The two men exchanged a few more remarks, mostly about the condition of the platoon’s vehicles, plans to improve the positions, and the training that needed to be done that day. Then they parted, Bannon proceeding around the hill to the Mech Platoon while Pierson started rousing his platoon for stand-to. The war, or at least the preparations for war, went on.
By the time Bannon had worked his way down to the walled farm where the dismounted element of the Mech Platoon was, it was getting light. Not that you could see the sun. In fact, the rising fog made it almost impossible to see anything beyond twenty meters. The Mech Platoon, led by 2nd Lt. William Harding, was already moving into its position and preparing for stand-to. Bannon decided to stay with them until after stand-to.
Harding’s platoon was good. It had an unusually good combination of platoon leader, platoon sergeant, and squad leaders. Not only had Harding and his platoon sergeant, SFC Leslie Polgar, been together for almost a year, they complemented each other. Harding did the thinking, gave the orders, and led the platoon, while Polgar handled its training, which often included copious amounts of motivation and, when called for, unbridled ass kicking, which to Polgar were one and the same.
It was easy to see that Harding’s grunts were well trained and confident in themselves, their weapons, and their leaders, Bannon thought as he watched them occupy their positions. Each and every man moved into them with hardly a word. Once settled in, they checked their weapons, situated themselves to cover their assigned sectors, and prepare to receive the enemy or stand down, whichever came first. By the time Bannon had arrived at the farm, a squad with two Dragons had already gone down into the village in order to establish a listening post, or LP while keeping his other two Dragons with the mounted element.
As he leaned against the farmhouse wall, looking out of the window across from Harding, Bannon kept thinking how worthless he would be here if the other people came boiling out of the fog. Without his sixty-one-ton tank wrapped around him, he wouldn’t be much good to anyone in a firefight armed only with a .45 pistol that was probably older than he was. Not that the .45 was a bad weapon. It’s just that when push came to shove, Bannon wanted to have the ability to reach out and touch someone. Hand-to-hand combat, eyeball-to-eyeball brawls with the enemy might make great war movies, but it simply wasn’t his idea of doing business. At the first opportunity, he resolved to secure himself an M-16 rifle. It might be a pain to carry around, but an M-16 at least provided its owner with a much greater sense of security when stumbling about in the dark alone.
By 0500 it was as light as it was going to get. With no Russians, or anyone else for that matter, in sight, Bannon told Harding to keep the squad in the village until the fog lifted and to stand down the rest of his platoon. He also reminded Harding of the 0730 platoon leaders’ meeting and the weapons inspection for the Mech Platoon at 0900 hours. He knew that by the time he returned to the platoon its weapons would have already been checked for cleanliness, functioning, headspace and timing. Still, not only was it part of the routine that had been established, it gave him a chance to learn more about the men who made up Harding’s platoon as well as provide them a chance to see him. In Bannon’s mind it was important that attachments such as the Mech Platoon know that their commander had high standards when it came to important items like weapons, positions, camouflage, and all those things that separated the quick from the dead.
On his way back, Bannon walked from track to track, greeting each crew as they prepared for breakfast and another day on the border. He made a few corrections, listened to a complaint or two, and generally let himself be seen. Only when he was around Alpha 31 was his presence greeted with a proper, but chilled reception. The other crew members of 31 were in a depressed mood for they, like Pierson, did not want to be branded as failures due to the loss of their lieutenant. But they were far less sanguine than Pierson was about fighting for his retention. The crew knew if Garger screwed up in combat they would be the first to pay for it. Unlike a dismounted infantry squad where every man can go off on his own if something goes south, a tank crew is a joint venture where one’s fate is welded to the actions of the other crew members. The sixty-one tons of steel that enclosed them silently bound their collective fates together. So there is a strong self-serving motivation that causes tankers to work together and ensures that each member of the crew can perform his job. At the moment, pride was running a distant second to survival for the bulk of 31’s crew.
By the time Bannon had finished his morning rounds and returned to where the Team’s headquarters element was, he found Uleski, the tank crews of the two headquarters tank, and the ITV crews were either washing and shaving or squaring away their tracks. The ITV that had been at the edge of the tree line had pulled back into its hide position and was camouflaged. Uleski was squatting next to the PC, stripped down to his waist, washing himself from a small pan of water. Looking up as Bannon approached, he grinned, “I knew you wouldn’t be back by stand-to. I just didn’t know what day. So,” he continued with feigned gravity, “do I need to report a murder together with an emergency requisition for a second lieutenant platoon leader?”
“Come on U, I’m a nice guy. Do you for one moment think that I would bring any harm to that poor young man over in 3rd Platoon? I mean, do I look like a mean person?”
Before answering, the XO straightened up and squinted as he looked Bannon over from head to toe “Oh, sorry. I thought you were my CO, the one who isn’t worth a damn in the morning until he’s eaten a second lieutenant.”
“Yeah, it’s me alright. Only this morning a second lieutenant wasn’t enough. Now I’m looking for a first lieutenant for dessert.”
Uleski looked to his left, then to his right, using exaggerated movements before turning back to face Bannon. “Ain’t seen any o’ them ’round these parts. Y’all might try over in yonder hill cuntree,” pointing east toward the border.
With the second round of poor humor decided in Uleski’s favor, the Team commander and XO got down to the morning’s business while Uleski finished washing and Bannon dug his shaving gear out and prepared to wash up. Uleski had a long day ahead and Bannon wanted him to get started. There were maintenance problems that needed attention and spare parts that had to be requested, borrowed, or scrounged. After that, a laundry point needed to be located and arrangements made to turn in the company’s laundry. Batteries for field phones and wire to replace some that had been torn out by a cavalry track that had wandered into the Team’s area had to be found. These, and many small but important tasks, were required to keep Team Yankee in business. Once the first sergeant came up to the position with breakfast, he and Uleski would divide up the list of these tasks between them and go about the day’s duties.
Overall, the Team wasn’t in bad shape. The last tank that had fallen out of the line of march during the movement to the border had finally closed in the previous afternoon, giving Team Yankee a total of ten tanks, two ITVs, and five M-113s, one of which was the Team’s commo track where Bannon and Uleski had spent the night and Bannon worked from when not on his own tank, Alpha 66. Two of the tanks had problems with their fire control system, but nothing that would take more than a day to repair. In fact, the vehicles were in better shape than the people were.
Not that they were falling apart. Life in the field, however, wears away at soldiers unless simple creature comforts such as food, clean dry clothes, and other such necessaries are provided. Added to the problems of living in the field was the tension caused by the alert and move to the border, the flurry of almost panicked activity during the first twenty-four hours in position, and three very long days waiting for what one wit in the 2nd Platoon called “The end of Times.” This was made worse by the lack of solid news from the outside world and the concerns of the married personnel, including Bannon himself, about the evacuation of the dependents back to the States. To top it off, a number of the men had not packed extra fatigues in their go-to-war duffle bag. Some hadn’t even brought a change of underwear. After three days of hot weather and hard work, the company was getting funky, which made finding a laundry and bath unit a growing necessity.