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The biggest trouble he had was getting away from them. They wanted to take him drinking. But he pointed to Herman and Pooch when they got outside. The other Marines were still waiting, all right. He would have been astonished if they hadn't been. He made the Japanese soldiers understand he had to get back to his buddies. They reluctantly let him go.

He was more careful crossing the street than he had been when he headed for the theater. For one thing, he'd had a couple of hours to sober up. For another, Szulc and Puccinelli owed him a C-note apiece. Of course you watched yourself better when you knew you had some cash coming in. RUSSIAN BOMBERS DIDN'T COME OVER the Japanese positions astride the Trans-Siberian Railroad so often any more. Hideki Fujita didn't miss them a bit. But the Reds hadn't quit, even if newsreel cameras made things here look easy. Russian artillery remained a force to reckon with.

Fujita had seen in Mongolia that the Red Army had more guns, bigger guns, and longer-range guns than his own side used. He'd hoped things in Siberia would be different. The difference between what you hoped for and what you got was life… or, if you weren't so lucky, death.

Japanese bombers kept going after the Red Army artillery. But the only thing the Russians were better at than building big guns was hiding them. The Russians were masters of every kind of camouflage there was. They were hairy like animals, so of course they were good at hiding like animals. That was what Japanese soldiers said. It sure made sense to Fujita.

Every so often, higher-ups who lived safely distant from the front sent raiding parties through the Russian lines to try to do what the bombers couldn't. The big Russian guns went right on tormenting the Japanese. If any of the raiders made it back to their own lines, Fujita hadn't heard about it. That might not prove anything. On the other hand, it might.

Russian gunners had come up with a deadly new trick, too. They'd started fusing some of their shells with maximum sensitivity. As soon as a shell brushed a tree branch-even a twig-it went off, and rained deadly fragments on the Japanese soldiers huddled below. Fujita wanted to kill the bastard who'd had that bright idea. Too many Japanese were dead or maimed on account of him.

Like a lot of other soldiers, Fujita had dug a recess into the front wall of his foxhole. He balled himself up to huddle in it. That wasn't very heroic, but he'd seen enough fighting to know heroism was overrated. What good was a dead hero? As much as any other sixty kilos of rotting meat, and not a gram more. Staying out and exposing yourself to artillery fragments wasn't heroic, either, not so far as he could see. It was just stupid.

But spending too much time in that recess was stupid, too. The Russians sometimes followed up those tree bursts with infantry attacks of their own. A Red Army man who came upon you when you were all rolled up like a sowbug would probably laugh his ass off while he shot you, but shoot you he would.

Japanese soldiers grumbled about the way things were going. Their bombers couldn't find the Russian guns, and their own cannon didn't have the range to respond to them, let alone knock them out. "We have to be careful not to complain too loudly," Superior Private Hayashi said in the middle of one gripe session.

"What? why?" Corporal Masanori Kawakami was always looking for excuses to put Hayashi down. That was what superiors in the army did with-did to-whenever they could. And Kawakami was also bound to fear Hayashi could fill his place better than he could himself. Not only that, he was liable to be right.

"Please excuse me, Corporal-san," Hayashi said, sounding lowly as a worm. He knew what was wrong with Kawakami, all right. "But if the officers hear us saying how much trouble the Russian guns are, what will they do? Send us out to silence them, neh?"

Corporal Kawakami grunted. That seemed much too likely. The corporal stabbed out a blunt forefinger. "You afraid to die for your country?"

"No, Corporal-san." Hayashi shook his head. Fujita believed him-he'd proved he made a good enough soldier. After a moment, he went on, "I'd rather give my life where it means something, though, not throw it away like a scrap of waste paper. What chance have we got of sneaking ten or fifteen kilometers behind the front, knocking out the guns, and coming back in one piece?"

Kawakami grunted again. If he said they had a good chance, all of his underlings would have known he was a liar. So would Sergeant Fujita, who'd already started having nightmares about that kind of raid. Officers might order it. Some of them might even go along. That didn't mean they-or the enlisted men they led-would see their foxholes again.

The only trouble was, officers could get ideas even without enlisted men giving them away. The officers at the front enjoyed those tree bursts no more than did the soldiers they led. A captain in a battalion a few hundred meters away lost his manhood to a shell fragment. Like anybody else, Fujita knew such disasters could happen. Men spoke of them only in whispers, though. Even thinking about that one made Fujita want to cup his hands in front of his crotch. But how much good would that do if your number was up? Wouldn't you just lose some fingers along with your cock?

A whole platoon-Fujita only thanked heaven it wasn't his-went forth to infiltrate the Soviet positions and do something about those damned guns. None of the Japanese soldiers came back. The Russian guns kept flaying the men in the forward positions. Worst of all, nobody seemed much surprised.

After it became obvious that the platoon was sacrificed on the altar of a god who didn't care, Superior Private Hayashi came up to Fujita and said, "May I please speak with you, Sergeant-san?" By the way he kept his voice down and looked around after he spoke, he wanted no one overhearing him.

"Nan desu-ka?" Fujita asked, his own voice carefully neutral.

"I'll tell you what it is, Sergeant-san." Before telling him, Hayashi took a deep breath and licked his lips. Then he charged ahead: "Why do we have donkeys commanding us, Sergeant-san? They must have known a platoon's worth of infantry couldn't get near those guns, much less take them out. But they sent them across the line anyhow, so it would look like they were doing something." Another deep breath. Another charge forward: "It's murder, Sergeant-san-nothing else but."

No wonder he shivered when he finished. He'd just put his life in the palm of Sergeant Fujita's hand. If Fujita wanted to squeeze it out, all he had to do was report this conversation to any officer. That would be the end of the clever young superior private. Corporal Kawakami would have extinguished him in a heartbeat. Kawakami knew where his rice bowl came from.

Fujita only sighed. "Before you go on about how they're big jackasses, tell me what you'd do if you were in charge."

"Keep bombing them. At least that has a chance of doing some good," Hayashi said at once. He must have been brooding about this for a long time. Well, who could blame him? Taking courage because Fujita wasn't calling him a traitor (or simply beating the devil out of him for saying the wrong thing, as was a sergeant's privilege), Hayashi hurried on: "And we ought to fortify this line the way the French did with the Maginot Line. We don't have to go any farther. All we have to do is keep the Russians from opening the railroad to Vladivostok again. Why do we need to waste men the way we've been doing?"

He waited. Sergeant Fujita opened his mouth, then closed it again. He sighed again. "Bugger me with a pine cone if I know, Hayashi. You want to ask questions like that, you should ask an officer who can give you a proper answer."

"Please excuse me, Sergeant-san, but no thank you. I don't think that would be a good idea." Hayashi shuddered to show how very much he didn't think that would be a good idea. "They would give me to the Kempeitai, and that would be that. To them, anyone who thinks they're stupid has to be bad."

Thinking about the Kempeitai was plenty to make Sergeant Fujita shudder, too. The secret military police were like mean dogs: all bared teeth and growls. And they would also bite down. They'd bite down hard. They existed to chew up and spit out-or swallow-anyone judged to be a danger to Japan and the Emperor. Foreigner? Japanese? They cared not a sen's worth.