“I’ve seen the ones without any limbs angry, but nobody before ever angry like him.” “Angry at what?” Sandy asked anxiously. She was a strapping woman with stern gray eyes and hair short as a soldier’s under her gray Red Cross cap, but it was in the softest maternal tones, with a gentleness that came as yet another of the day’s surprises, as though Sandy were one of her very own charges, that she explained, “At what people get angry at—at how things turn out.”