Likewise, Smith had come here to learn, especially about himself.
“I’m telling you that I’m not, Top,” he replied, selecting his words carefully.
The ranger nodded. “I get what you’re saying, sir.”
Now it was the instructor’s turn to pause in thought. “If you were an operator,” he went on finally, “I say that you’ve worked solo a lot.”
“What would make you say that?” Smith inquired cautiously.
The ranger shrugged. “It sticks out all over you, sir. In a lot of ways, you’re good. And I mean damn good. You’ve got all your personal moves down solid. I’ve rarely seen better. But they’re just
your
moves. You kept trying to do it all yourself.”
“I see,” Smith replied slowly, replaying the morning’s exercises in his mind.
“Yes, sir. You forget your people and you forget to think for your people,” the noncom continued. “That setup you ran on the ridge this morning probably would have worked just fine for one man, but there was more than one of you. I don’t know exactly what you’re doing in this man’s Army, Colonel, but whatever it is, it’s making you forget how to command.”
Forgetting how to command? That was a stark assessment for any officer—a brutal one, in fact. Could it conceivably be a valid one?
It was a startling thought, but it was entirely possible, given the peculiarities of his career path.
USAMRIID was not a conventional Army unit. The majority of its personnel were civilian, like his late fiancée, Dr. Sophia Russell. Directing a research project at Fort Detrick was more akin to working in a major university or a corporate laboratory than in a military installation. It was a peer-among-peers environment that required tact and a mastery of bureaucracy more than a command presence.
As for that other peculiar facet of his life, by the very nature and structure of the job, mobile cipher agents frequently operated alone. Since being drawn into Covert One in the aftermath of the Hades crisis, Smith had worked with a variety of allies in the field, but he had not borne the burden of being directly responsible for them.
It was one thing to make a bad call and get yourself killed. It was quite another when that failed call caused the death of someone else. Smith understood that. There had been a time in Africa years ago, before Covert One, when Smith had made such a failed call. The personal reverberations and pain of that decision lingered to this day. It was one of the things that had diverted Smith into the rarified world of medical research.
He slid the oiled bolt back into the SR’s receiver. Had that move been a form of cowardice? Possibly. It would be something to take a long and hard look at.
“I see what you mean, Top,” Smith replied. “Let’s say that particular requirement hasn’t come up with me recently.”
The instructor nodded. “Maybe so, sir, but if you keep wearing those oak leaves, it will. You can bet your ass on it.”
Or someone else’s.
Smith was still pondering the instructor’s words when an alien sound intruded into the forest quiet: the muffled purr-growl of a powerful two-cycle engine. A camouflaged all-terrain vehicle appeared through the trees, tearing up the trail from the Huckleberry Ridge base camp.
The young female soldier braked the ATV to a halt in the grove short of the mountain warfare class. Dismounting, she jogged toward them.
Smith and the ranger sergeant got to their feet as the courier approached.
“Colonel Smith?” she inquired, saluting.
“Right here, Corporal,” Smith replied, returning the salute.
“A call came in for you at base camp, sir, from the officer of the day at Main Post.” She produced a piece of white notepaper from the breast pocket of her BDUs. “As soon as possible you are to call this phone number. He indicated it was very important.”
Smith accepted the slip of paper and glanced at it. That was all that was required. The number was one that Smith had long ago