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“There's a plane coming in tonight,” Kelly told Tooley. He saw a fat centipede skitter along the floor, near the end of the bunker. It gained a shadowed wall and disappeared, probably on its way to the ceiling. He wondered if there were anything clinging to the ceiling just above his own head.

The pacifist looked at the zombie and then at the major, and he said, “Do you think they would take him back where he can get good medical attention?”

“You know what they'd do with him, even if they did agree to take him. They'd open the bay doors and dump him out at twenty thousand feet”

Tooley winced.

Kelly looked around at the patients, back at Nurse Pullit and Lily Kain who were engaged in an animated conversation about the nurse's new pumps. Pullit kept pointing to his combat boots and making odd gestures. “Tooley, I didn't come to the hospital bunker to look in on the patients. I came to see only one person.”

Tooley nodded, smiling. “Lily Kain, sir. Gorgeous jugs!”

“Not Lily,” Major Kelly said.

Perplexed, Tooley scratched his head. “Nurse Pullit?”

“Not Nurse Pullit. Why would I come to see Nurse Pullit?”

“Nurse Pullit's got pretty good legs,” Tooley said.

“Not Nurse Pullit,” Major Kelly said. He wiped the back of his neck, which was sweating, and he finally glanced up at the low ceiling. In the dim circle of light from the nearest bulb, there were no centipedes over him.

“Kowalski, sir?”

Kelly looked dumbly at the pacifist. “What about Kowalski?”

“Is that who you came to see, sir?”

Kelly frowned. “No, Tooley. I came to see you.”

Me?” Tooley was genuinely surprised and pleased. “Well, this is nice of you, sir. I can't offer much in the way of entertainment, but—”

“Tooley,” Kelly said, lowering his voice even further, his words hissing like sandpaper along the concrete ceiling, deadened by the dirt walls, rattling on the corrugated tin, “you're the only one I can trust. I know you wouldn't turn informer and leak information to the krauts, because you don't want to see either side win.”

“Through force,” Tooley amended. “I want us to win, but I don't really believe in force.”

“Exactly,” Kelly said. “But someone has been leaking information to the krauts, and we have to find out who he is.”

Tooley nodded soberly. “You think this informer might have come to me, since I'm an avowed pacifist — might have thought of me as material for a second subversive in the camp.”

“That's it.”

“He hasn't,” Tooley said. “But if he does, I'll let you know right away, sir.”

“Thanks, Tooley,” Major Kelly said. “I knew I could depend on you, no matter what everyone says about you.”

Tooley frowned. “What does everyone say about me?”

“That you're a chickenshit pacifist.”

“I'm a pacifist all right. But where do they get the other part of it, do you think?”

“I wouldn't know.” Kelly said. He got up, scanning the ceiling for centipedes, pulling his collar tight around his neck. “Anyway, keep your eyes open for any unusual— incidents.”

“Yes, sir.”

Kowalski suddenly dirtied his pants.

7

Crickets worked busily in the darkness, telegraphing shrill messages across the flat, open runway area toward the trees which thrust up on all sides. The crickets, Major Kelly was sure, were working for the Germans.

The sky was overcast. The clouds seemed like a roof, lighted from behind by dim moonlight, low and even, stretched across the land between the walls of the forest. Occasionally, heat lightning played along the soft edges of the clouds like the flash of cannon fire.

At the eastern end of the runway which Danny Dew had gouged out with his big D-7 dozer, Major Kelly, Beame, and Slade waited for the DC-3 cargo plane. They stood close together, breathing like horses that had been run the mile in little more than a minute and a half. They stared toward the far end of the open strip, at the tops of the black trees, heads pushed a bit forward as they tried to catch the first rumble of the plane's engines.

A frog croaked nearby, startling Beame who jumped forward and collided with Kelly, nearly knocking the bigger man down.

“A frog,” Slade said. But he didn't sound sure of himself.

The frogs, Major Kelly thought, were in league with the crickets, who were telegraphing messages to the Germans.

Abruptly, silencing the crickets, the sound of the plane's engines came in over the trees, low and steady and growing.

“Move!” Major Kelly said.

To the left and right, enlisted men struck matches, bent down and lighted tiny blue flares at each corner of the runway. They looked like overgrown altar boys at some alien worship. At the far end of the crude strip, another pair of men did the same, briefly lighted by an intense blue glow before they stepped back into the shadows under the trees. Now the pilot had a means of gauging the length and width of the runway. This really wasn't much for the pilot to judge by; he might as well have tried an audio landing with the sputtering of the flares as his only points of reference.

By the same token, the four blue lights weren't much for a random patrol of German night bombers to beam in on, either.

The pilot, Major Kelly knew, would already have begun to scream. He always began to scream when he started losing altitude a mile out over the trees to the west. When he came in sight of the blue flares, he would scream even louder. He said their permanent runway wasn't much better than the temporary affair he had first landed on. He said it was too short, too uneven, and too narrow. He said it wasn't macadamized, that the oil-and-sand surface was extremely treacherous. He said the four blue flares hurt his eyes and interfered with his judgment when he was putting down, even though he had to have the flares or not land at all. Besides, he said, the runway was behind German lines. Even if General Blade did have him by the short hairs, the pilot said, he had no right to send him and his plane and his crew behind German lines. He said this again and again, until Major Kelly went to great lengths to avoid him. The pilot had to shout about this to Major Kelly, because the general had forbidden him to tell anyone else that he had been behind enemy lines.

“What do you want to be behind enemy lines for?” the pilot would shout at Kelly, his face red, his hands fisted in the pockets of his flight jacket.

“I don't want to be here,” Kelly would say.

“But here you are.”

“On orders,” Kelly would say.

“That's your excuse,” the pilot would say.

There was really no reasoning with the pilot, because he was consumed with terror the entire time he was at the clearing.

Now, by the south side of the HQ building, twelve enlisted men waited to unload the materials which would, when combined with sweat, remake the bridge. All of the enlisted men were as nervous as the pilot, but none of them was screaming. The first time the pilot had brought the big plane in, the enlisted men had screamed right along with him, bent double, faces bright with blood, mouths open wide, eyes watering, screaming and screaming. But Sergeant Coombs had been infuriated by this display of cowardice. He had punished them the following day with KP duty and a severe calisthenics session. Because they feared Sergeant Coombs more than they feared the Germans, the men were forced to express this nervousness in less obvious ways. They stood by the HQ building, in the shadows, snapping their fingers, popping their knuckles, grinding their teeth, slapping their sides, clicking their tongues. One of them was kicking the side of the corrugated tin wall as if he did not believe it were real, as if he were testing it. The enlisted men, more aware of their mortality than the officers, were always afraid that the krauts would catch the cargo plane on radar, would follow it and bomb the shit out of the runway and the camp. The Stukas were friendly. The Stukas, for some reason, only wanted the bridge. But a flight of German night planes couldn't be counted on to limit its objectives. So the enlisted men sweated out each landing and each takeoff, suffering from the same terminal disease that afflicted Beame: hope. They didn't understand that nothing improved, that it wasn't any use sweating out anything. Whatever would happen would happen. Then, when it did happen, that was the time to sweat.