file:///J|/sci-fi/Nieuwe%20map/Frederic%20Pohl%20&%20C.%20M.%20Kornbluth%20%20-%20Critical%20Mass.txt
had engaged hi three of the five mainland campaigns-presumably Canton, Mukden and Tsingtao, since
they were the first. After that, nothing. Especially not the purple ribbon that might indicate a wound
serious enough to keep him out of further fighting.
The ribbons, his age and the fact that he was still a first lieutenant were grounds enough for the MP's to
despise him. An officer of thirty-eight should be a captain at least. Many were majors and some were
colonels. "You can go down, Lieutenant," they told the patent foulball, and he went down to the
interminable concrete tunnels of G-l.
A display machine considered the name General Grote when he typed it on its keyboard, and told him
with a map where the general was to be found. It was a longjsh walk through the tunnels. While he
walked past banks of clicking card-sorters and their servants he pondered other information the machine
had gratuitously supplied: GROTE, Lawrence W, Lt Gen, 0-459732, Unassigned.
It did not lessen any of Kramer's puzzles. A three-star general, then. He couldn't possibly have anything
to do with disciplining a lousy first-John. Lieutenant generals ran Army Groups, gigantic ad hoc
assemblages of up to a hundred divisions, complete with air forces, missile groups, amphibious assault
teams, even
carrier and missile-sub task forces. The fact of Ms rank indicated that, whoever he was, he was an
immensely able and tenacious person. He had gone through at least a twenty-year threshing of the wheat
from the chaff, all up the screening and evaluation boards from second lieutenant to, say, lieutenant
colonel, and then the murderous grind of accelerated courses at Command and General Staff School, the
fanatically rigid selection for the War College, an obstacle course designed not to tram the substandard
up to competence but to keep them out. It was just this side of impossible for a human being to become a
lieutenant general. And yet a few human beings in every generation did bulldoze their way through that
h'ttle gap between the impossible and the almost impossible. And such a man was unassigned?
Kramer found the office at last. A motherly, but sharp-eyed, WAC major told him to go right in.
John Kramer studied his three-star general while going through the ancient rituals of reporting-as-or-
dered. General Grote was an old man, straight, spare, white-haired, tanned. He wore no overseas bars.
On his chest were all the meritorious service ribbons his country could bestow, but none of the
decorations of the combat soldier. This was explained by a modest sunburst centered over the ribbons.
General Grote was, had always been, General Staff Corps. A desk man.
"Sit down, Lieutenant," Grote said, eyeing him casually. "You've never heard of me, I assume."
"I'm afraid not, sir."
"As I expected," said Grote complacently. "I'm not a dashing tank commander or one of those flying
generals who leads his own raids. I'm one of the people who moves the dashing tank commanders and
flying generals around the board like chess pieces. And now, confound it, I'm going to be a dashing
combat leader at last. You may smoke if you like."
Kramer obediently lit up.
"Dan Medway," said the general, "wants me to start from scratch, build up a striking force and hit the
Asian mainland across the Bering Strait."
Kramer was horrified twice-first by the reference to The Supreme Commander as "Dan" and second by
the fact that he, a lieutenant, was being told about high strategy.
"Relax," the general said. "Why you're here, now. You're going to be my aide."
Kramer was horrified again. The general grinned.
"Your card popped out of the machinery," he said, and that was all there was to say about that, "and so
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