“Make sure you do your radio checks.”
“Just did, Sergeant.”
“Okay. I’ll be back in a couple hours, and I expect this AO to be straight.”
“Roger, Sergeant.”
“And Reading, keep your Kevlar on. Carry on, men.”
We watched Staff Sergeant Reynolds walk away.
Reading giggled. “In the case of an all-out assault, I’m gonna shit myself and throw it at ’em. Take that, hadji! Shit bomb!”
It began with a knock at the gate, prom-prom-prom. The sliding rusted metal door, thirty feet wide and twenty feet tall, trembled from the pounding.
“F’tal bob,” I said.
Reading snickered.
The two ICDC stared at him.
“F’tal bob, motherfucker!” I shouted, pointing at the gate, pointing at the younger of the two hadjis.
The light was a clear yellow-gray, the sun a white smear still low in the sky.
The younger hadji got up and picked up his AK and started walking out toward the gate.
“See who it is,” I said.
“You,” Reading said back, not looking up from his Game Boy. “I’m in the middle of a level.”
“Fuck your level. Go see who it is.”
“Why you such a bitch, Wilson?”
“Because I hate freedom, motherfucker. Go see who it is.”
“Whatever,” Reading said, pausing his game and setting it on his chair. “Don’t touch my game.”
“I’m gonna kill your fucking Metroid, is what I’m gonna do.”
Reading flipped me off and walked around the barrier, putting his Kevlar on as he went.
“Hey, John Wayne. Forget something?”
Reading turned back at me, scowled, and shook his head. He came back for his rifle, picked it up, and went back toward the gate. The ICDC had unlatched the gate and was throwing his weight against it, sliding it open with a rumble and a creak. Reading held his weapon at the ready.
A hadji in civilian clothes stood outside the gate with a gym bag. Thin and scraggly, with messy black hair and a large mustache, he wore a checkered work shirt, track pants, and sandals.
“ID,” Reading said.
He pulled out his Iraqi Civil Defense Corps badge and showed it. Reading checked the badge against the man’s face and nodded, directing him inside.
“Come here,” I shouted, waving him forward. I stood, picked up my rifle, and slung it at the ready. I nodded to the older ICDC sitting smoking against the shack wall. “Check his bag,” I said.
He lurched up and went around the Jersey barrier and when the hadji came up he took his bag and poked through it.
“Pat him down,” I told the older ICDC. I pointed at the one in civilian clothes and spread my arms and legs. “Search, search,” I said.
The one in civilian clothes mimicked me and the older one patted him down.
“Turn around,” I said to him, swirling my finger.
He stared at me.
“Turn around,” I shouted, swirling my finger again.
He turned to face the gate. The older ICDC patted him down.
I swatted at the Iraqi’s ass and said, “Check here, yeah.” I cupped my groin. “Check his package.”
He shook his head and grimaced, but I repeated my order, so he stuck his hand between the other man’s legs and batted it around.
“Mota dudeki,” I said. The hadji in civilian clothes laughed.
The guard stepped back, scowling, and tapped the man on the shoulder, who turned back around grinning.
“Go on,” I said, pointing down the road at the ICDC barracks. Meanwhile, more hadjis had showed up for their shift, and Reading checked their IDs and lined them up. I gestured the next one forward. First one by one, then in twos and threes, then one big gaggle, and at last the last stragglers.
The sun was up now, the morning chill burnt off.
Soon two new ICDC in ill-fitting fatigues and old boots came to relieve the two at the gate. The old shift handed over their AKs and secondhand flak vests and the new shift took up positions in the cheap white plastic chairs.
“Well, that was exciting,” Reading said, returning to Metroid.
I took off my Kevlar and dug through my backpack. I pulled out a Maxim and an FHM and a Harper’s, and the ICDC leaned toward me staring. I gave them the Maxim and kept the other two for myself.
It went like this: report for guard mount at 0750, then you’re on duty in the sun till 1400. Then you clear your weapon and walk back to the barracks and sleep until 0100. You get up in the dark, get ready, and make it to guard mount at 0150, pull duty until 0800. The sun’s come up. Then you go eat breakfast, jerk off, and sleep until 1300. Guard mount 1350, on duty till 2000, clear your weapon, walk back to the barracks in the dark, think of some other life you lived once, sleep, get up at 0700, back to guard mount at 0750, and the cycle repeats. Light, dark, dark, light, night day whatever.
Reading played Metroid in the doorway. I sprawled on the cot inside the shack, drifting in and out of consciousness. The two ICDC sat outside in the night, smoking and looking at body-spray ads in FHM.
“Shit, man,” Reading said.
I ignored him.
“Shit, I’m so bored, I’m bored of Metroid.”
I lay still, pleading with God to make him silent.
“I know you’re awake. When you think we’ll get off this shit?”
“Let me sleep, fucker.”
“All you fucking do is sleep.”
“That’s because I don’t drink all those fucking Red Bulls.”
“Shit keeps me alert. I’m a killing machine!”
“You’re a fucking talking machine.”
“Shit, man. Shit! When you think we’ll get off this?”
“Never.”
“We gotta get off sometime.”
“Nope. Never. The unit’s gonna redeploy to Germany and they’re gonna leave us here to guard the ICDC gate. We’re mission essential. We’re the tip of the goddamn spear.”
“I wanna go out on patrols like the other guys.”
“So tell Lieutenant Krauss you wanna go out on patrol.”
“He’s pissed at me because I shot up that house.”
“You shot the shit outta that house.”
“There was a dude with an AK up there, I swear.”
“Yeah, he was up there fucking your mom.”
“Shit. Whatever. He was up there.”
“That’s why you got taken off the SAW?”
“Yeah.”
“Dumbass.”
“What’d you do to piss him off?”
“I don’t fucking know, man. I read a book one time. I just fucking do what I’m told.”
“Well, you musta done something.”
“Maybe he wants me to watch your dumb ass, make sure you don’t shoot up the gate.”
“Whatever.”
The radio popped: “RED STEEL MAIN, THIS IS RED STEEL FIFTEEN. BE ADVISED WE GOT A VEHICLE STOPPED ACROSS THE ROAD.”
“ROGER THAT, RED STEEL FIFTEEN.”
“Hey, that’s our tower.”
“RED STEEL FIFTEEN, THIS IS RED STEEL SEVEN. MONITOR THE VEHICLE. IF IT STAYS LONGER THAN FIVE MINUTES, CALL US BACK.”
“ROGER, RED STEEL SEVEN. STAND BY.”
I sat up and grabbed my Kevlar. Reading paused his game. We looked at each other, reaching for our rifles.
“RED STEEL SEVEN, THIS IS RED STEEL FIFTEEN. THE VEHICLE HAS LEFT.”
“ROGER RED STEEL FIFTEEN, RED STEEL SEVEN OUT.”
I dropped my Kevlar and lay back down. Reading dug through his backpack and pulled out a Red Bull.
“Hadjis coming,” he said. “Ali and Ahmed.”
“Ali Dudeki?”
“Yeah.”
“Fuck.”
The two hadjis came in. Ali was tall for an Iraqi, with a stubborn, mischievous face. He made a game out of grabbing guys’ nuts, though ever since Porkchop hog-tied him with zip-strips and left him like that for an afternoon, he was less inclined. Ahmed was shorter, a hunchback, and some kind of NCO—he was always harassing the guards, berating them, checking their AKs. With us he played the clown, shouting the handful of obscenities he knew in English over and over. Ali seemed to be Ahmed’s sidekick; it was clear the hunchback ran things.