against my orders and disrupted my sense of harmony, he is going to do ten military push ups! And since he is your squad leader, you must do ten military push ups with him, for you are a team!”
Everyone laid on the ground, staring at Joseph from the corner of their eyes, and began their push ups. As soon as they were all done, they ran back on the obstacle course and continued where they left off. This time, Joseph stayed in the middle of the crowd, rather than speed away from the group or fall far behind them.
As the days passed, the recruits began working as a team, even though they did not have a good outlook on Joseph much. Every time Joseph would make a mistake, the entire team would have to endure the same punishment that he was given. Some of the recruits would try and best him in the obstacle course, so as to take his spot as a squad leader. However, they would soon be punished with haste for leaving everyone else behind.
A day later, during lunch, one of the recruits walked over to Joseph, who was alone at the far end of the table, and sat across from him. He was a lean, clean shaven Hispanic guy, who looked to be around nineteen. The number on his dog tag had the number three on it.
“Yo, Number Seven,” Three started. “Seems like you got a lot of hate coming from the other noobs.”
“No kidding,” Joseph replied. “Being Squad Leader sucks.”
“Why not just ask the Lieutenant if you can relinquish that title of yours?”
“Because that would be the same thing as quitting the program, and I don’t plan on quitting. Why? Do you want to be Squad Leader too like everyone else?”
“Oh no,” Three laughed. “Not me. Lieutenant’s been up my business since Day One. If I become Squad Leader, I think everyone is gonna beat me up at night with soap bars tied up in socks.”
Joseph chuckled at Number Three’s sense of humor.
“But you know,” Three continued. “Everyone else has been trying to best you on the obstacle course. Unfortunately for them, you’re too slick. You got wings in those feet of yours? How do you do that?”
“Oh, parkour,” Joseph replied. “Nothing to it, really. Just gotta know when to sprint, when to go a steady pace, when to jump and how to land. I can teach you if you like.”
“You’d do that?”
“Yeah, sure.”
Three knocked on the table he and Joseph sat down on.
“Thank God,” Three responded. “I’m kinda tired of being stuck in the back of the pack.”
Once on the obstacle course, Joseph and Three kept a steady pace juxtaposed of each other. Joseph taught Three how to vault over the logs, properly run up the wall on the course, balance on the beams they had to cross, and glide through the other obstacles on the course in a form that saves their energy while keeping a strong, quick pace. Many of the other recruits saw how the two of them dashed through the course and also stepped in to take some parkour lessons in between