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“Oh, shit,” whispered Pappas.

“You think perhaps I should call him? ‘Excuse me, General Left, this is Lieutenant Arnold. My first sergeant is being mean to me and I don’t know what to do.’ ” The officer smiled again.

There is one, count ’em, one, field grade Fleet officer on the east coast, Major Marlowe, the S-3 and acting battalion commander of Second Batt down at Fort Jackson. I called him day before yesterday. He stated that he understood I had a problem, that he had so many he couldn’t begin to count them, and that I was on my own until my own battalion staff started to show up. The ‘Triple Nickle’ is the last ACS unit to be formed from American units. It is last in line for equipment, it is last in line for training and, especially, it is last in line for personnel.”

Pappas was shaking his head. Not in disbelief, but rather in horror. “I didn’t know we were that fucked up.”

“Believe it, Sergeant. I can’t believe you got rejuvenated. You are definitely one of the lucky ones. Over four million enlisted personnel have been recruited and trained in the last year. But,” he smiled and threw up his hands, “because the Galactics ran out of rejuvenation drugs, only five percent of the positions designated for majors, lieutenant colonels and full bird colonels have been filled.

“There was an article in the Army Times,” he continued, “on the filling of unit positions. Only three percent of the combat arms and combat support brigade and lower positions are filled.”

“Ouch!”

“The same thing goes for the equivalent enlisted ranks. Congratulations by the way, you are the acting battalion command sergeant major.” He paused and ran his hand over his hair again.

“So, Smaj, where should I go? Oh, the CID and MPs. In case you didn’t notice, there is something very like a war going on out there,” he gestured with a thumb out into the darkness. “The MPs patrol in squads. At night they stay in their armed Humvees and the Humvees stay in reaction range of each other. A cantonment of this size would normally have an MP battalion. We have a company. We should have a platoon of CID, possibly a company. We have three personnel. Less than a squad.

“So,” Lieutenant Arnold smiled with grim humor, “as I said before, goddamn am I glad you showed the fuck up.”

“What would you have done if I hadn’t?” asked Pappas.

“Braced him, probably tomorrow or the day after.”

“And then what?”

“I’d probably have been dead by morning,” the officer answered with complete seriousness. “Four personnel in this company who were sergeants and above are officially carried on the roster as deserters. I overheard one of the men say that they did not want to end up like Sergeant Rutherford,” he smiled grimly once again. “I think I was supposed to overhear it. One of the first pieces of paperwork the operations NCO gave me was the record of desertions. Losing a staff sergeant with eight years in the Army Airborne and a chest full of medals stands out.”

Pappas shook his head. “Fuck, sir. It’s the seventies all over again.”

The officer wrinkled his brow. “What?”

Pappas shook his head again and took another scratch. He dusted the resulting dandruff off the table. “Never mind, sir. Way before your time.” He thought for a moment and glanced at his own watch. “When does Morales usually show up?” he asked.

“He usually manages to roll in by nine,” the lieutenant said with a chuckle. “Officially he does ‘solo PT.’ The one remaining staff sergeant handles the formations. Sergeant Ryerson is probably all right, he’s just learned to keep his head down and his eyes shut. I don’t know about the CQ, though, he might have tried to contact Morales.”

“Well, sir,” Pappas said glancing at his own watch, “in that case maybe you could come on over to the barracks with me. I need you to verify the fact that I am now in the chain of responsibility. After that you can just sit back and watch. Sir.”

“Oh, with pleasure, Gunny,” said the acting company commander with a tight smile. “And I think we will make a stop by the Arms vault,” he continued, the smile going quite feral. “It only responds to properly coded individuals. Morales was never coded for it and he has been asking me for my codes for the last week.”

“Weapons, sir?!”

“We don’t have suits yet, but we’ve already received our full supply of weapons. M-200 grav rifles, M-300 grav guns, terawatt lasers, mortars, grenade launchers and a basic load-out came in one package including the vault.” The lieutenant smiled tightly again. “If I had to brace him this week, I was preparing a coup de main with certain elements of the company. As it is I’m glad to have you aboard; it would have gotten messy. We need to hurry. I doubt he knows you are here yet, so do you think we can do this without a full Operations Order?” he finished with a wry grin. His eyes were somber as he slipped his silks top on over the holstered .45.

“Aye aye, sir,” said the gunnery sergeant grimly, standing up and heading for the door. “Semper fuckin’ Fi. Adams! Front and center!

34

Andata Province, Diess IV

0821 GMT May 19th, 2002 ad

I think I should have waited to motivate them until now, Mike thought. Diess’ rising primary cast a fierce green fluorescence over the tableau on the roof. Fifty-eight sets of combat armor were planted at various distances from the edge of the roof, some of them slightly crouched as if trying not to face something. One was parked right on the edge. The roofs could be seen stretching in a continuous checkerboard from the inland mesas to the far green sea. In the extreme distance to the west Mike noticed some breaks and of course there was the missing set against the mesa, the fallen Qualtren and Qualtrev. Almost the length of a football field away was another megascraper roof at the same level.

“How far away is that megascraper, Sergeant Wiznowski?”

The NCO focused his range-finder crosshairs on the far wall and confirmed his rough guess. “Seventy-two and a hair meters, sir,” he answered, reading off his Heads-Up-Display.

“And do you happen to know the maximum jump range of a Warrior Combat Suit?”

“No, sir, sorry, sir.”

“Right, well it just so happens that the maximum jump range in the specifications we called for was one hundred meters for warriors, one twenty for scouts and one fifty for command.” Mike crouched and whispered an order. His suit rolled backward over the mile high drop and sprang outward. In apparent defiance of gravity it shot out and over in a back flip and landed neatly on the far roof. He then sprang back, landing with a thump in their midst.

“Sergeant Wiznowski, I want you to take a running jump to the other roof…”

“Uh, Mike, sir…”

“You can do it, Wiz. If I can, you can. Back up a couple of hops, take a running jump at it and as you jump, tell your suit to jump. Do it.” His visor faced that of the NCO, two blank surfaces, armor unreadable. He wondered what was going through the mind of the scout at that moment. Wiznowski had always been the consummate airborne NCO, brave to the point of suicide. Now he apparently was facing a challenge he was not fully prepared for. “Do you want me to jump again?”

“No sir, I’ll do it.” The tall suit backed up from the group and ran at the edge. There was total silence on the net as he reached the edge and whispered, “Jump.” Again, the suit soared upward in defiance of gravity and common sense. This time with his additional speed, far greater than an unarmored man, he soared far onto the roof, almost a hundred meters from the edge.