and this seems to encourage him. âWell, maybe I havenât introduced myself properly. Lieutenant Janus. Heading to Pittsburg myself. Iâm in supply and logistics there.â
Sure you are.
âPleasure to meet you, sir.â
The sharp, jerking movement comes as they clear the station and accelerate, and sure enough the passed-out drunk slides toward the floor. Rainy leans forward and lays a hard tap with the edge of her hand on his knee. Hejerks awake just long enough to curl himself sideways and avoid sliding all the way.
The civilian woman does not approve of any of this. The other two privates are leaning into each other, having the kind of very intense conversations men sometimes have when inebriated. The topic appears to be a friend whoâs been rated unfit for service, 4F, and whether or not heâs a wolf who will be going after their girls ten seconds after the train is out of the station. Also, beer. And something to do with some jackass sergeant who . . .
They suddenly recall that thereâs an officer present and fall silent.
âMay I ask what attracted you to supply and logistics, sir?â And again the question is absolutely respectful and cheeky at the same time.
âMostly the logistics,â he says solemnly. Heâs beginning to suspect sheâs playing with him.
âYes, sir. Iâve never been entirely clear on what that involves.â
He does not offer to enlighten her. âYou from here in New York City?â
âWell, thatâs where I caught this train, sir.â
âFamily?â
âYes, sir.â
âMother? Father?â
âOne of each, sir.â
âI donât suppose theyâre happy seeing you dragged into this stupid, pointless war, eh?â
âI wasnât aware that the war was stupid. Or pointless.â
A long drag on the cigarette. A crease check. âWell, itâs not our war, is it? Why should we be fighting to save Britain from the Germans? Let alone the Russians, those Bolshevik, Commie bastards. Tell me, Private: why should we be fighting for a dying colonial empire and a dangerous totalitarian state?â
Rainy takes a moment to consider the correct answer. âBecause thatâs what the chain of command has ordered us to do, sir.â
Check. And mate.
He sees it now. He sighs. âIâm going to see if I can get some fresh air. Youâre right, itâs rather close in here. Join me, PFC Schulterman.â
Itâs not a request. Rainy stands up and follows him into the still-jammed corridor. She spots the Full sign the conductor has hung on their not-really-full compartment. The lieutenant leads her to the end of the car, just a few feet, and onto a rickety, noisy gallery between rattling cars. The platform is not two feet deep. Itâs cold out, and a whole lot colder with the forty-mile-an-hour wind generated by the trainâs increasing speed.
âYou can cut the crap now, PFC.â He has to raise his voice over the clatter of steel wheels and steel coupling.
âSir. One of two things must happen now, respectfully.â
He tilts his head. âOh?â
âSir, either you show me identification stating that you are with army intelligence, or I will have no choice but to report you to the first officer I find. Youâre asking a lot of questions.â
âHa!â Heâs both delighted with, and abashed by, her answer. âHow long did it take you?â
âSir, your ID, please.â
His mouth hangs open for a second, then with a genuine grin that takes five years off his face so he looks like an adolescent playing dress-up, he reaches inside his tunic and hands her a cardboard identity card.
His name is not Lieutenant Janus, itâs Captain Jon Herkemeier. And he is army intelligence.
âWell done, PFC Schulterman.â He puts the ID away and reveals that in addition to being a crease-checker, heâs a lapel tugger. Fidgety
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