Read 299 Days VIII: The War Online

Authors: Glen Tate

Tags: #299 Days VIII: The War

299 Days VIII: The War (37 page)

There were a few picnic tables for the guards; the female soldiers were offered the
first seats. The women were fully qualified soldiers and respected members of the
unit, but the men were still gentlemen. The rest of the 17th and the Delphi guards
stood and quickly devoured plates of food. There weren’t enough plates, so each person
ate their food quickly and then took their plates back to the field kitchen, where
they were quickly washed and handed to the next person. There were plenty of handshakes
and high-fives among the 17th and the Delphi guards. Both groups were glad the other
one was there to share in this fight. It was a joyous occasion. Eating a nice meal
with fellow fighters. It was a feast. A New Year’s Day feast.

After everyone had eaten, Grant raised a cup of water and motioned for Ford to stand.

“Here’s a toast to a New Year,” Grant said. “A happy New Year.” Everyone cheered.

In the middle of all the celebration and hospitality, Scotty came running over to
Grant.

“He’s texting,” Scotty whispered, half out of breath. “The young guy is texting.”
He ran off toward the bushes around the gate and Grant followed him, right in the
middle of the toast. He knew it appeared rude, but he had no other choice.

When Grant caught up to Scotty, Scotty had his rifle pointed at the young guy. A cell
phone was on the ground. The young guy was crying and begging for his life.

“Please! Please!” the young guy was screaming. He looked like he was in high school,
maybe seventeen or eighteen years old. “I didn’t mean to hurt anyone!” He was completely
coming apart.

“Shut up!” Scotty yelled in his command voice.

Grant came up and drew his rifle, too. “Got him,” Grant said to Scotty. “What’s going
on?”

By now, a crowd had followed Scotty and Grant. An audience was forming.

“That fucker was texting,” Scotty said, still with his rifle pointed at the young
guy’s forehead. “After asking all those questions. Like our frequencies? Our fucking
frequencies he wanted to know.”

“They have my girlfriend!” the young guy screamed.

“What’s going on?” Ford asked. “And, why are you pointing a rifle at one of my men?”

“Because,” Grant said calmly, “it appears that he’s a spy.” There was a gasp.

“What?” Ford screamed. “Listen,” he yelled at Grant. “We are feeding you but now you’re
trying to kill my men? Explain yourself!”

Grant and Scotty explained all the weird questions followed by the texting.

While they were explaining this Ford, Ted yelled, “Perimeter!” and the 17th started
to form a circle around the Delphi guards. Who knew if other guards were spies, too?

Some of the Delphi guards shouldered their rifles or drew their pistols. The 17th
did the same. A Mexican standoff. Except there were way more soldiers than guards.

“We need to make sure there aren’t any more spies,” Grant said. “Sorry, Mr. Ford,
but we need to secure this place.”

“What the hell is wrong with you?” Ford asked. Things were very tense. The Delphi
guards were looking to Ford for instructions. “We’ve got four or five times more guys
than you do,” Ted said to Ford. “Let’s just calm down and see if there are any more
people who have picked today as a day to text their girlfriends or others.”

Ford knew that the 17th outnumbered them. He didn’t want a bunch of people, especially
his own, to get killed.

“Okay,” Ford said reluctantly. “We’ll put our weapons down.” His men started to do
so.

Ted motioned for the 17th to do the same.

“We’re going to see if any of your people have their cell phones on them and have
texted recently,” Ted said.

Ford nodded. He could not defend any of his men if they were texting information about
the soldiers.

Ted motioned for the soldiers to start patting down the guards.

While all this was happening, the young guy was bawling like a baby. He kept talking
about his girlfriend.

“Shut up!” Grant yelled at him. By now, Scotty had the young guy’s cell phone and
was reading the texts.

Scotty started yelling out the texts on his phone. “‘Convoy. Semi-truck. About 100
troops, 17th Irregulars of State Guard. Heading to Oly down Highway 101. At Delphi
exit now.’”

“Do you have an explanation?” Grant asked the young guy. He was going into judge mode.
He could feel it.

“My girlfriend is in Olympia,” the young guy said. “Her dad is an FCorps high-ranking
guy. He said that if I helped them that I could be with her.”

“Are you fucking kidding me?” Grant screamed. Selling out a hundred men just to make
out with some girl? Treason was bad enough, but treason for a chick was even worse.

Scotty, who was normally very calm, thrust the muzzle of his AR right at the young
guy’s face. He ducked out of the way. Scotty clicked the safety off his AR. It made
the very distinctive “click” sound of an AR safety. He pointed it right between the
kid’s eyes.

“Stop!” Grant yelled at Scotty. “Stand down, Scotty. Stand down,” Grant said in his
command voice. Scotty obeyed the order and clicked the safety back on, lowering his
rifle. A wet spot appeared on the young guy’s crotch. He had just pissed his pants.

It was silent for a moment. No one could believe what was happening. Thirty seconds
ago, they had all been toasting the New Year, now this.

“Do you want to do this or should I?” Grant asked Ford. “He’s one of your men, so
it’s your responsibility, but I can take that responsibility off your hands.” Everyone
knew what Grant was talking about. Especially the kid. He started crying even more.

“C’mon,” Ford said. “He’s just a kid.”

“I don’t give a fuck,” Ted said, walking up to Ford and getting in his face. “He tried
to get us killed and he just might have succeeded. That fucking text has already gone
out.”

Ford was dumbfounded. He didn’t know what to do. He had no plan for this; he had never
even thought that one of his own would do this.

Grant knew what to do: shoot this little fucker in the head, finish lunch, and get
back on the road.

Mercy. Be the example. This will set the tone for all that follows.

Grant thought about that. The outside thought had been right every time so far. He
needed to follow what it said. Another thought quickly jumped into Grant’s head, though
he couldn’t shake the feeling that it wasn’t actually his thought. It was a brilliant
thought and one that came from somewhere else.

“Give me that cell phone,” Grant said. Someone handed it to him. Grant read aloud
as he typed, “‘False alarm. No semi coming to Oly. It was a rumor. I verified it’s
false. All quiet at Delphi.’” He quickly hit the send button.

“There,” Grant said. “That solves that military problem. Now, onto the human problem.”

The kid was shaking so hard he fell down, trembling and whimpering on the ground.
He was pathetic.

“You can’t kill him!” one of the Delphi guards yelled. “He’s my cousin.”

“The hell I can’t kill him,” Grant screamed at the guard. “I can kill him.” Grant
drew his pistol. “I sure as shit can!”

It was silent again. Grant, with his pistol in hand, walked up to the kid and thundered,
“Stand up!” The kid couldn’t. Or didn’t want to, knowing what was coming. A couple
of soldiers grabbed him and forced him to stand.

“What’s your name, you little shit?” Grant screamed. “Name! Now!”

“Zack Knight,” the kid said slowly. He was ashamed of himself and didn’t want people
to hear his name, even though all the Delphi guards knew who he was.

Grant walked right up to Zack, waved his pistol in the kid’s face, screaming, “Traitor!
You deserve to die, you little fuck!” Grant was feeling a rage he didn’t know he had
in him. He was starting to think he would shoot this kid right then and there. He
started thinking about angle of the bullet and whether there was a safe backstop behind
the kid’s head. He knew that would be disobeying the outside thought, but he couldn’t
control himself.

Then a calm came over him. He casually put his pistol up to the kid’s head. Grant
took a breath like he was getting mentally prepared to do something big.

More silence. And whimpering. People started to cover their ears, preparing for the
loud noise that was coming.

“But not today,” Grant said as he calmly holstered his pistol. “Because you are no
longer a direct threat to my men. You can’t do any more spying and I cancelled the
effect of your little dispatch.”

Grant stepped back from Zack. “Killing you wouldn’t solve any problem. The problem
is over. Killing you would just have your family hate us. That accomplishes nothing.
And you’re not exactly a badass we’re taking out from the Lima side. You’re a pathetic,
selfish, horny little piece of shit.”

Grant stepped back even further and started to talk to the crowd. He needed to make
a political point. “We only kill people who are a threat to us,” Grant said. “Directly.
A direct threat. People who are capable of hurting us. Not pathetic little boys who
piss their pants.” That felt good to say, Grant had to admit. He really wanted to
kill this guy. He would settle for humiliating him if the outside thought said to
spare him.

Grant looked at Ford. “We have a little something we call ‘hammer and tag.’ I won’t
shoot this kid today, but he will pay.” Grant motioned and Sap came up to Zack and
zip tied his hands in front of him. The troops hauled the cuffed kid to a nearby picnic
table. They forcibly sat him down. Neither Zack nor the Delphi guards had any idea
what was about to happen.

Grant pulled out his pistol. Ford was confused. Didn’t Grant just say he wouldn’t
shoot him?

Sap and the others held Zack’s hands down on the table. Grant took his Glock, with
its polymer lower, and flipped it around so he was holding it by the end of the metal
barrel. His Surefire flashlight was mounted on the bottom of the barrel, so it filled
up his hand. He held his pistol like a hammer, except that the grip was pointing toward
Grant and the flat top of the metal barrel, with the rear sight was pointing toward
the kid. Grant’s upside down pistol was now a crude metal club.

Grant raised his hand high and smashed Zack’s hands. He screamed out in pain. Grant
saw that he had mangled his left hand. Sap wrestled the kid, who was much easier to
control now that one of his hands was smashed, so that his right hand was on the table.
Grant raised the pistol and smashed Zack’s remaining hand. A second scream of pain
shot out.

Grant looked at his pistol for any damage. The notched rear sight was the part of
the barrel that slammed into his hands. The rear sight had blood all over it. He handed
his pistol to Bobby, who was standing nearby. Bobby cleaned it off on his jacket and
handed it back to Grant.

One of Grant’s soldiers was standing there with a permanent marker. Sap and the others
held Zack down while Grant wrote a big “L” on his face. It was a little crooked because
the kid was squirming so much. And his face was scrunched up in pain so it was hard
to write on it, but the purpose of the “L” wasn’t to put a nice looking letter on
a person’s face.

“There,” Grant said to Ford. “That’s ‘hammer and tag.’ It’s better than killing them.
And now, he’s no longer a threat. And everyone will know not to trust him. Forever.”

After the hammer and tagging, Zack fell to the ground again, still sobbing like a
baby.

“Stand up, you little shit,” Grant yelled at him. Grant had to admit how good it felt
to smash that kid’s hands and humiliate him. After all, that little dirtbag was trying
to get them all killed just to be with a stupid girl. Grant knew it was wrong to enjoy
it, but he still managed to have a surge of warm adrenaline and joy pulsing through
him. It was like a drug. He loved it. But, ultimately, Grant had an obligation to
set a good example, and this was his chance so he decided to take it.

Grant motioned to Sap to get Zack standing up. Zack was balled up in a fetal position
on the ground crying. Sap kicked him lightly. Sap wanted to give him a second, much
harder kick but realized that would exceed the hammer and tag punishment.

“Get up, you stupid fuck,” Sap said. Zack was in too much pain to stand. Realizing
the political opportunity this presented, Grant motioned for Sap and Bobby to help
Zack up. After a couple of tries, Zack was finally standing. He stared Grant in the
eye. Grant laughed at Zack’s pathetic attempt at intimidation and stared Zack right
back in the eyes.

He said loudly to Zack, but really speaking to the crowd around him, “When people
ask what happened to you, tell them ‘reconciliation.’” Grant turned to the whole crowd
and repeated, “Reconciliation.”

“We have to live with each other when this is all over,” he said and pointed to Zack,
“and judging by the piss-poor performance of his Lima colleagues, that won’t be too
long from now. We can’t kill all of the shits like this. Well, we can, but that would
mean revenge killings from their side. And more from ours. And more from theirs. And
so on.”

Grant paused and looked at the crowd. “Reconciliation starts today.” He let that sink
in with them. Then he repeated, “Reconciliation starts today.”

Other books

With and Without Class by David Fleming
Broken Storm Part One by May C. West
War and Remembrance by Herman Wouk
Azrael by William L. Deandrea
The Detonators by Donald Hamilton
The Exiled by Kati Hiekkapelto


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024