Excerpt from Working The Trenches

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A few seconds later, Ugatu came back into the cargo bay and did just that, “Unstrap yourselves and grab your bags.  Follow me out in reverse order to how you came in.  Welcome to Sharanna Military Reservation Twentythree, the Empire’s newest initial military training facility for Guardians.  You’ll be here until you pass or they allow you to quit.”

The lone man who’d been on the opposite side of the ship followed him out first, followed by the left side from front to back, reversing the order we’d loaded in.  We debarked on a much larger landing field, with many ships of varying sizes from Starbird all the way up to convoy craft at least, and it was just that I didn’t see anything bigger, not that I was certain it wasn’t there.  First, we trotted at the same speed away from the ship as we had in approaching.  This area of Sharanna was a lot cooler and less humid than Fulda or even Sumabad; maybe the equivalent of five degrees Celsius outside.  Cold enough for natural state humans to be uncomfortable, and you could feel a hint of rain in the air.  Classic towering cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds occupied a good slice of the horizon, approaching rapidly, and you could see the rain approaching.  Overhead, the clear sky was rapidly turning to grey.  Once the weather got up steam here, it could really move fast and grow powerful enough to make a joke of any Earthly storm.  Imperial construction was tough; people just didn’t go out when storms were bad.  Sharanna was a completely artificial environment, so unless there was an intentionally created barrier, storms could travel millions of kilometers, alternately waxing and waning the whole way until they did run into something that stopped them for good.  Kind of like the Great Plains states, or the oceans of Earth, times a thousand or so.  My dog farm was in the prevailing wind-shadow of Band City with its massive ten and twenty mile high arcologies spreading across a swath a million kilometers or more in any direction, and no major sources of storms between the city and the farm.  I gathered that this place was not so sheltered.

Another operant was waiting for us, a woman in a uniform like none I had seen before.  It was Imperial forces field uniform, but with a large white tabard over each shoulder, like enlarged epaulets, as if she were staff, only more so.  On each, an insignia of rank the size of my hand was emblazoned, about four times the normal size.  It was a private’s circle of rank, split by a horizontal white line.  Below the line was purple, as in a Senior Private, above was green, as if for a Team Private.  “This is Instructor Jereya,” Ugatu told us, “She will take you to your barracks and your training units.”  Then without further ado, he headed back for the cutter.

“This way,” the woman said, moving us quickly behind a safety line.  As soon as we were all over the line, the cutter was off in a trailing vortex of wind, no sign of its presence remaining.  “We’re going to start with military discipline now.  You jondatswill keep step and interval as you follow me.  You’re all operant, so there’s no excuse for violating a ninety isixths interval or getting out of step.”  The distance was just shy of one Earth meter, a little over three feet.  “Each pace is seventy-five isixths, always step off with your left foot.  First Step is four paces per second, Third Step is six.”  Eighty-two Earth centimeters, roughly thirty-two inches per step.  Imperial seconds were 1.7 Earth, so first step was about 140 paces per Earth minute – a brisk walk – while third step would be 210 or so, a moderate trot about equal to what we’d done with Ugatu.  “Third Step, march! Left-right-left! she called the pace for three steps, by which time everyone was with it and she ignored it thereafter.

She yelled over her shoulder as she moved.  “I am Instructor Jereya!  Instructors are specialists, utilized at need to help instruct you pathetic losers in hopes of achieving a marginal competence.  We are technically civilians, but unlike Staff, Instructors and Leaders are in your chain of command until you are promoted to Trained Private!  All recruits are to treat Instructors as superior to Senior Privates, subordinate to Team Privates!  Similarly, Leaders are superior to Team Privates, subordinate to Squad Privates!  You will have one Leader to a squad, learn your current Section Leader and otherwise let the Leaders sort out who’s a Section Leader!  There is one active duty Section Private assigned to command each platoon; they will have final say in all matters having to do with your training.  You must have your squad Leader’s permission before initiating contact above that squad Leader.”

Jereya took absolutely no notice of the impending storm.  I didn’t believe for a moment she hadn’t noticed, but she didn’t show that she had.  We trotted past several boomerang-shaped assault cruisers and empty, recessed berths in the white pavement intended to hold others as large raindrops started splattering on the pavement and on us.  Within minutes, it had become solid rain with occasional sheets, and we were all soaked.  She trotted on, apparently oblivious, as the wind began driving the rain into our right side.  After perhaps fifteen minutes, we came to a portal, which she programmed and led us through.

We emerged into the middle of a multistory building, kind of an atrium without glass.  The light was artificial.  Around us, snowflake-like, six wings of barracks in six levels.  “This is Operant Training Barracks Two, your new home!  Each bay holds one section in three squad rooms!  The squads I am now assigning you to will be your place here until you are otherwise notified!  The assignments have been made at company level and are not subject to appeal!  Your squad leader has been apprised of your joining their squad and has your records!  Your first assignment will be to stow your gear, change your wet disgusting clothes and report to your squad Leader!  Move”

Copyright 2014 Dan Melson. All Rights Reserved.


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