One Good Life A Red White and Blue Land Novel Grace was thirty-seven when she died—shot by a federal agent on a street while her wife watched. She had stopped to let traffic pass. She had smiled at the man with the gun. Her last words, captured on video, were an offering of grace to the person about to take her life. Cole Brant was forty-three, a veteran of Iraq and two decades in immigration enforcement. He had been dragged by a car seven months earlier, an incident that left him with trauma no one addressed. When Grace's car moved toward him, he saw not a mother trying to leave but a threat he had to neutralize. One Good Life tells both their stories—and the stories of those left behind. A widow raising her stepson alone. A sister choosing truth over family. A lawyer building a trap that forces the government to confront its own failures. Through multiple perspectives, Richard Warburg examines how institutions create the conditions for tragedy, and whether justice is possible when everyone is both perpetrator and victim. This is not a story about heroes and villains. It is a story about the machine that grinds us all.