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The intent of the setup was that the battalion commander and his staff would be forced to travel through the battalion area on their way to the headquarters, thereby forcing a daily cursory inspection of their battalion.

Unfortunately there was no battalion commander and very little in the way of staff. And, from the looks of things, most of the quarters were empty. Trash littered the area and most of the trailers showed some signs of damage; one of the trailers in the NCO section was completely off its foundations.

Lewis led them across the quadrangle and into a maze of trailers on the far side. As they entered the maze, Pappas noticed furtive movement on the edge of the area. Immediately afterwards a group of five or six looters burst out of one of the trailers and ran off into the night. The whole base seemed to be a mass of scavengers picking at the body of the beast.

Lewis finally came to a trailer indistinguishable from the others. He stepped up on the rickety stairs to the trailer, knocked on the door and stepped back. A moment later there was a shuffling sound from in the building. A window blind flickered as someone checked to see who the visitors were, then the yellow porch light clicked on.

The man who opened the door, .45 caliber pistol in hand, was tall and prematurely balding. He looked at Pappas then at Lewis and the CQ between two burly privates and raised an eyebrow.

“Yes?” he queried dryly.

Pappas saluted. “Lieutenant Arnold?”

The officer looked Pappas up and down, then cast his eyes over the squad following him before responding. “Yes.” He returned the salute, permitting Pappas to drop his.

“I’m your new first sergeant, sir. Gun — Master Sergeant Ernest Pappas, reporting with a group of forty enlisted.” Pappas was unsure what it was about the solemn figure in the doorway that was so unsettling. Although he was neither formidable in appearance nor even particularly fit, there was an aura of depth to him. He was older than the standard first lieutenant and had not received regen; that was part of it. But there was an immediate impression of humorful wisdom and caring in his light brown eyes. Considering the obviously screwed up condition of the company, it was hard to believe this officer was the acting company commander.

The officer regarded him for a moment longer then a broad smile split his face. “Samoan?” he asked. There was a slight note of glee in his voice.

It was the last thing Pappas had expected out of his mouth so he simply nodded.

“Are you trying to tell me,” the officer said with the beginnings of a chuckle, “that the Fairy Godmother Department,” he continued, obviously having a hard time controlling his laughter, “has seen fit—” he broke off to choke on a deep laugh.

“To send me a marine! Samoan! First sergeant?!” he finished with a shout of joy.

* * *

“So that’s the situation Top,” said the lieutenant, watching his new first sergeant for a reaction.

They were in the kitchen of the Bachelor Officers’ Quarters for Bravo Company 1st Battalion 555th Infantry. The “Quarters” was a sixty-six-foot trailer subdivided into four single rooms with a shared kitchen, living area and bathroom. The rooms were the approximate size of a walk-in closet and the sole light fixture in the kitchen was an overhead outlet that had arrived sans cover.

The acting company commander was sharing these munificent quarters with the company’s sole additional officer, the leader of first platoon. That worthy along with Michaels and fourth squad had been harried off into the night with the almost impossible task of securing transportation for the first squad and baggage at the front gate.

Arnold tried to read the mind of the veteran NCO, his face an expressionless mask in the yellow light of the exposed bulb.

Pappas, meanwhile, was trying to figure out how to get his ass out of a cleft stick. Everything would be fine if he had the backing of the commander, but if Arnold played it light things would get sticky.

“Let me see if I’ve got this straight, sir,” he said carefully. “You just got here five days ago. The other El-Tee, Richards?”

“Rogers.”

“… Rogers got here two weeks ago. Until then the company was being run by this Sergeant Morales?”

“Yup.”

“And, might I ask your personal evaluation of the ability of this Sergeant First Class Morales?” Pappas asked carefully.

“Well, Gunny,” said the officer with a note of precision in his voice, “I try not to have personal evaluations. I prefer everything to be aboveboard and out in the open. Might I add that thus far Sergeant Morales has managed to avoid turning over to me document one on the state of personnel training, counseling, leadership skills or, for that matter, the company’s inventory. Every time I ask him about it there is another set of papers to shuffle that are much more important.”

“Oh,” said the NCO and blew out his cheeks. That settled that hash. There were to be no “unofficial” actions taken in regards to the House That Morales Built. “But,” he paused. Saying the next thing could very well get him into trouble. But there were loose ends to tie up. “Well, sir, why haven’t you already called him to heel?”

“And then what, Sergeant? Sergeant Morales has had six months to sew this company up. All of ‘his’ people are in the key positions. Anyone who disagreed with him during those six months, such as Lewis, has been stripped of rank or rotated out to another unit. The door to his office is locked, deadbolted, and he is apparently the only one who has a key. And he has numerous meetings that he has simply had to attend over the last week.” The frustrated lieutenant paused and ran his hand over his buzz-cut hair.

“And then there was the whole problem of what to do about it,” he continued, meeting the eye of the somber NCO. “Let us say that I got up on my high horse and insisted that he hand over the documents forthwith. And let us say that he did. And let us imagine that, between the drying lines of newly set ink,” he said, with a wry grin, “that I found clear evidence of missing inventory, falsified administrative punishments, what have you. What then, Top?”

Pappas had never been down this precise path before but he knew the general regulations. He pulled a Skillcraft pen from his breast pocket and started to scratch his head with it. “I guess you would call the battalion commander, sir, maybe the IG, for a full investigation. If there’s major evidence of a crime or crimes, maybe call the MPs or the CID.”

Arnold smiled tiredly and glanced at his watch. “Well, I think we don’t have a lot of time to discuss this, since you, or I now rather, have a platoon scattered to hell and gone and some housecleaning to do. So I’ll keep it brief. There is no battalion commander.”

Pappas stared at him in perplexity. “Sir, even with missing officers and NCOs there is still a chain of command,” he said definitively. It was a Rock of Gibraltar to the military. There is always a chain of command.

“The battalion commander is also the Charlie company commander. For all practical purposes that is all he is. Captain Wolf is hard at work keeping his company together. There is no ‘brigade’ commander because although we are a separate combat regiment, we are effectively three separate battalions; there is no regimental commander or even regimental staff. The next actual commander in the chain of command of this company, after Captain Wolf, is General Left at Titan Base.”