By the time they finished that drill and made it out to the rifle range, Jolene was sweating so badly under her helmet that moisture ran into her eyes.
“Zarkades, get the hell down here!”
“Roger that, sir. ”
She hustled to her place on the gun range and lifted her rifle. Aiming, she pulled the trigger.
“Good shot, Chief. Ten more just like that and you can start the live-fire course. ”
For the next four hours, Jolene did as she was ordered: stand, sit, crawl, shoot, run. Afterward, she and Tami headed across the post, hoping the phone lines would be a little shorter at this hour.
They were wrong. At least forty soldiers were already in line, standing under the waning heat of the sun, reading, talking, listening to music.
Jolene slowed. “Damn. ” She was about to turn around when she saw Smitty wave at her. He was fourth in line. Even with dirt and sweat running down his face, he looked young enough to be her son.
“Hey, Smitty,” Jolene said, heading toward him.
He smiled, showing off his braces. “Hey, Chiefs. ”
Tami came up beside Jolene. “Are you calling your mom or is there some girlfriend pining away for you?”
“I’m holding this spot for you two,” he said. At their surprised look, he added: “I just remembered, my girlfriend’s still at work. I can’t call her for another hour. And besides”—he gave them both a sheepish grin—“I know I’d want to hear from my mom. ”
Smitty backed away, leaving an opening in line.
“You sure you don’t have anyone you want to call?” Jolene asked. “What about your folks?”
“Nope. They’re driving to see my grandma today. ”
Jolene looked at Tami, who gave her a big smile. “You’re the man, Smitty,” Tami said.
The women stepped into line; Smitty walked away, whistling.
When the phone was free, Tami stepped forward and made her call. As Jolene listened to the singsong sound of her friend’s voice, she tapped her foot impatiently, flicked her fingers against the rough fabric of her pants, and then, finally, it was her turn. Tami hung up, and Jolene lurched forward, picked up the old-fashioned receiver, hot from so many hands, and called home.
Betsy answered, said “Hello?” and then yelled, “It’s Mom. ”
Jolene leaned against the sun-warmed side of the building, trying to ignore the line of soldiers behind her, but it was impossible. She could hear them moving around, talking, laughing. “Hey, Bets. How’s your week been? I’m sorry I couldn’t call yesterday. They had us busy all day and night. ”
Betsy launched into a breathless story about a trauma at school. Apparently Betsy had been chosen last for volleyball teams in PE. Sierra and Zoe had been behind the humiliation, had pointed and laughed until Betsy screamed at them to shut up and then received detention for her outburst. “Me! I got detention and it was all their fault. Can you call my PE teacher and get me out of it?”
Jolene had ten minutes on the phone, and Betsy had already used up six of those minutes telling her story. “Oh, honey, I can’t do that, but if you—”
“I get it. You’re too busy. Don’t worry about it, Mom. Lulu! Your turn!”
“Don’t be that way, Betsy,” Jolene said, her guilt surfacing again. “We get so little time to talk. ”
“Obviously. ”
“I’ll write you an e-mail as soon as I can, okay?”
“Like I said, Mom, don’t worry about it. I don’t need you. Here’s Lulu. ”
“Betsy. I love you. ”
There was only breathing on the other end; then Lulu was on the phone, sounding like a mouse on helium. At the end of a story about something she made for Jolene out of macaroni and string, Lulu said, “I want you to read me a story tonight. ”
“I can’t, baby. ”