Wild Fire - Wild Fire Part 104
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Wild Fire Part 104

"Right." Harry hadn't been so lucky.

"But you know what? I'd do the same thing again."

I thought I should remind him that the definition of crazy was doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

The odd thing, of course, was that, as Ms. Mayfield suggested, Bain and I had connected, and if he hadn't apparently killed a friend of mine, and if he wasn't trying to take over or fuck up the planet, I'd probably like him. In fact, he seemed to like me, despite my nosy questions. But then, I hadn't killed any of his friends, and I hadn't yet messed up his plans to nuke the planet, or whatever he was working on. So he had no reason not to think I was an okay guy.

As I studied the remainder of his photos, he asked me, "Have you ever been wounded in the line of duty?"

"I have."

"Military or police?"

"Police."

He informed me, "As you know, then, it's traumatic. It's so far removed from your normal, everyday experience that you can't quite grasp what happened."

"I think I got it."

"What I mean is, if you're in combat-or doing police work-you expect you may be wounded-or killed-and you think you're prepared for it. But when it actually happens, you can't believe it's really happened to you." He asked me, "Wasn't that your reaction?"

"I really think I got what happened."

"Did you? Well, maybe people react differently." He expanded on his subject and said, "Then, after you comprehend what's happened, you go into another state of mind." He explained, "To paraphrase Winston Churchill, There's nothing as satisfying as getting shot and surviving."

"Right. The alternative is getting shot and dying."

"That's the point. It's a near-death experience, and if you survive, you're never the same again. But I mean that in a positive way. You feel very ... euphoric ... powerful. Almost immortal. Was that your experience?"

I recalled lying in the gutter on West 102nd Street after two Hispanic gentlemen popped off what sounded like a dozen rounds at me, managing an unimpressive three hits at twenty feet, and I remembered seeing my blood running into a storm drain in front of my face.

"How did you feel?" he asked.

"I think I felt fucked up for a few months."

"But afterward. Didn't it change your life?"

"Yeah. It ended my career."

"Well," he said, "that's a big change. But I mean, did it change how you looked at life? How you felt about the future? Like, God had something big planned for you."

"Like what? Getting shot again?"

"No ... I mean-"

"Because I got shot again."

"Really? In the line of duty?"

"Well, yeah. I wasn't on vacation."

"I thought your career was ended."

"I'm on career number two." I added, "Libyan guy. I'm still looking for him."

"I see." He seemed stuck on this subject. "Apparently, you take these attacks on you personally."

You let the suspect talk because he may be headed somewhere. And even if he's not revealing something about the crime, he's revealing something about himself. I replied, "When people shoot at me, I tend to take it personally, even if it they don't know me."

He nodded and said, "That's interesting because, in combat, you never take it personally, and you never think about finding the actual person who was shooting at you. That's the last thing on your mind."

"So, you weren't pissed at the little guy who plugged you?"

"Not at all. He was just earning his pay. Same as I was earning mine."

"That's very forgiving. And you don't strike me as the forgiving type."

He let that slide and continued, "What I mean is, soldiers don't see the enemy as individuals. The enemy is one big amorphous threat. So, it doesn't matter who individually is trying to kill you, or whom you kill in return, as long as the guy you kill is wearing the same uniform as the guy who tried to kill you." He explained, "You're shooting at the uniform, not at the man. Understand?"

"Well ... I never saw the Libyan, but the two Hispanic guys who tried to kill me were wearing tight black chinos, purple T-shirts, and pointy shoes."

He smiled and said, "I guess you can't go around shooting everyone who's dressed like that. But I could shoot anyone who looked like the enemy."

"That's a treat."

He informed me, "Revenge is very healthy, but it doesn't have to be personal revenge. Any enemy combatant will do."

"That may not be as healthy as you think."

"I beg to differ. Revenge brings closure." He added, "Unfortunately, that war ended before I could return to duty and even the score."

I had the sudden thought that if I could pin Harry's murder on this guy, his lawyer would plead insanity, and the judge would say, "I agree, Counselor. Your client is out of his fucking mind."

It occurred to me that this guy had probably been lost in limbo after the Soviets went belly-up, and there were no major-league enemies left that were worth his attention, or who needed to be killed so that Bain Madox could save the nation.

Then came September 11, 2001. And that, I was sure, was what this was all about.

He changed the subject abruptly and asked me, "Have you gotten into the woods at all?"

"A little this morning. Why?"

"I was wondering if you'd seen any bears."

"Not yet."

"You should try to see a bear before you go back to the city."

"Why?"