Dauphine shrugged her daypack onto her back and walked out of the construction site, her final paycheck in her pocket ready to hit the bank first thing in the morning. The Chicago winter was starting to bite, a frigid wind whistling in from Canada, across Lake Michigan, down La Salle and straight into the neck of her thick Old Navy jacket, bringing some horizontal rain with it. She grunted in annoyance and tightened the Schemagh around her neck. The roughness reminding her of simpler times in the desert when the only concerns were getting the battle wagons reloaded in time to go back out and make it to the mess tent in time for whichever of the three squares a day the army was next due to dish up.
Illinois winters to Afghan summers were a massive difference, 104-degree dry heat to thirty-five damp degrees of misery. As she boarded the bus to head back out to her one-bedroom place in Cicero she reflected the chances of getting shot in Afghanistan were only marginally higher than in West Garfield on the way home. To help pass the journey she started scrolling through the local vacancies for loader operators or lifting operatives, what the rest of the world would call crane drivers. A skill the US Army had given her to pay back for the eight years she gave them from seventeen to twenty-five. At thirty-five she'd now been out longer than she'd been in, a fact that always came as a shock when she worked it out, in her mind she'd left the camaraderie and brotherhood of the infantry only recently, it still dominated her world view and self-image.
Crane driving was one of the few transferrable skills she'd come out of the service with, the others being an ability to sleep anywhere at the drop of a hat, looking busy when doing nothing by use of a clipboard and walking with a purpose, and the ability to consume an entire meal inside two minutes, including dessert and coffee.
An advert caught her eye, snapping her away from Kandahar in 2010. 'Tower Crane Drivers required. Union Rates' below that was a hyperlink to an email address. At the bottom of the advert it said, 'proud to support our Veterans.'
Cynically she thought that just meant they didn't need to offer medical insurance as her VA package was better than most corporate deals at her level, but when she got home she sent an email with her list of qualifications and a copy of her medical discharge certificate signed in facsimile by a grateful President that she hadn't voted for. She included the citation for her Purple Heart, gained in action near Sangin.
It was probably getting shot by a US issued weapon that put her off guns in general, even if local forces were wielding it. A seventeen-year-old boy, recruited into the Afghan Army and terrified out of his wits, had been cowering behind a wall babbling when she took cover beside him. In her body armour and LBE she was clearly a US soldier, but such was his panic that he'd let rip with half a magazine of 9mm from his Sig Sauer M17 pistol, one of which went through her leg, chipping a thigh bone and making an almighty mess when it came out the other side.
He so terrified once he'd shot someone that he pissed his pants there and then, dropped his gun, and collapsed on the floor, pushing his face into the dirt, none of which helped Dauphine. She knew she had to act quickly, before shock and blood loss finished the job the Taliban had tried to start. With her good leg she kicked him hard in the shoulder. "Schemagh, now. Give me." Another kick and he reacted, undoing the scarf, and handing it over. She tied it tight around her thigh above the wound then took her bayonet in its sheath and twisted it through the binding, building up the pressure and seeing the blood slowing before she passed out.
She came to two days later looking up at a British Army nurse in Camp Bastion Military Hospital. Her leg was bandaged and elevated and she had a raging thirst. The nurse brought her some water and because it was a British hospital, tea, then called the surgeon across. Colonel Philips came to see her around ten minutes later.
"Hello Sergeant LeBron, you look better than last time I saw you. Less blood and gore on show. Your Afghan friend probably saved your life, getting that tourniquet applied like that. I think we've had the Schemagh washed if you want to give it back to him. The Damage wasn't too bad, looked messy but almost entirely soft tissue. You'll be up and around again in no time."
She was a few days in hospital in Bastion then got helicoptered back to Sangin where she tried to put the record straight about her medical assistance by the Afghan soldier, but by then he'd been decorated and feted as a hero, he was being lauded as a success story and was all over the news back home. As her CO said to her, "Sometimes we serve better by remaining silent Sergeant LeBron, do you understand?" So, she got a medal and a citation and an early return from the combat zone, being packed and despatched within eight hours of returning from hospital. Twenty-three hours after that she was in a helicopter ambulance flying away from Harrisburg airport to an army hospital in Fort Indiantown Gap where she recuperated for five weeks.
It was while at the Gap that she got qualified as a lifting equipment operative. A grateful nation shows its thanks by sticking you on top of a metal tower for eight hours a day with only a bucket to piss in. Thank you for your service.
She kept the Schemagh. It had been doing a halfway adequate job of keeping the Illinois weather out of her jacket. Now who's laughing Ahmed, you little shit.
Next morning, she had a response to her email, thanking her for her service and inviting her to the site office on the corner of West van Buren and South Clinton, asking if she had an issue with Democrat presidents. She acknowledged the invitation, adding, "Not when they're road names" and left it at that. They both thought they'd been funny, although if either thought the other had been, would be a different story.
The interview was no more than a confirmation of her qualifications, confirmation she had her own hard hat, safety jacket, harness, safety glasses, gloves, and boots. They haggled a little over hourly rates, she pushed them up to twenty-seven dollars an hour with weekends at thirty-seven dollars. An assessment day was booked for later in the week and subject to proving she could drive a crane she was in, starting the day after the assessment. She could, so she did.
Getting booked in was the usual confusion from a new manager, "Daphne Lee Brown?"
"No" she replied, "It's Dauphine LeBron. French, my family's from Louisiana. Pronounced Doe Feen. Call me Daphne I ain't answering."
"OK, DoeFeen, you'll be paired with Bobby here. He'll show you round, you can split shifts with him then we're moving him to days and you to the 2 to ten shift. Is everybody happy?"
The assembled crew came back with "You betcha life we are" and to be fair, Dauphine was happy enough. She didn't much like working with people but if she had to these were her sorts of people, tough but challenging work needed tough but straightforward people. Much like her time in the Army, there was a job needed doing and they were expected to get it done.
She surprised a few of them on the first few days, lifting bags of cement like they were nothing, she wasn't in the same league she had been back in Afghanistan where she prided herself on being able to perform as well as any man and better than some, lifting shells and ammo packs into the fighting vehicles for hours on end. Her arms and back as tightly muscled as any of the male soldiers. Her party trick was to offer to work naked from the waist up if one of them could unload and reload a Hummvee quicker than she could, she had plenty of takers, but no one ever got her top off.
She went off into a memory, there was one soldier got her top off, Staff Sergeant Kevin Dare of the Third Battalion, Fifteenth Infantry Regiment. Dauphine had been part of his unit based at Camp Hartford, a forward operating base fifteen miles outside Sangin where the patrolling soldiers could come back for a day or two's recovery after being up-country for four or five days.
There were strict rules against 'fraternisation' between female and male troops, the rules were supposed to be there to (1) maintain the sanctity of relationships at home (2) ensure good military discipline amongst all members of the US forces (3) ensure no distractions are in place to the job of bringing peace and stability to the people of Afghanistan. It was a rule that had been in place since Korea when a couple of guys from the 73rd Airborne were both screwing the same (female) Aircraft mechanic. One of them ended up killing her and the other soldier in a fit of anger, that said it was a rule that wasn't strictly enforced.
Kevin and Dauphine had been restocking his command vehicle together when a mortar attack came in on the base. All personnel not assigned to the QRF were called to take cover, as Kevin and Dauphine only had their weapons, no body armour and LBE to hand they couldn't realistically get involved in the fighting and as they were in an armoured vehicle the safest thing to do was to lock the doors from the inside and lie down together on the floor.
How they got from there to pulling each other's clothes off in a frenzy she never could really remember, but they did. She knelt beside him on a pile of BDUs and sank his cock deep into her mouth, staring into his eyes as she did. He grew hard and long under her desperate attack, the explosions echoing around the compound only adding to her desire. If she was going to die then dying with a dick in her mouth was as good a way to go as any.
A rattle of small arms fire marked the end of his blowjob, with a smile she sat upright, her brown arms and neck contrasting startlingly with the white of her firm, perky breasts, their pink nipples standing proud in the dimly lit vehicle.