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“Sorry,” O’Neal said, stacking the beef. “Me and my big mouth. But if you decide to take that route, I know a few of them. They’re good people.” He frowned and looked at the pile of meat. “How much do you think the little kids will eat? I’ve got a steak for all the adults, Cally and Billy. You think one steak for all the others?”

“That should work,” Shari said. “Where do you get all this food?”

“It’s a farm,” O’Neal said with a grin. “What, you don’t think we give it all up, do you? Besides, it’s harvest time. We just slaughtered some cows and the pigs were going to be tomorrow. I’ll probably harvest one for a pig roast in the morning then roast it all day. That’s if you guys are willing to spend another night.”

“We’ll see,” Shari said with a grin. “Ask me in the morning.”

<p>CHAPTER 17</p><p>Newry Cantonment, Newry, PA, United States, Sol III</p><p><emphasis>1928 EDT Thursday September 24, 2009 ad</emphasis></p>We aren’t no thin red ’eroes, nor we aren’t no blackguards too,But single men in barricks, most remarkable like you;An’ if sometimes our conduck isn’t all your fancy paints,Why, single men in barricks don’t grow into plaster saints…— Rudyard Kipling“Tommy”

“It’s a real cantonment,” Gunny Pappas said, staring out the windows of the converted bus.

Moving ACS had been a problem from the beginning. Packaging their suits and moving them separately effectively disarmed them; most ACS troopers were fairly incompetent without a suit wrapped around them. And moving the suits with people in them was a horrendous operation; even with their pseudo muscles turned “down,” suits tended to destroy normal structures when the two came into contact.

Finally, standard forty-five passenger school buses had been converted to carry the units. The seats, basically bars of raw steel welded into benches, were intensely uncomfortable for anyone not in a suit. But they had the benefit of being able to survive even a long bus trip with ACS enlisted infantry onboard.

The sole concession to comfort in the buses was an adjustable headrest. The first thing ACS troopers tended to do once they were out of combat was remove their helmets and that habit had been recognized in the design. It was a well understood action; ACS sometimes spent weeks in continuous contact with the Posleen; after that long in a virtual environment the need to breathe uncanned air and feel wind on their face became overwhelming.

Stewart picked his head up from the rest and looked at the approaching gates. “Well, with any luck we won’t have to E E our way across this one.”

“Long time,” Pappas answered with a sigh. The sergeant major had brought a platoon of new recruits with him to their former base at Fort Indiantown Gap, back when he was Gunnery Sergeant Pappas. At the time the Ground Forces were in a state of only slightly controlled anarchy and the platoon had found it necessary to sneak in and fight their way across the base to their barracks. Once there they found the acting first sergeant engaged in black-marketeering and, possibly, murder. With the help of the acting company commander they had settled that idiot’s hash and managed to maintain a semblance of order in their company until O’Neal and the new battalion commander arrived almost simultaneously.

“Roanoke?” Pappas asked.

“Harrisburg,” Stewart corrected. “I was the second platoon leader.”

“Harrisburg,” Pappas agreed after a moment. He remembered the shattered armor of Lieutenant Arnold well, but while his recollection of battles was often too clear, inessential details like where they occurred had started to fall by the wayside. “HVM.”

“Yep,” Stewart agreed.

“Quit weirding each other out,” Duncan said from the next row. He leaned forward and pointed at the barracks and the neatly trimmed parade grounds. “Garrison time. Time to get drunk and laid, not necessarily in that order.”

“If everything’s ship-shape, sir,” Pappas pointed out. “I’ll believe it when I see it. I mean, these are garrison troopers forwarded from Ground Forces. How good are they going to be? There’s probably a foot of dirt on the barracks floor.”

* * *

Mike heard the challenge of the MP at the gate distantly and the response of the driver sounded like it was at the bottom of a well. But he swiveled his vision sideways to watch the exchange.

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