"Twice," Luc answered, not without pride.

"Sounds about right. He was luckier than a lot, that's for goddamn sure." Demange glanced at his watch. "Twenty minutes now. If we aren't marching at 0630 on the dot, I'll be in trouble. And if I'm in trouble, you sorry assholes are in big trouble."

Luc wondered why 0630 was so sacred. Would the war be lost if they started five minutes late? As far as Czechoslovakia was concerned, they were starting three days late. The Czechs said they were still fighting hard. The Germans claimed enormous victories. Somebody was lying. Maybe two somebodies were.

The border bulged south below Saarbrucken. At 0630 on the dot-Sergeant Demange and his ilk knew how to get what they wanted-French soldiers started moving into the bulge. A few French guns fired at the German positions ahead. A few German guns shot back. Both sides seemed halfhearted. Lou had been through much scarier drills.

Fields on the German side of the border looked-surprise!-just like fields on the French side. The only way Luc could be sure he'd crossed into Germany was by looking over at a German frontier post, abandoned now, that lay athwart a two-lane macadam road a few hundred meters off to the southeast.

Soldiers from another company poked through the frontier station as if they'd just occupied Berlin. Then, without warning, something over there went boom! Sergeant Demange hit the dirt. For a moment, Luc thought he'd been hurt. But then he got up and brushed wheat stubble off himself, altogether unselfconscious. "You hear a noise like that, you better get flat," he remarked. "I bet those Nazi cocksuckers booby-trapped the station."

Something had blown out part of one wall. Now the French soldiers over there scurried around like ants in a disturbed hill. Luc saw one man lying in the roadway. Even from this distance, he would have bet the poor bastard wouldn't get up again.

"Lesson number one," the sergeant said. "If it looks like they want you to pick it up, they probably do. Wouldn't be surprised if there are mines in these fields, too."

"Merde alors!" Luc muttered. The very ground under his feet might betray him. He tried to walk like a ballerina, on tippytoe. It didn't work very well in army-issue clodhoppers with a heavy pack on his back. Feeling foolish, he gave up after a few steps.

A belt of trees lay ahead. Did Germans lurk there? Sure as hell, they did. A spatter of rifle fire came from the woods. After the first bullet cracked past him, Luc needed no urging to flatten out. Prone, he fired back. His MAS36 slammed against his shoulder. In between rounds, he dug a scrape for himself with his entrenching tool.

Very cautiously, the French advanced. They took a few casualties, which made them more cautious yet. The Germans didn't make much of a fight, though. They melted back toward their fancy Westwall. It wasn't supposed to be as good as the Maginot Line-nothing was, not even the Czech forts-but everybody said it was tough even so.

When Luc finally reached the woods, he found several countrymen exclaiming over a dead German. The redheaded guy in field-gray had taken one in the chest. He didn't look especially unhappy-just surprised. Luc wondered if he'd killed the Boche himself. Not likely, but not impossible, either. He felt like a warrior and a murderer at the same time.

It was six in the morning in Peking, which meant it was yesterday afternoon back in New York City. Corporal Pete McGill and several of the other Marines at the American Legation clustered in front of a shortwave set, listening to the World Series. The Yankees were up on the Cubs, two games to none. They were leading in game three, too. Joe Gordon had already singled with the bases loaded and homered, and Hoot Pearson was cruising along on the mound.

"Cubs are history," McGill said happily-he was from the Bronx. "Three straight Series for the Yanks, it's gonna be. Nobody's ever done that before."

None of the other leathernecks argued with him. He would have liked to see them try! When the Cubs got done losing today (or yesterday, or whatever the hell day it really was), they would have to sweep four to take the championship. Nobody did that, not against the Bronx Bombers!

A Polack named Herman Szulc-which he insisted was pronounced Schultz-said, "I bet they won't be as good next year."

"Oh, yeah, wise guy? How come?" McGill had brick-red hair, freckles, and the temper that went with them. And if you affronted his team, you affronted him, too.

"Only stands to reason. Shit, look at Gehrig," Szulc said. "He didn't even hit.300 this year. He's getting old, wearing out."

"Nah, he'll be back strong. You wait and see," McGill said. "Sheesh! A little bit of an off year for one guy, and you want to write off the ball-club."

Before the argument could go any further, a Chinese servant brought in a tray with coffee and sausages and rolls stuffed with this and that for the Marines. None of it except the coffee was what McGill would have eaten in the States, but it would all be tasty. Duty at the Legation was as sweet as it got.

"Sheh-sheh, Wang," Szulc said as the servant set the tray down on a table. That meant thank you in Chinese. McGill had learned a few phrases, too. They came in handy every once in a while.

Wang grinned a toothy grin. Several of his front teeth were gold. A twenty-four-carat smile meant you were somebody here. "Eat," he said-he knew bits of English, the way the Marines knew bits of Chinese. He waved at the tray. "Hao." That meant it was good.

And it was. "Wonder what's in the sausages," somebody said with his mouth full.

"Your mother," somebody else came back, which almost made Pete squirt coffee out his nose.

"The Missing Link," Szulc suggested. That wasn't even so far-fetched. They'd found prehistoric human bones in these parts that were God only knew how old.

It also wasn't so far-fetched for another reason. Chinamen would cook and eat damn near everything. You could get snake. It was supposed to be good for your one-eyed snake. You could get dog, which was also supposed to make John Henry perk up. You could get fried grasshoppers. McGill had eaten one once, on a bet. It wasn't even bad, and he picked up five bucks crunching it.

Out went the Cubs again. A singing commercial came on. Szulc fiddled with the radio dial. "What the hell you doing?" McGill asked.

"Seeing if I can find some news between innings," Szulc answered. "Check what's up with the war."

"Oh. Okay," McGill said. The war was as important as the Series. Back in the States, people wouldn't have believed it. McGill was sure of that. But back in the States, people weren't right around the corner from the Japanese Legation and its garrison of tough bastards-not as tough as Marines, McGill was sure, but tough. Back in the States, people were doing their best to forget the Japs had bombed the crap out of the Panay the December before, even though she was flying the American flag.

Japan apologized, didn't she? She paid an indemnity, didn't she? That made everything all right, didn't it? Maybe so-back in the States. Not in Peking. Not even close.

Back in the States, people forgot the Japs had a zillion more soldiers sitting in Manchuria. Manchukuo, they called the puppet state there these days. If they decided they wanted a war with the USA, how long would this garrison last? Hell, back in the States, most people didn't know it existed.

If the balloon goes up with the Japs, it's my ass, McGill thought.

Szulc got a couple of bursts of static. Then he found the BBC. The announcer had a much posher accent than most of the Royal Marines at the British Legation. They called themselves leathernecks, too, and they made damn fine drinking buddies even if they did talk funny.

"-vakia continues to offer stout resistance to Hitler's aggression," the announcer said. "Russian volunteers and aircraft have begun appearing in Ruthenia and Slovakia. Both Poland and Romania deny consenting to their crossing."


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