Uprising. Douglas L. Bland
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The tall, sour man threw the driver’s door open, pushing them away. He stepped out of the van and spoke to a couple of older men in cheap camouflage clothes of the sort you could buy at any Canadian Tire store. They carried M16s which, Alex immediately noticed, needed a bit of maintenance. But the weapons, magazines in place, looked loaded, and so did at least one of the “Mohawk warriors,” as he soon learned they liked to be called. A quick survey revealed other armed people near the building, and they weren’t loafers. Their clothes and weapons were clean and they carried themselves in a soldierly manner. So there is a hard core to this outfit, Alex thought. And they’re the guys to watch.
One of the serious ones came forward, slid the side door open, ordered Alex out in a decidedly unfriendly manner, then pushed him aside and searched the vehicle’s interior, looking, Alex supposed, for a troop of Mounties. To the left of the grey plastic building, he noted a large Quonset hut, its curved walls supported by sandbag revetments about one and a half metres high and one metre deep. The entrance was guarded by more serious-looking people and draped with canvas to hide any light that might escape from inside at night.
The tall, sour man got back into the van and drove off, and most of the ragtag hangers-on drifted away and disappeared into the surrounding buildings. The new man in charge motioned Alex towards a small hut. A guard, no more than eighteen, in mismatched camo and an uncomfortable-looking army surplus store hat, stood in the doorway fidgeting with the trigger guard on his old army-issue FN rifle. That scared Alex a lot more than his admittedly ominous surroundings.
The serious man motioned Alex into the building and told the kid to watch him. Then, in one swift move, he grabbed the rifle from the boy’s hands and cuffed him on the head, sending his hat flying into the dirt.
“I told you already not to load this thing! Do it again without orders and I’ll kick the crap out of you. Understand?”
The kid nodded dumbly, bent slowly to pick up his hat but jumped back as his chief swiftly and expertly pulled the magazine off the rifle, snapped the breech open, emptied the chamber, and shoved the weapon back into his fumbling grasp.
As he walked away, he spoke over his shoulder to Alex. “Hard to get good help, captain. There’s a washroom in the hut. You’ve got time to clean up. Sonny here will get you something to eat. Grab a nap. No telling how long before they call for you – maybe tomorrow morning.”
Captain? Alex thought. He’d pegged the man without hesitation – or doubt – as a professional, a sergeant or warrant officer. But how did he know me? Do I know him? Uh, uh. He must have been briefed. Somebody here knows what they’re doing.
The kid opened the door and motioned with his empty rifle towards a bench in the corner. Alex sat down and dropped his small pack on the floor. The raid had been tiring and the nap in the van uncomfortable and insufficient. Alex suspected, however, that he wouldn’t get much rest in the next few days. Might as well shake off the stress hangover – hot water always worked – then grab what sleep he could.
Alex looked at the kid, slouching against the inside door, clearly unsure of what to do or what attitude to take to the person his boss had called captain. “Say, young fellow,” Alex said. “Did anyone ever tell you that cleanliness is next to godliness?”
The kid shook his head, more confused than ever. Alex stood up and made a move for his small pack. “I need a shit, shave, shower, and shampoo,” he said, and pointed towards the toilet room in the corner.
The kid waved his rifle vaguely. “There’s no shower.”
“That’s okay, son,” Alex said, slinging his pack over his shoulder as he crossed the room. “I’ll use the sink.” Please, God, he thought, don’t let him reload that rifle. If I’m gonna get shot, I want it to be on purpose and not by some amateur’s mistake.
Entering the bathroom, under the kid’s uncertain gaze, he unwrapped his shaving kit, stripped off, set clean socks, underwear, and a T-shirt on the back of the toilet, and sat down to do his business. He let the water run hot in the sink, shaved cleanly and closely, watching himself in the mirror.
His thoughts swarmed randomly. Who are these people? They seem …what? Tense, aggressive, suspicious? What next? Where am I? What am I expected to do? He stopped shaving and looked firmly at himself. Get a grip, he silently told his reflection. Stay quiet, assess the situation, find out what they want, then decide whether to go along. Refilling the sink with hot water, he took a facecloth and improvised a sponge bath, put his old clothes and his kit into the pack with instinctive neatness borne of long military habit, and went back into the room, startling the kid who lurched nearly upright. “I think I’ll get some sleep on that cot over there, if it’s all right with you.”
“Ah, sure, I guess so. No one ever tells me anything. They just yell at me.”
“Welcome to the army, boy. And remember: keep your finger off the trigger!”
Alex dropped on the cot and, suppressing questions he couldn’t yet answer, fell asleep immediately. The boy slouched into the corner chair baffled and seemed to ask his empty rifle, “Like who’s the guard and who’s the prisoner in this revolution anyway?”
Monday, August 30, 1300 hours
Chisasibi on James Bay
Joe Neetha was the senior Native Peoples Army “commander” in the Chisasibi area, and the only one outside the Committee besides Will Boucanier who knew the names and locations of the James Bay NPA “warrior cells.” Neetha’s family lived in the area of Mistissini where he grew up in the local custom. But Joe had been around; he’d travelled to Radisson, worked in a small store, then as a labourer for Hydro-Québec in town. There he’d fallen in with the native political community and worked for a time in the band office. It was there he was recruited into the Movement. Five years ago, he’d been ordered back to Mistissini to develop his own cell and join the local Canadian Forces Ranger patrol, one of nineteen such units in Quebec.
Although he knew all about the Rangers from living in the North, Joe had made a point of reading up on the group when he signed up. According to the official line, the Canadian Rangers, part-time reservists, provided military units to patrol isolated and coastal communities in Canada. They helped protect Canada’s sovereignty by reporting unusual activities or sightings to the Canadian Forces, especially in the northern region. Defence ministers liked to say that the Rangers played an important role in advancing the self-reliance of Canada’s First Nations and Inuit groups.
Joe remembered laughing when he’d read that – he didn’t believe the average Canadian had any idea how much natives contributed to the defence of the country, but he had to admit that the small Ranger patrols, typically fewer than twenty people, were a highly efficient means of protecting Canadian sovereignty in the sparsely populated North. Ironically, given this purpose, they also provided an organized authority within communities, which made them a prime target for subversion by the Movement. A significant number of Rangers held leadership positions as mayors, chiefs, or band leaders, and had a powerful influence on their peers, especially the youth in the community, who were naturally attracted to the Rangers’ martial image. So strong was the pull of the Rangers that the Canadian Forces in 1996 organized the Junior Canadian Rangers. The program unintentionally provided a perfect cover (as the Movement quickly realized) for indoctrinating new members and leaders into the NPA from