Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri
“Hey, Hollywood!”
I was just bringing the micro van around the first set of barricades when one of the assistant instructors, Chrissie, jogged around the corner waving for me to stop, long blonde ponytail streaming through the back of her “Instructor” cap. I brought my vehicle to a stop.
“Mac told me to tell you they aren’t taking it seriously. They’ve aced everything, but they’re getting cocky. It’s an all-female squad of Reserve MPs, with an additional First Sergeant deploying as special protection detail for female VIPs.”
“Cocky?”
She grimaced. “They’re nearly all civilian police or deputies in ‘real life.’ They’ve outscored damn near everyone on everything from firing range to physical fitness tests, and they’ve gotten pretty arrogant about it. They aren’t taking this very seriously because they’re convinced they won’t be doing checkpoints and searches. Mac said to take them down a couple notches.”
I nodded. “I can do that.”
“You need a gun or a grenade?”
I shook my head. “That’d just screw things up. They’ll have everything I need.” Chrissie gave me a puzzled look, but she was new here. I watched her walk back up the road to the checkpoint. Not a bad view at all, but I don’t play where I work, and she was married anyway. I’d seen enough of that shit go wrong to stay the hell away from attached women. Even ones that aren’t acting like it. Maybe especially them.
I’d gotten a message from Kimmi in the morning asking if I was interested in a “six-to-seven-month change of venue” for a “special project.” If I was eyeing Chrissie, maybe it was a good idea to take a break for a little while.
I’d get to it later, right now, I had a job to do.
My vehicle was a crappy little right-hand drive micro van about the size of a box of crackers. In the very back was a ratty cardboard box with a plastic tarp, pliers, some wire, a screwdriver, a roll of duct tape and a couple of towels. I called it the “Acme Murder Kit.” Innocuous items on their own, but put together, it should give any searcher a little concern.
After I’d gotten out of the Army, I’d wandered a bit and signed on with an old friend’s security company. The pay was okay, but it wasn’t really my main source of income, anyway. It kept my hand in, and helped keep me sharp. The job changed all the time, but for now, I was a test subject for the vehicle search exercise for advanced personal protective detail training. I wasn’t supposed to be on the schedule for this today, but one of the crew was out sick, so I had to join in. The plan initially had me as a benign citizen, but that was always subject to change. Since this wasn’t a graded exercise, all variations were authorized at the discretion of Mac, the lead instructor. It was always better for the students to learn now, in training, than the hard way in theater.
I gave Chrissie enough time to get back, pushed the rattletrap into gear and rolled into the checkpoint, smiling at an ornate plywood sign that had the word “Heartbreakers,” flanked by two cracked hearts wrapped in roses. I could see the squad had an aggressive stance, muzzles were on me the minute I rounded the final bend. The only initial indication that the squad was all female was the relative shortness of the group. The body armor and sunglasses made them look more like cyborgs. Pity, really.
I stopped at the stop line and a figure approached the van.
“Sir, please exit the van with your identification papers. Move slowly and keep your hands visible at all times.” She was a Private First Class, a PFC, with a nametape that said, “Garcia,” maybe 20 or so. A slight Hispanic lilt to her voice. She sounded emotionless and a little bored. All in all, the approach was pretty good; she stayed out of muzzle line of her overwatch and had her weapon slung behind her. The overwatch was cautious enough; I could probably have gotten two of them, but the third would have been a dice-roll, and that would still have left nine untouched before I was gunned down.
Not good enough.
Patience. I could do patience; that has always been kind of my thing.
I allowed them to escort me to the individual search area a few paces away from my van. Not enough paces.
The PFC had me turn around and started to search. She stopped, patted along my torso again, then backed off, and I heard her key her radio.
“I think he’s wearing some kind of low profile body armor.”
The squad leader, whose nametape read “Frost,” motioned Garcia back.
“Sir. Remove your shirt. Move slow or you will be shot.”
I unbuttoned, then peeled my dress shirt off slowly.
I could hear the PFC suck in her breath. I’m not in my 20s or even 30s anymore, but I’ve been blessed with a great metabolism, I eat right, and I work out every fucking day.
“Body armor? Jesus, Garcia.” Staff Sergeant Frost’s voice was dripping with amusement. She stared at me. “How many damn sit-ups do you do a day?”
I gave her my best smile. “It’s mostly crunches and planks. I have a home gym and way too much time on my hands.”
She shook her head, grinning. “I can see that.” She nodded to the PFC to go ahead.
PFC Garcia finished searching me with hands that lingered a little longer than searching a bare torso would actually necessitate, strictly speaking, then she backed off. I was instructed to sit while they searched my van with PFC Garcia watching over me.
I idly wondered where my shirt had gotten to; it was a rather expensive Armani dress shirt, since I hadn’t expected to be on the schedule for this, but it didn’t re-appear. I perched on the rear Jersey barrier and began the subtle art of getting my guard to mimic me. It took a while, but she was eventually half sitting and half-leaning against the barrier beside me. It was late in the day, I was probably the tenth subject to go through and they were getting bored, and a bit careless. I glanced over the barrier to make sure the straw bales were still in place and watched for my opportunity. Finally, when Garcia shifted to watch the rest of the squad as they searched the van, I saw the squad leader pulling a canteen and start to drink.
Show time.
Move one:
Slide to my feet, pretending to be off balance—swing left arm out, smack PFC Garcia in the chest—not as fun as it sounds with her body armor on. Hit the quick release on her M4 retaining strap and snatch it out of her hands while she falls back over the barrier onto the bales. Jam her foot into the gap between the jersey barriers, trapping her for a few moments.
Two:
Yank the charging handle back and let it slap forward. A round ejects from the M4; sucks to lose it, but couldn’t take the chance that there’d be a round there. Never depend on the enemy to be a good soldier. Thumb the safety off. Shoot the squad leader at 15 meters. There are closer targets, but she had never been entirely off-guard, so she is the primary threat. She’s also fast as hell, she’s already flipped the canteen away in an arcing spray of water and is swinging her M4 up when I fire.
Three:
Engage immediate targets at 5 to 10 meters. Since two of them have canteens in hand, prioritize by threat level. One shot per target. They are just starting to react now, but they are still not fully grasping that this has all gone sideways on them.
Four:
Engage remaining targets at van. It takes three steps to “slice the pie” around the corner of the van and take them down. Most of them have their carbines slung on their backs to make searching the van easier. The last one almost gets a shot off after scrambling for her carbine and “my” M4 locks open as the magazine goes empty, but all eleven of the Soldiers are down. The screams of the kill indicators on their gear is almost deafening, a horde of deranged electronic locusts.
I walked back and leaned over the barrier, yanked Garcia across it and dragged her by one foot to the back of the van as she struggled and cursed. My Spanish isn’t very good, but some of the curses sounded very creative. One of them appeared to involve my ancestry and a diseased burro of particularly low moral character.
She tried to fight, but I had her duct taped into a mummy in short order and thrown into the back of the van. I went around and dragged the two soldiers from in front of the van; they glared at me and refused to cooperate by just getting out of the way, so I heaped them into a pile off to the side.
I drove the 100 meters up to the village church where the observation tower was, threw my furious catch over my shoulder and went up the bell tower stairs.
Mac grinned at me from his chair and a seriously pissed off Valkyrie of a blue-eyed blonde First Sergeant stared at me unblinkingly after looking up from the monitors. I lowered the PFC to her feet.
“This one yours, First Sergeant?”
She almost growled; she was clearly going to have someone’s ass for this. Everyone’s ass. All in all, the MPs had been good sports, so I decided to try to give them a little bit of help.
“They weren’t bad. They didn’t realize how dangerous an unarmed man can be; they were a little cocky and if I’d been a little slower, they would have brought me down.”
She sighed and shook her head tiredly.
“Bullshit. They were a lot cocky, they were thinking with their…” She paused, grimacing. “You were never in any real danger once you made your move.” She shifted her stare to Mac. “This was a set-up.”
Mac just laughed, so I answered.
“Of course it was set-up. It’s always a set up. Here, in theater, wherever. This exercise wasn’t graded so they can learn from it.”
She stood up. “I’m going to go have ‘a talk’ with my team.” Without any further comment she headed down the stairs.
I caught up to her about 15 meters out of the church, with my Garcia-mummy over my shoulder.
“Hey, Top, you forgot something.”
She glanced at me and struggled to force down a smile.
“You can keep her. Besides, I think she’s probably enjoying the ride.” I could almost feel Garcia blushing.
I shook my head and sighed in a tragic tone. “I gotta throw her back. Too young. The game warden would take me in.”
The First Sergeant did smile at that, so I continued.
“Besides, it would violate the Creepy Old Guy formula.”
“And what is that?”
“A guy over thirty shouldn’t chase a woman any younger than one half his age plus seven.”
She smiled and I could tell I was getting under her armor a bit. “For someone like you, that eliminates an awful lot of the probably-willing, doesn’t it?”
“Yes, but the ones that are left are of much higher quality. And far more experienced.”
She laughed out loud at that.
Chrissie had keyed off all the kill indicators by the time we got back, and the squad was already lined up for their ass chewing. I laid Garcia down in front of them and backed off while First Sergeant Taylor put the rest of them at attention and ripped into them.
It was truly epic. She certainly wasn’t taking any prisoners, and at the end of it, she gestured down to her feet. “Somebody get over here and unwrap Garcia!”
I watched Mac walk down to the group from the tower, and waited until the First Sergeant was completely done.
“Mind if I have them for a minute, Top?”
She tried to glower, but I noted a slight spark of humor in her eyes as she turned away gesturing flippantly. “All yours.”
I had them take a knee in a semi-circle after they had released Garcia from her cocoon, like a delicate pissed off butterfly.
“All right, where did it go wrong?”
A spate of accusations, mostly centered on the young PFC erupted, until SSG Frost, apparently known as “Frosty” held her hand up. “My fault. I should have put two guards on you. Maybe three.”
“That might have helped, but the others would have had to be out of a ten-foot radius and on alert. I’ve gotten old and slow, but I calculate every move. If you are within ten feet I can probably reach you and take you down without too much trouble.”
A lean, tough-looking Specialist, a redhead with freckles and a name tape that read “Carmichael” stood up.
“Sir, if you think just because we’re women…”
I raised my hand, cutting her off and called over to Mac.
“I’m not a sir, never have been. Mac, how many soldiers have I taken down in hand to hand, and how many have I tried and failed?”
He shook his head. “You’ve never failed, and you have to have taken about 25 or so by now. Total kills of about 120. In the last two months.”
I turned back to the squad. “This has nothing to do with gender; this is all about experience and training. I can close ten feet in half a second and disable most people in even less time than that. What you really need to understand is that I’m not as good as I used to be. I’m over forty years old and this isn’t even my specialty. I’m actually a sniper, I just cross-trained in this. There are plenty of guys out there who are a helluva lot better than I am.” Images of Kurt and Wolfe flashed through my head. “There are some real monsters out there, and they don’t all work for us. Russian Spetnatz, Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Chinese Special Ops, some South American groups. As for gender, there are women who could have taken you down the same way. Although most of them would have knifed Garcia rather than carry her up those stairs.”
I tried to locate my shirt, but it had apparently gone missing in the chaos after the initial massacre and nobody claimed to remember where it had gotten to.
We set up a sand table on the ground: Chrissie and I walked them through their mistakes and showed them others I hadn’t exploited. We spent the rest of the day doing walk-through exercises before shutting down. I took them through every possible type of attack using Chrissie as the test subject.
The First Sergeant watched intently. “Good decision to use Chrissie for the rabbit runs.”
I nodded. “This way I can point out the mistakes as they make them without breaking the flow.”
She chuckled. “I was actually thinking that all you have on are your pants and shoes. The way Garcia and Carmichael are looking at you, another search might get a little personal.”
“The folly of youth.”
“Speaking of folly of youth…” She walked over to a pile of backpacks and triumphantly pulled my dress shirt out of one. “Carmichael!”
I reached over to take it, touched her hand and time stopped dead. I was staring into her eyes, just a couple feet away, desperately wanting to close that small gap. She stared back wide-eyed, as fixated as I was.
She blinked twice, shook her head and pulled back. I felt myself start breathing and wondering what the hell had happened.
The rest of the afternoon was a bit awkward, with both of us trying not to stare at each other. I caught SSG Frost watching us both in amusement.
*****
I pondered the whole experience as I dropped by Rick’s Place for my ritualized drink before heading home to my condo.
I was just getting ready to leave when the bartender, Kendra, put another drink in front of me and gestured at the other end of the bar.
“From the ladies.” Except that when I looked, there was nobody there.
A moment later I felt a hand touch my side and a soft Hispanic voice purred, “Body armor.”
Without looking back I responded. “PFC Garcia, what are you doing out without a chaperone?”
“She has a battle buddy, we’re good.”
I recognized the aggressive redhead’s voice. “Let me guess… Carmichael?”
“Got it in one.”
I turned and tried to look stern. “Does your Mom know you’re hanging out in bars?”
“Top knows. It’s the last weekend before Departure Day, so she’s letting us get it all out of our system.”
Carmichael and Garcia slid to seats on either side of me, asking about local places to visit. I could see Kendra frowning at me, with a disapproving “cradle robber” look on her face. There wasn’t much I could do without being rude, though.
I knew the game had changed when Kendra’s disapproving glances suddenly stopped, and she looked approvingly just past me.
With no warning, Carmichael and Garcia were gone and I could feel someone standing behind me. From Kendra’s grin, I knew she realized the same thing I had. A very military operation, pin the attention of the opposing force, then assault the main objective.
“First Sergeant Keats.”
“Just Anne.” She let go and slid into the suddenly vacant chair on my right.
I looked into her eyes, feeling a hint of that same jolt from earlier, and smiled. “Tony.”
“Frosty dragged me here. Told me it was an emergency.” She gave an eye roll and a half grimace.
I laughed. “Meddling kids, huh?”
She smiled, but it seemed slightly sad and slightly lopsided. “They mean well.”
“I guess we could at least humor them. Are you available for dinner? There is a very nice steak house near here.”
She shot a glance over at the next table where her self-satisfied minions lurked; all of them grinning from ear to ear. “That sounds pretty nice.”
I held her hand and guided her out to my Corvette. Garcia, Carmichael, and Frosty applauded loudly as we left.
As soon as we were alone I shook my head. “No expectations, it’s just dinner.”
She gave a helpless gesture. “Thanks. They’re just worried about me.”
“And they deal with this by sending you off with me?”
“It is sort of throwing me to the wolf, isn’t it?”
I gave a hapless half-shrug. No point in denying the obvious. “So, why are they worried about you?”
She paused, a little oddly shy, then she squared her shoulders. “I lost my husband three years ago.” Just from the loss in her tone, I knew what she meant.
“I’m sorry to hear that.”
That earned me the terse not-quite-smile of someone who had heard that phrase all too often. “It’s been three years. It was a heart attack, out of the blue. Bob was in great shape, never smoked, never drank too much. Stepped outside to mow the lawn one day and that was it.”
I was still trying to figure out how to respond, but she kept on going. “I haven’t exactly had an active social life. I’ve been busy raising my daughter and working for the Attorney General’s office in the Law Enforcement Division, but now ‘my girls’ seem to think it’s time I got back out there.”
“That’s kind of up to you, not them.”
She gave me appreciative smile. “They mean well.”
I shrugged. “We can at least go to dinner, if you want. You have to eat, anyway, and this might get them to lighten up, right?”
She was fascinating, just enough cynicism to find humor in the same things I did. She’d been Regular Army for fourteen years, right up until her husband died, but moved to the Reserves to stabilize their then eleven-year-old daughter’s life. We spent almost two hours laughing at each other’s misadventures.
When we finished dinner we headed out to the Corvette. “Where to?”
There was a glint in her blue eyes to go with a tentative smile. “I was thinking maybe… if you’re okay with it, we could have breakfast together?”