[Author's Note: Ethiopia pictures (cw nasty scarring on one of them); Dallol pictures.]
And so with one thing and another, the investigators meet up in an office to prepare to leave New York.
"The mouths have gone away. It's nice to stop seeing the wall crack into a mouth every time I turn my head."
Nod. "I'm glad they didn't follow you?" This is probably the wrong response but he doesn't know the right one.
"Yes." He looks awkward, not sure what he wants to say. "I-- just wanted to say thank you. You are a good man, Mr. Orkney."
Tiny smile. "I try. Thank you. --I'm a journalist, I don't know if you know? The most well-read thing I've ever written was a book on abuses in asylums. I -- am very glad to hear that I could help."
"Mrs. Winston-Rogers told me. I read some of your books. Quite enjoyed them. I hope you are able to write again, someday."
Henslowe talks for a few minutes about developments in painting while he was gone, and other changes. There are apple sellers on the streets of New York now. The breadlines are striking to him. And it is remarkable to see the bars open for business. And talkies! Henslowe marvels at the talkies.
A lot of things have changed in the last ten years! The breadlines you get used to but the talkies are indeed very good.
He has seen at least a few of them, and enjoyed the ones he's seen! He's -- doing a lot better now that he's out.
"He got caught up by mistake. Thought it was all just -- historical anthropology -- until the day you met him. I don't think he would have been involved at all, if he'd known."
"It-- is a shame how it catches people up. Anthropologists and journalists and, well, artists. It is not a thing you get involved in of your own free will. By the time you know what is happening, you're in too deep to leave."
"Or too addicted, or too -- eaten --" He's thinking about Ayers but he's also thinking about Lacie. "Metaphorically eaten, I mean, obviously if you're literally eaten that's a different kind of tragic."
"Yes. Still, we can acquit ourselves well or badly in what Providence has put in front of us. And... it is a cold comfort to have acquitted oneself well-- especially if your friends are eaten, literally or metaphorically. But I find that my honor is one thing they can never take from me."
"We can acquit ourselves well or badly, but --" and here he struggles for words for a moment. "My friend holds the philosophy that people would be basically good, if they had the chance and the space to be. That being good is hard, because the world is broken, and not everyone can do it, but if they could they would be. I don't know if I agree. But I do think he's a better person than I am."
"I don't know about that. I think there is always a choice, in every situation. No one can force you to lose your honor. But by the same token it is never too late to begin to rebuild your honor again."
He thinks about Ayers, and Lev. He thinks about Lacie. He thinks about Louise Fauche. "I hope you're right."
On their last day in New York--
Araari is walking home from church. She's started spending a lot of time there; it's one thing in New York that's familiar.
Two men, both carrying blackjacks, walk out of a side street and block her path. "Hey, lady. We got a message for you."
"From Captain Walker," says the first man. "He says you and all your friends should go back where they came from. Stop poking your nose in places it don't belong."
"Yeah," says the second man. "Be a shame if something happened to you while you were in New York looking into issues that don't concern you."
“I don’t have the power to control what the people I was sent with decide to do. I can tell them your message but I cannot stop them if they choose to disregard it. I’m sorry, sirs.”
Araari is visibly frightened.
"Look at you, you fucking nun," says the first man. "You’re out of your depth. Why don’t you go home and pray a rosary, huh?”
"--Wait, she's a nun?"
"Of course she's a nun, didn't you read the briefing?"
"I am not sure how I feel about threatening a nun. I'm a good Catholic, you know."
"Nun or not, she's going against Captain Walker's business interests, and that is not good for your life expectancy. --If anything, we're helping you," the man says to Araari.