Editing Certitude

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''I’m leaving the business'', he’d said.<br>
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''I’m leaving the business'', he’d said.<br>
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Leaving the Resistance. <br>     
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Leaving the Resistance. <br>     
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Feds had grabbed him off the street on Beaumonde and taken him prisoner.  They had him for 60 days : 1,440 hours.  86,400 minutes.  Over 5 million seconds.  I had no knowledge of what the Alliance did to him during all that time—Mike wouldn’t say and I refused to ask—but I knew the end result when we sprang him free.  Injected with DNA-altering drugs, Mike had been rendered incapable of withholding a truthful answer to a direct question and unable to resist a direct command.  I couldn’t tally the wealth of information they’d wrested from him, but I could measure what it cost him.<br>
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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Feds had grabbed him off the street on Beaumonde and taken him prisoner.  They had him for 60 days. 1,440 hours.  86,400 minutes.  Over 5 million seconds.  I had no knowledge of what the Alliance did to him during all that time—Mike wouldn’t say and I refused to ask—but I knew the end result when we sprang him free.  Injected with DNA-altering drugs, Mike had been rendered incapable of withholding a truthful answer to a direct question and unable to resist a direct command.  I couldn’t tally the wealth of information they’d wrested from him, but I could measure what it cost him.<br>
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Everything he’d worked for might well be useless to the Resistance now.  Over a decade of training, skill, and credibility in the clandestine circles just went up in smoke.  No one would hire him and some would gun for him, for fear he was a mole.  Mike had been burned, completely and irrevocably, and his life as a spy was done.<br>
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Everything he’d worked for might well be useless to the Resistance now.  Over a decade of training, skill, and credibility in the clandestine circles just went up in smoke.  No one would hire him and some would gun for him, for fear he was a mole.  Mike had been burned, completely and irrevocably, and his life as a spy was done.<br>
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And so he’d made his way to Salisbury, the place where he’d been born thrice over.  First as a rancher’s son, second as a monk, and third as a spy.  Disparate occupations, to be sure, yet in him it only made obvious the logical progression of one to the other.  He was that rare genuine article, the true natural, and what he did came as easily as breathing.  You could no more remove the instincts that served him so well as a spy than you could rip out my affinity for machines.  We’re hard-wired for it.  Deny us our talents and any suitable outlet, we’d both wither.  Die by inches.  Cut us loose and we’d gravitate toward them, like iron filings to a lodestone, without thought and needing no reason but that the Universe spoke to us so.  His choice of Salisbury, therefore, was no surprise to me.  Of all the places he’d choose to go to ground, it made the most sense it would be there.  He had contacts there, who would take him in regardless of his condition, contacts that had made him what he’d once been, and could be again.<br>
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And so he’d made his way to Salisbury, the place where he’d been born thrice over.  First as a rancher’s son, second as a monk, and third as a spy.  Disparate occupations, to be sure, yet in him it only made obvious the logical progression of one to the other.  He was that rare genuine article, the true natural, and what he did came as easily as breathing.  You could no more remove the instincts that served him so well as a spy than you could rip out my affinity for machines.  We’re hard-wired for it.  Deny us our talents and any suitable outlet, we’d both wither.  Die by inches.  Cut us loose and we’d gravitate toward them, like iron filings to a lodestone, without thought and needing no reason but that the Universe spoke to us so.  His choice of Salisbury, therefore, was no surprise to me.  Of all the places he’d choose to go to ground, it made the most sense it would be there.  He had contacts there, who would take him in regardless of his condition, contacts that had made him what he’d once been, and could be again.<br>

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