few blows in detention, or the cautious application of the waterboard, well, sometimes such measures were simply unavoidable. What had the term been, back in the day? Enhanced interrogation.
But sanctioned rape: that was something new. That was a bit of a head-scratcher. It was the kind of thing that happened in small, brutal countries where men with machetes hacked people to bits for no reason other than the fact that they’d been born in the wrong village, or had slightly different ears, or preferred chocolate to vanilla. The thought should have repelled him. It should have been … beneath him. This was what Sergio had driven him to. Strange how something could seem completely crazy one day and entirely reasonable the next.
These were the thoughts running through Guilder’s mind as he sat at the head of the conference table. If he’d had the option, he would have skipped these weekly meetings, which inevitably devolved into convoluted procedural squabbling, a classic example of too many cooks in the kitchen. Guilder was a firm believer in a clear chain of command and the dispersed authorities of the pyramidal bureaucracy. It tended to create a bloat of busywork at the bottom and an excessive appetite for paperwork and precedent, but it kept everybody in his own corner. Still, the pretense of shared governance needed to be maintained, at least for now.
“Does anybody have anything to say?”
No one seemed to. After an uncomfortable silence, Propaganda Minister Hoppel, who was seated to Guilder’s immediate left, next to Suresh, the Minister of Public Health, and directly across from Wilkes, cleared his throat and said, “I think what everybody is worried about, well, not so much worried as concerned, and I think I’m speaking for everyone here—”
“For God’s sake, spit it out. And take off your glasses.”
“Oh. Right.” Hoppel slid the smoke-colored lenses from his face and placed them with nervous delicacy on the conference table. “As I said,” he continued, and cleared his throat again. “Is it possible that, maybe, things are getting a little out of hand?”
“You’re damn right they are. That’s the first intelligent thing anybody has said to me all day.”
“What I mean is, the strategies we’ve employed don’t seem to be getting us where we want to be.”
Guilder sighed with irritation. “What are you suggesting?”
Hoppel’s eyes darted involuntarily at his colleagues. You better back me up here—I’m not going out on this limb by myself.
“Perhaps we should de-escalate. For a time.”
“De-escalate. We’re getting hammered out there.”
“Well, that’s the thing. There’s a lot of talk in the flatland, and it’s not going our way. Maybe we should try ratcheting things down a bit. See where that leaves us.”
“Have you lost your mind? Have all of you lost your minds?”
“You said yourself that things aren’t really working out the way we’d like.”
“I didn’t say that, you did.”
“Be that as it may, a few of us were talking—”
“That’s the worst-kept secret in this room.”
“Right. So, okay. What we came up with was the idea that maybe we should go in the opposite direction. More of a hearts-and-minds approach. If you follow.”
Guilder took a calming breath. “So what you’re suggesting, and excuse the paraphrase, is that we should look like pussies.”
“Director Guilder, if I may.” This was Suresh. “The pattern of a successful insurgency—”
“They’re killing people. They’re killing flatlanders. What about this isn’t clear? These people are butchers.”
“No one is saying different,” Suresh continued with a bland look. “And for a while that worked in our favor. But the roundups haven’t produced any usable intelligence. We still don’t know where Sergio is or how he moves. No one’s come forward. And in the meantime, the reprisals have been an effective recruitment tool for the insurgency.”
“Do you know how you sound? I’ll tell you how you sound. You sound rehearsed.”
Suresh ignored the barb. “Let me show you something.”
From a folder on the table he withdrew a sheet of paper, which he slid toward Guilder. One of their own propaganda bulletins, but on the other side was scrawled a different message.
Flatlanders, Rise Up!
The Last Days of the Redeyes Are at Hand!
Join Your Brethren in the Insurgency!
Every Act of Disobedience Strikes a Blow Against the Regime!
And so on, in that vein. Guilder lifted his head to find everyone staring at him, as if he were a bomb that might go off.
“So? What does this prove?”
“HR personnel have found fifty-six of these so far,” Suresh replied. “I’ll give you an example of the problem this is causing. This morning at