“Corporal, yes, Corporal,” I said.
He let us hang in pain for a few more seconds, then said, “Bay, position of attention, MOVE!”
The holdovers jumped to their feet. The newbies did likewise.
The corporal strode towards the closed locker in the center of the room—ignoring the highly-polished wax on the Dead Zone tile—and opened the doors.
“This is your static display,” said the corporal. “You can look at it as an example of how your lockers will look. But do not step into this Dead Zone for any reason, do you understand, recruits?”
As a bay, “CORPORAL, YES, CORPORAL!”
“Bay Sergeant Barlow, the bunks should all look exactly like this bunk”—the corporal indicated the perfectly-taut bunk next to the static display locker—“but you’ll need some help. Each of these holdovers has been instructed in the fine Fleet art of bunk-making. Several times. So you’re to assign one of them to help several other new people. And they will help, is that understood holdovers?”
“CORPORAL, YES, CORPORAL!”
“Make it happen, Barlow. You’ve got sixty minutes.” The corporal clicked a button on his chronometer, and strode swiftly from the bay, not looking back.
Everyone broke from rigid position and the bay filled with cursing, moans, complaints, and more cursing.
I marched up to Thukhan and, just centimeters from his face, said, “You effed us over on purpose, didn’t you?”
He smiled coolly. “Welcome to your first command, Bay Sergeant.”
“You could have just told us all what to do to begin with and nobody would have gotten in trouble,” I spat.
“You think you’re tough enough to bring it, Barlow? C’mon, I dare you. You don’t look like the kind of guy who has what it takes to handle a real man like me. I wasn’t kidding when I told you some of us are here instead of prison. If you want to make it easy, just throw the first punch. Cunt.”
I felt my right hand curl into a tight ball. The other holdovers had formed a half-moon at the back of Thukhan, who waited patiently while I glared at him, and the rest of the bay quickly grew silent. Many of the new recruits walked up to stand behind me, each of them glaring angrily at the holdovers.
“There are seventy of us and ten of you,” I said. “And right now seventy of us would like to bitch slap the ten of you.”
Loud murmurs of agreement.
Thukhan looked around at the bay, the bravado in his posture faltering, if ever so slightly.
He laughed harshly to cover up for that fact.
“Whatever,” Thukhan said. “Do you know what happens to a recruit who strikes another recruit? Mandatory stockade time. Docked pay.”
“Sounds like you have some experience with that,” I said.
“Maybe.”
“I don’t know why you did what you did,” I said, “but we’re all stuck here, and we don’t have time for your crap.” I looked behind Thukhan to the other holdovers, not all of whom appeared as ready to throw down as the former bay sergeant. In fact, three of them seemed almost embarrassed. I pointed at those three. “You, you, and you, will you help the rest of us?”
Those three looked at Thukhan and the other holdovers—who had turned to look at them—then looked at the rest of the bay.
Silently, my chosen three nodded their assent.
“Good,” I said. “Start showing people how to make bunks. When those bunks get made, the people whose bunks were made need to go help more people, and then those people need to help still more people, everyone understand?”
The bay said that it did—except for Thukhan, Gorana, and the five other holdovers who didn’t seem to give a damn what was happening.
I looked at my watch. “We’ve only got 52 minutes left. Let’s get moving. You three holdovers—Cho, Capacha, Jackson—come with me. I’m going to show you who you’re helping first.”
Chapter 19
Guns blazed. Human guns. Mantis guns.
The room rocked again from the concussion of enemy fire outside the frigate.
My ears were ringing when the captain and I both looked up to see the general and all of his people sprawled bloodily across their side of the room. The Queen Mother had peppered them with projectiles, their bodies pulped and grotesque. Though it seemed the Queen Mother had fared little better. She was down. Or, rather, her disc was down. Sparks spat from numerous holes in the disc’s armored surface. Sabot rounds, I thought. The Queen Mother’s forelimbs scraped and scratched futilely at the deck, her triangular head cocked in my direction and her mouth half open, the teeth looking wicked and deadly.
Her mandibles chattered ferociously, but the disc made no sound. Its translator was rendered useless, along with its weapons.
The Professor—unharmed—floated forward from his previous spot near the far wall, then stopped as the doors were cast open and armed marines flooded in. The instant they saw the general lying dead, they raised their rifles to fire—having previously dispatched the Queen’s guards, per Sakumora’s plan.
Seeing this, Captain Adanaho shrugged me off of her and stood up, shouting, “Cease fire!”
The marines hesitated.
“That’s a direct order,” she said for emphasis.
The room rolled with concussive grumbling.
Lights flickered.
“General Sakumora, sir,” said an alarmed voice through the speaker on the general’s table, “there’s a feedback loop in the deflection matrix. We’re absorbing hits, but we can’t say for how much longer.”
The captain stared at me for an instant, then she looked to the Professor, whose forelimbs dangled dejectedly in front of him.
“I’m assuming you didn’t know the Queen Mother’s plan either,” she said.
“That is correct,” said the Professor. “Though I knew as well as you that the situation was unstable. Had I known the Queen Mother intended to incite conflict, to force us to war, I’d never have come.”
More thunder, more flickering lights.
“Then it seems you’re destined to die with the rest of us,” I said, feeling the cold, dull ache of certain doom closing around my throat. I instantly rued the day Adanaho had entered my chapel.
But then again, was it better to die on Purgatory, alone, or on a Fleet warship among my own kind? Was either of these options preferable to the other? I tried to remember what Chaplain Thomas had once told me, about keeping a stiff upper lip in the face of death, and discovered I couldn’t quite remember his exact words.
The Queen Mother continued to scrape and scratch frantically at the deck, her disc become worthless. It seemed suddenly that the mantes—even this, the greatest of her kind—weren’t all that terrible once you took away their technological advantage. Without the disc, she was as mortal as any man. With the frigate bucking beneath us and the captain and I struggling to keep our feet, I almost laughed as I watched the supreme leader of the enemy struggle helplessly.
Now you know how we felt!
I wasn’t sure if I’d merely thought it, or shouted it.
The captain and every other human were looking at me.
That’s when true disaster struck.
Kakraooooummmmmmm!
The lights vanished entirely as the room tilted ninety degrees and hurled us to the port bulkhead, then back across the space to the starboard bulkhead, before leaving us floating free. Orange emergency lamps snapped on and I fought a savagely instinctual desire to vomit—zero gee proving to be every bit as terrible in the bowels of the Calysta as it had been onboard the shuttle.
Marines flailed and then lapsed into their microgravity training. It had been too long for me, so I kept flailing, eventually feeling Adanaho’s grip on my left ankle. She levered herself up into my face and shouted, “The deflection matrix is falling apart! We’ve got to get to a lifeboat!”
“How?” I said, almost spewing my last meal into her face.
She turned her head, seeing that the marines were way ahead of her. They’d
instinctually latched onto and levered each other like extension ladders, until one of them could get a grip on something solid, thus bringing them all into contact with the walls or floor or ceiling.
“We just need to get outside!” she said loudly.
Almost at once, the Professor was there.
His disc moved effortlessly, seemingly unaffected by microgravity.
“Grab on,” he said, a forelimb stretched in our direction. I reached for it and took it, while Adanaho stayed attached to me, and the Queen Mother stayed attached to the Professor’s other forelimb. Her disc trailed drops of mechanical fluid as the Professor began to tow all of us for the nearest open exit. If the marines desired to fire, nobody pulled a trigger. Perhaps because there was no way to shoot without killing both the captain and myself—fratricide being frowned upon, especially when superior officers are involved.
We emerged into the corridor beyond. The gore of dead mantes was everywhere. The marines had done their work well. I suddenly felt embarrassed and mournful. The Queen’s guards had saluted me as I entered, then paid with their lives for that trust. I gaped at the nearest of them, his young face split in two and his insect’s brain oozing out.
That did it.
I turned from Adanaho and emptied the contents of my stomach, which spluttered away from us in a thick, chunky stream.
“Where?” the Professor said sharply to the captain.
Emergency bells were chiming, and an automated vocal warning was issuing from every speaker.
HULL BREACH. VACUUM CONDITIONS ON MULTIPLE DECKS. PROCEED TO YOUR NEAREST SAFE DUTY STATION. REPEAT, HULL BREACH…
“There!” Adanaho said, almost climbing up my back so that she could point over the Professor’s shoulder.
A row of hexagonal hatches had opened along the walls, much further down the corridor. Personnel were piling into them. Each hatch was ringed with yellow and black caution striping, with tiny beacon lights spinning rapidly at the corners.
“Find one of those,” Adanaho said.
Though the ones closest to us appeared positively choked with people, all clamoring for escape.
Grrrrakkkkaaaaanngggggkt!
The guttural grinding sound of metal announced to even my inexperienced naval ears that the Calysta’s remaining moments were few. A wind had picked up in the corridor—air bleeding out into space. Men and women screamed, redoubling their efforts to seek escape.
For a brief instant, the Queen Mother and I locked eyes—hers as alien as the Professor’s had ever been—while we clung to the Professor’s separated forelimbs. I could not detect emotion behind her alien, multifaceted gaze, but her contorted body posture spoke of both fear and pain, while her mouth gaped in a show of murderous rage. I’d have let go of the Professor in terror at the sight of those tractoring incisors if I didn’t feel sure that the Professor, and the mobility of his functional disc, weren’t the only hope I had.
And besides, there was the captain to think of. She clung to my back like a bear cub.
Suddenly the Professor moved in a new direction. Opposite the way we’d all been looking. We shot down the corridor, headed aft, bumping aside crew and marines alike. A few gunshots rang after us, but in the panic of the moment they went wide, embedding themselves into the bulkheads.
The wind spiraled up to become a gale-force howl.
Now, humans no longer floated or pulled themselves along the corridor. They were vacuumed away, shrieking.
My ears suddenly began to hurt.
I wanted to yell at the Professor—to ask where he thought he was going—but then I saw it: an open emergency hatch, unblocked.
The Professor’s disc moved toward it at best possible speed.
We passed through the doorway and the captain had the good sense to reach out and slap the panel just inside the threshold. The doors to the emergency exit snapped shut with a loud clang. Suddenly we were all flattened against the hatch as the lifeboat spat through the disintegrating interior of the Calysta, following a predesignated route. Rapid egress shafts honeycombed the ship—as with all Earth war vessels—such that it took only moments for the lifeboat to be disgorged into the emptiness of space.
We floated free as the force of our acceleration ebbed. I found myself at a small porthole, catching a glimpse of the Calysta as she spun away—from my point of view—from us. There were huge wounds in her belly, punctuated by the gradual fragmenting of her exposed bones as new missiles from the mantis armada continued to home in on and decimate the frigate.
Then the Calysta flashed. Her reactors going up.
I jerked away from the porthole, having been strobed almost to blindness. There was a human coughing sound behind me, and the additional noise of mandibles skittering and scratching out the mantis native language.
I rubbed my lidded eyes and then opened them, seeing through purple spots that it was only the captain, myself, the Professor, and the Queen Mother aboard.
We were alone.
Chapter 20
Earth, 2153 A.D.
My time in Reception passed quickly, though I rapidly came to understand why Thukhan had been so eager to be out of a job. The bay sergeant occupied a more or less powerless, thankless position where he was punished for everyone else’s mistakes as much as he was punished for his own. Thus I became well acquainted with the various and devilish forms of so-called corrective training that the NCOs could dish out. This punishment went by names such as The Chair, The Plank, The Flutter Kick, The Cherry Picker, and on and on. Almost none of it hurt if you only did it for a few seconds. All of it was agony after fifteen minutes—though I considered myself lucky if they let me off in that short a time. And the corporals seemed to delight in initiating multiple twenty and thirty-minute punishment sessions per day, for the smallest of infractions.
By the time Pickup Day arrived, I was positive that every muscle in my body had become a purple lump of overstressed, tenderized gelatin.
But I’d managed to avoid any further confrontations with Thukhan. In spite of the fact that I slept over the bastard every night. Mostly we didn’t talk to each other and we worked to keep out of each others’ way. Ergo, if I was brushing my teeth in one sink during morning prep, Thukhan was brushing his teeth in the sink farthest opposite me. And vice versa.
Those holdovers who seemed loyal to Thukhan—such as the always-grumpy Gorana—didn’t speak to me either. Though I was pleased to see that Cho, Capacha, and Jackson seemed to have turned it around.
All three of them had had some disciplinary dust-ups with the corporals, which had previously caused them to be held back for reevaluation. Through them I learned that, aside from the regular IST battalions, there was a special, supposedly “hardcore” training battalion where the truly hopeless cases would be sent. The corporals called it Alcatraz, and being sent to Alcatraz was a threat held over the head of every recruit—even the ones like me, who did their best to get things right.
Of course, no recruit could ever be right. About anything.
Most of the punishment was conducted en masse, with the entire bay on its face or rolling over on its back, legs scissoring and quad and abdominal muscles screaming, the corporal in charge counting off the strokes, “One, two, three,” while the bay had to reply back with the repetition count, “ONE”!
“One, two, three—”
“TWO!”
“One, two, three—”
“THREE!”
And so on, and so forth, until the NCO was satisfied that the recruits had been properly and judiciously pulverized.
It occurred to me—once, during a particularly brutal evening session—that none of us recruits had to perform the exercise. There was no gun to our heads, and even though I’d seen and been the recipient of an NCO slapping, cuffing, and even hitting a recruit who got too far out of line, nobody was being threatened under penalty of death. There was only the threat of Alcatraz, and, failing that, being sent home with a dishonorable service letter sealed permanently into ou
r citizen files.
These twined threats—combined with the perpetual smoking—served to more or less keep everyone in line.
Through more medical testing and hole-poking.
Through hellish mornings and afternoons spent on the infernal cement in front of the hall, practicing the basics of marching, columnar movement, and facing movement.
Through quiet hours spent awake in the middle of the night, pulling seemingly pointless guard duty at exits and doors, everyone rotating on and off shift according to a roster that I’d had to fill that first day.
There was also cleaning. Endless, endless cleaning. Cleaning things that were already clean. Cleaning things that probably should have been cleaned a long time ago, and somehow weren’t. Toilets. Showers. Sinks. Under the bunks. Under the lockers. Between the lockers. Up and down the stairs. Up and down the hallways between the bays, and the gyms where we did daily PT, and the massive chow hall where we ate.
Meals. Now, that was a whole project unto itself.
For whatever reasons, the Fleet seemed to think it important that every recruit learn to function as a mess peon. Something—we were all told—which would continue long after reception.
So once a morning, several dozen people were selected from all of the male and female bays, and were sent down to work in the kitchen. It was work that on many worlds was ordinarily handled by machinery, but at Armstrong Field, it was done by hand. Either because of budget cuts or, as I suspected, just because the NCOs liked to see recruits worked until they dropped.
And drop we did. Lots of people had to make multiple trips to the triage and infirmary center. For blisters. Cuts. Dehydration and heat injury. Broken bones. And the mysterious plague of so-called Barracks Crud that seemed to have invaded our ranks.
On Pickup Day almost half of the group I was with were coughing, sneezing, and wiping their noses. Some people looked pale and about near to passing out. Nobody dared go see the doc, though, because it was rumored that anyone who went on sick call on Pickup Day would be left behind, thus becoming a holdover, and nobody wanted that.
The Chaplain's War - eARC Page 10