New day, new walk. It's true, the medic though: everything can become a routine. Even the fact that he was keeping in hand what he was keeping in hand. Who could have said that, just a month before? Semiautomatic assault rifle AK74, for its friend "Kalashnikov". For closers, "Kalash", it seemed. Just the new, "upgraded" version of the old AK47. So his drill sergeant had told him.
Yes, he had decided to serve out his time in the army before to go to the university. He just wanted to get out of home, or maybe to prove to himself that he was a man, "what does not kill us, strengthens us". Or maybe both things. And his father let him do: that maverick of a son needed a bit of discipline, before to end really bad...
So while many parents try to make her sons dodge conscriptions, his father did what he could to let him go in a "serious" unit. The airborne had a mixed reputation: good soldiers, but politically "ambiguous", sympathy for the "old times" and the likes. So they had agreed to avoid them. Family tradition is a family tradition.
And so he ended up in Sardinia. Assault Fusiliers, Monfenera Barracks, in Cagliari. Serious stuff, rather. And his drill sergeant took his job seriously.
One fine day, in the classroom, he had drawn an assault rifle on the blackboard. A masterpiece of realism, bearing in mind, he did it just with a piece of chalk. Then he asked the class what a kind of rifle it was. He just looked at the half-moon-shaped mag and said "AK47". The sergeant nodded: quite right, it was the new AK74, but the differences were in the materials, not in the real stuff. Less wood, more plastic. As for the rest, the same helluva gun. And he was not joking.
A dude mused something like "Americans do it better.", but the sergeant was not deaf. "Not in this field." he said, flatly. "They make the Armalite, or F16. A good rifle, but more costly, and with a story of defects. When they gave the first version of it to the soldiers, in Vietnam,, they said there was no need to clean it. and so, they did not supply the tools to do it. Result, those rifles got jammed regularly. Scarily regularly. Because the soldier who cured their stress with some illegal substances were using the barrels to enhance the effect... And this was not good, neither for them, nor for the barrels."
Then the sergeant had asked the soldiers, whether they thought that the "Charlie" cleaned their "Kalash". It was a rhetoric question, of course, just to get the message home. Clean your gun, boys. Take care of them, and they will take care of you. And no joint, please. Not even Paki. Got it?
The medic snorted, recalling all that. If the sergeant were there, he would have had a question for him. If you have a "Kalash", but no tools to clean it, then what do you have to do?
And the sergeant, very likely, without losing time about whose side was he on, would have advised him to get another Kalash, possibly just cleaned, at first chance. Get another one. What a euphemism...
Stopover. The girls went behind a groove, for obvious reasons. The medic and the soldier exchanged a glance, a bit embarrassed. They both thought the same thing.
To break the impasse, the medic pull out the map from a pocket of his backpack. It was not so precise, but covered all the country, and included the road they were on. A walking man can cover about four miles in an hour, and since a mile is about 1600 m, four miles are about six and a half kilometers. So, putting a fingertip on the scale, and then using it for measuring, the medic could have an idea of the distances and the times to travel them. Sure, there were hairpins, gradients... so the idea was quite vague, indeed. But, anyway...
"You really didn't take the initiative, with her?" the soldier asked.
"No.", the medic said, and kept measuring the map. Clearly, that boy still thought of that night Well, it was natural...
"I believe you... It had to be so... "
"Why?"
"Because she is a... "bòi bàba", as we say... "