• The Man Outside the House #16

    The phone rang twice before he picked it up.

    “Yeah, who is it?”

    “Good afternoon” said a male voice. “Is this Sergeant Ivan Bosconovitch I’m speaking to?”

    “Just tell me who this is.”

    “My name is Kenneth Houser. I work with the Public Department of Civil Affairs”, he said in a single breath. “Republican branch of containment.”

    Ivan was silent for a second before saying:

    “Where did you get this number?”

    “You’re filed in an on-going investigation, sergeant. It would be in your best interest to comply in answering some questions.”

    “I’ve no idea what you’re talking about, chief. Whatever I had to say I already did in court. If you need the transcripts, call the judge. Have a good rest of your day.”

    “This isn’t about the trial, sir”, the man’s voice was quick to point out, as he realized Ivan was about to hang up. “This is an on-going investigation being conducted by the Containment Sector, sanctioned by the Committee itself. Your collaboration is of the utmost importance.”

    “Look, what the hell is this? Why are you calling me? I don’t know nothing about any of that bullshit you people get paid to monitor, I barely leave the house. Go ask someone else in the army, call my commanding officer, I don’t know.”

    “I already told you, sergeant, you’re a key witness in a major case, it’s you that we need.”

    “And what case is that, even?”

    “The Partridge report.”

  • The Man Outside the House #15

    Sheriff Cecil Plettschner knew the price of being the last serious man in a town that size, and he was willing to pay it. For a man like him, it wasn’t a matter of willingness any more than it was one of necessity.

    Weaver Parish had become just another sad example of a once great, hardworking people falling into the cruel fate that both war and divine providence had in store for them, and in a time like this, men like him would be needed.

    He rode down the main street in his cruiser when he spotted the small diner. The truck parked outside left no doubt as to whether he was in the right place or not. As he parked right beside it, he stepped down and adjusted his belt while having a peek inside the passenger window, then later the trunk. No unattended firearms, no clothes or car seats with fresh stains of  blood. A pity, really, he thought to himself.

    He kicked the tire lightly with the tip of his boot and felt almost disappointed when not even that looked half-assed enough to warrant a ticket. Recently calibrated, way too together to not be suspicious when it comes to a man who being the opposite of together is a major trait.

    As the sheriff stepped in, he scanned around the establishment.

    Sergeant Bosconovitch was sitting at the counter, silently looking down as he ate a serving of bacon and eggs over a cup of coffee.

    Plettschner made his way across the establishment as he sat next to the sergeant.

    “You know”, he started. “When people told me some deranged lunatic was admitting to war crimes in broad daylight while harassing government workers I just laughed to myself. I mean, what’s new, right?”

    The sergeant just kept eating in silence, as if the conversation was taking place between two other people beside him.

  • The Partridge Report #6

    EXCERPT 20

    [START OR RECORDING]

    WITNESS #9791: “Why are you turning that thing back on?”

    INTERVIEWER: “My guy just beeped me, he’ll be here in a minute.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Jesus, where do you people get so much money to buy these gizmos?”

    INTERVIEWER: “We’re service providers, we just write documents saying what gizmos we’ll need and how many, in return they give us blank checks.”

    WITNESS #9791: “That’s rich. Back when I was in the academy we barely could afford spare sheets. Burroughs used to joke that if one of us used them to hang ourselves the rest of us would have to sleep under the shit stains.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Lovely.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Right? I miss the academy, sometimes.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Do you?”

    WITNESS #9791: “I guess. Compared to everything that came after, there’s a charm to not having to worry about much besides basic drills and being shouted at.”

    [MALE VOICE] “Here you go, sir. Sergeant.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Thank you, Brooks.”

    [MALE VOICE] “They only had Huxley Light. I hope that’s okay?”

    WITNESS #9791: “We take those, son, don’t worry.”

    “Here’s the change, sir. Anything else?”

    INTERVIEWER: “That’ll be all, thank you.”

    WITNESS #9791: “[Silence] Good kid. You gonna drink too?”

    INTERVIEWER: “I’ll let you get a headstart.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Don’t mind if I do.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Now, I hope you get that whistle wet, Sergeant, because you and I have much to talk about.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Do we, now.”

    INTERVIEWER: “I need you to come clean with me, Ivan. What is it that you’re not telling me?”

    WITNESS #9791: “Plenty. But you paid for the beer, so… Where should we start.”

    INTERVIEWER: “I know there’s more to it than what you said during the trials.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Then you know more than I do.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Well, then again, maybe I do.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Maybe I should be the one asking questions here, don’t you think?”

    INTERVIEWER: “[Laugh] That would be interesting. I’m curious to know what you’d be asking me.”

    WITNESS #9791: “I can think of a few things. For example, who are you, really?”

    INTERVIEWER: “Me? No one in particular. I’m just a grunt, like you. Except I work for a different company.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Except you people get fancier uniforms, I think is what you meant.”

    INTERVIEWER: “We pay for these suits ourselves, if that’s what you’re implying.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Fair. But be honest, why are you here? What’s your role in this probe you keep mentioning?”

    INTERVIEWER: “As I said, I’m the appointed chief inspector. Me and my team investigate leads and write reports to our higher-ups. At some point in the future someone either gets prosecuted or not. It’s as simple as that.”

    WITNESS #9791: “And I suppose in this case that someone is gonna be partridge”

    INTERVIEWER: “I get that this is what you ”

    Which means my boss makes me write bi-weekly reports so we can discuss my findings with some of the senior board members at RBC headquarters back in Lambert.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Sounds like a drag.”

    INTERVIEWER: “I hope no one watches this part of the recording but I can assure you, sergeant, you have no idea.”

    WITNESS #9791: “So you’re tasked with finding out ”

    INTERVIEWER: “That you did, but at the same time… You also used the word ‘circus’.”

    WITNESS #9791: “I did, because that’s what it was. ”

    WITNESS #9791: “Okay, one last question.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Let’s hear it.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Why are you telling me all this?”

    INTERVIEWER: “I mean, you asked, didn’t you?”

    WITNESS #9791: “That’s what I meant, do you people just go around playing meet-and-greet with everyone you interrogate? Does that not sound suspicious to you?”

    INTERVIEWER: “Sergeant, like I said more than once at this point, this isn’t an interrogation. You didn’t commit any crime. You were acquitted of all charges during your trial, weren’t you?”

    WITNESS #9791: “I was.”

    INTERVIEWER: “And you were honorably discharged and awarded for your service, weren’t you?”

    WITNESS #9791: “I guess.”

    INTERVIEWER: “You see where I’m getting at? You’re a civilian. You were invited by me so we could chat. ”

    WITNESS #9791: “So civilians can just go around asking zoo people what they’re up and they’re entitled to straight answers, is what you’re telling me.”

    INTERVIEWER: “I’m not sure entitlement is the word I’d use, in light of the Containment Act and all, but what we are allowed to disclose is left to our own discretion.”

    WITNESS #9791: “I see. So we’re just two buddies shooting the shit, is what you’re telling me.”

    INTERVIEWER: “I mean, if you wanna put it that way, sure. I guess we’re buddies.”

    WITNESS #9791: “That’s funny. Did Lucas get the same treatment when you invited him to the party?”

    INTERVIEWER: “I’m afraid I can’t disclose that.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Of course you can’t. I can guess how much less willing to participate he was, compared to me for example.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Private Romanek was not without his quirks, as you may imagine. But it wasn’t just that.”

  • The Man Outside the House #14

    The screams of sheer horror of the young woman filled the dark living room dimly lit by the TV. Ivan woke up, startled. He was met by the voice of the announcer.

    “An abject horror that defies description.”

    He looked around and barely registered his surroundings as he bolted from his seat, the bottle leaning on his hip fell to the floor with a loud thud.

    “Vile, grotesque corruption beyond all human comprehension.”

    There was, and there’s no mistake about it, a person’s laughter coming from outside. Again. He knew it, he could hear it loud as day.

    “No human weapon can suppress it…”

    But it wasn’t laughter this time, he realized. It was something different. Some type of chatter, a strange sort of back-and-forth between two people.

    “No human brain can register it…”

    He perked his neck out and looked around in the dark, trying to ignore the sound of the TV. There were people outside, talking to each other, loud and obnoxious. They were mocking him at this point, rubbing his nose in it. That wasn’t gonna do.

    “No human reasoning can prepare you to face…”

    Ivan strode across the living room and grabbed the shotgun off the wall, immediately cracking it open and checking the chamber.

    “The Indescribable Man!”

    There was no time to lose, he went for the drawer and slammed two slugs inside the chamber, leaving two more inside his coat pocket. He stormed through the front door and made his way into the cold night.

    “Warning! Do not reveal the ending of this movie to your friends and family!”

    Ivan sprinted through the cold night.

    “Or maybe try to… If you think you can!”

    With his shotgun in hand, Ivan scoured through the dense woods trying to follow the voices, determined to find their source. He was no longer afraid of what it could be; whatever it was, he was putting an end to this.

    At one point, he could hear a female voice. Listening closely, he was able to make out some of the words.

    “You’re gonna get yourself killed.”

    He kept listening to it, trying to understand more of what was being said.

    “Can you shut the fuck up for one second?” he could hear a second voice say, this time male.

    “I swear to God–” a second female voice could be heard saying, but the second half of the sentence was much quieter.

    The voices seemed different, this time around. They were hushed, nervous, but still loud enough to be heard clearly. Standing perfectly still, he could hear more hushed sounds.

    That was when a fourth voice came from the opposite direction.

    “You’re gonna get yourself killed.”

    Ivan immediately looked over his shoulder. It was pitch black, but the light from the porch soaked the part of the woods from where he could hear the voice.

    Far into the hazy dark of the trees, he could see a smokey silhouette of what seemed like a man of average height. He squinted just about enough to make out the silhouette, and he noticed when the person seemed to make a gesture.

    He was confused for a second. He wasn’t sure if it was directed at him or not, as the man seemed to be way too far into the dark to be able to see him clearly. But at the same time, there was no one else he could see. It had to be directed at him. A hazy, almost ambiguous hand gesture at shoulder length, like he was pointing towards the sky, or reaching for his own face, but then…

    He was waving at him?

    Ivan was confused to the point he was completely sure he was not seeing it right. Why was there a person this deep into the woods simply waving at him?

    The realization was so jarring that for a brief moment his mind didn’t even process the fact that he could only see the gesture because a different source of light flashed over the silhouette. Just about long enough for him to see a pale, emaciated frame raising a boney hand to eye level.

    Barely a heartbeat later, Ivan instinctively looked over his other shoulder, facing the direction the other voices initially came from. He had forgotten all about them, and now he felt swarmed by all sides.

    From across the trees, he could see the beam of a flashlight. He quickly braced his shotgun and shouted:

    “HEY!”

    “Oh shit”, said the other male voice from earlier.

    “Stop right where you are!” Ivan continued.

    “Oh shit, run, run”

    “Please don’t shoot!”

    “Who the hell are you? Who told you about this place?”

    “Please sir, don’t shoot, we are just lost—”

    “Bullshit”, Ivan snapped back, pointing the gun at the girl. “You think I’m an idiot? Nobody comes this far into the creek by accident, tell me what you’re doing here right now.”

    “We were just looking for our friends…”

    “Your friends? What friends? There’s no one here, kid, no one comes here.”

    “Our friends, they got lost here last month…” the girl continued. “They were last seen near the road… We were trying to find them.”

    “You do yourself a favor and you forget about your friends.”

    “But… why?!”

    “Because your friends are fucking dead, that’s why. They’re not coming back. They are never coming back.”

    “No! We know that’s not true!”

    “You don’t know shit, kid.”

    “How can you be so sure? You don’t know that!”

    “Are you calling me a liar, you little shit?”, Ivan said, pointing the gun at the young man.

    “No, please, that’s not what I said…!”

    “Get the fuck out of my property before I call the sherriff.”

    “Please sir, you need to help us… Everybody is giving up already, our friends could be in danger…”

    “The only thing I’m gonna do is start shooting if you don’t turn away and come back the way you came right fucking now, I swear this is my last warning.”

    “You’re not gonna shoot us.”

    “Trish, what the hell dude, let’s get out of here—”

    “What makes you think I won’t?”

    “Because you don’t shoot kids. Or women.”

    Ivan paused for a second.

    “Who told you that?”

    “You’re Mr. B, aren’t you?”

    Ivan didn’t answer.

    “Who are you?”

    “We’re Anya’s friends.”

    Ivan said nothing.

    “She told us about you.”

    “That a fact?” he asked, starting to look less confident. “What did she tell you?”

    “She said the stories aren’t true. You didn’t kill those people.”

    Ivan thought about that for a second.

    “Did you?”

    “Of course not”, Ivan said, finally raising the gun. “Why? That gives you the right to trespass?”

    “Good. Means we’re on the same page.”

  • The Man Outside the House #13

    “You will pay dearly for your recklessness, you madman.”

    “And this whole country will pay a thousand fold for yours, General!”

    It hadn’t stopped raining all day, and Ivan had spent every single waking moment drinking as soon as he slammed the door behind him. He was still covered under his tent-cloak when he picked up the first can of Huxley, the canvas dripping in a large puddle on his kitchen floor as footsteps of fresh mud trailed behind him.

    “Gentlemen, cease this nonsense immediately! Time is of the essence, we must cooperate in order to safeguard the future of our nation!”

    That afternoon was spent rushedly downing one beer after another, the loud sound of gulping being interrupted only by that of cans being opened and half-crumpled aluminium hitting the floor. His head didn’t stop hurting for longer than two seconds straight ever since he shouted at Bill for the last time, and the pain would persist in the same measure until at least five or six beers in.

    “Mister Chairman, our only hope of survival is to strike the enemy with the full brunt of our arsenal, and we must do it now.”

    “Fools! Don’t you see what we’re up against? This is not an adversary that can be fought through conventional means!”

    Now slumped on his mouldy chair with half a bottle of old country vodka leaning against his hip, Ivan slept not the sleep of the just, but whatever sleep was reserved for the likes of him. As the sound of the rain subsided outside, the voices in the television grew louder in the blue-lit darkness of his living room.

    “And how do you suppose we contain this threat, Professor?”

    “There is nothing we can hope to contain at this point, Mister Chairman. All that awaits us is the harsh reality of the only possible outcome.”

    On the screen, some no-name grainy black and white B-movie was on, a relic of Western propaganda disguised as cheap entertainment that must’ve been half a century old by then. In it, an emergency cabinet meeting between the top-ranking generals of the Coalition devolved in a charade of finger-pointing and panicked decisions as the head of state, the leading researchers and the top brass scrambled for an effective way to contain an extralogical anomaly of yet unknown proportions.

    Like most Western productions of that era, it portrayed the Cinerean military and its leading scientific minds as irresponsible megalomaniacs willing to go any lengths to surpass their civilized rivals in their search to exploit the powers of the unknown. These movies would more often than not flip these depictions into that of cowardly bumbling idiots as soon as the consequences of their actions would catch up to them.

    “Gentlemen… As the last line of defense of this nation, this will be the greatest challenge ever faced by us.”

    Ivan, however, was so enthralled by his own sleep and the imagery that inhabited it that he didn’t even realize the TV was still on.

    “May the strength and perseverance of the brave people of this country not fail them at this time. Because we, in our hubris, may have failed them like never before.”

    In the darkness of the war room, Ivan was in his full dress uniform, standing at the head of the long table. Drenched in a blinding glare, half spotlight, half interrogation lamp, he could still make out the silhouettes around him. Broad chests slated in medals, tie knots neatly tucked underneath buttoned officer tunics, hands pressed against the glossy tabletop as the shadowy figures, on their feet, leaned forward, their shadow-drenched body language inquisitive and aggressive.

    Half-lit by small banker lamps resting in front of them, their faces were almost visible, the darkness of the war room dissolving in an oily mix of glaring light and dense shadow.

    “You people have lost your goddamn minds”, Ivan snarled at the shadowy figures. “What you’re asking from this unit is a crime against humanity.”

    At that moment, standing there at the head of the table, he could feel himself overtaken by the dreamscape-bound omniscience of knowing that which one can’t see. The embrace of the unconscious of a man betrayed. Although he couldn’t see them clearly, Ivan knew those to be the people who wronged him, who exploited his men and their loyalty. The ones responsible for the pain and suffering of his allies and enemies alike.

    “Bosconovitch, you damn fool”, said a voice from the shadows. “Don’t you see what’s at stake?”

    Burroughs. A traitor to the bitter end, Ivan knew deep inside. Just another lackey of the brass ready to throw his men to the wolves if that meant another notch scribbled beneath his name. In the dream, perhaps fittingly, Ivan’s perception registered him as already a colonel, decorated in the war that within dream logic was still happening.

    “Do you not realize it’s your insubordination that jeopardizes the future of this country?” the colonel’s voice continued. “You’d risk us losing our best chance so far of ending this conflict, and for what? Childish morals, the likes of which have never won a single battle in history?”

    “Is that what you call this?” Ivan snapped back. “Morals? It’s barely common sense anymore, at this point. This isn’t war anymore, it’s pure butchery and cowardice.”

    “Be reasonable, sergeant”, said another voice. The old man, this time. “We must be prepared to use every tool at our disposal if we want to win this war, and such readiness comes at cost.”

    “And what cost is that? Making a covenant with the devil? Feeding people to dragons?

    “This is a matter of science, Sergeant Bosconovitch, not of blind superstition! Your short-sightenedness and sentimentalism has no place in this matter!”

    “Can you even listen to yourselves anymore? Morals? Sentimentalism? These people are our fellow countrymen, for goodness’ sake. They have been led astray by the farce of the oppressor’s propaganda, but they are still sons and daughters of Praetoria. Our lives have no more value than theirs, it is not for us to decide if they are deserving of this fate or not.”

    Burroughs slammed his fist against the table.

    “They’re communist scum, that’s what they are, and they deserve every last bit of what we got coming for ‘em”, Burroughs boomed. “They are traitors to their country, we are the ones trying to save it, I am in control of this operation and you, soldier, are way out of line. Either stand down immediately or I will have you stripped from your rank and arrested for mutiny like the self-fashioned adventurer that you crave to be so bad.”

    “You know something, Leland? Maybe you should’ve done that from the start.”

    “Don’t you ‘Leland’ him just yet, Johnny Boy”, said another voice. “You know he’s right for once.”

    “You of all people would know that, wouldn’t you, J.D?”


    “You have no idea”, he said. “And by the time this is over, this is where you will remain.”

    Something was eating away at the back of Ivan’s mind during that specific moment of the dream. Maybe in light of the recent events, Kasowitz, who up until that moment in his life had felt almost like a non-factor on his own misfortune, for some reason was being.

    Kasowitz was, simply put, off. The dream itself was off in its very essence, a vicious cave dive in the unlit, sunken depths of one’s resentment toward themselves and the world around them. Still, Kasowitz seemed like an even stranger outlier in his own way; cocky, collected, almost too together in his voluntary sidelining, as if he expected something to happen and wanted to get a good seat to watch it go down.

    There were, however, much more disconcerting visitations to be undergone at that moment, as the next voice to echo from the half light would indicate:

    “Are we done here, sergeant?”

    Ivan squinted and could see the bespectacled silhouette of the young man staring at him from across the table. Standing right behind the old man, he was, as always, almost an extension of that bloated obsession for the unethical pursuit for science.

    “Some of us have more pressing matters to attend to besides just standing here and entertaining the egotistical ”

    “Like what, you fucking reptile? Exploiting people in the name of science, then trying to look like the victim by blaming those you betrayed?”

    “Large doses of projection going on around here, I see”, the young man continued. “Especially since this conversation is taking place inside your head.”

    “I don’t give a shit if any of you are here or not”, Ivan said, looking around. “This doesn’t change the fact that what happened to those men was your fault.”

    “Are we here to discuss what happened to the men led by you, as well?” asked another familiar voice from the opposite end of the table. “Or is this just you reminding yourself how nothing is ever your fault?”

    Ivan started feeling overtaken by a severe unease. The bright light that blinded him, which once had been met by him with a frown of defiance as he snarled at his perceived abusers, was now a force of nature he no longer had the courage to face. His brow wrinkled and gleamed with sweat. Within the dream, he could feel his face retort into that of the present, the weariness of features battered by decades of frustration.

    “This isn’t about me, soldier”, was all he could muster.

    “We trusted you, sarge”, another voice said from the direction. “We deserved better just as much as you did.”

    “A hell of a thing, isn’t it?” said one of the early voices. It was Burroughs. “Leading, I mean. Blaming others for our shortcomings is never an easy task when we’re already busy with that of keeping someone else safe.”

    “Leading your men to their deaths is the only road idealism will lead you, Comrade Ivan”, said a voice opposite to Burroughs.

    Ivan squinted against the glaring light, and he could see a disheveled silhouette standing in front of the table.

    “If your way to cope with the type of  to being faced with this type of responsibility is”, he continued. His voice was weirdly familiar, even if just through recordings. “Then perhaps the battlefield was not your place to begin with.”

    “Kravchenko…?” Ivan whispered, genuinely surprised.

    “Okay, who’s letting commies into the war room, now?”, Kasowitz said, unamused.

    “At ease, lieutenant”, Burroughs cut in. “Everyone has a part to play in this theatre of war.”

    “I won’t be long, gentlemen”, said Kravchenko, unfazed by the provocations. “Just as much as the living, I’m needed elsewhere as well.”

    “What the hell are you doing here, Ilya?” Ivan asked. “We never even met.”

    “Maybe not”, the grizzled ghost agreed. “But you have met with the suffering you inflicted upon my men. I will answer for it just as soon as I’ll answer for myself.”

    Something about Kravchenko’s presence, just as much as his words, felt real in a way Ivan wasn’t fully able to grasp at that moment. The lingering notion that the two of them were similar men on opposite sides of the same war wasn’t new to him, but seeing him as leader of innocent men wronged by those Ivan believed to be on his side was more than enough to touch a nerve.

    “Like I said”, Burroughs added again. “Hell of a thing.”

    Feeling somewhat defensive toward the course this whole exchange was taking, Ivan could feel himself drift back into the cynicism from before. With a tired smile, he let out a dry chuckle and said:

    “I’ve had enough of carrying this burden on my own, colonel. I agree it’s mine as much as it is yours, but that doesn’t mean I’ll carry it for you. For all of you.”

    “You keep calling this a burden”, said the young man, his posture stiff and detached. “You keep acting like all of this wasn’t your choice.”

    “I was given no choice in this matter, traitor, and you know it”, Ivan replied. “If I had a say in any of this, we would all be in jail for our crimes, and that includes myself.”

    “Turn yourself in, if that’s the case”, said the young scientist. “See what good that does.”

    Ivan chuckled in contempt, once again.

    “After you, Partridge”, he added.

    “At least the kid’s trying to do something for the good of this country besides moping around at home blaming others for everything”, Kasowitz could be heard saying, his voice getting nearer. “You should try that, sometime.”

    He could see the obfuscated silhouette of the lieutenant walking along his side of the long table with his hands on his pockets. Possibly grounded within the same dream logic as in Burroughs’ case, Kasowitz was already a lieutenant in the dream, although at time of their service both him and Ivan were still sergeants.

    This once again made him self-conscious to the fact he was, in the dream, himself in his forties, and not in his twenties as when he first arrived. That strange notion made him notice the back of his hands; wrinkled, time-battered. Not the hands of a young soldier, but those of whatever they’re unlucky enough to devolve into.

    “Don’t go all judgemental on your old pals just yet, B”, Kasowitz continued as he stood just a few feet away, his face still obfuscated by the light. “Undesirables like us got to stick to each other.”

    “Traitors stepping up for other traitors”, Ivan scoffed, a bitter smile on his face. “It’s what this country was built on, after all, isn’t it?”

    “It’s not about loyalty any more than it is about who you choose to be loyal to”, Kasowitz said as he walked out of Ivan’s sight and into the darkness of the war room. “On that note, I’ll be taking my leave.”

    Ivan couldn’t help but notice Lucas was nowhere to be seen.

    “Easy there, buckaroo”, said Ira Hinckley, who for some reason was sitting at that meeting as well. “Don’t wanna get your knickers in a twist over something this minor, do you?”

    “Hold on, what the fuck are you doing here?”, Ivan asked, outraged.

    “What can I say, this is Bucky Roswell’s story just as much as it’s yours!”

    “You’re some movie cowboy, you don’t even exist”

    “Well, guess what, maybe you’re a movie cowboy too, have you ever thought about that?”

    “You have no idea what you’re even doing in this dream you stupid redneck.”

    “And you have no idea what an archetype even is, boy, you tell me who’s winning.”

    “Silence. Both of you.” boomed the colonel. “Ivan, you’re an embarrassment to this company. You’ve been handpicked to lead what could be the most important operation in this campaign, and you’re making a point of tarnishing what little honor you have left by making this about you.”

    “This isn’t about me, Leland, it’s about those poor men. I don’t care if they are our enemies, no one deserves what you put them through.”

    “If I may, colonel?”, the young man continued. “Sergeant Bosconovitch wasn’t handpicked to lead this operation at all.

    “You shut your goddamn mouth—”

    “He volunteered to take the place of the man on who this honor was bestowed, and we all know how that went for both him and this country.”

    “You shut your goddamn mouth right now.”

    The discussion was interrupted by the sight of a man standing besides the door. He was in full combat gear, still wearing his mask and his rifle.

    “Preacher?” Ivan said.

    “He wants to talk to you.”

    Ivan realized it was him he was talking to.

    “What does he want?” he finally asked.

    “Why don’t you ask him yourself?”

    The war room was suddenly silent. All those present fixed their eyes on Ivan, expecting him to take the lead. Nervously, he stepped away from the head of the table and walked toward the door.

    As he walked by Lucas, he could feel his cold, piercing gaze meeting his across the mask.

    He stepped outside of the war room and saw himself in a pitch black hallway.

  • The Partridge Report #5

    EXCERPT #17

    […]

    INTERVIEWER: “The trial.”

    WITNESS #9791: “A circus. Next question.”

    INTERVIEWER: “[Laugh] I mean it, sergeant. Let’s hear more about it, shall we?”

    WITNESS #9791: “Well, did you get access to the audio tapes or not?”

    INTERVIEWER: “I did.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Then you got nothing else to hear from me. That’s why I said ‘next question’.”

    INTERVIEWER: “I think you understand what I meant. I’m interested in hearing what was left out of the tapes.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Such as?”

    INTERVIEWER: “What actually happened that day would be a good place to start, I think.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Are you going on record accusing me of lying under oath, son? Is that what we’re doing right now?”

    INTERVIEWER: “[Laugh] Of course not, sir. The Republican Army appointed a commission to investigate your claims, I believe.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Yeah, so what if they did?”

    INTERVIEWER: “They acquitted you of all charges of treason, is what I reckon.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Yes, I remember that part, thank you for clarifying.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Furthermore, you were honorably discharged and awarded highest honors.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Is this getting somewhere, or…?”

    INTERVIEWER: “I mean, like I said earlier, this is not a bad track record, not by any stretch. Quite the high note to end your military career on, wouldn’t you say so?”

    WITNESS #9791: “Okay, enough with whatever this bullshit routine is, can you just tell me what you want to know so I can either answer it or not?”

    INTERVIEWER: “Private Romanek’s report, naturally.”

    WITNESS #9791: “[Silence] Just say what the question is.”

    INTERVIEWER: “How may I put this? On a scale of one to ten, one being him and ten being someone who wasn’t indicted in the first place, where would you place the deal you were given?”

    WITNESS #9791: “[Silence] I see where this is going.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Care to tell me where that is?”

    WITNESS #9791: “I already told you. You think I’m full of shit. You think I lied to the commission to save my ass. Stop dancing around it, just call a spade a spade, just bring me the papers you want me to sign if you want a confession so bad. I didn’t come here to spend all day listening to your collection of euphemisms for telling me to spill the beans.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Well, if I brought the papers, would you sign them?”

    WITNESS #9791: “Of course not.”

    INTERVIEWER: “[Laugh] Good, because there are no papers. For this project we’re operating by word of mouth.”

    WITNESS #9791: “That and tape recordings, you mean.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Among other things, yes.”

    WITNESS #9791: “[Silence] Is this why you brought me here? To ask me, politely, to throw myself into the dog pen so you can get dirt on the guy you were hired to catch?”

    INTERVIEWER: “I know this is a rhetorical question but no, we don’t need ‘dirt’ on anyone to make sure this investigation doesn’t fall through. Furthermore, we don’t need you compromising your plea deal in order to help us.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Calling it a plea deal just shows how much my word means nothing to you, apparently.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Sergeant, I’m not here representing the law, I’m here representing private interests that align with yours, at least for the time being. You don’t have to stick to the script, your trial was fifteen years ago. You’re out of the woods.”

    WITNESS #9791: “[Slamming on table] ‘Out of the woods’? Is that what you call this? I can’t even sleep at night because of what this bullshit criminal operation inflicted upon me and like twenty other people, both physically and mentally. I lost the ability to simply lie down and sleep like a normal person. You think I slept in the past twenty four hours? [chair dragging] I’m about to lose my medication, my pension, my house, who knows what else after that. Do I look like a man outside of the woods you speak of, you slick-haired brat?”

    INTERVIEWER: “I’ll need to ask you to sit down, sergeant.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Look buddy, I got way too much riding on what little I was given to work with. I don’t give a shit about the honors, this whole thing made me realize I fucking hate this army and this country. If they want to label me a traitor and a coward, fine, I’m not losing sleep over that of all things that have been keeping me up at night. I know where their loyalty lies, I know what type of person they’re willing to call a hero.”

    INTERVIEWER: “[Silence]But…?”

    WITNESS #9791: “‘But’? The fuck you mean, ‘but’? But I need that pension, man. What’s so hard to understand about someone not doing something because they’re scared of starving to death? That shit is my only source of income, I can barely stay afloat. I can’t even get a dead-end blue-collar job like most of my friends without getting written out of my own pension, all thanks to this bullshit unemployment legislation those parasites at the Committee keep pushing every year, may God fucking curse their cocksucking souls into the tar pits of Hell. [Silence] I need to pay bills, I need to buy medication. Now they want to cut me off and I can’t even pay for new roofing during the rainiest season all year. Don’t you see, kid? They’re trying to snuff me out like a rat. That’s all I am to them, some vermin they need to get rid of but just can’t find the right angle to swat. First it’s the pills, then it’s the house, then it’s me panhandling my way into dying of hypothermia on some park bench, or freezing to death after falling in some ditch. I can’t end like this. I have a family.”

    INTERVIEWER: “[Silence] I understand your concern, Ivan. But you also need to understand that in the event that anything happens to you, they’re still under government protection. The Reparations Act oversees the closest of kin even of the men you killed, let alone those who fought them.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Bullshit. They said my consultation was safe under the Act as well, and see where that went.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Yes, I understand, what they did to you was unfair, there’s no question about it. But I need you to trust me right now. Our legal team went through your files several times over before I was greenlit to even approach you.”

    WITNESS #9791: “Wait. What do you mean by that?”

    INTERVIEWER: “That it was ruled as anti-ethical to even involve you in this probe if there was any risk of this involvement damaging your family’s livelihood. I was only allowed to approach you after our legal team made sure they were safeguarded under the Reparations Act. [Silence] The papers are right here, if you want to take a look at them. This is the legal report from the week before our first phone call.”

    WITNESS #9791: “[Silence] I don’t know, kid. This looks legit and all, but… I lived long enough to regret having trusted legal teams I never got to meet in person. More than once, I mean.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Ivan, I’ll just be candid. I know you think we’re monsters, but we’re just a joint effort in public security. It’s the people who put you in this situation that we’re asking for your help to hold accountable.”

    WITNESS #9791: “[Laugh] And save face, in the process. Conveniently.”

    INTERVIEWER: “I believe you told me to call a spade a spade, didn’t you? So yeah, I’ll just tell you as it is. We need to catch Partridge before more people get hurt and we have to answer for it. You can help us, but only if you agree to tell me what happened that day.”

    WITNESS #9791: “[Silence] This building is technically your office, isn’t it?”

    INTERVIEWER: “For now, at least.”

    WITNESS #9791: “So I guess I can’t drink here.”

    INTERVIEWER: “[Silence] Let me call my supervisor.”

    [RECORDING STOPS]

  • The Man Outside the House #12

    It had been downpouring for what seemed like a whole day straight, and the heavy clouds the wind carried over Weaver Parish throughout that weekend weren’t holding back. Monday was off to a strange start by the moment Ivan had decided to finally call Hank and try to get a hold of whatever his side of the story was.

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Man Outside the House #11

    “I’ll be honest with you, the whole thing stinks.”

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Partridge Report #4

    EXCERPT #14

    […]

    INTERVIEWER: “So they just rounded up the five of you and hauled you to the choke point.”

    WITNESS #9791: “It wasn’t that simple but yeah, something like that.”

    INTERVIEWER: “Did they expect this plan to work?”

    WITNESS #9791: “I’m pretty sure they didn’t, but that’s beside the point. The endgame was a different one.”

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Man Outside the House #10

    Waiting for the sound of a passing 16 wheeler to roll out along the interstate highway, Ivan looked around and said:

    “Yeah, it’s been a whole thing. No one knows what’s going on.”

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Man Outside the House #9

    Leland’s fancy ride made him keep thinking how life seemed a lot less miserable from the inside of a car that wasn’t even out yet. Staring at the roadside as they made their way uphill, Ivan had a strange feeling while looking at the same pine trees from a million times before. Strange in the sense of being new, which for someone like him was the most disconcerting type of strangeness.

    Behind the wheel, Burroughs must have noticed his quiet introspection when he decided to say:

    “So?”

    “So what?”

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Partridge Report #3

    EXCERPT #11

    […]

    INTERVIEWER: “Kasowitz is pretty hard to fit anywhere in this puzzle, if I’m being honest.”

    WITNESS #9791: “I mean, if you say so.”

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Man Outside the House #8

    “Lieutenant Kasowitz is a hero.”

    The fresh pot of coffee was boiling loud from across the kitchen as the smell filled the morning air. Ivan was standing in front of the dinner table when he caught a whiff, resting the metal pieces back on the blanket that covered the wooden surface. Pulling the dirty rag that rested on his naked shoulder, he wiped his oily palms and walked towards the counter.

    “What the hell, Jim.”

    “I said what I said.”

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Man Outside the House #7

    Someone was knocking on the door.

    It was almost noon. Annoyed for having survived another stale gray morning following a placeholder for a proper night’s sleep, Ivan left the TV on as he got up from his chair in what felt like forced labor.

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Partridge Report #2

    EXCERPT #8

    […]

    INTERVIEWER: “So you’re saying they were covert missions.”

    WITNESS #9791: “[Laugh] You think I would if they were?”

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Man Outside the House #6

    The Bonneterre Marshlands had been known throughout history as one of the most treacherous crossings ever faced by the early settlers of the Praetorian nations. Named almost in mocking fashion by merchants who established the first caravan routes to extend from the south coast all the way across the wetlands, the bog had always been considered a death sentence for travelers and even highwaymen in the days of old.

    Conserved by the cold bodies of water that spread across the mainland, the bleached bones of men and women who fled the harsh winters of the northern tundra could still be seen sticking out of the mud where the water was clear enough. Carrion eaters, horse carcasses and rotten tree trunks had all been common sights throughout its narrow trails of tall bushes and short slopes. In similar fashion, the disconcerting, almost confusing symbols of devotion and communion cultivated in ages long past by the illusive folk that inhabited the region before the settlers could also be found. And perhaps even more so than the omens of death and decay that nature held up to the face of men around those grounds, the less said about them, the better.

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Man Outside the House #5

    The Republican Committee of Historical Reparations was run by a bunch of cowards, Ivan had decided for what seemed like the tenth time that week alone, and Wednesday had barely started.

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Man Outside the House #4

    “Just let me talk to the doctor.”

    “Sergeant Bosconovitch, listen to me…”

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Partridge Report #1

    NEOPRETORIAN BRANCH OF CONTAINMENT,

    INTERNAL AFFAIRS COMMISSION

    CASE FILE #89BWP97, “PARTRIDGE, T.”

    WRITTEN LOG OF EXHIBIT C: EYEWITNESS ACCOUNT #9791 

    DATE & LOCATION DISCLOSED IN ANNEXED FILE

    SANCTIONED BY SPECIAL AGENT H., K.,

    APPOINTED DEPUTY INSPECTOR, INTERNAL AFFAIRS

    (Full Chapter)
  • The Man Outside the House #3

    Days kept flying by in their usual blur into one another, bleak in their lack of distinction. From one gray morning to the deafening silence of the next witching hour, life had become a trailing haze of uneventfulness that connected these points in their dotted line toward nothing at all. The same room, the same house, the same trees, the same pain in the same spots. The same regret from the same mistakes being made over and over again throughout days different in numbering only.

    Being someone who had gone through life holding on to the belief that routine was a value set in stone, he couldn’t help but notice life itself had an interesting way of demonstrating that wasn’t quite the case. A life that consisted of next to nothing besides a miserable household, a stint through public school, a job at a munitions factory, marriages that had gone nowhere, the army, the trenches and an eventual series of court hearings that had been just as painful as anything so far: all a reminder of the importance of routine, but not anymore than a reminder of the constance of pain. Now, with not much of a routine left, it seemed like pain had filled that void like a leak inside a sinking ship.

    (Full Chapter)