"As a matter of fact, we do. Curing stupidity is another story, worse luck." The doctor kept one copy for the file and handed back the rest. "Good luck to you."
"Thanks." Pound took the papers and limped across the street to the depot there for reassignment.
"Glutton for punishment, sir?" asked the top sergeant who ran the Chattanooga repple-depple. He was not far from Pound's age, and had an impressive spread of ribbons on his chest-including one for the Purple Heart with two tiny oak-leaf clusters on it.
"Look who's talking," Pound told him. The noncom chuckled and gave back a crooked grin. Pound asked, "What have you got for me?"
"Armor, eh?" the sergeant said, and gave Pound a measuring stare. "How long did you wear stripes on your sleeve instead of shoulder straps?"
"Oh, a little while. They finally promoted me when I wasn't looking," Pound said.
"Thought that was how things might work." The sergeant didn't have to be a genius to figure it out. A first lieutenant with graying, thinning hair and lines on his face hadn't come out of either West Point or the training programs that produced throngs of ninety-day wonders to lead platoons. Every so often, the school of hard knocks booted out an officer, too. The sergeant shuffled through papers. "What's the biggest outfit you were ever in charge of?"
"A platoon."
"Think you can swing a company?"
Pound always thought he could do anything. He was right more often than he was wrong, which didn't stop him from occasionally bumping up against a hard dose of reality. But, since he would never again be able to get back to the pure and simple pleasures of a gunner's job, he expected he could handle a larger command than any he'd had yet. "Sure. Where is it?"
"Down in Tallahassee, Florida," the personnel sergeant said. "Kinda tricky down there. They didn't see any U.S. soldiers during the war, so a lot of them don't feel like they really lost."
"No, huh?" Pound said. "Well, if they need lessons, I can give 'em some."
"There you go. Let me cut you some orders, then. I'll send a wire to the outfit down there, tell 'em they've got their man. And we'll give you a lift to the train station." The sergeant sketched a salute. "Pleasure doing business with you, sir."
"Back at you." Pound returned the military courtesy.
Seeing the train gave him pause. It said-screamed, really-that the fighting wasn't over yet. A freight car full of junk preceded the locomotive. If the track was mined, the car's weight would set off the charge and spare the engine. There was a machine gun on the roof of every fourth car, and several more gun barrels stuck out from the caboose. You didn't carry that kind of firepower unless you thought you'd need it.
He already knew what Georgia looked like. He'd helped create that devastation himself. He was moderately proud of it, or more than moderately. He changed trains in Atlanta. Walking through the station hurt, but he didn't let on. Released Confederate POWs in their shabby uniforms, now stripped of emblems, also made their way through the place. They were tight-lipped and somber. Maybe the people in Tallahassee didn't know the CSA had lost the war, but these guys did.
The new train also had a freight car in front and plenty of guns up top. Pound looked out on wrecked vehicles and burnt farmhouses and hasty graves-the detritus of war. He thought the devastation would have a sharp edge marking the U.S. stop line, but it didn't. Bombers had made sure of that. Towns had got leveled. Bridges were out. He sat there for several hours waiting for the last touches to be put on repairs to one.
"Why don't we go back or go around?" somebody in the car asked.
"Because that would make sense," Pound said, and no one seemed to want to argue with him.
He got into Tallahassee in the late afternoon, then, and not the morning as he'd been scheduled to do. It wasn't remotely his fault, but he didn't think it would endear him to his new CO, whoever that turned out to be.
A sergeant standing just inside the doorway held a sign that said LIEUTENANT POUND. "That's me," Pound said. "Sorry to keep you waiting."
"It's all right, sir. I know the railroads on the way down here are really screwed up," the noncom said. "I've got an auto waiting for you. Can I grab your duffel? Colonel Einsiedel said you were coming off a wound."
"Afraid I am." Pound took the green-gray canvas sack off his shoulder and gave it to the sergeant. "Sorry to put you to the trouble, but if you're kind enough to offer I'll take you up on it."
"Don't worry about it, sir. All part of the service." The sergeant was in his early twenties. He'd probably been a private when the war started, if he'd been in the Army at all. Michael Pound knew what his curious glance meant. You're the oldest goddamn first looey I ever saw. But the man didn't say anything except, "I've got it. Follow me."
The motorcar was a commandeered Birmingham. The sergeant drove him past the bomb-damaged State Capitol and then north and east up to Clark Park, where the armored regiment was bivouacked. It wasn't a long drive at all. "Tallahassee's the capital of Florida, isn't it?" Pound said. "I thought there'd be more of it."
"It's only about a good piss wide, sure as hell," the sergeant agreed. "Christ, the Legislature only meets for a coupla months in odd-numbered years. We had to call 'em back into session so we could tell 'em what to do."
"How did they like that?" Pound asked.
"Everybody hates us. We're Yankees," the sergeant said matter-of-factly. "But if anybody fucks with us, we grease him. It's about that simple. All of our barrels have a.50-caliber machine gun mounted in front of the commander's cupola, and we carry lots of canister, not so much HE and AP. We're here to smash up mobs, and we damn well do it."
"Sounds good to me." Pound had wished for a machine gun of his own plenty of times in the field. Now he'd have one-and a.50-caliber machine gun could chew up anything this side of a barrel. And if God wanted a shotgun, He'd pick up a barrel's cannon firing canister. Canister wouldn't just smash up a mob-it would exterminate one.
Barbed wire surrounded Clark Park. So did signs with skulls and crossbones on them and a blunt warning message: HEADS UP! MINES! U.S. guards carrying captured C.S. automatic rifles talked to the sergeant before swinging back a stout, wire-protected gate and letting the Birmingham through.
"Had trouble with auto bombs or people bombs?" Pound asked. "Do they shoot mortars at you in the middle of the night?"
"They tried that shit once or twice, sir," his driver answered. "When we take hostages now, we're up to killing a hundred for one. They know we'd just as soon see 'em dead, so they don't mess with us like they did when we first got here. Now they've seen we really mean it."
"That sounds good to me, too." Pound was and always had been a firm believer in massive retaliation.
The sergeant drove him up to a tent flying a regimental flag-a pugnacious turtle on roller skates wearing a helmet and boxing gloves-that looked as if some Hollywood animation studio had designed it. Colonel Nick Einsiedel looked as if some Hollywood casting office had designed him. He was tall and blond and handsome, and he wore the ribbons for a Silver Star and a Purple Heart.
"Good to have you with us," he told Pound. "I did some asking around-you've got a hell of a record. Shame you didn't make officer's rank till the middle of the war."
"I liked being a sergeant, sir," Pound said. "But this isn't so bad." As Einsiedel laughed, he went on, "How can I be most useful here, sir?"
"That's the kind of question I like to hear," the regimental CO replied. "We're trying to be tough but fair-or fair but tough, if you'd sooner look at it that way."
"Sir, if I've got plenty of canister for the big gun and a.50 up on my turret along with the other machine guns, you can call it whatever you want," Pound said. "The people down here will damn well do what I tell 'em to, and that's what counts."