The censors would go for it, for sure, because they loved stories that made the folks back home think their boys were getting the best treatment in the world.
The coppery smells of blood and horror hung over everything, blotting out the mentholated scent of the eucalyptus trees, the smoke of battle, and even the stink of so many unwashed bodies. Trucks rumbled in and out constantly, disgorging litters weighed down with unconscious men, taking away freshly patched-up marines and soldiers. American uniforms dominated, most of them 'temps, but she heard British and Australian accents. Even some French. Three soldiers walked by who could only have been from the New Zealand Maori Battalion, their faces dense maps of native tattoos.
Just when she was beginning to sink into the period detail, a flight of Super Harriers off the Kandahar screamed overhead, thousands of pounds of locally made dumb bombs slung under their hard-points. Nobody even looked up anymore.
Nurse Halligan threaded around a couple of stretcher-bearers who were grabbing a few z's. She threw a look back over her shoulder to make sure Julia was keeping up, and pushed through a set of swinging doors into a large building that seemed to have been stapled together out of materials scavenged from an abandoned building site.
As she pushed through the doors behind Halligan, Julia caught the reek of disinfectant and dying flesh. It rose up to unlock memories of other casualty wards, some military, some civilian. In the end, she decided, they were all the same, just mounds of broken bodies and the glazed-over, uncomprehending eyes that all asked the same question. Why me?
The men in here still wore the bloodied uniforms in which they'd come off the line. Nonetheless, Duffy's entrance drew a few stares. She was an alien, almost barbarous vision, even among these men who presented a facade of martial savagery. Not everyone followed her path through the gurneys and canvas cots, though. Most in fact did not, either because they were insensible with pain or medication, or because battle had numbed them to a state of existential collapse. However, enough of them struggled up, and pointed, and whispered to qualify as a minor commotion.
Snider saw her, even before she could find him. "Hey, Miss Duffy. Over here!"
He was propped up on a folding chair in a far corner, his injured leg resting on a wooden crate and enclosed in a bright orange inflatable tube that could only have come from a twenty-first unit. They must have fitted him on the dust-off. Five or six men were gathered around him, clearly hanging on his every word. They all turned to check her out. Some were completely taken aback at the sight of her, their eyes going wide in surprise. One whom she recognized from Hill 178 nodded and waved. Snider beckoned her over as Nurse Halligan said good-bye and wished her well.
"This is her, boys. The reporter I told y'all about. She's from the future!" Then without warning, his excitement and gladness to see her turned to uncomfortable solemnity. "Miss Duffy, I didn't get to thank you for what you did this morning. Some of the boys told me you shot them Japs was fixing to stick me after I got hit. Said you drilled 'em like fucking paper targets on the range, if you'll pardon my language. They also said you got the Jap who killed poor Smitty."
They all peered at her fighting knife then. Some staring openly, some just flicking a nervous glance at it.
"And Miss Duffy, I'm sorry if I was out of line with you, you know… when things was turning to shit up there."
Julia raised a bandaged hand and demurred. "It was a busy day at the office, Sarge. I've had worse. But how are you doing? I see they got you a gel sleeve on the chopper. That's good. You'll probably keep the leg."
Snider perked up at the news. "Better than that, Miss Duffy. It's a fuckin' million-dollar wound. I'm going home. Won't be dancing too many foxtrots from now on, but who really gives a fuck, eh?"
Julia pulled up an empty ammo crate and insinuated herself into the circle of wounded men. She slipped off her backpack and leaned the MP-5 up against the wall. Snider gave her a quick introduction to all of them, bar one, whose name he didn't know. The man introduced himself as Corporal Robert Payne, a Canadian artilleryman who had been standing near a howitzer when a shell exploded in the tube.
"You know, Sergeant," said Duffy, "You might just dance the foxtrot again after all. It'll take a while, but knee reconstruction wasn't a big deal up in my day. And most of the senior Task Force medical staff have been pulled off active duty and put into teaching hospitals. Of course, I gotta tell you, the fuckin' foxtrot is never coming back."
Duffy waited until the men's laughter and ribbing died down before speaking again.
"Sarge, do you think you could see your way clear to an interview? There's already a lot of talk about what you did this morning. You want my opinion, they're going to turn you into a hero and send you out on the road back home, selling war bonds with John Wayne and Hedy Lamarr."
Sergeant Snider was openly surprised to hear that. "Hedy Lamarr, you say. That's a classy dame. You think she'd want to hang out with the likes of me?"
"Buddy, when I'm finished, you'll be beating her off with a stick. Matter of fact, you'll be able to walk into a room full of Hollywood starlets and know there won't be a dry seat in the house."
Snider's friends all broke out into catcalls and cheers, and Julia made certain to grab a few lines from each of them about what they thought of his efforts on the hill.
When she was finished she checked to make sure that the lattice memory had stored the interview, and she copied it to a spare stick, just in case.
"There's one other thing you could do for me, Sarge, which I'd really appreciate."
Snider pulled himself a little higher in the fold-up canvas chair, wincing as he did so. "You name it, Miss Duffy. I figure there's no way I can repay you for drilling those guys."
"Well, in fact, there is, Sergeant. There's some guys from Movietone who are going to be looking for you later. Could you possibly tell 'em to fuck off?"
Snider winked theatrically. "Consider them fucked, ma'am."
The University of Queensland sat within a great bow of the Brisbane River about seven miles from the city center. There wasn't much to it, thought Robertson, just hundreds of acres of open fields. The area had previously been given over to the cultivation of sugar, arrowroot, cotton, maize, and pineapples. Only one building had been completed before the outbreak of war, a grand colonnaded sandstone structure with two wings, divided by a massive clock tower that also housed an imposing atrium. Before any students or teachers had had the opportunity to move in, the Commonwealth Government had requisitioned it for the advanced headquarters of all Allied Land Forces in the Southwest Pacific.
In August of 1942, it had changed hands again, becoming the theater HQ of the Multinational Force ground combat elements, which was to say, the U.S. Marine Corps' Eighty-second MEU, and the Second Cavalry Regiment of the Australian Army.
The Abrams tanks and LAVs, Bushpigs and attack helicopters assigned to those two forces did not spend much time at the HQ, having been thrown into crucial blocking positions to secure General Douglas MacArthur's much-vaunted Brisbane Line. The line was less a natural stronghold than a strategic concession that he didn't have the forces he needed to hold ground any farther north. It conceded about two thousand kilometers of coastline to the Japanese. To be sure, there were significant Allied forces intact and operating to the north out of Cairns and Townsville, but they were cut off from resupply and reinforcement. They were surrounded, but the Japanese in turn hadn't managed to land enough men and materiel to snuff them out. So the forces there were effectively under siege.