“No,” I said.
“I'm not sure you got that quite right,” he said, somehow managing to squeeze harder.
“No,
“Better, but still, not enough,” he said. “Are you a primate?”
“No, sir,” I said.
“As in monkey, chimpanzee,
No.
“Mmm,” he said, and then took a step back to regard me. “Lutheran?”
I shook my head.
“Methodist?”
No.
“I'm usually quite good at this…Let's see… ‘Belk’… Presbyterian?”
No.
“Not-Episcopalian? Couldn't be.” He frowned, and then leaned close, put his nose at my neck, and sniffed. Once, twice.
“No,” he said, stepping back stiffly once more, eyes wide with mock horror. “Good God, Belk,
“Catholic,” I said quietly.
Gurley looked around as if to call someone else's attention to the zebra that had just walked into the room. “
The bartender brought over a bottle of Canadian Club and a glass. Gurley nodded at him. The man poured. Gurley picked up the bottle, sniffed it, and set it back down.
“Go,” he said, and the bartender was gone before I'd swiveled back around. He looked to me. “It's true. My mother had a preference for them-and so did I.” I lowered my eyes. “Catholic girls, Belk,” he said, and inhaled. “Are you Irish?” he asked.
“No,” I said, and started to say something else.
“Alas,” Gurley said. “There might have been the chance I'd ravished-fucked-a
“Captain,” I began, eager to stop him before his claims progressed.
“Sergeant,” Gurley began again, and then changed his mind. “But you must excuse me. I am better bred than my babbling tirade betrays.” He stopped. “Do you know what
“Captain,” I said again, and that's all I said, because I was a kid and scared. I tried to think about what Sergeant Redes would have done. Earlier that day, I learned he had been lost at sea, and now realized some things are just out of our control.
“Are you a good shot?” Gurley asked. I could hardly hear him for my booming pulse. In the meantime, it was as if he'd invisibly handed something over, some sort of false courage that ran through me and made me want to deck him, ready to deck him, in fact, if he made one more crack about me or his servants. Before that, though, I'd do myself and my faith proud by being as obnoxious as I wanted. Simple enough.
“I'm a fucking
Gurley broadhanded me with such force that I barked back into the bar and then to the floor, knocking over both stool and whisky.
“You
“It's there,” he said, pointing. “Retrieve.” I crawled to my feet with the help of a stool, and walked around behind the bar. I bent over to get the bottle and almost passed out, but caught myself. I put the bottle on the bar and began walking back around, but he stopped me with a hand. “That's fine. You're safer back there, don't you think? Bar between us?” I nodded. “Thomas Gurley, Captain, U.S. Army Air Corps, late of the O-S-S, Office of Strategic Services.” He winked and held out a hand.
“Louis Belk,” I mumbled. “Sergeant, I guess.”
“My word, Belk, be sure about
As I've explained, I was a terrible shot.
“Let's see if you can hit this glass,” he said.
“With what?” I asked.
“With your
“I'm not-I'm not going to fire a gun in here,” I said.
“Of course in here. That's why I cleared the bar. So we could talk. Get to know each other. Kind of an entrance exam for your position. Includes a little target practice. Ready?”
“But I don't have a gun, not here,” I said. I didn't have one anywhere.
“A war,” I repeated.
“A holy war,” said Gurley, “a crusade, if you will.” He unsnapped his holster and pulled out his gun. He laid it on the bar. “Lesson one,” he said. “Gun. Colt M1911. Forty-five caliber.” I looked at it. Gurley leaned across the bar, and before I could realize what was happening, he'd backhanded me again. My mouth was a mush of blood. He regarded this. “Swallow.” I did.
And this is the point, were Ronnie awake, were he ever to awake, he would ask, Why? Never mind that avoiding that question is why most people come to Alaska; never mind that few questions are less answerable
Why did I do what I did? For the same reason anyone in the army does what they do: because that's how you're trained. Now, it wasn't that I'd been trained to be a coward, and it wasn't simply that I'd been trained to follow orders.
I had been trained in the art of bomb disposal. Some guys might just take a rifle and shoot at an unexploded bomb to get rid of it, but that was artless (and in most situations, fatally stupid). No, what I did, what I'd been trained to do, was circle, study, plan, and when I was ready, move.
And Gurley, I didn't know him that well, yet. But I knew this: he could fume and rage and spit, but lay an ear to him and you'd hear it- he was still ticking. He hadn't gone off, not really, not yet. To haul back and hit him would have been like aiming that rifle and pulling the trigger. And then what would you have? What you always got when you didn't think ahead. Body parts, all over.
“Pick up the gun, Belk.” And I did, though doing so gave me an almost physical sense of things flying out of control. I blinked, hoping to regain my balance, but it only made me dizzier.
“Now we're going to shoot.”
I was surprised, and disappointed, that he was so obviously