In the Valley (18 page)

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Authors: Jason Lambright

BOOK: In the Valley
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“I know Mike is pissed, sir, but that dog had to die.”

“Don’t do that stupid shit again, Z.” And Paul left it at that.

But Mike didn’t. Later on, Paul could have sworn Z was on halo feed with Mike because Z kept making little jumps while he walked, like he was being slapped on the head from some ghost behind him.

Halo feeds could be like that sometimes.

Finally, Second Company reached the river. For their efforts, they bagged three squirters and one dog. To add insult to injury, the village elders later demanded a payment of ten thousand credits for the mutt. After the sweep was conducted and Second Company was leaving to link up with the ground-cars, Paul and Bashir learned of the elders’ demand.

Paul and Bashir talked with them about the dog and said there was no way the Juneau government was going to pay that much for a guard dog that, by the way, had attacked a soldier.

“You should pay us for the bullets my soldier fired at your dog,” Paul said, having had enough of the elders’ garbage. “The bullets are worth at least a thousand credits.”

The elders mulled this new angle over. Finally, they came up with a solution: “Your soldier—he will work for us for five years in the fields. He looks strong; we will find him a wife.”

Paul looked over at Z, who looked like he was about to explode. Paul shot him a quelling look. He had to drag this out a little, to mess with Z for bringing up his heart rate earlier in the day.

“I will let my soldier work for you for one year. Is this good?”

“Oh hell no, sir, I’m not workin’ these goddamned fields!” Z just couldn’t control himself.

Paul laughed on the inside. Gotcha, fucker, he thought, for making my fun meter peg.

The elders said two years would be good and five hundred credits.

Paul said no deal, and Second Company left. All the soldiers were ragging poor Z-man. His new nickname was Zag-Kush, or “Dog-Killer.” Z would never live it down.

P
aul would never live it down—that he had given up his chance to return to Earth for some stupid bitch that had dumped him. Each day when he went to work in the woods, trimming Purplewood trees, he would stew. He had given up everything for Darlene—everything—and she had left him to sit and spin on Ottawa 6, far from his home, under these alien stars, only one of which was Earth’s.

He didn’t know what to do, so he just kept working and drinking his paychecks away. One day blended into the next, and before he knew it, six months had passed since Darlene had walked out on him.

Paul was kicked back with a beer in the little apartment in Sunnyside when his halo pinged him. It said, “
PERSONAL CORRESPONDENCE

SOL SYSTEM
.” The warm little buzz Paul had been working up went cold. Then he slammed his beer all the way down and cracked another one. The icon in his visual wasn’t going away.

It had to be a letter from his father, a man Paul couldn’t possibly see again.

There was no way Paul could pay for a trip back to Sol. There was also no such thing as a reverse indenture that he could sell himself into to get back. He knew; he had researched the subject. There was just the cold, hard fact that he was stuck on Ottawa 6 forever, trimming Purplewood trees. He drained the
beer he was holding. Then he drained the next one. He kept drinking, in fact, until he could barely see.

Then he clicked on the icon. The message was simple:

Paul,

Your mother and I have received word that you found a woman on Ottawa 6. We wish you nothing but happiness and a long life together.

As you can imagine, this news has been hard on us. But you know Mother and I; we will always be proud of our star-travelling son and our eventual grandchildren.

When the day comes, you must send us images. We are curious about everything. We saw the picture you sent of Darlene (tell her we said hello); please send us images of your house, your friends, things that you do.

Your mother and I regularly search news items about Ottawa 6—there isn’t much, but we feel closer to you for looking.

Wish you were here; we miss you and pray for you.

Mother and Father

Paul erupted into violent, heaving tears when he was finished. Then he went to the bathroom and vomited the beers into the Plastone throne in his apartment. Collapsing in a heap on the cool tile floor, he wept himself to sleep. Needless to say, he didn’t make it into work that day. He didn’t make it into work the next day, either.

When the company sent a woman to check on him, she encountered a grizzled-looking, ghost named Paul with red-rimmed eyes. She asked if there was anything that she could do.

Paul thought, How about you give me my life back? How about you undo the hurt that Darlene laid upon me? How about you send me home to Hopefield?

What he said instead was, “I’m fine. Let the people at work know that I quit.”

She looked at him, clearly thinking that he was a bum, said, “OK,” and turned and left.

After her ground-car had faded down the road, Paul stood up and opened the jelly jar he had hidden on a shelf. It was his rainy-day fund he had started back when life was good and Darlene had graced these floors. As far as Paul could see, it was a rainy day indeed. There were 645 creds in the pot—enough to get a taxi into Hope, grab a couple of meals, and stay a couple of days in a cheap motel.

Paul had come up with a plan. He called up a taxi icon on his halo. Then he waited the sixteen minutes it took for the taxi to arrive at his little apartment while he nursed a beer.

When the taxi nosed up in front of the house, Paul walked out and left the door open. He didn’t take a single thing from the apartment with him, except for his switchblade and a trash bag with his quilt from Mother and the scarf from long-lost Amy Brown.

As the taxi rolled toward Hope, Paul called up a green icon called “
SERVICE
.” He clicked on it and followed the instructions for “
PRIOR SERVICE ENLISTEES
.” At least, thought Paul, I have a chance in hell of getting back to Old Earth after another hitch.

Just like that, Paul was back in.

Of course, he had to report in to the nearest duty station for in-processing, and that just happened to be Det 2, H Co, 2-18 IN (Armored). Sergeant First
Whitehead was waiting for him with a shit-eating grin on his face. Of course he was.

Three weeks later, Paul had orders for transport off-world. His excellent interstellar adventure had been postponed here on Ottawa, but not indefinitely. Paul had joined the ranks of those to whom the service was a home. He shouldered his duffel, again, and got on the cattle-car transport to anywhere.

P
aul would have rather been anywhere but Juneau 3. After five months on-planet, the feeling was steadily mounting in him that he was going to die there. There had been just too many close calls, too many weird experiences. And Major Najibullah the Bomb Maker was still out there, smokin’ and jokin’. Paul needed a near-cig at the thought. He pulled out a Fortunate and lit it.

Today he was hanging out in the watchtower right by the barracks at Camp Kill-a-Guy. He wasn’t doing much of anything; his gear was square for tomorrow’s mission. The planning was already done and approved by higher.

The party in the morn was taking place at Combat Outpost Lagnam, in the middle of BFE (Bum-fuckin’ Egypt) and out toward the magical fish. The outpost was south of the Belt, in other words, and on the western side of the Zudnok River.

It was about noon, and the day was scorching hot, about forty degrees in the shade. Paul had been drinking water like a madman, and he sure was glad he wasn’t patrolling today. Mike had pinged his halo earlier on. He was broiling alive in the rice paddies out by Kas Warnoz. Paul could sympathize; he had humped those boonies himself just a couple of weeks ago.

Ping!
went his halo, just as he took his last drag. It was the colonel. Paul clicked on his icon and got him directly. “Hey, Paul, where you at?”

“Up on the watchtower, sir, enjoying the sights.” Paul watched with deadened bemusement at a cruel entertainment Crusty and Dirty were engaged in, in the motor pool beneath him. They had caught some of the deadly, colorful “scorpions” and had put them into an ammo can. The scorpions were territorial and would fight to the death when two of them were caught in a space where there was no retreat. The two NCOs were betting on the result of the death match between “their” respective creatures.

“Rog, Paul, I’ll come up and sightsee with you.” The colonel’s icon clicked off. Paul checked his supply of smokes; the colonel would surely want to light up. Paul was curious what he wanted.

A few moments later, he heard the sounds of someone on the steps leading up to the tower. Ten seconds later, the colonel popped up onto the platform and joined Paul by the railing behind a pile of sandbags. They both looked at the mountain in the distance and at the antics of Crusty and Dirty. The colonel shook his head in bemusement.

Paul offered the colonel a near-cig. The colonel declined and pulled out his own pack. They both lit up and continued looking at the mountain. The air had an orange cast to it today, and the mountain was a curious pink color. Heat radiated off objects scattered around the camp. People who were walking around did so sluggishly, with bent shoulders. Only madmen and soldiers were out in weather like this.

The colonel broke the silence. “Going out tomorrow, Paul?”

Paul took a drag. “Yeah, to Lagnam; there’s been some trouble out there.”

The colonel, of course, knew all about it. A couple of nights ago, some shitheads had shot at the combat outpost there with an antiarmor rocket. The attackers had wounded some guys, and the bad dudes had run off into the night, laughing their asses off. So, Second Company was going to roll out there and see what they could see.

“You mind if I go with you? I’m getting bored sitting around out here.”

Paul’s antenna twitched. The colonel had to have an idea. “Hey, no problem, sir. We’ll party and have some good times.”

“Yeah, I was thinking…You know how there’s a rat trail out there? How about we set up an ambush along it?”

A “rat trail” was a path that bad guys used to bring in supplies and reinforcements to an area, like, say, the Belt. Paul was definitely interested. “Sounds good to me, sir. We’ll make some room for ya.”

They both finished their near-cigs and then went back into the barracks.

The next day, Second Company rolled out to Lagnam. Paul and the colonel talked with Bashir and told him the broad outline to their plan. If it worked, madness and chaos would ensue. If it didn’t work, they would just have a boring sleepover on a rocky desert plain. Either way, it beat sitting around at the camp, playing with themselves.

Second Company arrived with a convoy of ground-cars at Combat Outpost Lagnam, which was indeed situated in the middle of seemingly nowhere. They proceeded to set up camp outside the little square fortress’s walls. It was about 1500 hours local, four hours before full twilight.

Actually, “nowhere” was deceptive out here in the desert. There were many terrain features that didn’t appear on maps and, worse yet, appeared insignificant when viewed by micro feed. Nothing, in the end, really beat walking over the terrain to get a feel for it. The colonel and Paul were about to relearn that little fact that night.

Of course, going out for a stroll would have tipped off the bad guys and ruined Paul and the colonel’s scenario. So what ended up happening was unavoidable—but it still sucked.

After Second Company was settled down, Paul called over Bashir and, with the colonel, briefed him on what was going to happen that night.

Here was the plan, as they briefed to Bashir. Once it was full dark, the colonel and Paul would suit up and move out to a hill about a klick and a half north from the combat outpost. According to intel, the dissidents’ rat trail lay somewhere in between the four-hundred-meter-high hill in the distance and the small fortress.

Second Company would stay at outpost Lagnam and look for all the world like they were having a Boy Scout campout. If all the stars aligned, the colonel and Paul would spot any mule trains coming through the valley and give them the surprise of their short lives.

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