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Omi tried to speak, but failed.

Marten’s chest tightened with terror. He couldn’t believe what he saw. There had been rumors. Turbo had said—His chest unlocked and his numb mind started working from its momentary stoppage. “Get below!” he shouted, shoving Omi toward the nearest hatch.

They turned and ran, staggering and stumbling along the pitching deck. So did other men, babbling sailors who sprinted for the hatches. They jammed the nearest hatchway. Fists started flying, until a boatswain bellowed orders.

The hovers and ships of Convoy A22 acted amazingly fast. Perhaps the ships’ captains had been given secret instructions in case a nuclear bomb should explode in their vicinity. Not as smoothly and as in unison as some of their earlier maneuvers had been done, they veered from the nuclear blast. Each ship throttled up, until they fled at full speed. One hover lifted onto its cushion of air, higher and higher as it leapt past the other hovers. Then a glitch hit its engines. The hover’s nose sank. A wave rolled and crashed down hard, and the airborne hover flipped onto its back.

That was Marten’s last sight of it as the shouting sailors shoved him through the hatchway. He fell down the steps and landed on his hands and knees, and twisted away as others landed on top of him. He crawled, and then unsteadily arose and staggered into the rec-room.

“Nuke!” he bellowed.

Omi shoved in behind.

Shocked, paling faces stared up at him.

At that moment, loudspeakers crackled, and the captain spoke. “All personnel are to grab hold of something solid. A nuclear shockwave will soon hit the ship. Please be prepared. That is all.”

In a bedlam of shouts men scrambled for safety. Marten thrust himself at his spot at the card table, clutching the bolted down furniture with all his strength. Seconds later the shockwave hit. The transport shuddered and groaned, and they skipped across the ocean waves like a flung stone. Howling, screaming winds tore over them, and a hot flash caused men to open their mouths. Marten knew they were wailing in terror, but the winds were too loud for their shouts to be heard. Somehow, their hover kept upright. These ships had been built to take a pounding.

Across the table, Turbo stared slack-jawed at Marten. Stick mumbled prayers. Omi squeezed his eyes shut. Finally, no one knew how long, the winds died down and the pitching lessened.

Wide-eyed soldiers sat up. A few of them wept. More than one had broken bones.

“This is war,” Omi said grimly, at last opening his eyes.

“I wonder if they targeted a convoy ahead of us?” asked Marten.

“Our baptism of fire,” mumbled Stick.

Turbo laughed. “We haven’t seen nothing yet, is my guess.”

“You’re crazy!” Stick shouted in outrage.

“Earth has gotta hold somewhere if they’re going to win,” said Turbo.

“So?”

“So maybe Tokyo is where they’re gonna hold.”

“Tokyo is where we’re going,” Omi said.

“Yeah,” said Marten.

“Tell me one thing,” whispered Stick.

“What?” asked Turbo.

“How do I go AWOL and survive?”

They each glanced at one another, perhaps all wondering the same thing. Marten knew he couldn’t get the image out of his mind of lasering those four poor fools in the desert. Maybe he didn’t deserve to live.

5.

Convoy A22 split soon thereafter or at least the eight transports that had survived the shockwave did. It was decided providing a smaller nuclear target was more advantageous than group protection versus submarine torpedo attacks. So a single destroyer patrolled for the four transports of the Slumlord Battalion, minus the HQ Jump Jet and artillery detachments. They had presumably gone down with their ship. None of the V-Boats ever showed up again, and only one other time did they see a chopper. It was far in the distance, undoubtedly looking for a place to land after its carrier had gone down. They also saw a second nuclear blast, a flash that was too far away to send another shockwave rolling over them.

Dispirited and scared, the men gloomily wondered if the dark ocean would become their grave. Luckily, the storm abated the next day and they rode their air cushion as fast as the turbines could whine. Marten led the men in hard calisthenics, exhausting them physically so they didn’t have enough mentally to conjure up unneeded terrors. The hovers whisked over the Pacific Ocean all alone. From horizon to horizon stretched the mighty salt sea.

“It almost seems peaceful,” said Turbo several mornings later. Rumors said they were a day out of Tokyo.

“It gives me the creeps,” Stick muttered. “Everywhere you look is endless sea, water and clouds.” Stick shook his head. “It doesn’t stop, just goes on and on and on. It makes a guy feel insignificant.”

“Aren’t we?”

“No,” said Marten.

“No?” asked Turbo.

“Breath the air, taste the salt tang. Look at the view and enjoy it, because today you’re alive.”

“And tomorrow I die,” said Turbo.

“Maybe,” Marten said, “but today you can affect the world, or if not the world then somebody in it. So that means you’re not insignificant.”

Turbo shrugged.

“You’d better not feel that way when you’re covering my backside in Tokyo,” Marten told him.

“Good point,” said Stick. “In the old days I told the Blue Jackets the same sort of thing before we strolled the streets for a rumble.” He flexed his muscles. The short, stocky youth looked more dangerous than ever in his brown uniform and steel-toed combat boots.

“We’re gonna die in Tokyo,” Turbo said gloomily.

“We didn’t die in Reform,” Stick growled.

“Because we were lucky,” said Turbo.

“No, because Marten had balls to act,” said Stick. “I’ll tell you what I think.”

“Must you?”

“Life is like a knife-fight. You gotta crouch, glare your man down and grit your teeth. Then you gotta attack before you get a knife stuck in your ribs.”

“How can you slip a vibroblade into life?” asked Turbo.

“That’s not what I mean,” Stick said. “It’s the attitude.”

“Wonderful,” Turbo said. “Attitude.”

Stick shoved him. “Better keep on my good side, junkie, or it’s you who’ll get the knife in the ribs.”

Turbo squinted down at the shorter, much more thickly built Stick. “I’m combat trained, you ape. You can’t push me around anymore.”

Stick pushed him again.

“I’m warning you!”

“Knock it off,” said Marten. “Here comes the captain.”

Captain Sigmir strolled onto the front deck. He’d been jumping between transports, inspecting what was left of Tenth Company. Other than a lone sailor swabbing the middle deck, the captain and they were the only ones topside. Captain Sigmir wore the same black uniform he had the first day. Behind him followed two carbine-toting thugs, his personal bodyguards. Officially, they were his batman and orderly, both corporals and dirty-fighting experts.

“Gentlemen,” said the captain.

Marten and Stick saluted. Turbo lowered the brim of his hat.

Captain Sigmir expelled his breath as if someone had slugged him in the gut. His two bodyguards, odd-looking men, grinned at one another as they took up port arms behind the towering captain.

“After shock?” asked the captain softly.

“Sir?” said Turbo, the one addressed.

“Your disrespectful salute, soldier. I want to know what caused it.”

“Oh,” said Turbo. “It must have been my preoccupation with the joy of being alive, sir.”

Captain Sigmir narrowed his strange eyes. Since the end of training camp, he’d been acting even more weird than usual.

“Salute, you idiot,” said Stick, prodding Turbo in the ribs.