Read The Infinity Brigade #1 Stone Cold Online
Authors: Andrew Beery
Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Hard Science Fiction, #Military, #Space Fleet, #Space Marine, #Teen & Young Adult
“Recruit Jeremy James Hammond, front and center POST!” I yelled.
JJ responded by lumbering over like the great ape he was and stood at something that only vaguely resembled attention.
“Recruit Hammond, by the power vested in me by Drill Sergeant Baldwin, and because I don’t have the common sense God granted a fly, I now promote you to the rank of Acting Sergeant. Ramirez that makes you the corporal.”
Chapter 4: Boot Camp – Week Two
The steak dinner was delicious. It included Texas toast, a massive baked potato complete with both butter and, if you wanted it, sour crème. The steak was a lab grown ribeye with just the right amount of synthetic marbling. Much to my surprise we were given a full thirty minutes to enjoy this feast. It seemed too good to be true and as was often the case, it was. Five minutes before we were to have our plates policed up, the Senior Drill stood up and announced we needed to hurry up and finish because he was going to introduce us to some new safety equipment after dinner.
Now I had only been a recruit for seven days but even I knew that a Drill Sergeant suggesting anything was tantamount to an order. I wolfed down the last of my steak and potatoes… and hurried my tray to the automated recycler.
Once outside, the Drills took us on a leisurely five kilometer run. Acting Sergeant Hammond took the questionable opportunity to point out that his ‘mum’ always said you should never do strenuous physical activity after eating a big meal. The end result was a lengthy discussion involving a concern on the Senior Drills part that Jeremy James Hammond might accidently confuse Senior Drill Sergeant Harris with his mum… and in point of fact, since he was obviously a momma’s boy that said recruit might indeed attempt to suckle at the Senior Drill’s breast… a state of affairs that the Senior Drill would find deeply disturbing… so disturbing in fact that the Drills had us all drop and give them fifty. Later I spoke with JJ and encouraged him, in the future, to keep his thoughts to himself. I would learn over the course of many years of enduring friendship that this was, at best, a forlorn hope.
The safety equipment turned out to be a Mark Three sealable breather. It was what the Marines were using for gas masks these days. We were shown how to don the mask and instructed to do so. At this point, the Drills walked out of the classroom and sealed the door hatch.
A white smoke-like vapor filled the room. I knew from being on the wrong side of the law on several occasions that this was CS gas… chlorobenzylidene malonitrile. It was not lethal but you didn’t want to breathe it. All of a sudden the steak dinner made much more sense.
You sadistic bastards
, I thought to myself. I forced myself to carefully hyperventilate. The idea was to get as much clean air into my system as I could because if my guess was right we would be taking our breathers off soon.
I hate it when I’m right. Of course Jesus had failed to properly seal his mask so he was already choking on the burning fumes. Based on the number of other people gaging I knew he was not alone.
“Use your hands to push your mask into place” I yelled. “Then exhale as hard as you can to clear the mask.”
I needn’t have bothered. The next words we heard were “Remove your masks!”
***
I spent the next several days learning what it was to be responsible for more than just myself. I have to say, being the guy in charge is highly overrated.
We were scheduled for our first live weapons training this week. To get us ready for this august event, we needed to make a trip through medical. The purpose of this visit was to get a basic commlink embedded near the base of our skull and at the same time receive our initial load of combat nanites. These nanites would interface with both our newly implanted commlinks as well as the weapons we would be issued.
Another, perhaps even more important function of these nanites, was the fact that they were programmed to keep us alive… or at very least revivable… in the case of injury. I was a big fan of this aspect of my new little buddies because as I got to know the soldiers under my nominal command I came to realize it would be a while before I trusted them with live weapons.
Corporal Ramirez was a prime example of what I was concerned about. The man was a mountain of meat. He was a sure shot with a laser-tag rifle. If Vancouver or Hollywood put out a casting call for a Marine to play Lewis Burwell Puller, a.k.a. ‘Chesty’, in a new holovid… Ramirez would be the guy they cast. But hand the man grenade, even a fake one, and all hell broke loose.
He dropped the first one after pulling the pin. The second time around he managed to hold onto the grenade… and threw the pin. The third and final time around he managed to throw the grenade with everything he had. The grenade flew in generally the right direction before hitting a rock with so much force that it bounced and rolled most of the way back to the dugout we were throwing from. Had any of these been a live grenade the very least we would have had to deal with was a set of busted eardrums. I needed to make sure my guys and gals had a full load of medical nanites in them if they were going to be around Ramirez.
As the Acting Officer in Charge of our training platoon it was my responsibility to get each of my soldiers to medical; while at the same time insuring that our platoon fulfilled its various training missions. The Drill Sergeants on the other hand seemed intent on making the situation impossible.
I was told that I could split my platoon up but that each group would need to have one NCO. Since I only had one sergeant and one corporal that meant I could only have two groups. It seemed simple enough.
I split the platoon into two squads. Acting Sergeant JJ Hammond took half the recruits which worked out to eight guys and six gals. Corporal Ramirez took the other half. Our training task for the morning (after the first of our 10K runs) was to carry the components of a breaching bridge from the supply depot to a staging site. A class that was four weeks ahead of ours would be needing the parts to build the bridge as part of their training later in the morning.
Normally a series of gravity carts would be pulled behind an Armored Attack Vehicle (AAV) but the ‘enemy’ had destroyed all the AAVs so we had to hump the components the six kilometers to their destination.
I looked at the inventory of items we had to move. It seemed that there would be no problem moving it in the time frame allowed with half the platoon. Part of me was saying…
this will be easy
… and another part was saying…
not a chance in hell bucko!
I wish I would learn how to listen to the correct half but alas I am, and have always been, the eternal optimist.
Since New Parris Island was only about two kilometers across at its widest point this meant that we would have to cross it several times with our load. There was a real possibility that we could get bored but fortunately we had the Drills whose mission in life seemed to be keeping ours interesting.
About one and a half kilometers into our mission we began to take fire. Our first clue this was happening was when Private McDullis took a kinetic round dead center in his passive body armor. It knocked him back a good four feet. He looked down at his chest and saw the digital display flag him as dead. Per his standing orders (pun intended) he immediately fell to the ground as a casualty.
“DROP AND SEEK COVER!” I yelled. My helmet had a HUD display. We really hadn’t had a lot of time to practice with it yet but I had spent what little free time I had in the evenings reading the tech manual on it. After a few attempts I managed to turn on its friend-foe imager. Sadly everything it saw was flagged as a friend. I could see the snipper positions and began to fire in their general direction with my play-pointer which was the only weapon they would allow us to carry at the moment.
“Bloody Hell Sir… What are you firing at? I don’t see a damned thing!” JJ bellowed from the hole he had managed to find.
Did I mention before he was British?
It occurred to me that I was probably the only one using my ‘Heads-Up-Display.’ I tapped a control and took control of the HUDs for the entire platoon. As a guy, I hated to admit it, but reading manuals sometimes helped.
“WOooo!” I heard several of the platoon yell as their displays went live.
I started firing again at the guys firing at us. Kinetic rounds kept hitting the dirt near our position. Now understand, lunar dust is like talcum powder. It fine and once it stirs up into the air it can take a while to settle out.
“I only see friendlies,” Ramirez yelled.
“If they are firing at you they are not friendlies!” I yelled back.
“How do we know for sure?”
I gritted my teeth. We would get killed arguing about this. Suddenly inspiration hit. It’s rare but it does happen upon occasion. I pressed the HUD’s audio interface. “Computer, flag all shooters not within twenty feet of my present position as hostiles.”
Immediately four green icons turned red. “Take’em out boys!” I yelled. Thirty toy-pointers immediately converged on the four snipers. Their icons on our HUDs soon disappeared.
I was feeling pretty good about myself. The Senior Drill Sergeant must have been psychic because his ever-cheerful voice came over my commlink a few seconds later.
“Ensign, give me a sit-rep on your progress with your platoon’s medical workup.”
“Crap!” I said out loud.
“I see… situation normal, all fouled up. Address it Ensign… or I will demote you and promote someone who can, Harris out.”
“FORM UP!” I yelled at the platoon.
I had planned to use the entire platoon to carry the breaching bridge until we got near the medical center and then split off Ramirez’s squad… sending them to medical and continuing on with the other half of the platoon with myself and the corporal. That wouldn’t work now. While half the platoon was enough to carry the bridge; it would not be enough to carry the bridge and provide sniper cover. I needed a new plan.
“Jesus!” I yelled while trying to find him on my HUD.
“Over here, Sir.”
“Grab Jones and Westin… pick up McDullis and head over to medical. As soon as medical is done with you double time it back to whatever our current position is. Hand your Corporal stripes to the next group of four with the same orders.”
“You’re demoting me already?”
“Negative. I’m just shuffling my NCOs to get the mission accomplished. If you can avoid screwing up too badly you’ll get your stripes back by the end of the day.”
I knew based on the instructions I had received regarding the time it would take to process each of the soldiers through medical that it was going to be tight getting all of my platoon through before the exercise ended. That said, it was a good plan. It could work if everything went smoothly. Translation: I had zero expectation that things would go smoothly and that I would be successful with the current plan.
The problem was, I had two things stacked against me… well three if you counted the sadistic Drills that were intent on throwing up obstacle after obstacle. First, no plan ever survived contact with the enemy and second, the only member of my platoon I could absolutely count on to perform as expected was a guy named Murphy.
We got to within two klicks of our destination before we ran into our next problem. There was an electric fence between us and our destination. Now understand, we had just been on this chunk of real estate thirty minutes ago and I can assure you… there was no electric fence.
“JJ go take a team of two and check that out. The rest of you drop your load and start scanning the area. I can’t believe this is anything other than a trap.”
No sooner had the words left my mouth then the first kinetic rounds started hitting the dirt near us. One hit a rock near my hand and shattered. A metal shard managed to penetrate the Kevlar weave of my protective training BDU. It put a hole in my arm. It felt like someone had stuck a hot poker in my bicep.
“HOLY MOTHER OF SAINT JUDE!” I bellowed in pain. It was the hand I held my toy-pointer with so I was forced to use my other hand instead.
I grabbed a nanite squish-pack out of my belt pack and tore the top off with my teeth. I squeezed the contents into the wound. Fortunately the nanites I had received earlier as part of my time at the MEPS had already started to ease the pain and seal the wound. There was blood everywhere but such were the fortunes of war.
“JJ Report!”
“It seems to be run of the mill electric fence. We should be able to cut the wires and pull it down.”
“Make it happen Sergeant. We are burning daylight here.”
The rest of the day was a blur. We managed to get the bridge to its drop-off point but we were three minutes late. That cost us a hundred and fifty pushups. We got the entire platoon to medical in the required time… except for a guy named Ensign Stone.
Drill Sergeant Baldwin started to verbally administer a dress down that could easily strip the paint off the walls when she noticed the blood on my arm… and leg… and chest. I had been so preoccupied with everything that was going on I hadn’t noticed the other shrapnel wounds I had received.
Now to be fair, several of our guys got winged but they had gotten the nanite treatments. So they were good to go a few minutes after their nanites got to work. Senior Drill Sergeant Harris looked me up and down. I did my best to stand at attention but damn I was tired.
“Ensign remove your BDU Blouse,” Harris ordered.
I did although I had to admit I was somewhat stiff. It had been a rough day and there were still quite a few hours of daylight left to burn through. The shirt stuck where my blood had dried in a way that glued the fabric to my skin. I expected it to hurt when I pulled the fabric away but surprisingly it did not.
Sergeant Harris examined the shirt. There were a number of holes where shrapnel had passed through it. The snipers had not been trying to hit us but ricochets were hard to fully control. He looked at my arm and side. The skin was unblemished save for the blood stains.