“The very idea makes my balls shrink up,” Hattelstad said. “You know we’ve still got missiles, right?”
“No,” Berg said miserably. “I am as ignorant of the ship as it is possible to be while knowing that it exists.”
“And they’re loaded with that Adar ardune stuff,” Hattelstad said gleefully. “It’s more powerful than a nuke and it blows up if you look at it wrong. Wanna know about the food?”
“The word is unwelcome,” Berg said. “But if you insist on talking about greasy bacon or whatever, I’ll just have to puke all over you. Satisfied?”
“We ain’t supposed to be chatting, anyway,” Jaenisch pointed out. “So can it.”
The loading dock was crowded with other Marines, carefully tossing their rattle into the back of a five ton.
“So this is Two-Gun,” a tall, dark PFC with the nametag “Prabhu” said. “And either you’re hung over as hell, or you just went through that Shiva damned pre-mission physical.”
“Pre-mission,” Berg said, walking in the back of the truck and taking off his armor. He carefully put his harness in his mostly empty ruck and then banded the armor around it. “But I’m told that the effects pass by noon.”
Prabhu was loaded down with several people’s gear. “For some people,” he said. “Me, I was puking for a week. All I could eat was soda crackers and water. Well, and Coke. It helps you burp instead of puke.”
“Great,” Berg said. “And I think I’m coming down with something from the injections.”
“Probably Number Thirteen,” Hattelstad said, tossing his gear on top of the pile.
“Don’t tell me they really gave us an injection to prevent trisa… triska… fear of the number thirteen?”
“Nah, just sounds like it,” Hattelstad said. “So we call it injection thirteen. It’s something that’s supposed to prevent a bunch of infections from something that gets in your cells or something. Malaria is one of them. One of them ‘it’s not on the market, yet, but we’re sure it’s safe’ immunizations.”
“Oh, grapp me,” Berg muttered. “One of those.”
“Yep.”
With the battle rattle loaded, the entire group headed over to the headquarters building at a trot. They were led by Staff Sergeant Summerlin, who upped the trot to a solid run halfway to the headquarters.
Well, that was fine by Berg. He might be sick as a grapping dog, but he wasn’t fazed by a little running. If anything, it made him feel better. He probably should have done PT this morning.
At the headquarters they got started on loading the company’s equipment and supplies. That took most of the rest of the morning and they still didn’t have it all in the ship. At noon they broke for lunch and Berg had to face the thought of food.
“Eatin’ light?” a lance corporal asked, sitting down next to him.
“I had my ‘physical’ last night,” Berg said. “There ought to be a different word.”
“There is,” the lance corporal said. “Maulk. Kevin Crowley, I’m in Bravo Team.”
“Eric Bergstresser,” Berg said, shaking his hand.
“Two-Gun…” the lance corporal said, drawling the “u.” “Saw the clip. But you try that maulk in combat and they’re going to have to choose who they prefer, you or me.”
“Wouldn’t think about it,” Berg said, nibbling at the chicken strip. “Sergeant said try it, I tried it.”
“Talkin’ about Two-Gun here?” Staff Sergeant Summerlin asked, sitting down next to Crowley. “I heard about your fancy shootin’, Tex.”
“I was under orders to try it, Staff Sergeant,” Berg said.
“I also heard that,” Summerlin replied, grinning. “And I’ve seen two-gun mojo done well before. But only playing around. Don’t go training on it or anything.”
“We’re going to be using Wyverns, anyway,” Crowley said. “Not much chance for Two-Gun to shine.”
“My rig isn’t even set up for a pistol,” Berg moaned. “I’m not planning on using two. But if I do, I know who I’m going to shoot for showing that clip around.”
“Well, we can trade team nicknames if you wish,” Prabhu said, sitting down across from him.
“Hey, Gunga-Din,” Crowley said, grinning. “Din’s in First Platoon, so you won’t have to put up with his religious fervor. Much.”
“Eat maulk and die, you behanchod,” Prabhu said, picking up a chicken strip. “My real name’s Prabhu, obviously. Arun Prabhu. Ah, chicken strips. The food of the gods.”
“I’m eating a big ole cheeseburger,” Crowley said, biting into the thin and not particularly tasty mess burger. “Mmmm… taste the goodness.”
“May Kali send you more spots upon your face than you already have,” Prabhu said, grinning. “You cannot taunt me for my faith is pure.”
“Kali wasn’t the goddess of sickness,” Berg said, frowning. “Wasn’t that, uhm… Mari?”
“Hell if I know,” Prabhu said, taking another bite of chicken and ignoring Crowley. “I’m new to this whole Hindu thing. My parents were atheists from southern India. Big-time liberals who could go full high Brahmin when their ‘liberal’ positions were challenged. Such as when their son joined the Marines. I just found religion when I got asked what mine was at Basic. I didn’t want to say ‘Atheist’ so I said ‘Hindu.’ Now I’m trying to figure out what I signed up for. And there’s a definite lack of Hindu chaplains to explain the intricacies. So far I’ve found out there are a bunch of intricacies and that’s about it. So I just pray to Vishnu and Brahma and don’t eat his bulls and that’s about it.”
“Oh,” Berg said. “Just wondering, cause, like, none of the Hindus I knew worshipped Brahma, either. Just an FYI.”
“Intricacies, see?” Prabhu said. “Behanchod intricacies. And I had to give up cheeseburgers. That really hurt. Next cycle, I want to come back as a Christian so I can eat cheeseburgers again. I don’t care what the Brahmins say, Christian’s got to be higher on the ladder. They get prime rib.”
“That’s our Din,” Summerlin said. “Where’d you pick up all that stuff about Hindus, Two-Gun?”
“I knew a couple of them in school,” Berg said, shrugging. “Oh… crap,” he added, his eyes crossing.
“Gonna keep it down?” Prabhu asked. “Because, you know, this batch is really greasy…”
“Saaaah,” Berg ground out, his teeth clenched. “Yes, I’m going to keep it down.”
“Take a sip of Coke,” Staff Sergeant Sumerlin said. “It helps.”
“What we really need is a prescription of maree-jew-wanna,” Crowley pointed out. “Medicinal grade. But nooo. We just got to suffer. Welcome to the Corps.”
“It’s good training,” Berg said, letting out his air carefully, then burping.
“You are too grapping gung-ho for your own good,” Crowley said, grinning.
“Semper-grapping-Fi, behanchod,” Berg muttered.
As he was leaving the mess, Prabhu casually wandered over.
“I was wondering,” Prabhu said. “You know what behanchod means, right? It’s Hindu, not Adar.”
“I know what behanchod means,” Berg said, rubbing his stomach. “It involves doing some things with your sister that aren’t considered nice or legal. Like I said, I had some friends that are Hindu. Rana, in fact.”
“Oh,” Prabhu said, then grinned. “In that case, yeah, Crowley’s a behanchod.”