverboat gambler or a Florida land swindler or a New Orleans pimp.
Denniston’s personal qualities, Linder was certain, perfectly matched CIA’s recruiting profile for new clandestine operations officers, a profile that dated back to the World War II Office of Strategic Services and was refined continuously by way of sophisticated psychological testing techniques. The same recruiting profile, Linder believed, described the constellation of character traits commonly found among loan sharks, Wall Street bond salesmen, drug pushers, Ponzi schemers, plaintiff lawyers, used car salesmen, and other borderline sociopaths.
Such charm, craftiness, and determination were largely the reason why Denniston was now Branch Chief for North Africa and the Near East in the DSS’s Émigré Division. Of course, his Unionist Party membership had also played a role, but joining the Party before the President-for-Life’s final election was just one more example of his friend’s unusual foresight and tactical genius. When he and Denniston were fraternity brothers at Kenyon and Linder coached him through one exam after another, Linder would never have imagined that one day Denniston’s career would outshine his.
Linder took Denniston’s outstretched hand and gave it a hearty shake before pouring his guest a tumbler of sparkling water.
“Sorry, I don’t have anything stronger,” Linder said as he handed over the glass. “No ice, either.”
“You can send up for something if you want. They have an excellent bar here,” Denniston offered.
“Yes, I remember.”
“Of course,” Denniston responded. “You were stationed here, too, in those days. I keep forgetting. It seems like another lifetime.”
Linder poured himself another glass of water and took a seat across the coffee table from Denniston. This time he would not let Denniston suck him into another drinking bout. If Denniston wanted to booze it up, he could visit the bar alone.
“At the risk of being abrupt, Neil, I’d like to ask you a question I didn’t want to put in official email traffic. What exactly do you and Bednarski want from me in this operation? My understanding is that your target is one of the rebel leaders who looted the downtown banks during the Battle of Cleveland, and that your objective is to render him back to the States. But don’t you already have an inside man to set this up? Why do you need me?”
“Actually, the only inside man right now is you,” Denniston replied with his usual self-assurance. “Our plan is to introduce you as an insurgent leader from one of the western restricted zones. Your funding request will be of a scale that requires our target’s approval, since he decides on all major funding requests to his particular war chest.”
“So you want me to go to him as Mormon Joe Tanner?” Linder asked. “Has your man met Tanner before?”
“Not yet, but we’ve had a couple of our European-based assets vouch for you. And there’s one other step involved. You see, before you can get to our primary target, you’ll have to make your pitch to his go-between.”
Linder shook his head in distaste. “Does Headquarters know about this? Frankly, Neil, this is starting to sound like something you cooked up on your way over here.”
“Oh, they know all right—in broad terms, of course,” Denniston responded, full of his usual bravado. “The thing is, the old man is cagey and easily spooked. That’s why we wanted somebody with demonstrated abilities in dealing with insurgent types, so we can reach our man on the first try. In short, we wanted the best undercover operator around, and that’s you.”
Linder had heard the pitch before: Denniston was in over his head and needed someone to bail him out.
“If you’re resorting to flattery, there must be a catch. What is it? Whose signoff are you missing?”
Denniston shifted uneasily in his seat and looked away before answering.
“No, really, we’re good to go. Bednarski has an oral okay from the Division Chief.”
“Oral? I’d prefer something in writing,” Linder pressed. “I know we’re under time pressure and all that, but…”
“Sure, just ask Bob,” Denniston nodded. “Since he’s Base Chief, officially it’s his op. You can talk to him when we get together this evening.”
“Yeah, right. A lot of good that’s likely to do me, considering how well he and I get along.” Linder complained. Linder realized his complaint was useless. There was no way out; he was here, and so he would have to perform. Denniston had outmaneuvered him again. “So, tell me, how many days are we going to need for this? And how far do you expect it to go? Are we reeling in the fish in one go or just setting the hook?”
“That depends on whether you can get a face-to-face meeting with the target,” Denniston explained, leaning back in his chair, getting comfortable. “Once you do, and you establish your bona fides, we’ll decide how far and how fast to push. You may have to come back once or twice to seal the deal.”
Linder offered his colleague a resigned smile.
“No problem there,” he answered. “I’ve been working this town for over ten years and have become rather attached to it. Now, do you mind telling me who the target is?”
Denniston paused for effect.
“Roger Kendall is the go-between,” he teased.
“Then the target is…” Linder felt a sudden tightening in his gut.
“You guessed it. Philip Eaton.”
Linder gritted his teeth. “You’re certain of that?”
“No doubt about it,” Denniston shot back.
“I heard that Eaton might have travelled this way, but what is Kendall doing here?” Linder challenged. “He never leaves London any more.”
“Don’t forget, Eaton is his new father-in-law,” Denniston pointed out. “And Kendall seems to think that the meeting with Tanner is very important. So it appears his visit is mixing business with pleasure.”
Linder rose from his chair and strode to the open window. He gazed out over the Mediterranean and spotted a fishing boat heading out to sea. He wondered how long the trip to Limassol might take, if he chartered a yacht from Jounieh. And how much would it cost? He just might be able to put together enough cash for that with advances from the alias credit cards. There was plenty more in his safe deposit box in Limassol. He just had to get in and out before anyone knew he was missing.
Linder’s mind raced on. He imagined himself disappearing on foot into the back alleys of the Lebanese capital, catching a taxi and making his way through the hills to the east, across the Bekaa Valley into Syria, then up the coast to Turkey and across Bulgaria to some seaside resort in Croatia or Montenegro or Albania. The urge had been nagging at him for the better part of a year, but now it was more powerful than ever: if he did not break free and start a new life now, leaving everything he knew behind, something dreadful was certain to happen. But if he fled and was caught, his end would likely be just as dreadful: arrest and conviction on national security charges, a sentence to hard labor in some godforsaken prison camp in Alaska or the Yukon, and death from overwork or exposure.
Linder managed to regain control of his wayward thoughts, turned away from the window, and met Denniston’s gaze.
“Did Kendall bring his family?”
“You mean Eaton’s daughter and granddaughter?” Denniston inquired.
Linder nodded.
“Not to our knowledge,” Denniston answered. “Kendall’s registered at the Sofitel in Achrafiyé. He seems to be alone.”
Linder scowled as he strode back to the couch.
“I don’t get it. Kendall is a mere dabbler in rebel politics. And the latest word on Eaton is that he’s run out of dough. Frankly, Neil, this whole thing is looking like a fool’s errand.”
“Bob and I disagree,” Denniston demurred. “And so does the Division Chief. So here’s what we’re going to do. You’re set to meet Kendall tomorrow for coffee at one o’clock on the East Side. Right now, I suggest you get some rest, shower up, and meet me downstairs at seven. We’ll go to Bob’s for drinks and then step out for dinner and work everything out among the three of us.”
“Out to dinner? Together? When we’re prepping for an op? Have you gone nuts?”
Denniston shrugged and flashed his most disarming smile.
“Don’t fret. Eaton and Kendall never come to the Muslim side of town after dark. Besides, Bob wants to go out; and when Bob gets his mind set on something, there’s no point arguing with him.”
Without waiting for a response, Denniston finished his mineral water and rose to leave.
“Come to think of it, let’s not meet downstairs at seven. Why don’t I pick you up on Rue Clemenceau instead? I’ll look for you at seven sharp walking along the fence side of the street by the American University. I’ll be driving a silver Renault station wagon. It’ll be fun. You’ll see.”

Featured Review
I thoroughly enjoyed this spy adventure/thriller set in the world of the dystopian Forty Days at Kamas of a post American Civil War II. Follow Warren Linder, a former CIA agent now working for the DSS (Department of State Security), in a gripping spy adventure of betrayal, love, and the desire to make reparation. Follow Linder into the icy Yukon Prison camps and travel a near- impossible 2000 miles towards a hoped-for freedom and to fulfil a promise and find a lost love. The book is well written and very descriptive. Even though I read this book during an African heat wave I could feel the gripping cold of frostbite of Alaskan snow storms. My only objection is that the first couple of chapters were a little slow in development, but the remainder of the book more than made up with faced past and gripping action right through to the very end. I was quite sorry that the book came to an end as I was ready for more and here's hoping that the author can find a few more stories to tell that are set in this not too distant and maybe likely world. While Exile Hunter is the third instalment in a series starting with Forty Days at Kamas it doesn’t need to be read in sequence standing as an independent story. I won’t hesitate to recommend and read any of Preston Fleming's books.

About the Author
Preston Fleming was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He left home at age fourteen to accept a scholarship at a New England boarding school and went on to a liberal arts college in the Midwest. After earning an MBA, he managed a non-profit organization in New York before joining the U.S. Foreign Service and serving in U.S. Embassies around the Middle East for nearly a decade. Later he studied at an Ivy League law school and since then pursued a career in law and business. He has written five novels.


Links



Saturday, May 10, 2014

"Forty Days at Kamas" by Preston Fleming

Forty Days at Kamas
by Preston Fleming


Forty Days at Kamas is the first book in The Kamas Trilogy. Also available: Star Chamber Brotherhood and Exile Hunter (read my blog post).



For another book by Preston Fleming, see my blog post on Dynamite Fishermen, the first book in The Beirut Trilogy.

Description
Inspired by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's account of a Soviet labor camp revolt in Gulag Archipelago, Volume III, the story of Forty Days at Kamas follows political prisoners and security officials at a corrective labor camp in Kamas, Utah, where inmates seize control during the summer of 2024.
Kamas, Utah. 2024. In the totalitarian dystopia that America has become after the Unionist Party's rise to power, the American West contains vast Restricted Zones dotted with ghost towns, scattered military garrisons and corrective labor camps where the regime disposes of its real and suspected enemies. Kamas is one such camp.
On a frigid March night, a former businessman from Pittsburgh, Paul Wagner, arrives at a labor camp in Utah's Kamas Valley, a dozen miles east of the deserted resort town of Park City, which prisoners are dismantling as part of a massive recycling project.
When Wagner arrives, he is unaware that his eleven-year-old daughter, Claire, has set off to Utah to find him after becoming separated from her mother at the Philadelphia Airport. By an odd quirk of fate, Claire has traveled on the same train that carried her father into internal exile.
Only after Wagner has renounced all hope of survival, cast his lot with anti-regime hard-liners and joined them in an unprecedented and suicidal revolt does he discover that Claire has become a servant in the home of the camp's Deputy Warden. Wagner is torn between his devotion to family and loyalty to his fellow rebels until, on the eve of an armored assault intended to crush the revolt, he faces an agonizing choice between a hero's death and a coward's freedom.
In Forty Days at Kamas, author Preston Fleming offers a stirring portrait of a man determined to survive under the bleakest of conditions and against formidable odds. Fleming's gift for evocative prose brings the characters and events to life in a way that arouses emotional tension while also engaging the reader's intellect with fundamental questions about the future of American society.

Excerpt
Chapter 1
“Not believing in force is the same as not believing in gravity.”
~ Leon Trotsky
Wednesday, March 6, 2024
The train lurched forward. I reached out to steady myself, and my hand closed around the cold ankle of the sickly high school teacher who had boarded the train four days earlier in St. Louis. He had been oddly silent through the night and I felt a fleeting pang of guilt for the sleep I had enjoyed when his coughing finally stopped. After six days of sitting on the floor of an unheated prison compartment with twenty other prisoners, I felt little else. Anyway, the teacher’s suffering was over.
Still only half-awake, I sensed that the prison car had been nudged from behind, as when a train switches engines. Then all was silent except for the sniffling and wheezing of the men packed in around me. Before I could be sure what had happened, a twinge of pain darted up my spine from the pinched discs in my lower back. It was like no other pain I had ever known. A glowing fireball roared up through my neck, filled my skull, burst out the crown of my head and pierced the ceiling of the compartment, propelling me with it into the clear moonlit sky. The fire and I became one, soaring over the icy rail yard where the prison train had come to rest.
Suddenly the pain and the cold were gone. Below me, rock-strewn hills rippled out in all directions, meeting a line of jagged mountains in the distance. Halfway between the rail yard and the mountains was a scene that both disturbed and attracted me. A string of brilliant flood lamps atop tall poles outlined the perimeter of a vast prison camp. The camp’s wire fence enclosed a neat quadrangle, marked at intervals by wooden guard towers and surrounded by a broad swath of ploughed no-man’s-land. Transverse walls divided the camp into five equal sections. Three of these sections housed row upon row of elongated single-story lodges. The other two held an assortment of structures resembling workshops, administration buildings, and utility sheds.
A steady wind blasted the camp from the north, creating swirls of snow and waist-high drifts in the lee of the tightly strung barbed-wire fences. I directed my attention toward the lodges in the center of the camp and saw them loom larger. Now I could hear the whistle of the gusts more clearly. As I hovered above the camp, a surge of terror overtook me, followed by waves of hatred, despair, and grief, each frightening in its power, yet unfocused and without object, as if the collective anguish of all the camp’s inhabitants had risen up to meet me in a whirlwind of human misery. I turned my face from the camp and climbed higher until the fear subsided.
When I looked down I noticed a solitary road leading from the camp past a cluster of sandbag bunkers. I followed the road beyond an administration compound and motor pool, over a line of hills and into the next valley, where a concentration of street lamps and neon signs marked the outskirts of a town. The instant I focused my gaze on the town, I closed in on it at astonishing speed. Below me lay the same darkened rail yard where a locomotive had shunted our four battered prison cars onto a siding before towing the civilian coaches to the terminal.
The flashing red and white lights of a shunting engine illuminated a half-dozen canvas-topped troop trucks that disgorged black-uniformed guards in helmets and body armor. Some of the guards led snarling attack dogs on short leather leashes. As the shunting engine retreated toward the passenger terminal, the guards switched on their flashlights and formed a skirmish line opposite the coaches.
Not the dogs again, I grumbled. But before the fear of mauling could grip me, I realized that I was dropping back down to earth at an angle that seemed certain to land me on the roof of the last prison car. Just before impact I looked away.
A tremendous blow shook the car’s exterior wall. Then it struck again. But I felt no impact. When I opened my eyes, I saw huddled forms all around me rising slowly and painfully from the compartment floor. In the gray light filtering in through the compartment’s dust-caked windows, I saw that some did not stir at all.
More crashing blows struck the sides of the rail car. It took me a moment to recognize that these came from the banging of clubs and rifle butts signifying that the time had come to unload. Almost in unison, our crowd of shivering, half-starved public enemies began pressing itself against the barred door of the compartment.
Because I had occupied a place far from the door, the crowd’s shoving toward the exit gave me enough room for the first time in days to stretch out my cramped limbs. As I stretched, I felt lice crawling down my legs and suppressed an urge to scratch. With only a few seconds left before the guards would slide open the door to the corridor, there was no time to waste hunting lice, much less to think about my strange vision of the landscape outside.
Casting aside all thoughts other than how to haul my feeble body off the train, I rolled sideways onto my hands and knees, trying to tuck my right foot under me to stand. But there was no feeling in either leg. Apart from being debilitated from hunger and cold, the endless hours of sitting with my back propped against my fellow prisoners had cut off circulation to my legs.
The pounding of clubs and rifle butts began again at the head of the train and moved quickly down the line toward our car. From earlier stops I knew that once the door rolled open, anyone too slow to join the initial rush off the train would risk a thumping about his head and shoulders. Fear came over me that I couldn’t scuttle fast enough to avoid a beating. I made another frantic attempt to get on my feet, but I fell back against the schoolteacher’s stiffened corpse.
I had forgotten about him in the odd fascination of my dream and the urgency of leaving the train. Now I wondered whether there was time to scavenge anything edible from him. I patted down his pockets and the usual places where prisoners tended to stash a bread roll or an uneaten ration bar, and then searched for a bag or a bundle. It was no use; while I had slept the prisoners behind us must have noticed the schoolteacher turn cold and seized his belongings. For a moment I envied them; then I felt ashamed.
Outside the compartment a key turned the deadbolt in the steel door. Under power from the guards’ beefy shoulders, the door slid open and reached its limit with a heavy thud. A moment of silence followed.
Then began the hellish din of rifle butts on wood, cruel rasping curses, and discordant music playing from worn-out loudspeakers outside. The music, I knew, was required by convoy regulations to mask the cries of prisoners and the blows of nightsticks and rubber truncheons. Why the music was invariably an atonal modern symphony, none of us knew.
I was still on hands and knees at the edge of the crowd when the rush began and gained my footing in time to join the scrum as it heaved forward. The guards shouted and cursed at us as they drove us outside.
“Pile out, you sorry turds!“ one yelled over the frenzied barking of his well-fed German shepherd. “On the double to the blacktop! And plant your raggedy butts inside the markers!”
Through the filthy window, I could see a thinly spread line of guards with submachine guns leveled at the hip. Closer in, plainclothes thugs armed with truncheons, pepper gas canisters, and other non-lethal weapons herded the swift-moving stream of prisoners toward an assembly zone marked by orange traffic pylons.
The few stragglers who didn’t sit promptly upon reaching the ice-covered blacktop received a sudden kick in the leg or a sharp jab in the ribs from a guard’s rifle butt. Still another detachment of guards armed with sinister-looking jointed truncheons lurked further on, walloping any inattentive prisoner who failed to link arms with his neighbors. As the guards waited for the rail cars to empty, a flurry of snowflakes fell, diffusing the yellowish glare of the floodlights over the railyard.
Anxious for my legs to recover in time to drop to the platform without injury, I hung back and let others pass. To jump without full control of my legs might cost me a broken bone, which in a labor camp could lead to reduced rations and eventual starvation. Yet to be last out the door meant a beating and damage that might be just as bad. With each second I prayed for my circulation to return. Then I heard Will Roesemann’s voice coming from the next compartment.
“Paul, quick—I need your help.”
Preoccupied with my legs I had forgotten about my former cellmate at the Susquehanna interrogation facility. My first impulse was to refuse, but Roesemann had come to my aid many times and he had never asked anything in return.
“Give me a second, Will,” I told him. “My legs aren’t quite right yet.”
I dropped out of the packed corridor into the compartment where Roesemann knelt at the side of a bruised and bloodied prisoner.
The night before, at an unscheduled stop near the Colorado border, a squad of security men had tossed the prisoner aboard like a sack of potatoes. Word spread through the sleeper car that his name was Glenn Reineke and that he had escaped from a corrective labor camp at Kamas, somewhere in the Wasatch Range east of the Great Salt Lake. He and his partner had managed to evade capture for two weeks before a logging crew spotted them and held them at bay. The security force that finally took the fugitives into custody had given them an exceptionally brutal handling because both had escaped from Kamas before.
Roesemann pulled one of Reineke’s arms over his shoulder and offered the other arm to me. He was surprisingly heavy for so lean a figure and I could feel the thickness of his arm and shoulder muscles. During his time on the run he had grown a full black beard flecked with gray that matched heavy eyebrows knitted together at the bridge of a prominent nose. Reineke’s eyes were shut and his body completely limp. I wondered if he was even alive.
“This is pointless, Will. He’s a goner,” I said.
Suddenly the wounded man stiffened and raised his head. He mumbled something unintelligible.
“He thinks he’s back at Kamas,” Roesemann said with a troubled look.
“I’m not sure I can handle this, Will,” I replied. “I can barely walk myself.”
“Try anyway.”
“Will, this guy is trouble...”
“Goddamnit, Paul, stop whining and give me a hand.”
I swallowed hard, and then took Reineke’s arm.
The shouting of the guards outside became frenzied, their grunts and howls making them sound more like victims than aggressors. As prisoners we knew better than to cry out when hit because that only provoked the guards to beat us harder.
When we reached the car’s exit, by some miracle no guards remained on hand to harass us other than the dog handler stationed five yards back from the tracks. Roesemann jumped out and put his arms around Reineke’s chest while I lowered myself to the ground holding the wounded man’s legs.
At that moment a pair of guards looked our way from the edge of the blacktop and started toward us, clubs raised to strike. Roesemann and I put our heads down and rushed forward, prepared to meet their blows. But the guards were not after us.
Without a word, the pair lit into a shuffling graybeared just ahead. They rained blows upon his distinguished bald pate until his scalp was awash with blood. He scrambled desperately to break free but a vicious kick in the gut promptly felled him. He lay motionless a few feet short of the blacktop, rivulets of blood streaming onto the thin layer of new snow. Then two other guards seized him by the feet and dragged him between the orange pylons, his bald head bouncing across the frozen ground with sickening thuds.
Throughout the beating, Roesemann and I kept lugging Reineke between us, evading all blows except for a few glancing kicks from a young guard who stopped pursuing us the moment we reached the pylons.
“Get down and link arms!” the uniformed youth threatened from a spot safely beyond reach.
Behind us a truck engine roared and I turned around to look. At that instant a rubber truncheon caught me behind the ear and sent my knit cap flying from my head. Though dazed, I tucked my chin into my chest to protect my throat from additional blows. When none followed, a murderous rage well up inside me, not only at the pain and humiliation, but at the absence of any warning. The guards treated us not like fellow humans but like domestic animals that responded better to physical correction than to words.
We waited anxiously on the snow-covered blacktop until the guards were satisfied that no prisoners remained in or underneath the coaches and none had concealed themselves anywhere else in the rail yard. My lice stirred again, this time in my scalp and up and down my neck. I caught one and crushed it against my boot, but left the others alone. It was pointless—no matter how many I destroyed, more always appeared.
“Get up! De-link arms and form a single column four abreast!”
Having performed this operation many times, we succeeded in forming a workable column within seconds. Roesemann and I lifted Reineke and held him between us.
“Prisoners, prepare to march at my command!”
With guards flanking us on either side, we crossed the tracks and followed a deeply rutted path through a patchwork of open fields for fifteen or twenty minutes before it intersected a four-lane paved road that led toward town. Carrying Reineke had depleted my last reserves of strength, and the pain in my lower back had become unbearable.
“Keep to the road! One step to the right or left and I’ll fire without warning!”
I spotted a line of six unmarked tractor-trailer rigs parked two hundred yards ahead along the shoulder and resolved to hold out until we reached them. When we closed to within a hundred yards of the nearest truck, Reineke suddenly began to mutter and shuffle his feet. Roesemann and I looked at each other, unsure of what to do, and in that split second of hesitation, the man twisted out of our grip and broke away toward the fields.
Without thinking, I left the column and tackled him around the waist. Someone fired a warning shot and a half dozen guards swarmed after us. I lay still, anticipating a shower of blows. But to my amazement, the prisoners nearest to us closed in around us to form a protective screen. All Roesemann and I needed were a few seconds to pull the breathless fugitive onto his feet and we all managed to keep moving. The guards withdrew.
After the scuffle, I let go of Reineke for a moment to see whether he could walk without my support. It was only because of my odd position that I was able to see someone keeping pace with us among the trees. A moment later an old woman carrying a basket and a duffel and a young girl wearing a canvas backpack emerged from a thicket onto the road’s shoulder.
At first the guards failed to see them. The woman made the sign of the cross, then calmly stepped into the road, removed the cloth covering from her basket and began handing out bread rolls. The half-starved men broke ranks and collided with each other to get their hands on a precious roll.
A burst of submachine gunfire erupted, aiming over our heads. Dogs whined and barked, straining at their leashes to attack.
“Everybody on the ground! Sit! Link arms!”
The command rang out again and again as prisoners dropped to the ground, stuffing precious bread into their clothing.
“You! Woman! Freeze!” screamed the enraged dog handler closest to the old woman. But the woman had already taken the girl’s hand and was leading her back into the trees with remarkable speed and agility.
Without a moment’s hesitation the handler reached down to unleash his dog. In a flash a black German shepherd was racing alongside the column in headlong pursuit. Having seen dogs like these maul prisoners many times, I shuddered at the thought of what would happen to the unfortunate woman or her child. For an instant I considered stepping between the dog and its quarry but I lacked the nerve. The beast galloped past me at top speed.
Then I heard a high-pitched canine yelp followed by shouts and cries of animal pain. I turned my head in time to see a broad-shouldered prisoner sitting astride the black shepherd dog, one forearm locked firmly in the dog’s jaws and the other pinning the dog’s windpipe against the icy road. Guards converged upon the man and beat him senseless but the dog remained limp when they pulled it away from the prisoner’s inert body. Angry murmurs spread among us but another burst of gunfire silenced the crowd immediately.
“Major Whiting! Sir! Request permission to track the women!”
A young dog handler stood at attention before the convoy leader, a lean, sinewy man of about forty.
“Stand down, Rogers,” Whiting responded with an Oklahoma twang. “We have prisoners to deliver. Leave the women, and help move these vermin onto the trucks.”
Whiting waved off the eager young soldier and strode back to where one of the guards was directing two prisoners to drag the dog slayer’s body to the nearest tractor-trailer.
“Is he still alive?” Whiting asked the guard.
“He was a minute ago.”
“Then tie his hands and feet. If he lives, send him to the isolator with Reineke.”
“Yes, Sir!” the guard answered.
“And next time, son, when you open fire, don’t waste your bullets firing into thin air. Hit somebody.”
Roesemann and I looked at each other in mute fury. On command we hoisted Reineke between us and lifted him onto the truck.

Praise for the Book
"A brutal portrait of a dystopian America, full of dramatic irony and shocking revelation." ~ Kirkus Reviews
"A page-turner…moves at a solid clip. An overtly political story that succeeds as entertainment." ~ Pacific Book Review
"Weighty in ideas, Fleming’s book is both informative and deeply disturbing and provides an intriguing read." ~ San Francisco Book Review
"Masterfully paints a grim landscape with believable detail and vivid characters." ~ bookpleasures.com

About the Author
Preston Fleming was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He left home at age fourteen to accept a scholarship at a New England boarding school and went on to a liberal arts college in the Midwest. After earning an MBA, he managed a non-profit organization in New York before joining the U.S. Foreign Service and serving in U.S. Embassies around the Middle East for nearly a decade. Later he studied at an Ivy League law school and since then pursued a career in law and business. He has written five novels.


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