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

The Infinity Brigade #1 Stone Cold (2 page)

BOOK: The Infinity Brigade #1 Stone Cold
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I looked at my arm and realized that it was hanging at an odd angle. I tried to move it and the fire in my shoulder increased from ‘wickedly hot’ to ‘full-blown inferno.’

“You broke my arm!” I accused the judge.

The evil bastard just smiled at me and said, “Technically it’s dislocated, not broken.”

He was still smiling when he sat down. I wanted to wipe that smile off his face. But I wasn’t so drunk that I didn’t realize that this dude had some serious training. Even though I was bigger, stronger and younger, I was likely at a disadvantage.

“Why the hell do you care about me and what I do?” I spat.

The judge leaned forward and looked me right in the eye. I remember what he said… and how he said it. It was cold… and penetrating… and it burned every bit as much as my shoulder.

“I lost everybody that ever meant anything to me on Mars. I lost them because there were not enough shuttles or time to get them off the surface. I lost them so the likes of you could escape… So yeah, son… I’d like to say I lost them for a reason. I’d like to say your life has some worth. Up until today, I had my doubts. Today is the first day in eight years I’ve seen you care about something beyond yourself.”

He pointed to my shoulder. “I’ll have medical take care of that. When you and I first met I gave you a card… did you keep it?”

“Card?”

“Yes, I gave you a card and I said ‘If anything happens and you need someone to watch your six; you give that number a call and tell them that Gunny Grimes sent you’”

Chapter 2: Semper Fidelis

I was still trying to wrap my foggy head around the fact that the Marine I had met all those years ago was the district judge that I had been meeting with all this time. I mean a guy in a fancy suit with a tie looks different than a soldier in BDUs, a flak vest and helmet… but still? Part of me knew that marines must retire and leave the service all the time. The fact that the Gunny at some point had gotten a law degree and then elected to the bench… that was just beyond ‘wow.’

The card he had given me all those years ago was still folded in half and in a corner of my wallet. I don’t know why I had kept it. Maybe deep down somehow I knew it would be important someday.

The card had two words on it… written in Latin:
Semper Fidelis
. Below these two words was link code that connected the caller with a Marine recruiter. I knew this, because I called it from the judge’s office.

He had asked me one final question. “Well son? Are you ready to make something more of your life?”

I thought of my sister. I thought of Mars. I thought of the Gunny who had risked his life to make sure I was safe. I thought of the judge waiting to see if the sacrifice he had already made had been worth it. I thought about how I was tired of being a loser and a victim. I thought about how much my shoulder hurt.

“Good night, Chesty, wherever you are.”

Gunnery Sergeant Grimes, turned lawyer, turned judge... paused for the briefest of moments… and then broke out laughing.

***

Three days later I was on a shuttle to New Parris Island on the dark side of the moon. I had a duffle bag filled with everything the Marines felt I would need. I knew this because the bag and its contents had been issued at the MEPS. The only thing of our own we were allowed to take with us was the air in our lungs.

The Marine Corps Recruit Depot would be my home for the better part of a year. My shoulder was feeling much better. Medical nanites were one of the miracles we had picked up from the Heshe. Who the Heshe were… well that’s another story. Bottom line, they were leaving this galaxy and all the ones near it.

Before they left, they dumped a whole bunch of high-tech ‘how-to’ stuff on our Internet. The eggheads were still figuring it all out. The marines had made use of a lot of what the Heshe had gifted us with. The medical nanites were one small example.

Judge Grimes had personally driven me to the recruiting station. I don’t know if he did it to make sure I actually went – to be clear, I would have – or if it was because he wanted to visit old friends. We walked through the front door of the recruiting station. The place was smaller than I thought it would be and oddly plain.

I had expected all sorts of recruiting posters, complete with smartly dressed guys and gals carrying their weapons and smiling back at me with perfectly white teeth. There was very little of that. I saw one poster that simply said “Oohrah!” Below it was the Marine emblem… an eagle standing on the globe with an anchor and a starship crossed behind it.

The single wooden desk was simple and too clean for my tastes. There wasn’t a piece of paper or pen that wasn’t placed with obvious precision. There were two folding metal chairs in the room. One sat behind the desk and one sat in front of the desk. The only other things in the room were a Galactic Coalition of Planets flag and a computer terminal next to the desk on an adjustable stand.

The Marine who was at the desk stood sharply as we entered the small office. I’d learn later how to read ranks. For the moment he was just another Marine. The judge walked up to him and shook his hand.

“Master Gunny, it’s good to see you,” the younger man said.

“And it’s good to see you too Willy. How are the wife and kids?”

“Sarah’s doing fine Gunny. You should think about coming by for the Packer game on Sunday. She’s boiling some brats in beer. The kids, well they take too much after me for their own good. Danny broke his arm three days ago and little Sarah just got expelled for decking a bully in school.”

“You must be proud of them.”

“That I am Gunny. That I am…” The Staff Sergeant looked over at me. The judge must have taken this as a hint to introduce me.

“Son, I’d like you to meet Staff Sergeant William Anderson.   Sergeant Anderson, this is AG Stone. Treat him well. I expect he will be your commanding officer someday. In the meantime, we need to take some rough edges off of him.”

“Good news Gunny! The dark side of the moon is a great place to take the rough edges off!”

And with that I was walked through the MEPS which was through the door behind the small office. MEPS was an FLA (four letter acronym) for a Military Entrance Processing Center. One of the first things I learned about the military was that they loved their TLAs (Three Letter) and their FLAs.

If the office out front was boring and plain, the MEPS was anything but. There was high-tech equipment all over the place. Over the course of the next few hours I got scanned and prodded in places I didn’t even know existed.

One of the first things they did was ask me to drop and attempt to perform a pushup. The marine who gave the order demonstrated ten pristine pushups. His back was flat enough to iron a suit on. Rather than resting his hands on the ground he held himself up on his fingertips. With each repetition, his chest came to within a quarter of an inch of actually touching the floor.  

Now keep in mind my arm had just been dislocated. I dropped and banged out fifty reasonably decent one-armed pushups. When I was done I stood back up. The Marine looked at me and then asked me to drop and do them correctly.

I explained that my shoulder had been dislocated a few hours earlier. He nodded and said, “Potential recruit unable to perform at even minimal level” as he wrote the same on my MEPS profile.

“WHAT!” I yelled. “I just did fifty!”

“Fifty done incorrectly is still zero done correctly. I am prepared to change my assessment if you would like to have another go at it recruit.”

I gritted my teeth and dropped to the ground. I would not give this bastard the satisfaction of seeing me fail. I tried to put most of my weight on my good arm. I failed horribly. It was all I could do not to scream but I forced myself to do ten of the most painful pushups I had ever attempted in my life. When I was done I stood back up. The evaluator must have seen how red my face was and the sweat trickling down my brow.

“Not great,” he said “but good enough for now. Let’s take care of that shoulder.”

I was walked to another area of the facility where ten other recruits were waiting in a line for a medical checkup. They had us strip to our underwear. Our clothes were placed in sealed bags and we were told that if we survived they would be returned to us. The corporal that made the comment had a grin on his face.

I’m not a particularly shy person. But standing in a room with nothing but boxer briefs on for the better part of an hour while doctors and technicians did strange and nefarious things to me in the name of evaluating my medical fitness is not my idea of fun. Three of the recruits were gals. I suspect they had it rougher than us because, like us guys, they were topless. On Earth that was no big deal. On Mars it just didn’t happen.  I’m not sure who was more uncomfortable, me or them. I spent much of the hour trying to look elsewhere.

Then it was my turn to spend some quality time with the doc.  He came up and looked me over with a hand scanner.

“OK, I see we have some recent tissue damage to the rotator cuff in your right arm. I’m going to give you an injection of medical nanites. They will aid in healing but I’m going to warn you any place where you have had a previous injury is going to inch for a few days. That’s just the nanites doing their job.”

“Thanks Doc.”

“All part of the service son,” the medical officer said as he pushed the injector against the side of my neck.

“HOLY CRAP!” He was not kidding. I felt like I had ants crawling all over my body. I had broken my leg when I was sixteen. It hurt worse now than it did when I first broke it. My shoulder burned.

“Oh, I probably should have mentioned this first, but those tattoos aren’t regulation. The medical bots will take care of those as well.”

Sure enough as I watched, the ink I had paid good money to lay down slowly faded. The feeling of ants made sense now. Everywhere I had ink, I felt the ants doing their jig. Unfortunately for me, I loved ink and it was everywhere except my face and privates.

After a vision test and a brief psychological evaluation I was cleared for service by the MEPS.

All told, there were sixteen of us that went through the process and all sixteen passed. I was a little surprised by this because I had heard that becoming a marine was tough. So far it didn’t seem so bad. My assessment would change over the next several weeks.

A marine captain came out and looked us all over. He told us we were about to attempt to become members of one of the most elite fighting forces the galaxy has ever seen. He said if any of us had any doubts, that now was the time to back out. After this point we risked death or injury. I looked around. There were no takers. I guessed everybody in the room was as crazy as I was.

“RAISE YOU RIGHT HAND!”

I followed the captain’s instructions.

“Repeat after me… I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the Galactic Coalition of Planets against all enemies; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same. That I will obey the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So help me God.”

***

As the shuttle touched down on the lunar surface, inside a sealed hanger, the pilot kicked on some music. It apparently was a tradition and the Marines were big on tradition. The music was from an ancient rock and roll band called
Pink Floyd
. The lyrics were haunting and I couldn’t help wonder if this might not be the first in a series of attempts to break us with fear.

Breathe, breathe in the air

Don't be afraid to care

Leave but don't leave me

Look around and choose your own ground

For long you live and high you fly

And smiles you'll give and tears you'll cry

And all you touch and all you see

Is all your life will ever be…

 

“SHOW’S OVER RETROBATES! GET YOUR BUTTS OFF THIS CUSHY LUXUARY LINER! MOVE IT! MOVE IT! MOVE IT!”

 

I grabbed my duffle bag and raced off the shuttle. The drill sergeant that was screaming at us was standing in front of a white line. I’d seen enough war holovids to know that I was supposed to stand on that line.

I was the first out and I quickly placed my toes on the line. Unfortunately I didn’t know what to do with my duffle bag so I bear-hugged it to my chest. I was the only one to remember to bring my duffle. I began to worry that maybe I was supposed to leave it on the shuttle.

The drill sergeant put a quick end to that thought. He stomped up to the recruit next to me and said, “SOLDIER DID YOU NOT BRING ANYTHING WITH YOU ON THAT LUXURY LINER?”

“Yes Sir!”

“SOLDIER DO YOU KNOW WHO I AM?”

“No Sir!”

“I AM SENIOR DRILL SERGEANT HARRIS. YOU MAY CALL ME… SENIOR DRILL SERGEANT HARRIS. I AM NOT A SIR… I WORK FOR A LIVING. YOU WILL NOT CALL ME SIR. AM I CLEAR SOLDIER?”

“YES SIR… er… SERGEANT… er… SENIOR DRILL SERGEANT HARRIS!”

“DROP AND GIVE ME FIFTY!”

“The rest of you,” Master Drill Sergeant Harris said in an almost soft voice that I soon learned to dread, “Do I look like a valet?”

“NO SENIOR DRILL SERGEANT HARRIS!”

“Then why are your duffels still on the shuttle? The GCP was good enough to give you those items. Are you saying you don’t want them?”

“NO SENIOR DRILL SERGEANT HARRIS!”

“Perhaps you should retrieve them,” the Drill Sergeant whispered.

Everyone except for myself ran back to the shuttle. Senior Drill Sergeant Harris walked over to my position. “What’s your name soldier?”

“Master Drill Sergeant Harris, my name is Anthony Grant Stone.”

“What are you doing with that duffel bag Anthony Grant Stone?”

“Holding it Drill Sergeant.”

“Yes I can see that. What should you be doing with it?”

I honestly didn’t know, and in my defense I had been left unsupervised for far too long in my life. I did the only thing that came to mind. In hindsight, it was probably the wrong thing to do. I handed the Drill Sergeant the duffle bag. He smiled like a kid at Christmas and proceeded to dump the contents of said bag on the tarmac.

BOOK: The Infinity Brigade #1 Stone Cold
7.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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