The soldiers took my friend to a nearby camp, where they stripped him, tied him up, and inquired about an incident he had no knowledge of; still, they held him captive through the night. He was beaten, spat at, denied food and water, and at one moment, he quivered with terror uncontrollably at the sight of a cutting plier that a soldier brandished in his face; it was meant as a threat to pull his toenail. Following hours of torture, my friend eventually passed out. When he came to his senses the following morning, he had been untied, and his clothes were back on, somehow. He dragged himself out of the tent into the harsh light of daybreak, which had always seemed softer in the hills before. Soldiers seemed busy with their morning chores, but one of them who noticed him hopped over, put his hand around his shoulder, and declared, without regret, that they had made a mistake: They had picked up the wrong person, it was a case of mistaken identity. He was free to go.