After attending a short briefing with the FBI agents who’d raided Morris Franks’s compound in Arizona and reviewing the list of initial evidence gathered there, Mahoney and I entered a makeshift interrogation room off the main hangar floor.

His handcuffs had been removed, but the professed anarchist was in a restraint belt and ankle irons. Chains ran from both to a steel desk freshly bolted into the concrete floor. Franks was drinking a Dr Pepper and smoking a filterless cigarette.

In my pocket, my phone buzzed.

I pulled it out, saw it was Nina Davis again.

This is important! An emergency!

Can’t. Sorry. Emergencies here as well, I messaged back. I sighed, pushed aside the guilt I felt putting a client off, and forced myself to stay focused on Franks.

“You good, Mr. Franks?” I said after Mahoney introduced us.

Franks took a drag on his cigarette and then a swig of his Dr Pepper, blew out cigarette smoke, burped, and said, “Been better. Been worse. I could use something to eat. Oh, and a Miranda warning if you don’t want the ACLU crawling up your shorts. And an attorney ASAP.”

Mahoney said, “Haven’t you heard, Mr. Franks? Martial law’s been declared. Things like Miranda warnings, habeas corpus, and the right to an attorney have been suspended along with all other rules of a free civilization.”

Franks blinked and looked at me.

I nodded to him, said, “Kind of ironic, isn’t it?”

“What’s that?”

“The tyranny and government oppression you’ve always predicted—they’re happening, and you know what? You’re one of the first victims.”

I saw a slight tic in the corner of his mouth, but that was all he gave me.

“What’s this about?” Franks demanded. “No one will tell me a damned thing.”

Mahoney slid a picture across the table to him. “That’s Abigail Bowman, the U.S. treasury secretary, lying dead in the rain there.”

He studied her, shrugged. “Yeah? So what’s that got to do with me?”

“Your son, Martin, killed her. Shot her down in cold blood.”

He looked at me and then Mahoney before saying, “That’s bull.”

I pushed a second photo across the table at him. “Nope. He killed Bowman and a Treasury agent and wounded a second one, but not before that agent got a slug in your son. Martin tried to flee Manhattan, but a rookie cop gunned him down.”

Franks stared at the image of his son sprawled on the rain-soaked sidewalk. His lower lip quivered, and then he appeared disgusted.

Oozing contempt, he said, “You looked for a scapegoat, and you found my boy.”

“Your son was an assassin,” Mahoney said. “He was wearing fake Treasury identification and a badge when he was killed.”

“Planted.”

“We didn’t even have to do that,” Mahoney said.

I switched topics. “Tell us about Martin. Where had he been living?”

“I’m not saying anything. And take that picture away. I don’t want to see it.”

I left it where it was, said, “Your son’s dead, Mr. Franks. Unless you want us to believe you were part of the assassinations, I suggest you start talking.”

“I got nothing to say. I haven’t seen Martin or been in contact with him in…gotta be two years now.”

“Not a peep?”

“Nada.”

Mahoney said, “That’s funny. The agents who arrested you said your place was full of new solar technology, appliances, sat dish, and stacks of cash.”

“So? I don’t trust banks, and I got an inheritance at the same time as a guy who owed me money paid up.”

I sighed. “The cash was in mailers with fake return addresses, and three of them had notes signed by your son. One said he’d see you again soon.”

“Turn of phrase,” Franks said. “And the cash? He was just helping his old man. Other than that, like I said, we hadn’t been in touch.”

“Where’d he get the money?”

“Can’t say. But last time I saw him—couple years back, after he left the Marines—he said he was getting into contract security work overseas. He said there’s real money in that these days.”

“You declare that cash to the IRS?” Mahoney asked.

Franks chuckled and picked up another cigarette. “What do you think?”

I lit the cigarette for him, waited until he’d had a few puffs.

“Was Martin political?”

“Hell no.” He snorted. “I swear to you, I never heard him once talk about politics unless I was baiting him. Even then, he’d change the subject.”

“To what?” Mahoney asked.

“Anything. When he was in it, you know, combat. He liked to talk about that.”

That last bit did not jibe with my own experience, which was that people who’d been in combat rarely talked about it. Then again, Martin Franks was given the soft boot out of the Marines because his superiors thought he had psychopathic tendencies.

My cell buzzed, alerting me to a text. I chewed my lip in frustration, figuring it was Nina Davis again. But I slipped the phone from my pocket, glanced at the screen, and saw a text from Bree:

Scotland Yard coughed up Carl Thomas’s file! Call me ASAP!

Mahoney said, “Your son ever mention going to Russia? China? North Korea?”

Franks screwed up his face as he took a drag off the cigarette, then said, “Never. But you know? More I think about it, it sounds to me like my boy maybe came around to his pop’s way of seeing things. In my mind, Martin died to free us from tyranny. He sacrificed himself for the ideals of his country, and I salute him for his bravery. I predict Martin will go down in history as being as much of a patriot as one of them minutemen.”

I stood up to leave the room. “I hate to break this to you, Mr. Franks, but I am absolutely certain your son will go down in history as a coward and a traitor to his country. I have the distinct feeling you will too.”