Not a very exciting Sunday. I did the crossword puzzle, I went to see the new (and solidly entertaining) Captain America movie, and I wrote this, whatever it is:
“The world you know doesn’t exist,” said Sergeant Bearney to the troops lined up just outside the mess hall. “Not anymore.”
It was his standard spiel; Marcus and I had both heard it a dozen times, and there was no point in hanging around now to guess at which of the recruits would be the first to argue with him, or break formation, or just plain break down. Somebody always would. God knows Marcus had. I tried not to kid him too much about it anymore — it could have been anybody in that month’s batch of recruits, myself included — but I knew he was glad to finally be out from under Bearney’s thumb and into the comparative ease of daily combat. The Vargash will rip you to shreds, color the ground with your blood, but those two weeks with Bearney, those were hell. After that, fighting the invaders is like a walk in the park.
Not that there’s any such thing as parks anymore.
We didn’t have time to stand around gawking, though. If any of these recruits wanted to argue the point with Bearney, wanted to act all homesick for a world that had been burned away while we were all in deep freeze, so be it. Let the bastard deal with it like he always had. “I lived through the invasion, you maggots,” he’d tell them, maybe even briefly show them the deep curling scars along his midsection that the Vargash weapons had left him in the first failed counter-assault. “Some of us didn’t get to sleep through it in cryo, so quit your bawlin’.” And then he would get on with the process of turning these newly awakened rubes into soldiers. Eight months into the program now, a new group of conscripts every couple of weeks, whatever the cryo facilities could supply, and he hadn’t lost a single one. Every one he trained went on to die someplace else.
Well, except for me and Marcus, I guess, but we were different. Even Bearney would have had to reluctantly admit it. We’d been in that first group, before they had worked all the kinks out of resuscitation, and not everything had gone according to plan.
Right now, we were supposed to be meeting with Kincaid in the mess hall to discuss the…
I didn’t quite get to finish, even that sentence, before our standard forty minutes of free-writing were up and we had to go see the movie.
Anyway, that was Sunday.