infantry. But then, Siberian tactics weren’t known for showing particular concern for numbers of troops lost, so long as the objective was obtained. And anyway, Thomis hissed, it didn’t matter “what the fuck their strategy is, man — where in hell we gonna go, with a sheer hundred-fifty-foot drop behind us?”

“Jump into the lake!” opined Valdez nervously.

Thomis was stamping his feet to keep warm. “Very fucking amusing, Valdez.”

A reconnaissance patrol from C Company was almost shot as it scurried back from the treeline, their report succinct: “Fuckers are everywhere. Headin’ straight for us.”

“How far?” asked Major Truet.

“Half a mile — maybe less…”

“We could try rappeling down the cliff,” said Emory.

Thomis sneered. “Oh, terrific,” he said, cupping his hands about the M-16’s breech to stop it freezing up, “and while we’re going down, what the fuck you think the Siberians’ll be doing? Having tea? Anyway, where the hell would we go on the ice — taking a fucking stroll while they pick us off from the cliffs?”

No one answered. Thomis was a pain, but on this one his pessimism was justified. Valdez said the tanks were probably farther in the woods than anyone thought, that maybe they’d turn — run parallel to the tracks — and would go past Charlie Company, not toward them. Maybe they were going along some logging road, north toward Port Baikal to reinforce Yesov’s attack on the retreating III Corps.

“Jesus!” said Thomis, looking behind him, down out over the moon-bathed white cloud that obscured the lake.

“What?” asked Valdez, but then he saw, as Thomis had, what looked like a canal, or rather, a long, jagged slit in the ice; in fact, it was through a narrow break in the cloud cover that he and the rest in the squad glimpsed the flashes of the guns. They’d been at it all day and now, through his Starlight binoculars, Valdez for one could see clearly, in the surreal-looking green world of the night vision glasses, the slaughter of the remnants of III Corps caught out on the ice. “They’re being massa—” began Valdez.

“Shut up!” hissed Thomis. “Listen!”

The creak of the tanks had stopped. To the right of second platoon’s heavy machine gun trench and scattered foxholes, a branch collapsed, the snow pouring down from the tree like sugar. Valdez slid his M-16 forward on the frozen ice rest he’d sculptured in front of him.

“Hold it!” cautioned Emory softly. “Maybe it just fell.”

“ ‘Course it fucking fell!” hissed Thomis. “You idiot!”

Emory took no offense. He knew it was Thomis’s fear talking, the same kind of fear that had suddenly made his own mouth dry as sandpaper.

“No firing!” said the lieutenant softly, yet urgently, his voice on the walkie-talkie distinct, without a trace of static, as he turned the volume as low as he possibly could. He was listening so intently that he seemed to feel everything at once, the wind moaning through the trees, snow plopping down here and there, a crack of a branch, the distant crackle of small arms fire on the lake below, and in the distance the scream of more Siberian rocket salvos, their fiery tails a fizzing white in the night goggles, his concentration and the weight of the goggles giving him a cluster headache that started to radiate down his right arm.

“Bastards!” said Thomis, by which he meant, What the hell were the Siberians up to?

“No such luck,” Thomis heard the lieutenant reply in answer to Valdez’s hope that C Company was being bypassed by the Siberians.

Another patrol sent out earlier following the rail tracks south of C Company’s position had spotted an enemy troop concentration — at least five hundred, possibly brigade size — collecting around Kultuk. There was absolutely no doubt about it — Charlie Company was trapped between Kultuk twenty-five miles to the south and Port Baikal twenty miles to the north, and by cliffs above the artillery-ruptured ice behind them.

Suddenly someone said they could hear a chopper. “One of ours!” said Emory.

“One of theirs!” countered Thomis.

The truth was, it was impossible to tell amid the cacophony of echoes rebounding about the cliffs.

“I told you,” said Valdez. “Old Doug said he’d try to get evac through to us.”

“Old Doug’s in Khabarovsk!” said Thomis.

“Can it!” ordered Truet, who could hear them as he came down the line. But excitement was rising. Emory said it sounded like a Chinook. Throw all the crap out of it — seats, fire extinguishers, rescue winch — you could get forty or so men in a C-47, evac a whole platoon. More if you jettisoned your weapons. Truet said nothing; raising expectations was bad news if you couldn’t follow through. “Men’ll lose confidence in your leadership,” they told him at West Point, and he knew they were right.

Thomis was in the worst state, and only Emory knew what was eating away at him. Thomis and his wife had had a real dustup the night before he’d shipped out from Frisco. All the way through the tunnel they’d argued because he’d smacked young Wendy — she was ten — that morning for giving lip to her mother. He tried to make up, telling her he’d buy her something really nice for her eleventh birthday, but she’d gone into the big sulk. He’d hit her pretty hard — on the backside — and now he was thinking about how he used to kneel down, say her prayers with her. “Jesus, tender shepherd, hear me…” “Honest to God,” he’d told Emory in a quieter moment, “I’d’ve given my right hand not to have left her like that — hurting her. Her old man goes off, doesn’t come back, all she’ll remember—”

The “chunka-chunka” sound — a C-47?—grew louder, and a few of the guys started to get wound up.

“Easy now,” the sergeant told them. “Watch your perimeter.”

Thomis promised God right there and then that if he ever got out of it, he’d never hit Wendy again. Wouldn’t take any crap, but he’d never hit her — never. He could smell her warm, baby-powder smell after her bath — and her hair golden, just like her mom’s. There was another fall of snow from the trees, and he wondered whether other men in the line were making deals with the Almighty. Just get me out of this, God, and I promise…

* * *

In the dank cell, the Harbin Public Security Bureau guards had difficulty attaching the small alligator clamps to Ling’s testicles. Ling was so terrified, despite his determination not to show it, that his sheer fright and the cold combined to shrink the skin around the scrotum into a small, tight, corrugated ball with the consistency of tough old elephant skin. One of the guards jerked hard on the single rope tie that passed through Ling’s arms and around his neck. The guard had a lot of practice, having been very active in the Thirty-eighth Army’s “police action” against “antisocial elements” following Tiananmen Square in the summer of ‘89. He had tied the arms of many of the hooligans of the pro-democracy movement before they’d been executed.

“What did the Jew woman tell you?” asked the PSB interrogator.

Ling was silent, his gaze downcast, fixed on a spot of rat droppings to better focus his resistance.

“The white woman you had hiding in your house,” said the interrogator. “What did she tell you?”

Ling shook his head.

“She told you nothing?” proffered the interrogator. Ling’s head moved, but it seemed more a stiffening of his own will than an answer. Personally, the interrogator had told his superior, he’d much rather talk to the comrade — to convince Ling in a calm, logical manner that helping the Siberian Jewess against his own people was treason, an act not only against the party, but against the people. And the party loved the people. The Siberian at the consulate, however — Latov — was in a hurry to break the underground movement in Harbin, the major distribution center of food and munitions not only for Cheng’s armies fighting the Americans around Manzhouli, but for Chinese divisions spread along the Manchurian-Siberian border.

Ling didn’t feel the electric shock he’d braced himself for. Instead, the interrogator suddenly leapt out of his wooden chair with a bull-like roar, the current having short-circuited along the table. “You idiot!” he shouted, slapping one of the guards so hard that the man’s cap went flying. The other guard fumbled with the wires again while the interrogator strode angrily up and down the side of the cell farthest from the table. The shock had jolted his nerves so badly he had lit another cigarette while one was already on the go. He told the guard to turn up the amperage, and when the shock hit Ling, his scream could be heard in Stalin Park. Ling blacked out and had almost choked, the idiot guard having forgotten the tongue clamp and having turned the amperage too high.

The interrogator, his nerves rattled for the second time, reminded the guards that if they didn’t get results quickly, then someone would be taking their rice bowl to the front, and they would be thrown into the battle for A-7. American gangsters had already inflicted seventeen percent casualties on the PLA, and though they would be

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