With a loud clap of noise, the drogue stabilization chute deployed. Paul grunted, the wind knocked out of him, but he quit spinning.
Fighting it so he wouldn’t restart, he remembered all the skydiving lessons. He stretched himself, arching his back, and he fought to hold it, hold it… he sucked down air. His lungs unlocked. Even better, he held his position. The G-meter went green.
“He’s going to make it, sir,” the ground controller said.
“Once he deploys his main parachute I’ll believe it. Until then, let’s wait and see.”
Paul grinned. He liked the general, kind of. For a brass hat, the man was okay. He scanned the scene and continued to breathe pure oxygen from his two bottles. He carried enough for ten minutes of air.
Checking a gauge, Paul saw he dropped at 713 miles per hour. He was supersonic, baby. Except for the extreme speed, this was just like skydiving now.
He watched his height as measured from sea leveclass="underline" 20,000 feet, 18,000 feet, 16,000 feet.
“Get ready to deploy your main parachute,” the ground controller said.
“Roger,” Paul said, who watched the gauge closely.
At six thousand feet, with a Montana pine forest below, Paul gripped the handle, feeling the molding for his fingers. At five thousand feet, he pulled.
“It’s time to deploy,” the ground controller said a second later.
A louder clapping sound than before and a vicious yank against his shoulders told him the parachute deployed. If it hadn’t, he had an emergency reserve chute.
Paul’s speed slowed. Soon, he began to float down to the ground. He was going to make it. Now he would find out if they were going to wash him out of the program or not.
In the brisk morning air, three hundred yards from an old car lot, Colonel Higgins walked past parked Behemoth tanks. These were new vehicles from Detroit, painted with desert colors.
This happened to be the newly reconstructed Sixth Regiment. Jake had belonged to the original sixth. Stan sighed. He dearly missed his boy. It still didn’t sit well with him. He’d buried the sadness, though, and now he took it out on the Chinese. It was an unhealthy thing to do, and every time he destroyed a Chinese tank or truck, he waited for a good feeling to emerge.
Why doesn’t killing the enemy make me feel better?
The Behemoth tank crews stood at attention before their vehicles. They were sharp-eyed young men in black uniforms and angled caps. How many of them would die before this damn war ended? After three years of grueling fighting, they had finally fenced off the Chinese invaders. Another campaign should push them all the way into northern Mexico. Then what would happen?
Will we invade Mexico to drive out the Chinese? We have to. If we don’t, we’ll have to worry about the Pan-Asian Alliance for the rest of our lives.
One tanker caught his eye. He was a tall lad with sucked in cheeks. Stan stopped before him.
“What’s your name, soldier?”
“Corporal Chet Bretnor, sir.”
“Chet?”
“Yes, sir?”
“Why do you seem familiar?”
“I was part of Jake’s crew, sir. We survived the Red Dragon attack together.”
Stan frowned, and he turned away. But he was the colonel, the hero to some of these lads. He forced himself to look once more at Chet.
“That was a bad day,” Stan said. “I’m glad to see you make it.”
The boy’s face screwed up, as if he was trying to gin up the courage to say something. Stan didn’t want to hear it, whatever the boy had to say. He sighed, and he almost walked on, almost…
“Yes?” Stan asked.
“Sir,” Chet blurted. “I haven’t heard from Jake, sir. Do you happen to know where he’s stationed?”
Stan froze for several seconds. Then he shook his head. “Jake died, I’m afraid.”
“I’m very sorry to hear that, sir. How did it happen?”
Stan frowned. That seemed like an odd question. “Radiation poisoning,” he said.
“Didn’t he get the bone marrow treatment?”
“No.”
“Then why did those men take him away?”
“He was dead.”
“What?” Chet asked. “No. I don’t think so, sir.”
Stan stared at the soldier. Finally, he asked, “What do you mean?”
“Jake resisted them, I’m not sure why, and the man gave him a sedative.”
“Resisted?”
“From where I lay, it sure sounded like that. I was pretty out of it at the time, sir. Maybe I don’t remember it very well.”
A worm of suspicion crept into Stan’s heart. “What did the men look like who took him?”
Chet cocked his head, and he gave Stan a funny look. “You know, I’ve never really thought about it before. You know what. They were MPs.”
“Come again?” Stan asked, sharply.
“Militia MPs, sir,” Chet said. “I’m sure of it.”
“Son of a bitch!”
Chet recoiled, and he paled. “Did I say something wrong, sir?”
Stan had to come back from the place he’d gone in his mind. He saw the boy’s fright. So, he put his hand on Chet’s shoulder. “Come with me. I want to hear more about this.”
“Sir?”
“I’m an idiot. I should have realized when the doctor wouldn’t look at me.” He faced Chet. “Militia MPs took him. I can’t believe it. They took a sick, possibly dying man. They’d better hope he’s still alive—or heaven help them.”
Paul sat quietly before General Allenby. The holding cell made him uneasy. The obvious two-way mirrors didn’t help him relax.
A wooden table stood between them. Paul sat on one side, the general on the other.
General Allenby didn’t look like anything special. He was average height with a narrow mustache and bland features. He had intense brown eyes, the only giveaway that something extra might be going on with the man.
Allenby stared at him. Paul stared back. He didn’t know what else he was supposed to do. If the general thought he was going to wilt before a brass hat… the man could think again.
Paul had landed, waited for pickup and soon ridden back in a jeep. They took him straight to the brig. He’d waited here… he didn’t know for how long. There were no clocks on the walls. He felt hungry, so maybe three hours had passed since landing.
A few minutes ago, the door opened. Big MPs stood outside. They were the hard types who would beat you down with billy clubs if the general ordered it. Allenby walked in, sat down and the MPs shut the door.
Now the general just sat there, staring. Because of the mirror behind the man, Paul could see the balding spot on the back of the general’s head.
Internally, Paul shrugged. Screw them anyway. He was good at what he did. He’d stopped kissing butt a long time ago. Actually, he’d never done it. That’s why he’d been discharged from the Marines the first time after Quebec when he’d still been a kid.
“You didn’t take your anti-nausea pill,” Allenby said.
“That’s right.”
“Why not?”
“They don’t agree with me.”
“You’re going to have to take one… when you combat deploy.”
“Okay.”
“We’ll need our Marines at peak efficiency,” Allenby said. “We’re only going to do this once and you have to do it at your best.”