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Later, he picked up Wally, who was staggering drunk, and they went home, confident they’d have hellacious hangovers the next morning, which they did. It made the trip to Dix even more memorable as about half the young men on the train were in the same fix. After one guy got sick, almost everyone lost yesterday’s lunches, turning the train into a stinking mess.

For several days after their arrival and getting uniforms, nothing happened in Camp Dix. They ate, they slept, and they wondered. Finally they were called out to the parade ground, all two hundred of the NCOs in training. They noticed similar groups gathering in other areas of the sprawling base.

A little man in an impeccable khaki uniform stood in front of them and ordered them to sit down on the ground. He had a multitude of stripes on his sleeve. He was barely five feet tall and skinny and wrinkled. He could have been anywhere from thirty to eighty years in age.

Instinctively, Wally and Tim knew this little man was to be both respected and feared.

“Oy yam here to train you,” he said. His accent was unidentifiable but he was definitely speaking something resembling English.

“Oy yam Sergeant Smith,” he pronounced it “Smeeth.” “And you will obey me in all things, and you will do so without hesitation or question. What I teach you might just save your fookin’ lives. If you have any difficulty with my accent or the way I talk or some strange words oy might use, it is because oy am from a little ways from here.”

Wally sucked in his breath and poked Tim. “I’ll say he’s a ways from here. He’s British. Jesus, they brought in the British Army to train us.”

Sergeant “Smith” paused. He heard the murmurings as his young trainees figured out what he’d said and not said. It was true, he thought with a happiness he dared not let them see. Americans were an intelligent lot. Smith and his companions at Dix and many other camps were ready to begin training the recruits. So what if they were still short of rifles and other tools of war. They would somehow make sure the recruits were at least as well prepared as the men he’d led at the Marne in 1914, or against the Boers years earlier. He knew he could not give these men his years of experience, but he could damn sure see to it that they were as ready as they could be when they faced down the Kaiser’s hordes.

He glared at them and they met his look. They showed curiosity, even respect, but no fear. “Oy hate the fookin’ Germans. Hate them with a fookin’ passion.” He saw he had their attention.

“Men, oy will train you to the best of your abilities. I will train you to achieve things you never thought you could possibly do and then you will do some more.”

He paused. “I will train you to defeat the fookin’ Germans!” His voice didn’t quite rise, but it did gain in strength.

“I will train you to kill the fookin’ Germans, and I will train you to drive their fookin’ Kraut asses out of your country! Now get up and get started!”

There was silence, and Smith wondered if he’d gone too far, or maybe he’d scared them, or maybe they hadn’t understood his thick Yorkshire accent. Then all two hundred men stood up and started applauding, and the applause turned to cheers, and the cheers to howls. Yes, he thought, this was going to be most interesting, and God damn the fookin’ Germans.

CHAPTER 8

Kirsten, Ella, and Maria were jammed into seats on a train that moved north from Los Angeles towards San Francisco at little more than a snail’s pace.

People filled every seat and the overflow sat in the aisle of the passenger car, while others were forced to stand wherever they could find a spot. There was no place to move. The air was thick with the stench of sweat, fear, and urine, and not all came from the children and infants. A couple of fools actually tried to light up cigarettes or cigars in the confined space, which had made more people sick. They had been shouted at until they put them out.

Many adults had relieved themselves where they stood or sat, and Kirsten wondered just when her turn would come as her bladder was getting uncomfortably full. She couldn’t stand if she wanted to, and several people had passed out. Some were still upright, unable to even fall.

There were several other passenger cars in the train and she assumed they were all as stuffed with humanity as this one. Nor was anyone interested in taking tickets. A man who actually had tickets complained that people were in his family’s seats; he had been beaten up by squatters while his wife and two children looked on in horror, shrieking and crying.

Kirsten wished she could talk to Ella, who had vomited on herself. In a way, Kirsten envied Ella, who seemed oblivious to the world around her. Of course, she did talk to Maria who was a wonderful woman, but, like so many like her, was undereducated and had limited interests. She simply wanted to get to family in the north, while Kirsten also wanted to talk to someone about the collapse of civilization that was going on around her. Was the world really coming to an end? And what were their real chances of survival?

She also wanted to talk to someone, anyone, about bathroom facilities, drinking water, and food. She felt sweaty and dirty, but these were the least of her worries. She estimated that the train was going maybe twenty miles an hour tops and most of the time at speeds far less than that. This meant many more hours of confinement. Of course, she could always get out and walk. But all the way to San Francisco? She’d stick with the train.

She wondered what was going on in Ella’s mind. Her cousin still hadn’t spoken a word since her ordeal. When she got to San Francisco, Kirsten would have to find a psychiatrist for her. If Ella didn’t get better, Kirsten dreaded the thought of having to care for her, although she dreaded even more the thought of putting her into an asylum. She’d visited one once and thought she’d go mad herself at the sight of the inmates. She prayed that Ella would get better.

At least Kirsten had a window. If the wind was blowing from the right, it meant fresh air. If the wind blew from the front it meant coal smoke, cinders, and people yelling at her to close the damn thing.

A pair of specks in the sky caught her attention. Were they large birds, she wondered? No, they were airplanes. She felt a shiver of fear. Only the Germans had planes. Surely they would leave a train full of refugees alone.

The two planes banked and approached the train side on. Others in the train saw them and began to scream. Gunfire rippled from the planes’ machine guns. Bullets tore through the wooden walls of the railroad car, finding packed flesh. Screams changed to howls of pain and panic, but the train rumbled on as people died and blood poured from the cars.

The planes banked and came on the train from the other side. One plane veered and attacked the engine. The boiler exploded in a plume of white steam that billowed skyward. The engine rolled off the tracks with a maniacal howl, pulling the other cars with it.

Kirsten knew horror as the car she was in tilted to her left and slid down a small embankment with scores of people screaming. It stopped abruptly on its side, and the car was filled with dust and smoke, blinding her. She clawed her way upward, thankful that the train had fallen on its left side and not the right where she had been sitting looking out the window. There were people below her and she felt them pulling at her, trying in panic to climb over her. The smoke and dust choked her. She didn’t want to burn to death.

The dust and smoke settled a bit and, with the help of others, she got the window open wide enough for people to crawl out. People pushed and tried to claw their way past her. A heavyset man succeeded and kicked her in the face. She spat blood, and somehow managed to pull a hat pin from her purse. She jabbed it into his thigh, but he didn’t notice.