King went up the mountains without complaint. Not out
loud, anyhow. We drove to Dieffelsbach and a little past, then dismounted. The other
side of the mountain was between the lines, our natural habitat. But a jeep
moving around up there made smoke and noise, too much for our St. Hubert’s
medals to mask. A jeep can’t use a miraculous medallion unless it accepts
Christ, and so far, Detroit’s turning out a load of pagans.
“Atheists,” said David. “Cars are atheists. Without thought,
they can’t have gods, right?”
He couldn’t read minds. I just had a habit of thinking
out loud.
And anyway, “They stop at the darndest times. They get
spooked by gremlins and won’t move. Brand new parts rust away overnight. I call
that paganism, or rank superstition. They ain’t got no faith,” I said.
In some outfits, the fact that I wear five stripes and
David has two would have ended the debate right there. But Recon puts a premium
on brains, not obedience. When I was a corporal, that seemed like a better idea
than it did now.
We broke off twigs for our helmet covers. Brenner had
a cloth sack for his helmet instead of a mesh of cord like we used. He used his
knife to cut slits in it, then ran the branches through the slits. I asked him why the cloth cover, and he turned back one
corner. It was white on the inside.
“For snow,” he said. “Half the year is winter, not so?”
Yeah. Just because the Krauts had been fighting old
Franz the Austro for five years before America got interested, that was supposed to mean
they knew it all. They did, in fact, know just about every trick about modern warfare.
But they didn’t have to have the know-it-all attitude to go along with it.
I’d heard some Germans didn’t act like they knew it all.
Back when the war started, there had been a lot more of that sort.
I limbered up a wisecrack, something about New York
winter camouflage being a slushy gray. Before I could let it go, though, the
ground slid sideways under my boots.
The bang came an instant later.
Everybody froze but me. I was moving toward the sound
of the explosion.
Line troops are supposed to scatter when they’re under
artillery fire, seeking the nearest cover. But at night in the woods, movement
attracts the eye. Recon troops are supposed to freeze until they locate the
source of the threat.
Not that everyone who wears the Eye on his collar
actually does what he’s supposed to do. I passed a couple of guys who were
huddled in a puddle behind a fallen tree, their heads jerking every which way
in terror. One of them, I was pretty sure, was Syzmkowiak. I loomed out of the
black across their line of sight and headed on – there wasn’t time to deal with
them now. At least they didn’t shoot me, thinking I was Franz, or some black monster leaping through the darkness. Well, I wasn't Franz, anyway.
In a little pine-filled swale, the branches were full
of trapped smoke. I grabbed at the skinny trees, skidded to a stop.
Corporal Spencer was down at the bottom, minus most of
his leg. His buddy, McNeill, was lying on his stomach at the lip, right where
the ground started to slope down. He was about thirty yards from Spencer.
“Mines!” McNeill hissed.
My training kicked in and suppressed my urge to swear.
Some of the cleanest mouths you’ll find come out of beast barracks.
I saw it all plain as print. Spencer was laboring up
the rise, hitting rocks and scared to make noise. A streambed with pines would
absorb the noise, feel soft underfoot, and get his head under cover for a
little ways. It was the obvious choice.
So obvious, in fact, that the Austros thought of it
too.
“Follow me,” I told McNeill. “Walk in my footprints.”
“What if it’s a Bouncing Betty?” he whispered. Those
were nasty little devices which popped up about three feet in the air before
they exploded, throwing shrapnel at about waist height, or a little lower. Guys
were rightly terrified of them. It was odd, though, for McNeill to be more
worried about his privates than his corporal. I’d learned one more thing about
one of my men tonight.
“Then you’ll have armor, woncha?” I said, and poked a
thumb at my chest.
I added “C’mon,” which I wouldn’t have done a minute
ago. I had pegged McNeill as one of the steady ones.
I took big steps, holding onto the pines for balance.
Sap made sticky patterns on my hands. My boots crackled the dry needles just a
little, but they were so quiet even McNeill, three steps back, probably didn’t
hear ‘em.
Three steps, heck – he hadn’t taken more than one step
down into the swale.
“Keep up,” I growled, “or you’ll forget where I
stepped! There’s no mud to make footprints down here.”
“I can see ‘em,” he responded. “You brought your own
mud with you.”
Even in the midnight blur, he was right. My bootprints
were outlined with dark mud from further down the mountain.
“Close up anyway,” I said, and the tone was a threat. Are we going to have to do it this way?
He closed up. He didn’t grumble, but he didn’t grovel,
either. His honor was preserved. So do men, if they are to stay men, go to war at
each other’s side.
It’s still better than trying to make us into robots.
That was the other side’s gag.
Spencer was a medic before joining Recon. He had his
bandages out, and twisted around his upper leg, but he hadn’t tightened the windlass
to make a proper tourniquet. He had his rosary in his hands, and he was
whispering.
His hands and face glowed like the full moon when I
got there. He’d lost too much blood.
I turned the windlass (a dowel included in the
first-aid pack for just this reason) and tightened the bandage around his upper
thigh, compressing his artery against his thighbone. I didn’t see that it made
a lot of difference.
McNeill was there, and slit Spencer’s pant leg away so
we could see what we were doing. I pulled my compass out from inside my shirt
and opened the cover, so the saintelmo backing would light up Spencer’s wound.
Down here in the trees, it didn’t risk the mission, just us.
“He’s cold,” said McNeill, holding Spencer’s arm. “Spence?
You there, buddy?”
Spencer was trying to talk. There was nothing wrong
with his throat or chest, but he couldn’t force the words up. He was weakening
fast.
“Spencer,” I said, taking hold of his hand. The
tourniquet loosened, but we were beyond that now.
“Spencer, listen to me. I’m not gonna let you die. You
hear?”
He nodded, then gagged, like he’d swallowed something
huge.
“You gotta help me. When you feel it coming, fight
back, you hear me? Cuss, yell, spit, anything, just don’t go to sleep,” I said.
McNeill got out a rosary. He got up on his knees.
“McNeill, take two steps back,” I said sharply and
clearly. It was the loudest thing we’d heard since the mine went off.
He obeyed automatically, his legs moving even while
his face reproached me. Weren’t we going to give Spencer a proper sendoff?
As it happened, no. We weren’t.
Spencer pulled sharply on my hand. I almost lost him
then. He let out a long, long breath and groaned. I slapped him.
“Fight, Spence! Fight! Eyes on me!” I barked.
Then he shuddered, and he was dying. He was trying as
hard as anyone could ask, but there just wasn’t enough blood left in his body. The
End was coming.
Now.
I got one foot under myself and heaved. I grabbed my
wrist with my other hand, putting my back, my leg, both arms, even my neck into
hauling Spencer back from the Pit.
But me, I’d been around some.
From the waist down, he was deep into the Pit. There
was still dirt there, under the pine needles, but he was past all that now.
Things brushed at his leg – legs! – knocking him this way and that.
He got his other hand up and grabbed hold of mine. He
pulled. He was stronger than me – if we’d have been arm-wrestling, I’d have
lost. But we were both on the same side tonight.
I dragged him up to his knees and stood up leaning
backwards. If I fell now, he might drop right over the Edge. But his weight,
and his strength, anchored me. I took a grinding step back, pulling up, and his
legs slid up out of the ground, into view. One of them was solid mud and dirt
down to his torn combat boot. The other was tan and new and utterly hairless,
like the leg of a twenty-two-year-old newborn.
Something tugged at his heel one last time and
retreated, beaten.
I panted, with exertion and relief. Spencer came to
his senses with a visible click. He grinned.
“Thanks, Sarge,” he said. “Guess I shouldn’ta tried
that shortcut, huh?”
“Well, you’ll remember it next time,” I said, too glad
to remember my sergeant’s growl. I grinned at McNeill, too, who hadn’t seen it
before. He was shocked.
Spencer nodded sideways at me, looking at his buddy.
“The Sarge’s pop was Elvish,” he explained. “You know
how they can’t die? Well, he got some of that from his old man.”
“They can die,” I said, shaking a little with elation.
“They just don’t get old. And when they do die, if they do, they don’t go to
Heaven, or the other place. Don’t go much of anywhere. They’re air spirits,
right? No air up there.”
“How bout you, Sarge? Can you die?” said Spencer. “Hate
to lose you, after all this.”
“Sure I can,” I said. I put a little rasp in it,
because Spencer was getting chummy. Much as every decent instinct demands that
men get a little weepy when someone’s been pulled back from the brink of death,
the Army frowns on it. Can get outta hand.
“Sure I can,” I said again. “I just get better, is
all.”
I let go of his hand, but my arm didn’t drop. Our
rosaries were entangled.
I had to admit, that was kinda funny.
