His breath came out in a gush and he swore he could feel the weapon’s stock against his spine as the next blow to his stomach came full force. The world around him greyed out for a moment, and when he came to, the Commandant was slowly getting up from behind his desk, meticulously straightening the creases in his uniform. He favored Andrews with a toothy smile. “You Americans are so predictable,” the man said in English so lightly accented that Andrews knew he had spent quite some time in the States. “All bluster and bravado, yet when it comes right down to it, softer than the belly of a pig.”
“You’re barkin’ up the wrong tree, m’man,” Andrews retorted. “I’m about as American as Mao T’se Tung.” Two rifle stocks jammed into the nerves of his shoulders, slamming the Marine back against the hard wood of the chair, a hiss of pain escaping through tightly pursed lips.
“You take me for a fool,” the man observed, coming around to the front of the desk and perching against it with one hip, casually studying his fingernails. “No matter. What you lack in bravery, you in no way make up for in civility. I, however, am a man of good breeding. I can be polite, even if my guests don’t understand the meaning of the word.” He pressed down the fabric of his uniform jacket, then braced his palms against the desk, leaning forward slightly. “My name is Kamran Al-Hassein and I am the commander of this Unit. And you, my American friend, were caught trespassing on my land. I would like to talk with you about this. Civilly. Why don’t we start with your name?” Al-Hassein smiled again, spreading his hands. “After all, you know mine.”
Andrews smirked. “John Fuckin’ Doe. Next question?”
At the Commander’s nod, two rifle stocks came down on the long muscles of the soldier’s thigh. Andrews cried out in pain, slumping in the chair once again, beads of sweat popping out on his forehead and under his nose. “Your name, American.”
“Benito Mussolini from Bum Fuck, Egypt,” Andrews gasped out. A thundering blow to his jaw snapped the Marine’s head back against the chair and the world spun crazily on its axis for long seconds.
“Your name.”
“Dom Perignone, 1936,” the soldier moaned. A blow to his right collarbone, the bone snapping like a rifle shot, the sound echoing throughout the sterile room.
Al-Hassein walked over to the semi-conscious man, lifting the sopping hair and peering into the soldier’s pain glazed eyes. “Why do you have to make things so hard on yourself, my friend?” False compassion rang through his voice. “The pain will end if you just tell me your name.”
Andrews gathered what little bilious spit was left in his mouth and shot it at the Commander’s face, hitting him directly between bushy black eyebrows.
Al-Hassein stepped back, wiping the spittle from his brow and nodding to one of the guards. Andrews screamed as the butt of the man’s rifle came directly down between his spread thighs, squashing his genitals like a ripe melon. The Marine’s arms and legs drew inward as he hunched over, vomiting squarely into his abused lap. Then he passed out cold.
Sighing and shaking his head, Al-Hassein cleaned his wet fingers on an immaculate white handkerchief. “Take him down to his friends,” he ordered the guards in Arabic. “Unbind the others and let them live with his pain tonight. We’ll start up again tomorrow.”
“Yes, my Commander,” one of the guards intoned. “Will there be anything else, sir?”
“No food or water for any of them. Oh, and make sure none of them gets a wink of sleep tonight. That will be all.”
“Yes, Commander.” Unbinding the unconscious soldier from the chair, the guards removed him from the room.
Pressing his handkerchief back into his pocket, Al-Hassein returned to his seat behind his desk, sighing again. “Americans,” he mused sadly as he picked up his pen. “Such pitiful representatives of humanity. The world will be much better off without them.”
Only the walls of the office heard his thoughts as the Commander returned to work.
The slamming open of the steel door scared Reingold out of a year’s worth of growth and he jumped up from his place by the drain, barely avoiding the body of Andrews as it was thrown into the cell. The guards laughed and retreated from the cell, slamming the door tightly shut behind them.
Kael gathered the young man up in her arms and gently turned him over so his face could be seen. Dried blood crusted around his nostrils and mouth. One side of his jaw sported massive swelling and the first hints of horrid bruising that seemed to take shape before their eyes, competing with a day’s growth of beard for space on his face.
“Aww shit, Gunny,” Reingold whispered, taking stock of his companion. “What did they do to him?”
“A little manual persuasion,” Kael replied shortly, noting the fractured collarbone by the odd angle of the Marine’s right arm. Laying the unconscious body gently down on the wet ground, she lifted the front of his thin robes, baring Andrews’ swollen abdomen.
“Aww bloody fuck,” Reingold whispered again, taking in the injuries. “Think he’s got something busted inside?”
Kael gently probed the muscled abdomen, feeling for warmth or involuntary guarding. “No. These guys know what they’re doing. They want us around for awhile yet.” Her eyes tracking down to the massively swollen bulge hidden beneath Andrews’ Marine issue Jockeys, Kael took a deep breath and gently tugged them down by the waistband.
Reingold’s gasp echoed through the tiny chamber, his eyes wide, his face pale, his hands involuntarily cupping his own groin in sympathy for the sight that greeted his eyes.
“Don’t go passing out on me now, Shooter,” Kael warned, gathering up her own robes and ripping off a large swath of cloth from the hem. “I’m gonna need your help here, so buck the hell up.”
“I …I don’t think I can take this, Gunny,” he replied in a tremulous voice.
“Step to, Marine!” Kael’s low voice rang out. A sharp sound followed as her callused palm connected with the panicked man’s cheek.
As if in a trance, Reingold reached a hand up to caress his cheek, looking at his commanding officer with wide eyes. “Why’d ya hit me, Gunny?”
“Because you were acting like a horse’s ass, Shooter,” Kael commented, tearing the cloth in two and dipping both parts into the chilled fetid water that pooled on the floor of their cell. Folding both cloths into neat squares, she pressed one over Andrews’ groin and the other over his abdomen. “Not worthy of Johns Hopkins, but it’ll do for now.” Her eyes lanced up at Reingold who seemed to have regained some of his coloring. “I’ll need your help for this next part,” she said softly, pulling up the Marine’s undershorts and pulling down his gown.
“W-what do you want me to do?”
“Rip off a piece of your robe about this big,” she said, indicating the length by the spread of her hands.
Doing as he was ordered, Reingold handed the cloth to Kael. “What do you need it for?”
“His collarbone’s fractured and mis-aligned. I’m gonna need your help to set it properly, then we’re gonna bind his arm to his chest. We’ll have to take it off before the guards come back, but it’ll lessen his pain for now. You ready?”
“I …I think so.”
Kael looked at him, her eyes warming. “You’re a good man, Shooter. C’mon. Help me lift him up.” When the soldier was leaning against her chest, Kael gestured to her companion. “Ok, hold his arm straight out. Yeah, just like that. Now keep holding and don’t let go, alright?” At the Marine’s nod, Gunny took a deep breath, clenching and releasing the fingers of her numbed right hand. “This is gonna hurt like a bitch. Thank the gods he’s unconscious. Ready? One. Two. Three. Now.” With a sharp jab, Kael drove the heel of her hand into Andrews’ collar bone. The two ends of the bone aligned with a sharp snap.