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Robbie Cordwood fue encarcelado por matar a los tres hombres que atacaron a su esposa.  A Ć©l le pareciĆ³ bien. Justicia servida. Pero un dĆ­a el mundo cambiĆ³ y The Puppets vino de las estrellas. Luego ELLOS comenzaron a apoderarse de los cuerpos de las personas, arrastrĆ”ndose por la boca. Las puertas de la prisiĆ³n estaban abiertas y nadie sabĆ­a quĆ© hacer a continuaciĆ³n....

I wrote the first draft of When They Come For You, on a laptop in the medic office in Iraq, way back in 2009. It was a biproduct of the b movie science fiction education I received as a kid, having watched invasion of the body snatchers dozens of times with my mom. There's this running idea of things falling apart all around them, but the center holds. So, the idea that's always in the back of my head, even to this day, is to be the center that holds, even when everything around you is going to pieces. Be the glue that keeps it all going.

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The characters in the piece form that glue. Robbie Cordwood stumbles his way into leadership during the initial alien takeover of the planet, when he's just looking for his wife. Along the way they pick up a man of God. Then the resistance to the aliens forms around the three of them. As the United States retreats further and further south into the warmer parts of North America, Robbie leads the refugee evacuation effort to escort humans to friendly lines. And eventually, the U.S. Army retreats so far south, that Robbie is on his own.

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A lot of this came from the third season of Battlestar Galactica, where the humans are leading a resistance movement on the ground against the Cylons while the military has retreated off world.

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I also liked the idea of a married couple running a resistance movement, and being the center of a war story, much like on Battlestar. I don't think I'd even had a serious relationship at that point, so their marriage was based off of observation and fantasy than any real-life experience. But the part where the man of God walks into a married couple's bedroom and catches them in a bsdm moment always makes me laugh. So, the question I was posing was, "If you're married, how bad can handcuffs and whips and chains be if it's under the sight of God?" To be clear, my own personal life was not nearly that adventurous, as I was several years away from dating regularly. I think I was trying to marry two ideas in my head. The sort of working class mid-west Baptist teachings of propriety along with the dark hedonistic nihilism of the wartime Army.

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ā€‹This is summed up in the end of the book, where the resistance makes a final attack on the aliens and the closing words are the Lord's Prayer. Because there's a certain darkness under Christianity that demands a sacrifice. It makes sense, since God so loved the world, he gave his only son. At the end of the book, one of the characters follows in the Lord's footsteps and makes the ultimate sacrifice for what he loves the most. In the wartime Army I spent my early 20's in, there was no greater honor.

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