The truck drove backward, exhaust first, to a mountain near Sinjar. When the truck stopped, the road was full of dead bodies—Yazidi males, riddled with bullets. The ISIS fighters pointed their guns at the corpses and, wondrously, sucked out the bullets, which flew through the air into the gun chambers, restoring the Yazidi men to life. The Yazidi women were returned to their families. Tears rolled up their faces and disappeared into their eyes.

Foreign fighters in the ranks of ISIS put down their weapons and reclaimed their European passports. They made an arduous backward trek through Turkey to a life of peace in Europe. Faith in apocalyptic prophecy was stripped away and in many cases replaced by social isolation.

American soldiers worked alongside ISIS to stabilize Iraq. Smoke-filled craters were suddenly made whole, as rock and debris were drawn back together, and buildings reappeared. Metal projectiles flew upward from the buildings into the sky and were captured by U.S. aircraft that conveyed the explosive cargo to base.

In 2014, ISIS forces withdrew at a lightning pace from Mosul and returned to Syria, and the caliphate was undeclared. Thousands of Iraqi refugees endured an epic journey across mountains and rivers, walking backward in a kind of reverse exodus.

In 2011, Syrian soldiers used their guns to draw bullets from Syrian protesters and bring them back to life. In Egypt, activists returned Hosni Mubarak to power. In Tunisia, the Jasmine Revolution restored Zine El Abidine Ben Ali to office.

A Tunisian street vendor named Tarek el-Tayeb Mohamed Bouazizi lay in a hospital with terrible burns. He was taken by an ambulance, which drove backward to the city of Sidi Bouzid, where he spontaneously combusted. The flames healed his wounds. Bouazizi expunged them with the flick of a match and a canister that drew paint thinner from his body. He walked backward to the local police who gave him money to help him work as a trader.

A procession of American trucks rumbled from Kuwait into Iraq. They traveled in reverse, and the drivers stared back down the desert road. Millions of items were removed from the trucks and then assembled into vast American bases, complete with coffee shops, bowling alleys, and movie theaters.

In an American cemetery, the coffin of a U.S. soldier was slowly removed from the ground with great deliberation. A flag was ceremonially unfolded. The body was flown to Iraq where it was taken to a morgue and then a hospital. The soldier’s buddies carried the body to a Humvee that raced backward through the streets of Baghdad until it reached a chaotic scene of black hanging smoke. The body was taken from the Humvee and laid out on the street.

The soldier showed signs of life. Fresh blood trickled upward toward a wound that began to close and heal. The great swirl of dust folded in on itself like a collapsing cloud. There was a blast of light and a loud explosion, and an insurgent appeared seemingly from nowhere. He attracted the flying metal to his body and collected it neatly in containers attached to his chest. The insurgent traveled to a safe house where his vest was removed, and the dangerous contents were stored out of harm’s way.