Chapter 214 Pretty Squared Away

(August 1)

Nick was stunned at how perfect this place was. It was huge. A big barn, outbuildings, and a farmhouse. There were soldiers and armed civilians everywhere. Fatigues mostly from the Army, but some from the Navy, and Air Force. Nick even thought that he saw one man in Marine fatigues. Most of the men had beards, which looked weird with the military uniforms. The civilians were decently equipped. Most of them had ARs slung over their shoulders and others had pistol belts. A handful of the civilians had kit and looked like contractors.

“Wow. You guys are pretty squared away. You’re a real unit out here,” Nick said. “We kept hearing at Ft. Lewis that guerilla units were forming up with mostly civilians but plenty of AWOL military people in them. The brass were very afraid of these units. I thought maybe it was propaganda that the Patriots had all these irregular units. Guess it’s true.”

Grant nodded. This was further validation that Hammond and the whole Boston Harbor operation was for real and not some small group of goofballs masquerading as a “Special Operations Command.” The irregular units were serious business. And now Grant was getting confirmation that the Limas knew it.

Grant saw something out of the corner of his eye. He recognized that the Team was there; those were the contractor-looking guys Nick had seen.

Grant yelled toward the Team, “Hey, homos, what are you doing here?” Not exactly military protocol from a commanding officer, but Grant wasn’t exactly a military officer. He had been calling the Team “homos” for a couple of years. Old habits die hard.

The Team turned at the familiar voice and came over. Grant gave each one of the Team a “bro hug.” They talked for a while. Grant introduced Nick and showed off Nick’s backpack with medical supplies.

“A combat medic? Nice,” Pow said. “Very nice.”

By this time, Ted and Sap had come up to them. Grant introduced them to Nick who couldn’t believe how many soldiers were there and how military they seemed to be, albeit with some civilians and non-regulation facial hair like beards. But still. This was not a hillbilly unit. It was a military unit dispensing with some military protocol, but still deadly serious.

“What was your unit?” Ted asked Nick.

“2nd Battalion, 23rd Infantry Regiment, 4th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, at JBLM,” Nick said. Translated, that meant that Nick was assigned to the 4th Strykers—which were like armored personnel carriers—at Joint Base Lewis McChord, the giant military base between Olympia and Tacoma that included Ft. Lewis.

“Stryker, huh?” Ted asked. The Stryker units saw plenty of combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. Their medics were good. They had to be, unfortunately.

Ted wanted to test this new guy to make sure he was a real medic. “Who was your CO?” Ted asked Nick.

“Col. Pete Lowe,” Nick said without hesitation. The name sounded vaguely familiar to Ted, although he didn’t know all of the COs at Ft. Lewis now that he had been out of the Army. The COs changed pretty often.

“What was your MOS?” Ted asked. “MOS” was the acronym for military occupational specialty. Each job in the military had an MOS.

“68 Whiskey, sir,” Nick said instantly, using the phonetic alphabet term “whiskey” for the letter W. Ted knew that 68W was the correct MOS for a combat medic.

“Sergeant, not ‘sir,’” Ted said. “I work for a living.” Ted did not have any rank insignia on—almost no one did—so Nick assumed he was an officer and called him “sir.”

Ted continued the questioning to see if this supposed medic was legit. “Where’d you go to medic school?”

“Ft. Sam Houston, Sergeant,” Nick said instantly, again. Ted knew that was the correct answer.

“You got your CMB?” Ted asked, referring to the combat medic badge, a designation showing that a person had been a medic in a unit engaged in combat.

“No, Sergeant,” Nick said. “Went from Ft. Sam straight to Ft. Lewis. No deployment overseas.”

“Why did you leave your unit?” Ted asked.

“Things are bad, Sergeant,” Nick said, shaking his head. “There is no discipline at all. As in, none. Everyone is taking off. Well, took off. I was one of the last to go. Shoulda gone sooner, but I was following orders.”

“Why do you want to join a rebel unit?” Ted asked. He knew that this new medic had come straight from Pierce Point and therefore had not gone through vetting from HQ. So it was up to Ted to screen this guy. Grant must have already done some screening or he wouldn’t have brought him out here.

“I’ve seen what’s happening,” Nick said, still standing at attention. “It’s out of control, Sergeant. I want things back the way they were. I have a wife and two babies. They aren’t growing up like this. Not if I can help it.”

“Sgt. Malloy,” Grant said, “Nick here has an incentive to not screw us.” Grant didn’t want to be a dick, but he wanted Nick and the others standing around listening to know that Grant took this job very seriously and was willing to do horrible things in order to win this war.

Nick nodded, knowing exactly what Grant meant. “My wife and kids,” Nick said, “are here in Pierce Point and Lt. Matson knows where they are. You guys control everyone coming and going. My family isn’t going anywhere. They are in your hands.”

“We don’t kill women and children,” Grant said, “but we would keep them in ‘protective custody’ if Nick…well, didn’t work out.”

Grant put his arm on Nick’s shoulder for a little dramatic flair and said, “But that won’t be necessary. I’ve talked to Nick a fair amount. He volunteered for this unit before he even knew what we did.”

Nick nodded. Then he asked, “So what do you guys do?” Grant and Ted filled Nick in on the 17th Irregulars. They didn’t mention the ultimate mission, of course. That would come later.

Nick was smiling. “Cool. Looks like I’ll get my CMB now.” Grant and Ted didn’t say anything. They both wanted to say “Hopefully there won’t be any combat” but they knew that wasn’t true.

“Report to Sgt. Sappenfield here and he’ll get you squared away…what was your last name?” Ted asked.

“Folsom,” Nick said.

“Well, Private Folsom, welcome to the 17th,” Ted said. “We’re very glad to have you.”

“Glad to be here,” Folsom said. He walked off with Sap. Grant filled Ted in on Nick’s background.

“Does he know where this place is?” Ted asked.

“Blindfolded him on the way in,” Grant said, with a smile, proud of his foresight. “Not only does it prevent him from seeing how to get here, but it reinforced with Nick from the get-go how important OPSEC is.”

Ted smiled. This lawyer Grant wasn’t as much of a…lawyer as Ted had feared. Grant was not exactly a soldier, but he wasn’t a typical dickhead lawyer either.

Grant told Ted that he had promised Nick that he could see his family on occasion.

“I’d rather keep all the guys here 24/7 for OPSEC,” Ted said, “but I understand why you would let Folsom go home periodically. Normally, if I let one guy go out of camp, I’d need to do that for everyone. But,” Ted said pointing to everyone, “no one here has any family nearby to go see. If that starts to change, if people in the unit have people out in Pierce Point, we’ll need to revisit this.”

“Good point,” Grant said, embarrassed that he hadn’t thought of that. Wait. Of course he hadn’t thought of that. He hadn’t been a Green Beret for twenty-five years. That’s why Ted was there.

Grant spent the rest of the day checking on how things were progressing with the facilities at Marion Farm. He met a few more new arrivals. He chatted with each man or woman out there. He wanted to get to know them and let them know their CO a little better. He was constantly motivating and encouraging them. Not over-the-top, rah-rah motivation, just the subtle and laid back motivation he had been doing his whole life. Several hours went by.

“Joining us for dinner, Lieutenant?” Sap asked.

“Nah,” Grant said. “Love to, but the Grange has no idea where I am.” Grant had his radio on the Grange frequency so he would know if they really needed him. But what he really meant was that his family had no idea where he was. He didn’t want them to worry. Besides, he really wanted to eat dinner with them. He hadn’t had dinner with them in several days, but he couldn’t tell his troops that he needed to go home for dinner with his wife and kids.

“Understood,” Sap said. “I’ll let the guards know you’re coming back and they’ll have your car turned around for you.”

Grant thanked Sap, walked to the gate at the farm, got his car, and drove home. Just like normal. Driving his car home to have dinner with his family. After spending the day with his guerilla unit. Just like normal.

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