Interlude
Gloria Santiago sat miserable and
alone on the front steps to the barracks Other soldiers passed without
speaking The last of her "friends" had been downchecked by the rest of
the platoon on a peer evaluation the day before That woman was already on
her way to a non-combat training unit.
Gloria’s eyes were bloodshot, her
body sore and bruised Her once fair skin was dry and scratched.
Worst of all, her spirit was very nearly broken.
I just don’t understand it, Santiago
thought. This world is so different, so strange. And I’m no good
at any of it. Even those damned little bitches Trujillo and Fuentes can
beat me up. It’s so unfair... nothing ever prepared me for this.
Santiago stood up and began walking
away from the barracks to the nearby woods. She wanted to be alone in
fact as well as spirit.
From a hundred meters away Corporal
Salazar saw her slinking, spiritless walk. He began to follow her to the
woods.
Chapter Six
May all our citizens be soldiers, and all our soldiers citizens.
--Sarah Livingston Jay
Maria:
They couldn’t give it to us; it had
to come from inside; inside ourselves.
I can’t speak for everybody; not for
all the Amazonas. I can only tell you what I felt; what happened
to me.
You remember how Centurion Garcia had
made a bunch of us “pregnant,” making the rest of us carry their gear.
Well that was imposed; we hated him every step of the way. And most of
us, by this stage in our training would almost rather drop down dead than “get
knocked up.” Certainly we wouldn’t ask to see the medics over little
discomforts, as we might have if some other women hadn’t had to carry our load
for us if we did.
I wonder, though, if we’d have been
so reluctant if there had been some young men around to carry our gear for
us. It’s just possible they wouldn’t even have minded, stupid boys.
I sometimes think that men are overgrown babies whose spoiling of us often
keeps us from quite growing up ourselves.
Or maybe we keep each other from ever
quite growing up.
One impossibly late night after
another impossibly long day I went to bed (not a real bed, of course, just my
tacky air mattress under a strung out poncho). I was feeling a little
poorly, nothing definite, just a general feeling of inner rottenness. But
by morning I really was sick: dizzy, throwing up, a fever, too. I still
don’t know what it was that got me, influenza, bug bite, or reaming rod of
randomness.
Unfortunately, we had another road
march – heavy packs – scheduled for that morning. To add injury to
insult, I had to carry the machine gun. I couldn’t; I just
couldn’t.
The cadre had been dropping girls
right and left of late. Less than half of those who had started were
still with us. The rest were, like me, pretty much at their limit.
Curiously, again like me, it had also
become extremely important to all but a tiny number of those remaining to
complete training. Whatever it was: unwillingness to go home as failures,
a real need for the benefits that went with service, some stirrings of pride in
being soldiers, I don’t know.
In my case I had to finish
training... for Alma’s sake.
I think Marta noticed me first,
throwing up outside the perimeter. She came up and asked me, gently, what
was wrong. I threw up again and started to cry for Alma; and for the life
I’d hoped to build for us. I knew I’d never make the march. I’d be
a failure. And they’d boot me out.
She held me a minute or two, kissed
my forehead. She told me it would be all right. Then she took my
machine gun, throwing it up on her shoulder with a grunt. In a few
minutes Inez Trujillo came up, she and the rest of the squad. With hardly
a word they took my pack apart; splitting up my gear among them. They
hung the empty pack on my back. Trujillo told two of the girls – Isabel
and Catarina – to help me. They got on either side of me and put my arms
over their shoulders.
If Garcia even noticed or cared he
never let on. He just called us to attention, gave us a “left face,” took
his position at the front, and ordered us to march.
The first few miles were bad, but I
still had a little strength in me; just enough to keep going. The next
nine or ten miles were worse, because I didn’t have that strength left by then,
but I couldn’t drop out after having let the other girls put themselves through
hell having to carry me for the first few miles. Funny thing, pride, no?
I don’t like to think about that
march too often. It was bad. Half the time I was nearly
delirious. Most of the rest I was puking. The girls helping me
didn’t say a bad word even when I threw up right on them, though the stench
made them start to gag, too.
Now you might say those women did
nothing special; that if they hadn’t taken my gear willingly, Garcia would have
made them. That’s true, they had to carry my equipment if I couldn’t.
But they didn’t have to carry me.
That they did on their own.
It’s hard not to love a group like
that.
*****
There was a funny upshot of that
incident. Without a word of explanation Garcia had us turn in those
miserable poles, the “pricks,” the next day. They were carried away on a
truck. He never reissued them. We never gave him cause to.
Fortunately, we spent the next four
days in the same general area, learning how to conduct raid, ambush and
reconnaissance patrols. We did make some cross-country moves, but they
were fairly short moves; without heavy packs.
Mostly, they left me behind to help
secure the Objective Rally Point, or ORP. That’s the last position where
your patrol – usually squad or platoon sized – stops, short of the actual place
where you set up the ambush or do the recon or raid.
If I hadn’t been sick, it might have
been fun. I know most of the other girls thought it was. Though, by
then, they would probably have to be considered a little weird. Being in
the ORP wasn’t so bad. Still, I was usually alone.
Actually, I hoped I was alone.
There was always the chance of a snake showing up to keep me company. I
hate snakes. And the antaniae? The moonbats? I am frankly
scared to death of them. The thought of one crawling into my sleeping
roll with me is enough to pull me to my feet, shivering, no matter how tired I
am. As soon as I was remotely able to keep up I insisted that I not be
left behind in the ORP anymore. If the other girls thought that was
because I was tough, I did nothing to disabuse them of the notion.
*****
It was early one morning, following a
less than fully successful ambush and while we waited for chow, that I cornered
Trujillo. The others, especially Marta, Cat and Isabel, I’d already
expressed my gratitude to.
“Inez... thank you,” was all I said.
She just shook her head, as if she
didn’t quite understand.
“For carrying me. For getting
the others to carry me.” I looked down at the ground, ashamed, actually.
“Wouldn’t you have done the same for
us?”
I don’t know if I would have before,
I really don’t. But I nodded, as if I was certain I would have.
“So what’s to thank? We’re in
this together. We help each other.”
The subject was a little
uncomfortable. I changed it. “Why are you here, Inez? I
mean... I joined to try to build a better life for myself and my
daughter. But why did you join?”
“I thought it was the right thing to
do,” was all she said.
“There was a man,” I reminded her,
“back when we first got on the hovercraft to come here. He was something
special to you? A boyfriend? A lover?”
She looked confused for a minute,
then started to laugh. “Lover? Ricardo is my brother!
He’s in Third Tercio. He’s probably at Centurion School now.”
“Are you going to try for that?
Centurion, I mean.”
“I’ll take what they offer me, if
they offer me anything,” she answered.
“They will. You’re different
from the rest of us, different from me, for example.”
“Maria,” she said, with a subtle
smile, “do you think we carried you and your gear because we thought you were
worthless?”
I really didn’t know what to say to
that.
*****
Somewhere nearby artillery was
falling and exploding. Garcia paid it no mind, though it made the rest of
us pretty nervous.
He said, “Many armies spend an
inordinate effort, I understand, on limiting the effects of friendly
fire. We don’t spend much. We’re soldiers. We’re there to be
killed if the country needed us to be killed. We’re there to win, even if
doing so gets us killed.
“You might not expect it to be true,
but it is true, that the infantry only inflicts twenty or thirty percent of all
casualties in battle. We take, on the other hand, about ninety percent of
the casualties. Who kills us? The enemy artillery. Who among
us does the killing? The machine guns. What kills or suppresses the
machine gunners? Your own artillery.”
Garcia pulled a tetradrachma coin
from his pocket and flipped it to illustrate. “Now you have a
choice. You can stay so far behind your own supporting artillery that
there is no chance of any of your own being hit by it. If you do, the
enemy machine gunners will be up and firing when you attack. Two years
into the Great Global War, there was an attack. Twenty-five thousand
Anglians were killed, as many more wounded, on the first day alone, by a few
dozen machine gunners that hadn’t been suppressed or destroyed by the Anglian artillery.”
He flipped the coin again. “On
the other hand, you can follow your own artillery so closely that you take some
losses in dead and wounded from your own side. Quality control at the
factory – or lack thereof – ensures that if you follow a barrage closely, some
shells will fall short among your own troops. But then, you can be on top
of the machine guns, shooting, stabbing, hacking and blasting before they have
a chance to mow your people down.”
His face took on a somber, serious
cast. “How sad for those killed by their own side’s artillery.” The
frown disappeared, replaced by a rare and ghastly grin. “How grand,
however, for those likely much larger numbers not killed by the enemy
machine guns. And the dead don’t really care what killed them.
“We go in for the second approach,
taking losses to ‘friendly fire’ somewhat more philosophically than the world
norm. It takes a lot of discipline, though, and that means a lot of
training. Some of that can be inferential training, general discipline
building. It’s better, though, if the training is a little more direct
and pointed. Move out.”
*****
I was scared to death. Garcia
wasn’t just flapping his gums about following a barrage closely. He
wanted us to do it.
“Madre de Dios! Did you see
that?” Marta stopped short, slack-jawed, to see a woman sail about
fifteen feet into the air, arms and legs fluttering. The woman landed,
stunned, it appeared, but otherwise fairly whole, a few meters from where a
delay-fused shell had gone off not too far from under her feet. The woman
was lucky the shell had missed her head before burying itself in the ground.
“Don’t think about it,” Cristina
Zamora shouted. “Just keep marching forward. Forward!” Zamora
was acting platoon centurion for the exercise.
About seventy-five meters ahead of
where Marta and I stood, a wall of flying dirt moved relentlessly up a steep
hill. They were firing delay fuses, but that was the only safety measure
I could see, that kicked up a visually impressive amount of dirt and rocks with
each burst.
We resumed walking forward, firing
short bursts either from the hip or, shoulder held, aiming with the F- and
M-26’s neat little integral optical sight. Look, anything you can
throw at the enemy to keep his head down is worth the effort. Besides,
walking is a lot faster and less exhausting than doing little three second
rushes. In battle, an exhausted Amazona is a fear-filled and
useless Amazona.
As we neared the top of the hill, the
shell fire shifted a last time and redoubled in intensity. Zamora spoke
into a radio, then shouted, “Wait for it!”
The delay fused high explosive was
replaced by a dozen rounds of white phosphorus. A cloud of smoke
enveloped the hilltop.
“Adelante las Amazonas!”
We charged, screaming and firing all the way.
*****
For whatever reasons, and each of us
probably had her own, we did develop something like esprit de corps.
Or, rather, most of us did. A few couldn’t. Life for them became
very hard, because, as the overwhelming bulk of us still remaining bonded
together, the others were left out in the cold. Some were encouraged into
the group by that. Others just shut down before being washed out.
Probably no one suffered more from
this than Gloria. I guess she was so used to being the center of
attention that she just couldn’t take being cut out. Cut out, however,
she certainly was. Oh, she tried to pretend that she felt what we
felt. I’ll tell you something, though; we women are much better judges of
character than men are. Gloria fooled no one.
She took to hanging around one of the
Corporal-Instructors, Corporal Salazar. Salazar’s partner, Sergeant
Castro, noticed, eventually. I remember a screaming match that ended only
when Centurion Franco knocked them both silly.
It was about that time that Gloria
stopped being put on shit detail.
I guess Salazar wasn’t entirely
gay. Eventually, he and Gloria were caught engaged in... shall we say...
an indiscretion. Maybe the worst part is that Castro’s the one who caught
them. Maybe, if Castro hadn’t been so upset, he might have kept it to
himself. He was a good man, ordinarily, a lot kinder than most.
Some of us were selected to sit in on
the courts-martial, just to witness, not to sit the board. Salazar just
sat, mute. Gloria kept begging for the chance to resign. It was too
late. Castro wept a lot, as quietly as he could. I felt sorry for
him.
The two were each charged with mutiny
and aggravated fraternization. Salazar was further charged with
aggravated abuse of office (improper sexual relations) and adultery; Gloria
with conduct tending to contribute to the demoralization of the Legion and
adultery. (Did I mention that the partnerships in Gorgidas were
treated as legal marriages in the Legion?)
The evidence was pretty damned
overwhelming. Castro had seen them. There was some semen from
Salazar on Gloria’s uniform. It had obviously not been rape, though
Gloria tried to claim it had been. I think what ruined that defense is
that Gloria still had her teeth and, under the particular circumstances, could
have been expected to use them to considerable effect, had it really been rape
or, more technically, forcible sodomy. Besides, we were supposed to be
real soldiers, ready to fight and die. How could one of us hope to claim
rape if she’d been conscious but hadn’t fought to death or, at least,
incapacitation or been physically overwhelmed by sheer brute force? What
was true of civilian women could never really be true for us.
Mutiny? When two or more
soldiers combine to suborn good order and discipline in the armed forces, that
is mutiny. Salazar and Gloria made two. They were certainly...
ah... combined, at the time. The predictable effect of sexual relations
between people of substantially different ranks is to suborn good order and discipline.
We are responsible for the predictable effects of our actions just as if we
intended them. There was no evidence put on that Salazar or Gloria had
any defensible reason to believe this would not be the effect if discovered,
nor that they would not be discovered (though disbelief in discovery was no
defense anyway). So: Mutiny.
The penalty is death. As a
matter of fact, failure to report or suppress a mutiny by any means – including
summary execution – is also punished by death. I guess poor Castro didn’t
have a lot of choice. If he’d shot them both on the spot he’d probably
have been commended.
Unfortunately, he didn’t. When
the verdicts and sentence came back they were, “Guilty on all counts” and
“Death by Musketry,” respectively. It took less than twenty-four hours
for Carrera to confirm the sentences. There was no appeal, certainly not
to an ignorant civil court. The President of the Republic could have
intervened, had he so chosen. He did not so choose.
We made up the firing squads
ourselves, for Gloria, while the TercioGorgidas provided the one for
Salazar. They were picked, not volunteers. None of us would have
volunteered, even if we didn’t like Gloria. We couldn’t refuse the order,
either. Some tribune from Gorgidas that I’d never seen before
commanded both. The firing squads stood nervously in ranks as the
prisoners were marched out of their cells. I understand that of the
twelve rifles, two had only blanks in them. That was so the girls and
gays who’d been picked to execute the sentences could console themselves that –
just maybe – they hadn’t really been shooting.
The sky was that shade of deep blue
you see just before sunrise. Many times in training I had thrilled to
wake up, stand and stretch, and feel the planet come alive around me at just
that hour. I didn’t feel any thrill now, though. Those of us not in
the firing parties stood in formation to one side to witness. I
shook. I doubt I was alone.
Salazar took it fairly well. He
marched out to the wall under guard but also under his own power. He
stumbled, once, but that was just the darkness. Salazar shook his head
“No” when he was offered the blindfold (a mistake, by the way; people who are
going to shoot you in cold blood get nervous if you’re looking at them.
Nervous people don’t shoot well.).
Gloria had to be carried; tied, and
screaming all the way. While Salazar was allowed to stand, and given a
cigarette to smoke (yes, we really do that for these things), Gloria was
trussed up to a stake. She kept squirming, though. A sergeant
pasted aiming markers over each of their hearts, after bending his head to
listen for the heartbeat. Salazar shouted out to Castro, “I’m sorry!”
Some large flood lights were lit on
the order of Tribune Silva. The Gorgidas tribune shouted, “Ready,”
and the firing squads lifted their rifles parallel to the ground... “Aim,” and
the muzzles shifted imperceptibly... then “Fire!” There was a sound like
a single shot, but longer.
I saw fluid (blood, I suppose) and
bits of flesh shoot from out of their backs to spatter against the wall behind
them. Salazar was thrown back against the stake, then fell to the
ground. The impact of the bullets twisted Gloria half way around her
stake. She slumped against the ropes that bound her to it. They
were both still breathing; we could see that by the flood lights. Salazar
seemed unconscious but alive. Gloria was trying to scream, but only blood
and an occasional faint “coo” that was probably her best effort at a shriek,
came out of her mouth.
The junior tribune ordered the firing
parties to, “Order arms.” Then he marched to Salazar and shot him, once,
in the back of the head, behind his ear. Unlike the members of a firing
squad, there are no blanks for the officer commanding them. If you can’t
kill you have no business being an officer. Salazar convulsed, then
stopped breathing. The tribune walked a few more steps, took aim, and shot
Gloria the same way. Her body shuddered violently but the cooing that
passed for shrieking stopped. It was a mercy.
Garcia marched us away. We
didn’t sing as we marched. I know I felt sick. I doubt I was alone
in that. That night Marta cried herself to sleep on my shoulder.
Castro hanged himself from the limb
of a tree a week later.
Was it right, what they did to those
two? I’ve asked myself that question for many years now.
It was such a small thing in itself;
what Gloria and Salazar did, I mean. Oh, sure, one or two of us might
have pulled an extra shit detail because Gloria had been selling herself for
consideration. (Or maybe it would be better said – more charitably said –
that she’d been given consideration for giving herself. Didn’t matter,
the effect was the same in either case.) Still, I’d have gladly pulled an
extra detail or two if it would have spared me having to watch their
deaths. I didn’t like the bitch, not even a little bit, or Salazar
either. But I sure didn’t want them dead.
Franco called us together after
Castro hanged himself, to talk to us. He was ready to puke himself; you
could see that. Maybe he was talking to convince himself; I wouldn’t
know. But there were tears in his eyes. I am certain of that.
“I
remember an old line,” he began, “something about military justice being to
justice as military music is to music. It’s both true and false.
For one thing, military music can be of a fairly high artistic order, if art is
that which causes emotional catharsis. Listen to Beethoven’s Yorckische
Marsch sometime, if you don’t believe me; or Boinas Azules Cruzan la
Frontera played on war pipes.
“The saying is true, though, in another
respect. Military music serves primarily the cause of battle and so does
military justice. It is concerned with the rights and privileges of
individuals only to the extent that they may also serve the cause of
battle. Battle in turn serves the cause of the country. The
country, too, has an interest in winning as cheaply as possible, in terms of
human life. Next generation’s quota of cannon fodder has to come from
somewhere, doesn’t it?
“Well doesn’t it?” He sounded
imploring. I think maybe Salazar may have been a friend. Or Castro…
maybe both.
“So maybe the question isn’t whether
it was just to have shot those two for such a trivial affair. Maybe the
question is whether it would have been injustice to the country – which is to
say, injustice also to the country’s soldiers, which is to say you and I
– not to have shot them.
“Maybe you think the Court should
have been lenient. Let’s suppose the court-martial board had been
lenient. Suppose – despite the evidence – it had not found them guilty of
mutiny. They could have received sentences of between twenty-five years,
for Gloria, and forty years, for Salazar, on the other charges alone; all of
that, by the way, being at hard labor, or until they died of it. Prison
in this country is roughly analogous to state slavery, after all.”
Franco paused, as if not sure to
continue. He did continue, though.
“Well, maybe Salazar wasn’t the only
one of your trainers capable of having an interest in a woman. Hell, I
used to have a girlfriend myself. Yeah, it was a long time ago.
These things are often relative, not absolute. And maybe Gloria wasn’t
the only one of us who might have... given herself for consideration. So,
don’t you see? We had to shoot them. We had to.”
I thought about that then…I do so still. Truthfully, I don’t know that I
wouldn’t have done what Gloria did. Yes, it was that rough
sometimes. In fact, the only ones in my platoon I am sure wouldn’t have
were Inez Trujillo and Cristina Zamora – they were just too completely
soldierly and decent – and Marta. Though she had her own reasons.
“Does it matter,” Franco continued,
“if a leader is sleeping with a troop? Does it make a difference to an
armed force that its leaders are treating some of its troops unfairly because
they are sleeping with others? Will those troops being discriminated
against have equal faith in their leaders when they suspect that those same
leaders care a lot more for some other troops than they do for them? When
we’re talking about instincts and feelings, does it even matter if the
suspicion is valid or merely conjecture?
“There is some justice in equally
shared dangers in war. How does a soldier take it when she might be going
on an exceptionally dangerous night patrol so some other troop can warm his or
her squad leader’s bed that same night? How about the third or fourth
time they have to go on a really bad mission that ought go to the squad
leader’s playmate?
“Oh, yes. Of course,
once a war starts we’ll forget all the unofficial lessons we learned in
peacetime about our leaders and the way they do business. Right.
Of course.
“And I’m the Queen of Anglia.”
Franco shook his head.
“No, Salazar betrayed you and us,
both. It was maybe a small betrayal, but it was real. And you would
have lost faith not just in him, but – to an extent – in all your leaders, then
and in the future, if he’d gotten away with it.”
I suppose he was right about
that. No, I know he was.
“And the woman? She was
actually fairly capable in a lot of ways. She was quite bright. Her
political instincts were obviously pretty high, too. She’d sure known
where to give – or sell – herself to the greatest effect. Imagine if
she’d actually made it past training. Imagine a unit of the tercio led by
her. Who might have been next on her list of acquisitions? What
would the rest of the girls have felt if Gloria had made high rank based on de
facto prostitution while they struggled along just trying to be good
soldiers? How long would the rest of you have kept trying, do you
suppose?
“Then, too, she’d also betrayed
Castro, another soldier; a comrade, who had a right to expect loyalty from any
other soldier in the Legion. Forget about Castro killing himself a week
later. Even if he hadn’t committed suicide, he would never again have
been the same soldier he had been.
“A pretty good one, by the way. A decent human being, too.”
*****
I think about those executions quite often, even now. I’m sorry they had
to be done. I’m not sorry they were done.
Of course, the Legions have nothing
against sex, per se. I have it on pretty reliable authority from a woman
who knew Duque Carrera in much his younger days that he was something of
a satyr. Presidente Parilla was worse. Most male leaders are
married and many keep a mistress, too. There’s no law against it.
Most Amazon leaders are married or living with someone of an appropriate
rank. And the Legions absolutely only care about adultery that really is
to the detriment of good order and discipline; with a comrade’s spouse or
partner, typically, or an underling. A trooper can screw the world and
the Legion won’t care unless it hurts the Legion.
Get caught screwing someone you
oughtn’t, however, and go to the wall. No excuses.
And if there’s no chance of your ever
going to go into a battle, you have as much right to comment on that as a man
does to comment on a woman’s right to an abortion. Some, not much.
So, yes, we can play, more or less
like real people. That doesn’t mean someone can play with us without
permission, though.
*****
Last of all the clothing issues they
made to us, we were issued our parade dress uniforms. The uniform is
still the same, even after all these years. Kilts.
I’ve always thought that made
sense. They’re warlike. It can’t be said that kilts are really
either masculine or feminine. They look good on both sexes. And
they are distinctly more flattering to women than shapeless skirts or baggy
trousers. I understand Carrera (one of his aides, I imagine, on his – our
– behalf) applied all the way to Taurus for a particular tartan – that’s the
pattern of plaid – for us. Carrera even went ahead and changed our unit
name from Thirty-sixth Tercio Amazona to Thirty-sixth Tercio Amazona
(Montañera) in case the Highlanders might object to kilts on other than
highland troops.
We did, by the way, get some mountain
training, though we honestly weren’t anything like as capable as Fifth Mountain
Tercio. I’m sure there are women out there who could match the Montañeros,
or even outdo some of them, in mountain climbing, just as there are women who
can run, ski, swim, what have you, better than the average man. Do you
have any idea how much time those world class women athletes, or any women who
excel at some physical activity, have to spend on their sports? Even the
naturally gifted ones we like to hold up as examples spend most of their waking
hours in exercise. That just isn’t practical for a soldier; there’s too
much else to do.
The other thing is that kilts – light
ones, like ours – are very practical and healthy for women in a hot, muggy
climate like we have. The uniform included all the other items of regalia
that go with kilts, basket weave handled dirk high among them.
Towards graduation from basic we were
allowed a couple of thirty-six hour passes. It isn’t generous and isn’t
intended to be. What it really is, is a half reward and half
reassimilation into civil life for those not going to go on to a leadership
school. None of us knew, as of yet, who would be going on- and upward,
though we made some educated guesses.
A thirty-six hour pass doesn’t get
you much. You’re not allowed to leave the island, even though you could
make it to the City and back in theory. But you can catch a movie that
isn’t either propaganda or training, you can eat a civilized meal at one of the
three or four little towns on the island, you can visit the museum at the main
cantonment area. You can go swimming or sunbathing on one of the
beaches. You can even go dancing, there are a couple of clubs for the
recruits, beer only. You can phone home, if you’re willing to wait an
hour to get to a pay phone.
I called Porras to speak to Alma.
She asked me in her little voice,
“Mommy? Is it really you?”
“Yes, Baby,” my heart leapt, “Yes
it’s me.”
We couldn’t talk long, there being a
long line of women behind me waiting to phone their own loved ones. But I
did get to find out that Alma now knew her ABC’s, could add up to five plus
five, and really, really wanted to know if the Gonzalez children could live
with us when I came home.
*****
A half dozen of us elected to go
dancing one Saturday night. Trujillo was somewhat reluctant, but went
along to keep an eye on us. She was like that.
We boarded a bus – one ran around
“Perimeter Road” every fifteen minutes – and headed for Main Post, near the
airfield. It stopped probably thirty times outside one or another of the
little camps, like Botchkareva, that littered the island. The bus dropped
us off right outside the Enlisted Club there on Main Post.
There was a kilted Amazona
that I didn’t know except by sight waiting outside. She wasn’t in tears,
but you could tell by the sound of her voice that she really wanted to be, and
might have been but for her training. Inez asked what was wrong.
“I came here by myself,” she
said. “And they... grabbed me” – she pointed to her buttocks and breasts
– “and laughed about it. Bastards.”
“I see,” Inez said, without
inflection. “I see.”
She turned towards the main door to
the club, took a deep breath, and walked forward. We followed her
in. She must have known we would.
Do men really act that way with a
little beer in them? There were two long lines of staggering drunkards,
one on either side of the hallway. Through some wide doors I could see a
number of privates lined up along the top of the bar. They were making
gestures and echoing commands that, I’d guess, were what troops about to jump
out of airplanes did. Not far from the bar someone had pushed together
four tables in the shape of a shallow ‘T’. A chair sat on the leg of the
‘t’. One really inebriated sot – he was probably eighteen or nineteen –
was waving napkins in his hands. One by one a bunch of the others, arms
outstretched like airplane wings, would run up to the long top of the ‘t’ and
either do a belly flop and slide along it (someone had thoughtfully poured beer
over the surfaces of the tables to make them effectively frictionless) or veer
off and rejoin an almost unbelievably stupid looking circle of others, all of
them likewise imitating planes.
I really shouldn’t criticize those
boys. I once, years later, took my girls to a male striptease.
Women can be, if anything, at least equally silly under the right
circumstances.
I’d guess that the word had gone out
that the Amazonas were on pass. The boys along the corridor were
waiting for us. I won’t repeat their comments, they were demeaning and,
under the circumstances, very, very unlikely.
The boys began to chant and clap
their hands in time. Unfazed, Trujillo walked forward as if they weren’t
even there. She walked, that is, until one of them tried to reach a hand
under her kilt. (Old joke: Is anything worn under a kilt? Answer:
No, everything is in perfect working order.)
I’m pretty good with a knife.
Inez was something else. She had drawn her dirk and slashed the boy’s arm
nearly to the bone in far less time than it takes to tell about it.
One-armed, she pushed the gasping boy against the wall, then pinned the
offending hand to the paneling with the dirk. Then she stood there in the
middle of the hallway, arms folded and calm as could be, and asked, “Who’s
next, boys? You?” she pointed at one with her chin. “How about you
two? Why not all at once? Come on, you’re big and strong, you can
take on little ol’ me. Of course, it might get a little messy.”
By that time the rest of us had our
dirks out, stroking them, and were standing close behind Inez.
I have never seen so nonplussed a
group of slack-jawed, bug-eyed men in my life. It must have come as quite
a shock.
Finally, one of them, maybe a little
less drunk than the rest, said “Cortizo, get an ambulance for Hernandez.
Don’t call the MP’s.”
To us he said, “You are obviously not
who we were waiting for. Pass, Ladies.” His voice added the
capitalization.
Inez pulled the dagger from the wall,
cleaned it on the boy’s uniform, and resheathed it. He fell to the floor
when she released his shirt. Then we walked into the dance area
unmolested.
Barbaric, no, having to actually
fight for one’s dignity? Why shouldn’t Inez have left it to the law to
preserve minimal respect for our persons? Weren’t we entitled?
Sister, in this world you’re not
entitled to anything that isn’t bought and paid for, and then only if
you can defend it. I have no doubt that we could have called the
MP’s. I also have no doubt that we could have ruined the lives of some
young men whose only fault was stupidity and immaturity. (I’m glad we
didn’t. A number of those boys gave all they had, later on, for our good
and the country’s. You can forgive a lot in someone who died for the
country... and for you.)
Then, too, if we had, they would have
despised us for it. Maybe that boy Inez slashed and pinned hated us
afterwards. Or maybe not, men are funny about wounds. They often
don’t mind a scar or two. And they’ve got a sense of justice, most of
them, that can accept being slugged when they deserve it. But hated or
not, those boys at least knew we were like them, soldiers, warriors.
I think Inez did more for us in that
moment than anyone ever had or would.
The dancing itself was pretty
uneventful. Only a few boys had the courage to ask one of us. I
can’t recall that any of us declined. But, much like them, we were mostly
too bashful to ask. Silly, no?
Some of them had a drinking contest
going on, off in a corner. They didn’t invite us and we had no interest
in joining. We did, however, watch as – one by one – the boys passed out,
semi-comatose. I didn’t envy them their hangovers in the morning.
Though the spirit of the competition
I found intriguing. We didn’t do that sort of thing.