Chapter 116
Smoke burned her lungs, and every muscle of her body was on fire, but Rain wasn’t going to quit. She had ten more reps to do to complete her training for the day, and even though the last thing on earth she wanted to do was start the obstacle course over, she knew she had to run through it ten more times if she ever wanted to go back to her room, take a shower, and collapse on the bed.
Lt. Gordon Laurant was a nice fellow when one was sitting across from him in the parlor or at dinner, but on the training field, he was a savage, demanding more of them than Rain could’ve ever thought possible. Yet, as she took off again, making another loop through large tractor tires, a muddy swamp, over spinning logs, and across a ropes course that had left her hands burned and full of rope splinters, she knew no one could train her to take on the Mothers like this man. So, she completed the tasks he set before her with determination, even if her body felt like it was about to give out at any second.
At least she wasn’t alone in her training. Besides a pack of other new recruits from Quebec, she was joined by her friends from Michaelanburg. Adam, Walt, and Mist, who was fighting through a lot of pain since she hadn’t fully recovered from the impromptu surgery Rain had been forced to perform to remove the part of her IUD that was eating her insides when she’d tried to yank it out in Oklasaw. Mist was making it, though. She was never one to give up. Seth was also with them, as was the prime minister’s daughter, Josie Bissett. She, too, was a little spitfire, and though she had been training for military service for years, she’d admitted one evening while they were all sitting around in the room Walt and Mist shared that she’d had it easy until now. “I want to be ready, though,” Josie had told them. “I want to know if I am in harm’s way, I can defend myself.”
Rain had to think there was little chance that Prime Minister Geraldo Bissett would let his daughter actually be placed in any dangerous situations, but Josie didn’t see it that way. She wanted to be part of the attacking force, just like the others, and get no special treatment for being the first daughter.
As Rain made another pass through the mud, her boot got stuck, sinking several inches into the mire, taking her extra time and energy to pull it out. She whispered a curse word and pulled on her leg with her hands, but it wouldn’t budge. It was stuck good this time.
Adam was a little ways behind her--because he’d lapped her a long time ago. She turned to see how many minutes it might take him to catch up to her. She knew he’d help her get out once he got there, and since she saw no other way of breaking free on her own, she decided to save her energy.
It wasn’t Adam who stopped to help, though. It was Seth. He didn’t say a word, only grabbed hold of the lowest part of her exposed calf and yanked up, splattering a fresh spray of mud all over his white shirt and hers. “Thanks,” Rain said when her leg came free.
“Sure,” Seth mumbled and ran on. He had hardly said anything to her since they’d arrived in Quebec, which crushed Rain’s heart. She’d never meant to hurt Seth. He was such an amazing guy. He didn’t even need to be here, but he was because he cared so much about a cause that wasn’t even his to fight.
Now that she was free from the mud, she continued on her way, determined to move fast enough that she couldn’t get sucked back down into the muck again. She made it through that part of the course and was moving onto the rotating logs when Adam caught up to her. He gave her an encouraging smile, which she returned, and then he sprinted ahead of her. It wasn’t a surprise that he and Walt were good at this. When they were inseminators whose only purpose in life, according to the Mothers, was to practice impregnating women, one of the only things they were allowed to do with their time was to lift weights and work out. Other than eating the nasty non-food they were given, sleeping, waiting to be chosen by a woman, and having sex while strapped to a chair, that was pretty much their lives. It was a miserable existence, but it had definitely left Adam and Walt in good shape, and as Rain began to make her way across the spinning log, she had to pull her eyes off of Adam’s stealth form to keep from falling off of the apparatus, which she knew from experience hurt like hell and also meant she’d have to start this section of the course over again.
“You’re doing great, Rain!” Josie shouted as she ran beside her. “Just keep your head up, and run fast!”
Rain tried to take her advice as she put her feet down quickly on the log, moving them in a sideways sliding sort of motion as she propelled herself forward, trying to keep her head lifted, but she hadn’t quite figured out how to make it across without keeping her eyes glued to the log. She had thought she was in pretty good physical shape until she got here. After all, she’d run through the forest for days in an attempt to escape the Mothers. But… it turned out she wasn’t quite as coordinated as the Quebecian Army needed her to be in order to participate in the assault that would be taking place in just a few weeks. If she wanted to live, and she did, Lt. Laurant and the others in charge insisted she figure out how to run and do other things at the same time, skills Rain obviously still needed some practice in. She was getting better though. As she reached the end of the rotating log without falling off this time, she told herself she was making progress.
How she was going to do this nine more times, she wasn’t sure, but she knew she’d figure it out. There were Mothers out there that needed to be brought down, and Rain was just the woman to do it.
Hours later, after she’d finished, took a shower, and ate a huge dinner consisting mostly of meat for the protein her body needed to build more muscle, Rain sat on the couch in the living room area of the room Walt and Mist shared. After the five of them had been allowed to join the Quebecian Army, they’d been moved from the guest rooms at the prime minister’s house to housing for members of the military. Adam and Rain shared a room, too, but for some reason, they always gathered in Walt and Mist’s.
Watching the news was something Rain hadn’t quite gotten used to yet. It was a novel concept to her, witnessing a live newscast to get an update on what was going on everywhere in the world. Ordinarily, that would have excluded what was happening in Michaelanburg since for many years, they kept everything that went on within their borders completely secret, but now that there was a war waging there, other nations were covering what was happening in the sheltered nation as well as they possibly could without having direct access to what was taking place beyond the borders.
“Today, along the northern border of Spanish-America, heavy fighting continued to take its toll on the forces of the Motherhood with several explosions going off and forcing the defending armies back at least a few miles. Our correspondent in the field, Rex Tolson is here with more. Rex?”
Rex Tolson was the epitome of everything the Mothers were fighting against. Intelligent, handsome, and capable, he stood with his microphone in defiance of their forces, a helmet on his head and a protective vest the only means he had to keep himself from being injured or killed by the sexist females visible in the distance over his shoulder. He went on to explain how the Mothers were being forced backward, closer to the large city not far from the border, every day. “At this rate, by the time other nations come into the fray, such as the great Nation of Quebec, the Motherhood simply will not stand a chance. Back to you, Tammy.”
Mist turned the volume down on the television with the remote control, something else Rain had had to get used to as Tammy, the anchorwoman, began to talk about something else. “I wonder how true that is. Will there be any fighting left by the time we get there?”
“These reporters can say what they want to in order to get people to support the war effort, but they don’t know the Mothers like we do,” Walt said, shaking his head. “They won’t be as easy to defeat as the newscasters are trying to make it seem.”
Rain tended to agree with him. She had the idea that there would be plenty of fighting left for them to do by the time they got back to Michaelanburg. While part of her was ready to go right away, at the same time, she never wanted to step foot in the country again.
A quick knock on the door got all of their attention. If it was Seth, he would’ve just walked in, so whoever this was, it must’ve been someone from the prime minister’s office. They all exchanged nervous glances before Adam, who was closest to the door, got up to see who it was.
Over his shoulder, Rain could see that it was Josie. “Hi, guys,” she said as Adam pulled the door even further open, gesturing for her to come in. “Sorry to interrupt you. But I have an update from the Department of the Military that I need to share with you.”
“Come on in,” Walt said, even though she was already several steps into the room.
“Thanks,” Josie said, her eyes wandering across their faces before she asked, “where’s Seth?”
“Probably still in his room,” Mist said. “He doesn’t always come over here.”
“Oh.” Josie sounded disappointed. For a moment, a slight stab of jealousy turned Rain’s stomach before she remembered that that was ridiculous. “We should probably get him, too. He’ll need to hear this,” Josie said, which was a perfectly reasonable explanation for why she was asking for Seth, not because she was starting to develop feelings for him.
“I’ll get him,” Adam said, stepping around Josie to walk next door.
“Come on over here,” Mist told her, waving for her to have a seat near her on the couch. “I’m sure they’ll be right back.”
It only took about a minute for Adam to return, Seth in tow. He looked annoyed at first when he walked in, but then his eyes landed on Josie, and Rain was certain she saw a shift in his expression. His face brightened. Rain caught Adam’s eyes, and they exchanged a smile and a knowing glance. So he had seen it, too.
“Sorry to interrupt you,” Josie said. “It’s just… I’ve received our orders from the commanding general. We are to move out. Tomorrow.”
“Tomorrow?” Rain could hardly believe her ears.
“Yes. General Bruce Higgins is our commanding officer in the field, and he said to get there as quickly as possible as our forces are planning a raid on a major city, and they want the four of you specifically to be present for intelligence reasons when that happens.”
“Did he say what city, or can we all just guess?” Mist asked, her eyes showing she was still a little shocked about the command, just as everyone else was.
“He didn’t say, but I think you can tell, judging by that description, where we’re going. We leave at oh-six-hundred hours. I’ll send you the specific information you need through your tablets.” Josie gave them a reassuring smile and then got up. “I’ll leave you to prepare.”
Rain noticed she gave Seth a small, personal wave as she walked out the door, but then her mind jumped back to the news they’d just received.
“So we’re going home, ladies and gents,” Walt said.
“Yep. We’re going home,” Rain reiterated. “To Michaelanburg.”