Prologue
“Well, Tir, you
think your plans for the humans are working?”
The
Darhel Ghin waved a stick of incense through the air and placed the message to
the Lords on the Altar of Communication. The background of melodiously chiming
song-crystals and the mirrored silver colonnades aided his contemplation of the
multitudinous alternate futures. At the moment he sorely needed the aid. Most
of the futures looked bleak.
His
Indowy body attendants lifted his robes as he rose and turned to the attendant
Tir. The younger Darhel’s foxlike face was the well-trained mien of a senior Darhel
manager. He returned the Ghin’s ear flick of polite query with total
impassivity. In fact better than two-thirds of the overall plan was in total
disarray, mostly because of the actions of a single lucky individual. Admitting
that, however, was not a route to power. And there was little for this old
fossil to pick apart. The entirety of the plan was known only to himself.
“No
plan unfolds in perfection,” the Tir said smoothly. “That is the purpose of
management.”
The
elfin Ghin flicked his ears again. The gesture was deliberately ambiguous. It
might have been polite agreement. Or it might have been polite disbelief. The
difference was subtle. “We retain Diess.”
The
Ghin deliberately did not ascribe that as a positive or a negative trait.
Destroying the allied human forces arrayed to defend the planet might or might
not have been part of the young pup’s plan. Leaving the statement ambiguous was
a deliberate trap with overtones he doubted the Tir was aware of.
The
Tir flared his nostrils in agreement and glanced at the gathered Indowy. “It is
an important world.” The corporations of Diess were entirely Darhel-controlled
despite the billions of Indowy residents. The laborers of the Federation were
as disposable as bacteria. “The revenue is significant.”
The
Ghin’s nostrils flared. As expected the young fool had sidestepped. “And
Barwhon as well.”
“Regrettably the
human loss there has been great.” The expression he displayed now was one
copied from humans, cat-pupilled vertical-lidded eyes opening wide. The wide
mobile mouth turned down, exposing the edge of sharklike teeth. Even the ears
drooped. It was a subtle and effective expression and one difficult to copy.
Humans would have slumped in apparent defeat as well. Sorrow was not a Darhel
emotion. Hatred, yes. Anger, definitely. Sorrow? No.
The
Ghin took a moment to contemplate his own plans. The Ghin knew that the road to
mastery was not one of plots alone. A clear understanding of reality was
paramount. That the young fool had risen to his current place was a sign that
the quality of the opposition had fallen off.
Or
of a deeply laid plan.
The
Ghin gave an internal flare to the nostrils. No. No deep plans here. His own
plans had every path to the future open to his own designs, and every path shut
to the young fool. There were no flaws in his approach. It was a warm
feeling.
“Your
plan will require further . . . adjustment? You were
frustrated on Diess by the actions of a single human.”
“Yes,
Your Ghin,” agreed the Tir. He had set the trap and the old fool had wandered
right in. “I fear my presence on Earth will be required for the next phase.”
“And
that is?” The Ghin set the targan trap and waited for the quarry.
The
Tir’s face settled into even less readable lines. The next phase was obvious.
Even to this old fool. “The humans must enter the path to enlightenment.
Individuality is an obstacle to oneness that must be overcome.”
“And
you propose to do that how?” The Ghin flicked his ears again in that
deliberately ambiguous manner.
“There
are so many paths to success it would take days to describe. Suffice it to say
that the humans must be pawns to the Path of Enlightenment. Their myth of
individuality shall be crushed and with it their passion. The way of passion is
not the way to success in our current endeavors. Nor is it the way to
enlightenment.”
The
Tir paused, trembling slightly. “The time of heroes is past. And the time of certain
individuals in particular is long past.” The Tir was a master of facial
control, but his control of body language was still spotty. The deep breath and
rippling of muscles along the upper limbs spoke of surging anger.
The
young fool was on the edge of lintatai! The Ghin schooled his face into
immobility. The Tir had been reading his reports and analyses too long. He had
forgotten that, hidden deep beneath the veneer of civilization, the heart of
the Darhel was the heart of a frustrated warrior. This was the very urge that
he now fought. And that heart told the Ghin that his opponent had seriously
miscalculated. Humans would not be so easily vanquished as a threat to Darhel
control.
“I
am joyful that our people have such exquisite leadership,” the Ghin said. Then
he also copied a human expression as his lips drew back in a broad smile. The
glittering teeth of a rending carnivore were exposed for all to see and the
watching Indowy shut their eyes and turned away. None of them had the stupidity
to actually run or otherwise embarrass the Darhel lords, but none of them would
ever forget the sight. “Our future is in good hands.”
Chapter 1
Kabul town was
ours to take—
Blow the trumpet
draw the sword—
I’d ha’ left it
for ’is sake—
’Im that left me
by the ford.
Ford,
ford, ford o’ Kabul river,
Ford o’ Kabul river in the dark!
—“Ford O’ Kabul
River”
Rudyard Kipling
Ttckpt Province,
Barwhon V
1625 GMT November
23rd, 2003 ad
A burst of
machine gun fire took the lead Posleen in the chest. The orange tracer of the
fifth bullet drifted past the crumpling creature as steaming yellow blood
stained the purple ferns of the undergrowth. The company of centaurlike aliens
began to spread to either side as the remainder of the humans opened fire. The
ford behind the humans echoed a liquid chuckle, as if laughing at the poor
soldiers called to their deaths by its aberrant presence.
Captain
Robert Thomas peered through the ever-present mists and whispered a call for
fire as the Posleen deployed. His company was heavily outnumbered by the
approaching Posleen battlegroup and low on soldiers, ammunition and morale. But
they had also dug in on the soggy, forward side of the ford. The unit had a
choice of fight or die. Crossing the ford with the Posleen at their backs would
be a losing proposition.
It
was a desperate position to take, almost suicidal. But unless someone got their
thumbs out and reinforced them, the surprise strike by the Posleen would turn
the flank of the entire Fourth Armored Division. In a situation like this
Thomas knew his duty. Place his soldiers on the deadliest ground possible; when
the choice is death or death, soldiers tend to fight the hardest. It was the
oldest military axiom in the book.
The
heavy vegetation of Barwhon had prevented engaging the centaurs at maximum
range, so it was the sort of point-blank shoot-out that favored the Posleen.
Thomas grunted in anger as his Second platoon’s machine gun section was taken
out by a wash of plasma fire, then snarled as the first God King made an
appearance.
There
were several ways to distinguish the God Kings of the Posleen from the
combatant “normals” that made up the bulk of the Posleen forces. The first
thing was that they were larger than normals, being about seventeen hands at
the complex double shoulder versus the normal’s fourteen to fifteen hands. The
second thing was that they had high feathery crests running along their backs
and opening forward like the ceremonial headdress of the plains Indians. But
the main way to distinguish a God King from its bonded normals was the silvery
ground-effect saucer it rode.
The
device was not only transportation. A pintle-mounted heavy weapon—in this case
a hypervelocity missile launcher—bespoke its prime reason for existence. In
addition the vehicle mounted a mass of sophisticated sensors. Some God Kings
used them actively, others passively, but the sensor suite was just as dangerous
in its own way as the heavy weapon. Denying information to the enemy is the
second oldest lesson of warfare.
However,
in the last year of give-and-take in the jungles of Barwhon V humans had
learned a few lessons about fighting God Kings. All the heavy weapons of the
company redirected their fire to the forces around the saucer as the company’s
sniper targeted the God King and its vehicle.
Well
before the units had left the blue-and-white ball of Terra, the American
military had begun modifying their weapons to deal with the changed threat.
First the venerable M-16 had been replaced with a heavier caliber rifle capable
of stopping the horse-sized Posleen. In addition there had been changes to the
sniper force.
Ever
since snipers were reactivated as a position in the 1980s there had been
debates about the appropriate standard rifle. The debate was ended by a special
operations group deployed to Barwhon. The only reason that any of the
reconnaissance team survived to see the green hills of Earth was the use of a
.50 caliber rifle by the team’s sniper.
The
debate went on over the use of bolt-action versus semiautomatic. However, that
was a debate for military philosophers. The M-82, the semiautomatic
“Murfreesboro Five-Oh,” had become the weapon of choice.
Now
SP4 John Jenkins demonstrated why. He had chosen to set up on a slight mound
behind the company and across the gurgling ford from the likely direction of
contact. His coverall, sewn all over with dangling strips of burlap, made him
invisible to the naked eye. However, the God King’s sensors would not be
fooled. To avoid having the sniper detected, the company had to cover his
actions with mass fire.
As
the M-60s of the three line platoons took the forces around the God King under
heavy fire the specialist triggered a single round from the thirty-pound sniper
rifle. His two-hundred-pound body rocked from the recoil and the saturated
ground under him squished in shock.
The
round that the rifle used was essentially the same one used by the time-honored
M-2 .50 caliber machine gun. Three times the size of a .30-06 round, it had a
muzzle velocity normally associated with antiaircraft cannons. A fraction of a
second after the recoil shoved the heavy-set sniper backwards, the
armor-piercing bullet struck the saucer to the left of the pintle base.
The
Teflon-coated tungsten-cored bullet penetrated the cover of an innocuous box at
the God King’s feet. Then it penetrated the slightly heavier interior wall.
After that it passed through a crystalline matrix. It would have passed
entirely through the matrix but its passage had disturbed the delicate balance
of the power crystals that drove the heavy antigravity sled.
The
power crystals used a charge field to hold molecules in a state of high-order
flexion which permitted tremendous energy to be stored by the crystals.
However, the flexion was maintained by a small field generator embedded deep in
the matrix. When the dynamic shock of the bullet shattered the field generator,
the energy of the crystals was released in a blast equivalent to half a ton of
high explosives.
The
God King vanished in a green actinic flash along with better than half his
company as the shrapnel from the shattered saucer washed outward. The fireball
consumed the two dozen remaining senior normals immediately around the saucer
and the blast and shrapnel killed better than a hundred and fifty more.
The
first volley of cluster ammunition artillery seemed almost anticlimactic to
Captain Thomas. The next wave of Posleen disagreed.
* * *
“Echo
Three Five this is Pappa One Six, over,” Thomas whispered hoarsely. The past
two hours had been a blur of charging Posleen, hammering artillery and dying
soldiers. He felt that they were about done. He blew on his hand to warm it and
stared out at the battlefield. The slope down to their position was littered
with Posleen corpses but the damn horses just kept coming. As usual, there was
no way to tell how many more there were—aerial reconnaissance was a distant
memory in the face of the God King sensors and weapons. But there were at least
two thousand scattered in front of his company. The bare hundred soldiers he
had brought to the table had destroyed twenty times their number.
However,
the horrific casualty ratios were beside the point. He was down to less than a
reinforced platoon and the next push should slice through them like a hot knife
through butter. The problem with fighting the Posleen was rarely killing them;
the problem was killing enough of them to matter. Unless the promised
reinforcements arrived he was going to have destroyed his whole company for
nothing. Having been on Barwhon since the first day the Allied Expeditionary
Force arrived, the captain could handle killing his entire company. It had
happened before and it would happen again; the unit had had two hundred percent
turnover in personnel in the last year. But it irked him when it was for
nothing.
He
dropped back into his water-filled foxhole. The cold, viscous liquid came up to
his waist when he sat on the bottom. He ignored the discomfort—mud was as
common on Barwhon as death—slid another clip of twenty-millimeter grenades into
his AIW and called brigade again. “Echo
Three Five this is Pappa One Six, over.”
No response. He pulled a steel mirror out of his thigh pocket and held it up
where he could see the battlefield. The tired officer shook his head, put the
mirror away and jacked a grenade into place.
He
moved to a kneeling position and took a deep breath. With a convulsive lunge he
popped up and fired a string of grenades into a set of normals that looked
ready to charge.
In
general, once their God Kings were killed the normals gave one burst for glory
then ran. But some of them were more aggressive than others. This group was
hanging around, exchanging some fairly effective fire and generally being a
pain in the ass. Since most of his troops were scrounging ammunition, patching
wounds and preparing for the next heavy assault they did not have time to deal
with harassment. This would have been Jenkins’s job, but he had bought it almost
an hour before. So the company commander spun another group of grenades at the
idiot centaurs, dropped back into his hole and switched out magazines. Again.
Overhead flechette rounds flailed his hole for a moment and then stopped.
Posleen normals were so stupid they had eclipsed all other ethnic jokes.
“Echo
Three Five, this is Pappa One Six,”
he whispered into the microphone. “We are under heavy attack. Estimate
regimental strength or better. We need reinforcements. Over.” His company was
good; after this long they had to be. But ten-to-one odds was a little much
without prepared defenses. Hell, ten-to-one against the Posleen with prepared
defenses was a little much. What was needed was a concrete or rubble wall and a
moat filled with punji stakes. Not a company on the ass-end of nowhere and
barely enough time to dig in. No mines, no claymores, no concertina and damn
sure no support.
The
radio crackled. “Pappa One Six,
this is Echo Three Five, actual.” At that moment Captain Thomas knew he was
screwed. If the brigade commander was calling it could only mean the shit had
truly hit the fan.
“Situation
understood. The second of the one-ninety-eighth was ambushed during movement to
reinforce you. We have at least another regiment moving uncoordinated in the
brigade’s rear area.”
In
the pause Thomas closed his eyes in realization of what that meant. With over
two thousand Posleen in the brigade’s vulnerable rear, there was no way they
were going to be able to spare reinforcements.
“Your
retreat route is impassable, Captain. There are Posleen all over it.” There was
another pause. The sigh at the other end was clear even over the
frequency-clipping radio. “It is
imperative that you hold your position. If we have time we can handle this. But
if another oolt’ondar breaks in
right now the whole salient will be in jeopardy.” There was another pause as
the colonel on the other end of the phone tried to find something else to say.
Captain Thomas
thought about what it must be like to be on the other end of the phone. The
brigade commander had been here as long as Thomas and they knew each other
well; the commander had pinned on Thomas’s first lieutenant and captain’s bars.
Now he was sitting in the heated tactical operations center, staring at the
radio, telling one of his subordinate commanders that the situation had just
murdered him. That he and his whole unit were nothing but centaur fodder. And
that they not only had to die, but that they had to die as hard as possible.
Die alone and forlorn in the cold purple mists.
Half
the unit was veterans, the usual proportion in experienced combat units. After
the first week of firefights most of the non-survivors were gone. As time went
by the occasional veteran would be killed and the occasional newbie would
survive. The two-hundred-percent turnover generally occurred in the newbies who
did not learn fast enough. At this point in the battle Captain Thomas figured
that most of the newbies had already bought it and those remaining were mainly
veterans. That meant that they might just die as hard as brigade wanted them
to.
He
shook his head and stared up into the violet sky. He closed his eyes for just a
moment and tried to conjure up the sky over Kansas. The smell of baking wheat
and the hot, dry wind of the prairie. The blue bowl of the sky on a cool autumn
day as the sky seemed to stretch to infinity. Then with a final sigh he
switched the radio to the local frequency and keyed the mike.
Staff
Sergeant Bob Duncan closed the sightless eyes of the captain and looked around.
The autoprojector
of his helmet system sensed the tensing of his neck muscles and swiveled the
viewpoint around the area of the ford. Target points and intelligence
information—trickled deep into his eyes by tiny laser diodes—cascaded across
his view unnoticed. Calculations of Posleen and human casualties flickered
across the top of his view as the artificial intelligence that drove the armor
calculated blood stains and damage assessment. The soft puffs of recycled air
that drifted across his mouth and nose were, fortunately, devoid of smell.
Nannites swarmed across his eyelids, automatically collecting the water that
threatened to drown the vision tunnel.
The
powered combat armor automatically adjusted the light levels so they remained
constant. The resulting lack of shadows gave the scenery a flat look. After a
year and a half of combat Duncan had become so used to it the effect was
unnoticeable unless he took his armor off. Since that had last happened nearly
six weeks before, “real” vision seemed abnormal.
The
advancing Posleen forces had done their usual bang-up job of removing all the
corpses from the battlefield. Since humans and Posleen were both edible, they
considered humans nothing but tactical problems or rations. The Posleen word
for human was “threshkreen.” It translated more or less as “food with a
stinger.” Which made the captain’s unmolested body all the more unusual.
Duncan
picked up the stick thrust into the ground beside the officer. Duncan had seen
one exactly twice before, both times when bodies of commanders were left
unmolested. This time, however, the body was on a mound of dirt that must have
taken some time to construct. Duncan examined the indecipherable writing on the
stick for a moment then picked the stiffening corpse up in his arms. The body’s
weight was as nothing to the powered battle armor, light as a feather with the
soul fled to some region beyond this blood-torn realm. He started trotting.
“Duncan,”
called his platoon sergeant, first noting the movement on sensors then turning
to eyeball the retreating suit. “Where the hell do you think you’re going?”
Duncan
appeared deaf. He continued to trot back along the trail the suits had used to
retake the ford. Here was where the Posleen regiment from the ford had made its
stand. The gigantic trees of the Barwhon jungle were flayed, their branches
stripped of leaves, massive trunks shattered from heavy-weapons fire.
There
was where the last of the scattered Posleen regiment had been overrun. A final
pile of bodies indicated where the normals piled on their beleaguered God Kings
in a last-ditch attempt to save them from the advancing armored monsters. A
pile of combat suits attested to their effectiveness when cornered.
There
was where the suits had been ambushed in turn. A God King corpse—pooling yellow
blood staining the ground—was sprawled across a shattered suit awaiting
recovery. No miracles of modern technology for that trooper; the readouts of
the armor showed the telltale signs of a penetration.
Once
a Posleen penetrator round entered a suit it tended to stay inside, caroming
around like a blender blade. The only sign of damage on the armor was a tiny
hole. It still leaked red. Private Arnold was a newbie and with his pureeing
the company of one hundred and thirty nominal suits was down to fifty-two
functional. That fifty-two had been reduced to forty by the time the unit
retook the ford.
Duncan
continued on in the ground-eating lope of the armored combat suits. His mind
was a blank, without purpose or desire, simply cruising on autopilot.
He
finally entered the area of the brigade command. The scattered positions were
already being reconsolidated. The damaged vehicles were under repair or being
towed off as graves’ registration teams moved around “taggin’ and baggin’ ” the
bodies of the dead soldiers. Each of the casualties was being fitted with a tag
indicating name, location, unit and general nature of death; then the bodies
were loaded into black plastic body bags for processing and burial. The cleanup
crews would get to the swath of destruction from the armored combat suits in
their own good time. The swath from the Posleen, of course, would not need
them.
Duncan
finally slowed as he neared the brigade’s tactical operations center. He noted
without caring the expressions on the faces of the MPs at the entrance and the
platoon of troops dug-in around the command post.
The
Galactic-supplied combat suits were made without any face shields; their visual
repeaters took the place of that possible weakness. The MPs and security troops
were faced with a featureless front of faceted plasteel that was impregnable to
any Terrestrial weapon; a similar suit had survived a blast from a nuclear
weapon. Although there were a few hypervelocity missile launchers in the area,
there were none at the TOC. So there was no stopping this juggernaut unless
reason or orders worked.
One
of the MPs decided to try. She was either braver or more foolish than her
fellow as she stepped out into Duncan’s path and held up a hand like a traffic
cop.
“Hold
it right there, soldier. I don’t care if you are Fleet, you don’t have
authorit—” Duncan never even slowed and the half-ton suit tossed her aside like
a rag doll. Her fellow MP rushed to her side but other than a bruised rib and
an assault on her dignity she was unharmed.
The
TOC was three prefabricated structures hooked together. The doors were not
designed to accommodate armored combat suits but that was moot. The door and
frame resisted his suit as well as wet tissue paper and he continued through
the briefing area and down a short hall to the commander’s office. The startled
brigade staff followed him.
The
brigade commander had his door open. He watched the battle-scorched apparition
stalk down the hall towards him without expression. The suit was covered in
gouges from glancing hits and splattered with drying Posleen blood. It looked
like a mechanical demon from some hell devoted to battle. As the commander
recognized who was cradled in the arms of the suit his expression altered,
becoming terrible and fey.
Duncan
walked up to the commander’s desk and gently set the captain’s husk on the
scattered papers. One of Barwhon’s ubiquitous beetles hovered over the open
mouth and terribly disfigured face. The mortal blow of a Posleen combat blade
had opened the side of Thomas’s head like an egg.
Duncan
tapped a control on the forearm of the suit, activating the surface speakers.
“I brought him home,” he said.
The
colonel continued to stare up at the angled slab of plasteel armor in front of
his desk. The suit radiated heat from blows of kinetic energy weapons, and the
stink of putrefying Posleen was thick and hot. He started to open his mouth to
speak, but stopped and worked his mouth as if trying to clear his throat.
“I
brought him home,” said Duncan again, and laid the stick across the captain’s
body.
The
symbol was one that had become universally familiar since the landing. Many
were to be found among the rear area troopers, each supposedly authentic. In
fact there had only been eight confirmed recoveries of them and the real ones
were all accounted for, all carefully laid to rest with their owners. Between
them the owners of the staffs had collected four Medals of Honor, three
Distinguished Service Crosses and Silver Stars innumerable. The staff alone was
guarantee of at least the Star. The colonel’s hand went over his mouth and
unmanly tears coursed down his cheeks at the sight of the ninth. He cleared his
throat again and took a deep breath.
“Thank
you, Sergeant,” he said, tearing his eyes away from the warrior staff. “Thank
you.” The suit was swaying in front of his eyes and for a moment he thought it
was an optical illusion. But it was soon apparent it was not. Duncan dropped to
his knees with a rumble that shook the flimsy building and wrapped his arms
around himself.
What
was going on inside the suit was impossible to discern, but the colonel had a
very good idea. He got up and walked around the desk, with a passing pat on the
shoulder to his former subordinate now leaking red all over a report titled
“Manpower Requirements FY 2003.” The colonel crouched down and put his arm
around the shoulders of the gigantic suit.
“Come
on, Sergeant,” he said as tears continued to course down his cheek. “Let’s get
you out of that suit.”
CHAPTER 2
Ft. Indiantown
Gap, PA, United States of America, Sol III
1423 EST January
18th, 2004 ad
It shouldn’t
oughta be this way,
thought Lieutenant Colonel Frederic (Fred) Hanson.
The
incoming commander of the First Battalion Five-Fifty-Fifth Mobile Infantry
Regiment had years before retired from the Army as an Eighty-Second Airborne
Division brigade executive officer. He was familiar from long experience with
monumental screwups, but this one took the grand prize.
The
way a unit is usually activated—from scratch or from “regimental reserve”—is
from the top down. The commanders of the activated units would meet with their
officers and work through a plan of activation. The plan could either be
supplied or one they developed themselves. In good time the various senior
noncommissioned officers would arrive, usually with the subordinate commanders
and staff. Then the soldiers would arrive, before the staff was ready but after
all the officers and NCOs basically had their feet under them. The equipment
would arrive, training schedules would be finalized and the units would begin
to come together. Slowly they would become a unit instead of a collection of
individuals. In time they would be sent off to war—rarely are units pulled from
storage in peacetime—and the hard work of the formation would be forgotten in
the harder work of combat.
Under
the best of circumstances it is a careful dance of supplying the right number
of officers and NCOs along with their equipment. In any war the cannon fodder
is the easiest to lay your hands on and trained and confident junior officers
the hardest.
In
the case of the First Battalion, Five-Fifty-Fifth MIR—or for that matter any of
the battalions forming throughout the world—the process did not occur so
smoothly. Fred Hanson thought he had seen every possible combination of
mistakes the United States Army had in store. As the borrowed Humvee pulled
into the activation area he was forced to admit he was wrong. This time the
Army had made one small mistake, actually microscopic, with macroscopic
implications.
The Terran
Ground Defense Commands—the various national armies of earth—were not worried
about trained personnel. In return for humanity’s help in battling the
Posleen, one of the first technologies offered by the Galactic Federation was a
rejuvenation process. A long-retired senior officer could take a graduated
series of shots, possibly go through a few simple surgical procedures, and drop
away years. Within a few weeks, months at most, the patient would end up an
apparent twenty or so. Thus many of the senior military personnel retired over
the previous decades were available for recall in a time of planetary need.
There was, however, one tiny difficulty.
The
rejuvenation program was matrixed on a combination of final rank and present
age. An E-9, a Sergeant Major in the Army or a Senior Master Chief in the Navy,
would be called up if he or she were within forty years of service, an E-8
within 39. The scale progressed down to the point where a soldier or sailor who
left the service as an E-1 could be called up within twenty years of service.
Officers followed a similar matrix.
The
personnel of the first enlisted and officer ranks who had been out of service
longest were the first called up and rejuvenated. Thus, in the United States,
there was a sudden influx of extremely senior officers and NCOs, many of whom
last heard a shot fired in anger during the Tet Offensive.
Simultaneously
there was a general call-up of personnel shortly out of service and a universal
draft. This created a rush of lower-ranking officers and NCOs along with a mass
of low-rank enlisted. The rejuv program was designed to supply an equivalent
number of field-grade officers, the military’s equivalent of middle management.
There
was a gap, but there would be more than sufficient capacity to provide command
structure and unit integrity. For the first time in the history of an emergency
call-up, there would be an overabundance of trained enlisted and commissioned
personnel.
The
two programs were carefully and strategically timed so that there would be
enough recalled senior officers and NCOs to fill all the slots allotted to
them. If all went well, before the second lieutenants, first
lieutenants and captains along with their respective platoon sergeants and
first sergeants got to their units, the brigade and battalion commanders and
staff would be in place with their feet on the ground, their “warpaint” on, and
an activation plan ready to get into gear.
Unfortunately
for the plan, about the time the rejuvenation program reached the level of
master sergeants and full colonels, brigade commanders and very senior staff
officers, the nannites started to run low. While Galactic technology was
impressive, Galactic production capacity was hampered by cottage-industry
techniques. As with combat technology, human techniques were slowly gaining
currency. That did not, however, help with the critical nannite shortage.
There
was virtually no way to slow down the training and deployment of the new draft
and the recalled prior service that did not need rejuvenation, so suddenly the
Army and Navy had a whole bunch of chiefs and quite a few Indians but not many
people to help them communicate.
Colonel
Hanson had been briefed on the situation so the sight of trailers stretching
off into the distance was not a shock, but the conditions were.
The
area was a former live-fire range. He had spent one hot nasty week there as an
observer/controller and he remembered it well. Now it was the snowy home of two
regular infantry divisions and a Fleet Strike Armored Combat Suit battalion
along with support for the activated but still widely distributed Twenty-eighth
Mechanized Division formerly of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard.
There
were twenty-six thousand personnel on the Table of Organization and Equipment
of an infantry division and almost eight hundred in an ACS battalion. Hanson
was one of the first crop of O-5 and below to be rejuvenated and he knew that
this seething mass of humanity was critically short on senior officers.
The
trailers were laid out in battalion and brigade formations with the battalion
offices to the notional front and the battalion commander’s, staff’s, and
senior NCOs’ housing to either side. To either side of this “headshed”
formation was a company street. Stretching down one side of the company street
behind the battalion area were the company offices surrounded by officers’ and
senior NCOs’ quarters and supply. Across the street were the enlisted barracks.
Each enlisted barracks held fourteen personnel in six two-man rooms and two
single rooms for squad leaders.
The
companies of one battalion backed on a parade field; across the field was
another battalion and the process started again. However, there were over nine
thousand trailers in a mass a couple of miles on a side. And, although the
personnel were theoretically barracked with NCOs nearby, most of these people
were not even soldiers yet, much less
units, and the senior NCOs,
E-6s, -7s and -8s, were virtually absent.
By
the time the rejuv situation turned critical, the pipeline was already full of
incoming soldiers. Since basic trainees need constant supervision, the majority
of the incoming senior NCOs were going to training units. Battalions in that
seething mass were being commanded by captains and companies by brand-new
second lieutenants. Most of the companies had staff sergeants as first
sergeants, if they were lucky, and often only sergeant E-5s. Without the
backbone of a solid NCO and officer corps, command and control was spotty. The
children were all home but the parents were trickling in late.
So
he had been told by the G-1 Personnel Officer of the Fifteenth Mechanized
Infantry Division, and the picture was worse than any briefing could paint. He
saw sections of the canton where control had obviously broken down completely.
There was laundry strung on the walls of the barracks, garbage littering the
company streets and soldiers openly fighting. Groups of soldiers huddled around
fires, some of them in shreds of uniform that must barely be fighting off the
Pennsylvania winter cold. One block was a mass of fire-torn trailers where a
party had apparently gotten out of hand. Other areas were orderly, reflecting
the attitudes of the junior officers and NCOs put in charge.
Without
his battalion commanders and brigade and battalion staffs in place, the
activation commander effectively had his hands tied. There was absolutely no
way for a few generals, a handful of “bird” colonels and some sergeant majors
to police fifty thousand people. The entire activation had been based on the
rejuv program and with that prop kicked out it had fallen apart. Food and
supplies were arriving and that was all the rampant juvenile delinquents in the
cantonment cared about.
As
the Humvee pulled into “his” battalion area Colonel Hanson wanted to cry. It
was one of the “bad” areas, the kind of block he would have been loath to walk
in without a weapon and body armor. He gestured for the driver to pull down a
company street and was appalled. The battalion area was nice enough. It had a
rock-bordered entrance to the headquarters and the sidewalks were shoveled and
swept. But with one exception the company areas were a disgrace. He could see
sections of the barracks that had been ripped away in apparently casual
vandalism and garbage covered the ground.
As
the driver swung around the back side of the battalion area he saw that the
last company was quite neat. Furthermore it had posted guards clad in Fleet
Strike gray “combat silks” outside the company offices and was running two-man
patrols between the barracks. Since the weapons were M-300 grav-guns the show
of force was impressive. The M-300 weighed twenty-three pounds—the same as the
Vietnam-era M-60 machine gun which it resembled—but most of the soldiers in
sight handled them easily. Their obvious fitness and gray combat silks were the
first good news he had seen.
The
thin uniforms were supposed to be proof against any normal cold and so it
seemed; the lightly clad soldiers were handling the windy winter day with
aplomb. Although combat silks were officially the daily uniform of Fleet Strike
units, most personnel elsewhere in the battalion seemed to be wearing BDUs and
field jackets. It also answered the question of whether any GalTech equipment
was available. What the acting battalion commander had to say about wearing the
uniform might be instructive. Colonel Hanson wondered why the rest of the
battalion was out of uniform and where he was going to get his own set of
silks.
He
gestured for the driver to pull up in front of the company headquarters.
“Go
take my bags to my quarters. Then head back to headquarters.” He wished he
could keep him—the kid seemed well turned out and smart—but the G-1 had been
specific, “Send the driver back along with his Humvee, clear?”
“Yes,
sir.”
“If
anybody gives you any flack over at my quarters, come get me. I’ll be with the
Bravo Company commander.” He gestured at the company headquarters with a thumb.
“Yes,
sir.”
As
Colonel Hanson headed up the snowy path to the trailer the two guards came to
attention to a barked “Atten-hut” from the right-hand guard. The guard could
see that it was just a baby-faced kid walking into the headquarters, but the
kid had been riding in a Humvee and wheels were hard to find. Ergo, it was not
a kid; it was a rejuvenated officer or NCO and it looked like an officer. When
the private first class finally determined that the black rank on the kid’s BDU
collar was oak leaves, he blessed his prescience. The two dropped back to
parade rest at a returned salute and traded shrugs after the colonel entered
the trailer. The senior private blew on his frigid hands and gave a quiet
smile. By the appearance of the commander, things were going to go either very
well or very poorly for Bravo Company. And he was willing to take book which it
would be.
Colonel
Hanson was surprised and pleased to see a CQ—a sergeant detailed for a
twenty-four-hour period to be in charge of the company area—standing behind a
table inside the door at the position of attention. The slight, dark-haired
sergeant, who did not look old enough to shave, saluted.
“Sir,
Sergeant Stewart, Bravo Company, First Battalion, Five-Fifty-Fifth Mobile
Infantry. How may I help you, sir?”
The
sergeant was either a refurb, or well trained, and Colonel Hanson could not
tell off-the-cuff which it was.
“Well,
Sergeant,” he said, returning the salute, “you can show me to the company
commander’s office and get me a cup of coffee if it’s available. Water if not.”
“Yes,
sir,” said the sergeant, rather too loudly. Fred wondered why, until he
realized that it would probably be audible through the paper-thin walls. He
smiled internally as the sergeant continued in the same loud tone. “If the Colonel will just follow me to the commander’s
office, I’ll see about the coffee!” Colonel Hanson kept from
laughing with only marginal success as a small snort slipped out.
“Pardon,
sir?” asked Sergeant Stewart as he led the colonel down a corridor on one side
of the trailer.
“Cough.”
“Yes,
sir.”
The
narrow passage to one side of the trailer passed one door labeled “Swamp,” a
second labeled “Latrine” and a third, which showed signs of repair, labeled
“First Sergeant.” At the end of the corridor the area opened out to reveal a
desk with someone who was probably the company clerk behind it at attention. On
the table was a cup of coffee and the private’s position was ruined by having a
pitcher of cream in his left hand. He saluted.
“Cream,
sir?”
“Black.
Do you have sugar?”
“Sir!”
The private held up a handful of packets.
“One,
please.” The sugar was dumped and stirred as Sergeant Stewart knocked on the
door.
“Enter,”
came a raspy voice from the interior.
Normally
on taking over a unit the incoming commander had the option of studying his
officers’ open records—their 201 files as they were called—and the officers’
efficiency reports. In addition he was able to discuss the strengths and
weaknesses of his subordinate personnel with the outgoing commander. In this
case the G-1 admitted he was only able to provide the officers’ names, and
that with difficulty. The information systems were as confused as everything
else and in most cases officers’ files were still in storage in St. Louis. All
that Colonel Hanson remembered was that his Bravo Company commander was named
O’Neal.
“Sir,
a Lieutenant Colonel Hanson is here to see you,” Stewart said through the
doorway, respectfully.
Colonel Hanson had pegged Stewart immediately
as one of those individuals in any command who can make or break a small unit.
He would have to be in charge of something and needed to respect his leaders
or he would be running all over them in short order. So the deference he showed
towards his company commander told Fred something. Of course the condition of
the company had told Colonel Hanson something already but that could be due to
several causes. This Captain O’Neal could have an enormously effective senior
sergeant, he could be a martinet, and so forth. But O’Neal had at least one
hard case eating out of his hand and that said everything necessary about his
leadership. Now if he only had some tactical sense.
Thus
Fred Hanson thought he showed admirable control when a squat juggernaut who,
despite the faint sheen of sweat from a recent workout, was immediately
recognizable from numerous TV appearances rolled through the door. Hanson
noticed in passing the scars still on O’Neal’s forearm as the captain saluted.
“Captain
Michael O’Neal, sir, Commander, Bravo Company First Battalion, Five-Fifty-Fifth
Mobile Infantry Regiment. How may I help you, sir?”
Fred
Hanson slowly returned the salute, as properly as he had ever done in his life.
That’s how you do it when returning the salute of a holder of the Medal of
Honor.
“Lieutenant
Colonel Frederic Hanson,” said the colonel into the silence. “I’m about to
assume command of the One-Five-Five-Five and I thought you might like to come
along.”
Fred
thought he saw a brief flash of suppressed glee go across O’Neal’s face but the
shuffle of Stewart’s boots was the only sound in the silence that followed that
announcement.
“Yes,
sir. I’d like that main well. Stewart, go find the Gunny then come up to
battalion.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Shall
we?” asked the baby-faced battalion commander.
“After
you, sir,” answered O’Neal, his eyes shining.
“I
think that went rather well,” said the colonel, shutting the door on the
departing major.
“Yes,
sir. I think Major Stidwell will be a real asset at post headquarters,” agreed
O’Neal. “Although he might want to be a tad more careful about who he calls a
‘snot-nosed kid’ next time.”
“I
also suspect,” continued the colonel with a slight grin at the memory, “that
despite whatever damage this might have done to his career, any complaints that
Major Stidwell might voice will be pro forma.”
“Surely
you’re not questioning the major’s, uhm, intestinal fortitude are you, sir?”
“Not
really,” Colonel Hanson said, glancing over the battalion commander’s desk at
his most junior company commander. The new battalion commander started taking
down the late Major Stidwell’s extensive “I-love-me” wall. As a piece or
individually it was impressive. From his West Point diploma to his graduation
from Command and Staff College Major Stidwell seemed to have all the merit
badges any field-grade infantry officer could ever wish. A graduate of both
Ranger School and Special Forces Qualification Course, when in uniform Major
Stidwell would be entitled to wear the “Tower of Power”: the three stacked tabs
of Ranger, Special Forces and Airborne qualification. He was a holder of the PT
badge and probably could make a fire with only two sticks.
But
somewhere along the line the major had somehow missed the whole concept. What
was conspicuously absent were plaques from previous commands. There were two
possibilities and, without having seen his personnel file, Colonel Hanson could
not decide which was more likely. Either Stidwell was so disliked by his
commands that they celebrated his leaving without any sign of regret or he had
had very few leadership positions. On second thought, it had to be the latter;
some sycophant would always gin up a plaque no matter how disastrous your
tenure.
“Although
Major Stidwell seems to have all the requisite abilities to be a commander,”
the colonel professed, gesturing at the wall, “sometimes that does not mean a
person has command ability. Often an inability to command can be masked in
peacetime by an able staff. However, during times of stress when quick and
accurate decisions must be made without benefit of objectively correct answers
or able staff support, the inability to lead becomes crystal clear. I suspect that
Major Stidwell can function as a junior officer quite well and may even be
exemplary as a senior staff officer but is incompetent as a commander,
especially a combat commander.” He concluded the lecture with a shrug. “It
happens.”
“Are
you supposed to discuss the merits of senior officers with junior officers,
sir?” Mike asked, leaning back in a rickety armchair, probably acquired from
post stores after being rejected by a dayroom as too old and worn out.
“Well,
Captain,” the colonel responded, “there are junior officers and junior
officers. In your case you can be sure that I will discuss with you anything
that I believe will help you in your military development and I will in turn
solicit your advice on ACS tactics on a regular basis. I don’t intend to take
everything you say as gospel. But I will listen.”
“Because
of the Medal?” Mike asked with studied casualness as he pulled a cigar out of
the sleeve of his gray silks.
It
was not the first time Colonel Hanson had heard of Michael O’Neal. He was That
O’Neal. Mighty Mite. Ironman O’Neal, the hero of Diess. Colonel Hanson had
known more than one real hero in his military career and he knew that without
being there it was impossible to determine what actions might or might not have
occurred when a medal, especially the Medal, was handed out. Sometimes the most
heroic stories turned out to be so much bullshit while others that seemed
simple turned out to be unexpectedly complex. Some real heroes were braggarts,
some quiet. Often heroes were simply in the wrong place and survived. Sometimes
everything was exactly as indicated.
In the case of
Michael O’Neal, the sequence of events that led to him being showered with
medals was as analyzed, dissected and researched as any sequence in the history
of military operations. When the media got as carried away as they did with
O’Neal’s story there was an inevitable reaction. First he was idolized, then
the media tried to pick the story apart. It never found any detail to be any
less than it appeared at first glance. Arguably the story had been understated.
As
an advisor on armored combat suit tactics to the Diess Expeditionary Force,
then-Lieutenant O’Neal had taken command of remnants of the Armored Combat Suit
battalion to which he was attached after it had a drastic encounter with the
first wave of Posleen. The platoon-sized band, initially weaponless due to a
fuel-air explosion that had swept away their suit-mounted weaponry, ended up
breaking the Posleen siege of the armored divisions of the expeditionary force.
Along the way they killed a plurality of the Posleen in the attack and
destroyed a Posleen command ship that had come in for close support of the
Posleen forces. O’Neal had accomplished this last feat by the simple expedient
of flying his command suit up to the ship and detonating an improvised
antimatter limpet mine by hand.
The
armor enclosing the young man across from him, who was now examining a cigar as
if it were a weapon on guard mount, had been blown five kilometers through the
air and several buildings. Finally that particular bit of detritus along with
what was left of O’Neal had skipped a further two kilometers out to sea and
sunk. Weeks later it was found by a SEAL recovery team homing in on the
automated beacon and glad to find a half a billion credits’ worth of combat
suit partially intact. To their surprise the armor announced that the occupant
was viable.
“Not
just the medal. More the way you kept your company together. That’s the sign
of a good commander.”
“Good
command team, sir, pardon the correction. Gunny Pappas is tops.”
“They sent us a
Marine? I thought they were mostly going to Fleet.” The way that the Galactic
Federation fought the war against the Posleen had caused numerous schisms in
the way the United States military did its job. The aliens’ Federation
supported their Fleet from funds drawn on all two hundred-plus planets of the
Federation.
However,
planets that were actively engaged against the Posleen had to fund their own
ground defenses. In the case of established planets, corporations whose trade
would be affected drew on multiple planets to fund the defense. The planet
Diess, which O’Neal had served on, drew forces from the spectrum of Earth’s
armies. However, the planet Barwhon, which despite its lack of industry had
more monetary resources to draw on, was being defended only by “NATO” troops.
Since
Earth had only heard of the Federation three and a half years before, it was
without any monetary support other than whatever it could raise by selling its
military forces to the highest bidder, which also served to train Earth’s
forces for its own impending invasion, now less than two years away. Despite
the situation, it seemed impossible to become politically cohesive and prepare
as one planet for the invasion. This caused a number of compromises.
Some
Fleet Strike forces were detailed directly to the Fleet, while others were
detailed to the planets either under attack or about to be attacked. In the
case of the Earth, those units detailed to Terran defense were to be retained
for their parent countries’ usage, while still being under the Fleet’s
regulations and chain of command. However, Fleet personnel were drawn primarily
from Terran navies. And Fleet Strike forces—the ground combat, special
operations and fighter forces—were drawn from each country’s Marine, Aviation
and Special Operations units.
Because
of the size of the United States and NATO’s Navy, Marines, Airborne and
Special Operations, the defense Fleet was heavily influenced by NATO with
Russia and China a close second. Virtually every Fleet Strike ground unit was
found in those four areas with one battalion in Japan. There were howls of
outrage over the patent injustice from the Third World, but this time nobody
had time to listen.
The
force situation and alien technology had modified some long-standing traditions
in the United States military. Fleet Strike’s American contingent now consisted
of the First through Fourth Fleet Strike Divisions, drawn from the Marines, the
82nd, 101st and 11th Divisions along with
the 508th, 509th, 555th, and 565th Separate Regiments, all
drawn from the Airborne. The Marine and Airborne Units were or would soon be
Armored Combat Suit units, mobile infantry units whose personnel fought encased
in powered battle armor and wielded grav-guns that hurled depleted uranium
teardrops at relativistic speeds or plasma cannons that could go through the
side of a World War II battleship.
Since
the Fleet Strike personnel placement system no longer recognized a difference
between Marine and Airborne there were occasional situations that were
extremely nontraditional. A Marine Gunnery Sergeant might be ordered to a unit
that was drawn from the Airborne tradition or an Airborne commander put in
charge of a Marine unit. There were more Airborne personnel and senior officers
than Marine, so to cantilever the Airborne influence all senior battalion and
brigade NCOs could be called “Gunny” although the actual rank was being slowly
phased out. Fleet Strike’s American Command Post, however, was at Twenty Nine Palms,
a former Marine base. And their dress uniforms, while drawing heavily on
certain well-known science fiction TV shows, were dark blue piped with red, the
color of Marine Dress Blues. The Airborne establishment found itself busy
playing catch-up.
A
small ceremonial contingent of American Marines remained, passing back and
forth between Fleet and the Presidential Guard. They were the only Terran
forces under the sole and direct command of a country that wore battle armor.
America, with not only tremendous economic clout but equally great military
renown, was the only country with an off-planet credit high enough to afford
the incredibly expensive suits.
“Yes,
sir,” said O’Neal with a characteristic frown. “An actual Marine Gunny, long,
long service. He’s a hippie.”
“Hippie?”
“What
they call a Vietnam vet. Real old timer.”
“Well,
I suppose us hippies will have to talk over old times,” said the commander with
a smile.
“Jesus,
sir!” said Mike, looking at the apparently teenage colonel in surprise. “You’re
for real?”
“I
took a company of the One-Oh-One into Happy Valley in Vietnam,” said the
colonel with a suppressed shudder at the memory. “I started off as a butter bar
with the One-Eighty-Seventh.”
“Hmmm.
Well, at least I won’t have to explain who Janis Joplin is.”
“It
is damn strange, isn’t it?” said the commander, tossing another piece of
“I-Love-Me” claptrap into a box. “How the hell do you separate the wheat from
the chaff? The regimental commander is forty years younger than me. When I was
retiring he was a second lieutenant. I’m glad I didn’t know him; I can imagine
what my memories of him would do to our relationship.”
“What
about his memories of you, sir? Can you imagine if you wrote him a bad OER back
when?”
“However,
like your first sergeant . . .”
“He’s
a Marine,” said O’Neal with a chuckle. “Yes, sir, I know. Well, as long as we
don’t have to take any beaches everything should be fine. Actually I kind of
prefer a Marine for this.”
Colonel
Hanson looked at him quizzically as he dropped the last plaque into the box. “Pourquois?”
Mike
suddenly looked grim as he held up the cigar with his own querying expression.
At a nod he lit it with a Zippo emblazoned with a black panther on a rock.
Drawing in a series of puffs he said, “Well, sir . . .” puff,
“the Airborne has a tradition,” puff, puff, “of in and out.
Wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am.” Puff. “Also, the Airborne tradition is, practically,
for hit and run.” Deep draw, puff. “Hmmm, El Sol Imperials. Damn hard to find,
what with the shortages.” He dropped the affectation with a sudden intensity,
stabbing the cigar as if to drive in the points.
“This
situation is much more like the Marine tradition, especially the tradition of
World War II and Korea. Take a hard objective. Hold it against all comers,
against human-wave attacks with critical shortages and damn little support.
Hold at all cost and die to the last stinking soldier if necessary, killing as
many as humanly possible the whole time. No retreat, no surrender, no quarter.
Sir.”
Mike
had a sudden vision of a narrow clay street with towering skyscrapers to either
side. The street was packed with yellow centaurs, the horse-sized invaders in a
bayonet to boma-blade battle with a beleaguered German panzer grenadier
division. The bodies of the Posleen and Germans were piled in mounds, blocking
his way. Their red and yellow bloods had commingled and an orange river was
flowing into the alien sea.
He
tilted his head down and fiddled for a moment with his cigar as he struggled
to throw off the flashback. “Damn, it went out.”
Colonel
Hanson dropped into his swivel chair as Mike pulled the Zippo back out. He
reached into his breast pocket and produced a pack of Marlboro Reds. It had
taken him years to break the habit, but the Galactics had a pill to do that now
and besides they had eliminated cancer, heart disease and emphysema for
military personnel so . . . “You okay, Captain?” he asked as he
tapped out a coffin nail.
“Yes,
sir. I am just peachy-keen,” said Mike, meeting his eye steadily.
“I . . . we
cannot afford a shell-shocked commander.”
“Sir,
I’m not shell-shocked,” disagreed O’Neal, against the cacophony of internal
voices. “What I am is one of the damn few people you are going to meet short of
Barwhon or Diess who is prepared, mentally, for this invasion. I had gamed it
for thousands of hours, before Diess. Diess was, so to speak, just the icing on
the cake. When you get your AID you can cross-check me on it.” He took a pull
on the cigar. Since Diess he had been hitting both tobacco and alcohol kind of
hard. One of these days it was gonna catch up with him. “This war is going to
be a form of hell, sir, for every single American. The shit just doesn’t get
any deeper than this.”
Colonel
Hanson nodded thoughtfully. That made a lot of sense. “Which brings us to the
here and now. Now that I have that obnoxious oaf cleared out of my
headquarters, what’s the situation? The G-1 didn’t even know the players and he
had no ideas about ACS equipment, but he did say the supply situation is as
confused as could be expected. Who are the acting staff? And since this
headquarters seems to be absolutely empty, where the fuck are they?” he
concluded.
“Major
Stidwell was acting as his own G-3, sir, since that was his slot anyway.
Actually, he was doubling up on everything except the -4.”
“Maybe
I should have given him the benefit of the doubt if he was that overwhelmed,”
the colonel mused.
“Actually,
I wouldn’t go so far as to say that, sir. The only reason there is an S-4 is
that we got sent a supply officer, a mustang L-T, to the assistant –4 slot.
Otherwise, Major My-Lot-In-Life-Is-To-Micromanage Stidwell would undoubtedly
have taken that slot as well.”
“Oh,”
said the colonel with a grimace.
“We
also have a full set of captains as company commanders, sir, any of whom could
have taken a second hat if Stidwell was overwhelmed. We’re better off than the
Line and Guard units from the point of view of company-grade officers.
“However,
if he made the decisions he could be absolutely sure that they were the
right decisions,” the captain said with a snort. “God knows what decisions
might have been made by mere captains that did not have his years of
experience. They might have, oh, ‘taken excessive initiative with the training
schedule,’ or, God forbid, ‘begun ACS training before all the meetings about
how to implement it were completed.’ ”
“If I remember my recent history, you have
been there and done that as well, haven’t you?” said the colonel neutrally.
“Yes,
sir, I have,” said O’Neal with instant seriousness. “As a matter of fact, he
was trying very hard to have me court-martialed for insubordination.”
“Were
you insubordinate?” asked the new commander, wondering what sort of answer he
would get. He shouldn’t have wondered.
“Sir,
I disobeyed not one direct order, but so many I can’t begin to count,” O’Neal
stated definitively.
“Why?”
“I
did not think anyone would dare court-martial me, sir, and if it was disobey
them or have my company die in combat it was a no-brainer.”
“Why
would they have died?” asked Hanson.
“Sir,
he was starting training exactly as they did with the Two Falcon on Diess. Yes,
sir, I have been there and done that before and I was not going to do it
again; that was an oath I swore on the souls of my dead. We had, have, a
critical suit shortage, the unit has not received its issue and only a few of
the troops, ones transferred from other ACS units, have them. So he wanted
everyone to memorize all the parts to the suits, do Posleen flash cards, and
all the rest of that. In other words, bore them to death. What I tried to explain
to him was that I obtained a shit-load of Milspecs, VR glasses for training,
through . . . some secondary channels.” Mike cleared his
throat and took a puff of his cigar.
Colonel
Hanson smiled. He had to remember that although this officer had extensive
experience with suits and even suit combat, he did not have extensive
experience as an officer. Needs must when devils drive. Since time
immemorial, units that were not properly supplied had found ways of obtaining
the equipment they needed. As long as it was kept to a minimum and under
control it was not a problem.
“We
could have been training in the field simulating eighty percent reality combat
weeks ago,” Mike continued after determining that the colonel was not going to
question him on the source of the Milspecs. Mike was prepared to back his
personnel, but it had surprised him as much as the losing company when second
squad showed up with a truck full of GalTech equipment. Since then, of course,
he had learned all about Sergeant Stewart and “The Squad From Hell.” Now
nothing surprised him.
“But
that wasn’t by the book—which is not my fault, I wanted to include it—so he
wouldn’t buy it. Then we started having problems with shit being stolen out of
the barracks, rioters, vandalism, and all the other fun stuff that has been
going down around here. I broke out the ‘nail-guns’ and got rounds for them
from the ammo dump out of the training budget. Forget the rants about
extremism; I thought, still do, that it made sense to at least put the weapons
in the troop’s hands, give them a feel for those big bastards and get in some
physical training that made more sense than long slow distance runs. But he
wasn’t worried about the image or whatever, he was most upset that the rounds
couldn’t be returned to the dump and were going to be charged against his
training budget before he was ready to use them for training.”
“Well,
I can empathize,” said the colonel with a frown. “Live-fire training is
expensive.”
“Oh,
Jesus, sir, not you too!” Mike could feel the iron bite of anger on his tongue
and tried to keep under control. The last two months with Stidwell had strained
his already damaged patience to the limits. This colonel was an entirely
different kettle of fish, though. All he had to do was keep in control and
present the situation rationally. Right. And then maybe the dreams would stop?
“Captain,
training budgets are just that, budgets. You have to stay in them, especially
when everybody is having to make sacrifices for this goddamn war.”
“Sir,
what we will actually spend for training this year can come out of my pay,”
Mike answered reasonably.
“What?
How much do you make?” asked Hanson, surprised.
“Well,
in case you haven’t noticed, Fleet makes a hell of a lot more, rank per rank,
than the Army, sir, but what I meant was: What is included in a training
budget?”
“Well,
vehicle fuel, expended rounds, consumable expenditures, food, special field
equipment, that sort of thing.”
“Yes,
sir. The first thing to remember is that the Army had no idea what training
budgets for an ACS unit would be, so they kept the budgets that they would have
had as Airborne, Marines, whatever. What wasn’t considered is that the suits
are fueled off a dedicated fusion plant at company level that is rated for
forty years use with on-board fuels. The cost is part of our capital
budget including the fuel, just like suits. Suit food is cheap, a basic supply
comes with the suit and recycles itself so the cost of the whole battalion’s
food for the year, if we stayed in suits, would come out of my pay, easy. No
field toilet paper, no MREs, no vehicle fuel, no disposable plastics, the suits
take care of it all, garbage in garbage out. For that matter, food comes out of
the general battalion expenditure. And no ammunition costs.”
“What
do you mean, no ammo costs?” Colonel Hanson replied, still trying to assimilate
all his other assumptions about training costs being stood on their ear.
“When
we start suit training, or even VR training, you’ll see, sir. The suits are
absolutely awesome training vehicles; there is virtually, pun intended, no
point in having a live-fire. So, we are so far overbudgeted that we could all
buy Cadillacs out of the ammo budget and leave plenty to go around. So,
anyway,” he concluded, “the big problem is not that we don’t have equipment,
it’s that we haven’t received all of our personnel.”
“I
wasn’t aware that, except for senior officers and NCOs, there was a personnel
shortage. It sounds like you’re talking about troops or company-grade
officers.”
“Yes,
sir, that’s exactly what I’m talking about. We’re still waiting on twenty
percent of our junior personnel consisting of females and recalled enlisted and
current training cadre.”
“You
did say females? Females?”
“It
was recently decided to open the Combat Arms to females,” O’Neal answered with
another puff. He was tempted to chuckle, since the colonel had gotten quite red
faced at the concept of females in his battalion. But he finally decided that
discretion was called for. “We are expecting four female junior officers, that
I am aware of, two transfer first lieutenants from other arms and two butter
bars; hell, I am getting two of them. We’re also getting a slew of privates and
rejuv or current-service NCOs including one of my platoon sergeants. All the
girls are going through infantry training at the moment. The others are either
going through retraining if they’re recalled or still at their units.”
“Oh,
joy.”
“Yes,
sir. Better now than when we were having the riots; I hate to think of what
would have happened then. And then when they get here we have to retrain in
ACS. There is still no ACS training center.”
“Right,
well I do not intend to wear myself ragged trying to be my entire staff. Until
there is a qualified replacement, you are the acting G-3. Get the other company
commanders up here one at a time. I am taking them all on sufferance given the
condition of the battalion.”
“It’s
only partially their fault, sir. In many cases conditions resulted from direct
orders of Major Stidwell.”
“Well,
we’ll see if I agree. Okay, who is senior?”
“Captain
Wolf, Charlie Company.”
“Get
him up here.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Then
get started on revising the training schedule. We don’t have any duties to
interfere and I believe in training. As soon as the new chums arrive, I want us
out in the field, twenty-four/seven until Momma makes us come in from the rain.
Create a training schedule beyond your wildest dreams.”
“Yes,
sir!”
“And
in your planning, keep one thing in mind. Our job is to put ourselves between
the Posleen and civilians. The mission is to save our people. And we will not
fail.”
CHAPTER 3
Said England unto
Pharaoh, “I must make a man of you,
That will stand upon his feet and play the
game;
That will Maxim
his oppressor as a Christian ought to do,”
And she sent old Pharaoh Sergeant
Whatisname.
It was not a Duke
nor Earl, nor yet a Viscount—
It was not a big brass General that came;
But a man in khaki kit who could
handle men a bit,
With his bedding labeled Sergeant
Whatisname.
—“Pharaoh and
the Sergeant”
Rudyard
Kipling, 1897
Atlanta, GA,
United States of America, Sol III
1025 EST January
15th, 2004 ad
“My name is
Sergeant Major Jake Mosovich.” The lights of the hall glinted from the silver
badge on his green beret.
It
was, Jake had decided, a singularly inappropriate environment. But the
reception hall of the First American All Episcopal United African Church was
packed to overflowing with a mixture of the very old, the very young, and
women. All of them were gathered at tables piled with an odd assortment of
weapons, household items and general bric-a-brac. The new Special Forces team,
with a few old faces, was scattered throughout the room prepared to train or
intervene, whichever seemed necessary. There was a jarring note to the room;
there were no young men. Virtually every male of military age in the United
States was already inducted into the military and if any of the local teens had
gone AWOL, they certainly were not going to turn up at a Special Forces local
defense training clinic. Even if it did mean a hot meal on a cold day.
“I
am a twenty-five-year veteran of the United States Army Special Forces: We’re
called The Green Berets. We are one of the special operations units your tax
dollars have supported for years, so now you get to get some of your own back.”
As usual that was good for a small laugh.
“The
mission of the Special Forces is to train indigenous forces in irregular
tactics. What that means is that we are supposed to go into countries and teach
guerillas that are friendly to the United States how to be better guerillas.
Officially, we have never performed our stated mission.” He smiled grimly and
there was another chuckle. Some of them got it.
“But
it is what we are trained to do. And guerillas, in general, do not have access to
regular weapons or equipment. They have to make do with what’s around. And they
don’t work with huge supply systems, the ‘tail’ as we military folks call it.”
His
face turned grim. Combined with the scars it made him look like something from
a nightmare. “We all know what’s coming,” he said, gesturing at the ceiling and
by extension into space. “And we all know that the Fleet won’t be ready when it
hits. The ships are taking a long time to build. And unless they are all ready,
throwing the few that are ready at the attacks would not help us at all
and would set the plans back for years.
“And
the politicians have finally admitted that there won’t be much of a chance of
defending the coastal plains.” He chuckled grimly at the simple term. “In case
any of you are not aware, that includes Atlanta. And Washington and L.A. and
Baltimore and Philly and just about every other major city in America.” He
didn’t completely agree, and he wondered who thought that it wasn’t political
suicide. But the decision had been made.
He
shook his head again. “And I know that most won’t be leaving.” He looked around
the room at the assembled faces. Old women and men, boys and girls. A
smattering of women between twenty and fifty. Two men in the same range, one
with both legs missing and the other showing signs of palsy. “At least not
right up until the invasion. I’ve seen more wars than most of you have seen
movies and don’t nobody leave until right up to the last minute. Then there’s
always a mad scramble. Something always gets left or forgotten. Somebody is
always at the back of the line.” He shook his head again, face gray and grim.
“So,
we are here to teach you all we can about how to survive at the back of the
line. How to live and fight without much in the way of support or regular
weapons. We’re hoping that it will give you an edge if it comes time that you
are at the wall. Maybe it will, maybe it won’t.” He he tapped his
camouflage-clad chest, looking at one little girl. “That is right in here.
“We
will also be teaching you about how to spread mayhem with regular equipment in
case you get access to it,” he continued, returning to parade rest.
“Let
me say this, I hope I don’t have to but we are required to by our orders, what
we are teaching you is absolutely and strictly illegal to use outside of time
of war. We are going to be at the First American for five days, by the grace of
Pastor Williams, and when we get done you are going to know how to make weapons
that make Oklahoma City look like a firecracker. But so help me God—and I say
that without taking the Lord in vain, this is an oath before Our Lord—if so
much as one of you uses this against another American citizen I will hunt you
down if it takes the rest of my life.” He looked around the room and his
scarred face was molded granite.
“You
will not use my teaching against your fellow man. You must swear that now, on
the Ever-loving God, before we will teach the first lesson. Do you swear?”
There
was a sober muttering of general assent. He thought it would be enough. The
pastor seemed to understand his flock and most of those present were his
congregation.
The training
actually served two purposes. It was not expected—and this lesson would be
drummed in over the next few days—that these people could hold their
neighborhoods. Shelters were being constructed that should be able to hold most
of the displaced population. But as he had said, it was human nature to leave
it until just a little too late. In addition to teaching a few techniques that
might help some of these citizens against the enemy, they would, together with
the pastor, designate locals to be official evacuation coordinators. Evac
coordinators would hold a semiofficial position, analogous to World War II Air
Raid Wardens. In the event of a Posleen landing, they would direct their
neighbors towards the most efficient evacuation routes and, if necessary, organize
local defenses.
Statistically
some of these people they were training would be caught behind Posleen lines.
In that sad event, viewed coldly, the more Posleen they could take down the
better. Vietnam taught the American Army that even a baby can plant a mine if
properly trained. These people would be as well trained as Mosovich could
arrange in five short days.
“We
are going to start today with basic weapons training. I know that many of you
have had bad experiences with guns. Until the call-up sucked up all the gangs,
this neighborhood was basically a write-off. I know that bullets flew around
practically at random and there were some terrible acts committed. Well, we are
going to teach you how to handle guns the right way and how to use them
effectively. Not randomly.
“The
police department is setting up a firing range for this neighborhood and it
will be manned during the day. You are encouraged to go over there and shoot.
The training ammunition is free and there will be standard weapons available,
you just can’t take any with you. When the Posleen are scheduled to start
landing, weapons and ammunition will be issued as requested—we have plenty of
rifles and ammunition—and if there is a local scatter landing before then you
can draw your allotment from the local police station. In the meantime, it is
feared that weapons would be stolen from you if they were generally
distributed.
“I
personally think that is a crock, but all of us occasionally have to live with
city hall, or in this case the federal government. I find it easier to think of
it this way; soldiers don’t take their rifles home, either, they leave them in
an armory. Same thing, basically. Anyway . . .
“We
are going to take a look at two weapons today, the M-16 and the AK-47.”
Sergeant
First Class David Mueller watched the lecture bemusedly. It was almost
impossible to imagine that an SF team was teaching lower-income city dwellers
about urban terrorism techniques. It made sense in abstract. But later he was
going to be teaching the first class in a series that would put every one of
these people on an FBI register of potential urban terrorists. It was a list
that every member of the SF team was on as well.
Yeah,
it made sense in a cruel way, but there was one little black girl, hair in
pigtails and not more than twelve, who was staring at the AK like it gave milk.
This was a group of people who had not seen much in the way of power, and a lot
of power was about to be put in their hands. These techniques would work even
better against the government than against the Posleen.
“Okay,
what’s this?” Mueller asked the group of churchgoers, holding up a white plastic
bottle of a name-brand cleaner. They had broken up into groups for specialized
sessions and analysis. They would be looking for leaders and individuals who
showed special talents. So far Mueller was pretty sure he had picked out a team
leader. And he suspected the little twelve-year-old would turn out to be pretty
talented at mayhem.
“Bleach,”
the little girl blurted, with a “what, you don’t know bleach when you see it,
whitey?” look in her eye.
“Really?
Okay, and what’s this?” he asked, holding up a translucent bottle of clear
liquid.
“ ’Monia?”
“Right.
And what do you use ’em for?”
“Cleanin’
stuff,” said an older gentleman in the second row.
“Well, I admit
I’ve used them for that, but what I usually use them for is blowin’ stuff up.”
He could see he got their attention then. “You can use these, and some other
common products, to produce explosives.” To their obvious amazement, he then
proceeded to demonstrate the entire process of making a pipe bomb from start to
finish.
“Now,
you can get slow fuse for the detonator from a gun shop, they use it for hobby
cannons and some muzzle loaders, or I’ll show you a couple of ways to make it
yourself. Also, later on I’ll be showing you ways to make a nifty trip-wire
booby trap with a pistol or rifle cartridge and some string. If you put more
liquid in the mix you get slurry, and I’ll show you some neat stuff to do with
slurry later. But first, I want you all to make your own pipe bombs, being very
careful to follow the steps exactly as I showed you. Afterwards, we’ll go over
to that old house on the corner, the one that was a crack joint, and blow that
SOB sky-high.”
Most
of them seemed to like that idea.
“You
need to brush your teeth more often, young man,” said the medic, peering at the
ten-year-old’s molars. “How long has that tooth been aching?”
“A’out
a mo’h, ah ’ess.”
“Well,
you need a filling, maybe a root canal.” A portion of the mission that had just
evolved was providing medical support to the communities they trained. It
disgusted Sergeant First Class Gleason that her country—with the best health
care system in the world—would permit the degree of health neglect that existed
in these communities. They should have sent in the Berets long before now; some
of their “hearts and minds” techniques might even have done something for the
gang problem.
Not
that there was one now. That problem had loomed large in the minds of early
planners, but it turned out to be basically moot. All the gang members were in
the Guard and generally stayed there. Local Guard commanders, when first faced
with desertion problems, took a cut a la the Gordian Knot solution. The death
penalty had never been removed from the books and local commanders resorted to
it more often than not in situations where a soldier had deserted as opposed to
taking an extended AWOL.
It
was not hard to spot deserters. Police forces were exempt from call-up, being
effectively an extension of the war effort when the Posleen landed, and they
were on the lookout. Military personnel were, as in the old days, required to
be in uniform at all times and, although the local commanders were lenient
about weekend passes, if there was a male of military age not in uniform who
was spotted by the police he was invariably stopped and asked for his deferment
card. Since deferment was now a line on the driver’s license, a false
deferment card turned up with a simple call to the station or a check of the
carcomp. It was a nerve-wracking stop for the cops; the deserters knew what
could await them, and most reacted violently. Usually if a suspected deserter
was spotted the cop would call for backup and shadow; only when enough force
was in place would the stop would be made.
It
occasionally made for a comic opera when some poor unsuspecting policeman from
another force would find himself suddenly surrounded by fellow officers with
drawn guns. But it made the cops pretty damn mad at the Guard commanders when
the suspect just said “Fuck you,” and pulled out a pistol, suicide being
preferable to hanging.
So
now the gangs were extinct and only the young, old, female and frail were left.
And those people needed better health care than they were getting. The medic
looked in question at the boy’s mother.
“Ain’t
no dentist, no doctors neither. They either in the Army or they too expensive.
It’s a all-day wait at Grady, an’ maybe they do something, maybe they don’. So,
what you say, soldier-girl?”
The
matronly Sergeant Gleason, a recent graduate of the all-inclusive Special
Forces Medic course and mother of four, smiled pleasantly. “I say I pull the
tooth and do an implant. That way he’ll grow back a new, good one. While I’m in
there, I’ll do any fillings he needs and a general preventive work-over.
“For you, son,
since I see your eyes getting round at the thought, I’ll be putting you under,
so you won’t feel a thing. And for you, Mom, I’ll tell you it won’t cost you a
blessed dime.” A military nurse for fourteen years, Gleason jumped at the first
chance to move to Combat Arms. The choice of Special Forces was difficult for
her family, her children especially, to understand, but if she was going to be
a combat medic it was going to be the best there was to offer.
Special
Forces was designed from its very inception to be a unit that spent most of its
time away from the regular force structure and logistic tail. That meant that
the team must be self-reliant when it came to medical support. Since it was
generally difficult to find an MD willing to go through Special Forces Q
course, the SF had to grow their own. While SF medics were not and never would
be MDs, they were nearly as well-trained as Physician’s Assistants in the area
of trauma medicine.
While
on a mission they were authorized to perform minor surgery, prescribe drugs and
perform minor dental procedures. What actually went on was something else.
Although every medic really did know that they were not the equal of a drunk MD
on his worst day, sometimes they were all that was available. In situations
just like this, throughout the world, SF medics had saved lives with emergency
appendectomies, tonsillectomies, tumor removal, benign and malignant, and other
actions that would have them burned at the stake by the American Medical
Association.
Sergeant
First Class Gleason was acting in the best tradition of SF canker mechanics
since the Berets had been in existence.
“Thank
you, soldier-girl. He says, Okay!” said the relieved mother.
“I
do not!”
“Don’t
you sass your mother. That tooth’s just gonna hurt worse if’n you don’t get it
fixed.”
“She’s
right, you know,” said Gleason. “Always trust your mother.”
“Okay,
I guess,” said the child, nervously. “You gonna put me out, right?”
“Yep,
with new Galactic medicines so I don’t have to worry about dosage and you don’t
have to worry about aftereffects. When you want to do it?”
“Can
it wait ’til tomorrow?” asked the mother. “I gotta go to work an’ I wanna be
there.”
“Sure,
anytime. In the meantime, son, you brush good tonight with this toothbrush, and
rinse your mouth with this rinse. I’ll see you tomorrow at, say, ten?”
“Dat
be fine, doctor,” said the mother.
“That
is one thing I am not. I am, however, licensed to perform minor procedures and
I put this in that category. See you tomorrow.” The two walked out, the
youngster clutching his toothbrush and mouthwash like talismans.
“Last
client, doc,” said the team leader, Captain Thompson, stepping aside to let the
pair through the door.
“Good,
I’m about done for. We got any new orders?”
“Yeah,
I’ll detail it at the team meeting, but we’re supposed to wrap up Atlanta.
We’re going to Richmond next.”
“I
wondered if they’d consider sending us overseas.”
“I
think, given our area of responsibility, that we’ll probably stay in country.”
“Meaning
let Africa go hang?” asked Gleason with a grimace.
“Hell,”
said Master Sergeant Mark Ersin, wandering into the room and the conversation,
“let Africa hang. We’ve got enough to do here.”
“Agree,”
said Captain Thompson, his ebony face somber. “The cities are going to get hit
hard. The more prepared our own people are, the better. The Mideast is
bristling with weapons and not really attractive and Africa will never get its
shit together in time. Let ’em hang.”
Ersin’s
scarred Eurasian face creased in a grim smile. “Trust me, we do not want to be
away from supports if the Posleen land early.”
Along
with Mueller and Mosovich, Ersin was a survivor of humanity’s first contact
with the oncoming threat. The three were members of a joint service special
operations force sent to recon the planet Barwhon. They had survived when the
mission was changed from reconnaissance to snatch, had survived when the other
five members did not. And along the way they had gathered an immense fund of
information about the Posleen rear areas and how they organized themselves. One
piece of information all three reinforced was that fighting the Posleen was not
a pleasant proposition.
“When
the Posleen land,” he continued, “we want to be somewhere we can go to ground
behind defenses. Once they are down and deployed, I’ll be happy to go mess
around in their rear. Until then, I want a roof over my head and a wall around
me.”
“Well,”
continued Captain Thompson, “after Richmond we’ll be finished with our outreach
program. We’re slated to come back here and act as command and control skeleton
for the militias. Cadre.”
“What?”
gasped both Gleason and Ersin. It was the first time that the cadre idea had
been mentioned.
“Apparently
the militia training program is working well, but they want professionals in
place,” the captain explained with a shrug.
“I
thought that was what the Guard was for!” Ersin snarled.
“Hey,
Sergeant, these are the civilians you are supposed to protect!”
“Excuse
me, sir, but I don’t think I can do that if I’m dead! If I fight the Posleen
again, I want it to be from fixed defenses!”
“Whatever
your wants might be, Sergeant, those are our orders,” the captain answered with
an iron clang to his voice.
“Our
orders friggin’ stink, sir. Oh, Jesus! We have just been royally corn-cobbed.
Have Jake or Mueller heard this yet?”
“No.
I didn’t realize you would have such an extreme reaction,” said the captain
with a tone of bemusement.
“Oh
my word, sir, you haven’t seen extreme reaction yet.”
* * *
“What
pissant son of a bitch came up with this fuckin’ cadre bullshit?” shouted
the irate sergeant major.
This
is not the sort of language normally heard between sergeant majors and
four-star generals; however, the Ground Forces Chief of Staff had been more or
less expecting the call. When his aide allowed that Sergeant Major Mosovich was
on the phone and would like to have a brief word with the General, the General
acceded, after making sure no one else would hear the conversation.
“Hello,
Jake. Nice to hear from you. Yes, I’m fine, overworked but aren’t we all.”
“Fuck
that! Who? I will personally frag their ass! Is this some slimy regular-army
plot to be done with SF for once and for all?!”
“Okay,
Jake, that is just about enough,” General Taylor said, coldly. “It was my
fucking plan.”
“What?!”
If General Taylor thought the previous volume was extreme he now discovered a
new meaning to the word.
“Okay,
you’ve been teaching them. What chance do those people have if the Posleen land
before the evacuation is complete?”
“So
you’re going to throw the goddamn SF away? Is that it?”
“No.
I am going to use them up as carefully as possible. But they are going to be
between Posleen and civilians. Where they damn well belong. Clear?”
“Clear.
We are not armed, or trained for the mission. We have limited tactical
mobility. We are trained to be behind-the-lines, hit-and-run fighters or cadre
for that type of force but we will make our stands and be overrun to buy the
civilians a few minutes that they will undoubtedly squander.” The sergeant
major hissed the last words.
“Jake,
how do you fight Posleen?” the general asked in a reasonable tone.
“What?”
“I
thought the question was in English. How do you fight Posleen?” he repeated.
“My
best idea is with artillery and fixed defenses,” the sergeant major replied.
“How
about mortars and firebases?”
“And
then what, sir? We’ll be in scattered firebases, cut off and without support.
And where are the firebases coming from?”
“Well, in the
case of Atlanta, there are several major geographic positions to choose from.
The mission will be to form firebases along evacuation routes and man them with
indigenous nonmilitary personnel who have some limited training: American
Strikers. The teams will form and train these militias and design and construct
the fixed defenses from available local materials and using local assets. Now,
in what way is this not in the SF tradition, Sergeant Major?”
“Shit.”
There was a long pause. “We are not going to survive this, Jim. Among other
things, our ‘militias’ will consist of old men and teenage women.”
“When
the Posleen are down and their deployment is clear, when all civilians are
effectively evacuated or hors d’combat, when the fuckin’ job is damn well done,
SF personnel may make their way to secure areas using any means available.”
“There
won’t be any means, Jim. None.”
“Sure
there will, dammit. ‘If you ain’t cheatin’ you ain’t tryin.’ ”
“ ‘If you get caught, you
ain’t SF.’ Understood. I still think this is a Guard function.”
“There’s
gonna be plenty of targets to go around.”
“My
point was not lack of targets, sir.”
“Okay,”
said Mueller, “we are fucked.”
“Sergeant
Mueller,” said Warrant Officer First Class Andrews, “attitude will not help.”
Warrant
Officer Andrews and Sergeant First Class Mueller did not get along well.
Whether Mr. Andrews knew it or not, in this instance that was going to affect
him more than Mueller. Most of the SF warrant officers were ninety-day wonders,
junior SF NCOs or even non-SF NCOs who were sent through a warrant officer’s
course to become the second-in-command of a team. In the new Special Forces,
essentially reborn since the oncoming Posleen threat, when a veteran NCO has a
problem with a junior officer, the junior officer goes. That tradition had
wavered in the last couple of decades. But in the face of adversity old habits
die hard.
“I
don’t see the problem. We build a firebase and secure it. We have a massive
amount of building materials to draw on. This is a basic Special Forces
mission. What is your problem, Sergeant?”
“It’s
not his problem solely, sir,” interjected Sergeant Major Mosovich, rather
harshly. “I made some of the same points to High Command. They had the same
attitude. Maybe you just have to see the Posleen in action to realize that this
plan is pretty much pissing in the wind.”
“Yeah,”
remarked Ersin. “I wouldn’t mind if it made any sense. But it doesn’t.”
“Pardon
me, perhaps it’s being a junior officer,” started Andrews, meaning “maybe it is
my being a little more intelligent than you old fogies,” “but we just establish
a strong outpost and slow the Posleen advance with indirect fire.”
“Yes,
sir. And then what?” asked Mosovich. Mueller was uncharacteristically quiet,
perhaps realizing how close he was to losing his cool.
“Well,
then we E and E out, I suppose. If we can’t escape or evade, we go down as hard
as possible. It’s happened before and it will happen again. Bataan, for
example.”
“All
right, sir. Point one, the Posleen do not slow in the face of indirect or, for
that matter, direct fire. They move as fast under fire as not under fire. If
you kill enough they stop but only because they’re dead. Point two, there will
be virtually no way to E and E out. The Posleen will closely invest the strong
point and then probably overrun it with mass attacks. If we could build large
curtain walls, maybe it would work, but I don’t think we have the time and we
couldn’t supply it for a multiyear siege.” He paused and mentally counted.
“Point
three, we don’t know where they will be coming from or going to. They land more
or less randomly and their objectives are more or less random. We will be a
focal point for attack without any reasonable chance of killing enough to
matter. Now, does the situation make a little more sense, sir?”
“I
can’t believe that the Posleen will be that great a threat, Sergeant Major,”
said the warrant officer, somewhat smugly. “While I know you have experience
fighting them, that was without fixed defenses. I think we should be able to
hold them for a time and then escape.”
“Yeah,
well, keep dreamin’, Mister,” Mueller finally interjected, then walked away in
disgust.
CHAPTER 4
Ft. Indiantown
Gap, PA, United States of America, Sol III
0900 EST January
22nd, 2004 ad
“For those of you
just arrived, welcome to Bravo Company First Battalion Five-Fifty-Fifth Fleet
Infantry, my name is Captain Michael O’Neal. And the unit you have joined is called
the ‘Triple-Nickle.’ ”
Mike
looked the final draft of soldiers over. Already they were scattered through
the formation, but they were noticeable by their BDUs and Gortex as opposed to
the rest of the company’s gray silks. They were also noticeable by being either
female, or older than the norm or both. None of them were actually rejuvs,
although most had been recalled out of the inactive reserve. Unlike the
colonel, Mike had an AID and although the local personnel officers might not be
able to call up 201s, he could. He had quickly perused the draft and was
generally satisfied. He had a couple of hard cases, including one private
second class who had been a sergeant not once but twice, but mostly they were
good troops on paper. When he got done with them they would be better. Now for
The Lecture, so that they would be absolutely clear where their company
commander stood.
“If
you’re wondering, yes, I’m that Captain O’Neal. That is all I am going to say
on the subject. What I am going to talk about you will hear me say today, and
on numerous occasions until you have the unpleasant opportunity to see what I
mean.
“Those
of you, most of you, who have never been in combat, you are not ready for the
Posleen. Those few of you who have previous combat experience, you are not
ready for the Posleen. The way you fight Posleen, the way we will fight
Posleen, is brutally simple. You get a good position, hunker down, call for all
the artillery and mortar fire available and kill as many of them as you can
until you are almost overwhelmed, then move as fast as you can back to the next
position. Since the situation is a binary solution set, win or lose, there is
only one choice. We will win. Whether any individual present survives to see
that victory is going to be a combination of training and luck.” At the back of
the formation he could see First Sergeant Pappas looking over the group. Mike
suspected that the senior NCO was doing the same thing as Mike: scanning the
group of mist-puffing soldiers and wondering where the losses would come from.
Would it be the tall guy in Third platoon? The cut-up in First? The wiry,
deadly Sergeant Stewart of fame and legend? Sergeant Ampele, his stolid
antithesis? New guy? Old? Mike nodded internally and went on.
“Many
of us are going to pay the ferryman. But, as George Patton said: ‘Your job is
not to die for your country. Your job is to make sure the other poor bastard
dies for his country.’ Do not concentrate on the ferryman, he will be
there in the end for all of us, whether it is next week, on the plains of
battle or at an advanced age at the hands of an outraged spouse.
“Until
you meet the ferryman your only thought should be to kill Posleen. If you love
your family, put them out of your mind. I have two daughters and a wife. Except
in a small compartment deep within myself, I could care less. I live, breathe
and eat killing the Posleen. Not because I particularly hate them, not because
of Diess, but because anything less is not my all. We have to kill and kill and
kill until there are no more Posleen. Until then no one is safe. Until then put
away your emotions, unless hate helps you to drive on, and prepare for training
harder than anything in your miserable lives.” Mike inhaled through his nose
and felt the cold burn his sinuses. He couldn’t wait to get suits!
“Until
the suits arrive we will train on Milspecs sixteen hours a day with one
half-day off a week for personal business. Once the suits arrive we will take
to the field for the same regimen. You can send e-mail during personal stand
down. Your pay is direct deposit; there is no other option. If your family
needs a larger allotment, see your squad leader; he can show you how to manage
your pay through your AID.
“To
those of you who are prior service: you are no longer Airborne or Marine, you
are Fleet Strike. You may respond ‘Airborne’ or ‘Semper Fi’ as you wish, but
remember, the persons you are training with, whether they come from your
background or not, are the people you will be fighting beside. Don’t make
judgements on the basis of their prior service or you will find yourself sorry
and sore. Fleet Strike is an entirely new organization, drawing, I hope, on the
best of the Army elite and the Marines. Each of you volunteered for this unit,
but I doubt you understand what a radical change you have made in your lives.
If you are in the Line or Guard, you are first a citizen of the United States,
then of Earth and only last of the Federation, operating under basically the
strictures with which you are familiar. As a member of the Fleet, your first
line of control is the Federation military.
“The
Federation treats its military in a way very different from the United States
military. You will shortly have a briefing in the high points of Federation
military law. I say the high points, because the Federation military operates
under a set of strictures more complicated than anything on Earth. You swore an
oath to that law and are now bound to it. But there is no way you could
possibly understand it.
“For
example, as your commander, I can shoot any one of you dead, for no reason
whatsoever, and suffer no adverse consequences. To the Federation the military
is a separate caste, exempt from most laws while bound by a hedge of others.
You may kill a civilian nonmilitary human without legal consequences, with one
tiny caveat: as your commander, I absolutely forbid you to violate any American
law outside of time of conflict.
“However,
the American branch of Fleet Strike operates under a secondary set of regulations
which is essentially the Uniform Code of Military Justice. There are massive
loopholes; I can shoot you dead and get off scott free, but for your
purposes following the UCMJ will do.
“One
last word. I expect nothing less than one hundred percent of your mind, body
and soul. Those of you who are prior service may have heard that one before,
too. Do not fuck with me. If you play games, I will have you in a ‘prison-unit’
so fast the paperwork will take a year to catch up. You all volunteered to be
here. If you want out, say so at any time and I guarantee it will be acted on.
“Officers
fall into my office after you turn over your troops. First Sergeant, post.”
Mike
looked coldly over his officers, those already attached and those just arrived.
There had been three officers with the new draft: a tall, blond female first
lieutenant with the unlikely name of Teri Nightingale, slated to become his XO;
a greyhound slender brunette female second lieutenant named Karen Slight headed
for Third Platoon; and a dark stocky male second lieutenant, Mike Fallon, who
was that rarest of birds, a ring knocker, slated for Second Platoon leader. In
Mike’s experience service academy officers came in two extreme brands, good and
bad. Good West Pointers were very good indeed, but bad West Pointers were
simply very good at kissing the boss’s ass and covering their own. Only time
would tell with this one.
Tim
Arnold, previously the acting XO, was a first lieutenant and the weapons
platoon leader. A tall, goofy-looking fellow, he was a Mustang like Mike, with
prior service as an enlisted man in the Twenty-Fourth Mechanized Infantry
Division, then the Eighty-Second Airborne Division as a lieutenant. The goofy
personality hid a head full of simple wisdom about the military and people.
Mike would miss him as an exec because on at least a couple of occasions it had
been Arnold who had kept Mike from losing his famous temper in a very public
way.
Dave
Rogers, the First Platoon leader, was the odd duck. Rarely do you have a first
lieutenant as a grunt platoon leader but with the overabundance of first
lieutenants, and being junior, he was stuck. Tall and aristocratic, he seemed
to be resigned but offended by the position and Mike suspected there was going
to be bad blood between him and Nightingale. Unlike Arnold, he was lightning
quick to correct deficiencies, real or imagined, and had nearly as short a
temper as Mike’s. For all that, he was experienced and sharp. Mike read him as
hard but brittle; once Rogers had his first taste of fighting the Posleen, he
would find a job as an aide or something similar in short order.
“As those of you who have been here have
discovered, what I told the troops goes double for the officers. Despite the
spectacularly fucked-up supply situation we should be getting our full
equipment loadout next week in one abysmally confused shipment. If the new
battalion commander hadn’t arrived we would be truly up shit’s creek getting it
sorted out, but he’s detailed me as acting Three, so I’ll have some impact on
the plan, especially since I get along with Wilson, the Four.
“Once
the suits are uncrated we have to adjust them to the troops. As far as I know,
I am the only qualified suiter in the battalion, so they’ll have to send a tech
or techs. I can find no mention of that in the mails, either general or
GalTech, and none of my contacts have heard a word, so who knows when the techs
will arrive. Whoever and whenever they are sent, it will take two, three, maybe
even four weeks thereafter to get everyone suited. Command suits will be first,
then platoon sergeants, but then it will be first through weapons. I have
already discussed this with Top and he will pass it to the NCOs.
“In
the meantime, we have four tactical exercises without troops next week. The
first will be an open-field skirmish as a lone company, the second will be
integrated with the other companies in a larger open-field encounter, the third
a company defense with good to fair terrain and light opposition, and the last
will be my personal favorite, the Spartan scenario. Since there’s been a
shakeup at battalion, that means I can take the aggressor. Nightingale, you’ll
run the company, you need to learn the ropes; Arnold, brief Nightingale on what
that entails.”
“Brief
Nightingale on the playbook.”
“Right.”
Mike looked at the newly arrived officers. “Combat against the Posleen requires
swift fluidity and total concentration. So we’re stealing a page from football
and soccer and using ‘plays’ at the squad and platoon level. This serves two
purposes.
“The
first purpose is to reduce the time it takes to give orders. A series of simple
two-part commands covers the vast majority of instructions given in combat.
“The
second purpose is to overcome ‘combat lock.’ I want our troops so conditioned
that when the time comes every single one of them opens fire without
hesitation. Stopping a Posleen charge is like stopping an avalanche with fire
hoses; you can do it, but it takes all the water in the world. We need every
single son of a bitch firing.”
“Most
of that will be up to the NCOs. I want the officers to remain as hands-off as
possible unless we are in active company or platoon-level training. If there is
an issue with one of your platoons’ readiness, bring it up with First Sergeant
Pappas or myself.”
“Get
your shit squared away this afternoon, because as of tomorrow there aren’t
enough hours in the day. We have a Tactical Exercise Without Troops scheduled
for tomorrow and sixteen hours per day of training from here on out until our
Fleet Strike Readiness Evaluation Series. So you’d better get cracking.
“Dismissed.”
CHAPTER 5
Rabun County, GA,
United States of America, Sol III
1723 EST February
3rd, 2004 ad
As the car
dropped over the ridge into the pocket valley in the Georgia hills, Sharon
O’Neal almost turned around.
She
had never understood her reaction to Mike’s father. A gruff but fair man, he
occasionally called her “Lieutenant” and treated her like a chief would a
junior officer, courteous if occasionally salty. At her request, he refrained
from relating war stories to the children and rarely did so around her, but she
had heard enough over the years to understand him somewhat.
Perhaps
it related to her Navy experience, where she felt so exceedingly rejected by
the “old-boy” establishment. Mike Senior would drop without a ripple into a
group of Navy chiefs, without much of a ripple into a group of Navy officers,
especially a group of surface-warfare types. He would be indistinguishable from
a group of SEALs. Whether it was real or not, she always felt a trace of
contempt or perhaps superiority emanating from the old war-horse.
After
a long career related to the unfortunate brevity of human life and the means to
arrange for reducing it, Michael O’Neal, Sr., returned to the family farm to
raise crops like generations before him, and to raise his family. Since then,
with the exception of collecting weapons, some of them illegal, and a group of
retirees with a similar bent, he appeared to have put that earlier phase of his
life behind him. She knew he had left the Army under somewhat mysterious
circumstances—the failure to be recalled along with all his buddies was
confirmation of that—and that he had spent some time overseas doing things of a
military nature, but what really bothered her was the old-boy feeling. Now he
seemed tailor-made for her needs and she was going to have a hard time looking
him in the eye and saying that.
She
glanced at Cally beside her. If she had to choose which of her children might
survive on a world consumed by war, she would have chosen Cally. Usually the
older child is more reserved and prissy, but with her children it was reversed.
If Michelle scratched her finger, she broke into paroxysms of tears; if Cally
ran into a wall, she stood up, wiped the blood off her nose and kept running. But
she was still only seven, would only be nine when the Posleen landed, and her
mommy and daddy were both going to be far away.
Michelle
was already gone, consumed by a colony ship packed with dependents headed for
safety. That program had come under fire, both in the United States and
overseas. Called racist, supremacist and every other –ist anyone could come up
with, it still made too much sense to stop. If a human gene pool was going to
be moved off-planet (and given the situation, it made sense to create such a
backup), it made sense to choose from the gene pool that represented the
necessary skills. Right now, the Federation did not need scientists and it did
not need politicians and it did not need engineers; what it needed was
soldiers. It might not be nice, it might not be politically correct, but it
made sense and that was all the Federation cared about.
The
house was stone, unusual in this part of the mountains, and dated to well
before the Civil War. The O’Neals were among the first settlers in the area
after the Cherokee were forcibly relocated, and the house was designed to
protect against the understandably angry stragglers. The first O’Neal was an
Irish immigrant who mined gold for a few years then decided that there was more
money to be made selling food to the miners than mining. He marked out a stake,
broke the ground and built the farmhouse with the occasional help of his fellow
miners.
It
presided regally over a small valley so filled with good things that it seemed
that God had touched it. On the south-facing slope was an orchard of apples and
below that an orchard of pecans. The fields were broken into tillage and
pasture with hay in portions. It was a tidy and productive six hundred acres
that satisfied the financial and nutritional needs of the O’Neal family even in
these hard times.
The
government was gathering all the foodstuffs it could and caching them in hardened
shelters throughout the Rockies and Appalachians. The survivors of America
might be on the run, but the United States government was determined that they
be well-fed runners. Unfortunately, even with new ground being broken, genetically
modified crops and the modern American agricultural engine getting into high
gear for the first time, that meant shortages. Shortages were something that
happened to other people, not Americans.
When
Americans walk into a grocery store, they expect cheerful, smiling bag boys and
fresh produce. Now the bag boys were all in uniform and the produce fields were
producing wheat and corn crops that were going into holes in the mountains.
America’s wheat yield the previous year had been twenty-five percent higher
than at any time in history but there was a bread shortage.
Even
small farmers such as Papa O’Neal were required to report their production and
adhere to crop rotas, but the government did not expect or desire to control
every acre. The O’Neal garden had kept the family in fresh vegetables
throughout the long summer as Sharon awaited her summons to uniform and Mike
sat through endless speeches and parades.
The
simple numbers meant that one of them would not be coming back, probably Mike,
and that Cally’s chances were less than good. As a mechanical engineer
specializing in maintenance support requirements, Sharon fully expected a
glorified clerk’s position on Titan Base. Her chances were better than fair.
Unfortunately she could take neither her husband nor her eldest daughter with
her.
As
they pulled up in the twilight the simian shape of her father-in-law, the man
from whom Mike had derived his innate strength, if not height, stood
silhouetted in the doorway.
“Papa
O’Neal?”
“Uhn?”
They were sitting in the living room of the farmhouse. It had a bachelor-pad
look to it, the feeling that there were no women resident in the house, for all
that it was neat as a pin. An oak-wood fire blazed on the hearth against the
winter chill while Sharon nursed a glass of white wine that was growing quite
warm. She wondered if she dared ask for ice, while Mike Senior nursed a beer
gone much the same way. Both of them had been sitting that way since getting
Cally off to bed, more unspoken between them than might ever be possible to
say.
“I
have to ask. It doesn’t have a thing to do with this, with Cally, but it’s
important to me.” She paused, wondering how to go on. Wondering if she should.
Did she really want to know the answer? “Why’d you leave the Army?”
“Shit,”
he said, getting up and going to a sideboard. He threw away the warm beer,
pulled out an ice bucket, walked over and plunked two cubes in her glass then
walked back over and pulled out a Mason jar. He poured two fingers in a small
glass mug, knocked it back with a “pah!” and a grimace, then poured two more
and walked back over to his chair carrying the jar.
The chair,
with its cowhide cover, complete with coarse hair, had the look of much of the
house: rough, dependable, marginally comfortable but not by any means
aesthetic. He flumped into it with a sigh and continued, “I just knew you were
working up to that.”
“How?”
she asked, swirling the wine and ice with her forefinger. She took a sip as it
slowly cooled.
“You’d
never asked. And I could tell that you’d never asked Mike.”
“I
did. He told me to ask you.”
“When?”
he asked, pouring another hit of the fiery moonshine.
“Shortly
after I first met you. I asked him what was with you, you know, why you were
so . . .”
“Loony?”
he asked.
“No,
just . . . well . . .”
“Eccentric
then,” he prompted with a shrug.
“Okay,
eccentric. And he told me you’d had an interesting career. And you’ve talked
about other stuff, but never that. And hardly at all about Vietnam.” She cocked
her head to one side.
“You
were born in, what? Seventy-two?” he asked roughly.
“Three,”
she corrected.
“Lessee,”
he said scratching his chin. The action reminded her so strongly of Mike Junior
for a moment that she caught her breath. “In nineteen seventy-three,” he
continued, “I was at Bragg, but I went back in seventy-four.”
“I
thought we pulled out of Vietnam in seventy-two and three,” she said, puzzled.
“Oh,
we did, sure.” He smiled slyly. “ . . . all except the
‘Studies and Observation Group.’ ”
“The
what?”
“The
SOG. What was the SOG?” he asked rhetorically. “Well, first of all, we were
guys that you absolutely could not introduce to mother, or to Congress, which
amounts to the same damn thing. We were a bunch of major bad-ass hard cases for
which the war just could not be over. It could not be a loss; therefore, they
created a way for us to go back into the jungle.
“SEALs,
LRPS, Rangers, Phoenix, SF, Marine Recon, they all contributed. Its purpose
was, basically, payback. The brass knew the war was lost. Hell, officially and
effectively we had pulled out, but there were some targets that we just felt
should not survive the experience, a few situations that needed cleansing in a
big way.” He took a pull from the two-hundred-proof liquor and stared at the
crackling fire, mind far away in time and space.
“I
really didn’t understand the fuckin’ Vietnamese then. I mean, the fuckin’ VC
were such absolute stone-cold motherfuckers. They would do things to people I
still wake up in a cold sweat over. But some of them, hell, maybe most of them,
did it because they were patriots. Maybe some of them got their rocks off, but
quite a few of them were as sickened by it as I was. They did it because the
mission was to unite Vietnam under communism, and they believed in that with
the same hard cold light that I believed it was evil incarnate. It took me damn
near fifteen years to come to that conclusion.” He shook his head over old
wounds, bone deep.
“Anyway,
we were there to arrange permanent solutions for some of the more unpleasant
examples of dialectical materialism as manifest on Earth.
“There
were two targets that stand out in my mind. It was one of those situations when
there was a fine dividing line. There are a lot of situations that are black
and white, but most are shades of gray. This was a situation where two people
disagreed on what shade one of the targets was. They were both consummate
motherfuckers, no disagreement there, but one motherfucker was, officially, on
our side and the other motherfucker was, officially, on the other side.
“Well,
I finally decided that I was tired of distinctions like that, so I killed them
both.”
She
looked at the glass clutched in his hand, thick crystal formed into a
handleless mug. On it was a legend so chipped and marred as to be illegible,
but from a faint outline of a shield and arrow she knew what the inscription
would be: De Oppresso Liber, “To Liberate the Oppressed.” It was such a
high-minded motto, dropped in the Devil’s cauldron of Southeast Asia, where the
oppressed seemed to seek oppression over freedom, where enemies were friends
and friends were enemies. For the lesser soldiers it was the moment-to-moment
fear of the booby trap, the mine and the sniper. For those who ruled the
jungle, it was the fear of betrayal, the knife in the back. Across more than
thirty years, the jungle of the mind seemed to reach out and touch the tough
old man across from her.
“Anyway, it
really pissed off the brass. However, giving the real reason it pissed them off
wouldn’t work. But everybody was into something, back then. Some of them were
smuggling drugs back to the World, some of them were moving comfort rations out
to the front. Whatever.
“Me?
I had been moving some equipment back to the World for the last few tours, the
kind of equipment guaranteed to not make the ATF very damn happy. Anyway, they
put that together with a couple of other things and whomped up a court-martial
for smuggling and black market. Twenty years in Leavenworth was the verdict. I
got shipped off about when Mike was born. After three years a particular appeal
worked and I was out.” He snorted faintly at some remembrance and Sharon
realized that the hits of white lightning were finally starting to have some
effect.
“Now,
I could have, probably should have, come home. But I never was into the story
of the prodigal son; if I found myself shoveling pig shit I wasn’t going home
until I was chief pig-shit shoveler.
“A
buddy clued me that there were positions available for someone with my skills.
Positions where I’d probably meet a few old friends. The Feds wouldn’t care for
it, but, hell, they don’t like anything they don’t directly control while being
spot on any evil they do. So I went back to being a soldier. On my own side.”
He shook his head again at the futility of the long war between East and West.
It was fought on battlefields throughout the world, most undeclared. And it
killed more than bodies.
“But
you know, me and my buddies, we sure could win the goddamn battles but we could
never win the goddamn wars! It was Vietnam all over again. In Rhodesia, my
unit, the RSAS, we had one team rack up the highest kill ratio in history. Five
guys wiped out a guerilla regiment, poof! Gone! And we still lost the goddamn
war.
“It
was then, after Rhodesia, that I just got fed up. I was making a living, but I
sure as hell wasn’t making a difference; the gooks won every fuckin’ time. So I
came home and became a farmer like my father, and his father, and his father.
And someday, God willing, Mike will come through that door again and only leave
horizontal.”
He
turned blazing eyes on his daughter-in-law and she realized that he was finally
talking to her as a fellow soldier, not just a civilian in uniform. “Know
this, Sharon—and this may be the last time I get a chance to teach a young
officer—it really is true that you have to pay more attention to your friends
than your enemies. You can defend against the enemy, but it is damn hard
to defend yourself against your own side.” He shook his leonine head again and
poured more moonshine, the fire of his soul suddenly damped.
“Papa
O’Neal?” she said, after some thought.
“Yeah,
L-T?” He did not look up from swirling his moonshine.
“I’m
glad you shot him. If you hadn’t, you wouldn’t be here for us.” She smiled
faintly. “God works in mysterious ways.”
“Hmmph,”
he commented. “Well, in any case I didn’t shoot him. I used a knife. I wanted
to see his eyes.” He shook his head again and threw the fresh white lightning
onto the fire where it blazed like a beacon in the night.
CHAPTER
6
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
0812 EDT May 23rd, 2004 ad
The President
hunched forward in his chair, watching the video from Barwhon. The scene was a
large, dry open area in the towering forests and swamps. Debris was scattered
across the field, bits of cloth and torn tents. Ripped packages of combat meals
could be discerned in the foreground, the Mylar linings reflecting the
omnipresent purple sky.
The voiceover from the reporter was
unnecessary. A clip taken the week before of the same crew’s visit to the
command center of the First Infantry Division had preceded the current view.
Where the brigade of logistics and management personnel had been was now a
wasteland of shredded equipment and camouflage uniforms. There was not a body
to be seen.
The
mistake had been trivial, a battalion being rotated out of the line, their
relief missing the “handoff” by a slim margin, an unanticipated Posleen
assault. Suddenly a mass of Posleen equivalent to a division was in the rear
area. While the flanked line brigades of the division had struggled for
existence, the Posleen had sliced through the lightly armed and undertrained
rear area personnel like a buzz saw through balsa.
The
final casualties were still being counted. As always with the Posleen, it was
the Missing In Action column that was the largest. Virtually all of them could
be counted on as dead. Many would be rations for aliens, others bits and pieces
lost in the ruck the Armored Combat Suits had made of the Posleen.
The
ACSs, a British battalion this time, had led the rescue divisions. The suits,
heavily reinforced with fire from the oncoming support, had slashed through the
centaurs and relieved the survivors of the American infantry division. Then
they had led the French reinforcements into their positions and hunted the Posleen
into the ground.
But
the losses were enormous. Most of the division was missing, which meant dead.
And during the primaries, he was not in a position to take the heat from this
debacle.
He
flipped off the television and spun in his chair to face the secretary of
defense.
“Well?”
the President asked.
“It’s
not as if it hasn’t happened before—” said the secretary, only to be cut off.
“Not
in the last year. We lost heavily in the first year’s fighting, but this is the
first big loss anyone has had this year.”
“The
Chinese just took a big hit on Irmansul, Mister President,” commented his
national security advisor. The former infantry commander rubbed the side of his
nose. He had made his suggestions the first week he had been with the
administration. Now to see if they would take fruit.
“But
not NATO forces,” the President snapped. The treaty was nearly moribund, but
the term was still used to indicate the units from “First World” countries.
NATO forces commanded far higher funding from the Galactics than counterparts
from other areas of the world; a NATO division cost the Galactics twelve times
as much as a Chinese division. “Let the Irmansul consortium get what they paid
for! But we cannot afford these sorts of losses. And they have to stop!”
“It’s
war, Mister President,” said the secretary, casting a sidelong glance at the
NSA. “You win some and you lose some.”
“Well,
I’ve never been a ‘loser,’ Robby,” the President snapped, angrily. “And I’ve
got to wonder if that’s the case with all of our commanders?”
“Do
you have a problem with the chain of command, Mister President?” asked the
secretary.
“I
don’t know,” said the President, snidely. “Do you think we have a problem?
First we have all these news reports about training and discipline problems.
Then we’re still reeling from the arguments over whether we should defend the
coastal plains or not. Then we have this. I have to wonder if we have the right
people in the right jobs!”
“There
are several issues currently—” the secretary started and was cut off again.
“I
don’t want to hear about issues!” the President snapped. “I want to hear about
results! Now, do you have any suggestions?”
The
secretary of defense finally understood what the President wanted. The
President wanted a “policy-maker’s” head. With the campaigning already started,
he wanted to be distanced from the failure on Barwhon, while having the blame
pinned precisely. That meant placing it at a high enough level that the
administration could be seen as “doing something.” The secretary suddenly realized
that he should only offer his own resignation if he really meant it.
“I
think we need to consider a new command team for Ground Forces,” said the
secretary, carefully.
“I
think we need to consider more than that,” said the President. “I think we need
to completely replace the upper command and change the command
structure . . .”
The
NSA hid a small smile. Fertile ground indeed.
The
general gave a broad and humorless smile. It was a well-known mannerism that
countless subordinates had fallen victim to. “He did what?”
General Jim
Taylor, Chief of Staff to the Ground Forces High Commander, gave a huge grin
and balanced the Fairbairn combat knife he was playing with on one finger. “He
canned the commander and the vice.” Jim Taylor had dealt with plenty of Marines
in his time, and as far as he was concerned, the vice commander was just a guy
wearing a Marine’s hat. “And he’s completely changed the command structure. The
High Commander will command Training Command, Intelligence, Logistics, what
have you. Including ‘Base Support Command.’ ”
“CONARC,”
said the other general. He gave a resigned sigh. At least his position had
finally been given its correct name. He had held the position of CONARC for the
past two years, ever since completing his assignment as head of the Infantry
branch of the Galactic Technology Board. It had been an intensely frustrating
period. Not only was his background as one of the most experienced combat
commanders in the Army being squandered, he was responsible for bases that were
out of his control. He was the “commander” of the base personnel and “owned”
the bases, but he did not have command of the units assigned to those bases.
And those units were halfway mutinous and engaging in almost daily riots. Then
the cost of the cleanup for those riots came out of his budget. So he
was watching a previously stellar career come crashing down because of others’
failures.
“Nope,”
said General Taylor. “Continental Army Command is the biggest change. There
will be two ‘Force’ commands under the High Commander: CONARC and ExForC.
Continental Army Command and Expeditionary Force Command. The commander of
CONARC will have direct command and control of all combat forces in the
continental United States.”
The
silver-haired general Taylor had been addressing sat bolt upright in his chair
and pinned his ebony-skinned superior with a glacial-blue gaze. “Are you
kidding?”
“Nope,”
said Taylor with a grin. “And, before you even ask. Yeah, Jack, you get to keep
the position. I say that as the new High Commander,” he added with an even
wider grin.
General
Jack Horner sat back in his chair and a rare, real smile violated his normally
serious mien. “Congratulations. Jesus, there is a God.”
Taylor
shrugged and expertly threw the knife into a cork dartboard with a picture of
Jar-Jar Binks pinned on it. “There are other problems. He wanted to switch back
to Ridicuplan, but I talked him out of it, I think. But we have to maintain
forces on the coastal plains during the main invasion.”
“Oh,”
said Horner with another thin smile. “Great.”
“Yeah.
He’s got a point; public opinion is dead set against losing the plains
completely. It would tear us apart as a country to fall back on the
Appalachians and the Rockies, giving up all the major cities . . .”
“Nice
recitation,” commented Horner. “Are you considering running for Congress?”
“Say
that and smile, partner,” said Taylor, with a warning grin. “No, but it’s also
true.”
“Sir,”
said Horner, formally. “There is no way to defend the plains.”
“Oh,
don’t get me wrong, Jack. I know that and I’m not gonna piss away boys’ lives
trying. And I’m not gonna let the President, either. What we have to do is come
up with a plan to defend certain key cities.”
“Which
ones?” asked General Horner, frowning slightly in agreement. “That I can live
with, if we don’t have to defend too far out.”
“Well,
we’re going to decide which ones and where. But I more or less promised that if
it is ‘historic’ it would get defended.”
Horner
nodded. “You know, I played around with that a while back. Defend the inner
part of all the ‘major’ cities that we were planning on losing. But we don’t
want to do it with a normal population.”
“I
told him that, too.” Taylor nodded. “We’ll plan on evacuating all but the
military and an essential civilian presence. No children stay.”
Horner
nodded with another positive frown. “Good. This will actually be a better
defense plan, you know.”
Taylor
nodded with a grim smile. “The cities will pull some of the heat off of the
mountain defenses.”
“That
and it will keep some of the Posleen where those refurbished battleships can
reach them,” Horner noted. “I’ll have a list of recommended cities for defense
by the end of the week. Count on Norfolk, DC, San Francisco and New York.”
“Okay,”
said Taylor. “And start thinking about ways to pull out the defenders if it
gets too hot. They’ll have to be planning on staying for five years, without
external support. But if they’re going to get overrun, there will have to be a
plan.”
“Something
else for the ACS to handle,” Horner said with a frown. He had just the person
in mind to write that part of the plan. Always call on an expert.
CHAPTER
7
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
0605 EDT May 28th, 2004 ad
“Good morning,
professor!” came the call from the door.
Monsignor
Nathan O’Reilly, Ph.D., the Reagan Chair of Archaeology and Ancient History,
looked up from the computer screen and his eyes lit. The young lady in the
doorway was not only one of his favorite former students, she was a notorious
gossip. Since her new job often included gossip that he wanted to hear, it was
always a pleasure to see her.
“Kari!
Come in,” he said, rising to his feet to rearrange chairs. “Sit,” he commanded,
pointing at the comfortable armchair placed by the desk. “Coffee?”
“Oh,
no!” she gasped. “I couldn’t hold another drop. I’ve been up practically the
whole night and I’m headed to bed!”
“Since
when does the White House Protocol Office work swing shift?” he asked with
raised white eyebrows. He took a sip of his own coffee and glanced at the
cesium-quartz clock on the wall. Among the bric-a-brac of ancient alembics,
archeological relics and old books it stuck out like a nuclear reactor in a
Roman coliseum.
The
clock had been a gift from another former student. The newly promoted Vice Admiral
with the Federation Fleet had presented it to his old mentor with the joke that
now he could always be sure what century he was in. It indicated that Kari was
returning home shortly after six in the morning. While he was habitually early
to work, he knew from experience that Kari, while quite beautiful and
intellectually brilliant, was a tad lazy. Her working through the night was
something he would have deemed impossible.
“Oh!”
she exclaimed, tossing her head to clear an errant blonde hair. “It is just so
exciting! The Tir Lord Dol Nok is coming on a state visit! And the first
place he is visiting is right here!”
“Kari,
Kari,” the professor soothed, “calm yourself. Precision, darling. By right here
are you referring to George Mason University or Washington?”
“Washington!
He’s going to hold a summit with President Edwards to finalize the sale of the
heavy weapons for the planetary defense centers in the U.S.!”
The
professor shook his head. Kari was a wonderful girl, but it was early for her
particular brand of cheerleader enthusiasm. “That is wonderful news. But why
were you up all night?”
“Oh,”
she said, letting out an exaggerated sigh. “The summit won’t be for months, but
the protocols for the High Tir are just sooo complex. Previously the
WHoPo thought that the only significant similar human protocols seemed to be
among the Mandarin. But that was just being narrow-minded. I was able to
convincingly demonstrate that there were more similarities with observed
Egyptian motifs. . . .”
O’Reilly
leaned forward and gave her every bit of his attention. While in many ways Kari
epitomized the image of the dumb blonde, she was one of the most brilliant
young ladies it had been his privilege to teach. Her insights into early
societies’ interactions probably exceeded his own. If she were not such a
natter-head or had an inkling about what was actually happening in the world
around her, she would be a perfect recruit for the Société.
He
nodded his head as she made a point about the surprising similarity between Minoan
court protocols and the protocols of the Darhel. He was aware of the
similarity, had in fact pointed it out to her on a previous visit. Unlike Kari,
however, he had a pretty good idea why the similarity existed. The protocols of
the court of Minos derived from both Egypt and Phoenicia. Since becoming a
member of the Société, what he had to say about Maya, Egypt and Phoenicia was
no longer printable. He could not, unfortunately, teach the truth. That was the
part that stuck furthest into his craw.
“So,
anyway,” she finished her dissertation, “we had to completely restructure the
plan. I swear, those idiots from the State Department think that the Darhel are
just funny-looking Chinese or something! They had no idea at all that the
manner of precedence is reversed with the Tir. They had no idea about food
protocols; they were going to serve roast beef to vegetarians!”
“State
is usually more competent than that,” commented the professor,
chuckling. “Surely they have dealt with the Darhel’s idiosyncrasies before
this?” He knew that they had. Kari was not the only former student who came
back for occasional “chats.”
“I
don’t know what moron concocted the menu,” she answered. “But we got it
straight. The precedence thing has apparently been overlooked before.”
“Well,
not this time,” the professor said with a smile. “You seem to be doing well?”
“Oh,
I don’t know.” She sighed, her normally vivacious face deflated. “What the
heck is the point? We’re still going to have hell on earth, no matter how
good I am at protocol.”
“We
each must do our small part for the future,” he said with a reassuring smile.
“Think of the poor people who labor in factories or even work in a convenience
store. At least you work at the White House.”
“Hmm,”
she said with a pensive frown. “But, lately I feel like I should be doing
more.”
“Such
as?”
“Larry
offered me a position on his staff,” she said.
“You
want to enlist in Fleet?” he asked, surprised.
“Not
enlist. Get a commission. They need officers who can be liaisons with the
Indowy and Darhel.”
He
regarded her somberly for a moment. If she left the White House not only would
he lose a very good source, she would be like a fish out of water. She simply
had no concept of how different military life was from anything she had ever
previously experienced.
“Kari,”
he said carefully, “why did you say the Tir was coming to visit?”
She
wrinkled her brow prettily and cocked her head. “There’s a problem with the
heavy grav-guns going into the planetary defense centers. The Galactics can’t
produce as many as had been planned for before the invasion. Also, the new plan
to defend the cities is going to require more than the Pentagon had planned
for. The Tir is coming to decide the final apportionment not only for the
United States but worldwide.”
“Hmm,”
the professor murmured, nodding his head. “Do you think that the Tir would have
been more or less favorably disposed to the United States for more grav-guns if
the President had shaken his hand, walked at his side to dinner and fed him
beef?”
Kari’s
eyes widened. “Oh.”
The
old man’s face creased in an engaging smile. Kari thought that when he did that
it took thirty years off him. He still had the greenest eyes she had ever seen.
She wondered for a moment what he was like as a young man. She knew he had come
late to his current profession. And he had flaming red hair before it turned
white. He was probably a pistol as a kid, she thought.
“So,”
he asked, “still planning on taking that position with Fleet?”
“No,” she said, shaking her head. “Your
logic, as usual, is perfect.” She smiled back. “What about you?”
It
was his turn to look rueful. “Well. The Ministry did not feel it necessary to
reactivate a former subaltern, whatever his later accomplishments.”
She
shook her head. “What idiots. They could use you in Fleet Intelligence. You
seem to understand more about the Galactics and the Posleen than anyone I’ve
ever met in the military.”
His
face displayed none of the terror that little admission fired in him. He had
thought his understanding of both their Galactic “allies” and their putative
enemies was carefully hidden. Apparently he had been insufficiently
circumspect.
“Well,
it seems to me that knowledge of humanity and its many foibles gives more than
enough background to understand our allies and enemies. We are, after all, not
so terribly different.”
She
nodded and yawned. “Oh!” she exclaimed with a hand over her mouth. “Sorry!”
“No
problem, dear,” he said with a twinkle in his eye. “I think you need some
rest.”
“Mmm,”
she agreed, getting up and heading to the door as he stood in anachronistic
gentility. She paused at the open door. “I’m going to be busy for a while, so I
may not be able to see you. Take care, Monsignor.”
“And
you, my dear,” he said as she walked out. “And you. Most definitely take care.”
He
sat down and went back to parsing out the Sanskrit tablet on the screen as his
mind worked on many different tracks. He began to mutter a tune that had nearly
fallen out of favor except as a corrupted nursery rhyme.
“Yankee
Doodle went to town a-ridin’ on a pony . . .”
CHAPTER
8
Ft. Indiantown
Gap, PA, United States of America, Sol III
1023 EDT June 6th, 2004 ad
“Does he ever
lighten up?” asked Lieutenant Nightingale as she stepped onto the covered porch
of the company headquarters. Tall and greyhound thin, the blonde XO had just
been the victim of an O’Neal smoking. She now took a moment in the shade out of
sight of the troops to regain her composure.
“I
don’t think so,” said Lieutenant Arnold, her fellow sufferer. The tall, balding
thirty-two-year-old weapons platoon leader shook his head.
Until
the arrival of the second draft, he had been the executive officer of Bravo
Company. He knew exactly how stringent their commander’s standards were. He had
come to grips with them. Teri, on the other hand, was having problems.
In
the captain’s eyes, the faults of the two lieutenants were too numerous to
list.
The
job of an executive officer was usually to ensure that the unit was functioning
smoothly first and learn to be a company commander second. O’Neal, however, had
put “tuning” the company in the lap of their extremely competent first sergeant
and insisted that Nightingale become as competent as he was at maneuvering the
company in combat. She had thus far failed miserably.
She
was having a hard time adjusting her command style to combat troops. The gentle
cajoling that worked well with the techs who had been in her previous
intelligence company was perceived as weakness by grunts. She also seemed to
have no tactical sense at all. The fact that she was for all practical purposes
a neophyte was beside the point. From Captain O’Neal’s uncluttered point of
view she was one heartbeat away from having his company in her hands and either
she could cut the mustard or she could not.
In
Arnold’s case, the new weaponry and employment techniques were the problem. He
was having to adjust to ranges of fire and maneuver he had previously never
considered. At the same time he was overseeing the training of troops in a
variety of weapons beyond their dreams.
The
military had learned some lessons on Diess and Barwhon, and the ACS weapons
platoons now packed so much firepower they were jokingly referred to as the
Grim Reapers. They had initially been deployed with 75mm automortars and
terawatt lasers. Diess had proven that the standard suit grenade systems were
superior to the automortars at short ranges while the lasers were too bulky and
awkward for the sort of rapid movement ACS had adopted. The mortars and lasers
were effectively retired, but in their wake came a diversity of suit-mounted
special weapons. From this diversity the platoon leader was supposed to choose
which would be appropriate for the probable mission. Since no mission ever went
as planned, there were far more wrong choices than right.
If
the probable mission was indirect fire-support, the platoon packed individual
multimortars. These were enhanced grenade launchers and each weapon-suit
packed four: one on each shoulder and one on each arm. They threw 60mm rounds
up to five miles with pinpoint accuracy and had fourteen separate munition
types from which to choose.
The
basic munition was a standard high-explosive (HE) round that could be set for
airburst, surface detonation or delay. The weapons graded up from there through
“enhanced conventional munitions,” i.e., cluster bombs, to antimatter rounds
with a “soft kill” radius larger than the range of the mortar. Thus any
unarmored humans, or Posleen, in the immediate area of the mortar platoon would
be fried if these were used. Unfortunately, for everyone involved, these heavy
weapons suits could run through the available onboard rounds in twenty seconds.
The “Reapers” joked that they all needed one platoon of grunts apiece, just to
carry ammunition.
If
the probable mission was close support there were three separate weapons
systems to chose from, depending on how close and how personal. The simplest
was a set of super shotguns with multiple types of rounds from which to choose.
From there it got complicated.
Unfortunately
each suit could only mount one type of weapon and choosing the right weapons
mix could make or break an engagement. The Old Man was actually beginning to
perfect some beautiful sucker moves for the playbook that involved the heavy
weapons platoon. But they required that the platoon leader be able to read his
mind. As the playbook got firmed up it might be a little easier but in the
meantime there were far more wrong mixes than right.
“Well,
I don’t care what anybody says,” continued Nightingale, angrily, “there’s such
a thing as— What the hell is that?” she broke off.
“Those
are Indowy, I think,” said Arnold seriously.
Outside the
headquarters the Pennsylvania summer sun stirred up the yard of the company
area in playful dust devils. Emerging from the swirling dust was a group of
squat green humanoids. Looking superficially like fat children, their coloring
derived from a chlorophyllic symbiont that wavered across their lightly clad
skin like green fur. Their faces were nightmarishly batlike but their eyes were
large and round, giving them an ingenuous expression that actually went well
with their personalities. In their midst they towed a large crate on an
anti-grav dolly.
“No,
that. It looks like a coffin,” said Nightingale.
“Little
coffin,” commented Arnold. Neither of them had ever seen the traveling carton
for an armored combat suit.
The
nine Indowy were led by an individual with somewhat more ornamentation, but
otherwise indistinguishable to the pair of officers. When the lead Indowy
reached the bottom of the rickety metal stairs leading to the company
headquarters it stopped and bowed. The following Indowy set the box down and
shuffled nervously.
“Is
this the clan of the most illustrious Michael O’Neal?” The AID translation was
in a higher pitch than the two were used to, almost off the audible scale.
Arnold
nudged Nightingale.
“Yes,”
she said. “Yes, it is. I am Lieutenant Nightingale,” she continued more firmly,
“his second-in-command.”
“I
bear a gift from my master, the Indowy Aenaol,” said the leader with a deep
bow. At a gesture the remaining Indowy righted the sarcophagus and touched a
button. The box opened to reveal a small combat suit that sported some notable
modifications from the standard command suit.
The
first thing the officers noticed was the ornamentation. The suit was covered in
complex designs that at first appeared to be three-dimensional, an absolute
no-no when dealing with penetrating fire. On closer examination they appeared
to be holograms somehow incorporated into the armor. There were some elegant
fins running down the arms and legs that might help with heat dissipation, a
major fault of most combat suits. The helmet was formed into the face of some
sort of demon or horrific alien creature, smooth to the front with pointed
demon-ears and fangs dangling nearly to the suit’s chest. Both arms sported
underarm daggers and more weapons peeped from unlikely places. It appeared that
if it was surrounded the whole suit might start blasting. More of the company
were gathering around to look at the apparition as First Sergeant Pappas
stepped through the door.
“Okay,
what the hell is . . . that?” the tall, Herculean Samoan
NCO said, uncharacteristically dumbfounded.
“The
captain’s new suit, Top,” chuckled Arnold. “Why don’t you go get him?”
Mike
walked through the door a moment later to the relief of the Indowy team, who
were becoming nervous at being surrounded by humans. For the Indowy, dealing
with humans had much the same effect as a human dealing with a tiger. The
trainer can tell you all day it is harmless, but once you’re in the cage it is
just a damn big carnivore.
“Top,
clear these people out,” Mike said, instantly analyzing the situation. He
turned a bit of dip between his lip and gum, then spat in the dust to the side
of the porch.
“What
the hell does this look like, a fuckin’ circus?” the first sergeant said,
rounding on the first NCO in sight. “Sergeant Stewart! Move your squad out of
here before I find something useful for you rag-bags to do! What? None of you
have anything better to do? Maybe we need to GI a few barracks?” The crowd
rapidly dispersed leaving only the captain, the lieutenants and the first
sergeant.
“Indowy
Aelool, taon, I see you,” said Mike, making a fractional bow. He had not
dealt with any Indowy since Diess, but he had kept current with the position of
the human military ranks in the complex hierarchy of the Federation. However,
the decorations marked the Indowy as a senior craftsman. As a Fleet Strike
captain Mike outranked the Indowy by several degrees despite the fact that it
might command thousands of Indowy. In the Federation scheme of things, Indowy
had incredibly low caste.
O’Neal
was not certain but he suspected the senior craftsman was a transfer/neuter.
That Indowy sex had a natural advantage career-wise, since they were only
peripherally involved in childbirth; they also were a strong political force
within the Indowy ranks. That made his assignment to a fitting team unusual to
say the least. Mike would have expected a lower-rank female craftsman.
“Inspired
Lord O’Neal, I see you,” the Indowy intoned.
“Inspired
Lord?” asked Mike. It was an Indowy rank equivalent to a clan leader; he was
not aware that it was ever bestowed on non-Indowy. He could not immediately
determine a human equivalent, but there was rarely more than one per planet,
sometimes none on a minor planet.
“It
was the determination of the grouped clans that such would be your rank among
the Indowy, henceforth until time should end. Never has one done so much for so
many. I grieve that no greater lord than my humble self could greet you as
fit.”
“I
understand the difficulty.” And he did. The Darhel would probably look poorly
on this example of Indowy independent thought. “But,” he continued
determinedly, “the success on Diess was the result of the actions of many.”
“So
you have said, repeatedly,” the Indowy Master agreed. “Yet the strategy for
success did not exist until you showed your own commanders the Way. The forces
necessary for success were freed by the action of men under your command. The
final action, protecting the assembling defenses by single-handed destruction
of a command ship, was not done by others.” It wrinkled its jowls, an Indowy
head shake. “Your humility is in keeping with the finer traits of the humans,
but it is false. Argue not, you are an Inspired Lord, in thought as well as
deed.
“In
keeping with your new assumption,” it continued, “it was found mete to gift you
with this token of our gratitude. A free gift, freely given as you gave so
freely to our brothers.” He gestured grandly at the suit. “It incorporates
every aspect of suit design that you called for, that was possible to
construct.”
“Power
source?” asked Mike glancing quickly at the suit. He moved the bit of dip to
the side as a slight smile violated his face.
“Class
Two antimatter reactor, as you specified. Equivalent to a five-kiloton
antimatter warhead, but small enough to armor against almost any strike. Just
such a warhead could go off next to the armor and not penetrate the energy
core, so strongly is it protected.”
“Armor?”
Mike asked on a rising tone.
“Sixty-millimeter
frontal monomolecular uranium-silicon alloy with energetic reinforcement. The
energetic reinforcement is logarithmically autocontrolled against
nonrelativistic–velocity projectiles. As the round comes closer to a
penetrating angle, the deflection energy increases logarithmically.”
Mike
stepped gingerly down the steps and ran his hand down the front of the suit.
“Inertial systems?”
“Two
hundred eighty gravities with full lift and drive, seven inertial sump points.
Sorry,” he said with a shrug. The gesture was shared by Indowy and humans. “It
was the best the Tchpth could do.”
Mike
turned with a closed-mouth smile—he knew what the sight of teeth did to the
Indowy—and gleaming eyes. “Tell the Indowy that I accept with thanks!”
“Umm,
sir?” interjected Nightingale.
“Yes,
Lieutenant?”
“Is
that legal? I mean, isn’t there some law against it?” she asked.
“No,”
he responded definitively. His face was quite closed as he turned slightly to spit
out another stream of tobacco juice.
“Sir?
I mean, conflict of interest? And gifts from contractors? I know there are Army
regulations, sir.” She finished with a moue of distaste. He was the commander
and could have any filthy habit he wanted to have. But he could at least have
the decency to keep it private. Her former unit had a zero-tolerance tobacco
policy.
“There
aren’t any in the Federation laws, Lieutenant. None at all,” said the Indowy
Master. “We checked quite carefully, and it is entirely within the agreed-upon
structure for the Federation Armed Forces remuneration process. Also, since it
is a necessary piece of equipment for the captain’s function, it is not taxed.”
“Oh.”
The group of officers and NCOs shared looks. The Indowy had just handed their
captain nearly half a billion credits worth of suit, untaxed. In perspective,
an Indowy junior craftsman earned less than five credits a month.
“Again,
my thanks,” Mike said to the Indowy.
“It
is little. My team will be staying to fit your clan. I guarantee you the best
fitting possible.”
“Why
don’t you come inside out of the dust and we can talk,” said Mike, gesturing
towards the headquarters. “There are a few things I’ve been hoping to talk to a
good technician about.”
“Thank
you. And my team?”
“Top,”
O’Neal said.
“Right
you are, sir. Beds for the Indowy, coming right up. I think a trailer to
themselves?”
“Reading
my mind again, Top.”
“Yes,
sir,” said the darkly tanned mountain with a smile. “That and training is what
NCOs is for.”
CHAPTER 9
Rabun County, GA,
United States 0f America, Sol III
1023 EDT June 17th, 2004 ad
“Okay, honey, now
turn the cam a quarter twist, carefully, while making sure the pin don’t come
out.”
“Like
this?” asked Cally, her forehead wrinkling in concentration.
“Just right.
Now, can you feel any resistance to the pin?” asked Papa O’Neal, watching the
exercise from the shade of a tree. The heat of Georgia’s summer enveloped them
here at the edge of the fields and every little scrap of shade was appreciated.
He worked the massive wad of Redman in one cheek then moved it to the other
side.
“No,”
she said, licking a drop of sweat off her lip. “There’s no resistance at all,”
she confirmed, barely moving the cotter pin.
“Okay,
pull it out, carefully. Don’t move the trip wire and for dang sure if you feel
any resistance, stop.”
Cally
was taking to demolitions like a duck to water. She had incredible hand-eye
coordination for an eight-year-old, and took infinite pains. It only took Papa
O’Neal blowing up one cow for her to decide she wanted to be real careful. This
was the most advanced technique yet: a claymore directional mine on a trip
wire, with the trip wire booby-trapped. Okay, so it was not a real claymore,
yet. It was, however, a real blasting cap.
“Okay,”
he said, continuing the lesson, “so you’re walking along a
trail . . .”
“No,
I’m not, ’cause trail is spelled
D-E-A . . . T-H . . . uh . . . T-R-A-P,”
she contradicted.
“Okay,
you’re having a bad day.”
“ ‘Pay more attention if
you’re having a bad day, you make more mistakes, not less,’ ” she recited
pedantically.
“Okay,
your target is walking along a trail,” said O’Neal with a shake of his head. He
took a pull from the Gatorade at his side and nodded at her canteen.
“Posleen
or human?” she asked, taking a large swig of water. Papa O’Neal’s house had the
best water in the entire world.
“Well,
human this time.”
“Okay,”
she agreed with equanimity. Humans were generally smarter than Posleen
according to both Papa O’Neal and her daddy, who ought to know. If you trained
to kill humans you were bound to be better at killing Posleen.
“And
he’s smart . . .” continued Mike Senior, turning slightly to the
side to spit. The stream of brown juice nailed a grasshopper as it slumbered on
a grass stem.
“No,
he’s not,” she disagreed, putting away her canteen. “He’s on a trail.”
“Sometimes
you gotta use the trails,” said Papa O’Neal.
“Not
me, I’m in the trees.”
“Okay,
a target is walking along the trail, a not-very-smart human target.”
“Okay,”
she agreed.
“And
he’s smart enough to be looking for trip wires.”
“Dogs?”
“Feelers.”
“Okay.”
“And
he spots the trip wire . . .”
“Feels.”
“Right.
And what does he do?
“Not-very-smart?”
“Right.”
“ ‘Always assume your
target is smarter than you.’ ”
“Would
you stop throwing my statements back in my face and go with the exercise!” He
worked the Redman back over to the other side and spat again. A beetle started
to burrow, thinking it was raining.
“Okay,”
she agreed. If that was how he wanted to do it, fine.
“Okay,
what does mister not-so-smart do?”
“Cuts
the wire.”
“Go
ahead.”
“No
way!” she disagreed. “You cut the wire. I’m not taking your word on that being
a practice claymore!”
“Okay,
pull the blasting cap, then cut the wire.”
“Okay.”
She crept over to the camouflaged claymore, sweeping carefully ahead of her
with a long piece of grass; you never knew when Papa O’Neal was going to booby-trap
his exercises. Then, with a glance over her shoulder to make certain that
Grandpa was not going to mess with the detonator, she pulled the blasting cap
out.
There
was a series of sharp retorts behind her as the training claymores that were
hooked to the booby trap on the blasting cap went off in a daisy chain
sequence. If all of the claymores had been real, a hundred-meter swath of the
edge of the fields would have erupted in fire.
“And
the moral of today’s lesson?” asked Papa O’Neal dryly. The wad of chewing
tobacco distended his grin.
“You
are an obnoxious prick, Grandpa!” she retorted.
“And
I’m teaching you bad language.”
“Hey!”
she shouted indignantly, holding up the blasting cap. “This isn’t even real!”
“Like
I’m going to let you handle a live cap hooked to a trip wire,” said the old
man. “Get real. I promised to return you in one piece.”
“You
pull caps all the time,” she said, puzzled.
“Not
once I’ve set an antitamper device on it. If I can’t blow it in place, I go
around. Handling live traps is for fools and damn fools. Which kind are you?”
“Oh,
okay. Enough demo for today?”
“Enough
for today, except I want you to repeat after me. I will
not . . .”
“I
will not . . .”
“Attempt
to disable . . . ” Spit.
“Attempt
to disable . . .”
“Any
demo . . .”
“Any
demo . . .”
“So
help me, God.”
“So
help me, God.”
“Amen.”
Spit.
“Amen.”
“Let’s
go bust some caps,” he said with a smile. Cally was good at demo but shooting
pistols was her real love.
“Okay,
but I want a five-point handicap this time,” she said, checking the Walther in
the skeleton holster at her back.
“No
way. I’m getting old, my hands are all palsied,” he quavered, holding out a
shaking left hand. “I think I should have a handicap.”
“You
do have a handicap, Grandpa; you’re getting senile. Remember last week?
Fourteen points ahead on the twenty-meter range? You know what they say:
short-term memory . . .”
“Are
you sure you’re eight?” he asked. A moment later an ant was smashed to its
knees by a descending mass of mucus and vegetable matter. After a moment it
shook its head and looked around in ant wonder at the largess from the sky.
CHAPTER 10
For heathen heart
that puts her trust
In reeking tube
and iron shard,
All valiant dust
that builds on dust,
And, guarding,
calls not Thee to guard,
For frantic boast
and foolish word—
Thy mercy on Thy
People, Lord!
—“Recessional”
Rudyard
Kipling, 1897
Ft. Indiantown
Gap, PA, United States of America, Sol III
2237 EDT July 28th, 2004 ad
Stewart’s second
squad sprinted forward and dropped to the prone, their grav-guns tracking and
firing on the advancing virtual Posleen the whole time. Wherever the silver
beams of relativistic-velocity teardrops intersected the Posleen wall, racking
explosions tore deep gaps in the oncoming line. In response, hypervelocity
flechettes and missiles tore at the defenders’ armor, most of the hipshot
rounds missing high. But with millions of penetrator rounds coming at the
relatively few suits, losses were a statistical certainty.
“Ten–twenty-two,
ten–twenty-two, execute!” Stewart said in a steady voice as Private Simmons’s
data lead went blank. Half the team checked fire just long enough to reach into
a side compartment and pull out a small ball. Flicking off the cover and
thumbing the switch they set it offset to their right and went back to firing.
“Clear
Ten–Alpha,” said the Alpha team leader as Bravo team duplicated the maneuver.
As
Bravo resumed firing, the cratering charges emplaced by the Alpha team went
off. They again checked fire only long enough to slither into the impromptu
foxholes, then took the Posleen back under fire. “Clear Twenty-Two–Alpha,”
called the team leader.
Moments
later the entire platoon was under cover.
“So
that’s your playbook,” said Colonel Hanson.
“Yes,
sir,” said O’Neal, watching Second platoon perform an advance under fire. The
hasty defense presented by second squad was temporarily impregnable to the
Posleen who were advancing on a narrow strip between a ridge and the Manada
River, a much larger body of water than reality for the purposes of the
exercise. “We’ve got about two hundred plays, so far, with the various levels
of the company trained in their own actions under each play. It’s more or less
analogous to the bugle calls the cavalry used. In this case, the squads are
performing a Ten–Twenty-Two, ‘form hasty fighting positions and take cover.’
Not that it will help them for long on this exercise.” He worked a bit of dip
and spat it into a pocket in the biotic underlayer of the all-enveloping
helmet. The saliva and tobacco products were rapidly ingested by the system
like all wastes. To the underlayer it was all grist for the mill.
“Is
this a fair test?” asked Colonel Hanson, noting how Second platoon was
dissolving as inexorably as rock candy in hot water. He wished he could have a
cigarette, but they were a bitch to smoke in the suits.
“I
think so. By the time Nightingale noticed the flanking maneuver, it was nearly
too late for Second to establish the optimum conditions, which was for the
Posleen to be a hundred meters farther up river. There the chokepoint is only
thirty meters wide, and Lieutenant Fallon could have held them indefinitely. As
it is, I don’t think they’ll make it.”
“What
would you do?”
“I’d
probably try a charge, maybe with some psychological refinements, and try to
push them back to the chokepoint,” said O’Neal. He swiveled his viewpoint down
into the river for a moment then back to the fighting. “It’s really not a time
thing; the length of time they hold is moot. If the Posleen break through now
or three hours from now they’ll crack the company defense down the river.”
“Would
it work?” asked Colonel Hanson, now paying much more attention to the briefer
than the essentially finished engagement.
“According
to the scenario, it will work on an irregular basis, dependent on a number of
factors not available to adjustment by the tested,” O’Neal answered precisely.
Whether any of it would work in the real world was the question in his mind.
Every time he looked back at Diess he got cold chills. The chances he had taken
were insane. Every single action had been long-ball odds and only incredible
good luck had carried the platoon through. His own survival was still placed,
by everyone, in the “miraculous” category. And he was afraid he’d used up not
only his own quota of luck, but his company’s. If these plans were wrong, it
was going to be a massacre. And the fault would rest squarely on his shoulders.
He
worked the dip around in thought and spat again. “The Posleen might have a
wimpy God King, they might not have enough muscle to the front, minute factors
of surface structure on the squad’s armor affects penetration, and so forth.
But if you’re this far back you have to hammer them like the hinges of hell,
and Lieutenant Fallon’s not a hinges-of-hell kind of guy.”
“So
the mistake on Lieutenant Nightingale’s part was farther back?”
“Yes,
sir,” Mike answered, in a distracted tone. Something about the scenario was
playing false to his experienced senses.
“I
almost always leave First platoon in reserve, which pisses the other two
platoons off,” he continued automatically. “But Rogers always goes around with
such a head full of steam, when I use him to reinforce or blitz it gets
hammered home with a vengeance.”
The
First platoon leader was a tall, broad, good-looking first lieutenant. As a
first lieutenant he would normally have either a heavy weapons platoon or a
staff position. Filling a slot for a second lieutenant was beginning to eat him
alive; Mike had forwarded four requests for transfer in the last six months.
“Nightingale
believes in distributing the load. I am trying to disabuse her of that. The
only thing that matters is the mission. You have to pick your units on that
basis, not on the basis of ‘fair.’ I finally decided that what she needed was
more of a helping hand. But I’d backed myself into a corner being
overcorrective.” He grimaced at admitting the mistake.
“Finally
I took over most of the stuff the first sergeant had been handling for both of
us and sicced him on her. They’ve been spending a hell of a lot of time
together and she’s starting to get the hang of it; Gunny Pappas is a top-notch
trainer. But I’m still not totally comfortable with her tactical sense.”
“It
takes time to learn that,” Hanson admitted.
“Yes,
sir. And I hope we’ve got it.” Mike kicked up a probability graph of the
engagement if it continued on the current course and fed it to the battalion
commander. The casualty graph looked like a mountainside.
For
Hanson, who came to his military maturity in the cauldron of Southeast Asia and
the Army of the ’70s, the Virtual Reality gear the unit trained with was the
next best thing to science fiction.
He
had been nearly seventy when recalled and although he had continued in business
after the Army, he was one of those executives for whom computers were Greek.
These systems, however, were as far from modern computers as a Ferrari from a
chariot.
Taking
his lead from the resident expert, he started calling his artificial
intelligence device, a Galactic-supplied supercomputer the size of a pack of
cigarettes, “Little Nag.” He now used her for all his official correspondence
and, now that he had gotten her over the annoying literalness of a new AID, she
was better than any secretary he’d ever had. In the regular exercises the
battalion was conducting, Little Nag kept better track of friendly and enemy
disposition, personnel and equipment levels, and all the other minutiae that
made for a successful military operation, than any staff in history. The newly
arrived S-3 and the other battalion staff officers were getting used to their
own AIDs and the staff was approaching a level of perfection seldom to be
dreamed.
There
was a rapid shuffling below as second squad left their positions and the others
moved to cover the extended front. The reduced fire pressure permitted the
Posleen to begin moving slowly forward, piling up windrows of their dead but
willing to take the sacrifice to overrun the position. However, what remained
of second squad eeled past the other positions and, using a gully that kept
them more or less out of Posleen sight, slipped one by one into the river and
out of Virtual sight.
“Oh,
God damn,” whispered Mike, cutting in an overlay of positions to track second
as they moved up current. He smiled and spit into the vacuole again.
“What?”
asked Colonel Hanson. “It looks like a forlorn hope to me.” He tapped a series
of virtual controls to project the course of the unit. The leader, the Sergeant
Stewart he had met his first day at the unit, had entered orders for his team
and the group of eight survivors was headed for a point in the river opposite
the narrow chokepoint the platoon had been unable to reach.
“Not
necessarily, sir. Even with the few that remain, second squad could take and
hold that chokepoint for a moment, given the right conditions. Maybe long
enough for the rest of the platoon to charge forward and relieve them. Damn, I
didn’t think that by-the-book Long-Grey-Line son of a gun had it in him.”
Mike
watched as the squad formed under the cover of the green waters then erupted
upward. As they moved, the water began to hump and wriggle as if infested by
snakes. What surfaced was not a group of suits, but a swarming mass of worms,
each gray body surmounted with a fang-filled maw. As lines of silver explosive
lightning flicked God Kings out of existence, the worms snatched Posleen from
the banks and dragged them screaming into the suddenly yellow-stained water.
The air, at the same time, was filled with an evil caterwaul and the thunder of
drums.
“Is
that what I think it is?” asked Colonel Hanson. His own half-smile was unseen.
The flair of their company commander was obviously rubbing off on some of the
members of the company. O’Neal’s own use of music in battle had become
legendary almost overnight.
“If
you think that’s the Seventy-Eighth Fraser Highlanders’ bagpipes slamming out ‘Cumha
na Cloinne’ it is. Stewart’s been listening to my CDs again.”
“Your
idea?”
“No,
sir, but now I know what infested Lieutenant Fallon’s mind. That would be Sergeant
Stewart.” The smile of the company commander was hidden by the faceless armor
but the battalion commander could clearly hear it in his voice. “You remember
him, sir.”
“Mmm,”
was the only comment. The battalion commander had recently returned a request from
the Ground Force Criminal Investigation Division for an investigation into
various items of equipment that had gone missing around post. His basis was
insufficient evidence of it being traced to Bravo Company. In fact, he was
fairly certain that the diminutive second squad leader was responsible.
“You
know,” the battalion commander commented. “Bravo had a fairly shabby reputation
before you took over. You might want to ensure that it doesn’t get one again.”
Mike’s
abbreviated nod was unseen. Prior to the nearly simultaneous arrival of First
Sergeant Pappas and Lieutenant Arnold, the company had been a center for black
marketeering at the post. The easy and unquestioned availability of technology
that was centuries ahead of current had created a tremendous profit for the
former first sergeant. Stewart and his squad of recent basic trainees, along
with the first sergeant and Arnold, had been instrumental in cleaning up the
situation. The former first sergeant was now serving time in the Fleet military
prison on Titan Base. The prisoners were used for work out in the vacuum that
was considered particularly hazardous.
“I’ll
point that out at the next leaders’ meeting,” was Mike’s only comment. He let
out another stream of tobacco juice and smiled at the course the battle was
taking. Stewart was definitely a subordinate worth having around. Too bad he
was only a squad leader.
Their
God King lords dead, and under assault from a creature of an evil mythology,
the Posleen advancing through the gap turned and tried to fight their way to
the rear as the mass of worms humped itself up onto the ground and began
attacking in both directions.
“How
are they snatching the Posleen?” asked Colonel Hanson, watching one struggling
centaur being dragged below the water.
“Well,
sir, you’ve got me there, unless they’ve retrofitted the suits somehow.” Mike
keyed into a higher level of oversight, on channels poorly understood by most
of the AIDs, much less humans.
O’Neal
had been in on the design of the suits from the very beginning and had been
fighting in them from the first contact on Diess. He knew more about the real
abilities of the weapon than any other human in the Federation. His last suit
had more hours on it when it was lost than any two others in the armed forces,
and his new suit was climbing in hours fast. Single-mindedly devoted to the
mission, he spent virtually every waking hour, and a significant amount of
sleep time, in armor. He had, as far as Hanson could tell, no social life and
interacted with the other battalion officers only on business matters or at
required social functions.
Not that there were many of those. Indiantown
Gap did not present many amenities to the units forming there. The clubs, officer,
NCO and enlisted, were overrun with activating units, and the town of Annville,
which was the only civilian area reachable without a personal vehicle, was
equally overrun with servicemen. In addition, with the limited training costs
of the suits the unit could train 24/7 if so desired. The colonel was taking
full advantage of these facts, and the battalion had been in the field nearly
every day since they completed fitting.
“Okay,”
Mike said in a distant voice, consciousness deep in an electronic world. “I see
what they’re doing. They’re grabbing them with space grapples. Could work.”
“The
AIDs are going with it,” said the colonel, overlooking the lack of a “sir” in
the sentence. “They’re not disallowing it anyway.”
“I
don’t know if it would work or not, I’ve never tried it,” Captain O’Neal
continued in a distant tone. “That’s odd.” He had finally found what was
bothering him.
“What?”
“The
Posleen are being run at only eighty percent efficiency.”
“What
do you mean?”
“Well,
you can adjust these scenarios to the user. It’s kind of like levels in a
computer game. You don’t want to kick the ass of a basic trainee; it takes
their edge off to get beat all the time. So, you set the level of difficulty.”
“What
level was this set to?” asked the battalion commander. Sometimes the things he
did not know about his job frightened him and most things like that were not in
any manual. With the exception of a few people like this captain, there were no
“old hands” with suits. He wondered how the battalions without an O’Neal were
able to prepare at all.
“I
set it at a hundred percent,” answered the captain. “These are trained troops
and we could expect real-world landings at any time. The problem with fighting
at a lower level is that it doesn’t simulate reality well. You want to train
harder than real combat, not easier.”
The months since
he had taken over the battalion had flown by; Hanson could hardly believe how
fast. The first wave of Posleen was only six months away, but they were
expecting a few scouting Battle Dodecahedrons any day. And before that there
would be a few tests.
Captain
O’Neal did not know it yet, but Colonel Hanson had arranged for an FSTEP, the
Fleet Strike Testing and Evaluation Program final exam. He was going to inform
the company commanders right after this exercise. One week after the FSTEP
would be an Organizational Readiness Survey and an inspection by the Fleet
Strike Inspector General’s office.
Thanks
to his increasingly able staff and the little troll standing next to him he
expected to pass all three tests with flying colors. If they got a first-time
pass, which had rarely happened with the other units that were already
operational, he had been approved for unit leave of one week. O’Neal would take
the time off, out of a suit, or the colonel would have him escorted off the
post. And the colonel had arranged a little surprise for the unassuming former
NCO. One that he would never have asked for, deserving or not.
“There
it is,” continued the company commander. “Hmm.”
“What?”
asked the battalion commander, drawn back from pleasant reverie. The surprise
had required an unforeseen number of participants. Mike should be astounded.
“There
is a command line in the general training software to reduce difficulty levels
at some unspecified intervals. The intervals are tied to about a million lines
of spaghetti logic.”
“What’s
that mean?” asked the colonel, wondering what pasta had to do with combat suit
programs.
“It
means someone’s been screwing with the code: I didn’t call for this. It could
only be the Darhel, they wrote the software. There’s a communications protocol
in it as well. I wonder if it’s a bug or a deliberate function. If it’s a
deliberate function, I can’t see the sense. All it could do is lower the
readiness of the training units.”
“What do you do
about it?” asked the colonel with an unseen half-nod. He was still getting used
to the lack of head movement caused by the gelatinous underlayer of the suits.
“I’ll
report it to GalTech; maybe one of the new members called for it,” commented
O’Neal, coming out of his programming trance. “But we won’t be using the
training software much longer, will we, sir?” he asked grimly.
“No,”
agreed the battalion commander. “No, I think the time for training is about
over.”
The
training for the Second platoon was, indeed, about over. Second squad was
entirely expended in the attack, but by the time the last trooper fell the rest
of the platoon had fought its way into the gap and was in prepared positions.
With a limited front to fight through, it would simply be a matter of how long
humans could hold on, not how long they could hold out. It was a subtle
differentiation that was often a deciding factor in war. This action was a win;
the company’s role was to drive forward and hold on until “conventional” forces
could reinforce. Whether the company would ever be used that way was the
question.
“Have
they finalized what our role is going to be, sir?” asked O’Neal, hoping against
hope that the battalion commander had heard something that he had not.
“Not
yet, and, yes, that bothers me.”
“I
wish to hell Jack would get his shit together,” Mike concluded with an unseen
grimace. He moved the dip to the other side of his lip and spit. It wasn’t like
his old boss to jerk around this way.
CHAPTER 11
The Pentagon, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1523 EDT August
29th, 2004 ad
Jack Horner
currently demonstrated the trait that was his trademark; his face was fixed in
a tight, nearly friendly smile that stopped dead at his eyes. The general that
this mien was directed at was not fooled; he recognized the danger signs. But
he also considered it his duty to continue the diatribe he had embarked upon.
“In
conclusion, General, the CONARC staff is unanimously of the opinion that the
projected distribution of forces is tactically untenable and logistically
unsupportable. The stated intent—to place seventy percent of our combat power
and nearly eighty percent of our real shock power—on the coastal plains is
patently unacceptable.”
“To
whom?” asked General Horner, tightly.
“To
your staff, sir, and to the nation we are sworn to defend,” answered his chief
of staff, Lieutenant General Bangs, rather pompously.
“Very
well, General, I will accept your resignation, if you feel so intent upon
protest.”
“Pardon
me, General?” gasped Bangs in surprise, face suddenly ashen.
“I
think I spoke English, didn’t I?” asked Horner rhetorically. He smiled like a
tiger, lips drawn back in a rictus, and his bright blue eyes were cold as a
glacier. “I will accept your resignation if you feel so strongly about it.
Because I have my orders from the Commander in Chief, and he says we are
going to hold the plains. To do that, we have to place the majority of the
combat power there, because it is also where the Posleen are going to
concentrate. I gave my staff, as you so succinctly put it, their
marching orders, through you, two months ago. And you come back to me, a month
and a half late and more than a dollar short, with the bald statement that you
are not going to support the plan. Fine. I will accept your resignation within
the hour, or I’ll relieve you for cause. Your call.” And only after more months
of back-room political dickering to make it acceptable to the critical
politicians. It was still amazing to him how many politicians simply accepted
the “Mountain Plan” and now held it close to their hearts.
“You
cannot relieve me for cause,” snarled General Bangs, his florid face broken out
in a sweat. “You don’t have it.”
“Actually,
your simple statement could be construed as insubordination, not against me,
but against a Direction of the President. I could care less: I can fire you at
will, whether you think so or not. The President has a declared war on his
hands. All your friends in Congress can do is hold on to his coattails. They’re
not going to expend any effort on a broken-down war-horse. Now, unlike some
people, I have work to do. You are dismissed.”
As the shaken Lieutenant General Bangs left,
Jack shook his head. He had put up with Bangs for half a year and he was glad
to have him off his back. Besides being well over the range into the
“active/stupid” category of officer, Bangs was the most immoral senior officer
Jack had ever met. Talking about women was, admittedly, a common sport of all
soldiers—J.E.B. Stuart put it succinctly when he said “a soldier who won’t
fuck, won’t fight”—but senior officers should not openly brag about their
prowess outside the marital bed.
He
went back to looking at the logistics distribution report. Bangs had been nearly
accurate when he said that the distribution was logistically unsupportable, but
he and the rest of the staff were thinking linearly. Jack was as certain as the
staff that the plains would be lost, but how they were lost was important.
The
initial concept of the war was to play a giant game of Go. Since they could not
predict where the Posleen landers would come down, the forces would be widely
distributed. It was accepted that the Posleen would overwhelm some of the
forces. By the same token some forces should be able to defeat the Posleen in
their areas. The standards for open field battle would require nearly
four-to-one superiority on the part of human forces. But if the conditions were
right they could recapture small areas.
The
plan was that these survivors would then rally and reduce the areas that held
active Posleen. As in Go, if a human unit was surrounded by Posleen, it was
effectively gone. On the other hand, if the human units could surround the
Posleen, the reverse was true. Take the white and black balls and cast them
upon the Go board of Earth. Begin the game.
However, the Go field does not have terrain
obstacles. The first and greatest obstacles were the oceans. The Posleen were
almost intensively terrestrial. While they were masters of extracting every
last bit of resource from land surfaces of terrestrial type worlds, they left
oceans alone. Thus as the landers came in on scattered ballistic paths, they
had to divert towards the continental landmasses.
The
simple orbital mechanics of this maneuver meant that there was a concentration
on the eastern and western coastlines and that there was a greater
concentration on eastern than western.
Once
the landers were down, the invaders had to deal with the terrains of these
regions. The Posleen were structured much like horses, except for the arms
jutting from a forward double shoulder, and they were fairly dense so they did
not swim well. Also—with the notable exception of the God Kings—they did not
use anti-grav vehicles for planetary transport and they were useless as combat
engineers. This meant that they were stymied by terrain obstacles that had even
the lightest defense. They could not climb mountains and they could not swim
rivers, ever, in the face of any sort of defense, even a teenager with a
.22-caliber rifle.
In
addition, they did not land at random. Landers had never been observed landing
in extremely built-up areas, such as the center of large urban areas. Instead
they landed in clusters around the cities and moved in towards them.
Despite
the reluctance of some of his staff, in the months since the meeting with
Taylor, Jack had worked out the broad plan for coastal defense. His AID, along
with selected lower level staffers, was fleshing it out even as he had the
confrontation with his chief of staff.
The
suburbs were indefensible; that was an absolute. Evacuate them when the first
real incursion was scheduled, but not before. Plan for that, because nobody,
realistically, would leave until the last minute. That was one of the things
the Interstate system was designed for; use it. Have the people pull out every
scrap of food before they left, bring out all the domesticated animals
beforehand. Supermarkets, in general, used “Just-In-Time” inventory systems, so
the Posleen were going to get, perhaps, two to three days rations from the
available resources. All the other food was in production or stored by the
various agricultural companies and grocery chains.
Part
of the work being done by his staff was compiling a list of all the locations where
food was stored in bulk and integrating it, where possible, into the coastal
defense plan. Any stocks that could not be easily integrated were going to be
either confiscated or destroyed before the landing. The Posleen would not find
one iota of harvested food if he could help it.
The
inner cities, on the other hand, were a different kettle of fish. The plan
called for defense of the inner cities, but only as firetraps, hell holes to
slaughter Posleen. The basic plan had worked well for General Houseman on Diess
and Jack intended to use it in America. It also meant that the plains were
going to be the battlegrounds that the American populace insisted on.
Again,
evacuate the cities. Around them in the suburban areas, at locations that were
being determined, would be established firebases. Around the inner city
construct a wall. The bastions would be the warehouses and skyscrapers of the
city itself. Those bastions would be able to interlock fire with the firebases
surrounding the city. As the Posleen attacked the city, the firebases would
take them under fire from behind. If they turned on the firebases, the city
defenders would take them under fire. The city would become a giant octopus of
destruction, engulfing the attacking Posleen in its arms.
Certain
major boulevards, preferably ones that were in direct line of sight with the
outer fortresses, would be left open, but with walls on either side and the
ability to close them off if necessary. Such killing fields had worked well on
Diess and they might work again. Let the Posleen file into the boulevards,
thinking they were advancing, then open up with all the weaponry in the city.
The fortress plan
also reduced the logistical argument. The city fortresses could be stocked for
a five-year siege if the Army started constructing and filling warehouses and
silos immediately. If the urban forces had to retreat they would destroy the
remaining stocks of ammunition and food
with preplaced charges. If the war
took more than five years, they
might as well slit their throats and be done with it.
He
understood that eventually the coastal plain cities would fall unless the Fleet
came in time. But the reduction of the Posleen forces would work in America’s
favor in phase two.
Phase
two involved drawing back to the mountains. When a region or city became
untenable the forces would have to be drawn back through secured routes to the
mountains. In this more than anything he thought the Armored Combat Suit units
would be effective.
The
cities’ outer fortresses would be designed whenever possible with their
heaviest concentration along the side toward the nearest refuge areas. When a
city’s defense became untenable, large sections of the city would be dropped,
then the remaining defenders would gather on the refuge side and perform a
breakout. With the interlocking fires of the exurbs and the city bastions, the
forces might be able to break through the surrounding Posleen and start on the
long route to safety. As they performed their breakout, ACS units could descend
on closing Posleen columns and break them up.
In
some cases the Navy, the wet arm, might be able to slip in and perform the
evacuation or provide fire-support. He expected this in the case of the Florida
cities especially. The Navy was reactivating ships long dormant to support
those endeavors.
In
the long run most of the cities would fall. But the Posleen that were attacking
them would break their teeth, reducing the pressure on the mountain defenders
and reducing the overall Posleen population. Until the Fleet was completed it
came down to a war of attrition.
The
initial mountain plan, which called for a complete retreat to the mountains and
the turning over of the cities to the Posleen, would have left vast numbers of
Posleen virtually untouched and all the resources of those cities at their
disposal. Once the Posleen attack on the mountain passes got into high gear
those forces would have been available and fresh. Now they would generally be
unavailable. And if the Posleen did attack the mountain defenses they would be
battered from hammering on the brick wall of the city fortresses.
If
the situation dictated, forces could even sally against the Posleen. But he
intended to hold that card up his sleeve or three years from now some
politician would give away their hard-won gains in a pointless gesture.
In
the mountains and in the interior the situation would be slightly different.
The Appalachian and Rockies routes had been worked on for the past two years
and featured multilayered defenses all the way up to the Continental Divides.
In the southeast, heavy defenses had been prepared along the Tennessee River,
through the region of and heavily assisted by the Tennessee Valley Authority,
guys who knew all about big projects. In addition, along the outer slopes of the
Blue Ridge Mountains and the Rockies twenty-seven superfortresses were under
construction. These fortresses, once completed, would afford interlocking
antiship fire all along the coasts and overlooked strategic cities. In addition
their locations provided an umbrella of defensive fire over the entire
country. Posleen forces that attacked the mountain defenses from the coastal
plains were again going to break their teeth. They would advance, but he
doubted they would be able to break through.
In
the interior, landings were anticipated to be light. The way that the Posleen
assaulted planets, in large more-or-less random swarms, caused them to
concentrate the majority of their forces on the seacoasts. As in the coastal
areas, defenses were just starting construction around the inner cities and
forts were being constructed in the suburbs. In the case of the Midwest,
however, the parasite forts were larger and, conversely, less heavily armed.
They were larger because these cities were not going to be evacuated and if the
Posleen landed in and near them, the civilians were going to run for shelter.
The entry systems were being built by amusement park companies and were
designed to accept millions of people in a matter of hours.
The
fortresses were less heavily armed because there were only so many heavy
weapons to go around. The armaments allocated to cities such as Pittsburgh,
Minneapolis and Des Moines were based on the lower likelihood of attack and the
greater likelihood of external support. The fortresses also were designed
similar to traditional “castles” and hosted numerous firing ports on every
side.
After
the gates shut the “civilians,” many of whom had designated militia positions,
would be expected to pick up arms from armories scattered throughout the walls
and proceed to firing positions. From there, behind fixed defenses, the
refugees could become effective fighters. They would have to be; the interior
fortresses would have a third of the “conventional” forces allotted to the
coastal fortresses. The interior would also be completely without ACS support.
The ACS would have other overriding missions.
The
Posleen, as a rule, did not care for extreme cold any more than humans. They
also were less able to deal with it effectively. Therefore, they landed in
temperate or tropical zones. Thus, Canada could be guarded by her own forces
and be well off; the northern border was not considered a problem. That did
leave Mexico as a failure source.
An
argument had been advanced that America should just erect a great wall along
the Mexican border, something that some people had wanted for years. Whether it
was a valid argument or not was moot; there were insufficient resources to do
the job before the Posleen landed. Any Posleen that landed in Mexico were going
to have the field day expected in the Third World for the Posleen and most
would probably remain there at first. But some of them were going to turn
north; how many was anyone’s guess.
Unfortunately,
as the Border Patrol had often said, there are virtually no terrain obstacles
in the southwestern United States. The only forces that could fight the Posleen
effectively without either fixed defenses or terrain obstacles were the ACS, so
the ACS were going to be committed primarily to the southwestern U.S.
Jack
Horner had, effectively, two divisions of ACS. Fleet had left behind in America
the Eleventh Mobile Infantry Division, formerly the Eleventh Airborne Division
of World War II Pacific fame, and three regimental task forces: the 508th, the 509th and the 555th Mobile Infantry
Regiments. How he distributed these forces might make or break the defense.
Some were going to have to be distributed to the coasts, especially the East
Coast, with its broader plain and less defensible passes, but most would have
to go to the Southwest.
He
had a little time to decide on the distribution and he knew only one person on
Earth who was more expert in the abilities of the combat suit units than
himself. He decided it was time to call in another opinion.
CHAPTER 12
Ft. Indiantown
Gap, PA, United States of America, Sol III
0922 EDT
September 5th, 2004 ad
The grader was a
Marine né Mobile Infantry Major from Fourth Fleet Strike Division. The unit was
currently deeply involved in the battles on Barwhon. He was a dark-skinned,
blue-eyed Iron Man in the square-jawed movie-star Marine fashion, but his armor
was commendably battered. Fighting the Posleen left gouges all over. The
nannites that maintained it, that existed throughout the underlayer, could,
with time, work out all the wounds on the surface. But the process left a faint
discoloration, obvious to the trained eye. Repaired gouges and nicks were
regarded much as scars were, badges that said that you had been there and done
that. Unmarred armor, like Mike’s, was a sign that either you had been through
total hell, or were a rookie.
The
grader had maintained a deadpan through the entire company FSTEP. Mike was not
terribly worried about the results; he had more or less written the book and was
careful to follow it to the letter at each stage of the exercise. He was
wondering, however, what the major made of it all.
They
completed the last exercise, a prepared company defense, just as the first of
autumn’s cold-front thunderstorms came across the ridges. The hurtling cumulus
started to darken the air as Mike bounded up to the major on the ridgeline.
Mike unsealed his helmet, the molecular seal bright in the afternoon sunlight,
pulled it off his head with a sucking sound as the shock gel released, tucked
it under his arm, then lifted one eyebrow in question.
“That
scenario was designed as a no-win,” stated the major, removing his own helmet
with a characteristic slurp. His dark skin could only have come from tanning
beds; most ACS personnel were as white as slugs. A wash of cold air suddenly
displaced the muggy early fall heat as a swirling wind stirred the dust and
leaves on the ridgeline.
“Yes,
sir, I know,” said Mike carefully. “I wrote it.”
“You
obviously also know how to beat it,” commented the major. “Were you going to
tell anyone else?” Mike could see the last of the nannites that had been left
on the former Marine’s scalp scampering down to the helmet. The silver trickle
writhed in the afternoon sun like intelligent water. The elongated droplet
reared out from the major’s head, apparently sensed its objective below and
jumped into the helmet.
“It’s
not something I am able to teach systematically, sir,” O’Neal admitted with a
wrinkled brow. “It is a matter of reading the movements of the Posleen and
shuffling your subunits to react to them along with careful employment of
artillery and positioning of observers. I only break it about one time in ten.
This time it was relatively easy and I wonder if the controller didn’t adjust
it. The Posleen acted . . . uncharacteristically during the
final assault phase. They were almost timorous.” He spat into his helmet. The
juice was a brief brown spot on the writhing gray surface. A moment later the
juice disappeared, absorbed into the underlayer and beginning the long journey
to becoming rations.
Another
blast of wind whipped the yellowing beech trees around them in a frenzy as a
distant branch cracked. A rumble of thunder rolled across the valley as
lightning played on the ridges in the distance.
“Gust
front,” commented the major, looking up at the swirling cumulus. The sky was
turning black overhead.
“Pardon,
sir?” shouted Mike, not quite catching the words over the wind.
“Gust
front,” the major yelled back, redonning his helmet. When Mike hooked back up,
he continued, “It’s the term for that blast of wind you get just before a
storm.” As the heavens opened their sluice gates and water began to pour from
the sky Mike shivered for a moment with a wave of cold chills; the shiver was
unnoticeable in the armor. “It’s often the strongest wind of a storm.
“The
adjustment to Posleen actions is a random effect based upon their actions on
Barwhon,” the grader continued. “Every now and again they do seem to turn
timorous, as you put it. Good exercise,” concluded the major.
“Thank
you, sir, we try.”
“Not
that I was going to be able to give you a fail, even if you deserved one.” The
mahogany face was covered with two inches of plasteel and another two inches of
underlayer. But Mike could still see the angry grimace.
“I
hope that is not the case.”
“Don’t
worry, Captain, your company seems well prepared for the invasion,” the major
admitted. O’Neal’s reputation as a tactical innovator and near-god of suit
combat had only grown since Diess. There were plenty of people in Fleet who
felt that O’Neal’s reputation was so much bull. The major, at least, was
starting to be a convert.
Mike
watched his company assembling in the valley as visions of silver fire and
swarming yellow centaurs swept across his memory. “I wish I could agree, sir. I
wish I could agree.”
“Captain
O’Neal,” the battalion commander’s voice chirped in his earpiece.
“Yes,
sir?”
“Report
to battalion, on the double.”
“Yes,
sir.” He saluted the major. “Sir, I have to go.”
“Roger,
Captain,” said the major, returning the salute, “good luck.”
“And
to you, sir,” said Mike. He dropped the salute and took off down the ridgeline,
legs blurring into run mode.
The
colonel was waiting outside the command vehicle, a converted Humvee since they
had not yet received updated combat shuttles. The first generation of combat
shuttles was determined to be deficient even before deployment when the humans
discovered that one of the Galactic races, the Himmit, had incredibly effective
stealth technology.
The
Himmit were an inquisitive species of cowards. Although curiosity might have
killed the cat, it never killed the Himmit because they were very, very good
at hiding. They had reconned multiple Posleen worlds without ever getting
caught. It was a success which humans did not even consider until the first
human special operations team went to do the same thing and failed miserably.
One small note in the resulting multihundred–page report caused more changes in
the war effort than the entire rest of the mission.
The
weapons that the Posleen God Kings mounted on their saucer jeeps had
continental range and autotargeting ability. While they seemed to have a blind
spot where ballistic weapons were concerned, they would sweep away any item
under power that crested the horizon. Therefore, tactical operations involving
aircraft were basically out the window.
The original
teams that designed the Galactic equipment that humans would use, such as the
combat suits and the space dreadnoughts, designed a combat shuttle that was
heavily armored, incredibly fast and surprisingly maneuverable. But on Diess
they discovered it was still vulnerable to the God King launchers; of nine
combat shuttles sent to succor then-Lieutenant O’Neal’s cut-off ACS platoon,
only one survived.
The
answer was stealth. Using a combination of human and Himmit stealth
technologies a new generation of combat shuttles was being created that would
be slightly less heavily armed and armored, but even faster and more
maneuverable. Best of all it would be extremely stealthy.
The
shuttles had a negative radar cross-section to human systems and only showed up
as ephemeral ghosts on Galactic detectors; projectors even smoothed turbulence
zones at subsonic speeds. The first prototypes had been fielded on Barwhon,
where the humans were engaged in a desperate struggle in the swamps. While they
continued to take losses, the rate was much more acceptable.
But
until Terran Fleet Strike units received them, the battalions used a mixture of
modern and futuristic equipment, such as the converted Humvee with a Galactic
communications and battle planning center on the back deck. It affected their
strategic mobility, but not local combat.
Colonel
Hanson high-fived his Bravo Company commander with a resounding metallic clang!
“Airborne, Captain! They’re trying to find a fault to discuss!”
“Well,
I think I should have salvoed the third fire mission just a little earlier,”
said Mike soberly. “The wave that made it through the fire on that one caused
about three percent higher casualties than it should have. I have got to
find somebody to delegate fire control to.”
“Well,
I’ll just have to send you to bed without supper!” laughed the ecstatic
battalion commander. All his other companies were performing well within
expectations, but O’Neal’s performance had definitely been the cherry on the
sundae. He had exceeded every pretest estimate of the highest possible marks.
“I don’t think they’re gonna notice that one, frankly, and neither did I. I
don’t think they can find a thing negative to say.”
“I
didn’t think you could max an FSTEP, sir,” Mike said.
“I
think you might have set a new standard. But that wasn’t what I called you back
for.” The battalion commander proffered a hardcopy of e-mailed orders.
“Nightingale is going to have to deal with the ORS and IG on her own; you’ve
been ordered to CONARC on temporary duty. Your master’s voice, I guess.”
Mike
glanced at the bald prose of the orders. It had Jack Horner’s touch all over
it.
“Yes,
sir, it sure looks that way. Well, the company’s as squared away as it’s gonna
get. When do I leave?”
“There’s
an evening flight out of Harrisburg direct to D.C.; you’re on it.”
“Yes,
sir. By your leave?” he asked, saluting.
“Get
outta here, Captain,” chuckled the colonel, returning the salute.
The
flight into D.C. turned out to be a connecting flight full of uniforms. If
there was a male of military age not in uniform, Mike thought he should be
shot, stuffed and put in a museum as a rarity. The variety of uniforms was a
surprise. Although most of the military on the flight seemed to come from
Ground Force Guard and Line units—notable by their essentially unchanged United
States Army greens—there were also “wet” navy officers and chiefs in black
uniforms, Air Force in their blue, and Fleet officers in high-collar black
uni-seals and beret. Mike was the only one on board in Fleet Strike blue and
red, and felt conspicuous. He was glad that his seat companion, a
forty-something female Fleet captain, either did not recognize him or did not
care.
After
the flight reached cruising altitude, the flight attendants came around with
drinks. When the flight attendant passed him the requested Coke, she did a
double take, but continued on, apparently dismissing the idea that Michael
O’Neal would be on her plane. Afterwards, however, as the plane was just
beginning its descent into Washington National, she came forward and did the
approved stewardess squat by Mike’s seat.
“Excuse,
me, sir. I was wondering something . . .” she said, diffidently.
“And
that was?” Mike had cycled into a foul mood. Although the company was in good
shape for an ORS and IG he wanted to be there to smooth out any wrinkles that
might come up. He wanted the company to do as well on the inspections as they
did in their readiness test. Although he respected Nightingale’s organizational
abilities, he was worried about how she would manage the “problem children” in
the company, even with Gunny Pappas riding herd. In that kind of mood, he
didn’t give anyone any slack, much less a stewardess who just wanted to rub
elbows with notoriety.
It was the very
reason his tunic, against regulation, was totally unadorned with ribbons. He
was wearing a Combat Infantryman’s Badge, with one star, indicating that he had
been in two major conflicts, and a pin that was still so unusual as to be
nearly unrecognizable: a half starburst. The pin had been developed by Fleet
to recognize persons who had been in the path of a nuclear blast. Despite the
fact that it was authorized to both Fleet and Terran personnel, there were not
many people vertical who wore them.
“Are
you the Michael O’Neal that was on Diess, the one who got the Medal of Honor?”
she asked quietly.
“Yes,”
Mike snapped. “Next question.”
“No
question,” she said with an honest smile. “I just wanted to thank you. My
brother is in the Seventh Cavalry. He made it back to the Dantren Perimeter,
but he never would have made it out without your platoon arriving when it did.
Thank you.”
Well,
that was an entirely different matter. “Damn, I’m glad to hear that! You know,
the armored forces hardly ever get any mention in all the fuss. They stacked
the damn Posleen up like cordwood even before we got there and nobody ever
gives them any credit. How’s he doing? I admit I haven’t kept up with the units
on Diess.”
“They
returned his division to the States. He’s down with the Texas Guard units,
getting ready for The Day.”
“Well,
when you talk to him, wish him well from me,” Mike said with a smile.
“Okay,
I’ll do that. He’ll be happy I stopped.”
“Good
luck yourself.”
“Well,
we’re from Missouri. From what they’re saying on the news, we should be hit
lightly. I hope so, but I’m sorry for all the people on the coasts.”
“Yeah, most of
my people are in the coastal plains. But no place is going to be completely
safe, so get yourself a weapon. If they’re swarming, you might not even be able
to take one with you,” he said bluntly. “But if they’ve been whittled down, it
might save your life. I recommend a twelve-gauge riot gun. They’ve got a kick
like a mule, but it’s hard to miss with a shotgun at close range and
double-ought will take down a Posleen just fine. You may be in the safest spot
there is and have the bad luck of a globe landing on you. So get a weapon.”
“Okay,
I will. Thanks again.”
“Take
care.”
As
the stewardess walked away, the Fleet captain looked up from her papers.
“I
thought it was you, but I wasn’t going to be impolite and ask,” she said with a
strong English accent. Mike, who had a fair ear for accents and had spent time
with the British while developing the ACS program, placed it as Midlands.
“Yeah,
well, I’m me, ma’am. I’ve never been anything else.”
“You’re
going to Washington?”
“Yes,
ma’am, apparently General Taylor wants some advice on how to run the war.”
“Well,
I can’t think of a better source for Combat Suit advice. Might I ask you what
is causing you to be so caustic, young man?”
Mike
let out a sigh, much of his formless anger blowing out with it. The problems he
was dealing with weren’t the captain’s fault. Nor was his own lack of confidence.
“Well, Captain, my company is going through an Operational Readiness
Inspection and an inspection by the Inspector General’s office at the moment
and I would much rather be there than giving dog and pony shows in D.C. I gave
a bunch of them last year and nobody gave a shit, pardon my French, so I don’t
know that it’ll be any different this time.”
“So
you’re really going to be telling General Taylor how to run the war?” she said
with a chuckle.
“I
suspect I might be, ma’am, at least from an ACS standpoint. The CONARC
commander and I have a long-term acquaintance. The orders came from CONARC at
Fort Myer, but I’m supposed to report directly to the Pentagon. Go figure.”
“I
think you should be happy about a chance for input,” she said, puzzled.
“Well,
ma’am, the other problem is the difference between tactical and strategic.
Although I will admit to being one of the experts at tactical employment
of ACS, I won’t bet dollars to donuts about strategic employment.”
“Just
remember,” she said, “ ‘an Army travels on its stomach.’ Strategic and operational
art are better than eighty percent logistics. Approach it from a logistical
standpoint and you’ll have them eating out of your hands.”
“Logistics.”
“Logistics.”
“Okay,
thanks, ma’am,” he said with a smile.
“Don’t
mention it.” She laughed.
“Captain
Michael O’Neal,” said Mike holding out his hand, “Fleet Strike.”
“Captain
April Weston,” said the gray-haired battleaxe, “Fleet Line. Command.” The
period was easy to hear.
“Oh,
you have a ship?” asked Mike, interested. Very few of the ships being built for
the defense were on-line or would be before the first few waves of the
invasion. It was what would make the coming years such a difficult prospect.
“If
you can call it that,” she said, with a sour grimace. “It’s a converted
Galactic frigate.”
“Ouch,”
said Mike, with a grimace of his own. “I saw the specs when I was at GalTech.
No armor . . .”
“Light
weapons . . .”
“No
redundant systems . . .”
“Limited
targeting ability . . .”
“Well,”
said Mike, with another grimace, “at least you’ll have Combat Environment space
suits.”
“Great,”
she said with a snort. “I spend a career fighting my way up through
bloody-mindedness and knowledge of the sea, and now I have to learn to breathe
vacuum.”
“You’re
a regular?” Mike said, surprised.
“Actually,
I was Royal Navy reserve until I made captain when they finally succumbed to
the bloody inevitable and switched me to regular. My last command was the Sea
Sprite, which, for your general fund of knowledge, is a cruiser. Now I’m
off to the boundless depths of space and classes in astrogation. At my age,”
she concluded, throwing up her hands.
“Well,”
Mike smiled, “good luck.”
“Yes,
we’ll all need it.”
CHAPTER 13
The Sons of Mary
seldom bother,
for they have inherited that good part;
But the Sons of
Martha favour their Mother
of the careful soul and the troubled heart.
And because she
lost her temper once,
and because she was rude to the Lord her
Guest,
Her Sons must
wait on Mary’s Sons,
world without end, reprieve or rest.
—“The Sons of
Martha”
Rudyard
Kipling, 1907
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
2317 EDT
September 5th, 2004 ad
Except for the
profusion of uniforms, the nation’s capital was virtually unchanged. Mike had
taken the shuttle bus from Washington National and it went all over town before
heading to the relatively nearby Pentagon. He caught brief glimpses of the
Mall, and the streets of Georgetown were surprisingly crowded with partyers.
Mike finally saw males out of uniform, persons with jobs so vital that they
could not be spared as cannon fodder for the war effort. From their suits, age
and haircuts, they were mostly attorneys or congressional aides. Probably
for the best, thought Mike. God knows what they would be like in
uniform.
In
the previous year, while on tour after the Diess victories, Mike had had his
fill of politicians, political aides, political military officers and
everything else spin-related. Diess had given him such a clear and
uncompromising view of the coming storm that he sometimes felt like the
one-eyed man in the country of the blind. There had also been much more
exposure to the upper echelons of the military than he had been used to and it
had not been a successful exposure.
Mike’s
idea of subtle was to not tell the person, word for word, that they could not
find their ass with both hands. Nonetheless the message came across. When a
lieutenant, as he had been then, even a lieutenant with The Medal, takes an
attitude like that towards officers thirty or more years his senior the
lieutenant comes out of the contest the loser.
The
problem, from O’Neal’s point of view, was that although many of the senior
military officers he had met were quite prepared for and capable of, even
brilliant at, fighting humans, they still could not get their minds around the
Posleen. Despite the ongoing stalemate on Barwhon and the horrendous daily
losses it inflicted, they insisted on thinking of the Posleen as simply suicidal
humans, something like the Japanese in World War II. And the numbers were not
real to them. They thought in terms of weapons systems, tanks and armored
personnel carriers, then troops, because waves of humans simply could not stand
up to a modern army.
But
the Posleen not only boasted incredible masses of troops so fanatical they
would happily take any ordered loss to achieve any ordered objective, they also
had weapons capable of negating the utility of tanks and armored personnel
carriers. Although the weapons of the normal Posleen were unaimed, fired “from
the hip” without careful sighting, many Posleen carried heavy railguns, capable
of penetrating side armor on an M-1 tank, or hypervelocity missile launchers
capable of penetrating frontal armor. And the God King leader caste carried
either automatic HVMs, laser cannons or plasma cannons. A plasma cannon, even
if it struck a modern tank with a glancing blow, raised the interior
temperature so high it cooked the crew to death.
But
all that senior officers heard was “wave charges” and “unaimed weaponry” and
they assumed it would be like fighting Napoleonic-era human troops. It might
even have been true were it not for the God Kings and their systems. It seemed
to those senior commanders as if a modern, well-trained and equipped force
should be able to slaughter them.
On
that point Michael agreed; the Posleen were going to be slaughtered. What he
could not get across to the senior leadership was that the Posleen couldn’t
care less how many they lost. They came in such masses that reducing their
numbers by ninety percent often left them still outnumbering defenders, and
with superior weaponry. Well, the powers-that-be would discover the error of
their ways soon enough. Unfortunately Mike expected blood baths aplenty in the
near future.
The
bus finally pulled up to the side entrance of the Pentagon, disgorged a mass of
uniformed personnel and prepared to take on another mass headed back to the
airport. Mike stared at the busy, scurrying officers, so intent on superior
performance of their little niches, and wondered what they all did. What in the
world were thirty captains, majors and colonels, most of whom wore the Military
District of Washington shoulder patch, doing flying out to distant places at
ten o’clock at night?
“Their
contribution to the war effort, I guess,” he muttered as he stomped wearily
over to the MP-guarded entrance. His day had begun at 3 a.m. and had included a prepared attack, a hasty defense and
a prepared defense. He had fought three virtual “murthering great battles” and
it was, in his opinion, getting nigh on to bedtime.
“Can I help you,
Captain?” asked the MP lieutenant in an oddly supercilious tone, as he stepped
in Mike’s way. Mike recognized the symptoms. Many Army and Navy personnel
resented the whole concept of Fleet Strike, effectively American units being
put under a broader command, some of them removed from America and not directly
defending it. And the difference in pay scale did not help matters.
Since
Fleet and Fleet Strike were paid by the Federation, as opposed to Terran
governments, they were paid in Federation credits. The Federation had a fixed
payment scale for every level of worker throughout the Federation and the
soldiers and spacemen of Fleet and Fleet Strike were given positions in that
hierarchy.
Through
one of those quirks of Federation law that was so beneficial to humans,
military personnel had an automatically advanced caste position. Federation law
legitimized differing legal structures for differing societal rank; what was
illegal for a lower-rank Galactic might be legal for a higher-rank Galactic.
Since
the Galactics did not recognize the difference between the legality of things
civilian and military, most military activities, such as terminating sentient
life, required special permissions. These, in turn, required a higher “caste.”
That being the case, the lowest ranked soldier or spaceman was ranked the same
as an Indowy junior master craftsman. The higher ranks were thus extremely
advanced in the overall Galactic hierarchy.
Given these
advanced ranks, the Galactic pay scales were equivalent. A Fleet Strike captain
made as much as a junior Darhel coordinator–nearly as much as an Army major
general. On the other hand, with the tax increases for the war he was being
taxed at almost eighty-seven percent of his income. It was a reasonable
contribution to the war fund by anyone’s estimation. Mike had also heard
something about a Federation-mandated bonus from the Diess action. That would
further add to the disparity in pay scales. Whatever the case there was extreme
prejudice over the pay structure.
It
was an attitude that would slowly dissipate after the war, if anyone survived,
as Army units were subsumed into Fleet Strike. In the meantime it was just
another hassle to be shrugged off.
“Yes,
you can, Lieutenant. You can check me in. I’m supposed to report to CONARC.”
“I’m
sorry, Captain, you seem to be in the wrong place. CONARC is based at Fort
Myer. There will be a shuttle in about forty-five minutes.”
Mike
handed over his copy of the e-mail and fingered the AID wrapped around his
wrist. “As you can see, the orders clearly state to report to the CONARC
commander at the Pentagon, not Fort Myer. So, where am I supposed to go?”
“I
don’t know, Captain, I’m just the gatekeeper. But these aren’t authority for
Pentagon entry.” He did not seem a bit displeased by the problem. “And in case
no one ever explained this sort of thing to you, when it says report to the
commander, it actually means report to someone at the command who will report
you as arrived.” The lieutenant proffered another smug smile, having to explain
such a simple item to one of the lords of the Fleet.
Mike
fingered the AID for a moment. “Would you care to try to find out?”
“I
wouldn’t know where to start, Captain. I suppose you could call CONARC,” he
finished, pointing to a rank of pay phones outside the entrance.
“Okee-dokee.”
Mike slipped the AID off his wrist and set it on his head. It automatically
conformed into a headset/microphone array. “Shelly, get Jack, please.”
“Yes,
sir,” the AID chirped. There was a brief pause, then, “General Horner on the
line.”
“Mike?”
came the clipped tones.
“Yes,
sir.”
“Where
are you?” asked General Horner.
“At
the side entrance.”
“Tell
the MP to clear you through to the High Commander’s office, ASAP.”
“Yes,
sir.” He looked at the MP. “Okay, Lieutenant, the Continental Army Commander
say, go to dee High Commander’s office, ASAP. Whadda you say?”
“I
have to have an authorized clearance to permit you entry to the building, sir,”
said the MP, obviously calling the snotty Fleet jerk’s bluff.
“Jack,
he says he has to have clearance.”
When
Mike used the Continental Army Commander’s first name, without being rebuked,
the MP’s face turned as white as milk. It was obviously not a bluff.
“Give
him the phone,” General Horner said, icily.
Mike
handed over the AID, which the MP accepted gingerly, and watched as the
lieutenant basically melted into the concrete. After three “yes, sirs” and a
“no, sir” he handed the AID back and waved over one of the guards.
“Sergeant Wilson,
take the captain directly to the High Commander’s office,” he said quietly.
“Have
a nice day.” Mike waved airily as he snapped the shiny, black AID back around
his wrist.
“Yes,
sir.”
REMF, thought Mike.
Although
Shelly could have led him through the labyrinth to the HC’s office, Mike was
just as glad to have the sergeant along. The slightly smiling noncom led him
first to a secondary guard room to get him a temporary pass, which was,
miraculously, already cleared for him, then to the area formerly dedicated to
the Joint Chiefs.
They
walked in through the clerks, still hard at work, and up to the desk of the
final keeper of the portal, an aged black warrant officer who looked like he
ate nails for breakfast. Mike had heard of Warrant Officer Kidd, an SF legend
who apparently had decided that General Taylor needed a keeper at all times. He
and the general went way back, so it was said, to an unlikely incident
involving an annoyed alligator and two bottles of Jack Daniels. The sergeant
stopped at the final keeper and saluted. “Chief Kidd, Sergeant Wilson reporting
with Captain Michael O’Neal, who is here to see the High Commander.”
Warrant
Office Fourth Class Kidd returned the salute. “Thank you, Sergeant. Return to
your post.”
“Yes,
sir,” said the sergeant, did a perfect about-face and marched out.
“I
think I ruined his whole day,” said Captain O’Neal.
“Naw.
Made it maybe. But you sure as hell ruined that L-T’s. Or so I heard,” said Kidd
with a cruel chuckle. “Did you really call CONARC ‘Jack’ to his face?”
“And
you’ve never called General Taylor ‘Jim’?” Mike answered with a smile.
“Well,
not where anyone could hear.” The warrant officer stood up and towered over the
dwarfish captain. “Damn, you are short,” he said and held out his hand.
“Warrant Officer Kidd. You can call me Mister Kidd.”
“Captain
Michael O’Neal,” said Mike as Kidd’s hand engulfed his. Kidd went immediately
for a crusher grip which Mike deflected through superior gripping power,
although it was hard with the size of Kidd’s hands. They wrestled for a moment
until a look of pain flashed across the warrant’s face. “As a special favor,
you can call me Mighty Mite,” said Mike as he let up, slowly.
“Okay,”
Kidd gasped.
“Can
I go in now?” asked Mike, maintaining a grip.
“Will
you let go if I say, ‘Yes’?”
“Mike!”
said the CONARC, striding across the office with his hand outstretched, “it’s
good to see you. You look a hell of a lot better than the last time.”
“Thank
you, sir,” said Mike after a perfunctory salute, shaking General Horner’s hand.
“Belated congratulations on the fourth star. It is well deserved. Sorry, I
didn’t bring any cigars, I’m flat out.”
“Good
cigars are getting hard to find,” said General Horner, leading him across the
office to a sofa set. General Taylor stood up and walked to his desk to
retrieve a cigar box.
“Here,” the High
Commander said, proffering the box to Mike, “on the house. There’s a guy in
Readiness that flies down to Guantánamo about once a month. What with the warm
relations we’re developing with Cuba, cigars are no problem. He always brings
me a couple of boxes.”
Mike
extracted one of the long black panatelas. “Thank you, sir.”
“Take
a handful. I’ll get a box sent over to your company next trip.”
“ ‘He said to the captain,
just before the axe fell,’ ” said Mike.
“What
gives you that impression?” asked Horner.
“Well,
both of you gentlemen are nice guys, but there has to be a reason you’re up
until after midnight plying me with tobacco,” Mike said with a smile.
“Not
really,” said General Taylor, chuckling as he lit one of the long, black
cigars. “We were going to be up anyway and now was as good a time as any to
brief you on your temporary mission.”
“Which
is?” asked Mike as he extracted his Zippo and began to puff.
“Mike,”
started General Horner, “as you know, as everyone knows, the defense plan that
everyone was calling ‘The Mountain Plan’ has been scrapped. The President and
the Congress will not stand for the Armed Forces not defending the coastal
plains, especially the coastal plain cities. The President accepts that we
cannot fight for every piece of ground, but he insists that we defend every
major city. You with me so far?”
“Airborne,”
said Mike, carefully judging the flame on the end of the cigar. When it was
drawing just right he took a deep puff. Good cigar, he thought. “Okay,
boss, it’s a given: The cities will be fought for. Does the President realize
that that will probably inflict more damage than if we can come back in
two–three years’ time with full Fleet backing and kick them out?”
“Yes,”
said Taylor.
“Oh.”
“That
has actually been the subject of a series of news magazine reports,” said
General Taylor, dryly. “I gather you haven’t been keeping up with current events.”
“No,
sir, I haven’t,” said Mike. “Not even Net news. I’ve been getting my company as
ready as it can be.”
“Apparently
you succeeded,” said General Taylor, chuckling. “I got a rather snippy e-mail
to the effect that there must be a bug in the software for your engagement. You
were able to score one hundred percent on a no-win situation. There is some
question whether you diddled the software.”
“I
don’t think so, sir,” said O’Neal with a smile. “It is a well-known fact that
only SFers cheat. We happened to luck out and the God King assigned by the
software on the final engagement was a wuss and routed. But mostly, it helps to
have done the same exercise a couple of hundred times in VR and Tactical
Exercises Without Troops. I play those scenarios in my spare time for
recreation, sir, something that other leaders need to learn to do. I mean, most
of them don’t even play Mario Brothers with their kids.”
“Are
you saying they need to play video games more?” asked the High Commander,
surprised at the frivolous approach.
“Basically,
sir,” said Mike, peering at the cigar blearily. The fatigue from the long day
and the days of preparation beforehand had him saying more than he intended at
a first meeting with the generals. He still was not too sure of himself.
Preparing
his company was at a level he understood. This “strategic” level was something
else. But if being in the game had taught him one thing, it was never lose the
image of confidence. Sometimes rep was the only thing that would carry your men
through. And sometimes the definition of “your men” could get awfully broad.
“This
gear creates a video game environment and the wargames are based on a number of
video game archetypes,” Mike continued. “If they would spend less time doing
the work of their first sergeants and pushing hardcopy and more time in the VR
environment they would do better in notional battles.”
“Well,”
said General Horner, “we, and by that I mean General Taylor and myself and to a
lesser extent you, need to decide what that battle is going to be and how it is
going to be fought. I am going to outline for you, in broad strokes, what the
strategic and operational mission of the ACS should be and, over the next two
weeks, you suggest how we should do it, in as much detail as possible given the
time. Got it?”
“Got
it,” answered Mike, leaning back in the chair. After a moment he leaned
forward again. The comfortable armchair was a surefire way to put him to sleep.
If he was going to keep from making an ass of himself in front of these
officers, he was going to have to stay on his toes.
“Okay.”
General Horner looked up at the ceiling as if drawing thoughts from the pooling
cigar smoke. “We are required, by order, to do as much as humanly possible not
to lose the cities to the Posleen. First we have to define what a city is. We
have arbitrarily decided to defend only the city core, because, quite frankly,
we don’t see any way to defend into suburbs. Oh, we’ll have some depth, and
some outer defenders, besides the parasite forts I’ll talk about in a minute,
but basically we’re just going to try to hold ‘downtown,’ the part with the
skyscrapers that Posleen shy away from landing on anyway.
“Outside
the cities, near the beltway that is around most of them, now, we are going to
construct modern fortresses. They won’t be ‘state-of-the-art’ like the
planetary defense centers, but they’ll have some sort of curtain wall and moat
system along with massive conventional firepower. We are going to give the fort
commanders pretty wide leeway on how they want to arm their walls. The idea of
these forts, and the central city fortifications, is to catch the Posleen between
two fires. We call the outer forts ‘coral forts’ because they are like a
spreading coral.
“The
cities and the coral forts will have enough supplies to hold out for five
years, if necessary. Each of them will also be just out of line of sight of a
planetary defense center; that was already in the PDC plans, so we don’t have
to worry overmuch about them being directly assaulted by landers or command ships.
If landers or command ships take to the air less than en masse, the planetary
defense centers should be able to sweep them out of the sky.
“If
the situation becomes completely untenable for a city’s forces, they may
attempt to flee to refuge. For the purely coastal cities, we are coming up with
plans to evacuate them by sea.”
“How,
sir?” Mike interrupted. If he had one weakness it was sleep. Without regular
doses his brain turned to mush. It had pretty much gone south sometime around
the landing in D.C. He was currently well beyond playing guessing games. He
took another hit of the nicotine hoping it would clear some cobwebs.
“Partially
by subs. We’re reactivating a bunch of the nuclear launch boats, boomers, that
haven’t been scrapped. We’re ripping out all the weaponry and upgrading the
environmental systems. We figure we can pack nearly a battalion into the
missile section alone, more in the torpedo rooms, and so on. We’re substituting
the nuclear kettle with power crystals to appease the environmentalists.”
“Like
there’s going to be an environment left,” snorted General Taylor. He walked
over to a sideboard and poured a measure of scotch. “Anyone care to join me in
a snort?”
“I’ll
take a vodka, straight,” said General Horner.
“Bourbon
on ice, sir, thank you, sir. Much ice, sir.”
“Don’t
be so uptight, Captain. We’re all old soldiers here,” said the High Commander.
“Yes,
sir,” Mike answered with a wink. He would rather have asked for coffee, but
when the High Commander offers drinks you don’t refuse.
General
Horner snorted and went on. “The Navy is also reactivating all the battleships
that haven’t been turned into razor blades. Since there were a bunch of them
that have become museums and since there were howls of protest over scrapping
the last two of the Iowa class that weren’t, it turns out we have eight.”
“I
heard about that, sir,” said Mike. “Can they stand up to Posleen weapons?”
“Well, their
belt—that is, the portion of their hull that is above the waterline, and most
of their bridge armor—is twelve to fourteen inches of homogenous steel. That
would normally be light to stand up to plasma cannons, but the steel that they
are made of turned out to be surprisingly resistant. Also they’re adding on
some lightweight ceramet enhancements that increase their resistance to laser
and plasma fire by about twenty-five percent. They’ll be able to hold their
own, even at short range, and think about the firepower! Each of those things
has nine guns, either fourteen or sixteen-inchers.”
“Didn’t
the Iowa lose one in an accident?” asked Mike, rubbing his chin and
thinking about having a battleship broadside at his beck and call.
“Yes,”
said General Taylor. “But they are building a new breech at Granite City Steel
in St. Louis. It’ll be ready in about ten months.”
“However,
for those cities which cannot be evacuated by sea,” continued General Horner,
“there must be some alternative means.”
“If
you mean fighting their way out through the investing Posleen, sir,”
interrupted Mike, “I don’t see any. Are we talking about light infantry, sir?”
He hid a yawn and took a deep breath to drive some oxygen into his flagging
brain.
“Some,
but with enough transport organic to the division to move the whole thing.
Basically a motorized infantry regiment. Most will actually be mechanized
infantry, Armor or Armored Cav. The tanks and AFVs will be positioned in
forward revetments or ready to sally and the troops will be in bunkers. If they
have to retreat or sally there will be trucks and other transports to move the
entire force and any civilians who’ve stayed behind. In one sortie.”
“Okay,
let me give you a situation and a city, sir,” said O’Neal, rubbing his chin in
thought, flogging his brain. “Let me see if I understand this plan. Let’s talk
about . . . Sacramento.”
“Good
choice,” said General Horner, leaning back.
“Okay,
sir.” Mike tapped his AID. “Map menu.” He tapped the icons on the hologram
until he had the map he wanted and yawned again. “It looks like about a
two-hour drive from Sacramento to Placerville, where, I would guess, the first
of the mountain defenses would be placed. How am I so far?”
“About
right,” said General Horner after a moment’s thought.
“Okay,
sirs. That means about six to ten hours of battle to reach the first defense
lines,” Mike said, taking another pull on the cigar. He looked at the ceiling
and flicked an ash.
“About
that,” agreed Taylor from the bar.
“Through
a Posleen swarm,” said Mike, still contemplating the ceiling.
“Yes,”
the generals chorused.
“Nope,”
said Mike, shaking his head definitively. “Sirs.”
“Really?”
asked General Taylor, handing out the drinks.
“Really,
sir. Look at Diess or Barwhon. Remember that French armored division on Barwhon
that got caught out of prepared positions during a movement?”
“Right,
Third Armored Cav,” said General Taylor.
“Troisieme
Armore Chevalier,” Mike corrected. “They lasted, what? thirty minutes?”
“There
had just been a landing, Mike,” pointed out General Horner, “the Posleen
numbers were at their maximum.”
“We
have to assume an outside influence to force the evacuation, sir,” O’Neal
pointed out and took a sip of the bourbon. He raised an eyebrow at the quality
of the sourmash. It had been in an unlabeled decanter, but it was a nice
Kentucky distillery, probably an “estate” brand. Obviously being High Commander
had a few perks even in these days of universal rationing.
“Okay,
I’ll give you that,” admitted the CONARC. “Now, assume MI support for the
retreat and reconfigured roadways to maximize terrain cover. How much MI
support would you want to evacuate the remains of a corps out of Sacramento?”
“Oh.
You’re talking about covering three or four divisions?”
“Yes,
or five. I think Sacramento is detailed for five divisions.”
“Jesus,
sir.” Mike shook his head. “I don’t think you could lead five of the current
standing divisions to a whorehouse on a Sunday morning much less through five
hours of battle with the Posleen in open field combat.”
General
Horner looked at Taylor and raised an eyebrow. “You wanna take that one,
General?”
General
Taylor smiled and shook his head. “We hope to get that under control, Captain.”
Mike
snorted. “Better you than me, General. Which particular magic wand are you
planning on waving?”
“Mike,”
said Horner, warningly.
“No,”
said General Taylor, holding up a hand. “He’s right. Things on the ground are
totally fucked-up. Every fucking report we get from the IGs says the same
thing.” He turned to the frowning and bleary-eyed captain. It was always hard
to tell if O’Neal was pissed off or not, however, because the frown was
plastered on his face at all times. “There’s no magic wand. We’re getting more
and more rejuvs in the pipeline. As we get people into their positions, most of
the major problems will correct themselves. When there are officers and NCOs
available to lead and be held responsible the directives that are already in
place will start to take effect.
“We’ve
got the better part of a year to fix things. And most of the divisions,
especially the really bad ones, will be fighting in fixed positions. So even if
they crack in places it should be controllable. But we do have one trick left.”
“Mike,”
interjected Horner, “remember back when we were with GalTech we discussed who
was going to be called up in what order?”
“Sure,”
said Mike, thinking back. “Combat background personnel first. Start from the
highest ranks and work down. Noncombat experienced last.” He thought about it
a bit more and smiled faintly. That was in the days before the Galactics’
problems with supply became evident. When everything was going to be pure Tech
as a salvation. When the plans were perfect and the future was rosy. “Good
days,” he added.
“Well.”
General Taylor nodded, with an understanding smile. “That was the plan. But
somewhere along the line the plan and the process went astray.”
“One
of my ‘computer geeks,’ ” said Horner, with a wry aside to General Taylor,
“finally got a look at the algorithm the personnel department was using for the
call-up. It was based on Officer and Enlisted Evaluation Reports.”
“Oh, shit,” said
Mike, with a chuckle. Although good soldiers generally came out fine on the
Army’s evaluations, the reports tended to miss the difference between a good
leader and a “Lifer.” The original plan had been to call up warriors as the
first wave, setting a tone for the forces to follow. That had obviously not
happened.
“So,”
said General Taylor, “we’ve had the software rewritten . . .”
“By
my people,” General Horner interjected.
“Right,”
continued Taylor. “From now on combat experience will have a high multiplier
along with medals for valor. We’re calling it ‘The Old Soldier’ program.”
“Oh,
hell,” said Mike with a grim chuckle. “No modifier for age, right?” Most of the
files that a program like that would spit out would have been formed in the
caldrons of World War II, Korea and Vietnam. Old soldiers indeed.
“Right,”
said Horner. “The program has been in place for a couple of weeks getting the
bugs out, but the really big call-up will be during the conference.”
There
was an unexpected bark of laughter from Taylor. Both of the officers looked at
him in puzzlement. Then Horner realized what he was thinking about and frowned
in humor.
“What?”
said Mike. The fact that something had discomfited his former mentor was
obvious even through his fatigue.
“There
were . . .” said General Horner, carefully.
“A
few bugs,” completed Taylor with a laugh. “His computer super geeks forgot
that there are certain persons who, shall we say, are unavailable for recall.”
The senior commander laughed again, uproariously. “Oh, Jesus, the look on his
face!”
Horner
frowned. Hard. A sure sign he was about to burst out laughing. “The computer
was searching for high-ranking officers who were still alive and had combat
experience. We felt that if there were bugs, it would be better to make the
mistake with senior officers than junior. The program had been deliberately set
to ignore whether their experience was as the rank they ‘retired’ at.”
“Although
in one case it wouldn’t have mattered,” pointed out Taylor helpfully.
“I
still don’t get it,” said Mike, looking from face to face.
“Mike,”
said Horner, with a slight snort of his own. “You do realize that Commander in
Chief is a rank, don’t you?”
“Oh,”
said Mike, then, “Oh!”
“Yep,”
said Taylor, and howled in laughter, “it called up all the surviving Presidents
who had either served during a time of combat at any rank or who were President
during a time of war. It recalled them at the rank of four-star general, that
being the highest available, and ordered them to report to Fort Myer immediately
for inprocessing as same.”
“Oh,
God,” laughed Mike, “that’s rich.”
“I
got a couple of very irate calls from the Secret Service,” Taylor laughed. “But
what was even funnier were the direct calls. One of ’em even offered to come
back as his ‘original’ rank.”
“Did
you take him up on it?” asked Mike.
“Nah.
I was tempted. God knows Fleet needs every pilot it can get. But it would have
been a political nightmare. I hope he was just joking.”
“Anyway,”
said Horner, severely, “right after this conference is the big kickoff. To make
sure nothing goes too wrong on one end of the spectrum, we will, with great
ceremony, recall every single winner of the Medal of Honor still at large.”
“Oh,
man,” said Mike, quietly. Although he wore the Medal himself, he was sure that
most of the other winners were real heroes. Whenever he was in their
company he felt like a piker. What he had not yet realized was that most of the
Medal winners felt the same way about the other holders.
“We’re
hoping that the infusion of ‘heroes’ will put some spine in the force,” said
Taylor, seemingly pulling a knife out of the air and cutting the end off of his
own cigar. The knife, after a brief flurry that looked like a simple habit
rather than showing off, disappeared as rapidly.
“We’re reactivating
the ‘Strike, Line, Guard’ concept as well,” the High Commander continued. “The
plan of creating ‘elite’ Line forces that were mobile shock forces fell by the
wayside along with a lot of other ideas.” He lit the cigar with a silver
lighter. The inscription “Who Dares Wins” was faintly visible along with a
chased dagger and wings.
Taylor
took a drag on the cigar and let out a stream of blue smoke. “Right now, other
than the Fleet Strike Forces and Special Operations, the only forces that show
overall high readiness are some of the Cavalry regiments. We’re going to start
the Line concept around them. They will become mostly volunteer and will be
moved to locations where they can be used to reinforce defense points and sally
against Posleen columns. They’re going to take a hell of a lot of casualties,
but I expect there will always be volunteers.
“So,
most of the ‘heroes’ will end up in Line units,” Horner pointed out. “But
they’re going to be bearing the brunt so it’s the right place to put them.”
“Just
remember,” said Mike, rubbing his eyes, “some of these guys are not going to be
tightly wrapped.”
“Speaking
from experience, Mighty Mite?” asked Horner.
“I’ve
had my bad days, sir,” Mike admitted, quietly. “Nights, usually.”
“You
need a break, son,” said Horner. He didn’t tell him they already had something
in mind.
“I
had one, remember, sir,” said Mike, sourly. “I was on a Bond Tour.”
“That
wasn’t a break and you know it,” said Horner. “And it wasn’t my fault. I didn’t
have a shred of pull back then.”
Mike
nodded and decided to change the subject. “Apropos of nothing, sir, where is
the equipment for all these mechanized and mobile divisions coming from?”
“Chrysler
is back in the armor-making business, has been for nearly a year. They and GM
have been producing like mad, son,” said General Taylor. “They’ve not only
stepped up their production rate beyond anything they expected, they’ve
converted two factories in western Pennsylvania and Utah for M-1 production and
four for Bradley production. The Toyota plant in Kentucky is about to get into
the business as well. Modern equipment we have out the ass. What we don’t have
is GalTech.”
“And
even an Abrams can’t stand up to Posleen for very long,” continued General
Horner.
“Hmm.
Any more rabbits in the hat?” asked Mike.
“Like
what?” asked Jack.
“Like
independent forts along the way?”
“No,”
said the CONARC. “We’ve only got so much logistics to go around. Not to mention
bodies. We have to concentrate on the cities, not long-ball chances like the
evac. There might be some small outposts—we’re looking at doing some stuff with
militias—but by this time they will probably be swept away. That’s where the
mobile infantry comes into play.” The fate of the defenders was obvious. But
the general carefully did not comment on that.
“And
in the southwest,” interjected General Taylor, flicking an ash from his stogie.
“And
in the southwest,” agreed Horner, “which is going to be an Eleventh Mobile
Infantry show. The other use for the MI will be as support during the initial
retreat to the montane defenses and to ensure that the Posleen do not break
through the Appalachian defenses especially. What we want you to do is go over
the conventional battle plans being developed and set up the MI zones of responsibility.
“Zones
of responsibility will not be detailed to units smaller than a battalion,”
continued Horner. “The units you have to work with are the 508th , 509th and the 555th. The Eleventh will be
used as a division to hold the ‘underbelly.’ ”
“Are
we going to have all of those?” Although there were plans in the pipeline to
supply all those regiments with suits, the schedule of supply had been pushed
back and back. Pretty soon they were going to start taking losses and the new
suits would be going to replace casualties.
“We
have to assume so,” Horner stated. His grim smile belied the words. “I’ve set
up an office with a couple of staff and all the necessary clearances. And of
course you’ve got Michelle,” said General Horner, gesturing at the captain’s
AID.
“Shelly,”
corrected Mike, fingering the bracelet of black intelli-plastic. “Michelle died
on Diess.”
“Sorry,”
said General Horner, ignoring the inquiring glance from General Taylor,
“Shelly. Can you work out the details with just that?”
“I
could do it without the staff, if everything is in the network.”
“It
is,” said Horner.
“Then
no problem.”
“Initial
deployments and SOP battle plans for three regiments in wildly varying
terrain?” asked General Taylor. “No problem?”
“Yes,
sir,” said O’Neal with a tired smile. He thought it would be a nightmare, but
doable. “After activating a company of multigenerational soldiers being
introduced to science fiction technology for the first time, in an encampment
that has daily riots, this will be a piece of cake.”
“Okay,”
chuckled General Horner, tossing back the last of his vodka. “You have three
weeks. Your company will be on leave by then and you’re going on leave as well.
Colonel Hanson asked me to make that an order, by the way.”
“Yes,
sir. I could do with a little time off.”
“I
agree,” said Taylor. “And so did Lieutenant General Left.”
Mike
looked suspiciously from general to general. “How did the Fleet Strike
Commander, who I trust is still safely ensconced on Titan, become involved?”
“Well,
Bob seemed like the best point of contact to make with Fleet,” said Horner with
a frown.
Mike
flicked an ash off his cigar and frowned warily. “And why did Fleet get
involved?”
“Well,
we had to get permission from Vice Admiral Bledspeth,” explained Taylor.
“Yes,
sir,” said Mike, his suspicions fully aroused. “I suppose you did. For what
is the question?”
“Well,
to get them to kick Sharon loose,” said Horner.
“And
shuttle her down for a break of her own,” pointed out Taylor. “That was almost
harder.”
Mike’s
jaw dropped. “Sharon’s taking leave?” he asked incredulously. “Since when?”
“What
time is it?” asked Taylor, ostentatiously looking at his watch.
Horner
gave one of his rare true smiles. “Close your mouth, Mike, flies will take
advantage. Think of it as having friends in high places. Or, if you prefer,
think of it as a reward for maxing your FSTEP.”
“Sir,”
the captain spluttered. “This is not funny. It is completely unfair to everyone
else in the world who has a spouse on detached duty! It is the worst case of
personal privilege I can imagine!”
“Yes,
it is,” said Taylor, seriously. “But most of those soldiers have not made the
contributions you have. Most of those soldiers are not going to be asked to
shoulder the burdens you, and Sharon, will be asked to shoulder. And most of
those families, despite the occasional tear-jerker news report, don’t have both
parents in harm’s way.”
“Mike,”
said Horner, seriously also. “It’s a done deal. I knew you would react this way
which is why I didn’t even ask you about it. Take it as a gift from a friend or
an order from a general. I don’t care which. But Sharon will be on leave a week
before you get kicked loose. Then you’ll have a week together. After that
you’ll have a week by yourself. And that will probably be the last break you
have for years.”
“Yes,
sir,” said O’Neal, finally getting over the shock. Looked at a different way it
was a hell of a compliment. The only part that bothered him was the personal
privilege. He finally decided that this was one gift horse where he wasn’t
gonna look at the teeth.
“Take
off, Mighty Mite. It’s good to have you around.”
“ ’Night, sir,” said Mike.
He paused at the door in thought. “And thanks,” he said.
CHAPTER 14
Lagrange Point
Four, Sol III
0510 EDT
September 10th, 2004 ad
I wanna pony.
Her young face was scrunched in an unhappy frown, her arms crossed over her
chest and tears threatening in her eyes. The light wind of the summer afternoon
had faded and the trees in the background were dropping their leaves like rain.
I’m sorry,
sugar, you can’t have a pony. None of us can have ponies.
Why not?
There’s
no air for them to breathe. As she said it Sharon realized that there really
wasn’t any air. She began to pant but she couldn’t fill her lungs.
Mommy?
said the little girl, receding into the blackness. She had fallen out of the
air lock and was drifting off into the depths of space, the diamond-hard stars
wheeling around her as she fell and fell. Mommy? Mum? Comman’er O’Neal?
Commander? Mum? COMMANDER!
Sharon
started up in the bunk and banged her head into the bunk above hers. For a
moment stars wheeled around her and she nearly screamed at not waking from the
nightmare. Instead she took a deep breath and quietly let slip her husband’s
favorite swearword.
“Are
you quite all right, mum?” asked Boatswain Michaels. He squatted by the side of
the bunk with a cup of steaming tea in his hand. His thick Midlands accent was,
as always, nearly incomprehensible.
“I’ll
be fine as soon as I figure out how to kill Lieutenant Crowley so I can have
his bunk removed,” she joked, swinging her legs over the side of the bunk. It
was necessary to hunch forward to avoid banging her head again. The ceilings of
the converted Indowy fast courier were barely six feet tall. Cramming two bunks
in vertically had been challenging.
Everything
had been challenging since she’d been assigned to the position of executive
officer on the Agincourt five months before. During her tenure she had
suffered through three different captains as Fleet High Command cycled officers
through the few available warships. The first one was fine, a former submariner
who had taught her many of the tricks that stood her in good stead since. The
other two had been losses, micromanaging assholes who were lost commanding the
ship. The last one had been a philanderer to boot, a Russian bigot with
wandering hands.
She
had firmly quashed a mutiny by the ship’s crew that would have led inevitably
to a fatal “accident” for the officer. The crew treated her more like an older
sister than their XO, and had fiercely defended her. By the time the captain
left he had discovered the many pleasures of a badly tuned ship, such as
varying air pressure in his cabin, reversing toilets, lighting that remained at
constant intensity but slid through the spectrum in varying increments, now
red, now purple, now, apparently, out, but really broadcasting in high
ultraviolet. The sunburn from the last had actually overwhelmed his
antiradiation nannites.
Since
he had completely bypassed his executive officer, placed in the position
because of her background in astronautic engineering, the systems failures were
entirely his fault. He, of course, did not see it that way, blaming everything
on Sharon. She, in turn, kept full records of all meetings or even casual encounters.
The
past two weeks of inquiries had been . . . interesting. It
was not an experience she cared to repeat. However, a new commander was on the
way and the Russian was headed back to the land of borscht.
“Ach,
you don’ wann’ remove Lieutenant Crowley now, mum,” the boatwsain disagreed.
“Thin you’d have’ta con this bitch on your own everytime.”
She
accepted the cup of tea, then rubbed her forehead before taking a sip. She’d
have a knot there. The request for foam rubber had been on the books for nearly
four months. Time to send another HEAT round. And then there was the shortage
of filters, which was why the ship smelled like a goat-locker. And the forward
force screen was acting up. And the number three impeller. And about half the environmental
fans, thus the hint of ozone in the goat-locker. And the heat exchangers. And
with the main water recovery unit down, the cup of tea she was ingesting was a
third of her potable water ration for the day. But with the Russian gone at
least they might get some of it fixed. If they could squeeze the parts out of
Titan Base.
“Anything
I need to know right away?” she asked and reached across the narrow compartment
for a bottle of Tylenol. The living compartments were designed for
four-feet-tall Indowy. At five feet eleven she fitted in them poorly.
“Aye,
mum,” said the boatswain soberly. “Wiv finely lost the forward force screen.”
“Damn,”
she muttered, swallowed a handful of the acetaminophen and chased it with a
swig of the bitter tea. The “chai” as the NCO insisted on calling it was a
thick, nearly black concoction preferred in the British Navy. Sharon had talked
the crew out of many things, feeding her pickled herring for breakfast as an
example, but she had been unable to adjust the tea. Whatever. It woke you up.
She
pulled off her T-shirt and pulled out one that was marginally fresher. Michaels
was queer as a three-dollar bill, so it wasn’t going to inflame him.
They’d
had a couple of problems with sexual harassment and one attempted rape in the
first few weeks she was onboard. Not all the countries that had contributed
sailors to the Fleet had a tradition of females serving on ships. She had
stamped on it hard. Maybe too hard. She sometimes wondered if being left on the
ship was punishment for suspending the attempted rapist in microgravity, vacuum
and darkness for fourteen hours. With his radio pulled. The sailor had had to
be transferred to Ground Forces.
She pulled on a
stained coverall and stamped her feet into a pair of shipboots. The emergency
belt pack was the last piece of necessary equipment to go on and she was ready
to face her day. She was already hot as hell. The backup heat converter must be
out again.
“You
should at least have a bite,” said Michaels reproachfully. He held out a
platter with toast on it.
She
tilted her head to the side, a habit she had picked up from her husband, and
smiled. “You’re the bosun, not a steward.”
Michaels
shrugged. “Cooky’s pretty damn busy, mum. I knew you’d not eat if I di’nt
insist.”
Sharon
picked up one of the pieces of toast and took a nibble. It was dry and quite
awful. There was no decent bread flour in the ship and the last fresh food they
had received had come in nearly a month before.
The
ship was on a seemingly endless patrol of near-Earth space. Parts and food,
such as reached them, were shipped in by light freighters and transferred by
hand from ship to ship. The crew struggled endlessly against the conflicting
demands of failing systems and the boring patrols.
Sharon
knew they were no better or worse off than the other frigates. The converted
fast couriers were the front line of the Federation’s defense against the
Posleen, but they were frighteningly inadequate from the human’s point of view.
The ships were ancient, literally centuries old, and lacked every item that
humans had come to expect in a warship. There were no redundant systems, no
easily switched out spares, not much in the way of defense, and the weapons
were nearly useless.
What
made matters worse was their customization. Each ship was hand built over nearly
a half century by one of a few Indowy families. Since each ship was custom
fabricated there were no interchangeable spare parts. For that matter, since
the ships were designed to last for a few centuries of blemishless activity,
then be taken out of service, there were no parts whatsoever. Every part was
solid-state; there was no reason that they would not last a pair of centuries.
And the Indowy guaranteed it.
Unfortunately,
most of the ships, like their own Agincourt, had been in service since
the beginning of the war. The losses from the war were straining the production
capacity of the Federation beyond the maximum and the shortage of shipping was
the most obvious aspect. These ships, which should have been taken out of
service a century earlier, were still being used on the front line. And the
Indowy technicians attached to the Fleet were learning a new term from the
humans: jury-rigging.
She
nibbled at her dry toast and had another sip of the bitter tea. Then she tapped
the artificial intelligence device on her wrist. “What’s the news?” she asked.
“There
are twenty-seven messages in your e-mail queue,” the AID answered in a
melifluous baritone.
“How
many of those are the maintenance people on Titan whining about our parts
requests?”
“Fourteen.”
“Delete.”
“Okay.
Then there are five denying requests from various crewmembers for a transfer
off ship. One of those is a rather snotty question about the leadership of the
frigate.”
“Send
’em a copy of the transcript from the inquiries and tell them to kiss my ass.
Diplomatically. And resubmit the requests. God knows somebody should be able to
get off this tub.”
“Done.
There are six answers to your requests for better food, all of which boil down
to quit whining.”
“Okay.
Send the requests back but increase the requested amount every time until you
get to our maximum stores level. Do that once per day or once per denial if
they respond within the day. Carbon-copy all requests to Fleet HQ.”
“Okay. Most of the rest of it is junk. But
there is a message from Titan Base stating that the new CO has been assigned
and will be arriving this afternoon.”
“Joy,”
said Michaels. “Bloody joy and happiness. Another one.” Part of the problem was
that the COs for the frigates were captains. The post would have been one for a
lieutenant commander or even a lieutenant in a regular navy but the frigates
were the only place for “wet navy” sailors to learn the ins and outs of space
command. Because the posting was relatively “simple,” the senior officers
assigned generally started off assuming that they knew twice as much as the
officers and crew in place. Many of them had learned what it was like to
breathe vacuum.
Sharon
shook her head. “Hey, maybe this one will be different. Who is it?” she asked the
AID.
“Captain
April Weston,” said the AID.
At
the name, Michaels sucked in his breath. “Bloody hell.”
“You
know her?” asked Sharon.
“I’ve
never met her,” said Michaels. “But everybody in His Majesty’s bloody Fleet
knows about her.”
Sharon
made a come-on gesture, indicating a request for enlightenment.
Michaels
shook his head. “Well, she’s just about the only woman who has ever stood for
admiral in the fleet who came out of surface warfare. She’s a bloody legend
among the swifties. On her mother’s side she’s related to a dead chappie named
Mountbatten.” He paused trying to figure out how to explain that to an
American.
“I’ve
heard of him,” Sharon said dryly. The late Earl Mountbatten had been the last
of a breed. Closely related to the Royal Family he had been an officer in the
Navy during World War II. After distinguishing himself as commander of a
destroyer squadron and having repeated ships shot out from under him he had
formed the first combined special operations groups in history. After the war
he had been made Earl of Burma and expertly ushered that country into
independence. He was a national hero and a treasure whose life was finally
snuffed out by the bomb of an Irish terrorist. “So she’s related to the Royal
Family?”
“Distantly,”
said Michaels with a shrug. “Us Brits have still got a thing about, well,
‘blood.’ You know?”
“Lineage,”
said Sharon.
“Bloody
right. Well, this Weston is the sort of person
who . . . sort of reinforces that. If there was ever a case
of the acorn not falling far from the bloody oak.”
Sharon
nodded. “So this is good?” she asked cautiously.
“Oh,
yeah,” said Michaels. “Of course, Mountbatten survived four ships. And most of
his chappies never made it back. There was some as would jump ship rather than
sail with him.”
Sharon
snorted and thought about the departed Russian. “I’ll take my chances.”
The
air lock hissed and Captain Weston stepped forward, still fumbling at the
catches of her pressure helmet. It annoyed her to demonstrate incompetence in
her first moments on the ship, but the only previous time she had worn a battle
suit was during the four-hour familiarization class at Titan Base.
One
of the petty officers standing at attention stepped forward and unhooked the
last recalcitrant fitting and her ears were blasted by the shrill of a recorded
boatswain’s pipe.
She
stepped forward and returned the salute of a good-looking brunette in a
slightly soiled coverall. “Captain April Weston,” she said and removed a folded
piece of paper from a sealed belt-pouch. That maneuver she had managed to
practice on the shuttle over and it went off flawlessly.
“ ‘You are hereby ordered
to proceed forthwith to the Fleet Frigate Agincourt for purposes of assuming
command,’ ” she quoted. “Signed Hareki Arigara Vice Admiral, Director,
Fleet Personnel Department.” Weston lowered the paper and nodded at the
presumptive executive officer. “I take command, ma’am.”
“I
stand relieved, ma’am,” said the brunette. “Sharon O’Neal, Lieutenant
Commander. I’m your XO.”
Captain
Weston nodded and looked around at the assembled crew. It was a fairly small
party. “I am about to betray my ignorance,” she admitted. “Is this most of the
crew?” she continued, slightly aghast. Normally most of the off-duty crew
members would be present for the greeting party. There was more than enough
room in the pressure hold for more people, so the group of twenty or so might
be it. That would place the upper end of the crew at thirty or so. The crew of
a “wet” frigate would number over a hundred. Her previous cruiser command had
numbered over a thousand.
“Ma’am,
there are four on duty in the tac center,” the XO answered, “three in
engineering and four more at various other points. There are also six Indowy
crewmembers.” She hesitated. “They . . . don’t usually
associate with large groups of humans.”
Weston
nodded her head. That was one briefing she had gotten. “Understood.” She looked
around and raised her voice slightly. “I’m sure we’ll all get to know each
other well over the next few months.” The tone was a command voice. It implied
that what the speaker said would occur, whatever the universe might throw at
the speaker. Compared to the whiny and blustering Russian she replaced it was
immensely heartening to the crewmembers. Which was what she had intended.
She
looked around at the damaged and dingy interior of the ship. The lighting was
purplish and unpleasant and the cargo hold was covered in scuffs and dents. For
all that there was little real dirt. The ship was obviously well cared for. But
the age and poor condition were clear nonetheless. She smiled and chuckled.
“I’m sure we’re going to get real friendly.”
There
was an uneasy chuckle in response from the group and she turned to the XO. “Mrs.
O’Neal, why don’t you show me to my dayroom and we’ll get down to business.”
“Yes,
ma’am,” said Sharon. The new commander had obviously gotten a realistic first
impression and the response was better than she had hoped. “If you’ll follow
me?”
The
commander’s office turned out to be a cramped antechamber of the captain’s
quarters. It was smaller than the office April had on her first command—also a
frigate, as it happened—and very poorly positioned. The captain’s quarters were
nearly thirty meters away from the bridge through a twisting maze of unusually
low corridors. Using this as an office was obviously out of the question.
She
turned to her XO, standing at attention behind her. She waved a hand. “This
isn’t Fleet Headquarters, for God’s sake. Simply bowing will suffice.” She
smiled to assure the XO it was a joke. “Is there anywhere closer to the bridge
for me to do my paperwork?”
The
XO shook her head. “No, ma’am, there isn’t. Believe it or not, engineering and
the bridge are almost collocated. The engineering section pretty much wraps the
bridge. Then, out from there are a mass of environmental systems. This is as
close as any quarters are to the bridge. And there’s not anything that can be
moved or taken off-line to get you closer. I’m even farther away, which is why
I was using the office in the period between the last commander and your
arrival.”
Captain
Weston nodded firmly. “Well, I suppose I shall have to learn to hurry.” She sat
in the workstation chair and spun it to face the XO standing at parade rest.
“Sit,” she commanded, pointing at the nearby bunk.
Sharon
seated herself carefully, hands on knees.
Weston
examined her just as carefully. The officer was attempting to radiate calm but
was obviously as nervous as a virgin in the East End. Weston nodded
unconsciously.
Sharon
wondered what the nod meant. The new commander had been regarding her steadily
for nearly a minute. If she thought she could outwait Sharon O’Neal she had
another think coming. The stare was, however, disconcerting. The captain had
blue eyes so dark as to be almost black. They were like looking into a Highland
loch; there was no way to know how deep it might be. They seemed to suck light
into them. Sharon almost shook herself, realizing she was becoming half
mesmerized.
“Lieutenant
Commander Sharon Jerzinsky O’Neal,” said the new captain, startling the XO. The
captain smiled. “Jerzinsky?”
Sharon
shrugged. “Polish, Captain.”
“That
I recognized. Rensselaer Polytechnic, Class of ’91. BS Aeronautic Engineering.
Cum Laude. Entered the United States Navy Reserve Officer Training Program in
1989. Why?”
Sharon
shrugged again. This was going differently than she expected. Among other
things she was amazed at the officer’s memory and wondered how far it would
stretch.
“I
took the ROTC program for the money, Captain. It wasn’t much but with a couple
of scholarships I only had to have one job on the side.” She carefully
refrained from discussing what the job was. Modeling was modeling but there
were a few pictures around of her that she sure hoped never made it into her
official packet. Or the fact that her minor had been in dance.
The
new commander nodded and went on. “Commissioned as an ensign and took training
as an aeronautics maintenance officer. Assigned USS Carl Vinson. Served
four years, three on the Carl Vinson. Exited regular service in 1995.
Why not continue?”
Sharon
wondered how to explain to this career officer. How to explain that despite all
the pressure being applied to reduce harassment, an aircraft carrier at sea for
six months or more at a time was still no place for a former model. How to
explain the decline in morale and discipline during those dark days of the
American military. How to explain the frustration of not being able to keep
birds in the air because of a lack of parts. Or the pressure to put up birds
you were not one hundred percent sure were good. Of having a husband knife her
in the back so he could get a few more hours in the air. Of having the same son
of a bitch leave her for an “LBFM,” a “Little-Brown-Fuck-Machine.” The
Indonesian wife was nice and almost apologetic. But that hadn’t helped.
“There
was no reason to continue at that time, ma’am,” she answered, her stock
noncommittal response. “I had never considered the Navy a career.”
“Despite a
string of ‘Excellents’ on your Officer Evaluation Reports?” asked the British
officer. “Despite, ‘this officer manifests maturity and ability far beyond her
age and far beyond her peers. Future assignments of this officer should be
determined keeping in mind the good of the service and possible future high
rank rather than the immediate needs of career placement.’ And it was
‘enthusiastically endorsed’ by the carrier commander.” The professional officer
cocked her head to the side in puzzlement. “That’s better than any evaluation I
got at the same rank. So, why leave? You had the possibility of a fine career
in front of you.”
Sharon
raised her hands palm up. “I was never a careerist, Captain. I’m happy that
Commander Jensen was so enthusiastic and that Captain Hughes agreed. But I
still was not there for a career.”
The
new commander cracked her fingers and leaned back in the station chair, fingers
laced behind her head. “Bullshit.”
Sharon
stared at her stonily. “Perhaps, Captain. But it is all I am required to
discuss with my superiors.”
Captain
Weston cocked an eyebrow. “Once burned thrice shy?”
Sharon
smiled faintly. “More like eternally shy. Ma’am.”
“Okay.”
The officer nodded. “Fair enough. Returned to school, Georgia Technical
Institute. Met and married one Michael O’Neal.” She stopped. “Parenthetically,
I met the Mike O’Neal who won the medal on Diess on a plane just the other day.
Nice fellow, if you’ve never met him. Just as short as he looks on TV.”
Sharon
smiled thinly. “Yes, he is, ma’am. But I find him quite tall enough.”
Captain
Weston looked surprised for the first time in the interview. “Seriously? He’s
your husband?” she asked, her accent for once becoming prominent.
Sharon
smiled whimsically. “Seriously. I mean, I know he’s not much to look
at . . .” she said and smiled again.
The
captain shook her head and trudged on. “Took your masters in aeronautic
engineering, specializing in determining maintenance cycling. Went to work for
Lockheed-Martin in Atlanta on the F-22 project. The project was then in the
process of being ‘downsized.’ I’m surprised you got a job.” She cocked an eye
for an answer.
“So
was I,” Sharon admitted. “But they were continuing background developmental
work, figuring that sooner or later Congress was going to give up and buy the
damn thing. I was fresh out of college and cheaper than the people they were
letting go. I wasn’t happy about it, but I took the job anyway.”
“But
you stayed for two more years. Until you were called up, in fact.”
“I’d
hardly been there any time when We Heard.” Sharon finally crossed her legs and
interlaced her fingers over her knee. “By then we’d started tinkering with the
Peregrine variant. When the parameters came back it looked like the Peregrine
would be the answer to our prayers. Now that I’ve gotten a better look at the
data on Posleen weapons I think it’s a death trap. But nobody listens to me
these days.”
“Oh,
I wouldn’t say that,” said Captain Weston, enigmatically. She leaned back and
ran her fingers through her hair. They came away greasy and she grimaced. “They
listened to you at the Board of Inquiry. And that was with an entirely male
board and two Russians on it. Have you ever wondered why you are still on this
ship when all the other officers have been cycled through like shit through a
goose?”
Sharon
snorted at the sudden profanity out of the somber officer. “Yes, Captain,
actually I have.”
“So,
we’re back to ‘Captain’ are we?” asked the officer, with a snort. “As you wish.
You realize that none of the officers have been in place long enough to give
you an evaluation report.”
“Yes,
ma’am,” Sharon answered, more carefully.
“Captain
Stupanovich tried. He submitted your review despite only being in command for
sixty days. The minimum is one hundred and eighty.”
“Yes,
ma’am,” replied Sharon with a grimace. “I saw it.”
“Not
particularly good from what I’ve heard,” admitted Weston. “Well, that was one
piece of paper that will never see the light of day. If there is a remaining
copy anywhere, Fleet has been unable to find it.”
Sharon
wrinkled her brow. “I don’t understand. Why would Fleet be trying to purge that
review? I can understand denying it, but why purge it?”
“Commander,”
asked Weston, leaning forward and pinning her with that deep, black gaze, “how
many systems are currently down on this barge?”
Sharon
grimaced. “There are seventeen ‘minor’ systems down and four ‘major’ systems,
ma’am. The major systems are limited to environmental and defense. All weapon
systems and drive systems are on-line.” She shrugged. “The crew is doing
wonders, especially the Indowy, but we don’t have the spares! We might
have been able to get spares delivered for the heat exchangers and the number
six forward fans by now if Captain Stupanovich had bothered to forward the
requests!” she finished angrily.
Weston
nodded. “Commander, there are seventeen frigates assigned to Earth system
defense. You know that, right?”
“Yes,
ma’am.”
“Do
you know how many are flying?” she continued, aggressively.
“Twelve,
ma’am,” said Sharon, wondering where the discussion was going.
Weston
nodded again. “Do you know how many have more than fifty percent capability in
weapons and drive? The two systems that you correctly pointed out are the most
important?” She waved at the air. “It’s hot! The exchangers are off-line,
right?”
“No, ma’am, I
don’t know how many are out of service and yes, ma’am, the heat exchangers are
out,” said Sharon. “Actually, half—” she continued and was cut off.
“I’m
not attacking your job, Commander. I’m telling you why you should straighten up
your damn shoulders! Having all the heat exchangers off-line can be deadly. But
not nearly as deadly as having our lance-launch ability off-line! Do you know
what Admiral Bledspeth, whom I have known since I was in diapers, said to me?”
Sharon
shook her head, wondering what the Terran System Fleet Commander would have
said about this bucket of bolts. She felt like she was being slapped in three
different directions by the rapid turns of the new commander.
“He told me to
keep my damn comments to myself and listen to Commander O’Neal and I might just
live to see Terra again.” She shook her head and swore. “This is the only
damned frigate circling Earth that has all its weapons on-line and a fully
capable drive! And if you don’t think Fleet notices that, you’re not as smart
as they say you are.
“We
are currently the only frigate that is more or less ready to sail in harm’s
way!” continued the captain, seriously. “If there is an emergence of Posleen
ships, the fighters and the other frigates will try. But most of the frigates,
if they’re not limping on one reactor their launch systems are off-line!”
“Oh,
joy!” said Sharon as anger built in her system. “So, what you’re telling me is
I’ve been stuck in this hell-hole for doing a good job?”
“No,
Commander!” said the captain, determinedly. “I’m telling you that you are stuck
for doing an incredible job! And you are now going to have to teach
still another sea-sucking regular Navy asshole how the hell you do it!”
“Oh,
God,” said Sharon, with a laugh for the accuracy of the phrasing. The laugh
held a note of despair.
“And
I, in turn,” said the officer quietly, “will give you all the support I can.
So, maybe, we can turn this into something other than a flying rat-hole
sardine-can.”
Sharon
nodded and sighed. “Well, ma’am, in that case we’d better get you accustomed to
the paperwork.”
“Not
the systems?” asked the captain. It was a test. The captain might learn a
smattering of the equipment, but for the moment getting the parts out off the
supply chain was much more important.
“Not
if you want to have any running in a month,” said Sharon, shortly. “The Fleet
floats on electronic paperwork. And my AID is about to give your AID a crash
course. Starting with how messed up the parts program is.”
CHAPTER 15
Ft. Indiantown
Gap, United States of America, Sol III
1427 EDT
September 13th, 2004 ad
“Yes, Ampele?”
First Sergeant Pappas looked up at the image of the operations sergeant
displayed by his AID. The call had interrupted his attempt to reduce the mass
of paperwork that had built up while he was on leave and he suppressed an
illogical snarl; the recently promoted ops sergeant was famous for not wasting
his time.
“Top,
battalion PAC just called and we’re getting another E-6.”
“We’re
up to strength,” responded Pappas as a knee-jerk reaction.
“No,
we’re down one, according to PAC, and technically they’re right.”
“If
you’re talking about Stewart’s squad, you’ve got to be joking.”
“I
don’t know what else we’re going to do with him. He’s senior to Stewart and all
the other squads have staffs as squad leaders.”
“Do
we have his two-oh-one? And where are we on getting Stewart his Six?”
“The
two-oh-one’s still queuing from all the transfers, but PAC is ‘very confident’
that we will have it in hand by the time he arrives, and he has a hardcopy
with him. And there is no way that battalion is going to board Stewart. He’s
barely out of basic!”
“So
are you, and I got you your five stripes. Never mind, I’ll take another hammer
to the sergeant major. When the new guy arrives, send him straight in.”
“Roger.”
“Staff
Sergeant Duncan,” said the new NCO, from the doorway, “reporting to the first
sergeant as ordered.”
Duncan
had been around—he was entering his twelfth year in the military—and he knew
that when you reported to your company, whatever the procedure might say, you
usually saw other NCOs before you were introduced to your new first sergeant or
commander. Because they were very busy people with tight schedules, if you were
ordered to report directly to one or the other on arrival, it usually meant
trouble. And he really had no interest in trouble. Especially from the big son
of a bitch that was his new Top.
“Come
on in, Duncan was it? Pull up a chair.” Ernie Pappas, who still thought of
himself as a gunnery sergeant, could tell when someone was on pins and needles
and suspected he knew why.
“No
big problem,” he continued. “If you’re wondering why I asked to see you right
away, just a couple of things I wanted you to be aware of. Termites in your new
home, so to speak.”
First
Sergeant Pappas did a quick perusal of his newest NCO and came away with
varying first impressions. For one thing, the guy was no rejuv. Pushing thirty
probably, though it was hard to tell with his eyes. He had a battered look,
kinda shocky, that reminded him of the Old Man when he first arrived, and a pin
that he had only ever seen before on the captain, the one that meant that the
person had been in nuclear ground combat. Despite how bad it was on Barwhon,
the pin had only been earned in one engagement.
He
held out his hand for the hardcopy personnel file clutched in the new NCO’s
hand. “Diess?” he asked, softly.
“Yeah.
And I just got back from Barwhon,” the staff sergeant replied, surprised.
“How’d you know?”
“I’ve
seen the pin before.” Pappas let it lie at that and started reading the file.
He skipped all the marketing bullshit at the front that was mainly for
promotion boards and went straight to the military history file. Several items
leaped off the page. After a few moments’ scan he closed the file and smiled.
“What?” Duncan
asked. He knew that his new first sergeant had seen something that made him
adjust his first impressions, probably either the Article 15 just before Diess,
or he had read through the lines on his most recent transfer. The smile could
mean anything.
“Well,
I have the old good news, bad news routine,” said Pappas with a slight smile.
“And I’ll lay it out with the intermediate news first. I wanted you to know
that your platoon sergeant is a female.
“Sergeant
First Class Bogdanovich was an instructor for the Marines before they opened up
the combat arms and she jumped at the chance to go to Strike. She is extremely
competent and runs a helluva platoon. I doubt that you’re going to have
problems, but you’re not prejudiced against women, are you? I’d appreciate an
honest answer; I can shuffle things if you are.”
Like
I could say yes? thought Duncan. “No, that’s fine. I’ve never worked with a
female boss, but we were having them trickle in as I was leaving Diess. The
ones who are professional are fine.”
“You
got a problem with some that aren’t professional?” asked the first sergeant
cautiously.
“Top,
if one of my troops starts bawling because I told them they fucked up, that’s
their problem,” said Duncan with a frown. “I do not coddle my male troops, I
damn sure won’t coddle any female ones. Yeah, I had a little problem with that
on Diess, not one of my troops. She eventually decided that maybe Fleet Strike
wasn’t the place for her.”
The
first sergeant decided to take that one on faith. It sounded like a couple of
incidents he’d heard about, but not in Bravo since they’d received their first
group of women. Fleet Strike was composed of multiple countries’ forces, some
of which had a tradition of women in combat. It made no allowances for feminine
virtues or perceived weaknesses. It was not that what was generally considered
a feminine approach did not have merit, it was just that it had no merit in
combat. The Fleet forces were slowly coming to terms with that fact, the
American forces generally much slower than others. From Pappas’s point of view,
it was up to the Bogdanoviches and the Nightingales to prove that they had a
place. There were no freebies in the infantry. Not with a war on.
“Okay,”
he said with a nod, scratching the back of his head with a pen. “I don’t think
you’re going to have a problem with that. Now for the really bad news. We’ve
already completed our FSTEP, and maxed it, so I’m understandably proud of our
junior leadership and don’t really want to mess with it.
“The
only squad that does not have an E-6 squad leader is headed up by an E-5 who is
so outstanding I’m considering offing you to keep him in charge.” Pappas smiled
to show he was joking. “Unfortunately, he is also so incredibly junior—he’s
practically straight out of boot camp—that you virtually have to take the
squad.”
“Well,
Top,” said Duncan, furrowing his brow, “you know that thing about a lazy man?
If I can let my Alpha team leader run my whole damn squad . . .”
He held up his hands as if taking them off.
“Sure,
sure, I believe that. Anyway, I think you can handle Stewart. You’ll find this
out soon enough, but I came here from the Fleet Basic course at McCall with the
skeleton of the company, and Stewart came with me. Nonetheless, he really is
extraordinary. Wait’ll you deal with him. Last but not least, I think you
should know that I doubt I will be able to do anything about it even if you do
have problems with Stewart. Or Bogdanovich, for that matter. Or even me.”
“Why?”
asked Duncan, sensing a trap.
“You
know how I said I’d seen that pin . . .”
“Sergeant
Bogdanovich,” said the first sergeant as he walked into the Swamp, “meet your
new second squad leader, Staff Sergeant Duncan. He was in the Old Man’s platoon
on Diess.”
Natalie
Bogdanovich hesitated fractionally as she extended her hand, then took Duncan’s
in a strong grip. “Welcome to O’Neal’s Traveling Circus.”
Duncan
sized up his new platoon sergeant and was immediately impressed. Bogdanovich
was a short, heavily muscled blonde with engaging blue eyes and her hair pulled
back in a bun. Her fresh good looks were barely undone by a nose that was
slightly crooked from being broken some time in the past. But the energy and
enthusiasm she exuded quickly drew the attention away from that tiny defect.
Duncan could feel a restrained power behind her grip that reminded him of
Lieutenant O’Neal.
“I
didn’t even know he made captain, although I’m not surprised.”
“Given
the size of Fleet Strike,” pointed out Gunny Pappas, “we were bound to get
someone who knew him on Diess. There’s not that many units.”
“Well,”
Duncan noted with a grim shake of the head, “there were only twelve of us left
and three are on permanent disability.”
“How
do you get permanently disabled?” asked the first sergeant. “Galactic Medical
can fix anything that doesn’t kill you outright.”
“Psychiatric,”
Duncan and Bogdanovich said together, then looked at each other quizzically.
“Boggle
did a tour on Barwhon, first,” said Pappas.
Bogdanovich
nodded, somberly. “It seems there’s still some things they can’t cure.”
“Yeah,”
Duncan agreed quietly. “Although I think in the case of Private Buckley, they
let him off ’cause they didn’t want to put up with the stories.” Duncan gave a
grim chuckle.
“Private
Who?” queried the first sergeant.
“What,
Mighty Mite never told that one?” said Duncan with a smile. Two combat vets and
Mighty Mite as a commander. It looked like this might be a good place to call
home for a while.
CHAPTER 16
Ft. Myer, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1825 EDT September
13th, 2004 ad
“All work and no
play makes Mike a dull boy,” said General Horner, leaning casually in the
doorway of Mike’s tiny office; his junior aide, Captain Jackson, hovered at his
side.
“Well,
sir, the nightlife in Georgetown ain’t what it used to be.”
Since
being given the almost overwhelming task of writing employment guidelines for
the Armored Combat Suit units in the upcoming defense, Mike had been working
sixteen to twenty hours a day, seven days a week. Work was actually a relief
compared to contemplating the current situation. As the world hurtled to its
inevitable rendezvous with the Posleen, society had begun a slow process of
meltdown.
Once
the full import of the upcoming invasion became apparent, a radical shift in
economic and population emphasis occurred. Seventy percent of the world’s
population and eighty percent of its wealth was concentrated in coastal plain
zones or plains contiguous with coastal plains. While these areas had many
noteworthy features, defensibility against the Posleen was not one of them.
The
developing “Sub-Urbs,” underground cities for the refugees from the plains, had
been designed with locations for businesses, factories and all the other
necessary organs of society. However, like many things Galactic related, they
were not being completed as fast as originally anticipated. The waiting list
for businesses and manufacturing locations was even longer than the one for
residences.
Businessmen,
insurance adjusters and the common man could often do enough math to make their
own decisions. Areas that had become moribund due to the previous decades’
shift away from montane zones suddenly began to experience a rebirth.
The faded
industries of Bavaria and the American Rust Belt, especially the cities of
Detroit and Pittsburgh, saw a massive influx of new plants, as GalTech and
more mundane terrestrial industries relocated their fixed facilities to
locations that could be defended.
With
this movement of industry and services came a matching movement of labor. The
workers, managers and executives of the moving firms followed the jobs, but
others could put two and two together and a massive movement of people without
any fixed employment flooded the Ohio Valley and the Midwest in the United
States, and Switzerland, Austria and the Balkans in Europe. In Asia, more
limited infrastructures and disputed borders did not permit mass migrations
such as occurred in the United States and Europe, but there was significant
movement towards and into the Himalayas, Hindu Kush and Caucasus.
In
Japan, meanwhile, all the industry remained on the plains, but massive civilian
shelters were being dug and populated throughout the country’s many mountain
ranges. The Japanese experiences in World War II and their extensive civil
engineering infrastructure continued to serve them well.
This
mass migration and the flickering disruptions it caused in supply and demand of
goods, services and labor were causing every kind of shortage in one area and
oversupply in another.
Many
individuals were getting rich on these supply problems, most of them ethically.
Shortages had always been the creators of fortune. These individuals and anyone
else with an income were then faced with the problem of where to put their
money.
In
most cases this was still the currency of whatever country the transaction
occurred in, rather than Federation Credits. However, there was no convincing
evidence that banks or even countries would survive the invasion. Thus, the
cautious investor would prefer placement in a Galactic bank or a Terrestrial
bank in a very secure location. Although most funds were merely electrons, a
brick and mortar location remained a necessity. There was more to store than
money. People had valuable artworks, personal treasures, precious gems and
other items of “real” value. Terrestrial banks had, early on, joined in
partnership with Galactic banks and, using this conduit, funds and goods began
to flow outward from Earth.
However,
the inevitable law of supply and demand again reared its ugly head, and as the
flow continued from Terrestrial currencies to
FedCreds, the exchange rate went up and up. Now, along with a famine of
hope, was the specter of inflation. There were two exceptions to this.
Switzerland,
already a renowned financial center, had been given the highest possible
Galactic bond rating. Not only was it a major financial center already. Not
only was it seventy percent mountains. But the Swiss militia had gone through
several tests against notional attacks and every single assault had been beaten
off with ease. However, another player had entered the banking market.
The
ancient and secretive Buddhist country of Bhutan was briefly conquered by its
neighbor, Bangladesh, for the purpose of becoming a leadership haven. A single
visit by a British Armored Combat Suit battalion returned things to their
original structure, but the Bhutanese had learned their lesson.
Obstructed
by their religion from engaging in violence, they could still hire mercenaries,
and a new Ghurka regiment was born. Ghurkas were mountain troops from Nepal
that had a reputation as the best light infantry in the world.
To
pay for it Bhutan opened a few small branch offices of major banks. Since the
kingdom was determinedly old-fashioned and environmentally rigorous the bank
branches were shoehorned into millennia-old massively built stone monasteries.
Now, defended by the most renowned fighters in the world, massive stone walls
and terrain obstacles to daunt Hannibal, the banks began to receive a tsunami
influx of precious artwork, gems, metals and funds. A fractional tithe of this
flood served to pay for the most advanced military equipment on Earth for the
Ghurkas. The Ghurkas, and their British mercenary officers, were only too happy
to put it to use.
Inflation,
deflation and shortages wracked the world, causing famines and plagues in their
wake. But through all of it most continued to work and struggle: to labor for a
possible victory.
“Actually,”
said Horner with a smile, “I hear the ratio of unmarried females is even higher
than ever.”
“As,
I said . . .”
“Well,
you’re getting out of this office tonight. You have to be about done.”
“I
am done,” Mike answered, gesturing at a massive stack of hardcopy on his desk:
reports and presentations. “That’s it.”
“Okay,
good,” Horner said, pleased but not surprised that everything was just so.
Mike
had worked for him for two years when he was in charge of the GalTech infantry
team, initially as a civilian TechRep and later as his aide. Horner had learned
early that the junior officer had an intense ability to concentrate on getting
a job done. He had chosen him for this job for that reason as much as for his
ACS experience. Time had been short. There was a tiny list of people who could
design the operational strategy for ACS employment in Fortress Forward. And
there was a different tiny list of people who could pull something like that
together in the bare two weeks he had had at his disposal. The only officer
that Jack was aware of who was on both lists was sitting in the chair.
“As
long as you’re ready for the all-commands conference tomorrow, you don’t have a
reason not to come to the Fort Myer’s club tonight, all spiffy in your Fleet
Blues.”
“Well,
sir,” said Mike with a not particularly false yawn, “actually I have about thirty
reasons, starting with sleep.”
Jack
seemed to pay no attention to his rejection. “Besides welcoming all the Army
commanders to this official kickoff of ‘Fortress Forward’ we will be
celebrating the visit of the new French Ground Forces commander with a dining-out.
I thought you might like to attend.”
“Well,
sir, as I said . . .”
“His
name is Crenaus.”
“The
Deuxieme Armore commander, sir?” Deuxieme Armore, along with the Tenth
Panzergrenadier and a scattering of British, Chinese and American armor units was
rescued by then-Lieutenant O’Neal’s platoon on Diess, when they had been
encircled by Posleen in the Dantren megascraper. The platoon had dropped
megascrapers on two sides of the encirclement and cracked the Posleen on the
remaining side with a barrage of antimatter grenades. The French general—a
gangling firecracker of a man who bore a remarkable resemblance to the
scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz—had been notably impressed. Mike, in turn,
had been impressed with how well the general had held his unit together in such
an impossible situation. Deuxieme Armore had come out of the conflict with
lower losses than any of the other units in the mobile defense, to a great
extent because they retained cohesion when others broke like glass vases. The
strongest reason for that cohesion was the guest of the dining-out.
“The
same. When he heard you were in town he insisted that you attend,” Horner said
with a rare true smile.
“Yes,
sir.” Mike took mental inventory of his wardrobe. He had a pressed set of Fleet
Mess Blues and—on the suspicion that someone would require he wear them at some
point—his medals.
He
had thus far succeeded in not wearing any of them, despite Ground Force
regulations to the contrary, by the simple expedient of pointing out that he
was not, in fact, a Ground Force officer and, therefore, the regulation did not
apply. He had had to endure three more drubbings by overzealous MP officers
until a special order was circulated explaining the position of Fleet versus
Ground Force personnel. He probably would not have made the issue were it not
for the fact that other Fleet personnel assigned to the Pentagon were under
constant harassment. If his application of the old-boy network could help to
mitigate that in any way he felt it worth the effort. He also hated the looks
he got when people saw him with the Medal. But, what the hell, it would be a
chance to see some old companions.
“Airborne,
General, sir. I’ll be there with bells on.”
“Just
be sure you’re there with all your medals on.” Jack smiled one of his cold
thou-shalt-obey smiles. “Medals, Mike, not ribbons. And all of them.”
“Absent
companions,” toasted Mike, as junior in the group.
“Absent
companions,” chorused the inebriated crowd huddled around the new French High
Commander.
The
main ballroom of the Fort Myer Officers’ Club was jammed with the Military
District of Washington’s finest. The bright light of the chandeliers pulled out
highlights on gold braid and jewelry throughout the room as the officers and
their ladies danced the minuet of power. The room was packed with generals of
every rank; full colonels were not much more than waiters. But the entire
room’s focus was on the small group by the head table where a circle of aides
and senior subordinates clustered around four officers. Three of them were
four-star generals; one of them was a mere captain.
“By
rights, mon ami, you should be factored in that toast,” said the guest
of honor, with a companionable clap on the shoulder to Mike.
“Well,
there ain’t many left from my impromptu first command, that’s for sure.” Mike
looked around at his company, only faintly uncomfortable with the situation.
In
the year after his return from Diess he had been dragged around the United
States as a talking head for the Public Information Office. During the tour he
had intimate conversations with every kind of senior officer. He was sure at
the time that the Curse of the Medal was on him; that for the rest of his
career the closest he would come to the front was talking about it with a
commentator. He was finally reprieved with his current command. So he was
comfortable with senior officers at this point. And he had no problems with
uniforms.
Before
the tour began the first thing that was required of him by the PIO was the
purchase, at fabulous expense, of a set of the new Fleet Strike Mess Blues. The
group of designers and forward-thinking military officers that designed it
rammed through some wildly successful combinations of Galactic technology and
the modern mania for efficient and comfortable clothing. The daily wear
uniform, combat silks, was as comfortable a set of clothes as any casual dress
maniac could desire and even the standard dress uniform was extremely
comfortable compared to the norm. That mania for casual comfort had ended
abruptly at Mess Blues.
Designed to
highlight several traditions from members of the Fleet Strike amalgam, the
uniform also called on futuristic styling. A long mag-sealed tunic of Navy
blue, worn flapped open, was lined with the branch color of the wearer, in
Mike’s case Infantry sky blue. Around the middle was worn a full sash
cummerbund of “Redcoat” red (the identical shade was used by, variously, the
American Marines, American artillery, French paratroopers and the Red Army)
looped with gold. The shoulders and sleeves were again covered in gold loops,
the number of loops denoting rank. The pants were piped with red. It was topped
by a simple Americanized beret in the color of the different branches of Fleet
Strike. This gave the unfortunate impression that all members of the Infantry
were on a UN Peacekeeping mission, but that impression would pass with time.
This
admittedly flashy uniform was, in Captain O’Neal’s case, further highlighted by
a frightening set of medals. In the case of most persons with multiple layers
of “fruit-salad” the weight was on the lower end, the various commendation
medals and other bits of colorful “I Was There” ribbons that say that the
wearer has been a good boy and gone where a soldier was supposed to go. In
Mike’s case, the weight was uncomfortably skewed in the other direction.
Besides
the Medal, specifically awarded for single-handedly taking out a Posleen
command ship at the Main Line of Resistance on Diess, he had been separately
awarded for three other actions during that forty-eight hours of madness that
saw victory snatched from the jaws of defeat. There was a Bronze Star for
organizing the demolition of Qualtren, despite the accidental consequences, a
Bronze Star for organizing the survivors under the rubble left from the
explosion and a Silver Star for the relief of the Tenth Panzergrenadiers at the
Boulevard of Death. He had not wanted any of them and argued that, by
tradition, they should all have been lumped into one award. But they came
piecemeal instead.
Along with those
awards, and two Purple Hearts, there was a mass of foreign decorations from
countries as widely varied as England and mainland China (almost three
companies of the regiment China had sent survived due to O’Neal’s platoon). A
single Army commendation medal, a good conduct medal and an I-Was-There medal
for Desert Storm huddled at the bottom.
In
any other company the combination of uniform and fruit-salad would have looked
maniacal, but that was in any other company.
The cluster of
officers around Géneral Crenaus included the American High Commander in Ground
Force Mess Dress, a veteran of Just Cause, Desert Storm and Monsoon Thunder
along with so many odd little out-of-the-way missions he had long ago stopped
trying to remember them all. His “fruit-salad” was also impressively high
protein, low fat. General Horner, in Mess Dress, had managed to be involved instrumentally in all three operations
and although he was light on “Forgot To Duck” Purple Hearts, his commendations
were all about being out front leading troops.
And it turned out
that Géneral Crenaus, in French Mess Dress, tails, stovepipe hat and all, had
apparently been involved in every action the French had been able to think up
over the last couple of decades. And, apparently, a few they were not quite
willing to admit to as well.
Between
the Mess Dress on all the senior officers and the medals on every chest, Mike
was wondering when the Valkyries were supposed to show up and go violently
mezzo-soprano.
“I like that
one,” said General Taylor rather thickly as he pointed to an unrecognized
decoration on Captain O’Neal’s chest. He had managed to ingest better than a
quart and a half of scotch during the course of the evening. “I didn’t think
there were any Japs with you on Diess.” The decoration worn just above the
Combat Infantryman’s Badge looked somewhat
like a golden rising sun.
Géneral
Crenaus laughed grimly. “That’s not for saving Nip ass, bon homme. That
is simply an award for being there. I have one as well.” He pointed to the same
medal on his own chest.
“That’s not
the Diess medal,” pointed out General Horner, peering at O’Neal’s chest. “That’s
our Diess Expeditionary Force medal,” he continued, pointing at a normal-sized
medal of tan and red.
“Not
for being on Diess, mon Général,” corrected Géneral Crenaus’s senior
aide from the periphery where the aides danced attendance. “It is a Federation
recognition device for being in the effect zone of a nuclear blast.”
“Oui,
this one is entirely our young friend’s fault,” laughed the boisterous French
general, thumbing in the direction of the captain. “However, on reflection, I
can hardly fault him.”
“Fine,
great,” said Mike, feeling the bourbons the senior officers had been pressing
on him. “Next time I’ll leave your Frog ass swinging in the breeze.”
Géneral
Crenaus laughed uproariously to the apparent relief of the officers in the
outer ring. “I sincerely desire that there is never another such incident, my
young capitaine.”
Mike,
in the meantime, was rather drunkenly looking at his Star Burst medal upside
down. “You know the bastard part of it, sir?” he asked as he swayed forward and
back; trying to maintain balance with his head down was getting harder and
harder.
“What?”
asked General Horner, knocking back his Absolut and picking another off a
passing tray.
“I
don’t remember a bit of it. I mean, some of the guys got to really groove with
the experience. Some of the platoon couldn’t find bolt holes in time and they
were on the roofs when it went. Now that would be a rush.”
“A
rush?” gasped one of the colonels in the periphery.
Mike
rounded on the officer, with a look of disbelief on his face. “Sure, sir, can’t
you just see it? That wall of flame coming right at you and all you can do is
duck and cover? I mean, like, what a rush!” He smiled ferally as the
generals laughed. Most of the American aides, none less than a major in rank,
were remarkably short on medals indicating combat time. They obviously were not
sure to what extent the aggressive captain was joking.
Crenaus’s
aide, wearing the same medal, snorted and shook his head. Having met the junior
officer at his best, and worst, he had no doubt of the little firecracker’s
sincerity. Deuxieme Armore called him “The Little Shrew” and spoke it in hushed
tones. Not for any spitefulness, but because, weight for ferocity, shrews were
the most deadly thing on earth. And quite utterly fearless.
“Oui,
in a suit perhaps,” interjected Géneral Crenaus, genially. “But most of us were
not in suits. It was quite unpleasant from my point of view.”
“Sure,
sir,” slurred Mike. “That’s why I gave you thirty—hic—seconds warning.”
“Twenty.
You said thirty and detonated at twenty. Merci beaucoup, by the way, and
what a surprise that was!”
“C’est
la guerre. Vingt, trente, who’s counting.”
“We
were, certainment. With our, how do you say it? ‘pedal to the metal’ we
were. ‘Dix-neuf . . . ’ Wham! Zee Camera of God!”
the general continued, mock angrily.
“Bitch,
bitch, bitch,” Mike snorted and took another slug.
Géneral
Crenaus laughed again, hard, as at another thought. “Your Private Buckley did
not think it was, as you say, a ‘roosh.’ ”
“Heh,
yeah, I heard that one afterwards. Hah! And I thought I was havin’ a bad
day.”
“Would
you care to let the rest of us in on the joke?” asked General Taylor, settling
rather heavily on the head table.
“Oui,
it is a good one,” said Géneral Crenaus, gesturing at Mike.
“Well,
come on in when you want. Where to begin?” mused Mike, taking a sip of bourbon.
“At
the beginning is usually best,” commented General Horner dryly. The dozen or so
Absoluts had seemed to effect Horner not at all. Mike had heard he had a hollow
leg. Now he believed it. The only way to tell he was drunk off his ass was that
his normally sober expression had become like iron. Way drunk.
“Yeah.
Well, Buckley was one of the guys caught under Qualtren. Now, we had to extract
ourselves from the rubble, which we did by blowing through with our grenades
and stuff, not a technique I suggest to the unarmored.”
“Oui,
they are after all . . .”
“ . . . antimatter!”
Mike finished. “Right. So, everybody was able to figure out how to do this
successfully except the unfortunate Private Buckley, or Lefty as we came to
call him. Private ‘Lefty’ Buckley, on his first try, slipped out his grenade,
extended it as far away as he could, since it was, after
all . . .”
“ . . . antimatter!”
chorused Géneral Crenaus and his aide.
“Right.
So he sticks his arm out as far as it will go, pushing through the rubble, and
thumbs the activator.”
“Oui,
oui! Only to find that he can’t retract his arm!” crowed the French
general, belly laughing.
“Yeah!
The rubble shifted and it’s caught. So, like, this is gonna huuurt, right?
Actually, it only hurts for a second ’cause of all the suit systems. Blocks the
nerve, shuts down the bleeding, debrides and disinfects the wound, all in
seconds. But, ya know, ya got to imagine, I mean . . .”
“It’s
a ten-second count?” asked General Horner, looking grim, which for him was the
same as smiling.
“Right,
right. So like . . .”
“Dix,
neuf, huit, sept . . .” interjected Crenaus, with tears of
laughter in his eyes.
“Right,
ten, nine . . .” Mike translated, “and
then . . .”
“Wham!”
interjected General Taylor, laughing.
“Right.
Like, ‘Whoa, is this a Monday or what?’ Anyway, it didn’t, doesn’t really hurt,
or it wouldn’t be so funny. Just the really brief but memorable sensation of
your hand vaporizing.”
“So,
what does that have to do with the command ship detonation?” asked one of the
surrounding aides.
“Well,”
continued Mike, with another sip of bourbon. “Lefty has made it to the perimeter,
and performed a really decent private’s job, as well as he can left-handed. And
when the command ship lifts he’s one of the guys that goes with Sergeant
Green.” Mike paused and solemnly lifted his glass. “Absent
companions . . .”
“Absent
companions,” the officers chorused.
“ . . . he
went with Staff Sergeant Alonisus Green to distract the command ship away from
the Main Line of Resistance and focus its attention so that I could attempt to
plant a friggin’ antimatter mine on its side,” he ended, quite solemnly.
“There
was supposed to be a humorous punch line,” said General Horner as the pause
became elongated.
“Right,
sir,” said Captain O’Neal after a sip of his sour mash.
“ . . . so anyway the whole cockamamie thing works, I get
through the defenses, plant the mine and do my now famous imitation of a piece
of radioactive fallout . . .”
“Ten
seconds early, might I add!” interjected Géneral Crenaus.
“Man,
some people wouldn’t be happy if you hanged them with a gold rope! I go ‘to
infinity and beyond’ and all the friggin’ Frenchie can do is complain about
premature detonations. Where was I, sirs?”
“Detonation,”
answered a very junior aide, a mere stripling of a major.
“Right,”
said the captain. “Well, the mine works like a charm, except for some minor little
secondary effects . . .”
“Another
three meters and I would have been steak tartare!” the general shouted, holding
his arms in the air.
“With
all due respect: Quit interrupting, General, sir. Anyway it packs about the
wallop of a Class Three Space Mine and it causes some nasty secondaries, most
of which are, fortunately, directed away from the MLR and certain unnamed
ungrateful Frenchmen . . .” commented Captain O’Neal, rolling
his eyes.
“Did
I say I was ungrateful? General Taylor, General Horner, I call you to witness,
I never have said I was ungrateful. Nervous? A touch. Frightened? Merde,
yes! But not ungrateful, you dwarf poltroon!”
“Hah,
stork! Anyway, it tears the living shit out of the command ship, but about a
third of the ship hangs together. It apparently was really spectacularly
visible from some of the positions on the MLR. This big piece of space cruiser
describes a beautiful ballistic arc almost straight up, looking like it’s
moving in slow motion,” expounded Captain O’Neal, gesturing with both hands.
“You have to remember, this is to the background of a relatively small but
quite noticeable nuclear blast . . .”
“About
four kilotons,” interjected Géneral Crenaus, taking a hard pull on his cognac,
“and less than a kilometer away!”
“More
like three kilometers. Anyway, it rides up on the mushroom cloud, describes
this tremendous vertical arc and comes gracefully back
down . . .”
“Right
on Buckley,” hooted Géneral Crenaus and cracked up.
“ . . . right
smack dab on Private Second Class Buckley. He was one of the guys who was on
the roofs, in the blast radius . . .”
“Sacré
Bleu! I was in the blast radius!”
“You
guys should have hardly felt it in the blast shadow from the buildings!”
“Blast
shadow he calls it! Oui! They were around our ears!” shouted the
general, hands waving on either side of his head. “I know, I
know . . .” he continued, holding up a hand.
“Bitch,
bitch . . . anyway, here’s Buckley, grav-boots clamped to
some nice powerful structure, miraculously alive, survives looking right into
the shockwave, survives looking right into the neutron pulse, survives looking
right into the thermal pulse . . .” Mike paused dramatically.
“It
didn’t kill him, did it?” asked one of the aides, right on cue.
“In
a suit? Nah, but it did knock him clean out. And this time he waited for
somebody to come dig him up. He kinda had to since he was about fifty stories
down in the building with a quarter kilometer of space cruiser on top of him,”
ended Captain O’Neal, chuckling.
“To
Private Buckley!” roared Géneral Crenaus, raising his brandy on high.
“To
Private Buckley!” roared Captain O’Neal. “And all the other poor sods who wear
the Mask of Hell!” he ended, a touch bitterly.
“Here,
here,” chorused General Taylor, after there was a moment’s uncomfortable pause,
and everyone raised their glasses and drank. “Is that what you call it, Mike?”
“Isn’t
it, sir?” asked Captain O’Neal, swaying like an oak in the wind. “I may joke
about a rush, but it’s armor that you can take into a friggin’ nuclear blast.
As we have, and will have to again. What else is the mission that I have been
working on for two weeks? To go where no one else can go, to do what no one
else can do and to do that until we are no more.
“For
whatever goddamn reason we are going to get hit with five times the
number of Posleen pointed at Barwhon and Diess. As we are all well
aware. That level of force will leave us totally invested. No large
ships are going to be able to sneak through that firepower!
“So,
from when the Posleen land until Fleet is strong enough to invest us and take
out the landers, we will be cut off from resupply of GalTech. And that means
ten little MI troopers . . . nine little MI
troopers . . . eight little MI troopers, until ‘we’re
singing Glory be to God that there are no more of us, cause one of us could
drink it all alone.’ And it is my a-hoo-wah job to take my company into that
maelstrom of nukes and gas and hypervelocity missile rounds and fight the
Posleen on their own turf at up to one-thousand-to-one odds and cover all the
other troops who don’t have the equipment to experience it.
“Yes,
sir,” finished Mike. “I designed it, I made it, I live it and I call it the
Mask of Hell. And all who wear it are the Damned!” he ended softly.
CHAPTER 17
Lunar Orbit, Sol
III
2230 EDT September
13th, 2004 ad
“Oh, I will be God
damned!” If anyone had been present when Captain Weston opened the e-mail from
Fleet HQ on Titan Base, they would have been amazed at her command of
invective. She managed to curse for a solid pair of minutes without repeating
herself once. At the end of the diatribe she cut herself off abruptly,
realizing that the stresses of the new command were causing the reaction.
In
the short time she had been there, the only thing she had been able to
determine was that the situation was worse than expected. She now realized that
keeping the systems on-line had meant not only Herculean effort on the part of
her XO, but sheer good luck. Any of the jury-rigged repairs, patches and
add-ons could cut out at any time. This would make it appear that Captain April
Weston was not quite as competent as some had supposed. She doubted it would
destroy her career, but it would be awfully embarrassing.
For
that matter they might not have to worry too much about embarrassment. With the
forward deflector screen out any Posleen missile that made it through the
defenses would have a free ride. The detonation of a twenty-kiloton nuclear
missile in contact with the hull would erase any need to worry about career
advancement.
The
parts were bound to turn up sooner or later. And the XO was just as good as
advertised at wheedling them out of Titan Base and getting the Indowy to
venture out of their quarters and install them. Losing her “immediately” and
without any warning for a two-week leave was not good news.
The
other side of the ledger, however, was that the XO definitely needed some time
off. She had brightened up in the last few days, but it was a brittle
brightness. She definitely needed some shore leave.
So
be it. Far be it from April Weston to hold someone back from their just
deserts. If Uncle Al Bledspeth thought it was a good idea then it was a good
idea. But when she found whoever it was pulling the strings in the background,
she was going to have their guts for garters. She hated figuring out who was
conspiring with whom.
“Nathan!”
came the pleased cry.
Monsignor
O’Reilly looked over his shoulder and stood up in greeting. “Paul, how are
you?”
The
short, balding, dapper man was finely dressed in a tailored silk suit shot
through with threads of purple and green that caught the soft lighting in the
Century Club dining room. He smiled at his old friend and shook his hand
vigorously.
“Oh,
well, my friend, well.” He was accompanied by an Indowy. While they were no
longer in the two-headed calf category, it was exceedingly rare to see one in
public. Paul des Jardins gestured at the alien. “Monsignor Nathan O’Reilly, I
would be pleased to introduce you to the Indowy Aelool.”
O’Reilly
was aware that Indowy did not consider touching to be an appropriate action.
Like the Japanese they engaged in a variety of bows depending on status. Since
he had no idea what its status would be to the Galactics and since he had no
conception of the Indowy’s rank, trying to bow appropriately would be an
exercise in futility. He settled for bowing his head fractionally.
He
also was unsure of the Indowy’s sex. They had male, female and transfer neuter
to choose from and there was no discrimination. They also were difficult to
discern: The Indowy did not have significant external physical sexual
expression such as mammaries. And their subtle expression—their equivalent of
softer skin and rounded hips—was notoriously hard to spot. After a moment’s
introspection he decided that the neuter forms of speech would be best. Male
and female Indowy rarely objected to an accidental neuter reference, but
transfer neuters tended to treat male/female references with humor.
The
Indowy had an aura of peace and calm that was rarely found when they were near
humans. Normally the little creatures were as nervous as cats in a room full of
rocking chairs. This one did not even flinch at the sight of humans eating
meat.
“Indowy
Aelool, I see you.” He was enough of a student of the Galactics to know their
greetings. Actually he was enough of a student of the Galactics to know three
of the extraterrestrial languages. He still had no idea why Paul had tracked
him down at the Club. They normally used cut-outs. This was lousy tradecraft
and could damage an executive cell. He was furious; Paul had better have a damn
good reason for this.
“Please.”
He gestured at his table. “Sit down.” The damage, if any, was done. Might as
well play the hand.
“I’m
glad you were here, Nathan,” said Paul, taking a seat. One of the hovering
waiters came forward and replaced the high-backed leather chair with one
designed for Indowy. Nathan had not been aware that the club had them, but he
was not surprised. The Century Club was one of the most exclusive clubs in
Washington. Since it catered to the highest class of clientele, it undoubtedly
had preparations for every type of Galactic visitor. “The Indowy Aelool is
heading off-planet shortly and I wanted you to get a chance to meet him.”
“There
was so much to do,” said the diminutive alien in a soft, high voice. Monsignor
O’Reilly suddenly realized that the Indowy had spoken English rather than use
an AID translator and was surprised. As far as he knew, no Indowys spoke the
language or any language but Indowy. It was generally believed that their vocal
resonance cavities could not form human-style words. What other capabilities
might they be hiding? “My team has just completed the armoring of the First
Battalion of your Five-Fifty-Fifth Fleet Strike and I was to head back to
Irmansul immediately. However, my good friend Monsieur des Jardins insisted
that I meet you. As he said, ‘A stitch in time saves nine.’ ”
O’Reilly
paid no attention to the code phrase, simply nodding and taking a sip of the
fruity Washington State Beaujolais the waiter had delivered earlier. As he did
his mind raced and a series of pieces fell into place.
Apparently
Paul or someone high among the Fellowship had decided that the Indowy was the
perfect conduit into the Galactics. And he was sure enough to possibly burn his
sole contact to O’Reilly’s Société. The Fellowship and the Société had similar
aims, but O’Reilly was, as far as he knew, the sole link. If this little
meeting exposed him it would set back the work a decade. On the other hand, access
to Galactic technology was imperative. Both groups were hampered by imperfect
knowledge of the Galactics’ surveillance capabilities.
And
the Indowy always insisted on a face-to-face meeting before any serious
alliance was joined. From what he had been able to glean from current study,
and on the basis of Société records, he could understand why. The Darhel had
owned the electronic information systems of the Galactic Federation for
thousands of years. That gave them the ability to create any illusion they
chose using those systems. Face-to-face was the only way to be sure you were
talking to an actual contact.
The
logic complete he nodded to himself internally. The risk was worth the action.
He would have to sever himself from Paul as a contact for some time to come.
However, they would still be able to use intermediaries. And there was always
the Internet. The chaotic system still seemed to have the Darhel confused; they
depended upon filtering proxy servers for information control and the American
Supreme Court—bless those nine unknowing fools—had recently ruled them
unconstitutional.
“Well,
Indowy Aelool, if this Yankee dandy felt it necessary, I suppose I have to
agree.” He delivered the countersign with a broad but toothless smile. A
toothed grin was the sign of a predator to the nervous Indowy. Something about
this one, though, made him suspect that it could take a full-toothed grin
without a flinch. “Will you join me for dinner?”
“I
think not,” said the alien, his face wrinkling in a complicated expression.
After a moment Nathan realized that it was an attempt to copy a smile. The
closest Indowy expression was actually a motherly expression of disapproval. “I
have a ship to catch. But perhaps we shall meet . . . anon.”
Again the odd grimace. In this case a few broad ratlike front teeth were
exposed.
Nathan
thought for a moment. Then he wrinkled his nose as hard as he could, pulled
back his upper lip and crossed his eyes. At the incredibly silly expression
Paul nearly choked on his own recently delivered wine but the Indowy simply
copied it in surprise and emitted a series of high-pitched whines like a kitten
with its tail caught in a door. He clapped his furry hand over his mouth but
was unable to stop. Heads throughout the room turned at the odd and annoying
sound.
“Where
did you learn that?” asked the Indowy, having finally managed to stop whining.
The sound was Indowy laughter and was as infectious and difficult to stop for
them as laughter was for humans. “That was the best human copy of ‘ironic
agreement’ I have ever seen.”
“I’m
a student of anthropology,” said the Jesuit with deprecation. “There is nothing
that says that ‘anthro’ must refer only to human
beings . . . You ought to see me do Darhel ‘unfortunate
embarrassment.’ I’ve been practicing.”
CHAPTER 18
Ft. Myer, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
0710 EDT
September 14th, 2004 ad
“Hangover or no,
you’re giving the brief this morning,” said Captain Jackson as he sauntered
into Mike’s cubicle.
Mike
turned and looked at him with one eye shut, as a piston hammered his head. “I
will have you know, I have never had a hangover in my life. This headache that
is currently pounding me into the ground is entirely coincidental and based
upon nervousness over the briefing. It is not the result of trying to
drink officers who have far more experience and training in the imbibing of
hard alcohol under the table.”
“Same
for the light sensitivity and the taste in your mouth?” asked the nattily
dressed aide. Mike was fairly sure that the tailored uniform had not come off
the rack at the Officers’ Sales Store. Like Mike’s it was probably Brooks
Brothers or Halberds. The cloth was noticeably better and the fit was
immaculate.
“Correct.
Besides, in about three minutes the GalMed I just took will kick in and no more
headache. To what do I owe the honor, Captain, sir?”
“Actually,”
said Captain Jackson, with a smile, “I think you have me by date of rank,
Captain, sir.”
“Ah,
that would explain the confused look you perennially sport.”
“Actually,
that look comes with the position of aide.”
“That I am
familiar with,” Mike agreed with a wince. “I held the position myself, briefly.
Thank God there were no real aide’s duties, though; I was basically the
wild-hair guy for the GalTech program. But since there were no real aide duties
it was a good place to stash me.”
“So
I’ve heard. I also heard you fought it tooth and nail.”
“Well,
the position of aide is one that is strongly political, no offense, and I’m
lousy at passing canapés.”
“Unlike
us ring knockers?” asked the new aide with a raised eyebrow and an almost
subconscious gesture of his right hand. The West Point ring briefly caught the
light.
“I
will admit that I have met only one mediocre West Point graduate,” Mike said in
oblique agreement.
“Thanks.” The
captain’s brow furrowed. “Why do I suddenly suspect that is not the outstanding
advertisement for West Point it at first sounds?”
“As
I was saying, to what do I owe the honor?” asked Mike.
“Well,
first the general sends his regrets. He won’t be able to see you prior to the
briefing, other items have suddenly come up, but he will see you at the
reception afterwards.”
“Tell the general, thank you,
I can hold my own pecker just the same.”
“You
are really in a savage mood this morning, aren’t you?” the aide commented with
a nervous chuckle.
“Yes.
Is there anything else?”
“Do
you think the damn medal gives you the right to dispense with common courtesy?”
“No.
I was a revolting SOB before I got the medal. Is there anything else?”
Captain
Jackson’s face worked for a minute. “No. But can I ask you something?”
“You
just did.” After a moment Mike relented. “Go ahead.”
“You
are about to go out in front of a bunch of goddamned senior brass, under the direction of CONARC, and
tell them how CONARC—really meaning you—thinks they should handle their ACS
forces. Now, if you show your ass, it’s going to reflect poorly on my boss.
Since one of my jobs is to make sure that doesn’t happen, I’ve gotta find out
if you’re up to this briefing, because right now I am tempted to call General
Horner and tell him his fair-haired boy is even more canned than last night and
not up to the briefing.”
“That
would be bearing false witness, Captain,” said Mike, casually. He obviously
considered it an empty threat. He took a sip of his coffee and swished it
around in his mouth. “And isn’t there some sort of unwritten code at West Point
about ratting?”
“There
is a written code about reporting . . . questionable
behavior. I would be following the written code. And good sense. I will stop
this presentation if I think you can’t answer questions civilly. Trust me, I
know the system and how to use it. If General Horner doesn’t pull you, there
are other venues.”
Mike
smiled calmly for the first time in the encounter; it was like a tiger stretching
to work out the kinks and the toothy smile was strangely feline as well.
“Like
I said, Captain, to each his own. Very well, my problems are as follows. One.”
He flicked a finger up, counting. “I am about fed up with professional
paper-pushers. It was paper-pushing, political, regular-Army assholes that fed
me into a grinder on Diess and that probably will here on Earth. So—remember
you pointed out that you are politically connected not me—you were probably the
worst possible person to send to buck me up. Since Jack knows this, it was
probably a test. I am in no mood for tests, which I will point out the next
time I see him.
“Two.”
He flicked another finger. “I am giving a briefing for the senior commanders of
America’s defense on the subject of usage of ACS. I figure that there is about
one chance in ten of those senior officers paying me any attention, despite the
fact that these are the recommendations of their commander. We will undoubtedly
institute the strategic logistical plan. After that single bone tossed to us,
the ACS will get used in one of two ways: as cannon fodder, or as a last
desperate measure.
“In
the first case, ACS will be sent out unsupported by artillery or followed by
conventional forces and thrown at the Posleen in movement-to-contact
environments. They will be expected to make contact and stop the forces,
without flank support or logistical tail. Most of the time, they will run out
of juice, be surrounded and overrun. That will happen to about three battalions
in the first month of skirmishing, on the East and West Coasts. This will be completely
contrary to recommended doctrine.
“In
the other scenario, ACS will be sent into close-contact infernos when all other
methods, except nukes, have failed. They will be in close terrain, but, again,
not in prepared positions. They will be given orders to hold on like the
Spartans at Thermopylae and, by and large, much the same fate will befall them.
This will include the fact that the follow-on forces will be ineffectively
assembled or completely imaginary. And then the strategic scenario they died
for will die with them. That scenario will occur repeatedly throughout the
invasion. Again, it will be contrary to recommended doctrine.
“In
the meantime, senior officers will complain that the MI are a waste of funds,
that the same funds spent on conventional equipment would have given us much
more capacity. The ones that complain the worst will be the most pissed off
when the ACS are destroyed by improper implementation, and point to those defeats
as support for their arguments. The fact that they would not even consider
sending a conventional unit into the same environment will be completely
overlooked. And the whole time, we, meaning the ACS, will be watching our
numbers dwindle, without the ability to reinforce. It is not a pleasant
scenario, sort of like suicide by arsenic: slow and painful.”
“Well,”
said Captain Jackson, shaking his head at the Fleet Strike officer’s vehemence,
“congratulations, you have one last chance to get them to see the light.”
“Captain,
did you ever read ‘The Country of the Blind’?”
“No.”
“Well,
the one-eyed man did not become king!”
CHAPTER 19
Richmond, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1232 EDT
September 19th, 2004 ad
“My name’s John
Keene,” said the tall, distinguished engineer, taking the hand of the Green
Beret sergeant who met him at the airport.
“Sergeant
First Class Frank Mueller.”
“I
could have caught a cab,” the engineer continued as they walked through the
Richmond airport. It was filled with more smokers than any airport he had ever
seen. In fact, the entire airport was a smoking area with the exception of
occasional small nonsmoking areas. It almost made him think about having a
cigar.
“No
you couldn’t, there aren’t any. Or hardly any. And anyway, I wasn’t busy. You
got any bags?”
Keene
gestured by lifting the small carry-on and briefcase in his hands. “What is the
Special Forces role in all this?” he asked.
“The
Richmond Defense Project?” asked Mueller, wresting the carry-on out of Keene’s
grip but leaving him with the briefcase. He gestured with his head towards the
front of the airport and started walking. “In the case of our team, not much.
Virginia already has a Special Forces group. We were sent to beef up the local
defense training program. But Twentieth group has that well in hand, so we were
mainly sitting on our thumbs waiting to go back to Atlanta until the ‘Fortress
Forward’ program was announced. The local corps commander knew our team chief
‘back when’ and he made us a sort of super IG for the time being. When there’s
a problem, we get sent out to deal with it. Occasionally we lend a helping
hand, like picking up a defense engineering specialist at the airport.”
“I’m
not that much of a specialist . . .” said the engineer in
deprecation. Until the project to create the regional defense center in
northwest Georgia was dropped in his lap he had been a well-respected but
otherwise unremarkable civil engineer in the Atlanta market, one of literally
thousands. However, as the project had progressed, his innovative plans and
almost fiendish details had vaulted him to the top of the hierarchy of
“continental defense engineers.”
“I
saw the raw reports from the Fort Mountain Planetary Defense Center,” Mueller
disagreed. “You had more innovative recommendations than any seven other
engineers involved. Same with Chattanooga. Richmond is going to need innovative
ideas to survive.”
“So
is Atlanta,” Keene protested, “where my exwife and daughter are. So you can
understand if I would rather be there.”
“You’ll
be going back. For that matter so will we; Atlanta is where we are being based.
But Richmond needs some input.”
“What’s
the problem?” asked Keene, looking around the area of the airport. The first
thing that came to mind was that the area was flat, which favored the Posleen.
But, heck, airports always were.
“Terrain,
or lack of it,” said Mueller, as if he was reading Keene’s mind. “When I was a
terrain analyst we would call the terrain around Richmond, with the exception
of the James River and a couple of hills, microterrain. From a military point
of view, it’s flat as a pancake. I don’t know why they chose it for a defense
city.”
“Politics,
history and size,” said the engineer, “the same reason they chose Atlanta,
which has the same problems. Hell, Atlanta doesn’t even have the James; the
Posleen can cross the Chattahoochee at any point they choose. And what am I to
do about that? I can’t bring a mountain to Mohammed.”
“I don’t know,
why don’t you wait and see?” Mueller said as he walked up to a car parked in a
no-parking zone. He tossed the carry-on in the backseat, pulled the sign that
said “Richmond Defense Planning Agency, Official Business” off the dashboard of
the unremarkable white Ford Taurus, pulled a ticket off the window and put it
in the glove compartment. He had to stuff it into a pile of others.
“Okay,
any other information before the briefing?” asked Keene with a smile at the
little pantomime.
“Well,
we’re all staying at the Crowne Plaza hotel.”
“Okay,
wherever.”
“It’s
a nice enough place with a good view of the James . . .”
John
gave Mueller a sidelong look; even in their brief walk from the gate he was
experienced enough with the sergeant to wonder where the explanation was going.
“It’s
fairly convenient to the state capitol, which is where most of the meetings
are, but not very. However, it is within walking distance of Schockoe Bottom.
Which is really important.”
“Okay.
Why?”
“Well,”
said Mueller, pulling out onto Williamsburg Avenue, “there’s this fantastic
microbrewery . . .”
John
laughed, the first full belly laugh he had had in a while. He looked around at
the sparse traffic for a moment as if someone might have heard the mirth and
found it out of place.
“It
must help to be military,” John commented.
“Huh?”
“You
guys are better prepared, mentally, for this than civilians, I guess.”
“Man,
have you got that wrong,” Mueller denied. “There is no way to be prepared for
the Posleen. None.”
“Well,
you can joke about it, anyway.”
“Ah,
well, that I can. If you can’t joke about dyin’ you are not suited to the
military. So I guess that means we are better prepared.”
After that they
continued in silence through the suburbs of Richmond, heading towards the
barely visible city center. Avoiding the fork onto Government Road, Mueller
took the more scenic drop into Stony Run, overlooked by the Confederate
Memorial. Beyond the juncture with Main Street they touched the outskirts of
Schockoe Bottom. Abandoned factories loomed on their left as a giant hill rose
on their right.
“This
isn’t exactly microrelief,” commented Keene, looking up at tree-covered Libby
Hill looming over the valley of the James. The trees were turning color with
the first chill of autumn and the hill was a mix of brown and yellow. “Hell of
a lot better than Atlanta.”
“Maybe
not,” replied Mueller, “but it’s not like the city is up there. I’m damned if I
can think of a way to use it.”
“Possibly,”
mused the engineer, “possibly you are.”
“The capitol and
city center are that way.” Mueller gestured to their right as they dropped into
the sector of old brick factories. The dying rays of the sun lit the crowds
beginning to come to the area after the work of the day. Music began to pulse
as soldiers of the Twenty-Second Cavalry Regiment in BDUs mingled with female
office workers, dancing the dance that was old before clothing was born. The
city, each night, seemed to empty to Schockoe Bottom. They climbed out of the
bottoms and made a series of lefts to intersect the one-way Cary Street. As
they approached their hotel Keene took another look around.
“Yes,
there’s definitely possibility here,” Keene whispered, almost inaudibly.
Mueller
hid his small, unsurprised smile.
CHAPTER 20
Ft. Myer, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1650 EDT
September 27th, 2004 ad
“General Olds,”
said O’Neal, nodding his head slightly to the approaching First Army
commander, “I hope you enjoyed the conference.”
The
reception ending the all-commands conference was considered mandatory, a way
for the various commanders and their staffs to get together one last time and
go over all the things that had been missed at the marathon series of meetings.
For the next few weeks, e-mails would fly hot and heavy as everyone came up
with questions that they forgot or modifications arose from those questions.
However—as the American Army had repeatedly proven—open and complete
communication was the key to effective military operations. The left hand not
knowing what the right was doing was the quickest road to defeat.
On
the other hand, what it meant for Mike was one last run of the gauntlet with
some senior officers that in O’Neal’s opinion were poster children for the
Peter Principle. But once it was over, it was off for two weeks’ leave and
finding out what bad habits Cally had picked up from Dad.
“O’Neal,”
said the tall, spare commander, nodding his own head. “I thought I would get a
clarification on one item. I believe you stated that the directive of CONARC
was that ACS should not be used in a situation where a ‘Fortress Forward’ or
montane defense point had already fallen.”
Mike
gave it a quick scan for booby traps. “Yes, General, that is correct.”
“Even
if the ACS could permit the survival of the defending units.”
“Again,
General, that is the intent of the directive.”
“So,
you, or CONARC through you, equate an ACS battalion to be the same as the units
in a ‘Fortress Forward’ position, equivalent to a corps of trained soldiers?
All their support? Some seventy thousand lives balanced against six hundred?”
Mike
considered his response carefully. “General, I realize that you disagree with
the logic . . .”
“You
are correct, Captain, a point that I believe I have made with General Horner.
There is no military justification for such a stance, and if Fleet Strike feels
that its units are too good to support Army units, then I question why we are
funding Fleet Strike!”
Earth
provides a fraction of Strike’s funding, General. We are almost abysmally poor
by Galactic standards. So we are not exactly “funding” Fleet Strike. Of course
we do provide one hundred percent of its personnel. “It is not a situation
of lack of desire, General, but rather the coldest of military necessities,”
Mike stated. While the general had been reactivated after one of the longest
careers in the history of the United States Army, he had somehow obtained his
current rank without ever hearing a shot fired in anger. Furthermore, the
primary period during which he was a senior officer was the period of retrenchment
by the Army that culminated in Monsoon Thunder, a period during which the Army
was often less worried about a unit’s readiness than about physical fitness
norms and political correctness.
While
the general had served during the periods of both Desert Storm and Monsoon
Thunder, coincidentally in neither case had he been deployed to the combat
zone. Possibly because of that fact he was among those officers who placed the
blame for failures during Monsoon Thunder on the forces that were deployed, not
the plan or the overall level of military readiness.
Mike was in one
way looking forward to the day the general was finally responsible for a real
world military operation. Someday the general would be faced with a situation
where he was losing lives and territory faster than reinforcements could be
thrown into the gaps. But Mike was sorry for the troops that would have to pick
up the burden. What am I thinking?! I am the troops that will have to
pick up the burden.
“Let
me ask you a question, sir.”
“All
right.”
“I am sure you
have examined the reports from Barwhon and Diess, sir. Have you noticed that
while conventional forces invariably suffer significant levels of casualties
when they venture out from fixed defenses, the ACS is able to roam virtually at
will and can often stand and fight or break contact without major levels of
loss?”
“I
am aware of that fact but I disagree with the conclusion you are about to draw:
that therefore, the ACS must be preserved because they are the only mobile
force that can take the fight to the enemy. Those casualty levels are primarily
a terrain issue as opposed to a tactical, equipment or operational issue. The
terrain of both Barwhon and Diess is not suited to modern, mobile combat.
“The
swamps of Barwhon hamper our Abrams and Bradleys, while the megascrapers of
Diess hamper artillery and deny effective logistical support. Given open
terrain, or even broken terrain, mobile cavalry and armored forces would be
able to outmaneuver the Posleen forces and subject them to repeated firetraps.
That is the way to fight them, on the plains that everyone wishes to avoid!
“Right
here in Virginia would be perfect. Everyone says that the plains are lost, but
that is bullshit! Once the Posleen are on the plains, in nonrestrictive
terrain, our armored columns and artillery will eat them alive. ‘Fortress
Forward’ ought to be called ‘Maginot Two Thousand’! We don’t need to go back to
tactics that were smashed by the Wehrmacht! Apparently everyone has forgotten
Military History One-Oh-One!
“And
as for the ACS–one-tenth the expense poured into those tin suits would have
bought thousands more fighting vehicles. And I have stated my professional
analysis of the effect of conventional equipment in the upcoming conflict. So,
I beg to differ that one ACS battalion is worth five damn divisions of trained
and equipped mechanized infantry, armor and cavalry, I really, really do.” The
general was practically frothing by the end of the tirade.
“Well,
General,” said Mike and stopped. He thought for a moment and decided that there
was no way to antagonize the officer more than he already was. It was obvious
that this was one officer who rejected every concept under which the GalTech
and Fortress Forward programs were designed. Furthermore, he was so far out of
Mike’s chain of command that Mike could do just about anything but punch the
officious oaf in the nose and get away with it. Fleet and Ground Force’s first
official point of contact was somewhere in the morass of Galactic
bureaucracies.
“Well,
General,” he repeated, “that’s your opinion . . . and you
know the saying about opinions.” He grinned coldly to drive the insult home.
“Before the primary invasion we will, I fear, both have ample opportunities for
vindication. I frankly hope you are correct; it would make my job easier. Now
if you’ll excuse me, I have a plane to catch. Heaven and hell have been moved
so that I can spend one more week with my family. It behooves me to keep them
both on my good side.”
CHAPTER 21
Big Pine Key, FL,
United States of America, Sol III
1422 EDT October
4th, 2004 ad
The Keys were a
scene from the Twilight Zone.
The
last time Mike had been down Highway 1—the long strip of asphalt and concrete
that linked the beads of the Keys together like the cord in a coral
necklace—the traffic had still been heavy at 1 a.m. The occasion was a spring break from college and the
party would go on through the night and the next day. Honking cars and pickup
trucks crowded the highway, and people packed the shops and restaurants from
Largo to Key West.
Mike
watched an errant palm frond tumble across the sand-filled parking lot of the
Piggly Wiggly and knew in his bones that the world had turned a corner. The
strip mall on Big Pine Key had never been a center for bustling tourism, but
the islands to the north of it, where once retirees and college students
mingled, were just as deserted. The O’Neal family had driven ever southward on
the strip of blacktop looking for an open motel, or even a gas station. Instead
there had been an unending string of closed shops, abandoned businesses and
tumbledown residences. Crossing the Seven Mile Bridge to this ghost town had
been the final straw.
The
whole trip had been a disaster. The visit to Sharon’s parents had been
particularly excruciating. Despite the fact that he had faced the Posleen in
combat, and still held the scars to prove it, Sharon’s parents had retreated
into the disbelieving shell that many of the nation shared. In their hearts
they truly believed it was all a made-up threat of the “gubermint” and stated
the fact in no uncertain terms.
To
many of their ilk the world was flat, the sun revolved around it and there were
no other worlds. The sociologists were referring to this stance as “societal
denial.” After the third time his father-in-law had carefully but firmly
corrected him on the subject, Mike started referring to it as “total bullshit.”
Finally
Sharon had cut short the visit and they had continued on their way to the Keys.
The locale held special meaning for Mike and Sharon. They had briefly met on
Key Largo during school and felt a mutual, undeclared, attraction. When chance
happened to throw them together at a later date the mutual attraction had
rapidly flowered. Michelle and Cally were the results.
When
the opportunity had come to take time together the target of the Keys
immediately came to mind. The lure of four-star hotels, pools and diving was
almost irresistible. Mike knew that Cally would love it; there would be other
kids to play with and the clean green sea to play in. The only thing that would
make it perfect would be to have Michelle along. But at least she was safely on
her way to Adenast. Whatever happened on Earth, at least one member of the
family would survive.
But
the vacation might not. They had traveled through the deserted islands looking
in vain for a place to lay their heads. Or even refuel. The Chevy Tahoe was a
gas guzzler. Since Mike had packed along some items to start prepositioned
caches they were able to get all the gas they needed from military rations, but
the range of the tank was only so great.
They
had filled up in Fort Worth, north of Miami, but they had now reached the point
of no return. There was not enough gas to get them to Key West, where Mike was
sure he could get refilled at the reactivated Navy base, but if they turned
around they could make it back to Miami. If they did that they would stay; the
Keys were not worth wandering in the wilderness. And that would put the cap on
the trip.
Mike tossed the useless map he had been
perusing on the floor and looked at his wife. Even with the travails of the
vacation she still looked like a starlet in a low-budget disaster movie. Her
hair was just pleasantly mussed, her eyes slightly shadowed, her face lineless
and grave. It made him sit back and pause. She had hardly talked about her
Fleet position, but he was sure it was no sinecure. He suddenly realized that
being lost in a howling wilderness, running out of gas and on the edge of being
stranded might look good. What that told him about her last few months was
unsettling. He cleared his throat.
“Take
the chance on going on or turn around,” he said, laying out the options for
discussion.
She
nodded her head and looked around again. There was nothing more to be revealed
by the scenery. The day was one of those “blazing gray days” that south Florida
had from time to time. A cold front had petered out to the north but the
high-level clouds had continued on, obscuring the sun but permitting the heat
to build up underneath. The result was a condition of terribly bright indirect
light, combined with a dessicating wind. It was like being in Kansas, except
with palm trees and green water.
The
scenery matched the conditions. The strip mall had once sported all the usual
businesses for such a locale. There was a grocery store, nail kiosk, chiropractor
and hair salon. The “random choice” on this particular mall was a small
restaurant that professed to sell “Authentic Keys Food.” This could be read on
the sign that was now swinging from side to side in the hot, dry wind.
Sharon
stared at the same palm frond that had caught Mike’s eye and snorted. “This
isn’t going so well, is it?” she asked.
Mike
had talked endlessly about his company. And every word was praise for the men,
the command and the training. Which just meant that his situation was about as
fucked-up as hers. She knew she should talk about it. He might even have some
input that would help; he had been bumping around Fleet for a couple of years
longer than she. But it would sound like complaining and she just couldn’t add
that to the unmitigated disaster the trip was becoming.
The
days at her parents’ house in Orlando had been bad for many reasons. Besides
her parents’ complete illogic about the Posleen there was also the fact that
Cally was used to going to the various amusement parks in the area.
Unfortunately, they were all closed “for the duration.” Cally had taken it
well; she seemed to have developed an almost unhealthy control under her
grandfather’s influence. But not being able to give her the treat hurt at a
subliminal level. The trip to the Keys was as much for Cally as for Sharon and
Mike.
Now
even that had come apart. The world’s greatest natural tourist trap had
apparently closed for the duration as well. And that did not leave many
alternatives.
“There
has to be a way to find a motel or something,” she said, fingering her AID.
“We
already checked for websites,” Mike reminded her, noticing the gesture. The
Galactic artificial intelligence devices were connected to the Web and capable
of searching it as well as or better than any human-made interface. But they
could not produce shelter from thin air. “Heck, we haven’t seen a single person
except that one lady working in her garden up in Largo.” He now regretted not
asking directions, but at the time it had not made sense to stop.
“Hmm,”
she responded noncomitally. “A-I-D?” she queried.
“Yes,
Commander O’Neal?” Mike was amused to note that the AID was a baritone. Most
males preferred female voices; females appeared to choose the opposite.
“There
are no website listings for motels in the Marathon or Big Pine Key area,”
Sharon stated. “Is that correct?”
“Correct,
ma’am. There were such sites, but all are now inactive or specifically indicate
that the hotel is closed. The nearest hotel that indicates functionality is on
Key West.”
Sharon
let out a breath and thought for a moment. “AID, is there any other source of
information that indicates that an area might offer guest services?”
“Please
specify a source, ma’am.” The AID actually sounded puzzled.
“Oh,
police reports, news articles . . .”
“Infrared
satellite imagery,” Mike interjected.
“Right,”
said Sharon, nodding her head. “That sort of thing.”
“Commander
O’Neal, you are reminded that you do not have access to civil-political
intelligence gathering,” stated the AID. It was the flat, unaccented response
Mike had come to recognize as security protocol response.
“Let
me try.” He smiled. “AID, check my overrides and use the lowest level of
intelligence necessary to derive requested information.”
The
AID did not exactly sniff in disdain, but the tone of voice was distinctly
unhappy. “National Technical Means,” it said, sarcastically, “indicates that
the small fish camp on No-Name-Key is in operation. There is no indication of
cabin usage, but it has had cabins for rent in the past. They should still be
available.”
Mike
picked the map back up and searched for No-Name-Key.
“That’s
right next door,” he said in surprise.
“Correct,”
said the AID. “In addition, imagery indicates that the proprietor has been
underreporting fish harvests by about twenty percent, contrary to United States
Rationing and Storage Regulation F-S-B-One-Zero-Seven-Five-Eight-Dash-One-A.”
Mike
rubbed his chin and frowned. “Is that your own analysis or did you pull it out
of a file?”
“That
is my own analysis, Captain O’Neal,” stated the device.
“Well,
lock that analysis down unless overridden and remind me at an opportune time to
discuss where you developed the information,” Mike snapped. The hell if he was
going to let a piece of GalJunk drop the dime on some hard-working fishermen.
“Yes,
sir, Captain,” the AID snapped back.
“Well,
that’s that settled,” said Sharon with a smile.
“Mom?”
asked Cally from the back seat.
“Yes?”
“Do
you think there will be somewhere to eat?” she asked. There was not a hint of a
whine, just a simple question.
Sharon
turned and looked at her oldest daughter. Cally lay against the driver’s side
door, looking out at the abandoned landscape, idly tapping her fingers on her
thigh. Her face was somber and grave but the eyes slid across the area outside,
constantly questing. For targets or threats, Sharon suddenly realized. The
light blouse the eight-year-old wore had ridden up enough to reveal the small
automatic in her waistband. Taken all together the image made Sharon want to
cry. It was as if disaster had already come to America and they were wanderers
in some post-Apocalyptic nightmare. Sharon took a deep breath and forced
herself to be calm. Most of the reaction was stress still bleeding off from the
Agincourt and the disastrous visit to her parents. It would pass. It had
to.
“Probably.
There should be somewhere to get something. And if not we’ve got more ‘travel
rations,’ ” she finished with a smile. The rations had been Papa O’Neal’s
suggestion and it had been a good one.
Papa
O’Neal had been paying more attention to conditions across the United States
than either Sharon or Mike. When they had stated their plans to take a car trip
down the Florida Peninsula he had demurred. Even though they had access to
unlimited fuel supplies because of the “cache” items Mike had ported along, he
pointed out other problems. Without stating anything other than vague reports
of lack of services in south Florida he had suggested that staying at the farm
would be the best plan. But when Sharon and Mike had been insistent he had made
a series of startling suggestions. He had been so adamant about them that the
couple had finally given in, figuring that the additional items fell under the
category of “better safe than sorry.”
Thus,
attached to the spare tire on the back was a five-gallon can of gas and a
shovel. In the morass of material in the back were three cases of beer and two
other cases of mixed liquor. There were more cases of smoked and tinned meats,
gathered and prepared on the farm, along with sealed containers of flour,
cornmeal and a variety of dried fruits. If they did end up on a desert island
they could live comfortably for nearly a month on the stored provisions they
had packed along.
In
addition to food and liquor, Papa O’Neal had strongly recommended taking along
“trade goods.” The very thought of taking such ubiquitous items as hooks, heavy
monofilament and rubber tubing for sling spears to the Keys was ludicrous.
Looking around at the surroundings Mike had had more than one occasion to bless
his father’s foresight. The Old Man had spent years in Third World hellholes
and now it looked like the Keys just about fit that bill. Even if no one was
willing to take Galactic credits for room and board, Mike was willing to bet
dollars to donuts a case of six gross Number Two hooks would open doors.
“Well,
let’s go find out, shall we?” said Mike, putting the Tahoe into gear. He
deliberately steered to crush the tumbling palm frond, metaphorically spurning
the depression caused by the desolation around them. As they turned down the
side street towards No-Name-Key, the wind caught the shattered palm frond and
tumbled the pieces onto U.S. 1. The hard wind whistled through the abandoned
buildings and erased the marks the vehicle had made on the drifting sand in the
parking lot.
CHAPTER 22
Ft. Indiantown
Gap, PA, United States of America, Sol III
1400 EDT October
2nd, 2004 ad
“Teri, you have got
to stop getting into pissing contests with enlisted men.”
Teri
Nightingale sighed deeply as Ernie Pappas’s strong, oil-covered fingers dug
out the tensed muscles on her back. The first sergeant’s thumbs rolled up along
both sides of her spine, smoothing away the accumulated stresses of the day. At
the accusation she could feel the muscles try to tense, but forced calm into
her system. It was no good getting angry; he was right.
“I
know,” she said with another resigned sigh. “I know. But I was so goddamn mad
at Stewart I couldn’t stop myself.”
“And
now you’ve ended up looking like an ass,” said Pappas with toneless brutality.
“And such a nice ass it is,” he added, giving it a little pat as he rolled off
her back and propped himself up on one fist.
The
tiny motel on the outskirts of Hummelstown was as far as they could reasonably
get from the post. But Pappas was fairly sure a few of the company suspected
something. Which must have really confused them when he quietly corrected his
lover after her latest outburst.
The
Old Man had left a list of missions to work on in his absence, missions that he
specifically felt the unit was weak on. Earlier that day, practicing an
envelopment maneuver, the entire exercise fell apart. The Posleen had attacked
with more ferocity than normal and exploited a gap between First and Third
platoons to roll up the company.
Stewart,
in the after-action review, had injudiciously pointed out that proper
employment of the reserve would have plugged the gap and saved the maneuver.
They still would have taken more casualties than their “norm,” but less than the
total wipeout they had experienced.
It
was the casual remark of a young man who was rapidly turning into a brilliant
tactician. The formal training of the military had taken an untutored but
febrile mind and rocketed it into areas of genius. He proceeded to outline four
other simple steps that, either before or during the engagement, would have
saved the company’s ass. It was a given that he had thought of them in the
thick of the action and not as a “Monday Morning Quarterback” reaction after
the drill. He was only trying to be helpful, but the XO had taken it as a
direct attack and responded at length.
When the harried
XO, in front of most of the leaders of the company, had finished describing her
opinion of the comments she went on to discuss Stewart’s parentage,
unfortunately probably with more truth than she realized, education and
probable future. Before she realized what she was doing, she had thoroughly
poisoned the well.
When
she finished, the young NCO had stood up, stone-faced, and left the room without
a word. And also without asking permission, which was a legally objectionable
action. No one had suggested that he stay. Or be charged for that matter.
Pappas’s
comment had been pithy, succinct and to the point: “Lieutenant Nightingale,
with all due respect, that was a stupid thing to do.”
Their
discussion of how to rectify her mistake had drifted to bed, as many of their
discussions did. The relationship had taken both of them by surprise, but when
Nightingale put her hand on his neck the first time and hesitantly drew him
towards her, Pappas’s sixty-year-old brain had been run over by his freshly
rejuvenated twenty-year-old hormones. Although he had been faithful to his wife
during his entire previous enlistment, the current situation was just too tough.
For Nightingale, the combination of nearly a half century of sexual experience
and a twenty-year-old’s body had been an intensely pleasant surprise. Pappas
not only knew some of the oddest tricks, he was back in condition to be able to
use them.
He
now ran a finger down her perfect back, hooked a thumb into her armpit and
turned her to look at him. He pulled her to him, tucking her leg over his and
slid his hand down her back. “You had better get a handle on this, soon, or the
Old Man will turn you to paste.” He gently caressed her inner thigh then slid
his hand upward.
She
made a hissed inhalation and arched her back. “I know,” she said with a little
gasp. She paused for a moment then went on, panting slightly. “I just cannot
get a handle on . . .” She paused again, making little
inhalations through her nose. The nostrils fluttered in and out prettily.
“On?”
asked Pappas, waiting for her to try to answer.
“On . . . uhm . . .”
she said as he moved his hand slightly to the side. She stopped trying to talk.
“Are
you listening?” he asked, backing away slightly then sliding forward. Docking
was abrupt and perfect.
“Umm-hmm,”
she murmured. “Definitely.” She slid her leg up to hook over his hip.
“Stop
fighting with Stewart and listen to him. He’s better at this than anyone else
in the company besides the Old Man.”
“Okay,”
she squeaked, starting to rock back and forth.
“I’m
serious,” said Pappas, giving a little gasp of his own as well-trained muscles
clamped. He was on the losing side of the battle now.
“I’ll
make up to the shrimp,” she said pushing his shoulder to roll him over on his
back. She grabbed his short thick black hair in both hands. “Now hang on.”
Duncan
popped the top off the unlabeled beer
bottle with a K-bar combat knife and wordlessly handed it to Stewart.
The younger NCO was staring unseeingly at the wall of his tiny room. He took a
swig without looking at the product, then
stopped and stared at the bottle.
“Damn,”
he said, looking up at the recently arrived staff sergeant. “I thought I
had balls. Raiding the Old Man’s home brew is a capital offense.” Beer was
getting harder and harder to find. Materials such as barley and hops were
strictly controlled under emergency rationing and storage plans. The easy
accessibility of the materials to the company commander was a closely held
secret of the company.
“He’d
understand,” said Duncan, slipping a pack of Marlboro Reds out and lighting
one. “He’s good people.” He took a deep drag on the butt and blew smoke at the
ceiling.
“Unlike
certain unnamed stuck-up bitches,” snarled the younger NCO and clenched both
hands. His arms were shaking in anger.
“Who
is currently getting her ass fucked off by Top,” noted Duncan, with a wry smile.
Stewart
shook his head. “I never thought I’d see the day.”
“Well,
he’s a good-looking guy . . .” said Duncan.
“No,”
interrupted Stewart with a grimace. “I was talking about Top fucking her, not
the other way around. I mean, damn, the Gunny was always such a straight
arrow!” Only then did he realize that the other NCO was jerking his chain.
“Well,”
mused Duncan with another puff on the cancer stick, “I wouldn’t kick her out of
bed for eating crackers.”
Stewart
snorted. “Yeah, neither would I. Gotta admit it. Great set of knockers. Prime
slice any way you cut it.”
“So,”
asked Duncan with a smile. “Is your anger with Gunny Pappas because he is
fucking your Public Enemy Number One, or because he’s getting some and you’re
not?”
“Who
says I’m not getting any?” snapped Stewart, machismo aroused.
“Well,
I know you’re not getting any from Nightingale, although the way you two
fight . . .”
“Oh,
fuck you,” said Stewart, trying not to laugh.
“And
Arnold has already nailed up Lieutenant Slight, so she’s right out.”
“No!”
gasped Stewart, starting to double up in laughter. “Jesus! Arnold and Slight?
Are you sure?”
“Well,
I suppose he could have been demonstrating mouth to
mouth. . . .”
“Oh,
shit!” laughed Stewart, finally letting go of the tension of the argument with
the XO. “So when are you and Boggle gonna do the dirty deed?”
Duncan’s
face took on a look of deepest sorrow. “I fear never,” he said, placing a hand
on his chest in simulated despair. “Methinks that Sergeant Boggle pines for
Lieutenant Fallon!”
Stewart
laughed so hard that nut-brown ale spurted out of his nose and he started
gasping. The battles between the Second platoon leader and his female platoon
sergeant were as legendary as his own with the XO. The image of “Boggle”
Bogdanovich and the West Pointer wrapped up in Eros’s embrace was as
implausible as . . . the XO and Top.
“Jesus,”
he swore again, after regaining control of himself. “You don’t think?”
“Well,
not yet,” said Duncan, leaning forward and taking the home brew for a swig. “If
you’re just going to waste this blowing it out your nose . . .”
“So,”
said Stewart with a smile as he wiped beer off his chair, “who are you planning
on getting a leg over with?”
“Oh,”
commented Duncan, handing the bottle back and waiting for Stewart to take another
slug, “I was thinking about . . . Summerhour.”
Beer
blasted across the room again. Summerhour was a nearly seven-foot, not
particularly bright, fairly ugly, male, heavy weapons private. Since Stewart
was fairly sure Duncan was straight, the choice could not have been more
unlikely.
Stewart
finally wiped up the mess, wiped his eyes and gave up on drinking. “You think
the Old Man knows?” he asked soberly.
Duncan
shook his head. “Everybody thinks I’m some sort of expert on Captain O’Neal. I
was only with him for a couple of days. You guys have been training with him
for over a year. You answer the question.”
Stewart
thought about it. “Probably. I’ve never seen anything surprise him.”
“I
have,” admitted Duncan. “But only when the enemy pisses all over his battle
plans. He gets really angry then. Really angry.” He shook his head and
finished the brew to the yeasty dregs. “You don’t want to see him when he’s
angry.”
CHAPTER 23
No-Name-Key, FL,
United States of America, Sol III
1440 EDT October
2nd, 2004 ad
Mike was trying
very hard not to get angry. “Sir, I understand that you’re out of the hotel
business. I can even understand you being unhappy with tourists. But I’ve got
my wife and daughter with me and we need someplace to put our heads down.”
The
man behind the counter was in his fifties, his long graying hair pulled back in
a ponytail. He stared down his nose at the short, massively built soldier and
wrinkled his nose in distaste. “Look, buddy, you’re right. I’m out of the hotel
business. There ain’t any tourists anymore. How the hell did you get
leave when everybody else is locked up on a base or working their ass off?”
Mike
threw his hands up in despair. “I pulled every string in the book. Is that what
you wanted to hear?” In fact, every string in the book had been pulled behind
his back. But that would take more explanation than it was worth.
The
proprietor’s face worked. “Look . . .”
“Harry,”
said a female voice from the office at the rear. “Calm down.”
The
No-Name-Key Fish Camp consisted of eight ancient, wooden bungalows bleached
gray by a half century of sun, a few rickety docks surrounding a small but deep
embayment, a brand new cinder-block icehouse about thirty yards long and the
office, a single-story wooden building protruding over the small harbor. The
buildings all surrounded an oyster-shell parking lot. The parking lot had a
motley assortment of vehicles, mostly pickup trucks, parked at every angle.
Most of the trucks appeared to have been abandoned where they sat, palm fronds
and dirt encrusting their hoods. The racket of a large diesel generator sounded from somewhere
behind the icehouse and an overwhelming scent of fish and rotting weeds was
being carried away on the strong southwest wind.
The
office was a “T”-shaped building that doubled as a general store. The front
area was normally devoted to food and sundries while the back area was devoted
to tackle and live bait. On one side of the crossbar was the cash register and
an empty cooler. The other side had a door with a sign over it that said “Keep
Out.” It was from beyond this door that the voice had issued.
Both
areas were barren. The live bait tanks were uniformly empty and the tackle
shelves were bare while the food and sundries area was nearly empty. There were
a few jars of peanut butter and some quart Mason jars for sale. Other than that
the store had been picked clean. For all it was nearly abandoned, it had been
well cared for. The empty shelves had been covered with plastic sheets, to keep
flies and their specks off, and the floor was freshly scrubbed.
The
proprietor, propped beside his antique cash register, rolled his eyes and
looked out the window as the source of the voice walked into the main area. The
woman was fortyish and reminded O’Neal of Sergeant Bogdanovich. She had long,
blonde hair tied in a ponytail which hung down her back and wore faded jeans
and a peasant blouse. She had one of the darkest tans Mike had ever seen in his
life and a nice smile.
“Forgive
my husband, sir,” she said, sliding behind the counter and knocking that worthy
aside with a casual bump of her hip. “He’s best suited as a hermit.”
“I’m
sorry to impose on you . . .” said Mike.
“It
is not an imposition,” the proprietress said, with another smile. “Harry has a
lot on his mind is all. But one of them is the condition of the cabins and
about that I’ve got to be frank—”
“They’re
a wreck,” said Harry with a slight snarl. “We haven’t had a visitor for nearly
a year. There’s only one that the roof doesn’t have a leak!” He thought about
the admission. “Well, two.”
“And
those we offer,” stated the proprietress with a tight smile.
“We’ve
used up most of our linens for other things!” said Harry.
“We’ll
improvise,” said the proprietress.
“There’s
no electricity!” the proprietor thundered.
“There’s
the generator.” The blonde smiled.
“It’s
for the ice!”
“These
are guests,” said the proprietress, reasonably, but with a hint of teeth.
“No!
We don’t get a gas ration for guests!”
“We’ll
improvise.”
“There’s
no food!”
“Oh,
pish. There’s fish, lobster, crab . . .” She turned to Mike, who
was watching the familial argument with amusement. “No one in your family is
allergic to shellfish, are they?”
“No,”
said Mike with a smile at the play. “Look, let me get a word in edgewise.” He
started ticking things off on his fingers. “One, we don’t need electricity. We
came prepared to camp out, so we have our own lanterns.” He thought about the
argument. “Two, we have our own sleeping bags, so we don’t need linens. Having
a bed, any bed, is better than the floor and a roof is better than a tent. We
just want to spend a few days in the Keys and maybe get a little snorkeling and
fishing in.”
Mike
turned to the proprietor as he opened his mouth to argue. “Look, I understand
where you’re coming from. But let me say a few things. We’re prepared to pay
and pay handsomely. But if you don’t take FedCreds, we brought stuff that
people said was in short supply down here. I’m sorry to point it out, but I
notice your cupboards are bare. I’ve got fifty- and twenty-five-pound
monofilament, sling-spear rubber, five diving masks and two cases of large
hooks.”
Mike
raised an eyebrow as Harry’s mouth closed with an audible clop. When he did not
say anything Mike went on. “We’ve also got some other ‘comfort rations.’ So
we’ll be okay without all the usual amenities.” He looked from proprietor to
proprietress. The two exchanged a look and then Harry shrugged his shoulders.
“Sir,”
said the proprietress with a smile, “welcome to No-Name-Key Fish Camp.”
O’Neal
smiled back. “Call me Mike.”
The
cabin was small, old and smelled heavily of the mildew as common in the Keys as
mosquitoes. A chameleon had broken off its pursuit of a large antlike insect as
Mike opened the door. The cabin had two beds for the adults and another had
been prepared for Cally. It was divided into two rooms, the side towards the
parking lot being a combination living room/kitchen/dining room, while the rear
side towards the bay was the bedroom and bath.
The
furniture must have dated from the 1960s. The chairs, gleaming yellow in the
fading light from a window, were all tube steel and cracked plastic padding.
The countertops and floor were cracked linoleum, the patterns so worn as to be
indecipherable. Mike glanced at the nonfunctional stove, television and
refrigerator. The bedroom window showed signs of once sporting an air
conditioner, but here under the spreading palms and salt-tolerant oaks the wind
was relatively cool. There was running water but the proprietress, whose name
was Karen, pointed out that it was strictly rationed and not to be trusted for
drinking. There was a certain amount of imported bottled water, but the main
source for drinking water was the distiller attached to the icehouse.
The
icehouse turned out to be the center of the little community, as Mike found out
when he left the cabin at dusk. The rising clouds of Keys mosquitoes drove him
quickly across the parking lot to the knot of men gathered in the screened
porch of the large building. It turned out that they were preparing the day’s
catch.
With
the exception of the baseball caps, sputtering incandescent lantern and modern
clothing, the scene could have been from any time in the last thousand years.
The men and women were arranged along tables, talking and laughing quietly as
they expertly processed the harvest of the seas.
How
they kept up with whose was whose was a mystery to Mike as rubber tubs of fish
were dumped on the communal table. The piscines would slither outward, some of
them still faintly thumping, until they reached an available preparer. There
they would be filleted or simply gutted.
Mike
was amazed at the speed and technique of the workers. The gutting was different
from what he was used to. When he gutted fish he generally inserted the knife
into the anus and cut towards the gills. Then the head could be cut off and the
guts dragged out with it or the guts could be pulled out by hand and the head
left on.
The
fish that were being gutted here, mainly yellowtail grunt and mangrove
snappers, were being done in the opposite direction. The knife was drawn across
the fish’s throat just forward of the gills then the belly was slit back to the
anus. A twist of the hand brought out gills and guts in a smooth motion and the
fish was flipped away and the next one expertly snatched up.
The
filleting was, if anything, faster. A cut would be made across the meat of the
fish, just behind the pectoral fins down to the backbone. Then a cut would be
made along the backbone itself. A third sweeping motion lifted the meat off,
leaving a flap of skin attached to the tail. A swift slice along this flap
lifted away a clean fillet. Then the fish was flipped over and the same motions
cleared its other side. The remains of the fish were going into a bucket; they
were useful in traps and for trolling lures. The filleters would stop after
every couple of jobs and run the knives over a sharpener, then get back to
work.
Once
prepared, the harvest slid down the steel table to the tubs at the end. At that
point a group of children under the direction of a young teen female sorted
them by type, washed them and iced them down. Whenever a tub got full it would
be covered and wheeled into the icehouse, only to be replaced by another.
After
watching quietly for a few minutes Mike picked up an abandoned knife and gloves
and joined in. He chose only the types to be gutted, recognizing that his
filleting technique was not up to par. He tried his own gutting technique and
quickly found that not only did it require more motions, it left more junk in
the body cavity. So he started experimenting with the new technique.
The
conversation went on around him, much of it in such a thick cracker accent as
to be nearly incomprehensible. The conversation, whether it was the norm or
censored for the visitor in their midst, centered around the weather to be
expected for the next few days, fair, and the fishing, fair, and the price the
fish might fetch when the buyer came through in a few days, poor. Despite price
stabilization supports and general inflation the price per pound of all the
major fish types, even the prized black grouper and red snapper, had been going
consistently down.
Mike
kept his face in its habitual frown when Harry and a fisherman called Bob got
into another argument about power. Bob was of the opinion that Harry was being
stingy in not providing electricity for the regular Saturday-night party at the
No-Name-Key Pub. Harry pointed out the consequences of overusing fuel in a way
that was so oblique as to be opaque to an outsider. Thereafter the conversation
slid to less ominous topics, leaving Mike metaphorically scratching his head.
Finally
the last fish was gutted and Mike stripped off the chain mail gloves. The
fisherman called Bob looked him up and down and tossed over a cut lime. “Let’s
get washed up and head to the pub,” he said in general. There was a chorus of
muttered agreement which Mike decided to take as invitation. The worst that
would happen was that someone would try to throw him out.
Good
luck.
Harsh,
homemade soap and the strong Key limes took away the worst of the fish smell
and the crowd headed out of the screening to brave the mosquitoes. The distant
pub was lit by kerosene lanterns hung over the doorway, but the path to it was
pitch-black darkness. Mike found himself walking between Harry and Bob and
decided that he was more or less being escorted.
“It
was good of you to help with the cleaning,” said Harry, somewhat stiffly.
“The
more hands the better,” was Mike’s only comment.
The
walked a little farther in silence.
“You
in the Army?” asked Bob, noncomitally.
“Fleet
Strike,” said Mike and heard a faint snort.
“Really,”
said Harry in a sarcastic tone. “I bet you’ve been off-planet and everything,
huh? Got a chest full of medals from Barwhon. Pull the other one.”
“We
had a guy down here a couple of times,” said Bob in explanation. “He was a SEAL
based at Homestead Airforce Base, or so he said. The cops finally caught up
with him. He was a deserter from a Guard unit in Missouri.”
“He
sure could talk the talk, though,” said Harry, bitterly.
“He
stiffed Harry for a goodly bill. And ate us out of house and home,” Bob
commented.
Mike’s
nod was unseen in the darkness but they stopped when he did. He reached into
the depths of his jacket and extracted a card from his wallet. It was easily
discerned by the faintly glowing purple stripe around the edges.
“You
forgot to ask for my ID,” Mike noted, handing it to Bob instead of Harry. As he
did he tapped a control on the lower face of the electronic ID.
A
full-length hologram of Mike at parade rest in combat silks sprung up as an
electronic voice intoned the appropriate statistics. Name, rank, service,
Galactic ID number, height, weight, sex and age were all recited by the
combination ID and dog tag. The IDs were made of the same refractory material
as the suits, designed to take damage and still be able to identify their
users. In a pinch they made a dandy weapon in trained hands.
The group had stopped when the hologram
blossomed. When the recording ended the only thing that could be heard was the
buzz of mosquitoes and the occasional idle swat. Bob handed the ID back.
“Hmmph,”
said Harry, noncommitally. “Okay, you’re really in Fleet Strike. Big deal.”
“And
my wife’s an XO of a frigate in Fleet,” said Mike mildly. “And if you give her
the same ration of shit I’ve gotten I’ll feed you your left arm.”
There
was a general chuckle from the group in the darkness and a movement towards the
pub. “I think he means it,” said Bob, chuckling at the store owner’s discomfiture.
“Yeah,
well,” said the aging hippie. “It’s been so long since I had any red meat, it
might not be all that bad.”
“Things
are getting a tad complicated,” admitted Mike.
CHAPTER 24
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
1937 EDT October
2nd, 2004 ad
Monsignor
O’Reilly regarded the small piece of electronics that had mysteriously appeared
in his cassock pocket. It looked like a standard flash memory card, but there
were no manufacturer’s marks on it. Nor were there any instructions. He finally
put it in the flash reader attached to his computer and checked its
directories.
The
chip was apparently named “Religious Documents.” The first directory was titled
“Rig Veda,” the second “Koran,” the third “Talmud” and the fourth “The Franklin
Bible.” He opened up this directory and stared at the single file titled
“Install.” He twisted his face a few times, took a deep breath and
double-clicked the file.
It
asked for a password. He thought about it. He had not been given a password.
The likelihood was that if the first guess was wrong, the chip would erase
instantly. Finally he typed, “We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall
all hang separately.” The computer chirped and the installation began.
Either
the chip had more memory than any flash card should or the file had been
hyper-compressed. The tiny file was expanding to dump a mass of files into his
computer. If he had to destroy the evidence it would be nearly impossible to
track them all down. He nearly pulled the chip in panic, but the file dump
finally ended and a text box popped up.
“Welcome,” it read, “To The Franklin Bible Complete Study of Human
Archetypes And Pre-Historic Myths.”
There
was a new icon on his taskbar, a tiny blue world with a telephone on it. He
drifted the mouse across it and the caption “New Messages” popped up. He
clicked it.
“Dear
Monsignor O’Reilly,” the simple text box read, “in the event that you do not
want this program to stay on your computer, simply uninstall it using the
uninstall icon on your desktop. Uninstallation will remove all files created
with this program, all messages associated with this program and every bit of
evidence that it ever existed on your computer. This will take less than
fifteen seconds with the system it is currently installed on. You may also do
this by simply saying, ‘Dump the Post Office.’
“At
this time these are the critical messages for the Society of Jesus.
“The
Tir Dol Ron is en route to Earth. His first stop will be the United States.”
The
message that followed was much the same information he had received from Kari.
It did, however, include some expansions. Apparently the reason that the Tir
was coming to finalize the negotiations was that the humans could not possibly
kill this messenger.
The
message contained detailed data on requested defensive systems, construction
rates for Galactic-supplied weapons and Fleet construction rates. Actual rates
were graphed against planned and currently reported rates and the difference
was obvious. The bottom line was that less than half the equipment requested
for Terran Forces would be available before the invasion. There would, however,
be sufficient materials to equip all the expeditionary forces. Those forces, by
solemn and binding agreement, came first.
With
America asking for more grav-guns and fewer being available, it should be an
interesting meeting.
The
final piece of information was a note on subsystem suppliers. He nearly
overlooked it but a particular note caught his eye. All sixteen Darhel clans
were participating in supplying materials for the Fleet and the Terran Defense
systems. And all of them were behind on their schedules. However, one
particular clan, the Tindar, was farther behind than any of the others.
He
narrowed his eyes and wondered about the significance of that bit of
information. The list had been intentionally sorted by negative production
rates. It was definitely a clue to something. After a moment’s introspection
and a mental memo he returned to reading the primary message.
“We
have no suggestions or requests at this time. The installed software has
complete plans for a variety of Galactic systems including descriptions of
production and use.
“All
messages will completely clear themselves five minutes after reading; there
will be no trace of them on the system. The flash card will erase itself in
twenty seconds and will dissolve if submerged in water. We are happy to once
again be in contact with our human comrades.
“The
Bane Sidhe.”
CHAPTER 25
No-Name-Key, FL,
United States 0f America, Sol III
0922 EDT October
3rd, 2004 ad
Mike woke to the
to sound of the wind-up radio they had brought with them. It was forecasting
four more days of perfect weather to be ended in the season’s first severe cold
front. Hurricane Janice was proceeding to the north of Bermuda and was not
expected to make landfall in the United States. The United States Ground Force
command had recently upgraded its forecast likelihood of early Posleen landings.
The new forecast called for small-scale landings to begin occurring no later
than two months from the date of forecast.
Mike
snorted and threw aside the poncho liner he had been sleeping in, flipping a
small lizard nose-over-tail through the air. The silky, smooth nylon and
polyester blanket was a near-perfect camping accessory. It was the one item
that Fleet Strike had eliminated from its inventory that Mike disagreed with.
Although he understood that the replacement item was supposed to be better in
every way, there was an atavistic thrill to the simple polyester fill product
that the newer one did not have. In addition to that, there was also the fact
that the GalTech version was virtually unavailable, whereas the South Carolina
factory that made poncho liners was running three shifts and had ample supplies
on hand. It had recently been moved up the waiting list for Sub-Urb production
facilities on the basis of the product being designated “critical warfighting
supplies.” Not bad for an ersatz blanket.
Mike
rubbed the stubble on his face and decided that it was acceptable. One of the
GalTech products he had fallen in love with was depilatory cream. The product
not only removed hair, it inhibited growth for nearly a month thereafter. Of
course it was in as short supply as everything else, so Mike eked out his cache
by using razors in between. But he was still in the latter stage of inhibition
and could more or less ignore shaving for a few days.
He
rubbed his face, looked around the dilapidated room crawling with ants, and
shook his head. With a snort at the fruition of their plans for the trip he
took the two steps necessary to enter the bathroom. The mirror was losing its
silvering, giving an impression of leprosy to his face, and had a large chunk cracked
out of one corner. He propped up the seat of the toilet and did his morning
business, smiling at the handwritten sign the proprietress had posted at eye
level.
With
the shortage of water, flushing urine was contraindicated. To point this out
delicately the sign stated “If it’s yellow, it’s mellow. If it’s brown, it goes
down.” There was a bottle of bleach on the back of the toilet and Mike
carefully measured a capful and tossed it into the bowl to neutralize the
ammonia.
When
he came out after a sketchy wash-up Sharon had come back to the room.
“If
you hurry you can probably still get some breakfast,” she said with a smile.
She had a bouquet of tropical flowers that she set on the cracked linoleum
table.
Mike
smiled and shook his head. “Not exactly what we planned, eh?”
“Not
the Ritz-Carlton,” she admitted.
Although
they had both visited the Keys more than once, it had always been on a
shoestring. This time they had looked forward to staying in the best hotels in
Key Largo. Not only were they both making as much as pre-war generals, Mike was
absolutely flush with prize money from Diess.
The
Fleet fell under Federation regulations. One of those complex rules related to
property captured or recovered by military forces. It had been enacted, along
with a slew of other inducements, when the Posleen had first entered Federation
space. The monetary inducements were designed to persuade the chronically poor
Indowy to renounce their minimalist and nonviolent ways and enter the Galactic
military. The various inducements had failed miserably in their intent, but
they had never been taken off the books.
Military
equipment abandoned by the Posleen, as thousands of ships had been abandoned on
Diess, fell under the category of “salvage.” It belonged to the forces that had
either captured it or permitted its capture.
This
was not immediately apparent to the human forces on Diess. They had simply let
the thousands of in-system and interstellar ships sit until a Darhel factor had
pointed out that they were responsible for clearing them off the planet. The
military had protested that it did not have the equipment to remove the ships,
so the Darhel offered to remove them for them.
The
commander on Diess was not born yesterday. He decided to put the ships up for
bid and was amazed by the response. Both in-system and interplanetary ships
were at a premium due to low production rates and war losses. To date, fewer
than half the ships had been sold, but the income had exceeded the Federation
“payment” for all other NATO forces.
However,
the Federation regulations also required “sharing” of the income from the
prizes under a complicated scheme. One aspect of it related to “actions of
extraordinary nature.” Since it was unlikely that any of the ships would have
fallen into human hands without the actions of O’Neal and his platoon, a
percentage of every ship was detailed to them.
Mike’s
prize income the previous year had been larger than the Gross National Product
of most Terran countries. Not that it did them any good in the Keys.
“Where’s
breakfast?” he asked, pulling on a pair of multipocketed safari shorts and a
light cotton button-down shirt with still more pockets. He tended to get lonely
without them.
“Over
at the pub,” she said, putting the flowers in water. “The locals apparently
sell them eggs from free-range chickens. One of mine
was . . . a little on the pink side.”
Mike
grimaced. He hadn’t had fertilized eggs since his dad got out of the egg
business decades before. He had just opened his mouth to retort when there was
a shriek from the direction of the harbor.
Sharon
was not sure where the Desert Eagle appeared from, but before she had started
to move Mike was outside with the .357 caliber automatic leveled. As she ran
out the door she saw him lower the weapon from its two-handed grip and grin
sheepishly. Then she realized that the second shriek from their daughter was a
cry of surprised delight. It took her a moment to recognize the chittering
squeals that responded.
Cally,
in the company of Karen the proprietress, was squatting at one end of the
closest dock, trading splashes with a dolphin. The small bottlenose was
chattering back at her every squeal and she was obviously having the time of
her life.
Mike
slid the gigantic automatic into the rear of his shorts and stepped out onto
the dock. At the creak of the wood, Karen looked over her shoulder and smiled.
“Morning
sleepyhead,” she quipped and stood up.
The
dolphin protested as she stepped away but she just waved and tossed it a
handful of fish bits. The bottlenose caught them expertly and went back to
charming bits out of Cally.
“Tame
dolphin,” Sharon commented, squinting against the bright morning sun. “They
aren’t usually like that, are they?”
“No,”
Karen said. “I was Shirlie’s trainer.”
Sharon
raised her eyebrows in surprise. “Where? Sea World?”
“No,”
said the woman, bitterly. “Not anymore anyway. I was at the Marine Mammal
Research Facility in Marathon. It was really just a tourist trap for dolphin
rides, but I’ve never had anything against that. I was with Sea World for years
as a trainer and really believe that we did good work. Making cetaceans stars
kept all sorts of ugly things from happening to them over the years. Heck, if
it wasn’t for places like Sea World, nobody would care about dolphins and
orcas.”
“So
how’d you end up here?” asked Sharon as Mike walked down the dock to where his
daughter continued to converse with the cetacean.
“Well,
when the tourists started to fall off, we got a notice from the National Marine
Fisheries Board that we were to release all of our specimens. Their reasoning
was that there was no way to maintain captive marine mammals in adequate
conditions and it was better to release them.”
Mike
turned and looked behind him. “That’s insane!” he stated. “You can’t just
release a captive mammal and expect it to survive!”
“No
duh,” Karen said, then smiled sadly to take the sting out of the words. “That
was exactly what I said, and two or three dozen other trainers that I kept in
contact with. What really pissed me off was that we couldn’t even get any press
time. The NMFB just shoved the damn ruling down our throats and the press paid
no attention.”
Mike
nodded. “Let me guess. It wasn’t ‘newsworthy.’ ”
“Exactly.”
Karen nodded. “Anyway, I was dating Harry at the time. Instead of going back up
north–I’m from Chicago originally–I moved in with him. Shirlie and four other
dolphins just sort of ‘followed’ me here,” she concluded with a sly smile.
“Trail
of breadcrumbs?” asked Sharon, watching Cally pat the six-hundred-pound sea
mammal. She wondered when the inevitable question would hit.
“Something
like that,” said Karen. “We used to take them out for swims with the boat.” She
gestured at a well-kept Boston Whaler tied up to the office. Something about it
indicated to Mike that it hadn’t moved lately. “I just told them to follow me
over.”
“What
happened to all the rest?” asked Mike. “I mean there was Sea World and the
Miami Oceanarium and that one in St. Augustine . . .”
Karen’s
face pinched up at the thought. “Sea World just went over to the coast and
released theirs in the Intercoastal Waterway. I don’t know about the dolphins and
porpoises, but at least one male orca was later found dead. The rest did pretty
much the same thing.”
“Damn,”
said Mike. There didn’t seem to be much else to say. Then another thought hit
him. “Hey, what about all —”
“The
zoos?” Karen interjected. “And animal parks?”
“Yeah,”
Sharon agreed. “What about them? I remember something about Zoo Atlanta only
being able to keep the gorillas.”
“There
are a couple of big parks in Florida that have taken in some of the animals,”
Karen said. “The herbivores are free roaming and more or less making it. Most
of the carnivores have had to be put down. And anything that can’t get into one
of the reserve parks is getting put down.”
“That’s
not right,” Mike said. “We’ve got an obligation to those animals! They didn’t
exactly ask to be put in zoos.”
“You’re
preaching to the choir,” said Karen sadly. “We’ve been writing Congress, the
President, everybody. But the responses we’ve gotten have a point. With
shortages for humans, where are we going to get food for the animals?”
“Daddy,
get real,” said Cally, rolling onto her back, then flipping to her feet in the
most limber move Mike had ever seen in his life. “It’s an obligation, not a
suicide pact. Once you kick the Posties’ ass, we can gather them back up and
recover whatever we find. Until then, we gotta concentrate.” She rubbed the
small of her back. “Shit. I forgot about the Walther.”
“Showoff,”
Mike laughed. He shook his head. “I suppose you’re right, kitten. It still
pisses me off.”
“Softy,”
said Sharon with a smile and gave him a thump on the shoulder.
Karen
smiled at the byplay then turned to Cally. “You want to swim with Shirlie?” she
asked.
“Sure!”
said Cally with a grin. “That’d be spar!”
“Go
get a suit,” Karen said, and smiled as the girl scampered off. “Harry and I don’t
really think children are a good idea,” she commented without looking at them
as Cally went around the corner.
Mike
grimaced. “I can understand that.”
“She
carries a pistol with her?” Karen asked, carefully.
“You
don’t?” Mike snorted. “Yeah. And she knows how to use it. She also knows all
about firearm safety. Don’t worry about Cally; Dad’s turning her into a
survivor.”
“Our
other daughter is off-planet,” Sharon said, quietly. She was looking at the
dolphin racing around the small harbor. “Could I join you?” she asked.
“Sure!”
said Karen. “The more the merrier. The boys’ll probably show up around ten,
after they’re done foraging. Shirlie’s just so lazy she’d rather be fed.” Karen
turned to Mike. “What about you? Want to join us?”
“Maybe
later,” Mike said. “I think I’m gonna go try to butter Harry up. You guys have
got a couple of cases of hooks coming.”
Karen
exhaled in relief at that the thought. “That would be great. You don’t have any
idea how bad it’s been lately.”
“Yeah,”
growled Mike. “We’ve got a few things to thank the Posleen for.”
Mike
set the case of fishhooks on the counter and smiled. “There’s another case in
the Tahoe, and the other stuff. I’ve also got a Number-Ten can of coffee, but
you can’t have all of it.”
Harry
shook his head and smiled faintly. “You sure know how to make friends,” he
said. He opened the case and pulled out a box of hooks. “We’ve been making them
out of nails and tearing up lures. But, believe it or not, we’ve got coffee.”
Mike
reached behind his back and extracted a hip flask. “I’ve got some of this out
in the Tahoe, too.” He took a hit and passed it to Harry. “I’ll even give some
of it up for some goddamn explanations.”
Harry
regarded the clear liquid carefully. “Well, it’s a little early,” he said, then
took a swig. He grimaced and coughed. “Oh! Smooth!” he gasped. “Jesus, what is
that?”
“Georgia
Mountain Dew,” Mike answered with a laugh. “Only the finest. Now what the hell
is going on around here?”
Mike
had never had a conch omelet before. He had to admit it wasn’t bad, but the
thought would take a little getting used to. He scraped up the last of the
grits and wiped his mouth with the provided hand towel. The Key did indeed have
coffee, and Mike had to admit that wherever it came from it was better than the
issue can he had with him. He took another sip of the excellent brew and
cleared his throat.
“So
let me get this straight. All fuel is rationed. Okay, got that; it’s that way
all over. Fuel for the boats is rationed on the basis of their production.
High-producing boats get more fuel.”
“Right-on
so far,” said Harry, taking a sip of the java as well.
“And
power to the islands has been out for months. So you have to have a generator
to distill the water and make the ice. And the fuel for the icehouse has to
come out of the pool of fuel for the boats?”
“Right.”
“And
every month the price of the fish has gone down along with the fuel ration.”
“Yep,”
said Harry. “Next month there won’t possibly be enough fuel for all the boats and
to make ice. If we can’t store the fish until the trucks arrive, we might as
well give up.”
“What
about the stuff you’ve been holding back?” asked Mike, carefully.
Harry
was cool. “What stuff?” he said, blandly.
Mike
laughed and held up his wrist to reveal the AID. “My AID analyzed satellite
imagery of this place for the last year. It says you’re holding back about
twenty percent of your production.”
Harry
grimaced and nodded. “Yeah. But that goes to a lot of places. It’s not
really . . . available.”
“Maybe
you’d better make it available,” said Mike, quietly. Hoarding was becoming a
real problem as more and more people reacted to the coming invasion with a
panic mentality.
Harry
sighed. “If we did that it would take away the only things that make working
here worth living.” He paused and thought about it for a moment. “The spare
isn’t just in fish. It’s in stuff that’s more transportable. It’s in dried
conch and lobster tails. Shells. Stuff like that.”
“What
the hell do you use that for?” asked Mike.
“Trade
goods, partly,” Harry answered, holding up the cup of coffee. “There are small
traders who move stuff around the islands and up to the mainland. Conch keeps
for a long time. There’s a market for it in Florida. The traders get stuff in
Miami you can’t get in places like Cuba and bring back rum and coffee.”
“Oh,”
said Mike, nodding his head. He was aware that the shortages had created a
thriving black market, but this was almost like pioneer days. It sounded like a
triangle trade.
“Some
of it goes to the dolphins,” Harry pointed out. “They do a lot of their own
foraging, but we still eke out their feed. And we do a little dealing on the
side with the general goods trader that comes through.” He grimaced again. “The
damn thief.”
“That
bad?” asked Mike.
“Half
the stuff he carries he’ll only sell at black market prices. He’ll have two
cases of corn flour, but officially it’s only one case. Once the first case is
sold the rest sells at whatever the market will bear.”
“Damn,”
said Mike with a stronger than habitual frown. “That’s not the way it’s
supposed to work.”
“There’s
not enough fuel for us to go up to Miami every week or even every month. So we
have to depend on the one ‘official’ trader or the free traders. But the free
traders are totally black market and there’s no way to be sure what they’re
going to be carrying.”
“And
every month the price of the stuff is going up and the price of the fish is
going down,” said Mike sourly.
“Right,”
Harry said with the same tone. He looked like he’d bitten a Key lime.
Mike
nodded in thought. He had had a thought the night before but it was firming up
now. “Let me ask you this, Harry. What happens if you take the icehouse out of
the equation?”
“What
do you mean?” asked Harry. “We have to run the generator to keep the fish iced.
Besides that, the distiller is our only consistent source of fresh water. We
can’t take it out of the equation.”
“But
what if you could not use the fuel for the generator?” Mike asked. “What then?”
“Well,
that puts off a reckoning,” Harry admitted. “We’ve thought about a windmill or
something. We’d be pretty okay then. Hell, I’ve got an electric car stashed. We
could load up on spare batteries and make it to Miami and back with at least
some of the stuff we need.” He shook his head in despair. “But we don’t have a
windmill and they’re impossible to buy these days. Even if we had the cash. And
it wouldn’t produce enough electricity to matter. And the first good storm
would tear it up.”
“Ay-aaaah-ah,”
Mike whispered and whistled a scrap of melody.
Harry
smiled. “It’s not quite that bad. We haven’t had a Viking raid. Yet.”
Mike
smiled. “It’s an old memory. Who’s your electrician?”
Harry
wrinkled his brow in question. “Why the twenty questions?”
“I’m
getting to that,” Mike said. “Is it you?”
“No,”
admitted Harry. “It’s one of the guys on Bob French’s long-line boat.”
“Okay,”
Mike said. “Well we’ll have to wait for Bob to get back in to get it installed,
but let me show you something I just happened to have brought along.”
Good
day,
thought Bob French as he navigated the cut up to No-Name-Key. The world might
be going to hell in a handbasket, but the lack of tourists, fuel and markets
had reduced fishing pressure to the point of recovery. Since the types of
fishing that prevailed put more pressure on the upper end of the food chain,
the stocks of feeder fish recovered in the first year of the emergency. Since
then the increases in catch size across the board had been phenomenal. On
ledges where he used to be lucky to get one legal-sized snapper he now was
taking dozens a day. Lobster pots were coming in brimming with “keeper”
langostino and occasionally had a real monster, the sort of lobster that hadn’t
been seen in the Keys since the ’60s. And he had always thought that the tales
the old-timers told of multi-square-mile shoals of herring and sardines were
sea-stories until he saw one just this year.
This
day he was coming in with a boat loaded to the gunnels with giant groupers and
snappers. Unfortunately, the thought of what that meant was disheartening.
Every month the price was going down for all the fish, even the best cuts. And
the official trade company paid in warbucks instead of pre-war dollars or, best
of all, FedCreds. The warbuck was deliberately inflationary, so the cost of
everything went up nearly as fast as the price of fish went down. It should
have been the other way, but it wasn’t.
He
suspected, hell, all the fishermen suspected, that it wasn’t supposed to be
that way. But without any way to communicate with the mainland except mail or
driving, nothing seemed to be happening. He had finally used up his hoard of
gas tickets and gone to Miami to complain. After two days of getting shuffled
from one department to the next at the Marine Fisheries offices he had to get
back. If he wasn’t fishing he’d find himself on the shore.
And
he was better off than most of the fishermen. His boat was free and clear and
one of the larger ones still operating. Two of the guys working for him had
lost their boats to the repo companies after they couldn’t make the payments.
He couldn’t pay his crew much—hell most everybody got paid in fish or
supplies—but it was something. The communities had pulled together so nobody
starved and everybody had a little something extra. But nobody, not even he or
Harry, had much.
What
was going to happen when the invasion finally came was another question. But
that was a worry for another day. For today there was gutting a bumper haul of
fish that would just put him more in the hole for gas.
He
made the cut ahead of the tide race and finally saw something to smile about.
John Samuels had made harbor, which was the first bright spot he’d seen in a
month of Sundays.
They
called Samuels “Honest John” as a joke. The free trader ran a sixty-foot sloop
that carried small cargoes from Miami to Cuba and back. He stopped at all the
islands, buying delicacies “on the left” and trading at prices lower than the
“official” black marketers. He and the other traders were practically the only
source of tobacco and alcohol in the islands.
The
trader was sitting on the dock of the harbor office with Harry and the
“visitor” from Fleet Strike. The little fireplug probably was an actual Fleet
officer; his casual demonstration of Galactic technology the night before had
been impressive. Before everything went south they had watched the video from
Barwhon and Diess. Fighting the aliens was going to be hell. He didn’t envy the
frowning little bastard his job.
The
visitor seemed to have mended his fences with Harry. As the boat took the final
turn to the dock the sound of their laughter was clear over the quiet chugging
of the diesel. He killed the engines and drifted into the dock; every bit of
fuel was worth saving. As Harry and Honest John caught his tossed lines the
visitor flicked the butt of a cigar into the waters. Unless Bob was mistaken it
was one of John’s prized Havana Panatellas. The Fleet guy was making friends
fast.
“How’s
the fishing?” John asked, taking the boat captain’s hand as he jumped ashore.
“Oh,
it was a hell of a haul,” Bob answered bitterly. “For what it’s gonna fetch.”
“Smile,
Bob,” Harry said with a grin of his own. “We just got a new set of buyers and
suppliers.”
The
fisherman looked from one grinning face to the other in puzzlement. “You want
to explain that?”
“FBI
agents just performed raids on your suppliers’ and buyers’ offices along with
the offices of the Miami Rationing Board and the Marine Fisheries Board,” the
visitor answered for them.
“Why
the hell would they do that?” he asked in surprise. “And how did we find out so
fast?”
“Well,”
answered the visitor, with a slight smile violating his habitual frown, “they
are required to perform an investigation at the registered request of a
Galactic Enforcement Officer. All Fleet officers are also law officers. A
second request from the office of the Continental Army Commander just got them
moving faster than you can say ‘posse comitatus.’ ”
“That
black thing around his wrist is a communicator,” Harry added with a laugh. “The
FBI has already called him back. They said it was the best black market bust
they’ve made since the start of the emergency. It’s gonna make national news.”
“Things
are gonna be screwed up for a while still, man,” Honest John cautioned.
“They’re gonna have to find a replacement that ain’t part of the Cubano Mafia
that’s been controlling it.” He shook his head. “Ain’t gonna be easy. The
Cubanos have gotten used to having their way in South Florida. One raid ain’t
gonna stop it.”
“Cooperate,”
said the Fleet officer. “The assets of the companies have been seized. Ask the
FBI to turn them over pending the completion of the investigation. They don’t
need the trucks to prosecute the perps. And you can probably get them
permanently as the ‘victims.’ Get some materials and convert the old Piggly
Wiggly to a warehouse so you don’t have to base in Miami.”
“That
takes electricity,” said Bob, with his own shake of a head. “Which is something
we ain’t got. We can’t afford the diesel to run a generator that big. Even if
we’re in a co-op with the whole Keys.”
“Ah,
well, as to that,” said the visitor, with a real grin while John and Harry just
laughed.
“What?”
asked the captain, as the crew started to unload. The four of them joined in as
tub after tub of prime grouper and snapper were unloaded. He looked at Harry
again, waiting for him to go on. “What’s so funny?” he asked again, heaving a
hundred-pound tub to the Fleet Strike officer. The heavyset dwarf caught it
like it was a feather and slid it across the dock. He was even stronger than he
looked.
“Mike
had a little present with him,” said Harry with a grin.
“It’s
not a present,” said the visitor, seriously. “It isn’t even a loan. One of the
things I was doing on my vacation was finding places to plant energy caches.
We’re seeding the coastal plains with power sources to recharge suit units that
get caught behind the lines. When I was on Diess it was a pain in the ass
trying to find power. So I came down with three antimatter generators. They’ve
got a finite amount of power, but it’s enough to run a small city for a year,
so . . .” He shrugged and smiled again.
“Damn,”
said the boat captain, tossing him another tub. “Thanks.”
“Well,
the priority is any unit that needs it,” Mike said severely. “And, technically,
you’re not supposed to tie into it. But since you don’t have a power grid, it’s
not like the whole Keys are going to be hooked up to it.” He shrugged again and
frowned. “As screwed up as it is down here, it seems the least I could do for
you. Just don’t overuse it. It’s like a really big battery and once it’s gone,
it’s gone.”
“Well,
thanks anyway,” said Harry, stacking the last tub on the dock. The three hands
were already loading up dollies to carry the fish to the icehouse for cleaning.
“This means we don’t have to waste fuel for generation so the boats can stay
out longer. Hell, we’ve got a satellite dish, so we can hook up a TV in the pub
and even get real news.”
“Getting
news again will be great,” said Bob, with a smile. “Hell, before you know it we
might even have telephones again!” He laughed. “And then it’s
faxes . . .”
“ . . . and
cell phones . . .” laughed Harry. The electronic impedimentia
they had all grown up with was as distant as buggy whips these days.
“Well,
enjoy it as long as you can,” said Mike grimly. “The first serious invasion
will hammer the satellites. And there goes your reception again.”
“Yeah,”
said Bob, “that’s true. But it’s a hell of a long time since we got any news
but radio. I got a question to ask on that, if you don’t mind.”
“Shoot,”
said Mike, but there was a hint of wariness.
“You
said you were on Diess, right?”
“Right.”
“There
was this guy that won the Medal. They said he got blown up in a nuclear
explosion and lived. What really happened?”
Sharon
squealed and spun around in the water as Herman goosed her.
Karen
laughed in return and slapped the dolphin on the flank as it went by. “You have
to watch that one. There’s a reason we named him Herman Hesse.”
The
three of them had been dragged off to a tidal pool by the dolphins. Here, on
the Florida Bay side of the island, they had been swimming with the big
cetaceans most of the day. Cally had stayed firmly attached to Shirlie, who at
less than five hundred pounds was the lightest of the four. The other three
were males: Herman, who had more or less attached himself to Sharon, Charlie
Brown and Ted. Ted had left for a few hours in the midafternoon, but the others
had stuck with them.
The
day had not been for pure fun. The pool was home to a vast collection of the
sorts of rare marine organisms that could be traded for luxury goods. Seven
species of anemones, several more types of urchins, two types of lobster and
various other items had been gathered. Sharon watched Cally as she rode the
small dolphin to the bottom of the pool. There, in about fifteen feet of water,
the eight-year-old let go and began plucking at the reef. A sponge, a spider
crab and an anemone found their way into her mesh bag before she began to claw
for the surface and air.
“This
has been great,” said Sharon, finning slightly and spinning in place to keep
Herman in sight, “but I’m getting worn out.”
Karen
smiled. “A little different than what you usually do, huh?”
“A
bit,” Sharon admitted. She could see the dolphin trying to get into position
behind her.
“What do you
do?” Karen asked. Most of the conversation of the day had been taken up by the
tasks that they had been learning.
Karen
had prepared well. The dolphins had taken turns toting the three humans and an
inflatable boat full of the necessities of the expedition. She had packed a
light lunch of cold lobster salad and some cut fruits along with plenty of
fresh water. Sharon had been careful to wear a T-shirt and to insist that Cally
wear one as well. The hot South Florida sun would still have burned their legs
badly, but Sharon kept Cally well covered with sunscreen. In Sharon’s case, the
same nannites that scoured Fleet bodies for radiation damage would make short
work of the sunburn.
Sharon
watched Cally line up for another run at the bottom. She was too worn out to
even think about making another try, but the energetic youngster seemed as
fresh as when they started. “I’m an XO on a frigate,” she answered, watching
the quick hands snag a passing shovel-nose lobster. Although they were less
plentiful than the more common spiny lobsters, they were prized by the oriental
community as an aphrodisiac and fetched a high price among the free traders.
“What’s
that mean? I mean, what do you do?” asked Karen, interested. She had never met
a person who had been off-planet.
Sharon
suddenly found herself unable to explain. How could she explain the constant
strain of wondering which critical system would fail next? When the hull would
suddenly breach? How the ship, and herself, would perform when they were
finally in combat?
She
paused a moment and smiled faintly. “Mostly I wait for the air to run out.”
Karen
was a kind and empathetic woman. And she recognized that not only was the
answer correct, it was also as much as she could expect to get for the time
being. She nodded in agreement instead. “We ought to be getting back.” She
suited action to words, tossing her nearly full mesh bag into the cooler in the
inflatable. She pulled a harness out and winked. “If you waggle your hips do
you think you can lure Herman over?”
Mike
took another pull on the bottle of beer and a puff from the cigar. The sky was
slowly darkening, the famous purple of the Caribbean drifting up from the east
as they kept watch over the westward opening. The girls had been gone most of
the day and it was about time they turned back up.
“If
this isn’t paradise,” he opined to the trader, “it’s within the limits of
tolerance.”
“It
is close,” Honest John admitted. “In a lot of ways, life’s gotten better.
Slower at least.”
“Down
here,” Mike pointed out. “It hasn’t been slow for me.”
John
nodded in agreement. “The margin sure as hell has gotten thinner, though. It
used to be there was, I dunno, flex in the system. These days it’s sink or
swim. Sometimes literally.”
“So,
how is the Coast Guard these days?” Mike asked with a laugh.
John
laughed in return. “Not bad. They keep the pirates in check, at least. But a
lot of them have gotten transferred to ‘more vital’ tasks. So, SAR is spotty.”
He pronounced the acronym for Search and Rescue “Sahr.” It was a military way
of phrasing it that caused Mike to cock his head.
“Have
you lost many boats?” Mike asked.
“A
few. There’s two problems. Some of the boats have gone to pirates. Or
that’s the way it looks. Boats just disappear in calm seas. And the free
traders are in a constant low-grade war with the Mariellitos bastards
who think they control the trade down here.” The trader frowned and looked over
towards his ship as if to ensure it was still intact.
“Have
you been having much trouble?” Mike asked.
The
trader snorted, gave a grim smile and shook his head.
“Not . . . anymore.” He seemed disinclined to explain the
reference.
“The
other problem is a lot of the boats, their GPS and Loran is giving out; they’re
at sea more than the systems are designed to handle. And most of the traders
aren’t real sailors, guys who know how to navigate by the wind and the stars.
So if they lose their GPS, they get lost: really lost. There was one was just
making the crossing from Los Pinos to Key West. The crossing’s maybe two
hundred miles. Stupid fucker ended up near Bermuda. Dismasted, out of water,
half mad. How in the hell anyone could completely miss the Bahamas I’ll
never know.” The tall captain took another toke on the joint he held. “Nobody
could get that stoned. Hell of it is, he wants to go back to sea.”
Mike
chuckled grimly. He had his own massive list of screwups that he could detail,
starting with the Diess Expeditionary Force. But the situation in the Keys was
something of a whole different order.
“I
don’t understand how it could get this way,” said Mike, gesturing around with
the beer bottle. “Where the hell is everybody? I can understand the tourists,
but where’s the retirees?” The whole state of Florida was filled with retirees.
Some of them were recalled military, admittedly. But that had to be a small
percentage. Where were the rest?
“It
happened slowly,” Honest John admitted. “Not just here but all over Florida.
First, the tourists started trickling off. Then, most of the people who could hold
a hammer or run a press without cutting their fingers off went up north to get
jobs. The Fisheries Board reinstituted net fishing for the Florida waters about
then and there was a small rush to get into that. But when people found out how
hard it was most of them moved away too. Then all the young guys got sucked off
by the Army.”
He
smiled and took a big toke. “I was getting recalled my-own-self,” he said with
a chuckle. “But not only is free trader a ‘vital war production position’—and
didn’t that take some squeeze to a certain congressman—but I convinced the
in-process board it would be a waste of perfectly good rehab just to get a
drugged-out Petty Officer Three.” He grinned again.
“Anyway,
before we knew it the entire population of the Keys was below twenty thousand,
most of them retirees. The nursing homes and ‘managed care’ retirement centers
started having problems with taking care of their old folks. Some of ’em died
cause there just wasn’t anybody on duty.
“Then
when Hurricane Eloise came through, they took it as an excuse to evacuate all
the retirees that were not ‘fully capable of self-care.’ Down here in the Keys,
anyway.
“That
meant the only people left, other than in Key West, were the fishermen and
their families. There’s a federal law that Florida Power had to deliver down
here. But after Eloise, they got an ‘indefinite suspension’ because there was
a shortage of parts, or so they said. That was last year.
“So
that,” the ship captain finished, “is how it got so totally screwed up down here.
An’ that’s the truth.”
The
trader took another toke on his joint and a pull on the glass of Georgia branch
water Mike had supplied. He worked his mouth for a moment. “Cotton mouth.
Haven’t talked this much in a coon’s age.
Mike
nodded and took a contemplative puff on the cigar. Papa O’Neal’s branch water
was awfully smooth. He doubted that the trader had any idea what proof he was
knocking back like water. It was eventually going to catch up with him. “Just
one thing I don’t understand,” he mused. “Where’d they put them? The retirees
I mean.”
“Some of ’em got
mixed into the groups up the peninsula. Lots of ’em went to the big underground
cities they’re building,” said John. He took a last puff on the joint and spun
the butt into the water. “One nice thing about this war. Not only has it driven
the cost of Mary Jane down, the coasties don’t give a rat’s ass if you’re carrying.”
“That’s
crazy,” Mike argued, thinking about the first part of the statement.
“Why?”
asked John with a laugh. “They’ve got a real war to worry about. They don’t
have to worry about the ‘War on Drugs.’ ”
“No,” said Mike with a touch of impatience.
“I was talking about the Sub-Urbs. The work on them is hardly complete. I don’t
see them being able to take tens of thousands of geriatric invalids! Who the
hell is going to care for them there?”
“Search
me,” said Honest John, putting words into action as he patted his pockets.
“Damn,” he muttered, swaying to his feet. “I gotta go back to the ship an’ get
some more weed.” He took one step forward and fell in the water. He came up
spluttering and looked around. “Where’s those damn dolphins when you need
them?” he said blearily.
Mike
shaded his eyes against the westering sun and smiled. “Be filled with joy;
salvation is at hand,” he quipped and pointed at the opening where the group of
humans and cetaceans had just hove into view.
“Hey
Herman!” shouted Honest John. “Give a poor drunk trader a fin, buddy!” He
grabbed a dangling rope and smiled up at Mike happily. “To think I could have
been in-processing right now.”
Mike
nodded in mock soberness. “I gotta agree that might not have been a great
idea.”
CHAPTER 26
The Pentagon, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1328 EDT October
3rd, 2004 ad
“You know,
General,” said General Horner, with a characteristic antihumor frown, “I gotta
wonder if this was the greatest idea.”
Taking
a look around the in-processing station, General Taylor was forced to wonder
the same thing. Even if Horner had said it in jest.
Shortly
after the change of command structures, one of General Horner’s computer geeks
pointed out that the recall program had been misdesigned. Any serious student
of modern militaries could recognize that there were, of necessity, two general
types of officers: warriors and paper pushers. There were a few officers, such
as Jack Horner, who were superlative in both areas. But they were few and far
between. Most officers were very good at one or the other, but not both.
The
reason for a fighting army to have warriors in the officer ranks was obvious.
But there was a viable reason for paper pushers as well. Armies float on a sea
of paper. The logistic problems of Napoleonic armies had been solved, but only
at the expense of constant information flow that required humans in the loop.
Humans who were much more comfortable making decisions on the basis of a
spreadsheet than a map. Humans who found a more efficient way to load trucks,
well, exciting.
But bureaucracies
are like hedges: beautiful when pampered and trimmed and ugly as hell when left
to run riot. A military filled with warriors slags into a scrapheap as the
warriors vie for command slots and neglect their paperwork. A military filled
with paper pushers bloats out of control as the paper pushers create new empires
to lord over.
The
upcoming war with the Posleen was, admittedly, going to require lots and lots
of bean counters. But the previous personnel policies had left it with, in both
Generals Horner and Taylor’s opinion, more than enough bureaucrats at every level.
What it desperately needed was leaders and warriors.
However,
most of the first “crop” was . . . a little on the moldy
side.
“What’re
you in for?”
The
questioner was a tall, trim man in his early seventies. He vaguely recognized
the man next to him, but could not quite place the face.
The
man in question took a suck off the oxygen tube in his nose and wheezed out a
reply. “I got the Medal in Holland,” he croaked. The statement set off a
paroxysm of coughing that trailed into laughter. “They’re gonna have their jobs
cut out with me!” The laughter led to more coughing until he was turning blue.
“You
gonna be okay?” asked the questioner.
“Sure,”
said the emphysemic once he had reestablished control. “As long as the damn
ceremony don’t go on too long. What’d they get you for? I don’t recognize you
from any of the meetings.” The last was accusatory. The group consisted mostly
of Medal of Honor winners. The emphysemic former paratrooper knew them all by
heart and could list off the missing files along with dates of service and
death. He was not so good on what he’d had for breakfast, but he was spot on
for fallen comrades.
“I
made it on points,” said the tall former lieutenant colonel. He’d never thought
he’d be wearing Army green again; it was almost ludicrous. Hell, there were
more people who wanted him offed in the Puzzle Palace than in the rest of the
globe. If they ever organized, his ass was as good as dead.
The
emphysemic just grunted and went back to listening to the brass drone. He
thought he knew who was who, but then realized that the black guy was in
charge. Hell of a world.
“Who’s
the jig?” the WW II paratrooper asked and coughed for his efforts. He rattled
the bottle to get it to deliver a decent amount of oxygen but it didn’t help.
His
former inquisitor just laughed.
“In
conclusion,” said General Taylor, “I’ll just mention a few things about where
you should expect to be placed. Most of you are thinking, ‘Hell, I’ve got the
Medal. They don’t dare let me get killed.’ All I can say to that is, sorry. This
is the real and the bad and the scary. I can’t afford to waste warriors on bond
tours and rear-area paper pushing. You can expect to be placed with Line forces
and shuttled from front to front for emergency reaction forces. You are going
to be the tip of the spear, always the men in the breach.
“Face
it, most of you screwed up over and over again to win the awards that are on
your chest.” This last brought a note of often hacking laughter from the two
hundred or so in the meeting room. “If I had to be there, I couldn’t think of a
better group to have at my side or behind me. So it is the least I can do for
my soldiers.”
“There
are,” he finished, “a lot of things going wrong in the Ground Forces today, and
throughout America. Our job is to fix them. And we are going to.”
CHAPTER 27
No-Name-Key, FL,
United States of America, Sol III
2022 EDT October
3rd, 2004 ad
With great
ceremony Harry pressed the “on” button. There was a buzz from the crowd
enjoying alcohol and appetizers as the thirty-inch television blossomed into
life, showing the CBS evening news.
He
bowed to the humorous applause, then walked to the back of the bar where Mike
and Honest John were continuing a running argument.
The weekly party
was in full swing as the mosquitoes closed in on the pub. In one corner the
youngsters from throughout the mid-Keys region played and argued as the
teenagers danced. A table down the middle of the room was half covered with
dishes brought in by families. Most of them consisted of various ways to
prepare conch. The pičce de résistance, two man-sized black groupers, a
butterflied yellow-fin tuna and three bushels of lobster tails, was grilling
outside.
Mike
and family had contributed to the haul. Honest John had accepted Mike’s charter
for the remainder of their stay and the boat had sailed out daily for fishing
and diving adventures. Mike had returned laden with lobster and a variety of
species of fish, while Sharon and Cally had collected inshore species with the
dolphins and Karen. Despite his intent to spend time with Cally and Sharon,
they had been drawn to the inshore and the dolphins while he had been drawn to
the sailing, fishing and diving offshore.
The
expert captain proved that it was not necessary to have a “tuna boat” to catch
tuna, as he and Mike hit the yellow-fin run in the Stream. Mike had been
thrilled by the explosive strikes of the streamlined eating machines, while
John and the Key co-op had been thrilled by the high-quality protein; freshly
caught tuna was a valuable trade meat.
Mike
had also caught some praise for his diving skills. His GalTech breath-pack was
a major reason for that. The small, experimental system included a nitrox
rebreather that extracted oxygen and nitrogen from water. The staging bottle
was small but high-pressure so the system was good for several days. The depth
on it was limited to one hundred twenty feet, but the tiny pack made for such
limited drag that it was like diving without gear.
Mike
was able to approach normally skittish hog-fish and groupers without disturbing
them with bubbles. And if they spooked anyway, he was still usually able to
make a kill; the fish had no time to learn that a compact body and giant fins
meant incredible burst speeds. Then the blood, turned green by the light
filtering of the water column, would flow backwards as the fish made a last
desperate dash for safety.
He
was even able to make a rare tuna kill on a young fish that was attracted by
the strange seal-like creature in the water column. The thirty-pound yellow-fin
made a fine contribution to the catch.
He
had finally dragged Cally away from the dolphins for a day to go fishing.
Floating along a weed patch she had hooked into a big bull dorado and
practically been dragged out of the boat. Any lingering resentment at being
taken from her cetacean friends was washed away as the rainbow-sparkling fish
tail-walked across the wake of the drifting sailboat, taking the line out of
the reel with a banshee’s shriek.
The
nights had been just as good as the days. Mike, Sharon and Cally spent most
early evenings at the pub, eating part of the day’s catch and discussing the
news from the radio with Harry, Bob, Honest John and Karen. By eight o’clock,
though, Cally was whipped. Most nights Mike ended up carrying her off to bed.
Then the conversation on wide-ranging topics would either continue or Mike and
Sharon would retreat to their own room and renew their acquaintance.
The
last two evenings the news had been about the war. And it was mostly bad. The
goodness mopping up on Diess was countervailed by the opening of the Irmansul
campaign, where the Posleen had gained an immediate upper hand over the mostly
Asian forces. The Chinese Third Army had suffered over one hundred thousand
losses in the first week’s fighting and the bets were on that the Darhel would
call on European forces to help them out. While European and American forces
had suffered horrendous losses at the hands of the Posleen on Barwhon and Diess
their superior coordination often permitted them to avoid the massive
casualties that were characteristic of Chinese and Southeast Asian forces.
During
the discussions, Mike—and Cally, to everyone’s amusement—pointed out that the
best units were on Barwhon, not Earth. The Barwhon units had a high percentage
of veterans and were well drilled in to the needs of battle against the alien
centaurs. By comparison the units left “Earthside” were in lousy shape. Units
stripped from France, Germany or the United States would be no better off at
the outset than the Asian units.
The
virtual destruction of the first Expeditionary Forces and the ongoing
blindsided slaughter on Barwhon had stripped the NATO militaries of most of
their trained forces. The rejuvenated officers and NCOs would, eventually, take
up some of the slack of their loss. But the current forces were a rotten
branch. Until the reforms that Horner and Taylor had instituted took effect the
units that were “Stateside” might as well be back in basic training.
All
of which was surprisingly hard to explain to the boat captain.
“Look,”
said the slightly drunk captain, pugnaciously. “They’re soldiers, right?”
“Sure,
John,” O’Neal said, “but soldiering isn’t just about shooting a gun. Most war
is about getting the shooters and the backing for them to where the enemy is.
Even the Posleen aren’t everywhere. So getting the right forces to the right
place is the problem.”
“What’s
so hard?” asked Harry. “They’re right there,” he continued, pointing in the
general direction of Florida Bay. “What’s so hard about finding them?”
“Oh,”
Mike said ruefully. “You’ll find them. Or, usually, vice versa. But for regular
forces to survive them you have to dig in. Do you understand that?”
“No,”
said Harry. “But I’ll accept it.”
Mike
took a pull on a panatela and wondered how to explain. “Okay, here’s the best
explanation I can give. You’re going to fight somebody. You’ve got a one-shot
pistol. They turn up with fifty buddies armed with machine guns. What do you
do?”
“Oh,”
said Harry. He scratched his head for a second. “I guess you shoot the son of a
bitch who called you there.”
“True,”
agreed Mike. “But if you do it from behind a wall you might be able to reload
and kill some more, right? Hell, you might be able to survive.”
“Okay,”
agreed John, taking a pull on a lemon-dashed rum. “I’ll buy that.”
“So,
the way to fight is from prepared positions. It’s a lot like World War I that
way. But you’ve either gotta have enough men to man a huge front or you’ve
gotta guess where the Posleen are coming. And this is realizing that they can
drop out of the sky, anywhere, at any time.”
“Gooks
used to have little antiaircraft batteries all over the damned place,” said
Honest John with a belch. “Why don’t we?” The tone was bitter.
Mike
raised an eyebrow but answered the question. “Technology. The ‘gooks’ got
antiaircraft batteries from the Russians. The Russians had scads of gear lying
around and lots of production facilities. We’re having to teach the Galactics
not only what to build but how to mass-produce stuff. Even then what we’re
really doing is a sort of super cottage industry. So, we don’t have many
weapons that can hurt the landers.”
“So
we have to hit them on the ground,” Cally interjected, suddenly popping up to
snatch a conch fritter. “Until they give mom a real ship and we get some more
Class Nine Grav Cannons we’re shit out of luck.” She popped the tender piece of
giant whelk into her mouth and trotted back to the arcane games being played in
the corner.
“And
you’re saying if we hit ’em on the ground, we’re screwed,” said Honest John. He
grinned ferally. “I bet there are ways to hurt ’em that don’t involve tactics
we gave up after Belleau Wood.” He took another pull on the rum and pulled out
a joint. “You oughta be able to sneak into the rear area.”
“And
do what?” asked Mike, curious. Honest John had always been happy to talk about
fishing or the sea and he had debated a few military subjects, but this was the
first time he had evinced any real knowledge or background. It was like he had
dropped a mask or thrown off a cloak and said “Ah, hah!”
“Ambush
convoys? Destroy supply depots? Call in artillery strikes? Kidnap cadre?”
Mike
shook his head. “There’s a fairly robust long-range reconnaissance section on
Barwhon. But they don’t really strike, they give warning where strikes are
going to occur. The Posleen don’t have much in the way of convoys, not yet
anyway, and they don’t have supply depots besides their ships. And those are
pretty heavily defended.” Mike paused and thought about the question.
“The
way that the horses partition stuff, most of their good artillery targets end
up being beyond artillery range. Which is why a couple of universities are
working on longer-range artillery.” Mike shook his head again and puffed on the
cigar. “And the Posleen don’t care if a ‘town’ gets wiped out by a special op
group. They don’t pull forces back from the front to look for the group. They
use local forces. So it is generally a net loss. Just ask the combined ops team
that we sent to Barwhon before the expeditionary force.”
“So
we just, what did you call it, ‘hunker down and take our licks’?” asked Karen,
softly.
“I’m
afraid so,” said Sharon in reply. “The Fleet is building. I don’t know if it
could go faster; maybe it could, maybe it couldn’t. Once we have a real fleet
we’ll be safe. But until then we have to fight them on the ground.”
“We’ve
tried mobile warfare,” said Mike, taking a sip of his beer. “The French tried
it a couple of times on Barwhon. It was not successful.” He grimaced.
“Well,
that was the French,” said Harry.
Mike
snorted. “Don’t let General Crenaus hear you say that. They also ate our
lunch on Diess, but that was when they had already ‘broken the square.’ So it’s
not a fair comparison. But an M-1 is a tin can to their weapons. So I don’t see
being able to fight them in open field.”
“Well,”
snorted John, drunkenly, “they don’t do islands.”
“No,
they don’t,” Mike agreed.
“So
we blow the Seven Mile Bridge and we’re golden,” continued John, taking a big
hit on the joint.
“And
that will be that,” said Karen quietly. “We’ll be cut off.”
“It’s
already bad enough,” said Harry. “Since the clinic in Marathon shut down we’ve
lost two people who should have lived. Tom Robins died from appendicitis and
Janey Weaver died of scarlet fever. God help us if there’s something like a
measles epidemic.”
“If
there’s an epidemic the government will help,” said Karen.
Mike
took a pull of his beer to make sure his face was covered but John was not so
diplomatic. “The government?” he laughed. “What government? The one that
saddled you guys with the Cuban Mafia in the first place? Or the one that made
Florida Power fix their lines? How about the one that is setting the prices so
low nobody can make a dime to set aside then, if you do, taxes the shit out of it?”
Harry
held up his hands to forestall further argument. “No, no more!” he intoned.
“For tonight, we have power, no one is sick, the leeches have been taken off
our backs and there is plenty to eat. Let’s worry about which bridges to burn
tomorrow.”
John
nodded his head. “Yeah, man. You’re right.” He looked at Karen and smiled
lopsidedly. “Sorry, gal. Don’ mind me. I’m drunk.”
“And
stoned.” She laughed, picking up the smoldering joint and taking a hit herself.
“Damn,” she said, coughing, “no wonder you’re stoned.”
John
laughed in return and hoisted the glass of rum. “Only the best! Cuba doesn’t
only make fine cigars!”
“Speaking
of which,” said Mike, happy to change the subject, “what do you want for a
couple of cases of cigars and rum?”
John
thought about it for a minute and shook his head. “I know better than to dicker
when I’ve got a load on,” he laughed. “But what the hell. How much of that
white lightning you got?”
“Two
cases of liquor, white lightning and muscadine brandy in liter bottles. I’ve
got a couple of cases of beer as well. Then there’s some smoked and tinned wild
boar and venison. I’ve got a five-gallon can of gas. I can give you the gas but
I want the can back or an empty.”
Honest
John nodded. “Well, I think I can give up a box of panatelas for that,” he
said.
Mike’s
normal frown turned up in a smile. “Now I know why they call you ‘Honest John.’ ”
“Mike,”
said Sharon, smiling sweetly, “let me do the dickering.”
“Uh,
oh,” said John, setting down the joint. “I don’t like the sound of that.”
“Did
I mention I spent six months as a procurement officer?” she asked, cracking her
knuckles and leaning forward. “Now, I’ve got to wonder if the local authorities
are fully aware of your cargoes . . .”
CHAPTER 28
No-Name-Key, FL,
United States of America, Sol III
0832 EDT October
5th, 2004 ad
Mike carefully
set the last case of hand-rolled Imperials on the stack. The cigars were in
twine-wrapped bundles of fifty, a gross of bundles to the case. The stack of
cigar cases and rum barrels made an awkward fit in the back of the SUV.
Honest
John rubbed his face and grimaced. “Christ, I knew I shouldn’t dicker when I
was drunk.”
“And
never play poker with her, either,” Mike opined. “She’ll clean your clock.”
“She
already did,” the trader bemoaned.
“Oh,
fiddlesticks,” Karen said. “You know how that wine-jerked venison will go over
in Havana. Not to mention that muscadine brandy. You’re going to make a
killing.”
The
trader just snorted but then smiled. “It’s been a good visit, guys,” he said to
Mike and Sharon. “You guys keep safe. Don’t bunch up.”
Mike
turned from where he was securing the empty gas can and frowned at the trader.
“What rank did you say you were?” he asked.
“A
third class petty officer,” John answered. He smiled faintly and patted the
pockets of his floral shirt until he found a panatela and a match. He flicked
the match with his thumb and lit the panatela. “Why?”
“ ‘Don’t bunch up’ is not
a Navy saying,” Mike answered.
“Musta
heard it somewheres,” was the trader’s answer.
“Uh-huh,”
Mike answered. “And didn’t you say they just sent you a recall notice?”
“ ’Bout two weeks ago,”
John agreed, warily. “Why?”
“Oh,”
said Mike, smiling. “Just wondering. Most of the notices went out last year. I
can only think of one group that got recalled in the last few months.”
“What
are you two talking about?” asked Sharon, frowning.
“Nothing,”
said Mike, closing the back of the Tahoe.
“Guys,”
said Harry, giving Sharon a hug. “You take care, ya hear?”
“We
will,” said Sharon.
“Keep
in touch,” said Karen, smiling. “Herman will want to hear about all your big
adventures.”
“Okay,”
said Cally, giving the woman a hug. “I’ll make sure to write him.”
“Well,”
said John. “I’m not into soppy good-byes and I’ve got a tide to catch.” He
hugged Sharon and Cally and waved at Mike. “Tell that big ugly bastard Kidd
that Poison said ‘Hey.’ ”
“I
will,” said Mike with a smile.
“And
tell Taylor he can kiss my fat, white ass.”
“Okay,”
said Mike with a snort.
“Keep
your feet and knees together, snake,” he finished and walked towards the dock.
He started to yell for his two missing crewmen but after the first wince
thought better of it and just hopped in the dinghy, untied and started rowing
towards the harbor opening.
As
he was clearing the opening the two half-clad worthies, trailed by two swearing
females, charged out of one of the abandoned bungalows and down the shore
towards the retreating rowboat.
“What
were those women saying, mom?” asked Cally, ingenuously.
“I
think it was ‘See you later honey,’ ” Sharon answered, pushing her towards the
back seat.
“Oh,”
said Cally. “ ’Cause, you know, it sounded a lot like, ‘What about our money?’
”
Mike
laughed and shook Harry’s hand. “Thanks for having us.”
“Anytime,”
Harry answered. “On the house.”
Mike
nodded and smiled, then got in the Tahoe. He turned to Sharon and shrugged.
“Ready for a long damn drive?”
“Sure.
And this time let’s bypass my parents.”
“Works
for me. Actually, if we go by way of Mayport, you can probably catch a shuttle
from there. Then Cally and I will drive back to Dad’s. I can catch a shuttle
out of Atlanta or Greenville.”
“Okay,”
she answered with a sad smile. “And one last night?”
“Yeah,”
he answered. “One last night. Until the next time.”
Sharon
nodded. Of course there would be a next time. It had taken the highest possible
command authority to pry them both loose for this time. And they were both
going to be in the thick of combat. But, of course there would be a next time.
Mike put the Tahoe in gear and they drove out of the parking lot, down the
shell-paved path, wrapped each in mirror thoughts.
CHAPTER 29
Geosynchronous
Orbit, Sol III
1444 EDT October
9th, 2004 ad
“Join the Fleet
and see the Universe, eh Takagi?” mused Lieutenant Mike Stinson for the
umpteenth time as he looked out the clear plastron of his fighter canopy at the
swirling stars.
“Yes,
my friend. For once the recruiters didn’t lie.”
Captain
Takao Takagi was the number-one-rated fighter pilot in the Japanese
Self-Defense Force when he leaped at the opportunity to transfer to Fleet
Strike Fighter Force. He knew the objective realities of the situation, that
without dreadnoughts to break up the Posleen battleglobes the fighters could
only peck ineffectually at the surface, that the Posleen space-based weapons
would probably sweep the limited number of fighters available out of the
heavens. He recognized that his chances of ever seeing the snow-capped
mountains of Honshu again were slim to none. But he also understood the ancient
mantra of the Japanese warrior, the words that every Japanese soldier, airman
or sailor carries in his inner heart: Duty is heavier than mountains, death
is lighter than a feather.
Someone
must stand between Earth and the Posleen landings. Until the heavy Fleet forces
were ready, that meant a rag-tag band of converted Federation frigates and the
space fighters as they came off the assembly line. If it was his day to die,
when the Posleen came, then so be it, as long as he could take an offering with
him to the ancestors.
And
the view didn’t hurt.
Working
in two fighter Combat Space Patrol teams, the first three fighter squadrons
maintained a close Earth patrol. Since the first few scouting Posleen could be
expected any day, it was hoped that the CSPs could intercept the Posleen as
they exited from hyperspace and began their movement to Earth.
There
were two forms of hyperspatial transport known: “ley-line” transport and
“quantum tunneling.”
The
Federation, without exception until recently, used “line” transport. A quirk of
quantum theory first proposed by humans in the 1950s turned out to be true.
Along the path from star to star was a “valley” or “line” that permitted easy
entry into the alternative dimensions of hyperspace. These valleys permitted
ships to travel at high “relative” speeds, far exceeding the speed of light.
Although it was possible to “quantum tunnel” outside the valleys, it was slower
and more power intensive.
The
problem from a military perspective with the “valleys” was that the openings
were both a known location and they were relatively distant from the inner
planets. Therefore, it took hours or sometimes even days for a ship to travel
from the habitable world to the “valley entrance.” Nor were the entrances
necessarily near each other or near planets. So most of a long hyperspatial
trip involved movement in star systems from one valley to the next.
Furthermore, the approach of a ship in the “valley” set up a harmonic that was
detectable outside the “hyperspace dimension,” but ships in the valley were
blind to the outside. Although the Posleen did not, currently, set up space
ambushes, the possibility existed. And that made Fleet dislike “ley-line”
hyperspace intensely.
The
Posleen, however, used an alternative method. Disdaining the “valley” method
they used “quantum tunneling.” Quantum tunneling had numerous items to its
advantage. It permitted “small” jumps within star systems. It permitted the
ships to come out relatively close to their target, be it a planet or some
other location. And it was practically undetectable.
However,
“tunneling” had two countervailing problems. First, it was slow and energy
intensive, compared to the “valley” method. The trip from Diess to Earth took
six months using the “valley” method; most of the time spent in systems going
from valley to valley. Using the “tunneling” method it took almost a year and
seven times as much energy. Second, the “exit” phase was highly random. Ships
come out of hyperspace on a random course and at low velocities. But it was the
preferred method of the Posleen. Indeed, the species seemed unaware of the
“lines” between star systems.
Because
of the vagaries of “tunneling,” and the low relative velocity of the ships
exiting it, if the first few ships were individual Battle Dodecahedrons or
Command Dodecahedrons, the combination of fighters for immediate reaction and
frigates to pound with marginally heavier weapons might keep some of the
pre-landings from happening. At least, that was the hope.
In the meantime,
what it meant for the pilots of the First, Ninth, and Fifty-Fifth Interplanetary
Fighter Squadrons was an up-close and personal view of the world spread out
before them. The patrol positions were just beyond geosynchronous orbit—close
enough to intercept the Posleen but far enough out to avoid the junk belt
surrounding the planet—and the swirling blue globe constantly caught the eye.
As Takao rotated his fighter to take in the view again, the terminator was just
starting to cross the Atlantic. The pair’s current patrol was just ahead of
it—maintaining a near geosynchronous orbit—and he could clearly see the
American coastline coming up. After the series of cold fronts that had lashed
them for the past two weeks it looked like they were having some extraordinary
early fall weather.
He
had spent some time at Andrews Air Force Base, cross training with the American
F-15 wings before anyone had heard the word “Posleen” and he imagined that
quite a few people were heading to the mountains or the beaches this weekend.
His next leave was several months off, but he might take it there instead
of . . .
“Come
on, Sally!” shouted Big Tom Sunday as his daughter stepped up to the plate,
“keep your eye on the ball!”
The
booming voice caused more than one head to turn and Little Tom at his side
grinned sheepishly as he saw Wendy Cummings look their way. She gave a slight,
disinterested smile and looked back across the diamond. There Ted Kendall was
surrounded by a bevy of young ladies like her, sentenced by their parents to
watch a Saturday afternoon elementary school softball game.
Tommy
followed her eyes and quickly turned back to watching the game. At a moment
like this the shadow of his father seemed to overpower him like a rising flood,
just as irresistible and as elemental. His father had been a football star, his
father had been chased by the girls, his father never had to worry about what
to do on a Saturday night. His father was a butthead.
Little
Tom pulled his glasses off and wiped them on his shirt. There was a moment’s
sting in his eyes that he put down to the strong north wind and he took a
surreptitious swipe as he redonned them. Just the wind. He need not bother
being surreptitious, another check had Wendy halfway around the diamond, headed
in the other direction.
Wendy
walked slowly and carefully towards the crowd around Ted Kendall. Until the
week before he had seemed welded at the hip to Morgen Bredell, the two the
undisputed class king and queen as a classic double whammy: head cheerleader
and lead quarterback. Since their spectacular breakup during study hall, the
competition for both had become heavy. Morgen had latched onto Ted’s number one
rival for big man on campus, the school’s lead fullback, Wally Parr, but Ted
had seemed totally uninterested in female companionship.
Most
of the school thought that he was waiting for Morgen to come back. Sooner or
later she was bound to discover that Wally had fast hands not only in the
backfield. Besides being the quarterback Ted was considered an all-round nice
guy. As too many girls had learned, that did not hold for Wally.
Wendy
had considered that dissimilarity carefully before deciding to move into the
circle around Ted. After a few unpleasant dates with the backfield she had
practically sworn off football players, but maybe Ted would be different. She
practiced her opening line as she swayed closer.
Little
Tom glanced over again as Wendy closed in on the bevy, then looked away as his
eyes burned from the sun shining off her long blonde hair. You’d figure
sooner or later they’d learn. He pulled his glasses off again and took
another swipe at his eyes.
“What
the hell’s wrong now, Tommy?” asked his father.
“Nothin’,
Dad.”
“Allergies?”
“No,
just the sun. I should have brought my shades.”
“With
all I paid for custom sunglasses, you think you would. Stop a Posleen shotgun
blast.”
“Yep,”
said Little Tom with an unheard sigh at his dad’s total cluelessness. “Pity
about the rest of my face, mind you.”
His
dad laughed and went back to berating his sister. At nine she was already a
star athlete and well on the way to erasing Big Tom’s shame at having a
computer geek for a son. Big Tom unconsciously checked the Glock behind his
back as a high, thin line of cirrus clouds swept across the sun.
“Could
come any time,” he commented just as unconsciously.
“Yep.
Anytime,” Little Tom agreed. Another sigh and rolled eyes. “Dad, can I go home
now?”
“No.
We need to stay here and show our support for Sally.”
“Dad,
Sally’s got enough confidence for three of us. She knows we support her. I’ve
got homework and I have to get in two hours range time so I can be in the
tournament next week. When am I going to be able to?”
“After
the game,” answered his father with a frown.
“After
the game you are taking Sally and her friends out for sundaes,” answered Little
Tom with the sort of remorseless logic that always got him in trouble. “You
will expect me to participate in that as well. After sundaes we will convey
Sally’s friends to their various residences. We will return home at
approximately nine p.m. You will
maintain lights out for ten p.m.
I repeat . . .”
“Tommy,”
Big Tom growled.
“Shut
up.”
“More
or less. You are going to show your support or you can kiss any goddamn
computer game tournament good-bye.”
Little
Tom took a deep breath. “Yes, sir!” he snapped, crossing his arms and tapping
one boot.
“When
is this damn tournament, anyway?” asked his father.
“Next
Saturday, three p.m. until it
finishes,” said Little Tom, knowing he was in for it.
“You’re
supposed to be participating in a Youth Militia exercise that night!”
“Chief
Jordan excused me,” said Little Tom with another roll of the eyes. “I’ve
outgrown the local militia, Dad. Besides, the tournament counts as tactical
exercises for military prep credit.”
“Who
says?” asked Big Tom with a snort of disgust at the asinine idea. As if sitting
in front of a computer playing shoot-’em-up games could be considered real
combat training.
“Fleet,”
answered Tommy. “They count national standing in Death Valley toward
military pre-training.”
“Well,
I don’t. You need to know what the real thing is like, not a Virtual fairy
tale. You’re going on the Youth Militia exercise.”
“Dad!”
“No
means no.”
“Okay,
no means fucking no,” said the son furiously. “In that case, what is my
motivation for watching this softball bullshit, O Great Master of All Things
Military?”
“Watch
your mouth, mister!”
“Dad,
you are a fuckin’ dinosaur!” the teenager finally exploded. “I am damned
if I’m going to be in any Ground Force unit! I am going to be Fleet Strike or
nothing! And Youth Militia does not count towards Fleet! I don’t mind
you acting like I’ve got two heads and a tail because I don’t measure up to
your ideal son, but you are not going to screw up my chances of getting into
Fleet!”
“You
had better calm down and get a civil tongue in your head or you’re going to be
grounded for the rest of the school year!”
Little
Tom met his father’s eyes fiercely but he knew the old man would never back
down now. With the other parents listening it was going to be a point of pride,
something that his father had in overabundance. His eyes closed and his face
worked in anger as he tried to control himself. Finally he opened his eyes.
“I
am going to go catch a ride home,” he snarled at his father. “And then I am
going to cap targets for a couple of hours. And I suspect I am not going to
miss.”
“Get
out of here,” his father husked and dismissed him from his attention.
He
stepped out of the crowd of parents and started looking for someone, anyone who
had a car. As he did he saw the coach of the opposing team charge onto the
field towards the umpire.
Wendy
waited carefully as Ted warmed to expounding about himself. Until his breakup
with Morgen he had been the quietest of all the football players. His humility
was rapidly slipping away under the onslaught of female attention and since
there was not much he could think of to talk about except football the focus
was on recent games.
“Then
I handed off to Wally and he ran . . .” he continued.
“Thirty-two
yards for a touchdown,” interjected Wendy.
“Yeah,”
he said, momentarily stymied.
“You
were down by more than seven, so you decided to go for the double point rather
than try for a touchdown and a field goal.”
“Uh-huh.”
“So
you threw to Johnny Grant for a touchdown,” continued Wendy, flipping a lock of
blonde hair out of the way, “but I was wondering something at the
time . . .”
“Yeah?”
“It
looked like Jerry Washington was in the open and you had to throw past a safety
to get to Johnny. Why didn’t you throw to Jerry?”
“You
know,” he said, chagrined, “Wally, the big son of a bitch, was blocking, was in
the way, I couldn’t see past him. Everybody asked me that, afterwards,
especially Jerry. He was really pissed.” He turned towards her as the
conversation finally turned to something he could talk about.
“You
need to do something about that. That explains the same problem on the next
series when you got intercepted,” she said with a toss of her hair. She
personally thought it was her best feature and decided that subliminally
showing it off would help.
“What,”
he asked, laughing, “you doing a piece for the school newspaper?”
“No,”
she answered, “do you think we need a better sports section?”
“Oh,”
he started to respond, “I think the school . . .”
“What
is that bozo doing?” asked one of the suddenly snubbed coterie, watching the
coach of the opposing team apparently charging the umpire.
“For
she’s a jolly good fellow, for she’s a jolly good fellow, for she’s a jolly
good fellllow, which nobody can deny!” “Woof! Woof!”
The
chorus of male, female and canine voices rang through the Fredericksburg Public
Safety Building and out the open windows into the splendid autumn sunshine. A
mob of happy faces in jumpsuits and body armor–bulked uniforms were gathered
around a conference table to celebrate the thirtieth anniversary of the fire
chief.
“Speech!
Speech!” cried the usual joker at the back.
“Speech!
Speech!”
“Okay!
Okay!” said the slight gray-haired female as she stepped up to the head of the
table. Her blue, patch-covered coverall bore the nametag “Wilson” over her left
breast. One side of her face and the back of her hand on the same side bore the
stigma of replaced skin, slick and shiny, but her electric blue eyes were
undimmed by age and untrammeled by care. “If I can get you guys to just shut up
for once it’ll be worth it.”
She
looked around at the sea of young faces and suddenly grinned. “Now,” she
cackled, shaking her finger and gumming the words, “lemme tell you about the
ooold days, smack, smack, wah in mah day, we had ta carry the water up from the
river, yep . . .” At the common, quavered litany the group of
firefighters and police—most of them trained and all of them at one time
counseled by the wise old woman—laughed uproariously.
“No,
really,” she continued in a normal voice, shaking her head. “I just want to say
that the last thirty years are what living is all about. I don’t know how
people who don’t like their jobs get up in the morning. Every damned day I wake
up and spring out of bed more ready to come to work than the last.” That the
job had eaten two marriages and left her without children she carefully did not
mention. There were balances in any life and on the scale she was willing to
accept her portion.
“You people, and
the generation before you and I hope the generation after are what makes this
job so special. That and the chance, every day, to go out and do some good. If
there is a better thing to do with your day than to save a life—whether
fighting a fire or preventing a crime—I don’t know what it is. Someday, someday
fairly soon, I suspect, I won’t be able to climb the ladders, or carry the
stretchers or run the hoses. And the legacy that I will leave is right here in
this room.” There were a few sniffles in the bunch now and she thought it best
to wrap up before it got too sentimental.
“And
every day, I want you to keep that in mind. There is nothing more important
than saving an innocent life and anything that you have to do, through fire or
explosion, it is worth whatever effort. There is just nothing like it.” As the
crowd was cheering the door to the hall burst open to admit the dispatcher.
One
of the opposing team softball players was following her coach, dragging a
boombox nearly as big as the player. At the same time, one of the teenaged
sisters dragged along by the parents was tugging at her father’s arm, leaning
into him and proffering the headset from her Walkman. At the coach’s first
words the umpire waved the game to a halt, leaned over and dialed the boombox’s
volume to the max.
“ . . . not
a test, this is an announcement of the Emergency Broadcast System. Posleen
ships have been detected exiting hyperspace in near-Earth
proximity . . .”
Everyone
at the game unconsciously looked up. As they did there was a flash of white
light, clear against the crystalline blue sky. The blossom of nuclear fire
marked the location of at least one space battle. Tommy looked back towards his
dad and, as they caught each other’s eye, they both unconsciously checked
behind their backs. When they realized the mimicry, they both looked chagrined.
For a moment they seemed to connect in a way that they had not felt in years.
Then Big Tom headed out to the field to collect his daughter and Tommy headed
for the Suburban.
“Earth
is under a landing watch. This means that probability of landing in your area within
the next four hours is high. All military personnel are ordered to immediately
return to their units by the shortest possible means. All aircraft are ordered
to ground immediately at the nearest possible landing area. Citizens without
military duties are strongly urged to go immediately to their homes and stay
there until landing areas are determined.
“All
businesses with the exception of essential services, such as groceries and
fueling stations, are ordered to close immediately. All citizens are urged to
return to their homes and remain there. Stay tuned to your local TV and radio
stations for updated watches and warnings. Up-to-date watch and warning
information for your local area is available through National Weather Service
Broadcasts. . . .”
Wendy
listened to the announcement in shock. The group around Ted swayed towards him
then started to break up as individual girls sought out their parents. Wendy
was the last one to leave and she looked at him for a moment, reached out her
hand in farewell then walked away.
“ . . . Citizens are
urged to remain off interstate highways which are designated for military troop
movements. If you feel it necessary to leave your area, or if your area is
ordered to evacuate, follow the designated evacuation routes from your area to
refuge areas. There will shortly be a statement from the
President. . . .”
The
dispatcher had a portable weather radio with her and simply held it over her
head. As the dispatch began to repeat Chief Wilson looked around and said,
simply, “You all know the drill. Time to get to work.”
The
mountain of black metal had appeared with a brief flicker of plasma discharge
at a range of less than six hundred kilometers—knife-fighting distance in
space—and more or less on a collision course. Before Takagi and Stinson could
even initiate evasive maneuvers a plasma cannon wiped Stinson from the heavens.
Takagi grabbed his stick, flikkered, engaged thrusters and hit the Hammer. The
next plasma wash missed his fighter by less than thirty meters.
The
fighters conceived of and designed by the GalTech Fighter Board were the most
advanced spaceships ever built. Because the Posleen occasionally exhibited a
degree of skill at jamming, and because the Galactics required a human in the
fire decision loop, there had to be a body in the cockpit. To survive in the
expected environment the ships had to mount not only impressive countermeasures
but be able to maneuver in ways considered impossible by the first designers.
The
primary Posleen weapons that would be used against fighters were either a
terawatt laser system on the landers or a similar grade plasma cannon. Galactic
reports and information developed on Barwhon and Diess determined that Posleen
detection and acquisition systems were state-of-the-art. Indeed, there was
mounting evidence that they surpassed the Federation in every respect.
Furthermore, a laser beam traveled at the speed of light, a plasma ray only
fractionally slower. While over extremely long ranges there was lag, at any
practical engagement range the time between firing and impact was effectively
instantaneous.
Given
these two facts there was little hope for a fighter component, despite their
obvious utility against landers. The entire battle would have to be fought by
ships that could take a hit and keep coming.
However, in any
weapons system there was a slightly longer lag between acquisition of target
and firing, the “lock-on” phase. It was this inherent lag that was the single
chink designers could foresee in Posleen antiship weapons. What would be
required to survive in that type of environment would be a fighter capable of
carrying a reasonable payload and sufficient projectors and deflectors to be
able to somewhat spoof the Posleen acquisition systems, but most of all it
would have to be incredibly maneuverable. It would have to be able to make
vector changes that could avoid a light-speed weapon in the time it took that
weapon to acquire it and fire; it would have to be able to turn on a dime at a
fraction of the speed of light.
The
only thing that made this possible was inertial control. Inertial controllers
were used in all space craft, otherwise they could not reach reasonable speeds
without squashing their crew flat from acceleration forces. After months of
research and development the Galactic science/philosophers, the crablike
Tchpth, managed to create an inertial stabilization system capable of damping
six hundred standard gravities with a reasonable field area and mass. Since the
resulting craft would be at least the size of a conventional F-15 it had more
than enough room for weapons and jammers. Acceleration, however, remained a
problem.
The
Federation in general used a reversal of the inertial damping field for
reactionless acceleration. While it was a tremendously efficient system, it had
some limitations that they had not yet overcome. Specifically, although they
could damp six hundred gravities of acceleration, they could not generate them.
Thus the fighter’s dampers exceeded its actual abilities. This was where human
ingenuity came to the fore.
The
humans on the design team made a series of points on the subject of reactionary
as opposed to reactionless thrust and the utility of some of the materials the
Galactics used regularly. After a brief protest over the inherent danger of the
system, the antimatter thruster and afterburner were born. Antiprotons and
water were squirted into a plenum chamber at a three-to-one mix ratio. When the
antimatter hit the water it created a thrust just made for getting down and
busy. Dropping more raw antimatter into the thrust plume created an afterburner
that gave new meaning to the name “Hammer.” The Space Falcons could even do a
maneuver previously the sole prerogative of the Harrier jump jet, a VSLP.
This
maneuver was discovered, accidentally, by a new Harrier pilot who found himself
in a fairly high-altitude battle of maneuver—a dogfight or furball to the
military—with an F-16. The F-16 was inarguably the superior aircraft for the
situation; it was considered the best dogfighter in the world.
The
new pilot was desperate to avoid impending mock doom and not yet instinctive
about what not to do in a Harrier. As a mistake, he accidentally pointed all of
his vector fans in opposed directions, then somehow recovered. If he had not
been high above the ground he would have found out just how unforgiving an
aircraft he was flying. Briefly.
Instead,
he suddenly found himself going one hundred eighty degrees in the opposite
direction, directly at the rapidly encroaching F-16. He fired his own,
notional, missiles, dove for the deck and both avoided the nearly inevitable
midair collision and “killed” the surprised and momentarily terrified F-16
pilot. Once it was determined what he had done—and a method to successfully and
safely replicate it was developed—the maneuver became a regular part of the
Harrier’s repertoire. All the other pilots suddenly started to give Harrier
pilots, mostly semisuicidal Marines, a wide berth in a furball; they were
likely to fly right up your nostrils.
What was unusual
in an “airbreather” fighter was the norm in a space system and the F-2000 Space
Falcon could do the identical maneuver. In spades. With a flip of the pilot’s
wrist the fighter could be pointed in the opposite direction, but because of
inertial forces would continue along its initial vector. However, an
application of antimatter thrusters and afterburners slowed all but the most
extreme velocities and had the fighter headed in the new direction in no time.
In the case of Takao Takagi—up close and personal to a Posleen Battleglobe that
had not even existed moments before—he used every trick he knew in that first
moment and it spared his life for another day.
He
flipped his fighter end for end, a “flikker” maneuver, and fired off his
antimatter thrusters. At almost the same instant he kicked in his afterburners.
Hitting the Hammer was a desperation maneuver at low relative velocities. At
reversed velocities, as he was after the flikker, it was nearly suicide,
requiring an extraordinary degree of skill. If the ship already had velocity or
acceleration negative to, that is away from, the antimatter mass, the
additional punch of the antimatter degrading was absorbable by the ship
systems. Although the inertial effects would be high, the dampers could absorb
them. All that occurred was extremely rapid acceleration.
However,
if the vector was neutral with respect to the location of the antimatter mass
or positive to it—as in flying into it—the danger was that not only could the
inertial dampers be overloaded, resulting in pilot mush, but portions of the
unconverted antimatter might touch the ship itself, with catastrophic results.
As
it was, for a moment he sustained over sixty Gs after damping. While likely to
kill most human beings, with training and if they are sustained for only an
instant, sixty Gs are marginally survivable. In the case of Takao Takagi it was
an instant he would remember for the rest of his life. As he came out of
momentary shock, he fired a volley of antimatter “lances.” The small,
“brilliant” weapons were about the size of a conventional AMRAAM that had
hypervelocity drivers and penetration aids designed to get inside Posleen
defenses. The Class Four antimatter warheads should be able to destroy or
severely damage a lander. He knew that his AID would be broadcasting warnings
so he didn’t even bother.
The
battleglobe right in front of him was the only one he could worry about, but he
heard scattered reports of others. His globe was on a vector headed away from
Earth but it was already maneuvering ponderously back into orbit.
The
thing was so large it was incomprehensible as a ship. Up close his fighter,
nearly the size of a World War II bomber, was swallowed by the immensity, a
gnat pecking at a house. The black globe was kilometers across, and every cubic
meter was devoted to killing. As his fighter tossed him through pounding
evasion maneuvers, it seemed that every one of those weapons was aimed at him.
The gigantic
black globe was comprised of thousands of individual ships. It was not
concentrating on the unimportant gnat pecking at its exterior. Indeed, it was
throwing missiles and plasma and lasers in every direction. As the Posleen
dropped towards Earth they seemed to target everything for destruction. Whether
it was wanton violence or calculated experience, nothing escaped their ire.
Satellites flickered and died, burning like moths in a flame as gouts of plasma
or laser beams touched their fragile skeletons. The nascent International Space
Station, a valiant project dropped in favor of more immediate plans and real
deep-space work, was good for an antimatter missile. Inoffensive bits of space
junk, sections of orbiters, detached skins or deceased satellites that had
inhabited useless orbits doing nothing but being in the way since the 1960s
were washed from space as the extraterrestrial juggernauts descended.
Light
kinetic energy weapons dropped towards the planet below as probable threat
locations were spotted or a God King simply wanted to make a pretty explosion.
Dozens of the small, smart entry vehicles dropped through the atmosphere
striking cities and military bases across Earth. Four of them for some reason
struck the Great Pyramids in Cairo and another half dozen were targeted on
deserted areas in the Central American jungle. The detonations—equivalent to a
ten-kiloton nuclear weapon—were tiny, white pinpricks on the surface of the
planet.
After
what seemed like days, but was in fact hours, Takao had expended all his lances
and was reduced to peppering the globe with his dual terawatt lasers. The globe
began to break up, exposing to fire more of the vulnerable landers and the more
important command dodecahedrons as it neared the atmosphere.
But
despite its increasing vulnerability, Takao had to break off. Space Falcons
were exactly that: Space falcons. Only vaguely aerodynamic and without a
heat shield, they would burn up entering the atmosphere at combat speeds.
Bitterly
ashamed at his inability to stop the inevitable, the pilot turned back to Lunar
Farbase, watching in his rear camera as the black ball broke apart into a swarm
of death descending towards the Pacific and his beloved home islands.
CHAPTER 30
The Pentagon, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1749 EDT October
9th, 2004 ad
“This is Bob
Argent at the Pentagon.” The familiar reporter was grim faced. He stood in a
nondescript, brightly lit hallway in the background of which figures in green,
blue and black uniforms could be seen hurrying in every direction. “While it
would be inaccurate to say that the United States military was caught
flat-footed by the upcoming Posleen landing, it is true that the Posleen are
both earlier and in greater force than anticipated. As the situation
progresses, we will be bringing you live feeds from Continental Army Command
here in the Pentagon, where their state-of-the-art GalTech landing projector is
hard at work determining probable landing areas. The word is that the final
landing area will probably be determined only half an hour before the actual
landing and we will be standing by live. The Continental Army Commander is
expected to have a short press conference within the next hour. He will discuss
defense plans and known American and other casualties from the bombardment.
This is Bob Argent, live, at the Pentagon.”
When
the word came over the radio, Shari Reilly took off her apron, handed it to the
manager and walked out of the Waffle House without looking back. If he didn’t
like it he could mail her the check. Most of the customers were walking out and
not many were paying. She had wanted to be prepared for this, but when the
daycare and the bills and the rent and the groceries were paid for, there was
not much left to set by. She had thirty dollars stashed in her purse and she
fully intended to write checks that were not good if she had to but first she
had to get the babies.
Wherever
the Posties landed, it was going to be chaos and she had to hang on to her cash
as long as possible. But if she was going to have to get out of town, she
needed some stuff. The baby—Susie was hardly a baby anymore, really a big girl
at two, almost as big as Kelly, but she still needed diapers—and little Billy
was sick and she needed some medicine. They needed some road food, stuff that
would keep, and batteries. Some bottled water. After she picked up the kids she
would just have to go to Wal-Mart or Target, just like everybody else in
Fredericksburg.
She
walked to her battered gray 1991 Grand Am, a faded beauty in faded clothes, her
fine hair wisping out from under the hairnet, got in and pumped the gas. After
several false starts the engine finally caught. Turning out onto VA 3 she
debated going to the stores and then getting the babies, but she felt a strong
need to have them by her now, when it all came to the wall.
The
sitter was frantic, wanting to keep the little ones while Shari shopped, but
she finally got the babies away and headed back to the malls. By the time she
got out onto 3, the traffic from the malls was backed up to U.S. 1.
She turned
around, got around the line of cars and pickup trucks pulling into the Guard
Armory and found a gas station. When she got to a pump she filled it up with
regular then walked into the 7-Eleven. As she got to the front of the line, she
pulled out her checkbook and screwed up her courage. She had used this same
store and dealt with Mr. Ramani for over three years and she knew the answer
was no.
“Take
a check?” she asked, holding up the checkbook.
Mr.
Ramani looked at her with the most neutral expression she had ever seen on his
coal black face, then nodded. “You postdate it.”
“What?”
“Postdate
it. And call me to tell me if I can deposit it.” He pulled out his card and
pressed it into her hand.
She
began to tear up then shook herself inside and wrote the check so fast her hand
practically cramped.
“You
take care, okay?” asked the Hindu as he took the proffered check.
“Okay,”
she answered, then blurted, “you too. God bless you.”
“Thank
you, and may your God bless you and your children,” he said and gestured at the
man behind her. “You pay cash or charge!”
“Why?”
asked the startled customer, putting away the checkbook.
“You
got money. Pay up.”
Shari
stepped outside trying not to cry and got back in traffic.
* * *
Lieutenant
Colonel Frank Robertson, battalion commander of the Two Hundred Twenty-Ninth
Engineering Battalion (Light, “Sappers Lead!”) United States Ground Forces,
stood at the head of the battalion conference table at parade rest. His first
order on arriving at the Fredericksburg headquarters that afternoon was to have
the chairs removed, since “nobody was going to have time to sit down anyway.”
“All
right, gentlemen,” he said to his assembled staff and company commanders,
“we’ve gamed this plenty of times. They’re here in more force than we expected
and earlier than we expected, but that doesn’t really affect us much. We have
our full equipment and ammunition load-out, including all necessary demolition
charges in the new ammo dump, and by the time we have a probable landing zone
the majority of our personnel should have made it in.” That would not include
the Alpha Company (Equipment) commander or his assistant division engineer.
Both of them were out of town on business and would certainly not be back
before the landing.
“There
are effectively two possibilities. We will be in the landing zone or we will
not be in the landing zone. If we are not in the landing zone we respond as
ordered to act against Posleen spread and localize them until sufficient forces
are available to destroy the infestation. On that highly probable basis I want
all of the companies fully loaded and ready to roll on first orders to do so.
You have the demolition plans for every bridge in Virginia and your primary,
secondary and tertiary targets.
“On
orders, if there is a landing in our area of responsibility, which is central
Virginia, we will begin rigging all the bridges leading out of the infested
zone for demolition. You will not, I say again, not, destroy any
bridge without express order unless the Posleen are in near contact, that means
one thousand meters or less.”
He
paused for a moment, obviously trying to find a good way to say something. “I
think that if you haven’t talked about this you probably have thought it. It
may be, probably will be, that some of those bridges will
have . . . refugees on them when the Posleen come into
close contact.
“You
have all seen the news and official reports from Barwhon and Diess; you know
what it is like for refugees with the Posleen. You may be tempted to let the
refugees over the bridges and blow the bridge up with Posleen on it. Gentlemen,
I will have court-martialed anyone who does that. You have no flexibility in
this. You will blow the bridge when the Posleen reach five hundred
meters distance. We cannot take the risk of the Posleen capturing a bridge. Is
that clear?” There was a muted rumble of ascent from a ring of serious faces.
“Very well, are there any questions?”
Only
one hand was raised, that of the acting assistant division engineer. A terribly
young, recent graduate of the University of Virginia. He was just out of the
state-sponsored OCS that was providing most of the new crop of Virginia’s
officers.
“Yes,
Lieutenant Young?”
“And
if we are in the interdiction circle, sir?”
The
commander paused and looked around the circle of serious older faces. Most of
them had known each other off and on for years and he wondered how much longer
he would be looking at the same group. “Well, Lieutenant, in that case we die
and all of those we love die with us. And all we can do is take as many Posleen
with us to hell as we can.”
Mueller
had driven the quiet engineer around town since just after sunrise. They had
done the Fan and the university district in the morning and south Richmond—with
its unique intermingled odor of petrochemical plants, paper manufacture and
tobacco processing—in the early afternoon. Now, as the afternoon wore on,
Mueller had negotiated the tour into Schockoe Bottom. After a brief tour around
the Bottom, he intended to head up to Libby Hill and the best view of Richmond
around.
Instead
the engineer gave his first command of the entire tour, ordering him to turn
down Twelfth Street then following it around onto Byrd. After a dizzying series
of turns and three stops to consult the U.S. Geological Survey map they had
brought, they were stopped under the Schockoe Slip underpass, a stone arch
bridge that once connected the city proper to the Kanawaha Canal. Now it
connected two trendy office complexes built into and around the
nineteenth-century buildings.
“You’re
thinking of something,” stated Mueller, as the engineer again consulted the
map, switching between the quadrangle and a larger street map. More detailed
maps supplied by the city engineering department littered the backseat of the
government sedan.
“Umm,”
Keene replied, noncommittally. He got out and walked up the gray stone stairs
from Canal Street to Schockoe Slip. He stopped at the top and looked down from
the overpass into Schockoe Bottom. Mueller looked at the same scene and could
see some good positions for a small-unit firefight, but not anything to
interest a nationally renowned defense engineer.
None
of the major city engineers or officials had been officially available to
“sight-see.” The strategic plan for Richmond’s defense was still up in the air,
one of the reasons that Continental Army Command had sent John Keene. Keene’s
suggestions and use of terrain in the construction of the Tennessee River
defenses had brought him to the attention of the chief engineer for Third Army.
When Richmond’s planning had begun to lag, the chief engineer had offered
Keene’s services to First Army as a useful addition.
However,
despite the enthusiastic reception by the Twelfth Corps Commander, who was
tasked with the defense of Richmond and southern Virginia, Keene was less
enthusiastically received by the other engineers. Each of them had their own
pet projects to advance and the internecine fighting was the fundamental reason
that the defenses were lagging.
The Corps Engineer,
Colonel Bob Braggly, commander of the Corps Engineering Brigade, preferred
turning the Libby and Mosby Hills into a giant firebase and giving up the
center of Richmond to the Posleen. The city engineer, given quasimilitary
standing by the new “Fortress Forward” stance, absolutely refused to surrender
one inch of ground, preferring the concept of a wall enclosing the entire city
limits.
Various
local engineering firms had been called in to break the deadlock. Instead they
offered their own versions or negated each other’s effects by weighing in on
one side or the other. Either project was going to be the biggest engineering
contract in a hundred years of Richmond’s history, ten or twenty times as large
as the Floodwall project.
The
corps commander had flatly stated that there was no way to defend a wall that
extensive with the troops at hand. But one of his subordinates, the
Twenty-Ninth Infantry Division commander, had bypassed the corps commander in
the chain of command and sent staff studies supporting the elongated wall to
First Army. John Keene, as a disinterested third party recommended through
national command, was a possible way to break the deadlock.
Keene looked at the map again and walked
under the Martin Agency building into the circle at one hundred Schockoe Slip.
Mueller had never been this way and had gotten slightly turned around but it
only took a moment for him to reorient himself when he saw the Richbrau
microbrewery. It had been a long day and he was trying to figure out a way to
subtly suggest that maybe it was Miller time, when Keene finally responded,
“I’m thinking of Diess.”
“So
am I,” remarked Mueller, following his own thought process, “it sure is warm
for October.” In fact the weather had been unseasonably cool, but he was about
to continue in the vein that a cold Ole Nick would go down a treat when he
realized that Keene had gone almost catatonic in thought. He waited for him to
go on. “Is this when I’m supposed to prompt you,” he finally prompted, “or when
I’m supposed to shut up and wait?”
Keene
looked at the fountain in the middle of the circle without replying and
muttered, “Captain Morgan, I am really sorry for what we are going to do to
you.” Then turning back to Mueller he thumbed across the street. “Time for a
cold one, Sergeant.”
Once
they were seated in the dimness of the microbrewery, having dodged the various
street people between themselves and their goal, Keene became abruptly
animated.
“Okay,”
he said taking a sip of the tasty malt and stabbing the map, “how do you kill
Posleen?”
“Well,
apparently they’ve ruled out poison gas,” Mueller joked, “so I guess that
leaves artillery.”
“Right,
and what is the problem with killing them with artillery?”
“I
don’t know.” Mueller waited for Keene to go on but realized that the engineer
was really testing him. “Forward observers I suppose. Seeing them while staying
alive yourself,” he finally answered testily. He’d had more than enough
personal experience with how hard they were to kill.
“In
part. And that if you don’t contain them, physically, they both do more damage
and have the option to figure out how to get to your forces. The best thing is
to keep them at arms’ reach. Failing that, to have them contained where you
have superior terrain advantage, man-made or natural. With me so far?”
“Yep.”
“Okee-dokee.
On Diess, once the humans got their shit together, they formed the boulevards
into tremendous killing grounds. In Tennessee we were doing the same thing with
walls and even some tunnels. Lead them by the nose, then corral them and pound
them with machine guns, manjacks and artillery.”
“Never
work here,” countered Mueller. He was familiar with the Diess operation where
the Third Corps commander had built walls along the boulevards and slaughtered
the Posleen. The differences in cities were marked. “The skyscrapers are too
flimsy, the distances are shorter and the city engineer would have a cow. Then
the governor, who is a buddy of the city engineer and the Twenty-Ninth ID
commander and, for that matter, the President, would have a cow.”
“Sure,”
agreed Keene, easily. “But would they give up Schockoe Bottom?”
Mueller
thought about that one. “Possibly,” he finally answered. “I would have to say
probably.” The area was half deserted, with only a few businesses and the bars
that supplied the local forces with beverages surviving the economic blight.
“On
every other planet the Posleen have invaded for the past hundred and fifty
years, all the wealth, the production wealth, is in the megascrapers,” Keene
pointed out. “The Galactics have their factories built right into them. So, the
Posleen are expected to go for our skyscrapers; if it’s low, it’s less of a
target to them.
“So
when they land near Richmond, from any direction, they’re going to head for the
city center. Now, Richmond should have been evacuated by then. The city
engineer can bitch all he wants, but CONARC has designated the inner cities as
the defense zones, screw the suburbs.
“So,
using techniques as yet undetermined, we will lure the Posleen forward from
every direction, but all the roads will lead to Schockoe Bottom and none of
them will lead out. The tough part, the heavy engineering part, will be making
sure that, one, they can only get to Schockoe Bottom and, two, they can’t get
back out.”
“Posleen
check in . . .” said Mueller with a growing smile.
“ . . . but
they don’t check out. You got it. I want to go look at those heights across the
way . . .”
“That’s
Libby Hill. It was next on the agenda.”
“But
first I want to get a better look at the Bottom. It would be good if we could
set up some sort of direct-fire positions into the pocket. I was thinking of
firing from across the river, but maybe we could build a berm.”
“What’s
wrong with the Wall?” asked Mueller, puzzled. “Besides wracking stress. Can’t
we just backfill?”
“What
wall?” asked the puzzled engineer.
John
Keene looked up at the thirty feet of reinforced concrete that made up the
mile-long Richmond floodwall and grinned like a teenager. “Oh, man,” he said,
gesturing at the Army Corps of Engineers heraldic device, a two-turreted
castle, on the face, “are the Posties ever going to learn to hate that symbol.”
For
the next two hours he and Mueller walked around the floodwall, Schockoe Bottom
and the surrounding area, occasionally driving when something in the distance
caught their fancy. Finally they stood in Mosby Park, on Mosby Hill, where a
group of children from a nearby preschool played under the careful tutelage of elderly
teachers. As Keene looked down his mind was filled with visions of fire.
“We
can just pack the back side of this hill with those stubby tube artillery
things . . .”
“Do
you mean mortars?” asked Mueller, chuckling.
“Yeah,
them. Do you know they have more killing power than much larger artillery?”
Keene continued animatedly.
“Um,
yeah. I knew that.”
“It’s
because they don’t need as heavy a casing.”
“I
know, sir.”
“Right.
Anyway. We block off exit from the pocket on this side by rubbling those
abandoned factories down there and piling the rubble from the wall to this
hill.”
“Got
it,” said Mueller, sketching a diagram on his AID.
“On
the other side, it’s not as good but we have plenty of time and concrete. We’ll
build a wall connector from the Ethyl Corporation Hill to the wall. Then
continue around the terrain of the city, basically down Canal to Twelfth then
over to Thirteenth then along the streets to 95.”
“Good,”
Mueller commented.
“Why
good?”
“That
leaves the Richbrau in the perimeter.”
“Yeah,”
laughed Keene, “I hadn’t thought of that.”
“Well,
we just would have had to change the perimeter.”
“Right,”
laughed Keene again. Then he looked puzzled. “Hey, why are we in the Crowne
Plaza instead of the Berkley Hotel? It’s right next door to the Richbrau.”
“Hardy
Boys.”
“What?”
“Cyberpunks.
They got there first. One of the laws of SpecOps: never mix Cybers and SF, it
just doesn’t work.”
“What
the hell are Cyberpunks doing in Richmond?”
“ . . . and
never ask Cybers what they’re doing anywhere.”
“Oh.” Keene
shook his head and returned to the business at hand. “The perimeter will be as
follows: 95 to the Franklin exit. Block all entrances into the city. Use all
the buildings for direct fire into the pocket. Continue up Thirteenth then cut
across to Twelfth at Cary down to Byrd. The old power station is outside, the
Federal Reserve and Riverfront Plaza are inside. Maintain the defenses up to
around Belvedere Street where it gets carried down to the river and necked off
with the only real wall we’re going to have to build.
“Whatever
direction the Posleen come from, all roads leading to Schockoe Bottom are open
and all roads leading elsewhere are closed. Pack the back side of the wall with
troops, pack the skyscrapers with troops, all of them firing into the pocket.
Artillery and mortars on the heights. If they’re only on the north side, we can
pack artillery on the south side of the James River and pound them all day
long.
“God,”
John paused for a moment, eyes practically glowing, “it’s going to be glorious.”
“Just
remember,” Mueller cautioned, “no plan survives contact with the enemy.”
“What?”
asked Keene, confused.
“They
never told you that in Tennessee?”
“No.
Why is that?”
“It’s
sort of a military axiom,” explained Mueller, watching the afternoon traffic build
early. “The other side wants to win too, so they try to figure out how to
defeat your plan. Although that’s less of a problem with Posleen than with
humans. And then there are all the little things you didn’t think of. There are
changes in orders that don’t take into account the real situation. There are
bad communications that lead to actions like Pickett’s Charge. Lee said ‘Don’t
charge’ and the message was received ‘Charge.’ There’s the ‘fog of war,’ making
decisions on the basis of what you think is reality when in fact it is not.
“Anyway,
you construct your plan and really internalize it, but you also construct
alternative plans in case that one goes awry. If your primary plan is
internalized, but not really expected to succeed perfectly, you can devise
changes on the fly. And then you construct your GOTH Plan.”
“A
Goth Plan?” asked Keene again, shaking his head at the pessimistic outlook of
soldiers. “What? As in getting overrun by Goths?”
“Not
‘Goth’ as in ‘Hun,’ ‘GOTH’ as in G-O-T-H. Your Go-To-Hell plan. Your plan when
all your other plans have gone to hell and the wolf is at the door. Your, ‘They
died with their boots on’ plan.”
“Oh.”
“So
what’s the GOTH plan?”
“I
don’t know,” answered Keene, musing on the landscape below. “I don’t plan for
failure very well.”
“Then
somebody fucked up saying you’re a defense expert. ‘Expect success, plan for
failure’ is right up there with ‘on dangerous ground maneuver, on deadly ground
fight’ as a military axiom.”
“The
only military axioms I was aware of before the Planetary Defense Center program
were ‘never volunteer for anything’ and ‘never get involved in a land war in
Asia.’ ”
“Well,
now you know,” Mueller fiddled his fingers and wrinkled his brow with a grin,
“um, three more.”
Keene
chuckled as Mueller’s AID chirped.
“Sergeant
Mueller.”
“Yes,
AID?” Mueller said with a smile.
“Five
Posleen globes have just exited hyperspace in near-Earth orbit. TERDEF analysis
calls for landings in approximately three hours.” The voice was so toneless
that the facts took a moment to sink in.
“What?”
Mueller’s eyes momentarily went round and his skin flushed with a cold sweat.
He involuntarily looked up, then shook himself thinking the action was futile.
Even as he mentally started to berate himself there was a sudden flash of light
in the cloudless sky. The detonation of an antimatter reactor was clear even in
bright sunlight.
“Five
Posleen globes have just exited hyperspace in near-Earth orbit. TERDEF analysis
calls for landings in approximately three hours.”
Mueller
looked at Keene who had continued to look out over the cityscape.
Uh,
oh. “AID.”
“Yes,
Sergeant Mueller?”
“Contact
Sergeant Major Mosovich. Tell him to get the corps commander to stall on the
defense plan. I think we have a winner.”
“Well,”
said Keene turning back to the sergeant. “I see what you mean about plans now.
I suppose I’d better get started on that GOTH plan.”
CHAPTER 31
The Pentagon, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1820 EDT October
9th, 2004 ad
“Have you been
getting everything you needed?” asked General Horner as he strode into the
conference room. It had been billed as a press conference but, in a rare burst
of sanity, the news media agreed to simply have one representative of each
major media “type” in the Continental Army Center.
Until
the Blue Mountain Planetary Defense Center was completed, the nerve center for
the defense of the United States was in the Pentagon. The indefensible building
gave Jack Horner the uncomfortable feeling of swinging in the breeze. Being on
the front line did not bother him—he had been there and done that—but it was no
place to command a continental-scale battle.
His
AID would help, but even with it he needed an undistracted staff and that was
not going to happen if the Posleen were breathing down their necks. And the
latest information made that look pretty likely.
“Well,
sir, we really haven’t been given any access since the first warning,”
answered Argent, as the unofficial spokesperson. Although the other
representatives were all “Pentagon Hands” none of them had Argent’s depth of
experience or name recognition. His cameraman, another old Pentagon hand,
subtly directed his camera towards the general. Although the press conference
had not officially been “started” all was fair in a fluid situation like this.
“So
I understand,” said Horner with a bleak smile of anger. It was not how he had
told the Pentagon Public Information Office to handle information flow. As he
had just explained to the chief of information’s replacement.
“To
change that, I’m going to assign you Lieutenant Colonel Tremont, my senior
aide.” He gestured to the slim, dark lieutenant colonel accompanying him. “He
can cut through any red tape you may encounter. We so far have no indication
that the Posleen use battlefield intelligence. I’ve already cut half of the red
tape out and decided you can report on just about anything you generate while
you’re in here. I’m giving you one hundred percent access to my areas of
responsibility. You basically have Top Secret clearance and assumed
Need-To-Know on anything related to this invasion. If anyone has any questions
about that they can direct them to me after they have answered your
questions.”
Argent
looked momentarily stunned. “Thank you, sir. Are you sure about that?”
“This
was the original plan, believe it or not. I have to communicate effectively not
only to my troops, but to the citizens of the United States. It is my job, my
duty, to protect them and keep them informed of dangers to the best of my
ability. The best way to do that is through you,” he gestured at the TV crew,
“and your radio friends.” He gestured at the representatives from ABC Radio.
“Pardon
me,” he continued, turning to the print journalists and photographers, “but you
guys come last.” That got a laugh.
“So,
shall we start?” asked Bob.
“What,
we haven’t already?” Jack said with another cold smile.
“Well . . .”
Argent temporized. He hadn’t dealt much with the Continental Army commander but
he recognized the smile as a bad sign.
“Hasn’t
your cameraman been filming the whole thing?” asked Horner, shortly. “And
unless I’m an idiot, everybody is taking notes.”
“Okay,”
admitted Argent. “In that case: General Horner, it has been an hour since the
Posleen came out of hyperspace. What’s happening?” The cameraman lifted the
minicam to his shoulder to get a steadier shot.
“There’ve
been some space battles between the fighter patrols and the converted frigates
that were on station, but this incursion has been outside all the expected
parameters,” responded Horner formally. “The Posleen are here in greater
strength than we anticipated, they are more bunched than we were expecting not
only on the basis of Galactic reports but on the basis of our own experience on
Barwhon and Diess. Last but not least, they came out unusually close to the
Earth; dangerously close in fact.
“Because
of all of this the Fleet has been unable to engage them with any sort of
strength. They are coming down more or less untouched, while we have lost quite
a few of the fighters and frigates that engaged them. I have to say this, those
Fleet people did a hell of a job given the disparity of the forces they faced.
Their efforts were just outstanding.”
“Can
we get a look at some video?” asked one of the radio personalities.
“We’ll
get some of that in from the Operations center in a moment. Having said the
other, about total access, I want you to understand that we have a job to do
and we need to do it to the best of our ability. Understand?”
“Yes,”
replied the reporters, wondering when the hammer was going to fall.
“I
don’t have time to draw any of my people off their duties; so we’re going to go
into the CIC to meet the players. They are all very busy trying to save our
country, so be polite. This is a very quiet, serene place where people
concentrate very hard: no disruptions. Think of it like a war library. No
shouts for a quote, no flash photography, no camera lights.” He fixed them with
a blue, basilisk stare until all of them had nodded in compliance. “If any of
you do any of those things in CIC, I’ll have you thrown out of this building by
a suit of combat armor. He will have orders to shot-put you into the Potomac.”
The river was nearly a mile away. The reporters were fairly sure it was
hyperbole, but looking at the grim-faced, cold-eyed general, they were not
absolutely sure.
“After
the CIC, I’ll hook you up with a couple of our technical people who will try to
integrate our systems with yours. I want you guys to know where the landings
are going to be as fast as I do. But no disruptions. The American people cannot
afford them. Your families cannot afford them. Clear?”
“Clear,”
answered the sobered journalists. Never had a situation like this occurred,
where the people they were interviewing were in charge of saving not only their
lives, but the lives of their families and loved ones. In real time. Usually,
rattling a subject or throwing an unanswerable question at them was the best
way to get a really juicy quote. Those techniques suddenly seemed like a bad
idea. Rattled would be bad. Argent looked around and saw the other reporters
coming to the same sobering conclusion.
Horner
and his aide led them down a short corridor and over to an MP-guarded door. On
the far side was a small antechamber and beyond a large, darkened room filled
with a mixture of Terran and Galactic technology. On the far side of the room
was a giant Mercator projection showing a number of orbit lines in green, blue
and red and five large ovals designating possible landing areas. The outside of
the ovals, where they were discrete, was yellow and they shaded inward through
orange to red. One was centered on the Atlantic, another on the Pacific, a
third on Southeast Asia to India, one on Central Asia and one on Africa. The TV
cameramen started filming, not sure if the screens would show well enough to
broadcast. The quiet atmosphere reminded him of a surgery, everyone
concentrating on their individual tasks for an overall good.
The
possible areas for Posleen landings were still vast; the Atlantic oval spread
from Chicago to Berlin. The Africa oval overlapped the Southeast Asia oval. The
very edge of the Pacific oval overlapped the Southeast Asia oval near the
Philippines. In all they nearly circumnavigated the northern hemisphere.
“Full
house spread,” whispered a reporter from the Atlanta Journal Constitution.
“This
screen used to be covered with satellite tracks,” pointed out Lieutenant
Colonel Tremont in a whisper. “The remaining military satellites and facilities
are the green tracks, while the blue tracks are remaining commercial
facilities.”
“Yeah,”
whispered the CNN producer in return. “We’re mainly going out on dedicated
landlines to cable operators and on the Internet. Cell, pagers and phones are
mostly down.”
“This
screen is, obviously, not used for tactical operations,” Colonel Tremont
explained. “But it is useful for getting an overall picture.”
“Colonel,”
Argent asked quietly, putting on his reporter face, “is the loss of the
satellites going to degrade the quality of your artillery fire and command and
control? I understand that most development in those areas has concentrated on
global positioning satellites.”
“It
would, yes, except for the extraordinary work over the last three years of the
United States Geological Survey Service. Using a mixture of military, civilian
and volunteer personnel, they have put in survey markers across the country, in
most areas no more than a kilometer apart. In turn, the location and elevation
of the markers have been put into a universal target database. Now, whenever an
artillery unit gets into place, they just find the distance and elevation to
the nearest UTD point and input that data. That gives them their location to
the millimeter. Other units use a similar although slightly less accurate
system. So, yes, it will be a pain, but with the UTD we have effectively
replaced GPS.”
“What
about targeting the enemy? Didn’t that depend on the GPS as well?”
“Same
thing, only backwards. The forward observer determines his distance and
elevation to the nearest UTD and his distance and elevation to the target and
sends the raw data to the targeting computers. It all can be done with a
special laser range-finding system. The targeting computer crunches the numbers
and assigns the fire to the appropriate guns. It’s incredibly automatic.”
“Will
it work?” asked the Journal Constitution reporter.
“Ah,
well that is the question isn’t it?”
“You
said something about connecting our equipment up, General,” interjected the
producer.
“Of
course, let me introduce Major George Nix.” General Horner gestured for one of
the hovering officers and the slight, bespectacled major hurried over from one
of the displays.
“Major
Nix came out of Space Command and is our tactical systems officer. The TacSO is
the officer in charge of making sure all the systems integrate and are
maintained, as opposed to the tactical actions officer, Colonel Ford. Colonel Ford—we
call him the TacCO—is in charge of making the moment-to-moment tactical
decisions.
“Major
Nix, can you get these journalists a feeder screen and somehow hook their
cameras up? I want to make sure that everyone in the United States has
up-to-the-minute access to all the data we are generating.”
“Yes,
sir, we anticipated this.” He turned to one of the video technicians. “Come
with me.”
Nix
led the tech out of the room, the reporters following and quietly making notes
about the intense atmosphere in the room. He led them down the corridor and
into a well-lit chamber where two specialists and a slightly overweight staff
sergeant were arguing at a display.
“Sergeant
Folsom, ‘One If By Land.’ And do it fast.”
“Yes,
sir.” The two specialists hurried out of the room as the sergeant went around
configuring displays. As he worked he talked. “Gentlemen, we had anticipated
this, so you will get more functionality than you would expect, but less than
you are used to. I’m setting up two displays for the print and radio guys, and
we’ll feed you to your headquarters, ABC, over RealAudio, so you can do your
radio thing over the Net. The Net is busy right now, but the usage is not as
high as a normal business day so you should have good connectivity.
“The consoles
use a simple graphic user interface. Right-click on an area of the map and it
will zoom down to a fineness of about six hundred miles on a side. It’s not a
political map. It’s drawn from satellite imagery, so somebody had better be up
on their geography.”
“Sergeant,”
asked the CNN producer, appropriating one of the consoles, “is there any way to
run a second audio feed back to CNN?”
“Sure,
if somebody there has Interphone or NetMeeting.”
“Where?”
The
sergeant walked over and tapped at the next console. “What’s their URL?”
Within
minutes the sergeants and the specialists, returned from rerouting Internet T-3
lines to increase the room’s available bandwidth, had configured all of the
backup CIC consoles to support the media effort. The reporters were practically
speechless.
“Sergeant,”
said the CNN producer, as she finished preparing the headquarters’ team for the
next round of reports, “when this is all over, if you ever need a job, come see
me.”
“I’ll
think about it, when this is all over.” The question of when it would be over
and whether any of them would be around to see it was unspoken.
“Well,
now all we do is wait,” said Argent, watching the ovals of probable landing
areas reduce on his monitor.
“What
about reporting on the personnel being called back to duty?” asked the video
technician, watching the feed on his own monitor to ensure the “take” was
working.
“That’s
being reported on in Atlanta.”
“Poor
bastards.”
“Bye,
honey,” said Mike, shrugging into his silks top.
“Bye,
Daddy,” said Cally, looking up at him with round eyes.
“You
listen to Grandpa, all right? And be a good girl.”
“I
will, Daddy. When the Posleen come we get a few, then run and hide. Stop, drop
and roll, right?”
Unless
they’re right on top of you.
“And
then I’ll come dig you out,” he promised.
“Right,”
she said, face twisting as she tried not to cry.
“Take
care, son,” said his father, proffering a Mason jar for the road.
“Too
right, the last time in the body and fender shop was enough. Getting shot
smarts.”
“Long
drive.”
“Too
long. They’ll be down before I’m in South Carolina.” He looked at the Mason
jar, shrugged and took a hit. The fiery liquor felt good going down. He sealed
it and tossed it in his bag.
“How
you going?”
“Want
to know if I’m going to be in a landing path?”
“Something like
that. The Twenty-Fourth Tennessee Volunteers are right up the road as the
Tennessee Divide reserve and the whole Fifty-Third Infantry is holding Rabun
Gap. So we’re probably going to be fine. You, on the other hand, are driving up
to Pennsylvania. So, are you taking the plains or the mountains?”
“I’m
still trying to decide. The plains would be faster, even with the interstates
doglegging away from the Gap. But, that is a possible landing area according to
Shelly, so . . .”
“So.
Which way?”
“Mountains,”
Mike decided. “Up Interstate 81. Better to be caught in traffic jams than in a
landing.”
“Want
a piece?” A Glock 9mm appeared by legerdemain in the old man’s hand.
“No,
I’m packed. Speaking of which.” He reached into his bag and pulled out a finely
carved wooden box. The wood was an odd shade of lavender-brown Mike Senior had
never seen before. Mike Junior handed it to Cally. “I was going to leave this
with your Grandpa as a birthday present, but I think now would be a good time
to give it to you.”
She
was puzzled by the latch, a circular pattern similar in appearance to a maze,
with no obvious buttons. Pulling on the sections caused them to lift, and they
could be twisted on their axes but none of the actions seemed to open the box.
“It’s
an Indowy puzzle box, which I don’t, unfortunately, have time to let you work
through. Watch.” He lifted three sections and twisted them until the sections
joined together to form a pattern reminiscent of a multiheaded dragon. When
slid back into place, the latch released and the top opened as the serpent
seemed to writhe off the box and into a circuitous dance. The fire-breathing
hologram danced above the open box as Cally gasped at the contents.
“I’m
still getting presents from Indowy clans over Diess. Most of them I pass on to
the survivors or their families, but this I couldn’t resist.” In the box,
cradled in a lustrous silken foam were a gilded pistol and two magazines.
“I’ve
got a case of ammunition for this out in the truck. The powers-that-be still
frown on grav-guns in civilian hands but this is a pulser gun. It fires pulse
darts. Each of the darts has an electrical charge in it powerful enough to kill
an elephant, much less a Posleen. There are twenty-four darts in a clip. It’s
accurate to about a hundred yards with a good hand.” He pulled a clip out of
his cargo pocket. “This is a clip of practice ammunition and you can reuse an
expended dart as practice ammo. But to fire it in practice, you have to charge
the onboard capacitor.” He turned to Mike Senior. “It charges on 220.”
“No
sweat.”
“Thanks,
Daddy,” said Cally, picking it up and feeling the heft. “It’s small.”
“It’s
designed for Indowy, not that they would ever use it. It’s made out of
lightweight boron polymers. The charge on a dart is adjustable, so it can be
nonlethal. And it’ll take down a Posleen, unlike your Walther.” The small-frame
pistol was notorious for jamming, but it was one of the few in the world that
both fit her hand and had a decent-sized round. Since the Posleen were not
going to be stopped by an itsy-bitsy little .380 low-velocity, Papa O’Neal had
tapped and filled its bullets with mercury. The Posleen that caught one might
not be killed but it was going to know it had been kissed.
“Umm,”
she asked, carefully turning it so as not to point at either adult, “how do
you clear it and where is the damn safety?”
Mike
laughed and pulled out a computer disk. “Here’s the manual, read it on your
laptop. For the time being you have to trust me that it is empty.”
“Thanks,
Daddy.” She grinned, putting the pistol back in the case. “You’re swell.”
“Get
some practice with it right away. I know you’re good with that James Bond gun,
but this has more stopping power and is better suited for your hands. I’d
prefer you get familiar with it in case you have to use it.”
“Okay.”
He
tousled her hair, thinking that she looked a lot like her mother must have at
the same age. “You stay safe, okay, pumpkin?”
“Okay.”
She was tearing up again, the excitement of the gift giving way to the fear of
the moment.
“And
you listen to your Grandpa.”
“You
already said that.”
“I’m
sorry we didn’t get up to the base so you could see my unit.”
“It’s
okay, we can after you kick their asses back into space.”
Mike
Junior looked significantly at Mike Senior, who shrugged his shoulders,
unrepentant. “What do you want, a little lady or a little warrior?”
Mike
picked her up and hugged her gently. “G’bye, pumpkin.”
“Bye,
Daddy.” She bucked a little in his arms, holding back the sobs.
He
set her down, grabbed his bag and headed out the door.
They
followed him downstairs and out the front door where he removed the case of
pulser darts from the front of the Tahoe, handed it to his dad and threw in his
bag. He took his daughter in his arms one last time.
“And
if they land here, what do you do?”
“Shoot,
scoot and hide.”
“Okay.”
“Don’t
worry about us, Daddy, you’re going to be on the sharp end.”
“Are
you worried about me, pumpkin?” asked Mike, honestly surprised.
“Uh-huh.”
She started to cry.
“Oh,
pumpkin,” he smiled, putting on his mission face, “don’t worry about me.” He
slipped on his Milspecs, wrapped Shelly around his head as a hands-free
communicator and smiled ferally. “I’ve finally got the Posleen right where I
want them. They don’t know it, but they’re about to get the whole can of
kick-ass.” He looked out at the fields he had grown up in and thought for a
moment about what he had said. The company was trained and ready. He was
trained and ready. They could do this. The company believed it. The
battalion commander and staff believed it. Regiment was as sure as if it were a
steel-hard certainty.
Now
if he could only convince himself.
Mueller,
meantime, was getting on a different kind of mission face, as were Mosovich,
Ersin and Keene. Keene’s proposed plan for the defense of Richmond was not
meeting with the approval of the mayor or the city engineer.
“We
thought you were going to come up with a compromise plan, Mr. Keene, not a new
plan to destroy the city,” snarled the mayor, banging the conference table.
“It
is not intended to destroy the city, Mr. Mayor, only a small portion of it.”
“And
it does not provide for the defense of the outskirts whatsoever,” noted the
city engineer, poring over the detailed plan that Mueller’s AID had printed out
on their arrival.
“Fortress
Forward does not intend the defense of the majority of the city,” interjected
the corps engineer, “as we have pointed out time and again.”
The corps
commander motioned him subtly to back off, more than familiar with the old
argument between the two. “This firesack of Schockoe Bottom actually looks like
precisely what the Fortress Forward program is all about, but it only makes
provisions for one outer fort,” he continued, “instead of the suggested
multiple.”
“Yes,
but it makes best use of the available terrain,” noted Keene. “This is really
the only area where you have two useable terrain features to emplace on and
catch the Posleen in a crossfire. And the outer fortress can provide fire
support if the forces are forced to retreat towards Newport News.”
“What
about the rest of the city? What about south Richmond? Our primary industrial
area?”
Colonel
Braggly was again waved down by the corps commander as Keene answered. “It is
indefensible. Period. With the exception of a few gently rolling knolls, the
James is the only noticeable terrain feature.
“There
are four scenarios to work with here, gentlemen,” Keene said in an iron voice,
“and we have to be very clear about what they are. Sergeant First Class
Mueller, what is the best-case scenario for Richmond?”
“The
Posleen land beyond masking terrain features, effectively out of range to cause
us harm.”
“Right,”
agreed Keene. “In which case, a few days later a portion of the corps rolls out
to wherever they are needed.”
“What?”
shouted the mayor. “Why the hell are you going to do that?” he snarled, turning
to the corps commander.
“To
support those in need, Mr. Mayor,” replied the corps commander, calmly. “I
would hope that other corps would do the same for us. No, I know they would; it
would be the right military decision and so ordered. Of course, if the Posleen
land well away from here, other units would react. We’re not going anywhere if
they land in California.”
“Yes,
sir, but I was thinking if they landed south of the Broad River or north of the
Potomac, for example,” noted Keene. “Now, Master Sergeant Ersin, what is the
worst-case scenario?”
“They
land directly on us,” he said to universal grimaces. His own scarred face
remained stone-faced, eyes remote.
“And
in that case,” Keene said, with an almost unnoticeable twinkle in his eyes for
the moment of levity, “we activate our GOTH Plan.”
“Our
what?” asked the city engineer.
“Our
Go-To-Hell plan,” answered Mosovich, face as stony as Ersin’s.
“The
plan you use when all your other plans have failed,” noted the corps commander,
nodding his head at the clued-in civilian engineer.
“Your
‘On Deadly Ground Plan,’ as it is sometimes called,” interjected the otherwise
silent corps chief of staff.
“Our
‘we are fucked’ plan,” Keene clarified, “will be to destroy the city, Mr.
Mayor, because there will be no survivors anyway and we might as well leave the
Posleen a smoking ruin. Mine every building, blow up every block as they come
to it. Leave not one edible scrap of food including humans, destroy the bodies
as we go. Kill as many Posleen as we can, but most of all, make it very plain
that fighting humans is a losing proposition: All you get is sorry, hungry and
sore.” He looked around the room and for once saw consensus.
“You
might make that Virginians,” corrected the city engineer with a slight, sad
smile.
“As you will.
Ah, sir, am from the Great State of Juwjah, Ah will have you know.” It was good
for a little laugh. “But that is the absolute worst-case scenario. There are
two more, anyone care to take a stab?”
“They
land either north or south of the James, but not right on us,” said the corps
commander, “we’ve gotten that far.”
“Right.
Now, if they have landed south of the James, my professional recommendation is
to pull back across the James and wait for support. Maybe do some things with
the bridges and the floodwall on that side, in the way of sucking them in, but
basically the south side is open terrain and you’ll just have to sit on this
side and pound them with artillery. On the other hand, if they land on the
north side we probably have the time to implement the fire-trap plan. If we get
started right away.”
“You
already said it is pointless if they don’t land between the Potomac and the
James. It might not even work if they land north of Fredericksburg,” argued the
City Engineer. “In that case, I don’t think we could get the support of the
owners of those facilities for the demolition work.”
“We
don’t need it,” pointed out the corps engineer. “Necessary defensive works
under the emergency war provisions. We have eminent domain.”
“That
could be tied up in court for days,” bemoaned the mayor.
“They
can apply for just reparations,” said the corps commander, “but that is all.”
“Yes,”
said Keene, “that has all been covered in the PDC program. The private owner
just does not have a leg to stand on if the property falls under the heading of
necessary defensive structures as defined by the area commander, which is
General Keeton,” he noted, gesturing at the Corps Commander at the head of the
table. “He can order it with no debate now or in the future, if he, in his sole
opinion, feels it militarily justified.”
“On
the other hand,” noted General Keeton, with a frown, “we will absolutely
require the help of the entire civilian populace. We cannot afford to
antagonize the city and certainly not its leaders,” he concluded, gesturing at
the mayor and the engineer. “We will need your complete and undivided support.”
“Do
we really have to destroy Schockoe Bottom?” asked the mayor, plaintively. “It’s
an eyesore and a crime zone, but there’s a lot of history there.”
“Mr.
Mayor,” said Mueller gently, “whether today, or in the next year, a whole new
book in the history of Richmond is about to be written. The only question is
whether there will be anyone to write it.”
The
mayor looked at the city engineer, who shook his head in resignation. “I still
say we could have circumvalleted the entire city.”
“Maybe
we could have,” nodded Keene, “but we’re out of time and it would have thrown
away our best terrain features. There is no way, in Fortress Forward, to save
the city as a functioning entity. Rather, the idea is to absolutely screw the
Posleen while retaining the historic core.”
The
corps commander nodded. “Correct. Mr. Mayor? Mr. City Engineer? I need your
active support in this. Are you with us?”
The
mayor nodded his head. “Yes, yes.” He looked at the engineer, who nodded his
own head mutely. “Yes, we are.”
“All
right,” said the corps commander turning to the corps engineer, “initiate Mr.
Keene’s plan, modifying as you see fit while staying within the overall plan.”
“What
do we call it?” asked the Chief of Staff.
“How
’bout Operation Abattoir?” joked Mueller.
“Actually,”
said the corps commander, who had planned more than one antiarmor defense
against aggressor cavalry forces, “I prefer ‘Operation Big Horn.’ ”
The
military guys laughed while the civilians looked confused. “Why Big Horn?”
asked the mayor.
“First
you suck ’em in . . .” answered Mueller in explanation.
“Then
you blow the shit out of ’em,” finished Ersin with eyes as dead as a shark’s.
“Gentlemen,”
said Sergeant Folsom, poking his head in the room, “you might want to start a
feed; the computers are about to give final projections on Posleen landings.”
For
the past hour the newsmen had been giving almost continuous live reports but,
except for the narrowing of the potential landing ovals, it had been much of
the same. It amazed the CNN producer that anything could be so terrifying and
boring at the same time.
Argent
got up and stood in front of the American flag that had been procured from a
nearby general’s office, preparing to say his piece as the technician checked
the live feed from the defensive computers again. All of the ovals were
discrete, now, and the Atlantic oval, with the exception of an attenuated end
that made it look like a comma, had shifted almost completely away from the
European continent. It appeared the Europeans were going to sit this one out.
“In
three, two, one . . .”
“We
have just been informed that the defensive system computers are about to
determine the final Posleen objectives. As we have been telling you, until the
Posleen globes definitively commit to a reentry trajectory, the landing areas
remain only possibilities. Now, however, there are signs that the Posleen are
about to commit to definite targets.
“They
have had one orbit of the world, under fire from the available Fleet Fighters,
as has been reported from Palo Alto, and by now they must have picked their
targets.” At a call from the producer he hastily finished, “We now cut to the
live feed from the defensive computers . . .”
And
Colonel Robertson leaned towards the wardroom TV, taking a pull on his
pipe . . .
And
Little Tommy Sunday stopped packing his war bag and turned to the radio in his
room . . .
And
Lieutenant Young stopped compulsively reviewing demolition
plans . . .
And
General Keeton turned away from the mayor and towards the TV in his
office . . .
And throughout
the world, people stopped whatever they were doing, pulled over in their cars
or set down their burdens and waited for the American Defense Command, or
Russian Army Headquarters, or Japanese Defense Forces Headquarters or Chinese
Red Army Headquarters, to place the seal on their fates, whether for good or
ill.
“The
ovals are shrinking rapidly now,” continued Argent coolly. “So we are going to
zoom in on the American landing. I’ll keep you updated on the other zones and
when the final points are determined we will zoom back out and note their
particular areas.
“We
can definitely say, at this time, that there is little or no chance of a
landing in Australia, South America, Central America, Europe or Russia. There
is very little chance of a landing in the Midwestern United States. It mainly
looks like West Africa, India or Bangladesh, Coastal Northern China, the
Eastern United States and somewhere around Uzbekistan or Turkmenistan.
“The
ovals are shrinking. The American oval is centering on the eastern seaboard
between Philadelphia and . . . somewhere in central South
Carolina. Getting smaller . . .”
The
oval abruptly collapsed and turned a complete malignant red. “The area is now
centered on Washington, D.C. . . .” he continued with a note of
strain building in his voice as cold adrenaline jetted into his
stomach . . .
And
shifted south . . .
“Richmond,
Virginia . . .”
North
and smaller . . .
“Washington . . .”
And
finally centered between the two, straddling a river. It began to pulse an evil
crimson, the vague outline of a city on the computer-generated map in the
center like a pupil. Argent just paused for a moment, shocked by the evil icon
blazing out from the console.
“The
target,” he paused for a moment to compose himself, “the target, ladies and
gentlemen, is Fredericksburg, Virginia.”
CHAPTER 32
They send us in
front with a fuse an’ a mine,
To blow up the
gates that are rushed by the Line,
But bent by Her Majesty’s Engineers,
Her Majesty’s Royal Engineers
With the rank and the Pay of a Sapper!
Now the Line’s
but a man with a gun in his hand,
An’ Cavalry’s
only what horses can stand,
When helped by Her Majesty’s Engineers,
Her Majesty’s Royal Engineers
With the rank and the Pay of a Sapper!
Artillery moves
by the leave o’ the ground,
But we are the
men that do something all round,
For we are Her Majesty’s Engineers,
Her Majesty’s Royal Engineers
With the rank and the Pay of a Sapper!
—From “Sappers”
Rudyard
Kipling, 1896
Fredericksburg,
VA, United States of America, Sol III
1950 EDT October
9th, 2004 ad
“Dependents are
on their way in, Colonel,” said the supply officer, the S-4. The “Four” had
taken over the job of Civil and Dependent Affairs; he was out of any other job.
All the equipment and ammunition was issued and there wasn’t going to be a
resupply.
“For
all the good it will do,” noted the Charlie company commander. “They’re due to
land in fifteen or twenty minutes.”
“None
of that,” said Colonel Robertson. “We do what we can do, and all that we can
do. The telemetry looks like the Posleen are going to be spread hither and yon.
The probable landing zone stretches from over the Potomac in Maryland to
Spotsylvania County. They seem to be spreading out to surround Fredericksburg
and the area immediately around the township will be clear. Captain Avery,” he
turned to the supply officer, “get the dependents who are under sixteen years
of age headed into town with their available parent. That will give them a few
more minutes. Who knows, the horse might still sing. Put the other ones to
work.”
“Doing
what?” the S-4 asked.
“Setting
up our Go-To-Hell Plan. Captain Brown,” Robertson turned to the Charlie
commander and began snapping out commands, rapier fast, “start entrenching
around the city center, with outliers to the interstate but no farther.”
“Yes,
sir,” said the company commander, noting the instructions down in his green
leader’s notebook.
“Four,
have someone call the radio station and tell them to start broadcasting for
anyone with heavy equipment to come to—”
“The Mary Washington
College parking lot,” interjected the executive officer. He and the operations
officer had taken over the tactical map from the two privates who normally
updated it and were sketching in a battle plan. The battalion staff and company
commanders had been together for years, as was common with National Guard
units. At this point they could practically read each other’s minds.
“Good,”
said Robertson. He was new to the unit, but he had already recognized that it
had a superior staff for a “part-time” unit. And they were coming together
beautifully. If he could keep up the momentum and keep them from falling into
depression they would teach these centaur bastards a thing or two. “And call
for all noncombatants to head for the city center, coordinate with Public
Safety on where. Bravo company . . .”
“Start
mining the Chatham bridge . . .” said Captain Avery, the Bravo
company commander, glancing at the map on the wall.
“And
the railroad bridge and the Jeff Davis, but not the I-95 bridge; it’s too far
out,” agreed the commander.
“I’ll
take some of the older dependents with me for gophers. If any of them have a
clue I’m arming them.”
“Approved,
we’re shorthanded.” Many of the personnel had chosen to remain home rather than
respond to the recall.
“Some
of those AWOLs will be coming in now, if they can make it,” Avery pointed out.
“There’s nowhere to run.”
“And nowhere
to hide,” remarked Brown, the Charlie commander, darkly. “Jesus Christ,” he
whispered, his mind on his wife and two sons gathering with the other
dependents on the armory drill floor.
“Gentlemen,”
said the colonel, glad that his children were grown and well away from here.
“Many of you have wives and children out in the armory. There is not a lot I
can say. There’s just not time for you to run, or I would say ‘Run like hell.’
The landing will happen in moments; if you tried to get out from under the
interdiction circle you would run right into it.
“As
I told Lieutenant Young,” he said with a nod at the introspected assistant
division engineer, “the best we can do is hold them back for as long as
possible, make it as painful as possible for them, and ensure that the deaths
of our loved ones are quick and relatively painless. We should also try to
determine some manner by which we can destroy as many stocks of food as
possible before we are overrun. We must, unfortunately, include ourselves in
that equation; we’ve all seen the reports from Diess and Barwhon.
“Stay
straight, keep your troops in hand and do the mission. Our only choice is to
stand. We shall stand like Americans have always stood at a moment such as
this, on our feet, heads up and fighting,” he concluded. “Now get out and do
it.”
As
the two company commanders and the staff filed out Lieutenant Young gestured
for the battalion commander to remain a moment.
“Sir?”
said the young lieutenant.
“Yes,
Lieutenant? You’ve been quiet.”
“I
have been thinking about what you said at the first briefing, about how in this
situation we would all die and all of our loved ones.”
“And
now it comes to fruition,” the colonel snapped. Then he relented. “Your point?”
“That
is my point, sir. Does it have to happen?”
“There
is nowhere to run, son, and the forces outside the pocket are not going to
charge in and rescue us.”
“Yes,
sir,” admitted the lieutenant in a distracted tone. “But eventually, in two or
three weeks, maybe a little longer, we, that is the United States, will have
retaken this area. And we’ve got enough demo to destroy every bridge in
Virginia.”
“We
can’t hold out for two or three weeks against upwards of four million Posleen
with a short battalion of light engineers.” The colonel mused for a moment on a
couple of terrain features last used in the Civil War but the situation was
fundamentally different and he shook off the unreal idea.
“No,
sir, our death is a foregone conclusion, I accept that, intellectually, but
what about the dependents?” the acting assistant division engineer continued,
abstractedly. His eyes, concealed behind thick glasses, began blinking rapidly.
“Lieutenant . . .”
“That’s
it!” the junior officer blurted with a snap of fingers.
“What?”
“I
was trying to figure out . . . Look,
sir . . . damn, this is complicated.”
“Hold
on, son, what are you talking about?”
“Okay,”
the ADE paused and nodded his head as the last piece of the puzzle fell into
place. “Okay, sir, here goes. I’m from here, most of you officers aren’t. I got
into the history of Fredericksburg in high school really heavily and one of the
things I learned is that there are tunnels under the city, mostly forgotten,
connecting into basements. Now, if we just stash the women and children in the
tunnels the Posleen will find them, right?”
“Hold
on, who knows about these tunnels? I’ve never heard of them! Where they are and
how large are they?” asked the surprised battalion commander, hearing of the
feature for the first time.
“I don’t know
where most of them are, sir, but somebody will,” the lieutenant answered. “They
were used in the old days, like the nineteenth century, to move supplies up
from the river. They’re not very well-known, even to locals, but I’m sure that
someone in EMS or city engineering will know where they are. They’d practically
have to.”
“All
right, we’ll get past that,” said the colonel. “The Posleen will still sniff
them out.”
“Yes,
sir, so we have to make the Posleen think there is nothing left to find in
Fredericksburg.”
“And
we do that . . .” asked the colonel, quizzically.
“By
setting off a real mother of an explosion,” said the junior officer excitedly.
“If I had a nuke it would be perfect.”
“But
we don’t have one.”
“Quarles
Gas is right outside of town, sir,” the lieutenant pointed out. “Fill up a
couple of the buildings with natural gas and set them off. Can you say,
‘F-A-E’?”
The
colonel opened his mouth to rebuke the idea then pulled out his pipe and began
tamping it in thought.
A
fuel-air explosive, FAE, was the next best thing to a nuclear weapon.
During
Desert Storm the United States Air Force dropped pamphlets—helpfully
translated into Arabic—on the Iraqi lines explaining that at 10 a.m. on a certain date they would drop
a fuel-air bomb on an area which was held by a brigade of the Iraqi Republican
Guard. The pamphlets went on to explain that the weapon would have the effect
of destroying all the life in a two-square-kilometer area and be severely
damaging out to three square kilometers. All personnel in the affected area
were urged to evacuate before they dropped the FAE, to reduce needless loss of
life.
Naturally,
Saddam Hussein—that polite and abstemious gentleman—derided the idea that such
a weapon existed. So at 10 a.m.,
a battalion and a half of soldiers, over eight hundred human beings, were wiped
from the face of the earth in a pair of milliseconds. The Air Force
spokesperson promptly held a press conference to defuse Saddam’s natural
reaction that America had initiated first use of weapons of mass destruction.
The
next day the United States Air Force dropped pamphlets—helpfully translated
into Arabic—on the Iraqi lines explaining that at 10 a.m. on a certain date they would drop a fuel-air bomb on an
area which was held by a brigade of the Iraqi Republican Guard. The next FAE
took no lives, but did leave a three-mile-wide stretch of the lines open to
advances. At least three Iraqi officers, however, are known to have lost their
lives trying to stop the mutinying troops from retreating out of the area of
effect.
“That’s
‘Can you say FAE, sir,’ ” the colonel corrected, distractedly.
“Right,
sir.”
“Yes,
I can. So we hide as many women and children in these tunnels as we can, then
we set off an FAE.”
“Yes,
sir,” answered the excited lieutenant.
“Then
what?”
“Then
it kills a lot of Posleen, they think everything is destroyed and go away in
frustration.”
“And
the women and children dig themselves out of a series of collapsed tunnels?
Into a possibly hostile environment? Do you happen to know how they are
constructed?”
“No,
sir,” answered the lieutenant. It was a good question. If the tunnels were not
structurally sound, the overpressure from the shock wave would collapse them on
the very people they were trying to save.
“What
the structural integrity and overburden are?”
“No,
sir,” said the crestfallen civil engineer.
“Well,
neither do I,” mused the commander. “Obviously we don’t have all the answers.
You know, I think that our alien friends have never read Sun Tzu.”
The young ADE
nodded his head. “
‘Cast them into positions
from which there is nowhere to go and they will die without retreating.’ ”
“ ‘On dangerous ground one
must devise stratagems, but on deadly ground do battle,’ ” concluded the
battalion commander.
The
sergeant major stuck his head in the conference room as the colonel nodded his
head in turn. “Sir, it’s the fire chief, she’s here with a group of cops and
firefighters to see what they can do.”
“Get
them to the operations officer . . .”
“Sergeant
Major, Colonel,” shouted the colonel’s driver, running past the sergeant major
in the corridor. “You need to come outside and see this.” The officers and
NCOs, perforce, followed.
Shari
finally made it out of Target, after what seemed like hours and she only had
half the things she felt like she needed. For once the problem was not money.
By prior plan on the part of the Target corporation and the Federal Emergency
Management Agency, the store offered everything for free. One person had
quipped that that really meant the world was coming to an end. The problem was
reaching the merchandise.
Everyone
in Fredericksburg seemed to have come to Central Square at once and there were
fights breaking out everywhere. Twice she was sure she had lost Billy in the
crowds and even as she fought through the crowds she had things snatched from
her basket.
Finally
she decided that whatever she had was going to have to do. All of her
acquisitions were in four shopping bags, three that she carried along with the
baby and one that Billy lugged. Two boxes of cereal bars, diapers, wipes, some
bottled water and juice, a few batteries. It was not much to make a run for it.
She
heard them saying that the Posleen were coming to Fredericksburg but wrapped
in her own straitened world she had not assimilated it. As she fought through
the crowds towards her distant car, the movement and noise around her dropped
off, the crowd in front of her stopped. She was forced to stop as well and
looked up with everyone else in the parking lot.
In
the east, the sky was on fire. A new sun made up of hundreds of glowing red
landing craft tight-packed into a giant disk was an eye of Baal descending upon
the Virginia tidewater. The sight was unreal in the dusky afternoon sunshine, a
blazing circlet of death picked out among the fleecy clouds and the darkening
cerulean blue sky.
Every
human in view of the spectacle stood transfixed as the circle grew and grew,
swelling from a moon-sized ring to a horizon-spanning wall in moments. In the
time it took to scream, the circle went from a speck to a ring to a blazing
wall of fire and then snuffed out as the landing craft slowed below orbital
velocities. As the meteoric reentry slowed, the individual ships could be
picked out, the twelve-sided polygons of the command craft surrounded by their
rings of protective landers. Moments later the sonic boom hit.
The
sound was too large to be real, an aural Krakatoa beyond the ability for human
hearing to accept. Most in the parking lot were driven to their knees and many
lost their hearing permanently. None were spared.
Shari
screamed with everyone else, her hands flying to her ears, for once matronly
protectiveness being driven out by self-preservation. Billy and the other
children were writhing on the ground in agony when the crowd began to surge.
She snatched her children up, overcoming her own pain, dropped her hard-won
possessions and stumbled into the lee of a truck that, for the moment, was
stationary.
The
crowd around her broke into riot as everyone individually did whatever they
thought was the best for themselves. Some tried to get back into the stores,
some ran for their cars, some, like Shari, huddled in the shelter of unmoving
vehicles and some began firing randomly into the air. She held her babies as
the world around her went mad and they screamed in pain and fear, from the riot
as much as the sonic boom. Her ears ringing madly, she cradled her children in
the space afforded by the shadow of the truck and waited for the panic to
subside. Instead it increased, the crowd surging first one way and then the
other as more shots rang out. She steeled herself to look, needing to know the
cause of the newest panic and was nearly panicked herself as the shadow of an
interstellar craft swept across the parking lot.
The
lander drifted across the shopping center, like a zeppelin before a zephyr, and
settled as gently as a dandelion seed onto Salem Church hill. The appearance of
weightlessness was abruptly dispelled as the titanic craft, as tall as a
fifteen-story skyscraper, dropped the last few feet.
As
the reverberation of the landing crashed across the crowds, the lower fifty
feet of the facet facing the parking lot dropped outward with another
resounding clang. Moments later the Posleen came pouring out, a yellow tide of
hunting centaurs.
Virtually
every armed human, the vast majority of the immense crowd, pointed various
weapons at the yellow mass and opened fire.
Shari
on the other hand took one look at the tide of Posleen pouring out of the
landing craft, put Kelly’s left hand in Billy’s, picked up the baby, took
Kelly’s right hand and began walking towards town.
It
was not hard. Just stand up, drop everything and go. Like the time that Rorie
finally got too drunk and crazy. All the other times, the cops would tell her
to go to the shelter but she stayed. She told them she would know when it was
time. And it was time. Not hard, just pick the babies up, walk out, get in the
car and drive. When the time came you just went. Maybe later there would be
time to go back and pick up all the things you left behind. And maybe not. As
long as you got away alive and unmaimed that was the thing.
Just
walk away and keep walking. As guns go off on either side, and a high, whispery
racket goes overhead with a crickety-crack. As a line of giant holes
suddenly appear in a Jeep ahead of you, and the policeman that was firing from
behind it flies backwards in a mass of intestines.
Just
keep walking and don’t look back, as the crowd tries to pluck your babies away
faster than the courts, and the chatter of alien voices and boom of alien guns
comes closer.
CHAPTER 33
Richmond, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
2025 EDT October
9th, 2004 ad
“The engineering
companies of the Thirty-Sixth, Forty-Ninth and Hundred and Fifth Mechanized
Divisions are on the way via I-95,” said the Twelfth Corps operations officer,
looking at a flimsy. “The remainder of the divisions are going to take a back
way across the James and blow it behind them. That will be it for Fort A.P.
Hill. The dependents are already gone.”
The
temporary headquarters that Twelfth Corps had set up in the First Union
building was coming down. With the Posleen on the north side of the James, the
area was going to get untenable fast. Already the sound of folding chairs and
collapsing equipment could be heard in the background.
The
meeting was taking place in a gorgeous fourth-floor conference room. The
wonderful view to the east was about to be surrendered to the infantry. Present
were a skeleton staff, the commander, some operations and intelligence officers,
the major local commanders and the ubiquitous Special Forces representatives.
“My
boys are ready to roll,” said Colonel Walter Abrahamson, commander of the First
Squadron Twenty-Second Cavalry (Virginians), the armored cavalry unit assigned
to the Richmond local area. The commander was as tall and broad as one of his
armored behemoths, but his hooked nose and generally saturnine look bespoke his
desert heritage. With his current grim and implacable expression he looked like
a biblical plague preparing to spring forth upon the enemies of his people. A
gold Star of David earring, strictly nonregulation, sparkled on his left
earlobe.
“Unfortunately,”
commented the corps commander, “we don’t have a mission for you.”
“Then
let us go perform our traditional role.” The Cav commander smiled confidently.
“Eyes and ears.”
“He’s
got a point,” said the corps intelligence officer. “We’re effectively blind.
All we know is that all communication into the Fredericksburg area is cut off.
All the wireless communications are being jammed and we lost the last phone
trunk about twenty minutes ago. There were a few Spotsylvania County sheriff’s
deputies that made it out, but they’ve only been able to tell us where the
Posleen aren’t. We still don’t know exactly where they are. We need to
find out.”
“Sir,”
said Sergeant Mueller, “they could do more than that. We can hit back.”
“Oh?”
commented an Intel/Planning officer, looking askance at an NCO devising
strategy. “The Cav is in Bradleys and Humvees. The Posleen open those like tin
cans.”
“Yes,
ma’am, if you put them out in the open. But I went out on 95 north and south
last month, just nosing around. Coming down from Fredericksburg it’s pretty
darn flat but there are a few areas where, with improvement, they could fire
hull-down. Get them hull-down, fire at max engagement range, which with those
twenty-five millimeters is, what two thousand meters?” he asked the Cav
commander.
“About
that,” agreed the Cav officer with a nod at the NCO.
“Call
for a volley of fire and boogie out,” continued Mueller. “It will require some
engineering support but just a couple of bulldozers. That way we both keep the
enemy in view and slow them down.”
“You’ll
take casualties,” said the corps commander, turning to the battalion commander,
“and the few Posleen you kill will be a tithe of a tithe of their main force.
Are you for it?”
“Yes,
sir,” said the cavalry officer with understated enthusiasm. “That is a
straightforward Cav mission. My boys are cocked, locked and ready to roll.”
“Very
well. Sergeant Mueller, you and Master Sergeant Ersin head up the road,” said
the corps commander. “Get with the corps engineer before you leave. Tell him to
assign you some civilian construction equipment. Make a list.”
“Yes,
sir,” said Ersin quietly.
“Colonel
Abrahamson,” said the corps commander, “we have a battery of mobile one hundred
fifty-five millimeter available. They’re the new Reaver model. Take it with
you. As more come on-line, we’ll send the mobile units out to support you; the
others we’ll be digging into Mosby and Libby Hills. Have your fire-support
chief coordinate through corps artillery, since you’re effectively cut off
from the rest of the Twenty-Second.”
The
Lieutenant General smiled grimly. “Last, Colonel, I hope I don’t have to say
this. You are not to become decisively engaged, not for any reason.
Understand?”
“With
upwards of four million Posleen?” The cavalry colonel chuckled dryly, with a
rub of his thick, black hair. “General, my name’s Walter Jacob Abrahamson, not
George Armstrong Custer.” The infamous cavalry general had been both blond and
balding.
“And
remind your men not to try to enter abandoned homes and businesses,” the corps
commander commented, sadly. “It looks like the ‘Scorched Earth’ program is
going to get an early test.”
Parker
Williamson closed the front door, blotting out the sight of the Posleen lander
that had crushed the Hawkes’s house at the end of Bourne Street. He had already
closed the curtains on the unpleasant view out the back. He turned to face his
wife, down whose face tears cascaded.
“Well,”
he sighed, “I guess we drew the short straw.”
She
nodded, unable to speak, as their oldest daughter entered the room.
“Is
it gonna boom anymore, Mommy?” the four-year-old asked, dabbing at the passing
tears.
“No,
sweetie.” Jan Williamson gathered her composure, picking up the two-year-old as
he toddled into the room, still crying from the painful sonic booms. “Not that
we’ll notice.”
Parker
locked the door and turned to a red panel by the standard home security system.
The door swung open to reveal a key pad. A yellow light flashed above the pad
and a beeping tone started.
“Federally
Authorized Home Destruction System Mod One is activated. Posleen emanations
detected, predestruct sequencing authorized. Enter code for command authorization.”
Parker
punched in a code and hit set.
“State
your name.”
“Parker
Williamson.”
“Parker
Williamson, are you at this moment in your right mind?” the box asked,
beginning the federally mandated litany.
“Emergency
bypass authorization.”
“Please
key in second authorization as required by federal law.”
Jan
walked over and keyed in a second sequence.
“What
is your name?”
“Jan
Williamson.”
“Jan
Williamson, do you concur in setting the Federally Authorized Home Destruction
System Mod One into function? Be aware that the system is monitoring Posleen
emanations in the near area.”
“I
do.”
The
panel chuckled for a moment, checking that their voice prints were correct and
then the light went red. At the same time the home security system turned on.
“Intruder
detection system activated, autodestruct sequence activated.” In the basement
of the house, two chemicals, harmless when separated, began to mix. “Destruct
sequence will auto-activate upon unauthorized
entry . . . may God protect and keep you.”
“Come
on, honey,” said Jan Williamson, picking up their daughter in a big hug, “let’s
go read Peter Rabbit . . .”
Lieutenant
General Arkady Simosin, Tenth Corps Commander, the corps tasked with the
defense of Northern Virginia and Maryland, humorously called “The Army of the
Potomac,” looked at the giant blotch of red on his southern flank and wiped his
mouth.
“Tell
the Twenty-Ninth to pull his armored battalions back,” he told his G-3,
pointing at the tactical display. “They’re too far forward. Empty Belvoir and Quantico,
get them headed north of the Potomac. That’s going to be our defensive line.”
“Yes,
sir. Sir, I called General Bernard. He said that he would only take that order
from you directly and that he intended to drive into the Posleen flank to pull
them off of Fredericksburg.”
“What?”
the general asked incredulously.
“I
just got off the horn with him.”
“Get
him back.” The general fumed as contact was made with the subordinate
commander.
“General
Bernard?” he asked on speaker phone.
“Yes,
General?”
“I
believe the G-3 told you to pull your battalions back. I would like to know why
you have refused.”
“I
believe that I can put enough pressure on the Posleen to pull some of them off
of Fredericksburg, possibly give the Two-Twenty-Ninth some time to organize a
breakout.”
General
Simosin considered General Bernard the epitome of the one officer you could do
nothing with: active/stupid. A consummate politician, General Bernard had
expended sweat and blood to become the Virginia Adjutant General—the senior military
commander in the Virginia National Guard—in the days before the Posleen threat.
With the rejuvenation of so many senior officers, such as Simosin, advancement
had effectively stopped. General Bernard naturally blamed the rejuvenation
program for his inability to advance to Lieutenant General.
In fact, the
general had been strongly considered for relief for cause. He was chronically
insubordinate, jumped the chain of command at every opportunity, was tactically
unsound and refused to subordinate his units to either Tenth or Twelfth Corps.
Instead he insisted that they remained distributed in penny packets throughout
the state.
Now
he held true to every negative in his history and it was about to get his
troops slaughtered. Unfortunately, General Simosin knew that if he put pressure
on him the idiot would just jump to the First Army commander and get the order
countermanded. It was worse than the damn Confederates! Well, too bad.
“General,
you are ordered to round up your units and pull them across the Potomac. We
cannot stop the Posleen short of that natural obstacle and I will not throw
units away in a pointless gesture. That is an order, failure to follow it will
result in your arrest.”
“Dammit,
General, do you realize that that will throw away Alexandria, the Pentagon and
Arlington Cemetery? Not to mention thousands of American citizens in
Fredericksburg!”
“And
Washington National Airport and Fort Belvoir. I can read a map. And I’m in that
area at the moment, I might add. I am fully aware of those facts as is the
Continental Army commander. He is evacuating the area even as we speak.”
“We
can stop them! This isn’t Barwhon or Diess; common people are standing up to
them everywhere and wearing them away. We can stop them at any point on the
map! Just give me one brigade of the Forty-First Division, and we can stop them
before Quantico.”
“Since
I just ordered you to retreat, I could scarcely authorize a forlorn hope with
someone else’s troops. General, pull your battalions back and do it now.
Failure to do so will constitute violation of a direct order in combat. That is
my final word.”
Simosin
squeezed the tabletop, trying to keep the tension from coming through in his
voice. Now, if the First Army commander would only have the sense to see
reality. Even if he did not, CONARC was one hundred percent behind pulling
across the Potomac.
“If
that is your final word, General, very well.”
“Then
you will pull your troops back? Let me be clear, both General Keeton and I
agree that contact should be held until all necessary measures have been
emplaced. Do not contact the Posleen without direct and clear orders to do so
by either myself or General Keeton. Is that clear?”
“Yes.
I will contact you when that withdrawal has been effected.”
“Very
well, start them back immediately. Out here.” He turned back to the assembled
staff that had listened to the call.
“And
in the real world . . . how is the evacuation going?”
General Simosin asked, taking a deep breath and turning to the Federal
Emergency Management Agency representative.
“Fairly
well, all things considered,” the FEMA rep replied. “We’ve opened up the HOV
lanes into Washington and we’re routing the refugees through and out of town.
It’s moving slow, but we should have most of northern Virginia evacuated by
morning. It would help if we could open up a few of the lanes the military
isn’t using.
“I
know they are designated for defense use, but they’re being underutilized by
your military forces. We could maintain one lane and an emergency lane for the
military forces and it would more than handle what is moving currently.”
He
turned to the G-3. “Are we going to have a big increase?”
“No,
the convoys are pulling out of Belvoir and Quantico in a steady stream. We
planned it that way and it’s taking about an hour per battalion to cycle them
through beans and bullets. They shouldn’t pulse much. Most of them are headed
towards D.C. also, but a few are being sent up the Prince William Parkway to
Manassas. But I’m worried about civilian vehicles intruding on troop lanes.”
“Issue
orders to disable any civilian vehicle in a military lane with all appropriate
force. Have the order broadcast and displayed on those overhead signs, then
turn over unutilized lanes to FEMA. Anything else?”
“No,
we’re cutting all the corners we can,” replied the FEMA rep. “But when the
Posleen start coming close, into contact, things could get out of hand.”
“Do
you need troops?”
“We
could use a few. MPs by preference.”
“G-3?”
“Three-Twenty-Fifth
MP Battalion at your service, Madame.”
“Thank
you,” the FEMA rep said. “That should cover it.”
“Get
those civilians out of harm’s way; we’ll try to slow the centaur bastards
down.” General Simonsin wiped his face and looked at the map projection.
“Now
as to that. I don’t want to have even cavalry in contact; the Posleen move too
fast and hit too hard. We will follow the Reticulan Defense Plan to the letter
and pull fully across the Potomac. I have so informed First Army and CONARC.
So, to slow them down, what do we do for engineers?” The corps engineering brigade
was at Fort Leonard Wood going through a large-scale engineering exercise. The
timing of the exercise was exquisite. Exquisitely lousy.
“The
engineering companies of the Forty-First and Ninety-Fifth Divisions probably
should accompany them, since they’ll have to dig in,” said the G-3.
“So,
what do we use?” the commander asked again.
“Sir,”
said one of the operations officers. “I called Fort Belvoir and, since they’ve
reactivated the Fifty-Two Echo program there, they have plenty of combat
engineering instructors and trainees. And there are the officers going through
basic and advanced courses . . .”
“ ‘And to the strains of
Dixie, the cadets marched off the field to war,’ ” Simosin quoted. “Well,
that’s a start. Where do we deploy them?”
“The
first real terrain obstacle the Posleen will encounter is at the Occoquan
Estuary . . .” said the corps intelligence officer.
Second
Lieutenant William P. Ryan—being a not quite graduate of the Basic Combat
Engineers Officers’ course—did not know much about combat engineering. And he
knew even less about combat in general. But he was willing to learn, even if
this kind of makee-learnee was not particularly survivable. One look at the
pitiable stream of refugees headed north on Interstate 95 was enough to make him
determined to do his best.
Most
of his classmates were rigging the I-95 and U.S. 1 bridges over the Occoquan
River under the expert tutelage of their instructors. The senior instructor had
decided that Ryan was a good-enough prospect that he was sent to destroy a
bridge all on his own, and his “platoon” was rigging the 123 bridge under the
guidance of an experienced instructor-sergeant. The platoon was a group of
trainees from the enlisted combat engineers course along with their drill
instructors and junior technical instructors. The interesting challenge in
concrete cutting posed by the bridge he had left up to the much more
experienced NCO instructors.
He
crossed the river and walked down through the charming little town of Occoquan
to get a better look at the far ridge from the Posleen’s perspective. The town
was nestled along the south side of the river where it passed between two high
ridges. The subsurface geology of the ridges created the falls that gave birth
to the town and that were integrated into the Occoquan dam. That dam, in turn,
created the reservoir that stretched from his location nearly to Manassas,
twenty miles away.
As
he stood just below Rockledge Manor he noticed a small footbridge crossing over
the river just below the waterworks. He made a note to have a squad come over
and rig it for demolition as well. The dam, on the other hand, was another
matter.
If
they dropped the dam, God only knew where the Posleen might be able to cross
the Occoquan. After checking his map he guessed it would be somewhere around
Yates Ford Road, half the distance they might otherwise have to travel. On the
other hand, the Posleen could push forces across the dam itself. Not many or in
great force, but any intrusion was to be dissuaded. And there was an older,
partially submerged dam as well. He was unsure how to handle that tactical
problem and decided to pass it up the line.
Walking
rapidly back through the deserted town he got a strange feeling of sadness. He
could remember the days before the Posleen were a word, before Earth knew it
was in the path of an invasion. Even as America prepared, as more and more
shortages occurred and liberties fell by the wayside in the race to get ready,
the world was more or less the same as it had always been.
At
that moment, striding rapidly back to where engineers under his command were
preparing to destroy a major civil structure, he knew that this was truly the
end of the golden age. That from now until an unforeseeable future man would be
a hunted animal on his own world and that only God knew what the outcome would
be.
“Ladies
and gentlemen,” the loudspeaker boomed, “we need you to remain calm.” The crowd
gathered behind the Fredericksburg Public Safety Building was mostly women and
children. They had run from their homes in fear and fled to the only refuge
they knew. There was plenty of room with all of the ambulances and police cars
dispatched. The group huddled in the gathering dark, most of them knowing that
by coming here they were only delaying the inevitable.
“We
are working on a way to get you out,” continued the speaker, one of the
remaining fire fighters, “and we just need you to remain calm.”
“He’s
dreamin’,” said Little Tom Sunday in a monotone. Then, “Hiya, Wendy.”
Wendy
Cummings spun around. Little Tom stood behind her with a pack on his back and
duffel bag at his feet. He was wearing some sort of weird black padding that
stretched almost to his knees, a black helmet like the soldiers wore and a pair
of sporty sunglasses. Inside she sighed in exasperation. If there was one
person she did not want to spend her last hours with, it was Little Tommy
Sunday. But she might as well be polite.
“Hi,
Tommy. What’s that stuff?” she asked out of curiosity, gesturing at the
padding.
“Body
armor,” he answered in a disinterested tone. “It won’t stop one of their
railguns, but it’ll stop the shotgun rounds and spalling.”
Her
eyes widened as she recognized it from “Real Police” shows. Officers had been
shot at point-blank range wearing similar suits and survived. “Do you have any
more?” she asked, hopefully.
“Well,”
he answered, bending down stiffly to rummage in his duffel bag, “I don’t have
any more Class One, but I’ve got a Safe-Tee, some T-shirt Kevlar.” He pulled
the body armor out of the bag, revealing the contents. He glanced at her chest.
“It might fit,” he ended doubtfully.
“Holy
shit,” she gasped, “what-all do you have in there?” The bag gleamed with the
bluing of lethal purpose. She recognized the shape of some sort of machine gun
and other things she thought were grenades.
She
had taken the school survival course, but only because it was required. But,
since you didn’t have to pass, she had spent most of her time doing homework
from other classes and passing notes to her friends. She barely recognized the
items in the bag from familiarization.
“A
few odds and ends,” he answered, zipping the bag shut.
“Do
you . . . Could I borrow a gun or something?” she asked, trying
to figure out the connections on the body armor.
“What
would you do with it?” he asked, disgustedly, grabbing the Velcro and
efficiently connecting first one underarm strap then the other.
“Try?”
she asked, looking him in the eye for the first time in years. She suddenly
realized that he was far taller than she thought; much taller than she was,
which was a surprise. Everyone just thought of him as Little Tommy. He had been
self-effacing for so long, it had made him appear short.
“You
should have tried years ago,” he answered. He reached back into the duffel and
brought out a short black pistol in a shoulder holster.
“You
ever use one of these things before?” he asked rhetorically, dropping out the
magazine and yanking back the slide to eject the round up the spout. He caught
the 9mm round in the air like a trout after a fly.
“No,”
she answered, intimidated by his suddenly revealed expertise.
“Okay.”
He lifted up the magazine. “This is the gas, you fuel it like this.” He slid
the magazine back into the well. “It’s fueled when you hear the click. You
start it like this.” He jacked back the slide. “And,” he said, laying one
finger lightly on the trigger as he pointed the weapon skyward and across the
river, “this is the accelerator. You drive it by looking through the rear
sights while focusing on the front sights. Place the white dot on the front
sight across the V of the rear sights and pull on the accelerator real slow.
There, the Tom Sunday School of Glock Driving.”
She
accepted the weapon gingerly as he ensured she had it pointed up and downrange.
“So
where is Park?” she asked dryly.
He
took the weapon back, put it into the shoulder holster and handed her the rig.
“There is no Park,” he said as he easily hefted the weapon-stuffed duffel. “See
ya.”
“Where
are you going?”
He
looked at her for a moment and cocked his head to one side. “That stuff,” he
noted, gesturing with his chin at the body armor, “is really supposed to go
under your clothes. I’m heading up to somewhere on Charles or Princess Anne
Street that has a good view,” he said, throwing the strap of the duffel across
one shoulder, “then I’m going to smoke a whole pack of Marlboros waiting for
the Posleen to show their heads. Then I’m going to die.” He smiled warm and
quietly, as if asking her to deny the reality of that statement.
She
smoothed the stomach of her armor unconsciously and went through a series of
rapid mental readjustments. “Can I come with you? Maybe I can reload or
something.”
“I
sincerely doubt that there will be time to reload,” he answered, “but you would
be extremely welcome. Now, to find a good spot on Charles Street,” he said,
turning up the hill.
“How
about Worth’s?” she suggested.
Bill
Worth sat at ease in the rear of his store, a Franklin stove removing the last
tinges of chill from the evening of this truly wearisome day. The large front
room of the shop was redolent with the scent of old books and fine antiques. It
was the scent of home.
He
was spending what he considered to be his last few moments perusing an early
edition of Moll Flanders that included some tracts not usually found
outside of the editions published during Defoe’s era and sipping a Cóte d’Azur
’57 he had traded the previous year for a prototype Colt Peacemaker. As in all
good business deals, both parties felt they got the better of the bargain.
He
had just reached a condition of maximum comfort, his sockless loafers perched
on an ottoman, his wine close at hand, when the door to the shop jingled as,
most unexpectedly, a pair of customers entered.
“Feel
free to look around, gentlemen,” he told the pair of soldiers, officers if his
“Uniforms and Insignia of the United States Armed Forces” was any judge.
“However, I prefer not to sell anything today. I have decided to maintain my
collection intact for old sake’s sake.” He chuckled at the reference neither of
the soldiers would possibly recognize.
“Hi,
Mr. Worth, it’s me, Kenny Young,” said the younger officer, truly a
babe-in-arms as it were.
“Ah,
yes, young Mr. Young,” he said with another breathy chuckle. “The uniform
befits you. I thought you were studying engineering?”
“I’m
a military engineer.”
“Ah!
A Pioneer! Bravo. Where are you based?”
“Here,
Mr. Worth. That’s what the local Guard unit is, Engineers.” Lieutenant Young
smiled faintly. It was a well-known fact that Bill Worth hadn’t set foot
outside of the five or ten blocks of what he termed “historic Fredericksburg”
in years.
“Ah,
yes, somewhere up Route 3 isn’t it?” asked the shopkeeper, quizzically.
“Yeah,
about a mile from here,” chuckled the lieutenant.
“Ah.
Terra Incognita, indeed. So, to what do I owe the honor of your presence on
this most gloriously unpleasant evening?”
“Well,
we need to find out about the tunnels. We were told you might know something
about them.”
“Yes,”
commented the local historian, with a nod of his head. “Well, it would really
be Ralph Kodger, you need to talk to about them . . .”
“But
he’s . . .” noted the lieutenant.
“Dead,
yes, but a great historian in his time. Or perhaps Bob
Bailey . . .” continued Worth.
“ . . . who . . .”
said Young.
“ . . . moved
to Kansas, yes, I see you’re ahead of me here.”
“Do
you know anything about them? Where the openings are?” asked the engineer.
“What
their structure is?” asked the other soldier.
“And
you are, sir?” Bill asked politely. The older soldier was obviously impatient,
one of those people who feel it necessary to continuously rush about as if life
wasn’t always exactly the same length.
“Captain
Brown, sir, Charlie Company commander,” said Captain Brown, shortly. “We hope
to hide some of the women and children in the tunnels and blow up, well, the
city basically, to cover our tracks. We wondered about a ’50s-style bomb
shelter, but there aren’t any. So we’re back to the tunnels. Unless you know
where a bomb shelter is.”
“A
valorous endeavor indeed,” commented Worth, setting down his Defoe and walking
to the desk that was the center of his domain. “Might I ask a few questions?”
“As
long as you’re quick,” snapped the impatient commander.
“How
are they to survive?” asked the shopkeeper. “The women and children that is. Without
air, food or water? There won’t be much room for that sort of thing, I would
suppose.” He rummaged in the top drawer of the desk and extracted a pad of what
appeared to be parchment.
“It
turns out that the paramedics have been using a Galactic medication called
Hiberzine that can put a person in suspended animation for months,” said the
lieutenant, excitedly. “Public Safety has plenty of it; we can pack in as many
as can fit. Resources are not an issue.”
“Ah,
and how do you intend to blow up the city?” Mr. Worth asked, beginning to
doodle on the pad.
“We’re
going to fill some of the buildings with natural gas, basically,” answered
Captain Brown. “It’ll do the job; do those centaur bastards anyway. Now, I’m
sorry, but if you don’t mind, we need to find somewhere to stash the women and
children. If you’ll excuse us?”
“Actually,
I think you might consider my pump house,” Worth noted with a world-weary
laugh, continuing to sketch.
“We
need something larger than a pump house,” said the captain, assuming he meant
one covering the well for a house. “Thank you just the same. Come on,
Lieutenant.”
“Captain,”
the storekeeper drawled, finished scribbling rapidly on his pad, “would
something like this suffice?” He held up the sketch. “A two-story underground
pump house for an industrial plant? Three-foot-thick concrete walls? Fifty feet
long, thirty feet wide? Two levels? Underground?”
“Jesus,”
whispered Captain Brown, snatching the pad. “Where is this?”
“By
the river,” Worth answered with a dry smile.
“You
own this?” asked Lieutenant Young, peering at the well-drawn sketch.
“Yes,
I bought it several years ago and fixed it up,” answered the storekeeper.
“Why?”
asked Captain Brown, curious despite himself.
“Well,”
answered Bill Worth, with a sigh, “it’s got such a beautiful view of the
river. . . . Captain, if I offer this made-in-heaven facility
for your little plan, can I pick which building you blow up?”
“Are
you sure about this, Captain?” asked the first sergeant of Charlie Company as
Second and Third platoons assembled in the parking lot of the Fredericksburg
Executive Building. A seven-story block of unimaginative ’70s architecture, it
had all the aesthetic appeal of a brick, creating a modern eyesore among the
pleasant stone seventeenth- and eighteenth-century buildings that predominated
in the city center.
“It
was Mr. Worth’s only condition and it’s really the best building for our
purpose,” answered the captain. “It’s got plenty of volume, it’s close to the
pump house but the railroad embankment will create a blast shadow and I have to
agree, not that it matters, that it is one of the ugliest buildings I
have ever seen.” He turned back to the assembled troops and raised his
voice to carry over the sound of approaching semitrailers.
“Men,
we are going to kill two birds with one stone. While some of you prepare a
bunker to hide the women and children, others of you are going to prepare a
reception for the Posleen they will never forget. We have found an industrial
pump house that used to supply water for the old cellophane mill. It is
partially buried and has three-foot-thick concrete walls.
“Second
platoon, along with these arriving construction guys, is going to finish
covering it with as much overburden as we can find, while also preparing the
inside. You need to fair over the opening to the pump house proper, you’ll see
what I mean when you get in there. The radio station is calling for anyone with
welding equipment to come here and construction equipment is being diverted
from the Interstate lines to assist.
“Get
the pump house covered with overburden and get the opening faired over with
sheet and structural steel, whatever you can find. When we get as many women
and children in as we can, we’ll blow the tower and seal them in.
“I’ve
looked it over and there may be room for all the surviving women and children,
praise be to God. Since there may not be time or room, the chief of police is
starting a lottery for who goes in and the order. Only children under sixteen
and their mothers are going in the bunker.
“The
problem is that if we just bury the noncombatants, the Posleen will dig them
out like anteaters after termites. We need to create as much disruption as
possible and try to make it appear that there is nothing left to find in
Fredericksburg, and especially not on this side. To do that, we are going to
turn this building,” he pointed with his thumb at the monstrosity over his
shoulder, “into a giant fuel-air bomb.
“Trucks are
coming from Quarles Gas to pump it full of propane. But first it has to be
prepped. I want Third platoon to get in there and blow holes through all the
floors, to increase interior circulation. And before you leave make sure every
interior door is open. While the building is being prepped, the first sergeant
will rig it for demolition. Don’t set any of your charges in his way.
“When
you’re done, which should take less than forty-five minutes, you’ll either go
to the bunker work, or up to prepare the town defenses.”
He
gestured to the arriving lowboys burdened with bulldozers and backhoes.
“Second, we’re depending on you and those guys to make an impregnable bunker.
Get to work. And Third,” he gestured to the cases of C-4 at the entrance to the
building, “go blow some holes. Keep your helmets on, somebody might be blowing
above you.”
“Sir,”
muttered the first sergeant as the platoon pounded into the building, grabbing
demo and caps as they went by, “this is bound to cause casualties.”
“Well,
Top, there are times when you have to balance relative risk. I don’t have much
idea how much time we have, but I doubt we have much longer.”
“We
have to slow them down,” noted the S-3, desperately. “Charlie is just starting
on the bunker and the FAE. It’ll take them at least an hour.”
“More,”
noted the fire chief, “it’ll take that long just to pump the building full of
gas.”
The
Posleen had taken their time assembling—for which everyone was thankful. But
having reduced the last resistance and most of the buildings around Central
Square, the nearest B-Dec force was coming down Highway 3. And there was only a
scattering of militia and police to stop the six-thousand-odd rampaging aliens.
Other Posleen were moving in from the east and west, but by the time those
Posleen reached the city center it would be nearly dawn and the bunker and FAE
would be prepared.
It
was the Central Square force, rolling down the main highway into town, that
would be the primary threat to the plan.
“We
need something to distract them, to scare them,” commented the battalion
commander, “something like that dragon that the ACS used on Diess.”
“I’ll
tell you one thing every Earth animal is afraid of,” said the scarred chief,
getting the glimmering of an idea, “and that’s fire.”
“What
are you thinking?” asked the commander.
“If
we had some flamethrowers . . .” said the S-3 and his eyes widened
at the same time as the chief’s.
“Jerry,”
said the S-3, turning to his NCOIC, “call Quarles Gas, and tell them we need
some more flammables. Some gas trucks, gasoline that is, or kerosene. Any
liquid flammables.”
“Kerosene
is the preference. I’ll go get the fire trucks,” said the chief, shaking her
head.
“Colonel?”
“Yes,
Sergeant Major?” Colonel Robertson was mortally tired. The strains of the day
were rapidly taking their toll and he wondered what new catastrophe the
sergeant major had to report.
“Well,
sir, I was checking on the detail that was issuing from the ammo point, and all
the parties are out on site, but there’s still over a ton of demo and
ammunition of one sort or another left.”
“Okay, I guess
we could blow it in place when the Posleen get here.”
“Yes,
sir, we could, but I was thinking, the ammo dump isn’t far from the armory and
I’ve got that detail still on site . . .”
“And
you think there might be better places to put the ammo than in the ammo dump.”
“Yes,
sir. Face it, the dump is designed to contain an explosion,” said the
sergeant major with a feral smile.
“Well,
Sergeant Major, why don’t you just take charge of that little detail.” The
colonel smiled back. Good subordinates were such a treasure.
“Yes,
sir!”
Shari
stumbled into the crowd behind the Public Safety Building and carefully lowered
Kelly and Susie to the ground. Billy let go of her skirt and sat down, his eyes
wide and unseeing. She slumped beside him as the two girls huddled into her
lap, Susie quietly whimpering from the broken blisters on her feet and the
sights glimpsed over her mother’s shoulder. A woman coming through the crowd
stopped and stared, then walked over.
“Are
you in the pool?” she asked abruptly.
Shari
looked at her with wide unemotional eyes. It took a long moment to register her
question. “What?” she croaked.
“Are
you in the basket? Did you enter your name to be drawn?”
“Drawn
for what?” she gasped again, mouth and throat dry from dehydration and
agonizingly extended fear.
Finally
the woman grasped that Shari was suffering from more than the general shock of
the loathsome afternoon drawn into evening. “Are you going to be all right?”
Shari
started to laugh quietly and the laughs began to segue into sobs.
Every
step she took, from the parking lot to where the Army and police were digging
in along the interstate, she knew would be their last. Time and again she heard
the centaurs drawing closer, only to be delayed by some more interesting
target. When she was forced to pick up Susie, drawing her already slow progress
to a crawl, she was overcome with the utter certainty that her babies were
going to die. And from what she had heard behind her it was going to be one of
the worst of all possible deaths.
The
pain-racked march was a drawn-out nightmare, in which the monsters were always
just behind you and you knew that at any moment they would touch you and then
you would die. But this was no nightmare; this was a stark reality as the sun
set behind her in a blaze of red and she dropped into the shadows of Salem Hill
to the accompaniment of dying screams.
The
passing matron waved for one of the tending fire fighters as Shari began to
collapse into hysterics. The EMT came over, readying a dose of Hiberzine.
“No,”
said one of the other paramedics. She grabbed Shari by her shoulders and forced
her to look up. “You have to keep together,” she snapped. “We need you; we need
all the mothers. You’re Shari Reilly, right?”
Shari
nodded her head, still unable to stop the sobs. The girls started crying softly
in response as Billy just sat and rocked, looking into the deepening twilight.
“You
came in from Central Park?”
“Uh-huh,”
Shari sobbed, unable to catch her breath.
“All
you have to do is hang on until they call your name, okay? It’s a lot easier
than walking from Target to the interstate. We got a call on you. Let me see
your daughter’s feet.”
As
the paramedic tended to Susie, Shari slowly got herself under a little better
control.
“You’re
going through a normal reaction,” said the medic, soothingly. “You’ve had a
shock, Jesus, we all have! But yours was worse. You go through a reaction
period. You held out until you were here, which is better than most. You held
it together getting out of
the . . . the . . .”
“Out
of hell,” said Billy.
Shari
squeezed her son to her. “Are you gonna be okay, baby?”
“I . . . I . . .”
“It’s
okay, baby, we’re safe.”
“No,
we’re not, Mom. Don’t lie.”
“Son,”
said the medic firmly, “the engineers are building the best damn shelter they
can to protect you, and the rest of us are going to try to make sure there’s
nothing to draw the Posleen in. We’re gonna do our level best to save you, I
promise you that.”
“Is
it gonna work?” asked Shari, catching her breath in a pause between crying
spells.
“I
won’t promise anything,” said the paramedic honestly. “But it’s a better chance
than without it.”
“Excuse
me,” said a woman, looming out of the darkness, “somebody said you were up at
Spotsylvania Mall.” The woman’s voice caught for a moment. “Did you happen to
see a man driving,” she paused, “driving a hunter green
Suburban . . .”
“My
husband was a tall man . . .”
“Did
you see . . .”
The
women rose around her, closing in with desperate questions, but the paramedic
rose over her like an enraged lioness. “Look, people, I know you’re wondering
about your . . . your families, your husbands, but this
lady’s been through enough already . . .”
“No,”
said Shari, with a quavering voice, “I have to say it, I have
to. . . . There was nobody behind me, nobody at all. I’m
sorry . . .” She started crying again, quietly. “There wasn’t
anything I could do. I, I, just had to walk away, you see? I had to save my
babies, I had to walk and keep walking . . . There was this
little girl . . . she wouldn’t come with me and I was
carrying my babies . . . I couldn’t, I
couldn’t . . .”
“Shhh,”
the medic cried into her hair, “it’s all right, it is. There’s nothing to
do . . .”
“We
had to walk,” laughed Billy. “We just walked and walked and never ever looked
back. You can’t look back, you just have to walk and walk . . .”
He began to scream.
The
paramedic leaned over and pressed an injector against his neck. In a moment he
was out cold.
“What
was that?” Shari snarled, struggling to her feet.
“Shh,
just Hiberzine. He’ll sleep quiet. Unfortunately, when he wakes up to him it’ll
be just a moment from now. So before anyone gives him the antidote, make sure
they know he’s not tracking very well. We’ve put quite a few out.” The lost
wives had faded back into the darkness and another paramedic brought over
blankets and soup.
“I
put you in the drawing,” he said. “The engineers are about to start loading.”
“I
wonder how they’re doing at the interstate?” said the female paramedic.
The
chassis of a gas truck, caught on the overpass as the Posleen pounded into
view, was silhouetted by the fires of thousands of gallons of kerosene, diesel
and gasoline. A fire truck kept up a steady stream of mixed flammables as its
counterpart stood at a comfortable distance across Plank Road awaiting its turn
to fire. The giant flamethrower had demonstrated truly awesome range from time
to time as the Posleen tried to bypass the incendiary barrier. The gushing fuel
spouted out at tremendous force and ignited only as it touched the other
burning fuel. Occasionally openings would occur. When the Posleen tried to
charge through, the fire fighters would get them good and soaked then drift a
line of fuel to the nearest patch of flame. The explosion of fire would
immolate the group and the massacre would continue. Behind the two fire trucks
was a line of fuel trucks, well dispersed, and a spare pair of pumper cars
having their seals replaced.
“Damn
if this isn’t working, Chief,” said Colonel Robertson with an amazed smile. The
stupid aliens were hell-bent on forcing the passage and getting turned into
Posleen Toasties in the process.
“Yes,
sir, Colonel. Those holes your boys put in help too.” She gestured to the large
craters blown into the median, requiring the Posleen to go out of their way by
nearly a kilometer on either side. Explosions and shots in both directions
showed where skirmishing was occurring on the flanks. The Posleen had not yet
pressed in either direction nor did they appear to be interested in pursuing
it. When they did the defense would have to fall back.
“It’s amazing.
They don’t seem to have consolidated, yet,” the colonel informed her. “They’re
just coming in piecemeal and we’re blowing them away all over the place. We
blew the Jeff Davis bridge, but they’re pressing up from the south on the Jeff
Davis and Tidewater Trail. We’re going to be untenable here before the juice
runs out.”
“Okay,
well, we’ll pull back when you call it,” said the fire chief, wiping at a bit
of soot on her cheek. The smell of burning Posleen was like nothing else on
earth. The closest she could come was burning rubber and that was about as
close as alligator to chicken. The smoke was almost enough to call for
breath-packs and who knew what toxins it might contain.
“It
won’t be soon,” he commented with a grim smile as another group tried to charge
the fire. The fire fighters had almost made a game of it, opening pockets to
allow the enemy to charge forward then cutting off their retreat before filling
the hole and incinerating them. Even the God Kings seemed unable to find the
source of the fuel as the flames climbed high into the night.
“You
probably ought to turn this one over to your second,” Colonel Robertson noted.
“I’d like you to take a safety look at the fuel-air explosive. It would be a
bitch if it prematurely detonated, but we have to fill the building in
advance.”
“You
got it, Colonel. Where are you going to be?”
“Oh,
I have an appointment at the armory. Something about preparing a reception.”
The
old fire fighter smiled. “Well, lay in the punch and I suppose they will come.”
“Right
down William Street.”
“Yup.
Welcome to Historic Fredericksburg.”
“I
think they’ll spread out a little from William Street,” said Little Tommy,
turning away up Princess Anne Street. “Probably as far as Fauquier or Hawk
before they blow the Big One.”
They
walked along Princess Anne in the dusk, crunching the shattered glass from
display windows underfoot as the rattle of gunfire sounded in the distance. The
quaint shops had taken a big hit from the sonic booms of the landing.
“I
was wondering . . .” he said diffidently. “Do you want to take a
chance on the bunker? Now that they’re going to do that?”
“I’m
over sixteen,” Wendy pointed out, “and not a mother.” The last was somewhat
sharp, almost bitter.
“Ahem.
Well, there might be more room; they might take, you know, others. Shit, I wish
I had a hole to hide in.”
“You
wouldn’t hide if they gave you the chance, would you?”
Tommy
thought about it. “No; no, I probably wouldn’t. Not until
I . . . did some good. And by then it would be too late.”
“What
is it with all of this?” she asked, gesturing at the body armor and bags. “I
mean, I know kids that are in Junior Militia who are less well prepared.”
“Yeah,
well, my dad’s one real regret in life is that he took a scholarship to Clemson
to play football instead of West Point to play army. Then he went pro and that
ended any chance of going in the military. Instead, he became an armchair
soldier. You know, CNN junky, shooting pistols instead of playing golf, playing
paintball all weekend. The whole Posleen thing was the greatest thing that ever
happened to him; he was finally going to get to be a soldier. He even tried to
enlist, but he was outside the range since he wasn’t prior service. And then
there’s the knees . . .
“Anyway,
he decided early on, way before we Knew, that I was going to be the next
Hannibal . . .”
“Who?”
asked Wendy, coughing as a particularly strong swirl of smoke from the
interstate wafted down the street.
“ . . . the
next Robert E. Lee,” Tommy translated.
“Oh.”
“I’ve
been training to be a soldier since most kids were learning to play T-ball. My
dad made a big thing about giving me my first pistol when I was eight. I’d
asked for a new computer.”
“Yeah,”
said Wendy, in a questioning tone. “I thought you were a computer geek, not a
gun geek.”
“Gun
geek, that’s rich,” he said bitterly. “I am a computer geek, actually a
computer super-geek. I’m nationally ranked number eleven at Death Valley
and the smart money was on me going into the top five next week. I’ve been
coding practically since I could write. I live for computers. Knowing that, Dad
requires that I give equal time to this kind of training. I have to put in
exactly as much time on the range or in the field as I do on a computer.
“I
was the youngest member of the Junior Militia and basically quit after two
years because I was so far ahead of the rest of those slow-assed bozos. I can
run well enough to go out for track, but it was track or computer time. And, hell,
football? Lifting weights is considered ‘military training’ so I can press well
over my body weight and Dad wanted me to try out for the squad. It was the one
time I basically told him to stuff it. If I was a jock it would cut into either
range time or computer time and I knew which one my dad would choose.”
He
shrugged philosophically. “So, here I am, the most dangerous kid in school, and
an outcast computer geek. Go figure.”
“Well,”
said Wendy carefully as they stopped by Goolrick’s drugstore on the corner of
George Street, “I guess you’ve come to your moment.”
“My
dad’s moment, you mean. He’s out there, somewhere, holed up, waiting for the
Posleen to come into view and just living for it. Mom and Sally will go into
the hole and I’ll ‘give ’em as good as I get,’ ” he quoted in a false
baritone.
“Fucking
bastard,” he spat, bitterly. “The bitch of it is, I’m sitting here figuring
angles of fire as well as any infantry lieutenant, and as if it’s going to do
any good.” He shrugged and looked around, still figuring the angles.
“What
about Alesia’s Antiques?” he asked, gesturing across the street with his chin.
“It’s got a good shot across the courtyard behind it. We might even move into
the Bank Museum. That would give us first and second positions. We might even
survive three minutes,” he finished with a laugh.
“I’ve
been thinking about Alesia’s,” she answered speculatively. “You know when you
asked if I wished I was going in the Bunker?”
“Jesus,”
said Tommy, as the rebar went through the brick wall next to an antique safe,
“it really is here. How did you know about this?”
“Well,
your love is computers and the military. Mine is local history and research.”
He
poked his head through the small hole and into the musty tunnel beyond, shining
a Maglite around. “It’s about five, five and a half feet high. Brick arch, dry
earth floor. Amazing. What were these things for?”
“Nobody’s
sure. There’s no written records about them, but they date to the Eighteenth
century at least. The best guess is that they were used to bring cargo up from
the docks. The streets back then were dirt and they got awful boggy in the
rain. The romantic story is that they were for transporting contraband.
Smuggled silk and untaxed tea, stuff like that. The really stupid story is that
they were created by the slaves as escape routes. No way. They might have been
used as hiding places for the Underground Railroad, but they were not created
by it; they’re from an earlier period.”
He
turned and looked at her in the dimness of the antique shop’s basement. “I
guess I’m not the only one surprising people today.”
“I
usually get complimented on my intelligence just before I get dumped,” she
said, frowning.
He
swallowed a lump of his own resentment. “Maybe you were hanging out with the
wrong guys.”
“Yeah,” she
answered, “maybe I was. Look,” she continued, pulling out the Glock, “this
isn’t going to do me much good against the Posties. You got anything heavier in
there?” She gestured at the duffel.
“Yeah,
good point. The only problem is these are a little more complicated.” He
unzipped the duffel and started emptying it. He had set aside his armor and
backpack to move the heavy sideboard blocking the tunnel wall and now gestured
at the backpack. “Open that up and start laying the stuff out. We’ll need to divvy
it up.”
In
a few minutes the two bags were emptied out on the floor and their contents
neatly arranged. It made an impressive arsenal.
“We’re
not going to get to use a third of this stuff, but I believe in being truly
prepared.”
“I
can see that,” she said, picking up one of the assault rifles that had been
stowed in the duffel bag. “What’s this one?”
“That’s
a Galil .308. It’s a good anti-Posleen weapon. Do you want to try it?”
“Okay,
it looks less complicated than that one.” The other weapon appeared to have
more than one rifle on it.
“It
is. This one is my baby.” He hefted the rifle. “It’s an Advanced Infantry
Weapon, a 7.62 rifle with a twenty-millimeter grenade launcher underneath.
Thirty-round magazine for the rifle and five rounds for the grenade launcher.
Laser designator. Definitely the thing.”
“I’ll
take this one,” she said, lifting the Galil. “Is it loaded?”
“No.”
He took it and went through the basic steps to arm, fire, reload and safe it.
“Pull it into your shoulder and squeeze the trigger. This one has a laser
designator, too, but it’s low infrared so you can only see it through the
scope.”
He
safed the weapon and handed it back. “It’s empty. Point it at the far wall and
squeeze the trigger while you look through the scope.” He helped her get a good
cheek-to-stock position. “See the dot?”
“Yeah,
it’s all over the place.”
“Take
a deep breath,” he said, forced to notice the pleasant things it did to her
anatomy even under body armor, “let it out and squeeze the trigger
gently . . .” He almost continued with the standard line but
snorted instead.
“Don’t
laugh at me!” she snapped, dropping the rifle to waist level. “I’m trying!”
“I
know you are. I wasn’t laughing at you,” he said, snorting again. “I was trying
not to continue the saying that goes with that.”
“With
what?” she asked, confused.
“Look,
when you’re teaching trigger control the way the saying usually goes is ‘let
your breath out and squeeze it gentle, like a tit,’ okay? That was what I
laughed about, I almost said it. Okay?”
“Okay,”
she said, mollified. “What a crude and stupid thing to say,” she continued.
“I
tried not to! You badgered me into saying it, okay?”
“Like
you would know what squeezing a tit felt like!” She stopped and her hand flew
across her mouth as she realized what she had blurted.
“Thanks,”
he smiled grimly, “thanks a lot. If you must know, I guarantee I know more
about squeezing tits gently than you do.”
“Oh,
sure. I don’t think you’ve gone with a girl since Kathy Smetzer in fifth
grade!”
“Jesus,
you really have been keeping up with my life, haven’t you,” he snarled.
“It’s
a small town,” she answered, lamely.
“Right.
Well, for your general fund of information, my dad also had
very . . . different ideas about summer
camp . . .”
It
took a moment for the gist of what he had said to sink in. “Oh, sure, a camp
story.”
“The
camp I go to is a coed combat-training camp in Montana, run by the National
Militia Association,” he continued, firmly. “Although sex is not specifically
encouraged, sex education, as in, ‘this is how you do it, boys and girls’ is
taught. In detail. And there are no restrictions except those relating to
consent. Okay?”
“You’re
kidding.”
“You
wish. Every year I get through the year’s insults, slights and put-downs
knowing that the big man on that campus is the best shot, the best at
hand-to-hand or the most stealthy. And I generally come out somewhere close to
the top. And all the girls are in great shape.”
“You’re
not kidding.”
“No.”
“So,”
she snapped, returning to the crux of the argument, “do the girls at that camp
say that, say ‘gentle like a tit’?”
“Some
do,” he said, smiling warmly, obviously cueing on a happy memory, “but most say
‘gentle like a dick.’ ”
CHAPTER 34
Fredericksburg,
VA, United States of America, Sol III
0014 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
Kenallai, Kessentai
Oolt’ondai of the Gamalada Oolt’ Po’os’ felt that, after conquering
five worlds, after so many years of battles that the lowly fiefs bestowed by
the Net upon a Scoutmaster were in the final stages of orna’adar, he had
seen it all.
“Aarnadaha
lost how many oolt’os?” He snorted in surprise, drifting his tenar
absently back and forth in the verge of U.S. 1. The crackle of distant riflery
echoed from the north and there was a stink of burning on the light wind. The
house across the street was a crater that looked as if a giant had scooped it
out.
“He
has only a single oolt left,” related Ardan’aath, his closest Kessentai. They
had been associates for many years and he trusted the old oolt’ondai’s advice.
Kenallai’s
crest rose in defiance of this impossibility. “He landed with a full Oolt’
Po’os, did he not?”
“Yes,
oolt’ondai. And they landed on the richest booty in the region, the storehouses
of these thresh. As it is we hold only a smattering of living quarters. The
thresh gathered so far barely will meet our needs for the next day.
Furthermore, many of the living quarters were destroyed, either before our
oolt’os entered or as they entered. Many of them blew up in their muzzles.
Little of the thresh permitted itself to be in-gathered and much of the thresh
and booty that was left behind had been damaged or destroyed.”
“I
have to call him.” The senior battlemaster fluffed his crest nastily. “That
thrice-damned puppy had it coming, pushing us aside as he did in the landing!”
“Tell
it to the Net,” grunted Ardan’aath. “He was removed from the Path as he exited
his Oolt’ Po’os. One shot to the crest!”
“What
sort of Alld’nt planet is this?” Kenallai wondered aloud.
“I
may have an answer to that, my edas’antai,” answered one of the other God Kings
in the ad hoc council of war.
He
turned to his eson’antai, Kenallurial. Ardan’aath had yet to trust him. He was
only recently raised from scoutmaster to the lowest level of battlemaster and
filled with strange new concepts. Where a Kessentai might develop a few close
and trusted allies, as Kenallai had with Ardan’aath, the Path was a Path of
fury. In the heat the only call to depend upon was the call of the Blood. To
trust an edas’antai was one thing, but to gather a group of like-minded
Kessentai, to form wide allegiances and to advocate “thinking like the enemy”
was not the Way of the Path.
Many
of the other battlemasters advocated returning him to scoutmaster status for
more seasoning. More time in the forefront of battle, when his weak allegiances
disintegrated on him in the heat of edan, when his “allies” strove to be the
first on the finest territory, thus increasing the yield of their fiefs, would,
in the eyes of the older Kessentai, prove to him the error of his ways.
Nonetheless,
whether because of the ties of blood, or because he suspected merit at the core
of the young battlemaster’s philosophies, Kenallai maintained him at his side.
Other
oolt’ondai turned aside as the young battlemaster looked up from his Net
interface. “I have found a reference to these thresh.”
“I
looked for data on this world,” snorted Ardan’aath. “There was nothing. Only
widespread reports of it as a fecund world of low technology, ripe for the
plucking. We are lucky to have arrived ahead of the main waves. We shall gorge
ourselves on territory and booty!” There were feral growls from the assembled
God Kings.
“Not
reports of these thresh from this world. They were reported on two other worlds
within the last tar. Edas’antai,” he continued, touching a control to
send the data to his elder’s screen, “this report is most disturbing.”
The
Posleen DataNet was a morass of poorly sorted information. Without a central
control, information robots or any correlated indexes, data that was thousands
of years old had identical priority with newer, more appropriate data.
Navigating its rocks and shoals was a task few of the Kessentai enjoyed and
most used it as little as possible. The Net permitted communication within the
local area, distributed resources after conquest and occasionally called for
reinforcements, but as a source of intelligence most Posleen found it lacking.
“In
the last tar, thresh similar in appearance have begun to appear in
small numbers. On Aradan 5 the invasion has been effectively repulsed.”
“What?”
scoffed Ardan’aath. “The Po’oslena’ar have never been defeated!”
“They
are on Aradan 5,” noted Kenallai quietly. “Many have already left. The few
that remain are being pushed back day by day.”
“Note
the data on the physiology,” Kenallurial continued. “They are definitely not modifications
of the green ones for all they have some superficial similarities, nor of the
thin ones. This is a new species and the first I have been able to find in the
Histories with the Will to Battle.”
The
other Kessentai began perusing the data dredged up by the young battlemaster
and murmured among themselves.
“But
these reports do not mention dwellings of these thresh,” noted the Oolt’pos’
Kessentai. The brigade commander shook his crest in disturbed fury. The data
from the other planets was ominous.
“No
edas’antai, they do not.”
“Your
analysis?”
“I
believe we have landed on their homeworld,” the young leader caste answered.
“Then
we have truly placed our esonal in the grat’s nest,” said the
brigade commander.
“We
shall sweep them aside like abat,” said Ardan’aath, confidently blowing
out a snort that scattered sputum across the grass of the road verge. “What are
a few thresh?”
“Ask
Aarnadaha,” commented Kenallai grimly. “Well, our scouts are pressing forward
from the south. Soon we will have them between us, Sammadar and the remainder
of Aarnadaha’s forces.” He looked at the schematic of the Posleen closing in on
the defenseless city. The three-dimensional image showed the flecks of located
enemy and the relative locations of the Posleen forces. But the image was not a
map; there were no symbols for road, buildings or terrain. Like ants, the
Posleen depended on the paths of scouts for finding their way around. The best
that they could do was vague images garnered during the landing phase that
noted built-up areas and heavy defenses. Usually, unless a God King and his
sensors were sitting on it, it was unknown land.
“We
shall crush them beneath our talons and move on to the greater prize to the
north. This is a sideline. Send forces up the greater highway behind the oolt
of Aarnadaha,” Kenallai continued. “We can thereby lay claim to the fiefs he
would have taken. There is great booty to be had there.”
“My
scouts report that they are about to contact organized forces,” noted one of
the oolt’ondai.
“Then
let us move forward to observe these thresh. And hope that they are not
threshkreen.”
“Best
hope they are not metal threshkreen,” muttered Kenallurial, reviewing the data
from the world humans called Diess, quietly so that Ardan’aath would not take
notice. But Kenallai fluffed his crest in agreement.
“Is
this gonna work, Sarge?” asked Lieutenant Kevin Ray, prepping a remaining
claymore.
“Well,
that depends on what you mean by work, sir,” retorted Staff Sergeant Arthur Van
Tri. His Eurasian features creased in a grin at the lieutenant who had reported
to the unit only the week before. “If you mean save our lives, no. If you mean
kill a whole piss-pot full of Posleen, oh yeah.”
The group of
mixed engineers and civilians huddled in exhaustion on the ground floor of the
Fredericksburg Assembly of God Church. A hole had been knocked high up on the
wall, through which Staff Sergeant Tri, perched on a ladder, could look from
time to time.
“I
just hope they don’t realize that fence posts usually have fences attached to
them,” he continued, peering into the darkness through a night-vision scope.
“I
just hope they don’t realize that fence posts don’t usually have bombs attached
to their tops,” chuckled one of the civilians, playing with his blisters. “I
don’t give a shit, as long as you engineers get the bunker ready in time.”
“Don’t
worry, Mr. Sunday,” said Lieutenant Ray. “We’ll get it done. First we dig ’em,
then we die in ’em, right Sergeant Tri?”
“That’s
the Seabees, sir,” the sergeant sighed.
“Shouldn’t
we pull back, Sergeant?” continued the lieutenant, unrepentant. “We could set
up another ambush.” He flourished the claymore. The clacker was set to one
side, already hooked up to a detonator.
“Except
for that we’re about out of demo, sir. We really should have used it on the
ambush.”
“Hey,
Sergeant, it’s like in the old days. Always save a round for yourself!”
“Echo
39, this is Tango 39, over.”
Sergeant
Tri picked up the handset of the radio. The PRC-77 was an antique, but it could
still do the job. “Tango 39, this is Echo 39, over.”
“Echo
39, we are about to initiate. Posrep Lafayette and Old Greenwich, over.”
“Roger,
Tango 39, understand Posrep Lafayette and Old Greenwich, over. Still negative
activity at this site.”
“Roger,
Echo 39. Well, this is Tango 39, saying nice knowing you yah old chink.”
Sergeant
Tri swallowed as his eyes misted. “Copy that Tango 39. See ya in hell,
Hillbilly. This is Echo 39 out.”
Sergeant
Tri wiped his eyes and peeked out through the opening again.
“Looks
like I spoke too soon,” he said. “Might as well get your weapons ready.” Behind
him the mixed force gathered up their rifles and started to move towards other
slits cut in the wall.
Coming
down the road, just as he had been told they would, was a phalanx of trotting
centaurs. Their crocodilian heads swayed from side to side as they scanned the
nighttime air, scenting for prey and resources. Well back from the front ranks
a God King, notable by his larger form and crested head, rode in his
saucer-car.
Sergeant
Tri was no slouch with an Advanced Infantry Weapon, but there were a couple of
serious shooters among the civilians who were headed up to the roof to take
care of the God Kings, along with instructions on when not to fire.
Although
the Posleen targeting systems could pick out a sniper no matter how well they
were hidden, they got overwhelmed in a general melee, so smart snipers waited
until forces were fully involved before firing. Sergeant Tri did not actually
expect that to be a problem with the first or even second God King because the
human force had just spent a productive hour preparing a fiery welcome.
The
Jeff Davis Highway ran practically straight as an arrow from where it met with
Interstate 95 south of town until it crossed the Rappahanock River north of
town. From Walker Grant Middle School to the church was mostly empty fields.
The road that had been virtually unadorned was now lined with oak fence posts.
Although
a bush-hog was going to be useless to the city defenses, the posthole digger
attachment that one of the civilians brought along was just the thing from
Sergeant Tri’s point of view. While the battalion was actually low on mines, as
opposed to plain explosives, there turned out to be a simple remedy. On the way
out of town they stopped by Fredericksburg Hardware.
There,
not only were their top shooters able to pick up a few choice boxes of rounds,
the rest of them were able to load the back of a pickup truck with cases of
nails and duct tape.
Wonderful
stuff, duct tape. A quick flick of the wrist and a small charge of Composition
Four was bound to a box of one hundred nails. Another flick of the wrist and
the package was attached to the top of a fence post, a tree, a sign, rope,
mailbox, car door, or virtually any other structure. Although most authorities
called for the tenpenny nail in a situation like this, Sergeant Tri found them
lacking in imagination. While tacking nails will do the job, roofing nails, the
kind for putting down roofing tack, with a wide flat top that tended to land
point up, that was his favorite. That way, even if the nail failed to hit a
Posleen, it was going to be a real pain to the next one to step on it.
“Is
this going to slow them down?” asked Big Tom Sunday, gesturing in the general
direction of the advancing Posleen. Tri was willing to give him the benefit of
the doubt; he was the guy who thought of the posthole digger.
“Nope.”
“Then
why the hell did we do all this?” Big Tom asked without heat.
“It’s
not intended to slow these guys down, Mr. Sunday,” said Tri, politely, not
taking his eyes from the advancing enemy. “It’s intended to kill them.”
“Oh.
And the ones that follow?”
“Well,
it’ll take them a little more time stepping over and around the piles of
bodies.”
Big
Tom Sunday smiled and headed for the ladder.
Anarlaralta,
Scoutmaster of the Po’oslena’ar swiveled his head from side to side as he moved
his tenar in a random pattern, tiny touches of his talons slipping it
from side to side. He had been warned that other groups were taking tremendous
casualties but—with the exception of dwellings seeming to spontaneously
combust—he had met with little resistance. A few of the thresh had shown
fight, but they were rapidly dispatched. A few had even been captured. It was
easier to have them transport themselves to the slaughter than to slaughter and
carry them. They showed no fight; most seemed to be nestlings. All of that
being the case, he was at a loss to explain the bad feeling in his gut. Perhaps
he had not yet adjusted to the new thresh.
His
oolt now approached a building where his sensors told him a group of thresh
huddled, some of them armed. He thought of spreading his oolt to envelop it in
its arms but decided not to bother. He would order a few oolt’os forward, to
reduce the loss if the building erupted as others had. But for the rest they
would remain between the many highway markers to either side.
These
thresh certainly had odd habits. On this stretch not only were there overhead
lines with many objects attached, there were markers every few feet and they
were adorned with the same sort of odd contraption as the overhead
lines . . .
Sergeant
Tri watched the first few Posleen normals head for the church door, hefted his
AIW, turned and nodded significantly at Lieutenant Lee.
As
Lee moved the jumper cables into contact with the car battery, a fat blue spark
jumped through the shadows of the darkened church.
Simultaneously,
to the human ear, over three hundred improvised claymores detonated over a
four-hundred-yard length of road. Each of the mines spewed out over a hundred
missiles traveling much faster than a bullet. The mines were on both sides of
the road, attached to ropes slung across the road, on the ground, at every
level. Thousands of deadly missiles swarmed the road, and the Posleen were torn
to shreds.
The
nails tore the centaurs apart, yellow blood flying through the air along with
bits of flesh and bone. Hundreds of rounds of ammunition detonated and the
rear-rank God King’s saucer was consumed in silvery fire as its onboard energy
cells shattered. In that first violent instant, over a hundred Posleen were
destroyed and the Battle of Concord Heights was joined.
“Colonel,”
said the S-3, “Lieutenant Ray reports they are in contact with the Posleen. The
front ranks walked right into the ambush and they finished off the survivors
pretty quick, but the rear ranks are pushing forward hard and he doesn’t think
he can hold his position much longer.”
“Right.
Well.” Colonel Robertson looked around at the figures hurrying in and out of
the armory. The pile in the center of the armory floor was getting to a
respectable size. “We need to pull this operation back. What’s the situation at
the interstate?”
“The
main Posleen force has basically extinguished itself, pun intended, but
reinforcements are moving in from the north and south. They’re going to be able
to hold out for about fifteen minutes more.”
“It’s
better than we had any right to expect. And the bunker?”
“Just
about loaded.”
“Heaven
be praised. Okay, tell the sergeant major this is the last load.”
“Who
gets to do the honors?”
“I
think I’ll leave it up to the sergeant major. You and I need to head into
town.”
As
they walked out the front of the armory for the last time, the colonel turned
and looked at the sign just inside the front door and snorted grimly. “I hope
that our enemy at least has enough intelligence to begin to recognize
insignia.”
“Why?”
asked the S-3.
The
colonel gestured at the two-turreted castle. “Just imagine how much they’ll
come to hate that crest.”
“I
will have the get of these Alld’nt threshkreen for my supper!” Kenallai
stepped mincingly through the offal clogging the road, having abandoned his
saucer for a closer look at the carnage. A haze of dust and smoke still hung
over the battlefield and the shattered bodies of the Posleen companies were
steaming in the cold night air. “What in the name of the nineteen fuscirt did
this?”
“This, my
eson’antai,” said Kenallurial, gesturing into the building that had been the
center of the fighting. He pointed to a large green-clad thresh missing most of
his foreparts. An explosion had occurred that ate most of the thresh’s mass,
leaving little to salvage for rations. From the spray of oolt’os outward from
the thresh, it was an explosion designed to kill the oolt’os as they tried to
come upon him. Kenallurial tore a bit of the green garment away.
“Note the marking. In the reports it stated
that all the green- and gray-clad thresh wore markings. Many await deciphering,
but this one is recognized. It translates as something like ‘leader of military
technicians.’ There are others that wear rifles that are leaders of warriors.”
“Military
technicians?” scoffed Ardan’aath. “What rot! What does war have to do with
repairmen? War is for the warriors, not skulkers who use explosives for their
weapons! Show me the ones with the rifles and I shall bring you their get on my
blade!” He spun his saucer and darted off towards his advancing oolt’ondar.
Kenallai
took the proffered piece of cloth in his hand, turning the symbol so that the
protrusions were upward. “It appears to be a building.”
“Yes,
eson’antai. It may be their headquarters. And although their purpose includes
construction, they also are the primary artists of explosive destruction,” he
gestured around, “as you can see.”
“Well,
do these military technicians have a name of their own?”
“Yes,
they call them the ‘engineers’ or ‘sappers.’ ” Kenallurial’s muzzle made a hash
of the syllables.
“ ‘Sappers.’ ” Kenallai tasted the
word. “I hope that this encounter is the last that we see of them.”
* * *
“Damn,”
muttered Colonel Robertson under his breath, “it’s working.”
The
tail end of the line of women and children shuffled forward another few steps
as he passed under the railroad bridge over Sophia Street.
He
could see Lieutenant Young talking earnestly with a civilian construction
worker as he neared the pump house. The power to the city had been lost, and
thereby the streetlights, but construction Klieg lights had been set up and the
bulldozers and earthmovers worked unabated. The hill that had flanked Frederick
Street opposite the train station was leveled and the street was practically
gone. There was no trace of the buildings that had been there, or of the
Montessori School on the corner. In their place the Rappahanock had a new
bluff. The area looked as if it had been attacked by a group of giant gophers.
The
pump house had been a low concrete building, about fifty feet long by thirty
feet wide, surmounted by what appeared to be a twenty-foot-high silo. The lower
building had been partially covered by alluvial deposits, but otherwise was
protected overhead and on the river side only by its three-foot-thick
reinforced concrete walls. A narrow catwalk had led to the door at the top of
the silo where there was a room ringed by windows: the “delightful view of the
river.” To the side of the catwalk had been another, wider, door with a crane
mounted above it. It was through this door that replacement equipment was
lifted when the pump house was still in operation.
Now
fill dirt reached nearly to the door, as load after load of what the military
referred to as overburden was dumped onto the lower building. It was in this
lower compartment of the bunker that the noncombatants were being secured. The
catwalk had been replaced by a wider ramp constructed of structural steel.
Colonel Robertson could see military engineers rigging it to be destroyed as
the noncombatants shuffled up. At the top, the wall had been ripped out around
the door and other engineers and construction workers were driving holes for
demolition charges. The line of women and children, their breath steaming in
the air, disappeared into the maw of the beast at the top of the ramp.
As
Colonel Robertson waited patiently for the young lieutenant to finish with his
conference he found himself starting to nod off. He glanced at his watch and realized
that they had successfully held the Posleen back for over six hours. On the
other hand, with the Posleen across 95, through the defenses on the Jeff Davis
and pressing up Tidewater Trail, it was really all over but the shouting.
Lieutenant
Young turned away from the construction worker and nearly walked into the
colonel. When the lieutenant finally focused on the obstacle he swayed for a
moment and snapped off a salute. Sometime during the hellish evening he had
lost his glasses and peered at his superior owlishly.
“Good
evening, sir.” He looked around and swayed again in fatigue. “I am pleased to
report that we have sufficient room for all the remaining women and children.”
He looked at the line of crying children and worn women who were all that remained
of the Fredericksburg noncombatants.
Only
hours ago they had been as relatively carefree as any group of people could be
in the face of an impending invasion: middleclass matrons and their children,
the flower of American suburbia. Now they shivered in the freezing dark as
predatory aliens closed in on either side and only a forlorn hope stood between
them and an end in the belly of the beast. “This had better work.”
“It
will,” the colonel assured the plan’s developer. He had his own dark thoughts about
the likelihood, but it was far too late to voice them. And when it came down to
cases it was not a choice between this plan and a better one, but a choice
between this plan and nothing.
“Well,
even if it doesn’t, sir, they’ll never know.”
“You’re
going to Hiberzine all of them?”
“All
except the last few coherent mothers, sir. In the unlikely event that something
goes wrong that is fixable, it would be a hell of a note to have the whole
group die because nobody was awake to fix it.”
“Like
a leak or a fire or something?”
“Yeah,
or somebody having an allergic reaction, whatever. It just seemed like a good
idea. Sir,” he added belatedly.
“I
think at this point we can more or less dispense with military courtesy, Kenny.
Aren’t they going to use up too much air? I thought that would be a limiting
factor.”
“Well,
the Public Safety folks and Quarles Gas came through again. They each had some
CO2 scrubbers for work in confined spaces. So, anyway, the
bunker will be outfitted with sufficient power and light for a two-week stay,
at which point the sentry mothers will be instructed to put themselves under
and hope for the best. If they’re still alive at that point the Posleen will
not have found them, which is good, but on the other hand neither did the Army
so it would be a wash.”
“Sir,”
said Colonel Robertson’s radio operator, “the XO.”
“Uniform
51, this is Uniform 82-actual, over.”
“This
is Uniform 51-actual, over.”
“Uniform
51, we have penetration to Sunken Road and Kenmore House. Estimate old town
entry in five, say again, five minutes. Over.”
“Roger,
Uniform 82. Am with Uniform 49 at Point Delta. Plan Jackson is nearly complete.
Coordinate with . . .” His mind blanked on the call sign for
Charlie company. “Coordinate with Charlie 6, over.”
“Roger,
Uniform 51. This is Uniform 82.” There was a pause then the radio crackled
one last time. “Nice knowing you, Frank.”
“Same
here, Ricky. God will surely know his own.”
“Roger
that. Out here.”
Colonel
Robertson handed the mike to the RTO, swallowed and cleared his throat.
“Despite all your good work, we need to get a move on,” he said, gesturing at
the dwindling line.
“Yes,
sir, I heard. I’m going to go coordinate some more overburden, but if you want
to go chivvy some civvies, well, we work for you.”
The
colonel chuckled at the weak joke. “I wish we could get some support, any
support. Any distraction right now would be a good one.”
CHAPTER 35
Andrews Air Force
Base, MD, United States of America, Sol III
0323 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
“All right, here’s
the plan, such as it is,” said Lieutenant Colonel Augusta Sherman, commander of
the Twenty-Second Tactical Fighter Squadron. The squadron ready room at Andrews
Air Force Base was heavily soundproofed. The soundproofing was legacy of the
days when fighters and supply aircraft
thundered into the skies; the padded walls reduced the thunder to a dull
rumble. In the face of the grounding of aircraft worldwide it created an eerie
silence into which the squadron commander’s soprano voice dropped like pebbles
in a tomb.
“We
know that the Posties are in and around Fredericksburg,” she continued. “But we
don’t have a hard fix on numbers, depth, locations or any other damn intel.
Army AirCav Kiowas have fixed a route in that is out of sight of any of the
landers by sneaking along with their sensor masts just above the trees. In case
you need a reminder, flying in sight of landers is a definite no-no.”
She
pointed to the snaking course drawn in on the map. “It’s pretty close to
following the Rappahanock River. But just north of Fort A.P. Hill they ran into
solid Posleen forces and really got mauled by the God King’s automatic
targeting systems.”
She
looked around the ready room at the group of blue-suited squadron pilots. Until
the coming of the Galactics, American military hardware was the crčme de la
crčme and the F-22E was the cutting edge. But with the coming of the Galactics
and the Fleet Fighter Force the cream of the world’s fighter pilots was sucked
off into space. So many fighters were needed for the fleet that virtually
anyone with a background in flying or even a strong aptitude was offered a
slot.
What
was left to fly the hottest plane ever developed through purely Terran
technology was a ragbag group of relative losers. There was Kerman, who had his
flight license suspended after putting his crop duster into a house then
registering a blood alcohol level of .25. The investigator had it retaken
because it seemed an impossibility anyone could fly with that much blood in his
alcohol. There was Lieutenant Wordly, who spent as much time holding on to a
puke bag as he did the stick, Jefferson Washington Jones, plane lover, GED
graduate, a functional illiterate until he was twenty-five, whose first solo,
at the age of fifty-seven, was in a jet trainer, and all the others.
And
there was one antiquated squadron commander who got such a severe case of
agoraphobia after one trip out of the atmosphere she could no longer fly above
two thousand feet. It’s not the height, General, it’s the horizon.
On
the other hand, they had a plane that practically flew itself and every single
pilot was bound and determined to do the best job they possibly could.
“They
tried sending in Predator drones, but they got mauled too. The powers-that-be
hope that the combination of Terran stealth and high speeds will give us some
limited survivability. It’s really the only reason they produced the Echo, for
a situation just like this.”
She
took a sip of coffee to give an appearance of calm and took another look around
the room. Most of the pilots were simply listening, taking it all in. There
would be hardly time to breathe on a mission like this one, much less read
notes. And the whole mission would be programmed into their birds. This was
just so the pilots had some idea what was happening when they had to change the
plan. Kerman picked up the sheet of paper in front of him and started to fold
it, whistling quietly through his teeth.
“We’re
going in Nap-Of-The-Earth—sorry Wordly,” she said in an aside that produced
general chuckles. “Set your terrain-following gear to hard. And we’ll go in one at a time. When the point bird is
lost the next in line will follow. Hopefully they will be able to avoid
whatever took him out. The alternative, throwing everyone in en masse, is
suicide. None of the data we have indicates that we can overwhelm the Posleen
systems.”
Augusta
was getting distracted by Kerman. Whatever the origami was that he was working
on, the sound of the folding was interspersed across her words. And she was
trying in the back of her mind to remember what the song was that he was
whistling. She thought she recognized it, but she couldn’t figure out from
where.
“Eventually
we are going to get a complete look at the Posleen-controlled area or we’ll run
out of planes, take your pick. We’ll be continuously uplinking the take from
all of our sensors, but we are going in black otherwise. We’ll have to depend
on our low-light gear and IR lidar for terrain avoidance and data. I realize
how badly the Army needs intel, but the only way to get it is if we can survive
the penetration.” There was a snort of disbelief at this last suggestion. She
thought it was Kerman, who seemed to have almost completed his complicated
origami.
Augusta
agreed that surviving this mission would be unlikely. However, they had all
signed on the dotted line and raised their hands to swear. She still intended
to give them a chance to back out.
“Once
we are in the basket, into the actual Fredericksburg area, I intend to go full
active so we can get the max information possible.” There had been some
fidgeting and quiet conversation before she said that. When the words were
said, the room dropped to total silence.
“Because
of the threat and the fact that we are forced to go active on sensors, I
personally do not expect to come back. Given that fact, anyone who wants to bow
out can do so.” She paused and waited for someone to get to their feet.
Surprisingly, nobody did. She looked pointedly at Kerman but the older pilot
just smiled quietly and kept whistling.
“Okay,
with the exception of the first run, we’ll draw lots for the order. Oh, and
we’re going in loaded for ground attack. If you find a juicy target, there’s no
reason not to pickle the bastard.”
“So,
who takes the first run?” asked Kerman, slipping on a set of jet-black
aviator’s shades and popping the origami to full size with a flick of the
wrist. He obviously felt that as the aviator with the most experience at this
sort of flying it should be him.
“Who
do you think, Captain Kerman?”
When
the last lingering pilot had quit the room, the origami of a mushroom cloud was
left to flutter in the breeze from the air-conditioning.
At
over twelve-hundred knots the darkened trees to either side of the river were a
blur of gray, even when she was fully conscious. With a setting of hard on the terrain-following gear, the
plane was no longer adjusting itself for human physiology. The only thing that
mattered to it was the plane’s survivability. Between thrust-vector technology,
super-cruise ability and the craft’s robust airframe design Colonel Sherman
was taking regular hits of over sixteen Gs.
Between
her gray- and red-outs she could see bars of silver and red flashing by on
either side. At first she put it down to optical illusions from the pounding
she was taking, but then she realized what it really was.
“Base,
this is Tigershark 1,” she gasped. “Are
you copying this fire, over?”
“Roger, Tigershark 1. You hanging in
there?”
“Negative, Base, I’m fading in and
oooooooh shiiit.” She broke off.
“Sorry, Base,” she
continued after a moment. “There
was a lift by Rufin’s Pond.”
“Hang in there, Tigershark. You’re
beyond where the Kiowas took it in the ass.”
“Roger, Base. Fire picking up now,
there’s . . . damn.” She tapped a command into the
low-light TV camera. “There’s
Posleen packed onto 17 headed into town. Fredericksburg must still be holding
out.”
The
TV revealed masses of the centaurs headed north on U.S. 17 in brief flashes
through the trees. The God King’s systems were thwarted by the same trees; the
plasma, flechettes and lasers attenuated just enough that the Peregrine
continued its remarkable survival.
“Coming up on Fredericksburg, now,”
she continued, pointing the camera forward again. “Got some tracers, they must still be fighting in there. I’m
gonna give them a little room. Don’t want to kill anybody with the sonic boom.”
She touched a series of controls and the plane made a hard bank across the
Posleen mass on 17. To survive the moment, the bank took her to over twenty Gs
and she blacked out despite crunching as hard as she could. The blackout was
only momentary, nor did she succumb to the complete loss of blood to the brain
that pilots call the “funky chicken.” She was back in action in moments. In
that time, however, she had flashed across over three miles and was coming up
on Concord Heights too fast to target the next likely attack point.
“They’re solid on U.S. 1, too,” she continued as she
recovered. “I guess they’re
pressing them back into town. Heading for the I-95 interchange and going
active now.”
It
was one of the few required tasks laid on the mission, and one she was certain
was going to be her last. Once she crossed into the interchange of I-95 and VA
3 she would be in the open, radiating in multiple spectrums, and that was a
deathtrap. She finally understood how the Japanese kamikazes felt. She made a
series of adjustments to the weapons controls.
The
F-22E Peregrine variant hosted a number of instruments the original F-22
designers would never expect would someday be standard equipment. The plane was
originally conceived and designed, in the days of the Global Positioning
System, as an air superiority fighter. If there was a ground autotargeting
system to be installed, it would naturally be based on the GPS.
However,
since the designers modifying the F-22 into a ground-attack variant recognized
that there were not going to be any satellites, period, they had to come up
with other measures. Eventually they fell back on three old but proven
technologies.
First,
the Peregrine could fix its position fairly well on the basis of inertial
guidance. Given that it knew where it took off from, sensitive devices measured
every direction vector on the craft and, on the basis of calculating all of
those various vectors, could determine its current location with fair accuracy.
It was ’60s technology, but with more sophisticated computers, software and
sensors, its degree of accuracy far exceeded any previous system. However, the
farther the plane went from its starting point, called an IP, the larger the
degree of inaccuracy. This was especially true when the plane was performing
excessive maneuvers such as max thrusters on a hard terrain setting.
Second,
the plane could “look” at the terrain and match it to a computerized map in its
memory. A system originally developed for the much slower Tomahawk cruise
missile, with modern computers, radar and software it was more than capable of
taking terrain reads at twelve hundred knots. The terrain reads were primarily
used to adjust the data from the inertial guidance system, correcting it as it
got farther and farther off baseline. Thus, if the terrain was good the
inertial guidance became much more accurate.
Last,
the plane could fix its position in two dimensions quite well off LORAN radio
direction finding.
So
when Colonel Sherman programmed all of her cluster bombs to land just east of
the 95/3 interchange, she could be fairly certain that that was where they were
going to land. All she had to do was live long enough to give the drop command.
She had to ensure that the CBU-58s would land on Posleen and not human defenders.
The
plane made a hard jink to the left and dropped as a huge explosion occurred
behind her and to the right. Slapped by the shockwave, she at first thought she
had dropped her load early and looked in her rearview at the wrong moment. As
she snapped her head back to the front she got tone just as the Peregrine
cleared the woods west of Fredericksburg.
The
area in and around the interchange was a seething mass of Posleen. Forces
driving from the north and south had met at the interchange and tens of thousands
of them were creating a sea of alien centaurs in their haste to enter the city
before it could be fully sacked. But that same pileup made for thousands of God
Kings and they all swiveled towards the target as Colonel Sherman’s fighter
rocketed fully into the open.
Before
her thumb could complete the fractional movement to the firing button, hundreds
of lasers and plasma cannon shredded her aircraft. The high-tech fighter came
apart in a shower of carbon fibers, jet fuel and rocking explosions, but before
those cannons and lasers tattered her aircraft the last burst of data from her
sensor rig, video, radar and all, was received by the ground controller.
“That’s
a hard target for Showboat, sir,” said the technician, stabbing the monitor
with her finger in eagerness.
“Concur,”
said the ANGLICO captain, looking over her shoulder. “Call ’em up. Tell ’em to
give it all they’ve got; there’s no humans in that mass.”
“Fire mission, continuous!”
With
the setting of the sun, the wind had died and the Potomac River was as still as
a pond. The ship had already dropped its anchors to hold it in place against
the slight current and the huge guns now swiveled westward in their turrets.
“Load
M-One-Four-Four!”
Doors
opened in the side of turrets and the long green rounds slid across the
compartment, up the carriage and into the breeches.
“Elevation twelve-fifty, five bags.”
The
tubes slowly elevated as teenage seamen and women hurled the heavy bags of
powder onto the rammers, doing the same job their great-grandfathers had done
over sixty years before. With a sussurant hush the fifty-pound bags were shoved
up behind the antipersonnel cluster rounds.
“Warning
Light is ON!”
Throughout
the ship sailors opened their mouths and clamped hands over ears already
stuffed with earplugs.
“Fire!”
And
the newly refurbished USS North Carolina, one of the seven remaining
battleships in the world—pulled from her berth in Wilmington where she had
spent nearly fifty years as a state monument—shivered as flame lanced from her
sixteen-inch guns for the first time in over sixty years.
CHAPTER 36
Fredericksburg,
VA, United States of America, Sol III
0456 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
“Jesus Christ!”
Lieutenant Young shouted, clamping his hands over his ears, “what the fuck was
that?!”
“Had to be one of
the new Peregrines to survive this far in,” Colonel Robertson surmised, shaking
his head to clear the ringing. Just when his hearing was getting back to normal
from the noise of landing, the human fighter had slammed it again. “It was definitely
a jet.”
The mothers,
intent on getting into shelter, paid little or no attention to the cries of
their children as they carried them, with the help of the many defenders who
had gathered in the area, up the ramp to safety. There were fewer than fifty to
go, but the line had started to slow.
Lieutenant
Young was peering past the Klieg lights in the direction the fighter went when
there was a tremendous explosion to the west. Again the group was rocked by a
pressure wave as a huge fireball climbed above the trees in the distance. For a
moment the city was lit as if it were day, then the magenta and orange flash
faded. A split second later there was a second, fairly anticlimactic, explosion
to the northwest.
“Well,
there goes the fighter,” said Lieutenant Young. “So much for support.”
“I
think that first one was the armory,” Colonel Robertson corrected. “The second
was probably the fighter. But if he was running a direct feed, we might get
some artillery. Depending on how far out the Posleen go, One-Five-Five might
reach. And there might be more fighters, there’s a whole squadron up at
Andrews.”
“I
don’t think they’re going to slow them down, though,” the lieutenant commented
grimly.
“No,
probably not,” the commander agreed. His tone was fairly philosophical. His
unit had done its job and more. When he died he would know that no one could
have done more. It was a form of peace. “I think I will go chivvy some
civvies.”
“Okay,
sir. I think I’ll head over to the Executive Building and see how that’s
going.”
“Good
luck, Lieutenant.”
The
young officer straightened up and snapped a parade ground salute. The old
commander solemnly returned it. Without another word they turned away, each in
the direction they felt that duty called them.
Ted
Kendall found himself, unfamiliar rifle in hand, in a line of figures shuffling
past the Executive Building. Led by a tough old bird from the National Guard
armory, they were headed towards the sounds of rifle fire to try to slow down
the Posleen. It was their last detail, having spent the previous three hours
working on the bunker being prepared for the women and children. He stopped
when he saw a familiar figure hunched over a large piece of banner paper.
“Morgen,
honey,” he rasped, his voice gone from passing commands in the construction
around the bunker, “what do you think you’re doing?”
“I’m
making a sign.” Morgen Bredell had been in one cheerleading or pep squad or
another since she was eight. She knew she was not as brilliant as she was
good-looking, but if there was one thing she could get straight, come hell or high
water, it was making a sign out of banner paper and paint. She could even paint
a picture, after a fashion. She reached for the Red Brick color as she
continued: “When the Posties get here, I think they should have a sign. Don’t
you?” She started crying as she slowly dabbed in a building on the banner
paper.
“Sure,
honey, sure,” he comforted. “I love you, Morgen.”
“I
love you too, Ted. Sorry about the fight.”
“Yeah,
me too, honey. Good luck.”
“Yeah.”
She did not look up. “You too.”
“Yeah.”
He shook his head and hurried to catch up with the last platoon of the militia
reserve.
“This
is insane,” Wendy muttered as they lifted another piece of antique furniture
onto the pile under the glassless window.
“Death
is lighter than a feather, duty is heavier than furniture,” misquoted Tommy,
stepping back and dusting his hands off.
“Would you
quit with the Zen quotes, already,” she snapped.
“Well, you could
just blow your brains out and be done with it,” he answered serenely. He
gestured at the pistol. “That’ll do the job nicely.”
“What?
You want me to kill myself?” she retorted.
“No, I want you
to be as happy as you can be in what are probably your last few minutes of
life,” he answered with a grim smile. “What’s the point of getting angry? It
just reduces the quality even further.”
“Sorry,
but I’m not even completely through the denial stage, okay?”
“It’s
not upsetting me, it’s upsetting you. What we have here is a case of pronoun
trouble.”
“This
is a great way to spend the last hour of life,” she continued, pulling over a
table to lean against as she fired. “Not. Besides, the old thing about, ‘you
don’t want to die a virgin, do you?’ keeps running through my head.”
He
nodded his head, putting a pillow on a table of his own then stopped. “Hold it,
does that mean . . . ?”
“Yep.”
“You’re
kidding.”
“Nope.”
“What
about . . . ?”
“The
whole football squad?”
“Yeah.
And . . . ?”
“Half
the other guys in school?”
“Yeah.”
“None
of them wanted to admit to the rest that I was a tease.”
“Really?”
he asked and guffawed.
“Fuck
you. I wasn’t a tease. I told them all up front that I wasn’t that kind
of girl. Most of ’em figured they could change my mind, but they were wrong.
Now I wish I hadn’t held out.”
“Well,”
said Tommy, setting up a command-detonated claymore by the door, “I’d love to
help you out and all, but all things considered I think we should concentrate
on what we’re doing.”
“Yeah,
what are you doing?” she asked, placing her Galil on the table, pointed out the
window.
“Well,
the plan is we fire a few rounds from here for glory and boogie out the back
door, run into Alesia’s and get to our firing point there, right?”
“Right.”
“The
problem is, I don’t think we’ll have enough time to get in position in
Alesia’s. We need something to slow the horses down. Voilŕ, the claymore. It’s
a command-detonated mine that can be pointed at the enemy. Then when you’re
ready to blow it,” he pulled the clacker out of his cargo pocket, “you hook
this up, clack it three times and BOOM!”
“Oh,
okay. Then when are we going to blow it up?”
“As
we enter Alesia’s. I’ll run the detonator line back there and as we run through
the door I’ll set it off. That should slow them down a few seconds at least.
Then we get into position, fire a few more rounds for glory, run down to the
basement and hide in the tunnel. With any luck they’ll lose the trail when I
detonate the other claymore I set up in Alesia’s.”
“Why
do you clack it three times?” she asked, holding out her hand for the device.
“Just
to be sure,” he said, handing it over and looking out the window.
“Okay,
so the wire . . .” There was a sudden massive boom and both of
the teenagers slapped hands over their ears moments too late.
“Fuckin’
’ell!” shouted Tommy as a second and third massive explosion erupted.
“What
was that?” shouted Wendy through the ringing in her ears.
“The
first thing was a sonic boom, a jet, had to be a
Peregrine . . .”
“A
what?”
“A
ground-attack version of the Rapier Stealth Fighter.”
“Oh,”
she said, understanding not a word of the explanation.
“The
other two, I don’t know what they were.”
“Did
they blow up the Executive Building already?”
“No.
If we’re above ground when that goes up we won’t have to worry about wondering
what the sound was. We’ll be dead. And those explosions came from the wrong
direction. Actually, one of them was probably the fighter eating a plasma
round.”
“Okay.
If they got a fighter in here, does that mean help might be on the way?”
“No.
The reason I think it was an F-22 is that’s the only thing that might have
survived to get this far. The Posleen are murder on aircraft.”
“Oh.
Damn.”
“Yeah.”
He looked out the window. “So now we wait. It’s supposed to be the worst part.”
“Even
worse than getting wounded? That’s what really scares me.”
“Yeah,
me too.”
“You?
You’re not scared of anything.”
“Yeah,
I am. I’m scared of being just bad enough wounded that I’m conscious when the
horses get to me. That or being captured alive. You heard about their pens?”
“Yeah.
That scares me too.” She got a thoughtful look on her face.
“Umm . . .”
“Yeah.
No problem.”
“You
know what I was going to say?”
“Well,
it was probably going to be that old saw about, ‘if they’re goin’ to take me
alive . . . ’ And the answer is, ‘okay.’ ”
“Okay.
Thanks. . . . What about you?”
“I’d
appreciate it,” he said and paused. “Oh, my,” he said mildly.
“What?”
she started and then she heard it approaching.
The
sound was a freight train of the gods, tearing the firmament asunder with its
roar. All nine of the sixteen-inch, two-ton rounds rumbled over the town with a
thunder to drown the Hellbound Train. The culmination was a relatively
anticlimactic sound like millions of firecrackers in the direction of the
distant mall.
“Fuckin’
A!” shouted Tommy, “ICM!”
“What?”
As
the Volkswagen-sized shells rumbled over the town, their nose cones began to
open and release their submunitions. Each submunition, about the size and
shape of a softball, was an onion of destruction. Surrounding the central ball
of explosive was layer after layer of notched steel wire and white phosphorus.
As the munitions spun gently through the air, a cocking mechanism was engaged
by the inertial force. When the cocking mechanism reached a certain point,
after some seven hundred spins, the weapon was armed. A moment after impact,
the hammer released.
As
the bomblets arrived in fan-shaped sprays they first bounced back into the air
then detonated individually, giving the weapon its characteristic firecracker
sound. Across the length and breadth of the highway interchange, the ground
flashed white.
The
weapons were designed to detonate at head height on a person, so across the
mass of Posleen thousands of grenades began to explode. The explosions hurled
the centaurs aside, tearing their yellow bodies asunder, but the worst effect
was from the shrapnel. Each bomblet released thousands of tiny bits of metal,
each traveling faster than a bullet and along with these bits of shrapnel
traveled burning white phosphorus.
The
phosphorus and steel wire smashed into the bodies of centaurs throughout the
Posleen swarm with terrific effect. Thousands of the Posleen normals were
killed, along with their God King commanders, as they drove forward towards the
beleaguered defenders of Fredericksburg. Those that were not killed outright
were horribly wounded by flying steel and the phosphorus that refused to extinguish
even after penetrating the bodies.
The
first salvo eliminated the last remnant of Aarnadaha’s brigade, which had swept
across the mall area only to be decimated at the I-95 interchange. They had
paused, fatally, to regroup in the shadow of the melted Quarles Gas truck and
were swept away on the tides of destruction. And another salvo followed, and
another.
“What
are those?” Chief Wilson asked Charlie company’s first sergeant, pulling back
her Nomex head cover to hear better.
“Artillery,”
answered the first sergeant, not looking up from the circuit he was installing.
“What I don’t know is where the hell it could be coming from. And it’s big,
too. At least as big as one-five-five, sounds like larger.”
“It
is,” said Lieutenant Young, joining the conversation as he arrived from the
bunker. “I think it’s one of those converted battlewagons they refurbished.”
“Damn,”
laughed the NCO, “with fuckin’ sixteen-inch ICM, those Posties are gonna be
Post Toasties.”
“Yeah,”
smiled Lieutenant Young grimly, “between this an’ that, these fuckers are at
least gonna know they’ve been kissed!”
“Change of
mission, boyos,” said Captain Kerman over the squadron channel. “Fredericksburg
is still holding out. We’re going to be going in as ground support, adding our
weight to the North Carolina’s broadside. In addition, set your ground
support radios to settings 96-35 and 98-47. Those are the ground support
settings for the engineer unit in Fredericksburg. They may try to contact us.
If they come over the radio, don’t try to respond, we won’t have time, just let
it uplink.
“One
of the reasons for this strike is to try to get more targeting data. We don’t
know exactly where the Posties end and the humans start, so we’re going to
continue to pound the interchange. The battleship has to have had an effect by
now, so we might survive the encounter. If you do, return to base for bullets
and gas.
“Your
flight paths are on your computer; modify them as you see fit.” He paused,
searching for something to say as the squadron banked out of its figure-eight
pattern and lined up to face the embattled city.
“Sir,”
interjected Lieutenant Wordly, “what about straying into one of the
sixteen-inchers. Shouldn’t we avoid their path?”
Kerman
blanked for a moment on how to answer the question. “I tell you what,
Lieutenant. If you run into one of those shells, you may officially complain
about having a bad day.” There were actually a few chuckles transmitted over
the frequency-hopping radios.
“Well,”
he concluded, “I guess it’s time to go back to historic Fredericksburg.”
CHAPTER 37
Fredericksburg,
VA, United States of America, Sol III
0524 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
“Major, they’re
across the obstacles on Sunken Road,” said the civilian runner, a well-set-up
football type with blisters on his hands and blood from a head wound dripping
down his sweat-streaked face.
Major
Witherspoon looked at the dead and wounded piled throughout the Presbyterian
church. The dead were rapidly cooling in the unheated vestibule as medics
pointlessly worked to repair the wounded. Then he looked through the broken
windows to the west. There the inexorable tide of centaurs was clearly visible,
pushing through the piles of demolished trucks and cars at Williams and
Washington. A rolled-over gas truck—converted to a suicide bomb by the
driver—gave its last spiteful luminance to the scene.
“God,”
he chuckled, “I love it when a plan comes together. Okay,” he continued,
turning to the now-veteran soldier, “tell First platoon and the militia to pull
back and head to the south. We don’t want fire directed at the Executive
Building. As of now they are detached to whatever means they want to use, just
don’t get between the Posleen and the Exec. Same general orders to the Second
and Third, but tell them to pull straight back.”
“Yes,
sir.” The private now had tears mingled with the blood on his face. “I wish we
could do more.”
“When
you do the best you can, there isn’t any more to do, son. We held them through
the night; held them longer than the expedition on Diess. You should only have
regrets if you have not given your all.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Good
luck.”
“Yes,
sir.” Then Ted Kendall hoisted his AIW, and trotted off into the darkness.
“Ma’am,”
said Colonel Robertson, proffering a bundle to the last mother entering the
bunker. “I’d like you to take this in there with you. When you get your place,
just set it down and don’t tamper with it. It’s booby trapped in case the
Posleen try to open it, but it won’t injure anything outside the box if it goes
off.”
Shari
looked at the bundle in bemusement, wondering how to juggle it while carrying
Kelly.
“I’ll
take it down with her, sir,” said the fireman who was carrying Billy. “And make
sure it gets in a secure place.”
“It’s
a record of the defense and the unit’s colors. You know, the Flag?”
The
fireman nodded, eyes misting slightly, “Yes, sir.”
Shari
nodded as well, “ ‘At the twilight’s last gleaming,’ right?”
“It
sounds strange . . .”
“No,
it doesn’t.” She gestured with her chin at the line entering the bunker. “Where
else would this happen?”
“Well,”
said Colonel Robertson, picking up his rifle, “you’d better get down there.” He
glanced back over his shoulder at a sudden burst of fire due west. “It won’t be
long, now.”
Shari hurried
down the steep stairs as best she could. The rungs were pierced steel, but the
passage of so many feet had packed the planking with dirt and the steps were
slick with mud and other debris.
She
passed the first level, where the engineers and civilian workers were welding
the last steel in place, and ended up on the muddy bottom floor. The concrete
walls rose up around her, dripping condensation from the packed humanity’s
breath, the water sparkling brightly in the massed Klieg lights.
A
firewoman took the sleeping baby from her arms and ducked through a low
opening. To either side engineers worked feverishly to shore and strengthen the
hasty walls that had been faired over the opening. Following the firewoman out
of the echoing chamber Shari entered the vault beyond.
On
the left-hand side along the wall was a series of closed ports, apparently the
pump outlets. The fifty-foot concrete cellar appeared to be a sepulcher, with
the women and children under the Hiberzine resembling corpses in the harsh
lights of the medics’ headlamps. The bodies were piled throughout the long,
low-ceilinged room, children as much as possible on the top, but with little
other order. The flaccid limbs, slack jaws and staring eyes made Shari balk for
a moment, but the fireman just inside the door was used to the reaction and
pulled her through, gently but firmly.
“They’re
just asleep, promise,” he said with an automatic grimace he probably thought
was a grin. “It’s the Hiberzine that makes them look that way.”
Shari
skittered sideways and pulled Susie back to her as she stared wide-eyed around
the apparent tomb.
“Go
feel a pulse, if you want,” said the fireman who had brought Billy down,
carrying his burden to the front corner.
She
bent and felt at the neck of the nearest woman, a lady in her forties,
well-dressed as if going to work at a bank. After a long and frightening moment
when the vein in her neck remained flaccid, there was a single strong pulse
then nothing.
“It
works,” said the firewoman who preceded her. She gently pulled the protesting
Susie away and gracefully put her under; the motion was as automatic as
breathing by this point. “Be glad for it.”
“Carrie,”
said the fireman at the door, holding out his arms.
The
firewoman wrapped her arms around her compatriot and slapped him on the back.
“Sorry, man.”
“Hey,
just make more good babies, okay?”
“Yeah.
Do good.”
“Yeah.”
The fireman ducked through the low opening and was gone.
Carrie
repeated the pantomime with the other fireman, then a civilian in a hard hat
propped up a steel plate and with a last spiteful burst of an arc welder, the
two women were alone among the piled bodies.
“Well,”
the firewoman said, “it looks like you drew the short straw.”
“What?”
said Shari, looking for a place to lie down that was not on a body part.
“They
decided that there needed to be a few people awake on each level. You’re the
last one in and I’ve got a ten-year-old somewhere back there.” She gestured
towards the rear of the pile of bodies. “So we get the pleasure of waiting to
see who finds us first.” Beyond the wall a sound like rain on a roof announced
the first load of dirt that would bury them alive.
As
a burst of fire came from just beyond the hill where the engineers’ command
post was located, Wendy became aware of what Tommy was whistling under his
breath. Then she recognized it as a current pop hit. The singer who had
popularized the lyrics was considered to be going through a mid-life crisis and
the song was a cool, subtle composition about her relationship with a man young
enough to be her son.
The
diva was not particularly exhibitionistic so the lyrics were subtle double
entendres. The substance of the aria was, however, clear.
“Do
you boys ever think of anything else?” she asked in exasperation.
“There
was a study done back when,” Tommy answered calmly, continuing to look towards
the sound of distant fire, “where some psychologists determined that a teenage
boy thinks about sex every fifteen seconds on average. The old joke is about
two kids who hear about this and wonder what they are supposed to think of the
other fourteen.”
Wendy
snorted in response.
“Besides,”
he continued, “violence and sex are inextricably linked, at least in men.
Similar endorphins and hormones are released during violent confrontation and
sex, they both use the same areas of the brain, and one has a tendency to trip
the other. Tell me you’re not thinking about sex more today than normal.”
“Okay,”
she thought about it, “you’re right. So why?”
“I
don’t know, I suppose there are lots of theories. Survival reaction is what
the Darwinists say, a counter-reaction to death say the philosophers. A joke by
Mother Nature. Take your pick.” Another salvo of shells rumbled overhead.
“Shit, I wish we could communicate with that battleship.”
“Why?”
“We
could bring the fire in closer and really get the Posleen slowed down.” There
was a sudden series of tremendous sonic booms. The room rocked and plaster fell
from the damaged ceiling as firecrackers detonated in the distance,
intermingled with the sound and glow of exploding aircraft.
“I
guess the fighters are back,” said Wendy, brushing plaster dust out of her
hair.
“Peregrine
squadron, Peregrine squadron, this is Tango Five Uniform Eight Two, over.”
“Tigershark
Five, go ahead Uniform,” gasped Captain Jones as his fighter rocketed
across the Rappahanock on final. “Ground Control’s listenin’.”
“Peregrine
squadron. Drop everything you have on the intersection of Williams Street and
Kenmore, say again Williams and Kenmore, over.”
“Roger,
that, Uniform.” Jones risked a quick glance at his terrain map, but was
unable to find the designated intersection. “That’s gotta be for Showboat,
we’re hot for the interchange.”
“Roger,
Peregrine . . . Good luck.”
“Shark
Five.”
Luck
would have no place in this mission if Jefferson Washington Jones had anything
to say about it. He might have gotten his high school equivalent when most of
the other fighter jocks had been out of college, but he had years of experience
with the bad and ugly. Over the years he noticed that there was rarely such a thing
as a no-win situation. Sometimes you had to really try, but he had never been
in a situation he could not think his way out of and this one was no exception.
The
flight paths downloaded to the Peregrines all had the I-95/VA 3 intersection in
common, but they continued on to varying other locations from there, as if
everyone in the squadron was going to survive. When the mission was changed and
the flight paths downloaded, he immediately set to reprogramming.
While
his flight path still went over the Posleen positions at the interstate, it
deactivated the terrain-following gear and followed a manual profile that was
much closer to the mapped terrain. As long as there were no unexpected
obstacles the plane would probably not fly into the ground and the new
flight path had far fewer sight angles than the standard terrain-following path
would have taken.
But
the computer did not like it one bit.
“Terminal
flight path entered,” the cockpit voice system chirped. The sexy contralto was
standard equipment on all the Rapier series. “Terminal flight path requires
command override.”
“Override.”
It might look like suicide to the computer, but that was why there was still a
person in the cockpit.
“Confirm
flight path data. Press set three times.”
He
did.
“Last
warning, terminal flight path entered. Suicide is a permanent solution to a
temporary situation. Are you sure you want this flight path? Press set three
times if you do, otherwise press cancel.”
He
pressed set three more times. Since the cockpit system was not designed to get
in the last word, it let him get away with it.
“Like
it ain’t a suicide mission already.”
Passing
over the old mill district, he pressed the bomb release button on the joystick.
The system was set to “pickle at drop point” as long as the trigger was
depressed, so all he had to do was hold on and pray. He thundered across Mary
Washington Hospital, sparing a brief thought for the patients as lasers and
plasma searched for him to either side and hung on for dear life as the fighter
dove for the deck. As he came up on the interchange he suddenly realized that
he had failed to compensate for the trees.
The
robust stealth plane survived the lurch as its underframe snapped off the last
few oak tops surrounding the interchange and then dropped into the open. Around
him, as far as he could see in the odd mixture of moonlight and ground fires,
the ground bucked and heaved with wounded and dead Posleen.
The
centauroid bodies were a carpet of dead and dying, the ground soaked with their
fluids. Thousands, tens of thousands of the centaurs had crossed the
light-years only to find a final resting place under the hammer of sixteen-inch
guns.
“HOOOOWAH!”
Kerman shouted over the squadron frequency, as other pilots cheered the sight
of the carnage from the battleship’s fire.
Jones’s
fighter immediately performed its programmed hard bank to the north. As its
wingtip dipped to within inches of the masses of alien flesh, the weapons bay
popped open and deployed a totally unnecessary CBU-52. The cluster bomb opened
out almost immediately and scattered two hundred more bomblets across the
decimated Posleen adding insult to the masses of injury.
As
the plane snapped through a programmed set of low-level evasion maneuvers,
Jones could see other flashes to the south that told of squadron mates less
fortunate. He finally cleared the treeline on the northeast side of the
interchange—chased by a last spiteful burst of laser fire—and returned to
terrain-following mode. Now all he had to do was survive the unknown dangers
between here and Manassas and he would be home free. Until the next mission.
CHAPTER 38
The Potomac
River, Near Potomac Creek
United States of America, Sol III
0548 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
Video from the
side cameras of all the Peregrines was downloaded to the North Carolina
along with the orders to fire on the intersection of Williams and Kenmore
Streets. The captain ordered the video piped over the closed-circuit TV system,
while the tactical officers huddled over their maps.
“Okay,
Williams is VA 3, but where in the hell is Kenmore?” asked the peeved
S-2. Standard tactical maps never denoted street names. This was because calls
for fire never used them as references. Except in real life.
“Well,
it has to be further into the city,” noted the chief gunnery officer. The
lieutenant commander turned to his fire direction chief. “Pull the fire in
some, and spread it out. Target all the major intersections on the way into
town, one battery each.”
“Aye,
aye.” The warrant officer began punching commands into his computer as the
officers went back to arguing. Suddenly one of the communications technicians
jumped up from her station.
“Sir,”
she said, coming to attention next to the chief gunnery officer, “permission to
speak, sir.”
The
officer rounded on her testily. “What?”
“I’ve
got a way to get a map of Fredericksburg, maybe, sir.”
“How?”
“Off
the Internet. I’ve got a laptop in my locker. I can hook into the Internet and
get it.”
“Shit,”
said the S-2, “good idea, why didn’t I think of it? Or maybe put in a priority
call to the Defense Mapping Agency?” He caught the eye of the communications
officer and gestured him over.
“I
think Expedia would be faster, sir,” said the tech, diffidently.
“Can
we still get Internet access?” asked the gunnery officer.
“The
Posleen have destroyed all the standard systems in the area around us,” said
the communications officer, “but we might be able to punch through a short-wave
transmission. What’s this all about?”
“We
desperately need a map,” said the gunnery officer. “Your tech here thinks she
can get it off the Internet if she can get her laptop and connect to Milnet.”
“Okay,
girl, good work. Go get your laptop. If the Marines stop you, tell them to call
me.”
“Yes,
sir,” said the tech and jogged out the door.
“How
are you going to get through?”
“Patch
a line to Norfolk. I’ll get one of my techs on it.”
“Okay.”
“You
know, we’re going to have company before too long,” commented the S-2, poring
over the updates to the dispositions map. He noted the red marks showing
Posleen in close proximity. The Peregrines had come within five miles of the
ship on their way out. “That should get interesting.”
Like
everyone else in the ship, he was becoming bored with the continuous main gun
fire. After cheering the first few rounds it just got damn loud and monotonous.
He could hardly imagine what it was like for the gunners.
“Briefly,”
laughed the fire control chief.
“Yeah,”
noted the gunnery officer, “if only they’d all come down to the water
and get baptized.”
“You
wish,” said the S-2 with a grim chuckle. The Posleen were not going to like
their reception from the North Carolina.
It
was by far the most monotonous job on the ship. The Electrician Class Two was
one of the close-approach lookouts, the eyes and ears of the ship. Since the
environment the ship had been refitted for was projected to be extremely
hostile, a duty that traditionally involved exposure to salt spray and fresh
sea air was now performed in a crowded, air-conditioned compartment.
And
instead of hefting a pair of heavy binoculars and spotting the occasional
leaping porpoise or diving bird, the technician ceaselessly scanned a bank of
twenty monitors hooked to low-light cameras. Five across, four down, numbered
sixty through seventy-nine, back and forth, top to bottom, bottom to top, every
odd monitor, every even monitor, back and forth, top to bottom, for eight long
hours.
Then,
after a rest period that seemed shorter and shorter all the time, it was back
to scanning monitors, each of which now showed the same monotonous scene of a
nighttime Potomac riverbank.
When
they first sailed up the river, civilians had poured out of the woods. Some had
their own boats, but many just lined the bank hoping to be rescued. They had
been picked up by boat parties or the Marines and now huddled in the forecastle
awaiting a return to port. But since that first flurry of activity, the
shoreline had been undisturbed.
The
tech had just picked up a Pepsi and taken a sip when a centaur appeared from
the trees lining Marlboro Point Road and immediately opened fire with its
shotgun.
The
light shot did not even reach the ship—which was moored nearly a mile out in
the broad river—and was unnoticed in the next crash of the main guns, but the
lookout lurched forward in his station chair and keyed a mike.
“Posleen
report, monitor sixty-eight, starboard abeam.”
“Posleen
report, monitor ninety, port forequarter,” sang the soprano of a seawoman
handling the portside monitors. The hull rang as the first hypervelocity
missile struck the case-hardened steel of the bridge.
“PosRep
monitor seventy-three, seventy-five,
sixty-nine . . . PosRep all monitors.”
“CIC,
this is Lookout Control,” the chief petty officer managing the compartment
called over the intercom, “we have a full court press.”
“Go
to full auto on all Thermopylaes and Mark 49s, engage the zone defense system,”
ordered the captain, panning his monitor along the shoreline suddenly packed
with Posleen.
The
defensive systems officer flipped a cover up and inserted a key in a slot. With
a twist of the wrist, the close-in defenses went to fully automatic mode.
The
original Close-in Weapons System, codename Phalanx, was developed in the 1970s
as a defense against antiship missiles and other close air threats. A
sophisticated radar guidance system was coupled with a rapid-firing Gatling
gun. The guidance system was mounted atop the gun and the single housing looked
for all the world like a little robot. The conical white weapons sprouting up
on the decks of Navy ships all over were immediately dubbed “R2D2s.” With the
transition from a stance of the Navy fighting humans to the Navy fighting
Posleen, the weapons appeared, like most of the Navy, to have become obsolete.
However,
the same bright boys at Naval Sea Systems Command who pointed out the relative
invulnerability of World War II battleships to Posleen ground weapons noted one
other point about fighting the Posleen swarms. While the swarms might be
difficult for weapons systems to distinguish when they were just moving or
standing, once they fired it was a different story entirely. The conical white
radome then disappeared, replaced by a heavy-action turret borrowed from the
Abrams tank and a turret targeting system borrowed from the Hummer-25. Atop the
turret was an infrared spike detector.
As
the Posleen God Kings in their saucer-shaped craft came down to the river, they
immediately opened fire with their pintle-mounted heavy weapons. The lasers,
hypervelocity missiles and plasma rifles scored deep ridges in the battleship’s
plate, occasionally penetrating to the surface magazines of the vessel’s
secondary weapons. When they did, thundering explosions would rupture forth
from the embattled dreadnought. But with the turn of a key, the tides of war
changed sides.
The
Thermopylae turrets—so christened for a famous defense in ancient
Greece—swiveled outboard and the infrared spike detectors immediately found
targets. It was the most robotic of actions, as each weapon noted spikes in
their area of responsibility, double checked their safe systems, swiveled in
two axes and fired.
Every
fifth tungsten ten-millimeter penetrator was a tracer, and the shells were so
close together that the tracers seemed one continuous beam, a curved orange
laser searching out the impudent fools who had dared to challenge the Navy’s
battlewagon. The plasma cannons and lasers caused huge thermal blooms each time
they fired and the signature was distinctive against the cold night background.
Six CIWS on each side locked on to the targets in their area of responsibility
and serviced them with the greatest of efficiency.
Each
thermal spike was fed back from the CIWS and noted by the onboard defensive
computer. It, in turn, swiveled the five-inch secondary cannons outboard and
loaded them with canister ammunition. Its algorithm called for a certain number
of spikes over a certain vector. At that point there was a seventy-five percent
certainty of hitting significant numbers of Posleen normals.
The
certainty levels reading was displayed on the defensive systems officer’s
monitor while the captain was cross-feeding. Each waited for the heavy guns to
engage, but the certainty level first rose, then started to fall as the heavy weapons
of the God Kings were silenced one by one.
“Turn
the certainty to sixty-six percent,” said the captain, swinging back and forth
in his command chair, arms crossed. He had never agreed with the standard
setting on the defensive systems.
“Aye,
aye,” said a tech, and tapped in the command.
Immediately
twelve five-inch double turrets fired canister rounds filled with flechettes
along the average bearing-to-target in their area. Then they started to sweep
from side to side, pumping out a beehive round every second and a half.
“Lordy,”
whispered the EL-2 lookout as the centaurs were slaughtered. The dead began to
mound in heaps as the turrets swung from side to side, the weapons sweeping
across the normals like huge brooms as the Thermopylaes picked off leader after
leader.
As
the certainty level dropped from lack of targets, each time a God King or one
of the HVM-toting normals fired at the armored dreadnought it would be answered
by a storm of fire. As trailing God Kings came up, they began to concentrate
the fire of their companies on the secondary turrets that were decimating their
ranks. However, the dead continued to mound as the Posleen swarmed to the
sounds of the guns.
Althanara
was only a scoutmaster, but he knew a losing situation when he saw one. The
heavy fire from the direction of the water was bad enough, but the description
he coaxed out of the net interface was worse. He gestured to his oolt and
turned to the rear.
“Where
are you going you coward!” shouted Stenarnatta, the battlemaster he had
attached himself to. “The Net will cast you down as a Kenstain if you do not
return NOW!”
“Kill
yourself if you desire,” he snarled. “I’m going to attack that thing with a
Po’osol!” He gestured at the shotguns that his oolt carried. “These abat-spit
guns are useless.”
“Fine,”
snarled the battlemaster, “run away. Kenstain!”
The
scoutmaster turned his back on the soon-to-be-destroyed battlemaster and
trotted his company to the rear.
“We’re
down twenty-five percent on monitors on the port, only fifteen percent to
starboard,” noted the defensive systems officer. “And we’re down twelve percent
overall on secondary systems; we took a bunch of casualties in turret five.
They’re whittling us away and we’re taking heavy fire from Fairview Beach since
we can’t bring the broadside to bear.”
“So
far so good,” said the XO.
“Sir,”
snapped the regional alert communications technician, “incoming alert from
CONARC!”
Althanara
double-checked the complicated controls of the ship. Normally the devices were
left on automatic, although a few Kessentai did make a study of their use. He,
however, was barely out of the nest, on his first conquest. Well, if the Net
granted him the victory of this horrible battle then the debts for his entire
company might be set aside. He might even be able to get a few decent weapons
from this damn battlefield.
He
entered the last command into the Alld’nt damned equipment and fluffed
his crest. “May the demons grant me luck.”
High
Knob Planetary Defense Center was as open as a strip mine. The plan of
construction had all the PDCs opened in a cone from the top down, then the
various equipment installed. Last the centers would be covered in concrete,
steel and native rock.
But
the plan had only gotten as far as installation. When the guns had not arrived
in time, it had thrown everything behind. Thus the defense center, which was
designed to be complete in another month, was wide open at the top and had only
one of its slated nine guns installed.
Since
they were relatively defenseless, they were under strict orders not to engage
landings. What they were being held back for were the “airmobile” operations
the Posleen initiated at seeming random that had repeatedly hammered human
forces. It was hoped that engaging a lifting lander would not call down the
devastation that had been wreaked on other defense centers around the globe.
Euro
Fortress Command, a joint operations unit centered on France and Germany, had
chosen to engage the initial landings. The massive European defenses had been
created from the fortress lines that both countries had constructed as
historical enemies. The line of fortresses, representing tens of millions of
man-hours’ effort, had been shredded by the first wave of the assault. Whereas
during World War I and World War II the fortresses had been proof against days
and days of conventional shelling, twenty-kiloton kinetic energy weapons had
opened the forts like so many tin cans. Rebuilding the centers would require a
miracle from a beneficent deity. China and India had also used their incomplete
fortresses to engage the landings, with like results. In one day better than
half of the planetary defense centers under construction had been totally
destroyed. Only the United States and Japan of the “primary powers” had refrained
from engagement.
The
control was now going to be loosed. When Posleen landers engaged their
antigravity systems, distinct emanations were detectable. The command center
for the fortress, which, being on the ground floor, had been completed,
detected the emanations of the rising lander immediately.
“Lifting
lander, Westmoreland County, Virginia,” sang out a female technician, studying
the readouts. The final box of the form blinked and cleared. “The box says it’s
a standard lander, not a command ship.”
“Roger,”
said the operational commander, a bird colonel. He shunted the information to
Continental Army Command along with a request to engage. The answer had already
been fed into the computers and he got a nearly instantaneous response.
“Weapons free. I say again, weapons free.”
The
one-hundred-millimeter grav-gun was fully automated and required no crew. There
was, however, a crew of three detailed to respond to mechanical malfunction or
to man it if the central fire control failed. The procurement process had
insisted on a backup “local” control system that seemed as useful to most of
the personnel assigned as teats on a boar hog. If the central control was out,
aiming the weapon was going to be a matter of luck.
The
weapon defied most conventional Air Defense Artillery concepts, as could only
be expected of something designed to engage space cruisers and not lightly
built aircraft. Instead of swiveling gears to track and aim it, the support
struts flexed in a sinuous fashion that was mildly nauseating to watch. The
struts also were only required to maintain its position against gravity; the
grav-drive system had no recoil.
In
addition, instead of sending up a hail of exploding “flak” like most
antiaircraft weapons, it fired single free-flight bars of depleted uranium,
accelerated to .3c in the path up the twenty-meter barrel. One hundred
millimeters in diameter and two meters long, the bars would go through a
command ship long ways when they hit. Besides the massive kinetic explosion
such an impact would entail, as they passed through the atmosphere the bars
created a standing relativistic wave in front of them that generated a blast of
gamma and X rays sufficient to cook anything in the ships.
However,
instead of nine such weapons there was a single gun. And, instead of the
fortress being “buttoned up,” a mass of concrete and steel, with concentric,
compartmentalized defenses and multiple firing points of the main guns, there
was sunlight coming in from both directions in the firing area. Both the
armored outer door, which should have protected the compartment from impacts on
the surface of the fortress, and the armored inner door, which should have
protected the compartment from internal blasts, were missing.
Basically,
they were naked as a jaybird.
Which
was why the three-man crew decided there were better places to be as the gun
swiveled and pointed down and to the southeast. The last one out grabbed the
helmet for his skin-suit and then pelted after the others. Without his helmet
the mass of radiation that was about to be generated would cook his brains.
The
lander was currently below the horizon. But the Posleen had never heard of
“nap-of-the-earth” flying; hugging the ground made no sense to them. The ship
finally crested into view, visible both through the Galactic-supplied sensors
and the various radars scattered across the surrounding hills.
“We
have lock,” stated the control tech. Although there was a manual override, the
system was designed to be automated. The tech only need keep his thumb on the
firing tab and the weapon system would do all the work. The thumb was currently
ready to flip off the safety cover.
“Engage,”
said the operational commander. The tone was level and disinterested. It was
the professional tone of the truly terrified.
The
tech flipped up the cover and depressed the firing stud.
The
gun gave a final, organic quiver and fired one round.
Althanara had
finally cleared the obscuring trees. He began the rotation of the ship to align
the main plasma cannon as his secondary weapons opened fire on the Po’osol
floating on the water. The great ship was continuing to fire, oblivious. The
thresh obviously did not recognize the threat. But as the heavy plasma cannons
and lasers of the secondary defenses began tracking across the floating ship it
rocked with explosions. Just wait until the antiship HVM was able to target.
“Sir,
damage control!” said the damage control officer. “We’ve lost number three,
five and seven turrets. Four of the six Thermopylaes are out and Main Turret C
is welded to the deck!”
The
captain fanned himself with a clipboard and swore fluently. The temperature in
the bridge had risen fifteen degrees in transmitted heat and he could hear the
screams of burn victims transmitted through the foot-thick walls of the bridge.
“What the hell was that?”
“Lander,
sir,” said the defensive systems officer. He pointed to a screen. “It’s up on
anti-grav firing on us with its secondaries.” As he said it there was another
series of wracking explosions punctuated with a roar that tossed the
multithousand-ton ship like a terrier.
The
captain held onto the arms of his command chair as the ship rocked in the waves
it had generated in the explosion. He had felt the distinct thud! of the
hull hitting the bottom. Which meant it had been driven at least twenty feet
downward by the explosion. “What the hell was that?”
“We’re
holed!” said the damage control officer tapping frantically at his keys to get
data. “Something punched right through the ship! We lost number three boiler,
number two engine, two five-inch magazines and, Jesus, sickbay!”
The
captain spun on the defensive systems officer. “Can you see it?”
“Yes,
sir,” said the officer, pointing at the screen, “but . . .”
“Then
try to hit it!”
“Yes,
sir,” said the officer, punching commands as fast as he could type. The
remaining Thermopylae began to point skyward as the five-inch turrets followed.
The
same communications technician who had found the firing locations on the
Internet suddenly lurched to her feet, laptop in hand, and ran to the main-gun
control center. Pushing another tech out of the way, she ripped out a standard
computer plug and hooked it into her computer. Preempting the displaced
technician’s station chair she started loading a program.
“Come
on, come on, come on you son of a bitch,” she chanted. Never had a simple DOS
program taken so long to load.
“Yahai!”
shouted Althanara, as the ship rocked in the water. Somewhere would be the
magazines. Once he hit those it was all over. However, even as the next HVM
loaded, the ship began to spit fire back.
“What
are you doing, girl?” asked the gunnery officer. He was fairly sure there was a
rhyme or reason to the tech’s actions, but the kid had taken his main guns
off-line. As he asked he saw the repeater panel indicate movement of the guns.
“Or should I say, ‘Why are you doing it?’” he asked in a deadly voice.
“Trying
to save our ass, sir,” the tech said in a distracted voice. A solution light
blinked on the computer and she hit the enter button. All six remaining main
guns of the ship fired at one point in space.
Althanara
had just raised his arms in celebration when he realized the fire from the ship
was not a palpable hit. He did not, however, have time to panic. Before the
thousand-pound shells of the ship had made it halfway to the target, the
uranium bar from the distant Planetary Defense Center arrived.
The
round penetrated from the bottom of Athanara’s ship and exited the top. Along
the way it passed through the matter-antimatter converter and the antimatter
storage tanks. Puncturing the plasma conduits of the HVM launcher on its way
out was merely a formality.
The
expanding ball of nuclear fire that had been a lander caught the main-gun
rounds in mid-flight and disintegrated them. The shockwave and thermal pulse
caught the Posleen along its path and incinerated them as well. From the
exterior it was impossible to tell which round had arrived first.
This
incident would create a running debate in history. The argument over whether it
was the PDC round or those of the battleship that had destroyed the lander
would be argued from boardroom to bar for years to come. The optimistic
assumption was that it was the battleship’s guns that had caused the
destruction. Medals, commendations and lucrative defense contracts would be
based on that, false, assumption. That, however, was for the future. The
present held only the result of the action. The shockwave that finally reached
the battleship.
It
was tests of the hydrogen bomb at Bikini Atoll that finally broke the power of
the battleship. On that morning of hydrogen fire a fleet of empty ships was
sunk by a single weapon. However, the blast from the already depleted lander
was far less than the blast from the Bikini Bomb. And the lander was rather
farther away.
When
the shockwave from the nuclear blast washed across the ship the damage was
great but not catastrophic. The wave of fire searched down through the great
rents in the fabric of the ship, but was stymied by the same blast doors that were
containing the flooding water. It exploded a few more exposed magazines, killed
a handful of damage control personnel and tore the ship loose from her
moorings. But it did not sink her.
Sunk
or not, the North Carolina was done for the day. One turret welded to
the deck, huge gaps torn in her armor, and belching smoke and flame from the
punctured engine rooms, she raised her other anchor and turned to the
southeast. Let one of the other battlewagons take the position. “Showboat” had
some cleaning up to do. The Planetary Defense Centers, however, were still in
the midst of it.
Sten’lonoral
fluffed his crest. The world below, which was supposed to be of relatively low
technology, was aflame with war. The evidence was obvious even from space as
flashes of nuclear fire and kinetic bombardment sparked on the surface.
His
oolt’ondai was passing over a large sea and coming up on a continent, still in
orbit, but descending, when a little-used sensor chimed.
“Antiship
surface weapon detected,” the androgynous voice stated. “Request permission to
engage.”
Sten’lonoral
leaned forward and inspected the readout. It was so much gibberish but he did
not want this supercilious Alld’nt piece of crap to know that. “Very
well, you have my permission to engage.”
The
signal was sent to an outer lander with a kinetic energy weapon launcher. The
large weapons platform shot the massive hyper-velocity round out like a pumpkin
seed and continued on its path.
The
kinetic round took a moment to orient itself, nosed over and dove for the
planet. The drivers in its body accelerated to a fraction of the speed of light
then cut out. At those speeds additional aiming was unnecessary.
“Sir!”
shouted a technician, as the round of congratulations swept the PDC. “Incoming
K-E-W!” All eyes swung to the sensor screen but that was all they had time for.
The
warhead was massive but contained no explosives; all its power was in the
kinetic impact. On impact with the base of the bowl, directly above the thinly
shielded control center, the potential energy of its descent converted to
light and heat.
The
fireball was mostly contained by the cone shape that had been carved out of the
mountain, so the damage to the surroundings was mitigated. The few watchers had
the amazing image of fire gouting out the side of the mountain forever
imprinted on their brains, just before the kinetic blast erupted out of the top
of the mountain. The mushroom cloud was all that they needed to see to know the
fate of the poor souls in the command center.
CHAPTER 39
The White House,
Washington, DC, United States of America, Sol III
0558 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
“And the Missouri
is on the way?” asked the President, shaking his head at the carnage.
“Yes,
sir,” said the secretary of defense, looking at his briefing papers, “and the Massachusetts.
The Missouri will be on station within two more hours; she’s just coming
upriver. The Mass was steaming near New York City and won’t be there for
another twelve hours.”
“And
the Planetary Defense Centers are out of action?”
“Pretty
much, Mr. President. We’re caught between a rock and a hard place. When there’s
a take off, we have to engage it. But when we do we lose a PDC. High Knob makes
four that we’ve lost. But if we let the landers move at will, they’ll slaughter
us.”
“What
about Fredericksburg?”
The
SecDef turned to the High Commander, “And?”
“And
they’re still holding out, but that won’t last long. We’ve effectively
exhausted the Peregrines, so we’re about out of reconnaissance assets. No
reconnaissance assets mean no calls for fire although we’ve got some
experimental stuff on the way. My guess is that once Fredericksburg is
finalized they’ll turn outward to the north and south.”
“And
we won’t try to stop them between the James and the Potomac, right?” asked the
President of the United States, somewhat bitterly.
“Yes, sir.
Fighting them with a battleship is one thing, and even then we saw the sort of
damage we can take; the North Carolina will be off-line for months. But
engaging them in open terrain, with hasty defenses, is something completely
different. The forces still are not as ready as I’d like—heck they’re not
ready, period, not for open field maneuver. Let us pull back behind the terrain
defenses, like we planned, and pound them with artillery. That’s the way to
kill Posleen.
“Now,
down in Richmond they’re planning a forward firesack. But they have the terrain
for it: Washington doesn’t. So we pull back behind defenses and let them break
their teeth, then we sally and mop them up. I’m glad we reactivated those
battlewagons, though,” he turned and looked at the video again, “damn me if I’m
not.”
“What
about C-Decs taking off and counterattacking?” asked the President.
“General
Horner has released the Planetary Defense Centers to fire on Posleen ships now
that the main force is down. The centers are not fully operational, and they
only have a few heavy grav-guns each, but they should be able to take out any
landers that take off between the mountains and the sea. There’s a little
curvature problem in Maryland, but I don’t think the Posleen will be able to
use it effectively. The PDCs are still under strict instructions not to engage
actual landings. We don’t want them torn up like Europe’s.”
“Maryland,” said the President.
“The
Twenty-Ninth’s forces got mauled, but Tenth Corps sent an extra division and
that should do the job. If not, First Army has already ordered all the East
Coast corps to send forces to Virginia. The Posleen in Maryland aren’t going
anywhere, Mr. President.”
“But
in Virginia . . .”
“In
Virginia we have another problem. Once we concentrate sufficient forces across
the Potomac and the James we’ll begin to retake Virginia. As I think we’ve
demonstrated, there are two aspects to waging war with artillery when it comes
to the Posleen. The first is that you have to see them to kill them. That means
that they can see you. If they can see you they can usually kill you. So we
need troops in prepared positions to call fire on them. The second is that,
given observers, they are extremely easy to kill with artillery fire.
They are the definition of troops in the open. That is an artilleryman’s
favorite target. The second point, however, is that you have to be able to see
them to kill them, and that means that we eventually will have to advance
against them.
“When
we do, I want our troops massed and fully prepared, with good artillery
coordination in effect. Any harum-scarum attack in the glow of the good work
put in by the North Carolina would be premature in the extreme, sir. We
shouldn’t throw away a relative success now.”
The
President nodded in thought. “Jody,” he asked, turning to the press secretary,
“what are the networks saying?”
“So
far they haven’t gotten any reporters into the area so there’s not much they
can say. There have been some sharp protests about the military not allowing
them on the interstates because they’ve been taken over by the federal
government, but so far that hasn’t made the news. The only thing they are
getting is whatever video we give them from the front.”
The
President nodded and shifted in his chair as if uncomfortable. He looked at the
television again and said: “General Taylor, give me your opinion of the Forward
Defense argument.”
Taylor
froze with his mouth open until he recognized how stupid the expression made
him look. In a crystalline moment he saw the future laid out before him and
realized that in good conscience, despite the futility, total and complete
honesty was the sole option. “I think it’s a crock of shit, Mr. President.”
“Why?”
asked the President, eyes narrowing.
“The
proponents ignore every wargame ever played around it. Their contention is that
the Posleen can be defeated in decent terrain because it permits maneuver of
armored and mechanized forces. But when we’ve actually gamed it out, the
Posleen can move nearly as fast and are more maneuverable than armored or
mechanized forces. The Posleen may use primarily unaimed weapons and depend on
mass fire, but between the heaviness of their weaponry and the aimed fire of
the God Kings, mechanized forces in vehicles within one thousand meters of
Posleen are slaughtered.
“If
they are out of their vehicles and in prepared positions—not fortresses, just
dug in—standard Army units have about a ten-to-one advantage over the Posleen.
That is based on game theory and observational evidence from Barwhon.
“However,
projections place Posleen forces at over one hundred to one for the total
invasion.
“In
this case we are talking about the five divisions in northern Virginia that
will have time to dig in. Sort of, not well, just foxholes and bunkers and a
little concertina. Locally emplaced minefields, some claymores, some Bouncing
Bettys and M-833s. A division runs about sixteen thousand troops in its current
configuration. About seven thousand of those troops actually fire weapons at
the enemy.”
“I
know all those figures, General,” snapped the President.
“Yes,
sir, you do, but frankly neither you nor General Olds have done the math.”
“I
never said I’d spoken to General Olds,” the President said.
“No,
sir, you didn’t; however, he is the most senior proponent of Forward Defense
and he is a player in the Washington scene,” the general retorted angrily. “I
understand you did consult with him during your election campaign, which, since
he was a serving officer, pushed a line that most officers don’t prefer to
push. Have I made my point, Mr. President?”
“Go
on,” said the President through clenched teeth.
“Yes,
sir. Now, all I ask is that you do the math. If the math works out I will be
the most vocal supporter of Forward Defense you ever heard. Are you ready,
sir?”
“Don’t
get pedantic, General.”
“Certainly
not, Mr. President.” The High Commander glared at the Commander in Chief for a
long moment. “Here’s the numbers. There are five divisions. Five. Give them the
absolute benefit of the doubt, all the forces are in place. There are four
million Posleen. Assume that the majority do not head towards the larger
target and turn north; we still can assume that they will split. Can I make
that assumption, sir?”
“Yes,”
answered the President, tightly.
“That
is two million Posleen. Fifty-four hundred shooters per division. That includes
all the infantry, cav and artillery. Five times fifty-four hundred is
twenty-seven thousand. AID, twenty-seven thousand goes into two million how
many times?”
“Seventy-four,”
said the artificial intelligence device supplied to him as a courtesy by the
Galactic Federation.
“Every
shooter has to kill, not slow, not wound, kill seventy-four Posleen for
a forward defense plan to work. That won’t happen even with massive artillery
support; it’s just not in the cards. Those Posleen can pin the divisions with a
fraction of their force and go around or they can overrun them and keep going.
“If
they choose to simply overrun our divisions, by straight math they will lose a
quarter of a million troops. That sounds great until you consider that that is
about ten percent of their forces! If, when, our troops get flanked the
defense ratio goes out the window and the Posleen gain a two-to-one advantage over
our troops, at which point it is all over but the screams.”
General Taylor
wiped his face for a moment, trying to find an argument, any argument, to stop
the insanity he knew was about to occur. “Now if you can tell me how five
divisions can stop two million Posleen, I will be happy to give ‘cheerful and
willing obedience to your orders’ that I know are coming. If you can’t, all I
ask is that you consider the effect that the loss of eighty thousand
soldiers will have on the American people’s morale,” he ended quietly.
“Why
eighty thousand?” asked the secretary of defense. “You said there were
twenty-seven thousand.”
“There
are sixteen thousand men and women in a division, Mr. Secretary. Given the road
network and movement speeds of the divisions versus Posleen movement speeds, I
would estimate that eighty to one hundred percent of the corps would be
overrun.”
“Don’t
you think you are underplaying the effect of armor and artillery on the
Posleen, General?” asked the President. He actually appeared to be listening to
General Taylor and considering his arguments. But after nearly a year’s
experience with the chief executive, Taylor was fairly sure he was not changing
his mind.
“The
Posleen three millimeter railguns go through Bradleys the long way and about
one in ten carry a three millimeter. One in twenty carry an automatic
hypervelocity missile launcher, which will take out an Abrams with a frontal
hit. While they are ‘unaimed,’ what the term actually means is that the weapons
don’t have sights.
“However,
the Posleen seem to be naturals at firing from the hip. And don’t forget that
those numbers discount the God Kings, whose weapons are automatically targeted
and frighteningly accurate. They’re accurate enough to act as antiaircraft fire
against stealth fighters, for God’s sake. There will be some five thousand God
Kings in that mass. That’s nearly a division of God Kings alone. And a God King
is worth about five troops even if they are in the defense.”
“I
thought they dealt with them through sniper fire,” commented the secretary of
defense.
“That
works in an ambush, sir, or where there is an intense conflict in limited
terrain. But the God Kings are not all stupid. Most of them move in random
evasion patterns that are hard as hell to hit and that is a lot of targets for
snipers, even four or five at a time. The problem with Posleen is always a
situation of target overload.”
“Artillery,”
said the President.
“Probably
our best bet,” the infuriated general admitted, “but artillery is a wounder not
a killer. And the Posleen can take more wounding than humans. I want you to
consider something, Mr. President. That video we just watched showed a mass of
casualties from the battleship rounds, the most effective weapon we have in our
arsenal. AID, have you calculated the casualties visible in the films of the
battleship action?”
“Yes.”
“How
many casualties?”
“Eight
thousand, plus or minus four percent.”
“And
that is what percentage of the total Posleen force?”
“Point
one six percent or one point six mils.”
“Less
than one percent, Mr. President, Mr. Secretary, actually, close to one-tenth of
a percent.”
He
looked at the two civilian controllers of the military and saw their recoil of
shock. “Don’t look so surprised. We have to do that same thing, kill just as
many Posleen, nearly one thousand more times. And the North Carolina
took a lot of damage even before the lander tore her up. So the question is
where are we going to get all the battleships we need!”
“So
you’re saying that we can’t stop them with artillery?” asked the President.
“Sir,
every indication is that the Posleen don’t retreat or suppress under fire. The
only option is to kill them before they overrun you. While artillery reduces
their numbers, it can only stop them with masses of firepower that are not
realistic in this scenario. What I mean is we don’t have that many tubes on
hand. The artillery is useful for reducing their numbers. But it does not have
the consequential effect that it does with humans. It does not make them stop
and hunker down or retreat. They just wade through it, the stupid bastards, and
if it kills all but one of them, that stupid bastard is too stupid not to
charge the guns anyway.
“Unfortunately,
what has generally happened on Barwhon is that artillery fire kills maybe
thirty percent of maneuvering Posleen and then the other seventy percent hit
the defenses like a tsunami. In this case, that would be, AID?”
“One
million, three hundred and seventy two thousand plus or minus six percent
assuming recognized ratios for bonding scatter and rear area security.”
“How
many God Kings?”
“Three
thousand four hundred and thirty, plus or minus ten percent.”
“Number
of Posleen per shooter.”
“Fifty-one,
plus or minus ten percent.”
“This
is not like fighting humans, sir,” the High Commander concluded. “We need time
to create fixed defenses and mass huge amounts of troops. If those troops are
forced out of position and have to run, the other problems of training and
maintenance come to the fore. If we had the time, the training and the room, I
would send out some fast units with fast logistics support and mobile artillery
to slow them up. I don’t enjoy sitting on my hands. But, as it is, our best bet
is to rig the Occoquan, mine the roads and retreat like hell until we have the
Potomac between them and us.
“Once
we have the whole First Army on the north bank of the Potomac and the Eleventh
ACS in place and once we have masses of engineering support with convoys of
concertina and cement trucks, we can start moving into northern Virginia again.
“Then
we’ll use firetraps to reduce their numbers until it is survivable to send in
regular forces. We’ll put the ACS out front and when they run into really heavy
forces they’ll backpedal onto fortifications that we’ll make as we go.
“That
is the plan, sir, and it’s a good one. The only sticking point is that we have
to lose Arlington Cemetery, but we will by God get it back!” the High Commander
ended passionately.
“You’re
not retreating in Richmond?” asked the secretary of state.
“No,
sir, that is a somewhat different scenario,” the commander pointed out. His AID
helpfully brought up the appropriate map on the wall-sized view-screen. “Very
different in fact. Richmond is easier to evacuate across the James; they have
fewer people to move and damn near the same roads infrastructure as south D.C.
and Arlington. The point that General Keeton is defending has good terrain
features and clear lines of retreat. Richmond itself has more in the way of
terrain features than Arlington and there are some structures that Richmond has
that improve the defense plan. For that matter, the firebase they are building
is the nucleus of an outer fort like we intend for Fortress Forward and will
hold almost the whole corps artillery and divisional artillery batteries.
“From
Libby Hill they can pound the Posleen with relative impunity; the Posleen
aren’t going to make it up those hills in the face of massed fire. Although
Arlington Cemetery offers some of the same benefits it is not as steep a slope
and it would take too long to make it that way. Also, the really critical
installations are in the areas the Posleen would hold.” Taylor shook his head
at the thought of trying to hold Arlington.
“I
reviewed General Keeton’s plan when CONARC announced his support and found it
tactically and operationally sound. General Keeton has clearly stated that this
is intended to slow the Posleen and he expects to lose Richmond eventually.
Really all it is intended to do is give them a serious bloody nose. That being
said, using his corps in that manner will have a far greater impact on the
Posleen than meeting them in hasty positions in open field combat. The Richmond
plan calls for employing fortifications that will stop them physically, leaving
the soldiers with nothing to do but kill Posleen. The defenses also create an
open and fixed target for massed artillery.” He pointed to the appropriate
positions on the view-screen, the icon of battalion after battalion lighting as
the AID followed the Twelfth Corps forces. “This will have the Posleen in a
trap of interlocking fire.
“If
they complete all the defenses before the Posleen arrive I suspect that they
will take care of the southern force for us. Schockoe Bottom will be the
graveyard of the Posleen.”
“And
there is no way to replicate that in Washington?” asked the secretary of
defense.
“Not
easily, sir, and not with the same surety. As I said, the only really decent
terrain feature in the critical area is Arlington Hill and it has a relatively
light slope. Slope is a big factor with the Posleen. Replicating the complete
defense is just not on, none of the other features, such as the floodwall,
interstate embankment cuts or the valley channels, are replicated.”
The President
nodded his head when it was clear that General Taylor was done. “General, that
is a very well-reasoned presentation.”
“And
it didn’t change your mind one bit, did it, sir?”
“It
made me fully aware of the risks, which I admit certain individuals had glossed
over. Let me ask you something, since it’s unvarnished-truth time. What is
your opinion of Generals Simosin and Olds from the point of view of carrying
out a Forward Defense of northern Virginia?”
General
Taylor looked that one over carefully before he responded. “General Simosin is
probably one of the best defensive generals in the business for heavy troops
such as Tenth Corps. If we tell him, ‘center your defense south of the Potomac’
I think he will do as good a job as anyone on earth could. I don’t think he’s
going to come back with much in the way of the corps and I would request that
such an order be a written Direction of the President. I don’t want to lose him
to political splatter when he crawls back with fewer troops than are necessary
to bury his dead.”
The
President took that like a man. “What about losing you to political splatter?”
“If
it’s a Direction of the President, there’s not going to be much splattering on
me, especially when you include phrases like, ‘against the advice of my most
senior military advisors,’ ” said Taylor with a thin but determined smile. “And
frankly I could give a damn. I’m worried about the poor sacrificed bastards in
Tenth Corps, not political fallout.”
The
President’s face hardened at the implied insult. “And what about General Olds?”
“Well,
if he joggles Arkady’s elbow too much I’ll send Warrant Kidd up to New York
with a direct order to terminate him with prejudice. I am dead serious, Mr.
President, pun intended.”
The
President leaned back in his chair and considered his senior commander with his
hand on his chin, forefinger lightly tapping his cheek. “You’re really against
the Forward Defense, aren’t you.”
“I
think it’s a Goddamned nightmare, sir.”
The
President nodded his head. “Yes, it is, and I appreciate your candor, believe
it or not. You maybe got too strong, but that is the vice of your military
virtues, General, and I respect those virtues. Now, let me tell you about
political fallout, ‘splatter’ as you call it.” The short politician knew better
than to try to overawe the general with physical presence. He simply leaned
back in his chair, steepled his fingers and fixed the officer with a blue,
basilisk stare.
“Political
fallout occurs when an administration tells the American public that it is
going to throw away the most historic cities in our country for military
expediency. Political fallout occurs when the politicians ignore the desires of
their constituents for whatever reason seems appropriate at the time. Political
fallout occurs when politicians get so wrapped up in listening to their own
thoughts, ambiguous polls and advisors that they forget to listen to history.
And I intend to do none of those things.”
Edwards
leaned forward suddenly and tapped the black top of the table. The situation
room was absolutely still as he dictated the future of the nation in a few
words. “The people in those divisions are American citizens, citizen soldiers.
And their families and loved ones are American citizens. And those people sent
me a clear and certain mandate to defend the United States with my last breath.
And, General, we are going to start right here.”
“Yes,
sir,” answered the general gravely.
“Not
because of any political expediency, but because the citizens of the United
States want us to defend those cities and towns. And if we do not perform the
will of the people, we have failed in our mandate.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Are
you going to carry out these directives to the best of your ability?”
“Yes,
Mr. President,” answered the High Commander, back straight. “I have always
carried out my orders, even when I had clear and strong objections. It is my
duty.”
“Very
well, here is my direction. The United States Ground Forces will defend against
Posleen incursions further into northern Virginia. Such defense will take place
south of the Potomac, certainly, and all available forces will initially defend
in and around the area of Quantico Marine Base. Most of the corps is stationed
there so they won’t have far to go.
“I
will put that in writing and I will address the nation and both read the
written directive and present both views as evenly as possible, giving full
credence to both views. But in the end, it is my responsibility to call the
hard shots. Are you clear on this directive?”
“Yes,
sir. What is the primary intent? Beyond the defense of northern Virginia. What
is the main target for defense?”
“Don’t
lose an inch of ground is the idea. The last place to lose is Arlington, but
defense is to be as forward as possible given constraints of movement and time.
Initial defense by the majority of Tenth Corps will be south of the Occoquan.
You are clear on that?”
“Yes,
sir, in and around Quantico.”
“Very
well, General. Winston Churchill once said ‘war is too important an endeavor to
leave to generals.’ I don’t completely agree but I do agree that there is a
reason for civilian control of the military and it is for reasons like this,
not to prevent coups. Good luck, and may God be with us all, especially those
poor souls in Fredericksburg.”
As
the general left the Situation Room, the President glanced at the secretary of
defense, who was still fuming. “General Taylor doesn’t think much of Forward
Defense, does he?”
“No,
Mister President, he doesn’t,” agreed the secretary, with gritted teeth. “I
can’t believe you let him say those things to you.”
Edwards
nodded his head. “He’s become quite popular. There has been a noticeable
turnaround among the forces under his direction.”
“So,”
said the secretary, “what you’re saying is we have to put up with his
bullshit?”
The
President leaned back and gripped the arms of his chair firmly. “What I’m
saying is, your friend Olds had better know what he’s talking about.”
CHAPTER 40
Fredericksburg,
VA, United States of America, Sol III
0614 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
Another wash of
firecrackers slammed into the hill as a barrage of sixteen-inch cluster rounds
landed and Tommy picked up his AIW. “Okay, let’s go over it one more time.”
“We
fire a few shots from here,” said Wendy, tiredly, “then move back to Alesia’s.”
“You
go first, let me take any of the fire that might come through when we run. I’d
trade armor with you, but I don’t think you could move fast enough in this.”
“Okay.”
She looked at the shoulder-to-knee padding. “I don’t think so either. At
Alesia’s, we set off the claymore in here.” She pointed to the mine set up in
the middle of the room pointed at the door. “When they attack Alesia’s, we go
to the basement, get in the tunnel, pull the safe in front of the hole using
the pry bar and set off the claymore in Alesia’s when they come through that
door.”
“Okay.
Good enough.” A burst of fire came from the machine gun post catty-corner
across the intersection from their position. A hail of flechette rounds
answered the fire and the wall of the building sparkled in ricochets. The M-60
coughed once, twice, then was permanently stilled by a hypervelocity missile.
The kinetic explosion sent a shock wave across the street that hammered the
breath from their lungs.
“Oh, God,”
Wendy coughed on the cloud of dust blasted into the street, pulling the rifle
into her shoulder, and placing it on the pillow.
“It’s
time to dance,” whispered Tommy and snuggled the AIW into his shoulder. He
switched to grenade launcher and took up slack on the trigger.
When
the first rank of the Posleen phalanx entered the intersection of Charles and
George Streets it was met with a storm of fire. Wendy fired a series of
laser-aimed bursts that were surprisingly accurate for a beginner while across
the street a pair of youth militia fired rapid individual rounds from their
vintage M-14s. The real killers, though, were the five 20mm grenade rounds that
Tommy Sunday used to fill the intersection with dead Posleen. By walking the
fire rapidly from one side of narrow George Street to the other, he created a
flesh barrier of dead and wounded centaurs that, for a moment, balked their
trailing fellows. Unfortunately, the second rank could see the location of the
defensive fire.
A
tungsten and steel rain of flechettes hammered the openings through which the
two youths were firing and ricochets bounded though the stone-walled room.
Tommy dove back and down in a roll away from the windows.
“Move!”
he yelled and bounded towards the back door of the shop, forgetting to cover
Wendy with his armor.
Wendy lurched towards the door, then stumbled
as her right leg refused to support her weight. She looked down and, in the
gathering daylight, saw a dark stain on her calf from a ricocheted flechette.
She used the Galil to prop herself up and limped towards the door.
Tommy
leaned out the door, rifle training left and right as he slid in another clip
of grenades. “Come on!” he shouted above the din of fire on either side. When
she did not bypass him he looked back in the room. The problem was obvious.
“I
can make it,” Wendy cried, stumbling on half-seen furniture as tears of pain
clouded her eyes and the world swam in gray.
He
looked at her and for a moment time seemed to stand still as his mind raced
over alternatives. His hand twitched once towards the Desert Eagle at his side,
then in sudden decision he hefted the assault rifle in his left hand and swept
her over his right shoulder. As pounding started on the front door of the shop,
he sprinted for Alesia’s Antiques.
Bill
Worth coughed wrackingly in the rubble of his demolished book shop, the cough
sending fresh waves of formless pain through his body. The heavy wooden rafter
pinning his legs and his general condition indicated that he would not be in
the most dignified of positions when it came time to meet the gentlemen from
off-planet.
However,
whatever John Paul Sartre might have thought, one did not always choose one’s
destiny. If this was how he was to meet the latest visitors to Fredericksburg,
so be it.
From
a vague feeling of weakness and the spreading stain under his chest, he
suspected he might not be greeting the visitors in person anyway. To take his
mind off the vagaries of fate, he tried to sight-inventory what was left. A book
by his right hand caught his eye and he tugged it over despite the discomfort
it caused somewhere in his nether regions. Not immediately recognizing the
binding, he opened it to the title page and was pleasantly surprised by his
unexpected discovery.
“My
goodness,” he whispered, “an original Copperfield! Wherever have you been
hiding, young man?”
Thus,
the words of Dickens served to soothe him, like the gentle friends that they
were, until grayness overwhelmed his vision.
“Tommy?”
said Wendy, coming out of her daze into darkness as a hand clamped over her
mouth.
“Shh!”
he whispered fiercely. Somewhere above there was loud crashing. A thump through
the ground told a story of distant detonations.
She
recognized the smell of the tunnel and realized, shamefully, that he must have
carried her all the way down here instead of fighting. She was feeling better
all the time, the wound a distant discomfort but no more. She felt at it.
“I
injected it with a local,” he whispered. “You were in shock, that’s all.”
“Sorry,”
she whispered back.
“It’s
okay; it takes some people that way.” He pushed an object into her hand. “This
is a Hiberzine injector. Hold it down where our thighs are close together. If
we get buried when I set off the claymore, or when the Big One comes, you can
inject yourself and maybe make it until we get dug out.”
“Okay,
what about you?” she whispered.
“I’ve
got one too, but if I get knocked out by debris, inject me, and I’ll do the
same for you. Now hang on.” He picked up the claymore clacker and squeezed it
three times rapidly.
With
the first compression came a tremendously loud explosion and the sound of
complicated destruction. The safe covering their hiding place rang as a series
of heavy weights fell on it. There were further sounds of settling material and
finally silence.
“I took a
couple of seconds to set some more explosives in place after I got you in
here,” he whispered. “They pretty much dropped the bottom floor into the
basement and sealed us in.” He paused for a moment. “Now we just wait to find
out if we survive the Big One.”
The
reinforced concrete top of the pump house had been blown into the interior and
more dirt piled on top of it to within four feet of the top. Colonel Robertson,
his RTO, two engineer privates and a civilian grading contractor now waited in
the resulting fighting position for either the Posleen to reach them or the
fuel-air explosion to end the defense once and for all.
Colonel
Robertson took a moment to watch the nascent sunrise while one of the engineers
kept watch. The other engineer, the radio operator and the civilian were
playing liars’ poker. A few birds, more hopeful than realistic, were
participating in a limited dawn chorus. Except for the cold, and the fact that
he was about to die, it was a beautiful morning, clear and with a good chance
of a perfect fall day. Too bad he was going to miss it.
And
Major Witherspoon lay among the dead in the Command Post, half of his head
scooped away by a railgun round, as the Posleen pounded at the church door. The
wounded and medics clutched their weapons and waited in silence. The ghosts
seemed to gather around, in their blue and gray and camouflage, waiting for
their fellows to come join them.
And
Chief Wilson stood on the ground floor of the Executive Building wearing her
breathing apparatus. At her feet was a car battery and in her left hand was a
clamp, opened wide. She carefully transferred the clamp to her right, making
sure it stayed open at all times, and worked her hand before transferring it
back to the left. As she did so, she saw movement through the doors.
Since
they knew the Posleen were east of 95 now, Kerman, Wordly and Jones had
permission to avoid the interchange and each intended to stay among the trees
where the Posleen had far more trouble finding them. As they rocketed through
the dawn, the Gs, the slamming of the plane, the route, seemed as familiar as a
daily commute. As they crisscrossed the Rappahanock they took each G shock with
aplomb, passing on up the valley towards the rapidly approaching town.
“Lay it on the ridge,”
said
Kerman.
“Tigershark
Five.”
“Three.”
They
spread apart and, from three different axes, dropped napalm along Prince Edward
Street in a crossing maneuver to shame the Thunderchiefs. Kerman could see no tracers,
although there was plenty of Posleen ground fire.
“Ground
control, Tigershark Two. Negative human activity Fredericksburg.”
“Copy
Two. Concur. One more pass, over.”
The
three performed a synchronized fifteen-G bank over Belmont Manor, drawing sporadic
fire in the morning light, and approached from the rising sun.
“Lord,
take me down to the river . . .” Morgen whisper-sang, wishing
the sun into the air as she sat on the bank of the Rappahanock. She saw a set
of dots, banking through the rising sun and closing
fast . . . “ . . . and wash me in the
blood of the lamb . . .”
Even
Posleen normals can learn, after a fashion, and they had slowly learned that a
quick way to not pass one’s genes on to the next generation was to simply open
a door in this gods-forsaken town. This was the first company to reach the
town’s single high building. Or rather the remnant survivors from the company
that opened the door to the headquarters of the military technicians, the lucky
ones that were behind a hill.
They
had, however, heard the reports, seen the results, the remnants of the building
and the signs around it. So, although they could not read the words “Welcome to
Historic Fredericksburg, Home of the Two-Twenty-Ninth Engineer Battalion”
emblazoned on the paper banner flapping above the door in the auroral light,
the lopsided and runny twin-turreted castle was as clear to them as a skull and
crossbones sign would be to a human.
As
the remaining thirty out of four hundred approached the door, they slowed.
Every step of their advance had been contested, every building mined, yet here
was the largest structure in the town and it was undefended save for the sign.
They peered through the shadowed windows, discerning a figure within. Their God
King had carefully remained all the way across the street. At a barked command
from it, the lead normal stepped forward and opened the door.
Chief
Wilson was almost glad. The agonizing night at long last was at an end and
whatever was on the other side would no longer wait. Everything that could be
done, to preserve life a little while longer, to make safe the innocent, had
been done, and now, for the first and last time, she would take sentient life.
Most would be Posleen, but many would be human. And she was one who felt that
at the bottom they all were brothers. However, she was sure that the humans
were just as ready for this long night to be over, as content to enter into a
longer but hopefully more peaceful one.
“Gentlemen,”
she said to the Posleen filing through the doorway, “welcome to historic
Fredericksburg,” and dropped the clamp.
With
the closest simultaneity that an experienced engineer NCO could achieve, sixty
one-hundred-gram charges of Composition Four, located on window ledges,
detonated. The detonations simultaneously ignited the liquid propane gas still
being pumped to the interior and ensured oxygen was provided to the environment
to sustain the reaction.
In
a pair of milliseconds, every window in the seven-story building imploded, as
the air for three blocks in every direction was sucked down to near vacuum by
the reacting propane.
As
the propane consumed the oxygen, the inrushing air served to compact the highly
energetic reaction until virtually the last molecule of the propane was
consumed, at which point the superheated air erupted outward with cataclysmic
force.
For Morgen
Bredell and Colonel Robertson—along with all the surviving humans and Posleen
above ground in historic downtown Fredericksburg—it was a sudden moment of
breathless vacuum as a hurricane of wind rushed towards the city center and ice
picks drove into ear drums, an almost unnoticeable pause and then darkness as
the shock wave slammed outward leveling everything in its path.
“Nuke!”
shouted Jones at the sun-bright dome of fire, automatically snapping his
fighter into a hard right bank away from the formation as Kerman snapped into a
hard left. Wordly was left with the unsurvivable up and yanked his stick back
in a twenty-G climb at nine hundred knots.
His
fighter was immediately acquired by God King saucers from Marlboro Point to
Spotsylvania as well as landers and C-Decs. A pyramid of light beams followed
his exploding fighter as it climbed into the sky, a high-tech Vesuvius, a
bright triangular firework in the dawn to punctuate the erupting town.
The
shockwave propagated outward, leveling the Public Safety building, historic
downtown, finally demolishing the cut Chatham bridge, ripping up rails from the
railroad tracks and tumbling them through the air.
Wendy
screamed as the ground bucked like a bronco, brick and dirt raining around her.
She had one arm over her head, and noticed that Tommy had his over her head as
well, so the only thing protecting her ribs when a melon-sized rock fell on
them was the body armor. As the rubble fell around her, she inched the
Hiberzine injector towards her thigh. . . .
To
Shari and the fire fighter in the bunker, the effect was only a slight tremor,
the combination of the blast shadow from the railroad embankment and the tons
of overburden serving to reduce the concussion to a minor nuisance. They
stopped their gin game for a moment, said a prayer, swiped at the tears again
and returned to the distraction of cards.
Jones
hit the afterburners as soon as his ass was to the blast and settled into his
seat as the fighter rocketed towards its maximum speed. The fighter began to buck
from ground-effect and then the buffet increased as the shock wave started to
catch up. Finally the buffeting slowed as the shock wave receded and he reduced
speed and turned back towards the town.
Or
where it had been. For five hundred meters on every side of the tall building
offset from the city’s center the ground was as flat as if scoured. The quaint
buildings that had survived multiple bombardments in the Civil War were erased
down to the cornerstones. The largest remaining structure was a nub of grain
elevator south of the train embankment.
The
ridge where they had previously dropped napalm was wiped as clean, the churches
gone, but the sheltered valley beyond was still intact and there was sporadic
fire as he rocketed across. He banked sharply north, avoiding the open area
around the interstate, and called base.
“Ground
control, this is Tigershark Five, over.”
“Tigershark,
Ground.”
“You
copy this uplink, over?”
“Roger,
Tigershark.” A single turret volley from the battleship landed in the swale
from which he had taken fire. “Return to base, Tigershark.”
“Tigershark
Five.”
“Two,”
echoed Kerman, unexpectedly.
The
last survivors of the Peregrine squadron turned to the north and headed for
Andrews Air Force Base.
“Are
you all right?” asked Tommy, sitting up as brick chips, mortar and dirt
cascaded off him. He flicked on a portable fluorescent light.
“I’m
alive,” said Wendy, staying horizontal, but kicking some of the debris off her
legs. She pushed aside the stone that had glanced off her side. “How all right
am I supposed to be?”
“Jesus,”
said Tommy, shining the light up at the intact arch above them. “I can’t
believe this held,” he continued, looking at the sealed tunnel at both ends. He
pulled off his helmet and scratched his head vigorously then wriggled out of
the body armor.
“What
if the Posleen find us?” asked Wendy, gesturing at the doffed armor as he
detached the side connections and laid it out flat.
He
shook it to get the last brick and stone chips out and flopped down on the
field-expedient mattress, hands cradled behind his head. “At this point, if the
Posleen want me, they can just eat me, okay?”
Wendy
snorted, sat up and shook the bits off as well. She took off her own body armor
and stretched, wincing at her bruised ribs, then lay down and put her head on
his chest. He wriggled over to let her get on the armor-mattress. After a few
moments, they both sighed as the tension came off the day.
Tommy’s
breath began to deepen as the strains of the long night took their toll. At some
time in the future—he feared many times in the future—he would think about the
destruction of all he held near and dear. But for now it was enough that, for a
moment, there was peace, if only the peace of the dead.
Just
as he was drifting into sleep, he felt a pair of fingers slip under his
T-shirt. He froze, suppressing a snore and a moment later, one of these fingers
began playing with the hairs around his navel. Wendy leaned forward, her
breasts pressing into his chest and put her face against his ear.
“Tommy
Sunday,” she whispered, flicking his ear with her tongue, “if you don’t take
off your pants right now, I’m going to cap you with your own Glock.”
CHAPTER 41
I-95 near VA 639,
VA, United States of America, Sol III
0629 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
During the early
morning hours, work had virtually stopped on the Richmond defenses.
Occasionally the crash of explosions could be heard in the distance and the
portable TVs receiving broadcasts from Continental Army Headquarters held
everyone enthralled. However, with the breaking dawn the enormous boom of the
FAE in the distance and the uplinked video broke the spell and the tired
cavalry troopers and civilian grading contractors returned to preparing the
I-95 fighting positions. Meanwhile teams of women and teenagers emplaced
claymores and other mines along the verge. It looked to be a hot reception for
the Posleen.
“Let’s
get to it, boys and girls,” said Sergeant First Class Mueller as the extended
break ended. “It’s us next.”
“Are
we ready?”
“Yes,
Mr. President. Obviously, given the time of day and all the transmission
problems there is not a major audience. But there is a higher share than normal
because of the emergency.”
“It’ll
have to do.” He turned to the secretary of defense. “What is the situation with
Tenth Corps?”
“They’ve
turned around and are headed back down to Quantico. It’s a bit confused but I’m
sure they’ll get straightened out in time.”
“They’d
better. What about Ninth Corps?”
“They’re
headed for Manassas. The whole First Army is heading into northern Virginia,
with the exception of the Fifty-Fifth Armored Division, which is assaulting a
landing in Maine.”
“Maine.
Maine and where else?”
“Arkansas,
California and Oregon all have at least one landing of a battlegroup,” answered
the FEMA representative referring to her notes. “Several other states have
already dealt with individual landers. But only Fredericksburg has been hit by
a full globe. Not counting Fredericksburg or areas that haven’t turned in
complete reports, we have over fifteen thousand civilian casualties. Most of
those are in the immediate area of landings. About two-thirds are mortalities.”
She almost continued with a report on the evacuation of northern Virginia.
A
bad situation had gone completely catastrophic when Tenth Corps was forced to
shut down Interstate 95 and the Beltway to turn around. The corps was out of
the way now, and most of the lanes on both sides of the highways had been
opened to traffic, but the monumental traffic jam had stalled cars all over it.
Instead of pushing more traffic through than normal, the interstates were
almost deserted. Millions of Virginians were now on foot, heading towards the
Potomac bridges.
“Mortalities,”
repeated the President with a grimace. “Great. How ’bout just telling your President
that he lost fifteen thousand American civilians in the depths of the night.”
“And
an almost irreplaceable engineering battalion. And a city, sir,” said the
secretary of defense. “On national television no less. There, feel better?”
“No.”
The President turned to the makeup artist. “Are we done?”
“Just
about, Mr. President. You want to look your best, don’t you?”
“That’s
going to be hard,” he commented looking at the text of the speech. It was not
the best copy he had ever seen, but it was fairly good given the time the
writer had to create it.
“You
need to look good, Mr. President,” said his Chief of Staff. “Presenting just
the right face at this time is very important. You can’t appear worried or
haggard. It will send the wrong message.”
“Would
someone please tell me something new? I can do without the pointless
reminders.”
“The
Eleventh Mobile Infantry Division commander called,” said the secretary of
defense, reading an e-mail hardcopy from CONARC. “As the senior Fleet
representative, he asked that we hold off on using the Third Battalion of the
Five Hundred Fifty-Fifth. He recommended that we use First Battalion instead.”
“Did
he give a reason?” asked the President with a look of confusion. “General Olds
didn’t want them because they’re on block leave, right? And isn’t the commander
stuck in California?”
“Well,
Mr. President,” said the secretary. “He pointed out that they are fully trained
and tested, unlike the Third. Third Battalion is only halfway through their
initial training cycle, sir, and has not had an FSTEP.”
“So
why did General Olds prefer to bring them all the way up from Carolina instead
of using First Battalion?” asked the president. The answer had just reinforced
the question. “Isn’t that the battalion that’s officially assigned to him?”
The
secretary of defense looked uncomfortable. “I think you’d have to ask General
Olds, sir.”
“I’m
not asking, Olds, Robby. I’m asking my secretary of defense! Is it that divided
chain of command thing, again?”
“I
wouldn’t venture to guess, Mr. President,” the SecDef answered, tightly.
“Guess,”
the President snapped, tired of the prevarication.
“I
think it might be a matter of General Olds’s opinion of the First Batt’s
officers, Mr. President, rather than their readiness,” commented the President’s
military aide.
The
President turned and looked at the normally silent brigadier general. Since his
function was specifically to handle information flow and keep his opinions to
himself, the President was surprised to hear him say anything.
“Why
do you say that?”
“I
was present for the conference on Fortress Forward, Mr. President,” the
brigadier related without a change of expression. His face might as well have
been carved from mahogany. “General Olds several times expressed openly his
distrust of the ACS concept in general and specifically of some of the officers
of the battalion assigned primary responsibility for his area of operations.”
“Did
he state which officers?” the President asked.
“No,
sir, but the person giving the ACS brief to which he took particular exception
was Michael O’Neal.”
“The
Medal Of Honor winner?” the President asked, surprised. “Did he indicate what
he had against him?”
“Again,
Mr. President, let me clearly state that he expressed reservations about the
ACS program and some of the officers in the battalion attached to his Army. He
did not state that it was Captain O’Neal he particularly found offense with,
although that might have been taken from the context.”
The
President looked at his secretary of defense. “He’s your friend. You want to
explain that?”
The
secretary gave the military aide a long measuring look which the general
returned without a blink. The brigadier had commanded the Special Forces Sniper
School for three years and could stare down a cat. “Jim Olds is an experienced
and combat tested officer who has certain strongly held opinions, Mr.
President,” the SecDef explained. “Many of those opinions are about the nature
and function of an officer corps within an Army. He also has a strong opinion
about how this war should be prosecuted and how funding should be distributed.
They are opinions that the majority of the ACS community disagree with.
“Given
those facts, I doubt that General Olds is particularly happy with one of the
companies in his command that consumes a disproportionate share of funding
being commanded by a former sergeant. Or the influence that that former
sergeant has had on its preparation and training.”
Mike
fishtailed the Tahoe through the median, climbed out of a ditch and pulled out
under the nose of a five-ton truck. The vehicle braked with a blare of horn as
Mike cut into the lane and then swung the Tahoe back onto the median as the way
became clear. The pickup pounded down the rough median, swerving around trucks,
buses and Humvees pulled off the road for breakdowns and bouncing in and out of
ruts cut by previous passersby. It seemed like he had been traveling up the
twisty mountain interstate his whole life. He was barely over the border of
Virginia and the traffic was only getting heavier.
He
glanced at the heads-up display of the Eastern United States with unit
movements denoted on it and grimaced. Murphy’s Law was settling in with a
vengeance.
“Captain
O’Neal,” chirped his AID, “incoming call from Lieutenant Colonel
Hanson . . .”
“O’Neal?”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Caught
in traffic, I see.” The colonel was getting good at drawing information from
his AID.
“Yes,
sir.”
“I’m
stranded in Los Angeles. I’m hopping AMTRAK in about thirty minutes,
but . . .”
“Shelly,
display continent tactical.” Mike glanced at the virtual display. Green and red
zones were scattered across the United States, with grounding and routing
arrows superimposed. “It’ll be at least a couple of days, sir. Unless the
Sixteenth Cav can clear that infestation in Kansas.”
“Yep.
And airlines are well and truly grounded. There were scatter landings in the
interior and all it takes is one lander in the wrong spot.”
“Roger
that, sir.”
“How
long for you?”
Mike
saw another MP post coming up, the Hummer-25 already training its barrel on his
hurtling truck.
“Damn
near as long at this rate, sir. I’ll see what I can do.”
“Well, I
talked to Major Givens, and unless either I or Major Rutherford makes it back
in time, that’ll leave the battalion in command of the S-3. Who do you think I
said should fill in as S-3?”
“Great,
like I want to plan this operation.” Mike didn’t mention his questions about
Nightingale’s abilities or his own capabilities. It would be a hell of a test
of both. “Did you see the Tenth Corps go into defense?”
“Yes,
lovely. I wonder what’s going on there?”
“I
don’t know, sir, but I have to talk my way past a roadblock.” He started
slowing as the MP team leader got out of the Humvee.
“Okay,
good luck. I don’t know if it will help, but I’m ordering you to reach the unit
as quickly as possible. Using any means you deem necessary.”
“Roger,
sir. Well, good luck to you as well.”
“Thanks.
Out here.”
“Shelly,
get me First Sergeant Pappas.”
“First
Sergeant Pappas is not near his AID,” answered the AID.
Mike
wrinkled his brow. “Is he on post?”
“When
last located. But he is not in range of his AID. His AID is in his office. He
is not.”
Mike,
who went virtually nowhere without his AID, shrugged in puzzlement. “Okay, get
me Lieutenant Nightingale.”
“Lieutenant
Nightingale is not near her AID.”
“What
the hell is this?” the commander grumped. “Is anybody with their AIDs?”
“Lieutenant
Arnold is available.”
“Well,
get me Tim then.”
After
a moment the weapons platoon leader answered. “Captain O’Neal?”
“Yeah,
Tim. Look, I’m stuck in traffic on I-81. I don’t know how long I’ll be. Tell
Top that I want an assessment of Nightingale. If she’s not up to the job he’s
to tell Major Givens on my say-so. I don’t care if she remains technically in
command, but I want Gunny Pappas to run the show. Clear?”
“Uh,
yeah. Yes, sir.”
“Do
you know where the gunny is? He’s not by his AID.”
“Not
exactly. I’ll see if I can track him down.”
“Okay.
I’m gonna bend heaven and hell to get back as fast as I can, but I don’t know
if its gonna work.”
“Yes,
sir. Take care.”
“Right.
Out here. Corporal,” said O’Neal, rolling down the window and holding out his
Fleet ID, “my name’s O’Neal, Fleet Strike . . .”
“My
fellow Americans . . .”
The
President personally hated that phrase but it was the only acceptable one for
such a usage. He stared at the TelePrompTer and firmly quelled all doubts.
Though he knew that the country was about to pay a terrible price, it was a
price he was sure the American people would call for, a price that duty and
honor called for.
“ . . . you
have by now all witnessed the terrible events which have occurred overnight. In
the space of twelve hours thousands of American citizens have lost their lives
and one of the most historic cities in our nation has been erased from the face
of the Earth.
“I
call upon you now, as Americans, to face this challenge as we have faced every
challenge in our great history, with honor, courage and a sense of duty towards
all mankind.
“The
current military plan in a situation such as this is clear. Since the Posleen
are here earlier than expected, and in overwhelming local strength, the proper
military reaction is to retreat to better terrain, to retreat behind the James
and Potomac Rivers to the north and south, into the Appalachians on the west,
until such time as sufficient military forces are assembled to defeat the enemy
on the plains of battle.
“This
is a good and just plan, one caring, as American generals always have, for
their soldiers. If there were insufficient time to evacuate the civilian
populace the decision would be to stay and slow the Posleen until the civilians
could evacuate. But there is enough time to evacuate these areas. Manassas,
Arlington and Alexandria, all of northern and central Virginia, is evacuating
even as I speak.” He took a pause, not for any reason of drama, but gathering
courage for the words he was about to say.
Throughout
the country, at radios and, where they were functioning, televisions, Americans
leaned forward waiting for their chief executive to continue, knowing that such
a reaction, such a decision was anathema to the politician.
“Unfortunately,
sometimes the proper military response is not the correct action for the
country as a whole. Many mistakes have been made in history because of taking
the proper military choice. It is for this very reason that the military is
under civilian control in the United States and virtually every western nation.
If we had taken the proper military choice we would have dropped nuclear
weapons in Korea. The proper military choice led to the Battle of the Bulge.
The proper military choices nearly lost World Wars One and Two to the Germans.
“I
have, therefore, decided to override the ‘proper military choice.’ I have
ordered the Tenth Ground Forces Corps, the Corps of Northern Virginia, to go
into defensive positions south of the Occoquan River in the area of Quantico
Marine Base. Their purpose is to stop Posleen incursions aimed towards
Alexandria, Arlington and Washington, D.C.
“In
addition, the soldiers of the Ninth Corps, the Pennsylvania and New Jersey Corps,
should arrive in time to take positions south of Manassas, Virginia, a name
well known to us all. It is also remembered in some parts of the country by the
name Bull Run. It is a land saturated in the history of conflict.
“I
have done this, over the strong objections of my most senior commanders,
because I believe that is the desire of the American people and I believe that
the justifiable military reaction misses one small factor.
“We
have been attacked,” the simple statement came out as almost a snarl, while his
expression changed hardly at all. “For the first time in nearly two hundred
years, the United States has been invaded. And I don’t like that. If
these . . . things communicate among themselves I want them
to get one communication loud and clear. If you attack the United States, you
are asking for a bucket-load of trouble. If you land on these shores,
the only things you are going to get for your pains are chaos and death!
“The
video from Fredericksburg, horrific as it is, clearly shows what Americans,
surprised and facing overwhelming odds, can do to these creatures on their own
turf. As your President, I cannot simply throw away northern Virginia, not and
face myself in the mirror in the morning.
“I
have made this decision, knowing that it means the death of many of the
soldiers sworn to the service of their country.
“To
the soldiers in the field, I have only this to say.
“Obey
your orders, care for your comrades and take the field knowing that few things
can face a human who is in the right and just keeps coming.
“Good
luck. Pile ’em up like cordwood.”
Mueller
watched the female technician hooking wires up to the demolition circuit board.
“Where are we with the stringing?” she asked. Her hands moved with a graceful
haste, barely pausing as each circuit was connected; her fingers seemed to blur
in the morning light.
“We’ve
strung all but the outer edge, and the engineers have placed all the
detonators. We’re still putting up the claymores, but they’ll be done by the
time you’re ready.”
“I
wish we had enough Pyronics for this job,” she said, testily. “I hate working
with this lowest-bidder military stuff.”
“Hey,
MILSPEC is the class of the world!”
“Hah!
Tell it to the amateurs, kid. I’ve worked with every type of detonator in the
world and five gets you ten one of these blasting caps fails when I do the
systems check. These dang military caps are too dang sensitive.”
“Okay,
I’ve got ten bucks says you’re wrong.”
“It
was an expression. I don’t drink, swear or bet. I have enough excitement in my
life as it is.”
“What
do you usually do?”
“Well,
I used to drop buildings for a living, but lately I’ve been a home demolition
contractor.” She set the last circuit in place and hooked up the meter. “How
certain are you that they haven’t hooked up any of the blasting caps?”
“Not
certain enough.”
“Good
answer. I wanted to see if you had any sense.” She stood up and arched her
back, rubbing at her lumbar. “I prefer doing this with a table, too.”
“We
must all make our little sacrifices for the war effort.”
“Sure.
Personally, I gave up chocolate. I’m gonna go do the circuit. Stay here and
make absolutely certain no one touches the board. I don’t like all these
amateurs running around.”
“I
thought I was one of them.”
“Yeah,
but that way I only have to worry about one.”
“Let
me make you a deal. Since I am in charge of most of the ‘amateurs,’ especially
the civilian ones, and I really shouldn’t be tied to this spot, let me get a
guard who knows darn well not to touch anything and only understands simple
commands so he gets it right.”
“Whatever.”
Mueller
came back a few moments later with one of the cavalry troopers providing
security for the construction site. With a screen of Bradleys and Humvees five
miles down the road, Mueller was personally convinced that the Posleen would be
spotted well before they reached the ambush. But the military’s standard
operating procedures were developed from numerous situations where people were
personally convinced of one thing or another and totally wrong. So—despite
anyone’s personal conviction—Colonel Abrahamson was providing security to all
of the ambush preparation sites.
This
was the ambush site most distant from Richmond and presumably the point of
first contact for the Twelfth Corps. At this point, near Road 656, there was a
perfect site for a long-range armor and mechanical ambush. An overpass ran
along a very slight ridgeline perpendicular to the interstate. North of the
overpass there was a straight stretch nearly two miles long. Half a mile from
the overpass a group of trees crowded the road at either side and ran down the
median. In the midst of the trees a shallow and apparently unnamed creek
crossed the interstate in a box culvert.
Now,
both sides of the interstate just behind the overpass had been cratered and dug
out for fifty meters towards Richmond, creating a shelf in which a platoon of
cavalry vehicles crouched with their twenty-five-millimeter cannons pointed
northward. They would be able to fire hull-down, protected from most of the
Posleen fire, until the Posleen were close enough to be a threat. When the
cavalry started taking casualties they could drive away protected by the slight
ridge.
And
the wooded patch was lined with two thousand claymore mines.
Each
mine was a narrow curved box, with thin “legs” on the bottom, projections for
detonators on the top and the convexly curved front labeled, humorously in the
opinion of most military personnel, front
towards enemy. The directional antipersonnel mine consisted of a plastic
cover encasing a thin metal backstop, a pound of Composition B explosive and
seven hundred fifty small metal ball bearings, just a little larger than a
standard BB. On detonation the ball bearings would spew out in a cone, tearing
apart anything in their path. At fifty meters, the recommended stand-off for
maximum effect, the mines were designed to create a zone of total destruction
thirty meters wide. Fifty meters was just about the width of the right of way
and there was one claymore spaced every two meters, or six feet, for two
hundred and fifty meters on either side of the road, on both sides of the
interstate. When the daisy-chained mechanical ambush was detonated, nearly a
million and a half ball bearings would fill the air, each traveling faster than
a rifle bullet.
“Specialist
Rossi,” said Mueller, introducing the cav trooper, “this is Amanda Hunt, the
lead demolition person for the claymore ambush.”
“Ma’am,”
said the specialist with a nod of the head and a wave of the hand at his helmet.
He knew better than to salute, but wanted to acknowledge her civilian rank.
“Ms.
Hunt is going to go check the demolition circuits.” Mueller pointed at the
circuit board. “This is the controller for the ambush. One of the things she is
going to do is check to make sure none of the detonators have been connected.
This is like the claymore clacker, so she would like to take it with her. But
she’d have to hook it back up and that takes time. So, you are hereby ordered
to remain at this post until personally relieved by Ms. Hunt, understood?”
“Yes,
Sergeant.”
“I’ve
coordinated this with your squad leader and your platoon leader. Now, I don’t
think that this will happen, but in the event that we are attacked while she is
out there, you are to remain at this post until relieved by Ms. Hunt,
understood? You are not, I repeat, not to return to your fighting vehicle, but
remain here. Understood?”
“Yes,
Sergeant.” The trooper was clearly unhappy with the order.
“In
the event that your platoon pulls out before Ms. Hunt returns, you are to
destroy the circuit board. Do not attempt to use it, do not let anyone else,
not your platoon nor any of the engineers, use it. Understood?”
“Yes,
Sergeant, understood. Why?”
Mueller
smiled. “Because I might be out there, and I don’t want any idiot cooking off
two thousand claymores because somebody saw a horse run across the road. And if
Amanda isn’t back, it means that some or most of the detonators are not hooked
up. If she makes it back after you destroy the box, she can probably get most
of them to detonate anyway.
“I
would order you to stand your post until the Posleen are on you. That would do
the same thing, would mean that she and the engineers weren’t still trying to
hook up claymores. But I’m not going to expect you to remain when your platoon
pulls out. You’re behind the overpass embankment and the drainage ditch runs
right into the fighting position, so even if she doesn’t get back when we’re
taking fire, you can still hold out until the tracks start to move, so stay here
until relieved. Understood?”
“Understood.”
“Repeat
it back.”
“I
am to remain at this post, letting no one but Ms. Hunt have access to this
circuit board, until relieved by Ms. Hunt personally and no other. I will
remain under those orders, unless my platoon retreats from its position, at
which time I am to destroy the circuit board and retreat with my platoon.”
“Ms.
Hunt?”
“Okay.”
She looked deeply skeptical. “If I ain’t back though, your boss better make
damn sure he waits as long as he can.”
As
she drove away in her pickup Mueller looked the specialist in the eye.
“How
long you gonna stay?”
“Till
she gets back or the Posleen are swarmin’. I’ll get a radio from the track,
I’ll still be able to call fire right up till then.”
“Right.”
Mueller looked down at the departing civilian contractors. Their grading work
done, they were headed to the next ambush. It would probably be less elaborate
than this one, but the Posleen were going to be greeted as many times as
possible as they advanced.
“Any
word from the scouts?”
The
cav scout pulled a device out of his thigh cargo pocket and tapped the keypad.
The box was the size of an old “brick” cellular phone and had a hand strap on
the back for ease of carrying. This was useful, for example, when under fire.
The LCD display flashed as he scrolled through options and finally settled on a
screen.
“Nah,
the Posleen they’re watching are still in some sort of security distribution
around their lander. There’s some sort of armor indicator, maybe one of their
God Kings. But they still don’t seem to be moving this way.”
“Nice,”
said Mueller. “What is it?”
“You’ve
never seen one?” said the surprised scout.
Mueller
held up his wrist where the GalTech AID was wrapped as a thin bracelet. “I use
an AID.”
“Oh,
well it’s a combination of the IVIS and the ANCD,” said the scout, using the
military acronyms for the InterVehicle Intelligence System and the Army-Navy
Cryptographic Device.
“So
it’s both a tactical dispositions locator and a code book?” Mueller asked.
“Yeah.
Your position is broadcast by it to command vehicles that gather the data and
pass it on. And you can pull down signals information from the intervehicle
network. So, like, if I want to call up that battleship, I just search
for . . . what was its name?”
“The
North Carolina.”
“Right.”
The scout tapped keys for a moment and grimaced. “It doesn’t want to give me
Navy information. Why the hell do we practice Operational Security when the
Posleen don’t use the information?” he asked rhetorically.
“Where’s
it getting its location data from?”
“Triangulation
from the vehicles. They’re getting it from reads off of other vehicles that get
hard position data from those position markers that are scattered around. We
hit one on the way up here and the guidance system has us just about where we
are—sitting under the overpass—so it seems to be working.” He tapped the device
again. “I can put in a call for fire to the artillery battery that’s attached
to us, but I can’t get up to the Navy.”
“You
can do a call for fire?” asked the Special Forces NCO.
“Yeah,
in case it, you know, like drops in the pot.” The trooper shook his head. “I
hope I don’t have to, though. That means the chain of command is down to me,
you know? How’s that thing work?” he asked, gesturing at the AID.
“Pretty
much the same.” Mueller held out his wrist. “AID, battlefield schematic out
five miles.” A holographic projection of the battlefield in three dimensions
appeared in front of the two soldiers. As they watched, units, friend and foe,
were sketched in. “A little easier, though.”
The
trooper shook his head again. “Why’d you ask me?”
“I
was actually thinking you might say something like, ‘Oh, yeah, I heard on the
radio. . . .’ ” Mueller lowered the device and it decided the demonstration
was over and switched off the schematic. “Little did I know you were going to
pull out your own handy-dandy battlefield computer.”
The
trooper smiled. “I really love this thing.”
“What’s
the brief for the front-line scouts?” asked Mueller, wondering if everyone had
gotten the same word. “Are they staying out of sight?”
“Oh,
yeah. They’re not gonna stick their dicks in there, man. The quickest damn way
to get the Posleen to follow you is attack them.”
“Yeah,
it’s kind of like leading a pig.” Mueller felt the glimmerings of an idea.
“Huh?”
asked the urban-raised cavalry specialist.
“The
best way to lead a pig is to poke it in the nose,” said the NCO with a
distracted smile.
“Oh.
Well, until the colonel says different, we’re staying out of sight.”
“Yeah,
best thing for it.”
“I
thought you’d know that.”
“Why?”
asked Mueller, warily.
“Well,
wasn’t it a Special Forces team that got shot up on Barwhon?” asked the
specialist.
“Actually,
it was a mixed special operations team: some Special Forces, Marines, a SEAL.”
“And
they stuck their dicks into a Posleen camp, killed some God Kings and got their
butts kicked, right?” the specialist asked archly.
“More
or less.”
“So
we don’t want to do that, do we, Sergeant?”
“We
didn’t want to either,” Mueller admitted, grimly.
“So
why did they do it?” asked the scout.
“We
got orders from higher to snatch some Posleen for medical experiments. We
didn’t exactly like it and we liked the result even less than we thought we
were going to. We lost two absolute legends in the special ops community—Sandra
Ellsworthy and Arthur Tung—and when we made it back to the Himmit scout we were
at Death’s door from fatigue and vitamin deficiency.”
“Hold
on, by ‘we’ you mean you were on that team?” asked the cav trooper, his
eyes round.
“Me,
Ersin and Mosovich. We were the only survivors.”
“Jesus,
sorry, man. I, well, you know . . .”
“Yeah,
you didn’t know. It’s all right. But the only reason we went into the camp was
on orders. The real bitch of it was the whole mission was out of date by the
time we did it. They wanted a Posleen to study, but by the time we got back
with it there were captured Posleen and frozen Posleen bits out the ass coming
in from Diess. Total and complete fuckup.”
Mueller
paused, his face hard as he remembered the results of following incompetent
orders. The general whose bright idea it had been had never even commented, not
even obliquely apologized. Just handed out the medals, tapped them on the
shoulders and went on to his next star. “Anyway, the point is, I agree with the
scouts staying out of sight.” He looked down the road. “AID, how’s the
installation coming?”
“Engineers
report all claymores installed, all wire run and all blasting caps are in place
and ready to be connected. The engineer teams are ready to start connecting the
circuits when Ms. Hunt gives the command.”
“Okay, tell the engineer lieutenant to move
all the civilians back to the buses and on to the next ambush. What’s the
status on claymores for that?”
“Tractor-trailers
are unloading them as we speak, however, we have received only seven hundred,
since the rest have been diverted to the defenses on U.S. 1 and U.S. 301. If
time permits, more will be sent forward when a shipment arrives from the plant.
The factory is emptying its storage as fast as it can move the material out.”
“Where’s
Ersin?”
“Master
Sergeant Ersin is with the forward scouts.”
“Hell.
Well, tell him to be careful.”
Mark
Ersin adjusted the focus on the purely optical binoculars and let out a soft
sigh. He and the cavalry scouts with him were wearing ghillie suits, coveralls
sewn with dangling fabric strips that made them almost impossible to see
against the scrub pine they were nestled in. But Ellsworthy had been wearing a
similar suit when she bought it. Up against Posleen sensors, a ghillie suit was
cold comfort.
The Posleen, a
God King and about thirty normals, had obviously been left behind as security
for the lander. The numbers were far under the normal number of troops
associated with a God King, though, and Ersin was nervous about where the rest
might be.
The
lander loomed on what had previously been a tobacco farm. A tractor jutted out
from under one edge. The God King and normals had begun surveying duties soon
after the scouts came on site and, with the exception of the arrival of a small
anti-grav tank that was parked on the interstate, no changes had occurred.
“Three
Five Echo Two One, this is Nine Eight Bravo One Seven, authenticate Whiskey
Tango, over,” came a whisper over the scout’s radio.
“What?”
“I
say again, Three Five Echo Two One, this is Nine Eight Bravo One Seven,
authenticate Whiskey Tango, over,” the transmission repeated.
“AID,
who is that?” whispered Ersin.
“Master
Sergeant Ersin, that is the Twenty-Ninth Infantry Division’s division artillery
fire direction center.”
“What?
Direct?” asked the NCO, his faintly Eurasian face wrinkling in puzzlement. His
nose twitched like a rat sniffing cheese.
“Yes,
Master Sergeant.”
“What’s
the authentication?”
“I’ve
got an ANCD here,” whispered one of the cav troopers, pulling a box out of his
thigh pocket.
“Don’t
worry about it,” said Ersin.
“Authentication
is Mike.”
Ersin
picked up the handset and keyed it. “Niner Eight Bravo One Seven, this is
Three Five Echo Two One. Authenticate Mike, over.”
“Echo
Two One, require fire mission, over.”
What?
“Say
again, Bravo One Seven?”
“Echo
Two One, do you have the enemy in sight?”
“Roger,
over.”
“Require
fire mission, over.”
Ersin
wrinkled his brow and took a deep breath. “Bravo One Seven, this is Echo Two
One. Negative, say again, negative. Stay off this net in the future. Out.”
“Echo
Two One, this is Bravo Five Nine Actual, over.”
“Okay,
AID, who’s that?” queried Ersin, angrily.
“The
Division artillery commander.”
“Shit.”
He thought about it for a moment then keyed the radio anyway. “Bravo Five
Nine Actual, this is Echo Two One. Negative fire. I say again, per corps
orders, negative fire. Get off my net. Out.”
“Echo
Two One, this is Bravo Five Nine. This is an order. Call fire, I say again,
call fire, over.”
“AID,
contact corps, send these transmissions with explanation. Do it now. Bravo
Five Nine, require electronic authentication and link. AID, don’t accept
the link.”
“I
have to. Bravo Five Nine outranks you.”
“Not
really, haven’t we been transferred to Fleet Strike?”
“Your
team has not been officially transferred yet.”
“Okay,
what about divided command authorities? I fall under CONARC, not corps and we
are under a corps command not to fire.”
“Most
recent orders of a superior officer overrule previous orders. That’s Ground
Forces General Regulation One Dash One Zero Five. Link confirmed, Posleen
positions transmitted.” There was a brief pause. “One-Five-Five fire on the
way. Your position was noted as well. They are using close support rules as
stipulated by doctrine.”
“Goddamnit!
Have you contacted corps?”
“I
am unable to contact corps at this time due to message traffic. Material
transferred to e-mail and sent to queue.”
“Get
me Sergeant Major Mosovich,” he snarled at the recalcitrant machine as the sky
began to scream.
“He
what?” shouted the normally mild-mannered Twelfth Corps commander.
“General
Bernard ordered his artillery to engage the Posleen positions near Virginia
639.” The corps operations officer looked like he had taken a drink expecting
water and gotten unsweetened lemonade. In a way he had.
“Send
the corps provost to the Twenty-Ninth Infantry Division headquarters. Order him
to place General Bernard under arrest for insubordination and disobedience to
direct orders. Send General Craig to take command.”
“Craig
isn’t from the Guard, sir.”
“Fuck
’em. This is the last irresponsible action I am allowing that rat-fuck division
command and staff to undertake. Tell George to put a leash on those idiots.
Contact Division Arty, tell them that the order is countermanded. Relieve the
commander, have him report here, replace him with his XO pending final
disposition. Tell the XO he can figure on finding a new home unless he
justifies staying in command.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Get
me Colonel Abrahamson. He needs to know we may be kicking off early.”
CHAPTER 42
There was thirty
dead and wounded on the ground we
wouldn’t keep—
No, there wasn’t more than twenty when the
front begun
to go—
But, Christ!
along the line o’ flight they cut us up like sheep,
An’ that was all we gained by doin’ so!
We was rotten
’fore we started—we was never disciplined;
We made it out a favour if an order was
obeyed.
Yes, every little
drummer ’ad ’is rights an’ wrongs to mind,
So we had to pay for teachin’—an’ we paid!
An’ there ain’t
no chorus ’ere to give,
Nor there ain’t no band to play;
But I wish I was
dead ’fore I done what I did,
Or seen what I seed that day!
—from “That
Day”
Rudyard Kipling
Dale City, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
0728 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
“Does anyone know
what the fuck is going on?” asked Specialist Keren, rhetorically.
“You
heard the Pres, so shut up and dig,” said Sergeant Herd, but it was without
heat. Everyone was confused and uncertain.
The
Fiftieth Infantry Division was a new unit. Its unit colors had been in storage
since World War II when it had performed undistinguished service in the Pacific
theater. It had nearly participated in the battle of Leyte Gulf. It had
performed heroic rear area service during the battle of Tarawa. It had nearly
invaded the Japanese mainland and gone down in Army history. Unfortunately, it
was only a blip in Army history and an unnoticed blip until the present
emergency. And Ground Force personnel had responded appropriately.
The current
service personnel transferred to the unit were, by and large, the soldiers and
officers that relieving units were just as happy to see the backs of, and the
new recruits had only those personnel and a smattering of rejuvs to use as
guidance. A few officers and NCOs stood out, but in many cases only because of
average performance rising out of an abyssal morass of incompetence.
Mortar
platoon, Alpha Company First Battalion Four Hundred Fifty-Second Infantry,
Third Brigade, Fiftieth Infantry Division, was, if anything a cut above the
rest. Specialist Keren had, admittedly, been a sergeant before and would
probably be a private again but that had very little to do with his competence
as a mortarman. He had a bit of a drinking problem, and with it came a
coincidental habit of telling officers what he thought their mothers did for
pocket money, but that was no problem in the field. And he was the high point
of the “trained” privates. A couple of the newbie privates were on the mental
level of Oscar the Zoo Gorilla. And the platoon sergeant had spent the last
fifteen years improving his knowledge of metalworking in a machine shop. And
the platoon leader, despite the overabundance of first lieutenants, was a
recent graduate of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard Officers Training School
and would soon, almost certainly, require a razor.
But,
for all of that, they had established a unit camaraderie that was sorely
lacking throughout most of the division and they had managed to hold together
during the occasional riots that had broken out and they had trained, even when
the rest of the battalion had screwed off or gone AWOL half the time. What
magic element infected them, whether it was Keren’s sarcastic outlook on their
chances in the event of real combat, or the platoon sergeant’s careful
attention to every last detail of personal and equipment needs or the platoon
leader’s puppy-dog eagerness that was too infectious to ignore and too
ingenuous to kick, the unit had come together. True, they were far below the
pre-emergency norm for the American Army, and they had a lot of training to
catch up on, but they were as good as it got in the Fuckin’ Fiftieth.
Unfortunately
the current situation would have strained a veteran unit.
First
there had been the mad dash to saddle up, with nearly half the battalion
officers gone and over fifteen AWOLs in Alpha company alone. Then going into
the defense when it became apparent that they might be in the interdiction
circle. Then the orders to move out to positions north of the Potomac, which
was just fine with most of them. Last came the sudden about-face.
Up
until then operations had progressed with remarkable smoothness. The occasional
unit got lost or at least off on the wrong road and stuck in civilian traffic,
and a couple of units had run out of fuel because their bowsers could not find
them. And there were not enough lowboys—the tractor-trailer rigs that were
normally used for any movement that would not involve conflict—in the entire
world to move all the armored fighting vehicles being shuffled on the eastern
seaboard. So the division had to move in its APCs, Bradleys and tanks and
plenty of them broke down; some of the units in the division had not done
maintenance in months. But, basically, all things considered, up until the
turnaround everything was going as smooth as silk.
Moving
a corps is something like moving a large family. Telling such-and-such a unit
to go to this location and repeating that ad nauseum will not work. The units
invariably do not have enough fuel to complete the movement, even as simple a
drive as from Alexandria to Quantico: a forty-five-minute drive by car on a
good day. And telling the units to go here or there, centering hundreds of
fighting units with their support on a small area, means that thousands of
vehicles are all trying to use the same roads at the same time. While that
works just fine for commuters, military units rarely recover well when they
lack cohesion. Individual vehicles simply follow the vehicles in front and
rarely does every vehicle commander follow a map. Mixing units leads to one
unit with extra vehicles and one unit with virtually none. Just having mom and
dad go out to the car and sit after telling the kids to pack and load the car
is a recipe for disaster.
In
a normal movement or even a “planned” emergency every unit is given a
destination, a route to use and an estimated time of arrival. In addition
there are specified points to refuel, rearm and be served hot chow. Good
commanders send that information down the line and the subordinate units brief
their individual drivers and vehicle commanders. At a minimum almost every
driver and vehicle commander knows where they are going, the route to follow
and any planned stops along the way. (There are always exactly ten percent that
do not “get the word.”) Then the unit moves out and invariably everyone except
the drivers, the officers, senior NCOs and overeager junior NCOs goes to sleep.
On arrival it is the overeager junior NCO’s job to wake everyone up. That is
how they become senior NCOs.
When
the President gave the corps its marching orders every officer from the High
Commander down to the company commanders knew in their bones that the result
would be utter chaos. And they were right. With no time for the staff to
prepare any of the units and with the units effectively backwards to the way
they should have been arranged, the night had been an unending madhouse.
The
platoon had just heard a valid report that the Fiftieth Infantry Division had
less than seventy percent of its vehicles in the correct location. This after
what would have been a simple five-mile road march if they had driven directly
from their laagers in Quantico.
Unable
to determine precise points for every unit to move to and through, the Corps
had been forced to give general orders to the subordinate divisions along with
a general axis of movement. These were the orders that the divisions then
transmitted to their subordinate units. They had had varying success.
Some
divisions, notably the Thirty-Third, had tried to give every subordinate
battalion its precise destinations and axes of defense using the correct and
proper codes for such vital information. The result had been utter confusion on
the part of the battalions. Through simple errors inherent in any complex
unpracticed endeavor—especially when undertrained communications personnel
were attempting to use necessarily complex encoders and decoders—battalion
commanders found themselves with orders scattering them all over the map. In
some cases the orders had them outside of the continental United States.
Several commanders referred the obviously incorrect dispositions to the brigade
commanders, who should have been detailing their tactics in the first place.
The brigade commanders tried to contact the division for clarification.
In
the midst of all of this the corps’s communications protocols changed, not all
the correct protocols were transmitted to all the units and suddenly half the
corps was out of communication with each other.
The
mortar platoon had three of its five fighting vehicles in what the platoon
leader was fairly sure was the right place. After switching back and forth on
their PRC-2000 radio they finally established contact with the platoon sergeant
and the first squad track. The same method finally got them in contact with the
company net; the company commander’s RTO was flipping around to the old and new
frequencies trying to find its units.
The
information from the company was mildly encouraging. They were in more or less
the right place. Some of the company’s line platoons were in more or less the
right place. And the company commander was fairly sure that he would be able to
contact battalion “soon.” A request for refueling and chow, however, was
answered with an unsettling “we’ll have to get back to you on that.”
Now
fairly sure that there were some gun-bunnies—riflemen that is—between them and
the Posleen and fairly sure that they knew where they were and where the
gun-bunnies were, they were preparing for their first taste of war. All they
had to do was set up to fire, an exercise that should take a maximum of twelve
minutes according to Ground Forces Standard. Keren had been digging for over a
half-hour, waiting for word that the platoon leader was ready to lay the guns
“in-parallel.” Until that was done, control orders from the Fire Direction
Center would be meaningless; the guns needed a starting point to work from.
“You
know, I like Lieutenant Leper. I mean . . .” Keren tossed
another shovel of dirt out of the fighting position he was digging next to the
mortar track. He might not need the hole, but if he did he knew he was going to
need it bad and in a hurry. Most of the platoon thought he was an idiot.
“Can
it, Keren.” Sergeant Herd knew he had the best gunner in the battalion, maybe
in the division, but he also knew he had to keep him firmly in check.
“No,
really, he’s a nice guy and he tries hard. . . .” continued the
specialist. He tossed another shovelful of dirt out of the hole, and looked
around to see if he’d hit anyone with it. No. Damn.
“What,”
snorted Sheila Reed, the ammo bearer and track driver, “you think you could do
better?”
“Shit,
I know I could do better,” Keren responded, tossing the next shovelful
higher. A drift of the wind caught it and threw dust onto the rest of the crew
lounging on the track. His chocolate face creased as they cursed him.
“Go
out there and do it, then,” said Tom Riley, the assistant gunner.
“Fuck
no, Sergeant Ford is out there. You know what a bastard he is.”
“Fuck
Ford,” said Herd, suddenly interested. “He can do Fire Direction, but anybody
that can punch numbers can do that. Do you really think you can lay in the
guns?”
“I
can tell what their problem is from here,” Keren said, throwing the D-handle
shovel out of the hole and dusting off his hands. “They can’t get the
deflection head leveled up. It’s not like a one-twenty, where you only have to
level side to side. A deflection head you gotta level all the way around.” He
hoisted himself out of the hole and looked at his squad leader.
“Go
on. Tell Ford if he has a problem to take it up with me.” Sergeant Herd knew
the specialist was probably right. Having volunteered before the invasion was
ever heard of, the gunner had been in the service six years already and knew
his way around a mortar platoon far better than anyone but the platoon
sergeant. If he said he could get the platoon laid in he could get them laid
in.
Keren
pulled his sleeves down and settled his cap on his head. Regulations called for
wearing the Kevlar helmet at all times in the field, but his Kevlar was in the
track—where it did some good keeping you from banging your head—and that was
where it was gonna stay. Since most of the men and women in the platoon were
wearing BDU caps he fit right in. Those who were not wearing BDU caps were
wearing either floppy brim “boonie” caps or were coverless. The only people in
sight with Kevlars on were Lieutenant Leper and Sergeant Ford. On the other
hand Keren’s LCE with his pistol, ANCD and food and water did not leave his
body.
“Okay
Zippy,” he said, referring to Riley by his nickname, “get ready to lay that
bastard in.”
As
he neared the pair Sergeant Ford turned and glared at him. “We don’t need your
help, Keren, so get lost.”
“Already
am Sergeant, happens any time I leave the barracks. Sergeant Herd told me to
come over and see if I could be of assistance.”
“Sergeant
Ford,” said Lieutenant Leper, “maybe you could go and see if you can
reestablish communication with battalion TOC.”
Ford
glared at the specialist and stalked off towards the FDC track.
“Specialist,
I seem to be having a little trouble with leveling this up. I’ve watched Staff
Sergeant Simmons any number of times and I thought I knew how
but . . .”
“Yes,
sir, I understand,” Keren said, tactfully. “These things are a real bugger to
level.” He grabbed the leveling knobs and centered them, then looked at the
bubble and stomped one leg of the tripod down. Using both hands he manipulated
all three knobs, two at a time for a few seconds and spun the sight around.
“Direction
of fire is twenty-eight hundred, right, sir?” he asked.
“Twenty-eight
hundred mils, right,” said the confused lieutenant, looking over his shoulder
to ensure that the recalcitrant bubble was in fact centered. To his amazement
it was. “How the hell did you do that so fast?”
“The same way
you get to Carnegie hall, sir.” The specialist manipulated the head to
twenty-eight hundred mils and spun it towards his track. “Two gun aiming
point this instrument!” he shouted.
“Two
gun, aiming point identified!” Riley answered. The gunner on the other
track scrambled off the ground where he had been dozing and dove into the
track. A moment later his head popped through the top.
“Deflection,
one-seven one seven five! Close enough.”
“Deflection,
one-seven one seven five!”
keren
spun the sight towards the other track and read off the numbers. “Three gun!”
“Three
gun!”
“Aiming
point this instrument!”
“Aiming
point identified!”
“Deflection
one-nine one one eight!”
“Deflection
one-nine one one eight!”
He
waited until the guns called up, secretly pleased that the assistant gunner on
his track got up faster than the gunner on Third Track and repeated the process
twice more for each gun until they were laid in parallel and he pronounced
himself satisfied. “They’re in. Only way to know if they’re actually aligned is
to fire them in series, sir. But they’re as laid as I can get them.”
“That
was amazing. How did you get the bubble to level so fast?” the officer asked,
still surprised at the casual display of skill.
“My
first platoon sergeant taught me that trick, sir. If the bubble seems like it
should go one way, you have to grab two knobs. Twist one to push the bubble and
twist the other in the opposite direction. Also you should be looking at the
bubble from your normal sighting angle, rather than trying to crane down from
on top. That keeps you from chasing the bubble.”
“I’ll
remember that. Thanks.”
“De
nada, sir. No offense but we really needed to get laid in.”
“I
know. I think the company is really going to need us this time.” The young
lieutenant was obviously trying very hard not to look scared. For an officer to
look frightened was bad form and also he had been told it was guaranteed to
push the troops over into panic in a situation just like this one.
Unfortunately he was trying so hard not to look scared that he was looking
terrified instead.
“Sir,”
said Keren, taking pity on the poor kid. “We’re three klicks behind the line
and we’ve got a battalion of line dogs in front of us. What do we have to worry
about?”
“Is
it that obvious?”
“Hell,
yes. Want some unsolicited advice, sir?”
“No,
but you’re going to give it to me anyway, aren’t you?”
Keren
grinned. “Wouldn’t be a specialist if I didn’t. Walk back to the FDC track.
Tell Sergeant Ford, who is an asshole and everyone knows is an asshole so they
won’t take offense at you, to go to the tracks and make sure that all the .50
calibers have been cleaned, oiled, check head space and timing and get some of
the ammo bearers cutting fire lanes for them. Get some mines out, that sort of
thing. Pull it out of a book. Then sit there and look regal while you pore over
a map you already have memorized. Don’t pace. Sip water from time to time. Make
like you’re asleep. Maybe read the manual a few times.”
“And
that is supposed to inspire the troops?” The lieutenant gave a tired smile.
“No,
but it’s better than watching you run to the latrine every fifteen minutes,
sir,” the specialist quipped. “Yeah, the newbies and, hell, even the sergeants
are looking kind of light around the gills and they could use the example and
some work to take their minds off what’s coming up the road. Act like it’s just
another exercise, a nice, cold day in the country.”
“Good
suggestions, Specialist. So, why in the hell are you just a specialist?”
“You
didn’t hear that, sir?”
“No.”
“I
told my last platoon leader his mother was a whore with AIDS who squirted him
out in a public toilet and forgot to flush, sir.” He looked momentarily
chagrined. “I was kinda drunk at the time. But he really was an asshole,” he
finished, as if that completely explained the incident.
“I’ll
bet.”
“Roger,
out.”
Captain
Robert Brantley carefully hung the microphone back on its clip, settled his
Kevlar on his head, adjusted the chinstrap just so, picked up the squad
automatic weapon he had appropriated, checked the chamber to ensure it was
clear and climbed over the cases of ammunition in the Bradley fighting vehicle
and out the troop door. Descending to the loam of the forest floor he caught
the eye of his first sergeant and made a circular motion with his arm signaling
“rally on me.”
As
the sergeant ambled over, the commander took the time to observe the company
digging in. At least he watched the few members of the Second platoon who were
in view. The order had been clear and, for once, unquestioned. Two-man fighting
positions, interlocking fields of fire, M-60E machine gun positions with extra
cover, sand-bagged front parapets, everything rikky-tik. Except for a few small
points that it was no one’s job but the company commander’s to consider.
“How’s
it going?” he asked the first sergeant when he arrived. The first sergeant was
a transfer, a large NCO with a beer gut that a few years before would have had
him out of the Army. The company commander could have accepted that without
qualm—armies had functioned for ages without professional runners being the
norm—were he a competent NCO. Unfortunately he was not.
The
first sergeant was a nice, quiet simpleton who had apparently risen to his
present rank through a series of superiors who were okay with having a nice,
quiet simpleton as an NCO. How that had happened in the pre-Posleen Army,
Captain Brantley was unsure. The Army he’d left ten years before generally
shuffled material like this out by around staff sergeant rank.
“Uh,
okay, sir,” the first sergeant said and saluted sloppily. He pulled his BDU
blouse down to straighten out the wrinkles and tried to buckle his equipment
belt. The maneuver only served to heighten the effect of the beer gut. “Umm,
First platoon has most of their people now, but we still ain’t heard from
Third. An’ we still ain’t seen any sign of Bravo, so Second doesn’t have
anybody out there on their left.”
“How
very good. Well, the mortars are finally up and ready to support but they only
have two guns. How are the positions coming? And do we have any word on hot
chow?”
“Well,
we’re not as far along over in First platoon as we are here. And I can’t get
the XO on the horn, so I don’t know about chow.”
Captain
Brantley refrained from sighing. He remembered his first sergeant in the
company he commanded during his last hitch. An NCO who was one of the last with
service in Vietnam, he could track a mess section down no matter how “lost”
they got and if he did not find the mess section he would get pizza delivered.
By helicopter if necessary. Since the time of Wellington, at least, if not
Gustavus Adolphus, the importance of a prepared meal before a battle had been
highly emphasized. Brantley was not particularly happy going into battle with
two-thirds of his company, nobody on his left flank and soldiers who were
subsisting on MREs and junk food they had packed along.
“Okay,
take the command Hummer. There’s a McDonald’s up at the interstate. Get a
hundred and twenty hamburgers and thirty cheeseburgers.” He pulled out his
wallet and handed the first sergeant enough cash to cover the purchase. “If
they’ll take it, try to give them a chit for the food. If they’re closed, get
the makings out of the building. Take Specialist Forrier with you.” He gestured
with his chin at the RTO lounging on the troop ramp of the command Bradley. The
kid got into enough trouble that he would probably jump at the chance to do a
little authorized scrounging.
“If
you can’t find any hot food there, keep looking, find a deli, a restaurant,
anything. Got it?”
“Yes,
sir.” The first sergeant looked hangdog. “I don’t want to leave you, Captain.
We don’t know when they’ll get here.”
“Just
make sure you’re back with some real chow before they do. And make sure you
have communications in place; I want to be able to get ahold of you if I need
you back here.”
“Yes,
sir. Maybe the XO will turn up with some chow.”
“Maybe.
Get going, First Sergeant.”
The
NCO saluted again and headed for the command Humvee. Give him his due; if you
gave him clear instructions he carried them out to the best of his ability. As
that headache was placed under control, Captain Brantley saw the Hummer of the
battalion commander rolling in through the pine forest.
A
tall heavy-bodied officer hopped out of the Humvee before it came to a full
stop and strode rapidly towards the waiting company commander. Although he
looked about twenty-two, Lieutenant Colonel Hartman was nearly sixty, having
retired as a battalion commander in the First Infantry Division in the early
’80s. A solid professional officer, he had taken command of the battalion only
four months before and had worked steadily to bring it up to a highly trained
level he could be proud of. Unfortunately, the Posleen did not seem to be in
favor of giving him the time to correct the unit’s multitude of deficiencies.
As
he approached his Alpha Company commander—the only commander he had he
considered worth the spit to insult them with—he was rehearsing how to break
all the bad news.
“Captain
Brantley.”
“Colonel,”
the officer said with a nod. “I would offer you a hot cup of coffee, but we
seem to have misplaced the mess section.”
“That’s
not all we’ve misplaced,” the battalion commander alleged with a patently false
grin. “Let’s take a walk.”
When
the officers were far enough away from the unit that they could not be
overheard, the colonel maneuvered to place Brantley’s back to the soldiers in
view. That way they would not be able to see his face when he heard the news.
“Okay,”
the colonel said without preamble, “there is no good news. None. The bad news
is as follows. I know you don’t have Bravo on your left. That’s because there
is, effectively, no Bravo Company. There are enough tracks to make up a platoon
in Bravo Company’s area of operation. All the others are either lost or hiding.
We may be able to find a few more that are simply lost, but most of them are on
the run to avoid the battle. They ran, it’s as simple as that. Before the damn
battle was even joined.”
He
shook his head but did not let the overwhelming sense of shame and anger cloud
his features. Even from here he could see the occasional glance from the
soldiers digging in and he was not about to let them know how badly they had
been screwed.
“Your
First platoon has turned up intact intermingled with the Twenty-First Cav and
since they’re already there they have been ‘detached’ for the duration as
infantry support to the Cav.”
“Oh,
shit.” The company commander shook his head and tried not to let the hysterical
laughter that was bubbling to the surface overcome him. “Jesus, we are fucked.”
“The
battalion trains—including all the spare food, mess section, ammunition, repair
units and general logistics—somehow got on the Prince William Parkway and are
halfway to Manassas. That’s where breakfast is.”
“I’d
be happy to load up and go after it. I mean the whole company.”
“I’m
sure you would,” the battalion commander said dryly. “I have seen some
consummately fucked-up exercises, but this is arguably the worst.”
“This
isn’t an exercise, sir,” said the Alpha commander, all the humor evaporated. A
cold wash of chills came over him and his mouth went dry. “Charlie Company?”
“About
where you are, effectiveness-wise, with the exception of Captain Lanceman being
among the missing.” Something about the commander’s lack of expression seemed
to denote a lack of regret at the captain’s absence.
“I
put the XO, Lieutenant Sinestre, in charge and he has most of the company, but
he is missing his mortars. I sent them Bravo’s mortars and I’m detaching
Bravo’s personnel to you as your ‘Third Platoon.’ However, there are two more
problems.”
“And
they are, sir?”
“The
battalion has no reserve, this way, but worse we have no one on our right
flank.”
“Where’s
Second batt?” the company commander asked, shocked.
“Somewhere
around our mess section, thirty miles away near Manassas. That was the location
they received to dig in. Brigade is running around like a chicken with its head
cut off, so I’m arbitrarily going to extend the battalion. Third batt is on our
left, but there’s a divisional boundary on the right. I’ve got the scouts out
looking for the Thirty-Third, which is supposed to be out there somewhere, or
even the Forty-First. IVIS says there’s no one between here and the Potomac,
but I just can’t fathom that. There has to at least be someone around the
interstate!”
“Run
that by me again.” Arkady Simosin felt like a half-dead corpse. As many times
as he had participated in exercises—from a junior officer leading a tank
platoon up through exercises with multiple corps—he had never seen such a
tremendous mishmash as had happened during the night. His corps had utterly
jumbled units and, apparently, directions and intentions. Now he was finding
out just how badly. His staff had assembled to tell him the bad news with the
Chief of Staff as official sacrificial lamb.
“As
you know, sir, the corps battle plan called for the Forty-First to establish
strong positions between the Potomac and the I-95/U.S. 1 area, the Thirty-Third
to mass in the area of the roads and the Fiftieth to establish strong positions
to the west of the roads, with a cavalry screen to the west and Nineteenth
Armor in reserve. This plan was developed on the presumption that the Posleen
would drive up the 95/1 axis towards Alexandria.”
“Tell
me something I don’t know,” snarled the general. His accent went briefly
Brooklyn Slavic, always a bad sign. “You said something about the Forty-First
being out of position.”
“Badly,
sir. The Twenty-First and Fiftieth divisions are the only ones on the correct
east-west axis. The Forty-First is set up seven miles to the rear and the
Thirty-Third is set up four miles to the rear of where they are supposed to be.
We have logistics trains forward of our combat teams and combat units.
Currently we have three divisions echeloned instead of massed which is going to
invite . . .”
“Defeat
in detail.” Arkady grimaced and glanced at the screen of his PC. “That’s not
what this says. It just notes that they are not at full strength.”
“It
perceives that a percentage of each unit is in the right location and, given
the current chaos, that is their actual axis, General. Unfortunately, most of
each division is in the area I just gave you. Those are the locations that they
received to set up in or, in some cases, chose to set up in.”
“Okay.”
Simosin flogged his tired brain for a solution. “Call the Twenty-First. Tell
them to hold in place. If the Posleen make contact they are not to decisively
engage but they should try to slow them down. Pull the Fiftieth back to where
the Thirty-Third is actually axised. Pull the Forty-First forward to that axis.
Get as many units properly joined up as possible in the time allotted along
that axis.”
“That
will put us almost on the Prince William, General,” noted the G-3. “Well north
of the President’s stated intent.”
“North
or south of the Prince William?”
“South
of it, sir.”
“Good,
the President will have to suck it up; having that road at our backs will give
us a way to move reinforcements back and forth and to retreat if necessary.
Move the corps artillery north of the Occoquan; they’ll be able to range for
close support. And move all the logistic elements except ammunition and food
north of it too. Tell the division commanders to make their own judgement on
where their artillery should be placed. They should know that if it’s north, if
those bridges go down their artillery will be out of contact.
“What
is the status on the bridges?”
“They’re
cored, mined and ready to drop, General,” said the Ninety-Fifth ID Assistant
Division Engineer, a major-promotable. As the most senior noncommanding
engineer left in the corps, he had been seconded to act as engineering liaison
to replace the absent corps engineer. “They will drop them when the last of
the units are south and the refugees are north or when the Posleen come into
close-contact range.”
“Well,
we’ll just have to try and make sure that doesn’t happen. Okay, get to
shuffling units. We still have time to straighten this out, people; we just
have to keep our heads on straight.”
CHAPTER 43
Near Ladysmith,
VA, United States of America, Sol III
0912 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
The Twenty-Ninth
Infantry Division artillery fire was like a slight tap against a hornet’s nest.
Slowly at first, practically one at a time, the hornets began to wander out,
looking around for whatever had kicked their home.
Ersin
held onto the ceiling grab bar and the seat in front of him as the Humvee left
the ground for the fifth time, this time striking a streambed with a tremendous
splash that threw water over the hood of the all-terrain vehicle. Above him the
twenty-five-millimeter chain gun burped. How anyone could expect to hit
anything while airborne was beyond him but the gunner in the seat next to him
grunted in satisfaction.
“Better
get us hull-down, Tom,” the gunner shouted over the howl of the engine as the
vehicle dug itself out of the stream. “I got the God King.”
He
turned to look at the Special Forces master sergeant on the seat next to him
and laughed. “I knew all that time playing Death World was going to come in
handy someday!”
Ersin
glanced out in time to see the trees behind them begin coming apart under the
hammer of Posleen guns. In response the Humvee cornered so hard his clamped
hand came loose and he slid across the compartment and slammed into the gunner.
The wide stance and advanced traction of the combat vehicle permitted maneuvers
that would roll any normal off-road vehicle.
“Sorry!”
he yelled to the gunner as he forced himself back across the seat.
“No
problem, Sarge.” The gunner tapped the four-point harness holding him in place.
“That’s why we changed out the belts in this thing.” He glanced at his monitor
and shook his head. “Nothing in sight.”
“Another
klick to the interstate!” shouted the vehicle commander over the howl of the
diesel engine. “I told them we’re coming in!”
“Just
make damn sure they’re ready to pass us through the lines!” Ersin tapped his
AID. “AID, get me Sergeant Mueller.”
“He
is standing by, Master Sergeant Ersin.”
“Mueller?”
“Yeah, Ersin. I understand we got
company.”
“How’s it coming?”
“We’re hooking up the blasting caps as
fast as we can.”
“Well,
you got hostiles at about a klick, klick and a half from the IP. Hurry.”
“Roger.
We need to keep them from coming down U.S. 1, they’re not as far along.”
“How the hell do we do that?”
snapped
Ersin.
“Do you know how to lead a pig?”
asked
Mueller.
“No.”
Mueller
explained.
The
master sergeant gave a feral smile in return and spared a glance out the back
window. The Posleen were not to going to like their reception by Twelfth Corps.
“You
sure about this, Sergeant?” asked the Bradley gunner, as the TOW launcher
rotated outward.
“No,
but it’s the orders. Edwards,” he continued to the driver, “you be ready to put
your foot in it as soon as you get the word.”
“Okee-dokee,
Sarge,” said the driver of the Bradley. In sheer nervousness she gunned the
throttle.
“Now,
Irvine, you gotta . . .”
“ . . . launch
the rocket off-axis. I got it.”
“Hopefully,
that way the lander won’t fire right at us. When the Posleen turn this way,
we’ll lead them down 632.”
“What
happens if they do take us out, right away, that is?”
“Four
track will wait for the ground response and take it under fire. Not that we’ll
care,” he ended, parenthetically.
“I
got family in Richmond,” responded the gunner. “Target,” he said, indicating
that the target was in sight in his scope.
“Right.”
The vehicle commander looked through his repeater. The missile launcher was
pointed into a tobacco field. With any luck the gunner would be able to turn
the wire-guided missile and get it on a course to hit the Posleen landing ship
before it was destroyed by counterfire. The alternative, firing directly at the
lander, had been determined to be suicide on Barwhon. At that point, the
thinking went, the Posleen would send their forces towards the launcher.
Towards them, that was, as they retreated down the country road.
Since
their vehicle was nearly three thousand yards from the lander, the only Posleen
weapons they had to worry about immediately were the automatic weapons on the
God King saucers and the defensive fire of the lander itself. Not that either
system was very survivable for a tin can on tracks like a Bradley.
If
the plan worked, the Posleen would be exposed to sniping flank attacks by
cavalry units scattered throughout the woods and fields and it would give the
ambush sites more time to prepare. “Confirm, target identified. Fire.”
“Man,”
whispered the gunner as he closed the firing circuit, “I really wish they’d
used an Abrams.”
The United States
Ground Forces were in the unusual situation of having incomplete battlefield
intelligence. Knowledge of an enemy’s abilities and intentions is better than
half a battle won or lost. For years the pre-Posleen Army had worked on systems
to insure that future commanders would have an almost Godlike view of the physical
and electronic battlefield. Satellites would look down from their Olympian
orbits while closer pilotless drones and deep-viewing reconnaissance planes
with sophisticated radar and visual systems gave precise moment-to-moment
information on enemy movements.
The
coming of the Posleen had ended for all time the concept of “sundering the fog
of war.”
The
satellites were already gone. Most of them had been destroyed during the
ponderous atmospheric entry of the Posleen battleglobes and the rest were
picked off at leisure by the automated sky defense systems of the landers. The
same defense system created a virtually impregnable information bubble around
the Posleen forces. To find the Posleen, small units were forced to maneuver
forward until they made contact. It was a return to the bad old days of
information warfare; the days of skirmishers and scouting parties. The term
“Dark Ages” was used frequently.
Given
Posleen psychology, if they saw a target, it would be taken under fire. Once
taken under fire, if there were any survivors the Posleen would give chase. If
they gave chase they were bound to run into defenses, defenses which were still
not prepared. The whole concept of the defense and the information war had been
predicated on cavalry or infantry patrols making contact but not being seen.
Now
those slowly probing patrols were converting to skirmishers. In most cases the
results were poor. On the north edge of the Posleen bubble, in the Tenth Corps
area of operations, a reconnaissance platoon of the Twenty-First Cavalry found
out the hard way that Posleen can be fast and brutal in movement-to-contact.
Probing
forward on U.S. 1, the two Humvees and two Bradleys would bound forward in
echelons. First a Humvee would move, then a Bradley. When they were in place
with troops deployed, the next echelon would dart forward,
twenty-five-millimeter chain guns constantly questing for heat signatures.
As
the Bradley of the second echelon was bounding forward, without warning a
company of Posleen came out of a side road at a trot. Before the standing
echelon could even call in the sighting, all four hundred normals opened fire
at under five hundred meters.
The
moving Bradley was the first to be hit, as a three-millimeter railgun tracked
across the personnel compartment. The tungsten rounds penetrated the thin
magnesium armor and began tumbling through the compartment, chewing up the
troops within. Their moment of horror was brief, however, for within seconds of
one another, four of the twenty hypervelocity missile launchers in the Posleen
company found the armored cavalry vehicle. When the slugs of gadolinium
traveling at .3c struck the vehicle with near simultaneity, there was not
enough left to do a chemical analysis.
The
forward Humvee was gone seconds later, victim of massed fire from 1mm railguns
and shotguns, and the rear echelon, taking fire from nearly a hundred 3mm
railguns and HVM launchers, lasted only moments longer. The entire battle was
over before the standing unit could send out a sighting report, before they
could even move out of their positions.
The
dense smoke and crack of HVMs from the skirmish, however, was not lost on the
next echelon of scouts. The backup company a thousand meters behind the point
went into a hasty defense and called in a sighting report. Their platoon of
Abrams main battle tanks turned to the rear of a nearby strip mall. With a
brief, almost unnoticed, crash 120mm cannons shivered the remaining display
glass from the inside. The shadows of the buildings effectively hid the massive
combat vehicles within.
Arkady
Simosin watched the main IVIS display start to light up with Posleen sightings
and knew they were doomed. The Fiftieth Infantry Division had just reached its
defense points and started digging in. The slower Forty-First was not even
completely in place. One look at the number of sightings, and the rapidly
blunting blue arrows as cavalry forces were pushed back, told him that the
Posleen were coming to dinner and they would not be denied. He punched a button
on his command panel and an officer in helmet and LCE answered.
“Corps
Arty,” the officer started to say and stopped when he saw who the caller was.
“Yes, sir.”
“I
want you to target those sighting reports at will, just as if they were valid
calls for fire,” he told the artillery officer abruptly.
“They’re
only guesses, General,” protested the colonel.
“Yeah,
but by the time they fire on them, every single one of those roads will be
packed with Posleen. Can the battleships range to here?”
The
officer looked off-screen at another display. “Yes, sir. It can easily range to
the interstate points, and all the way along the cav’s front. Right now we only
have the Missouri; the Massachusetts is on the way. But they’re
not linked into the tac net; we have to give them vocal calls for fire.”
“That’ll
do. Feed them those coordinates. I want to pound the follow-on forces as hard
as possible. Do it.”
“Yes,
sir.” The officer punched a series of keys. “So ordered.”
“Out here.”
The general cut the display and leaned back. He zoomed the IVIS out to cover
all of northern Virginia, punched in another series of commands and grunted. At
current rate of advance, the ACS battalion was still six hours away. And he was
fairly certain that one battalion was not going to be able to make a difference.
The Eleventh Mobile Infantry Division
was getting closer, barely ten hours away, but it was a division in name only,
with a brigade and a half of troops fully suited and only partially trained.
He
punched another button and called up the Chief of Staff.
“Okay,
I’ve had a really bad idea.”
“Yes,
sir?”
“So
far we have failed miserably at every movement we have tried to make, but I
think we need to get ready to make another one.”
“What,
now, sir?” asked the COS, upset and startled. The corps was barely getting into
its positions and he could not believe the general was preparing to move.
“Not
now. I said prepare for one. With the way they are boiling out of there, we
might have to turn this into a battle of maneuver. If so, I want to be as
prepared as we can. This battle is in play mode; it’s up to company commanders
now. So get the staff working on a plan to pivot the corps to a north-south
axis, anchored on the north by the Occoquan. Start the Nineteenth towards the
west; they’ll anchor the left flank. If we find ourselves being pushed out of
position we’ll need to pivot towards Manassas and slow their rate of advance towards
Ninth Corps.”
“What
about the Forty-First, General? They’ll be swinging in the breeze.”
“Plan
it with them on the north flank, but I agree that they will have problems
completing the maneuver. However, they can retreat towards the Occoquan bridges
or, barring that, they can move down to the Potomac and be Dunkirked under the
cover of the battleships.”
“You’re
assuming that we won’t be able to stop them, sir.”
“You
are correct. At a tactical level we cannot maintain visual contact with them
long enough to get good calls for fire, at least not so far. We will have to
see what happens when they come into contact with the prepared positions. If we
had had more time, more room to trade for time, we might have been able to pull
this off. But without good trenches, wire and bunkers, I think they’ll overrun
us. We’ll see.”
“Aiming
point this instrument!”
“Aiming
point identified!”
The
missing platoon sergeant and One Gun had linked back up during the move and
Keren was back where he preferred to be. The L-T had handled the sudden
move—and the linkup with the missing tracks—with remarkable smoothness. As the
hammer came down the lieutenant seemed to be getting more and more into
harness, like a young horse that never really shines until up against a
competitor. He was laying in the section under Staff Sergeant Simmons’s
direction and doing it well. The guns were up almost before anyone knew it and
almost simultaneously the released troops dove into their tracks to check the
IVIS displays.
Red
enemy marks sprinkled the entire front of the Twenty-First Cav, only six miles
down the road, and the hammer of missiles and artillery could be heard from the
distance.
“Look,”
said Keren, scrolling the display to the west, “it’s solid along their front
all the way to the edge of the division.”
“So?”
asked Sheila.
“I
doubt that they just end there because the divisional front does,” snorted
Riley.
“Huh?”
The ammo bearer was only seventeen and straight out of basic training. Most of
the symbols on the display were still foreign to her.
“The
Posleen are probably out around the cav’s flank,” explained Sergeant Herd. “And
there,” he continued, pointing to a unit marker in movement down Gun Truck
Road, “is the response.”
“Only
a company,” muttered Keren.
“They’re
stretched thin covering a three-division front,” pointed out Herd. “Besides,”
he pointed to a mass on the primary roads, centered on the cavalry division’s
forward units, “that’s the main thrust. If the Posleen are off the roads,
they’re slowed down.” He turned towards the front of the track and began a fuel
and maintenance report.
As
the rest of the squad began maintenance or personal activities, Keren stayed to
track the scout company as it rushed down the twisting backroads towards the
threatened flank of the division. Before it was halfway there it flashed the
purple of in-contact then dropped off the screen.
“Shit!”
“What?”
asked Sergeant Herd standing up quickly and banging his helmetless head on the
overhead of the crowded track. “Damn! Cocksucker!”
As
the sergeant cursed every piece of metal ever designed by an engineer with the
express purpose of making an infantryman’s life uncomfortable, red enemy icons
began popping up to the rear of the westernmost regiment of the Twenty-First. A
fuel convoy, driving forward to refuel the thirsty vehicles of the embattled
division, went purple then winked out. Other logistics units began to report
contact as the main reserve of the division started a movement to the west.
“Posleen
have turned the cav’s flank,” said Keren. “They must have bypassed the security
companies and they’re in the rear area.”
“Shit.”
Reed hung upside down from the top of the APC watching the inverted screen.
“Better get ready to rock and roll, boys and girls.”
CHAPTER 44
The Pentagon, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1024 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
“This is Bob
Argent reporting from Continental Army Command. With the unauthorized firing of
artillery by units of the Twenty-Ninth Infantry Division, the Posleen have
started pouring out of their positions around Fredericksburg like ants out of a
kicked hive.” The reporter looked like hell. It was obvious under the makeup
that he had gotten as little rest as the soldiers he was reporting on. Under
normal circumstances a replacement would have been sent in to cover for him
while he got some sleep. But the veteran reporter would have none of it; this
was the news event of the century and he was at the nerve center.
“I
have with me Lieutenant Colonel Guy Tremont, aide to General Horner, the
Continental Army Commander. Colonel, how do you rate the chances for the Tenth
Corps forces, that is, can they hold?”
“Well,
Bob,” the colonel said with a somber smile, “Tenth Corps is a very heavy corps
and if any five divisions can do the job they will. We have great faith in
General Simosin here at CONARC and everyone feels that if any general can
command a defense like that, it is General Simosin.”
“What
about the confusion overnight? We understand that many of the units got lost.”
“Define
lost,” said the colonel, with a shrug. “It’s central Virginia, they always knew
where they were. In many cases there was great confusion about where they
should be, but that happens any time that there is a sudden change of plan.
Tenth Corps has recovered and is in position to handle the threat.”
“Is
that an implied criticism of the President, of his sudden change to defend
forward of the Potomac?”
“No,
definitely not. The President is the Commander in Chief; his word is law for
the military. If he wants us to defend in close, we defend in close; if he
wants us to defend in Pennsylvania, we defend in Pennsylvania.”
“So
you think that the Tenth Corps will be able to stop the Posleen?”
“There
is no surety in war, and certainly no surety when the situation is as chaotic
as this one, with the threat arriving before expected and by surprise. The
Tenth will do the best that any unit can do. If they succeed, so much the
better. If they do not, and have to retreat, there is another bullet in that
gun. The Posleen still have to get through the Ninth Corps coming into position
near the head of the Occoquan reservoir. One or the other should stop them.
“According
to the IVIS displays, they are already starting to turn the edge of the
cavalry . . .”
Jack
Horner nodded his head solemnly at the accurate statement.
“So
you’re still in favor of broadcasting the IVIS?” asked General Taylor. The two
were conferring about how many and what units should be moved into the area,
but they had taken time to watch the hastily briefed interview.
“Yes,
and when the ACS get here, I’m going to broadcast forty channels of raw video
for the networks to monitor, edit and distribute; every platoon leader at a
minimum. There is no indication that the Posleen use operational intelligence
and under the circumstances I think that the American people have a full right
to know what is going on.”
“Well,
the President agrees with you,” Taylor commented with a nod.
“I
wish I could have gotten him to agree with me on the locations to defend,” said
Horner, with a tight, humorless smile. “If we had even moved up to where the
Ninth is digging in, it would have made this almost survivable. Especially with
the Tenth up and the Ninth in a second defensive belt. As is, I’m afraid
they’re going to chew up the Tenth then go for seconds on the Ninth. The Tenth
has its right flank swinging in the breeze.”
“He
should have extended his line with the reserve.”
“No,
watch how Arkady uses the reserve; I think that might save the corps. At some
point the Posleen would have turned the flank. They’ll turn the flank of the
whole corps if he’s not careful. But the Nineteenth is already moving to
intercept.”
“Okay,
it’s Arkady’s battle, let’s let him run it. What’s the story on Richmond?”
The
Posleen scout companies moved southward on the broad highway towards the
distant city skyline at a tireless ground-eating lope, columns of phalanxes on
either side, heads swaying from side to side searching out potential trouble. A
unit of the thresh had been spotted, but they were still too far out to bother
engaging, their tracked tenar that had given so much trouble over the
last few hours hull-down and at maximum engagement range. The lead God Kings
considered firing but decided to hold off until their companies were in good
range.
There
had thus far been no sign of the twin-turreted military technicians and the
scout leaders breathed silent words of relief. Bad enough to fight a fast and
slippery enemy that fired from ambush and disappeared into the brush taking
countless oolt’os with them, but at least there were brief targets to engage, an
enemy to combat. The military technicians and the explosives that coasted
through the air on ballistic paths were impossible to fight. As long as neither
of them made an appearance the battle was a foregone conclusion.
Finally
they were getting in range of the thresh, close enough that massed fire would
start to strike their hated tenar, and the western God King gave the
command to fire.
As
a hail of railgun rounds and missiles began to spark off the overpass, the cav
platoon leader gave Mueller a quick thumbs-up and dropped into his command
Bradley, the hatch quickly shutting behind him.
Mueller
checked the monitor from the ambush site and decided to give the Posleen a
little more rope with which to hang themselves. The lead companies, which he
considered fair game for the cav, were still in the ambush zone. Let a few more
Posleen pass out of the ambush zone and fill it with the heavier armed
follow-on companies. Behind him the driver in the Humvee left for his use
started the engine, ready to get out of harm’s way as intended.
Mueller
nodded as the first God King on either side passed completely through the
ambush zone. Their companies were engaging the cav well, coming forward at what
would be a canter in a horse, and apparently confident that they had this
battle won. Wrong. He smiled ferally and engaged the firing circuit.
At
the speed of light the current flashed to the far side of the half-kilometer
mechanical ambush and then simple chemistry took over.
Since
Amanda Hunt and the engineering platoon leader who helped set up the ambush
were both pessimistic people, there were three fairly independent methods of
detonation for the claymores. It was one of the reasons the ambush was so time
consuming to emplace. First, the entire ambush was “daisy-chained.” Each
claymore had two points for detonators to be attached. The first claymore had a
detonator on either side, one for wire reception and the other for radio, and
was wrapped with detonation cord. One line of detcord ran from another radio
detonation sequence, another line ran from a secondary wire detonation
sequence, the third ran to the next claymore in line and the fourth and last
ran to the third claymore in line. At each succeeding claymore the same
sequence was set, with the exception that the succeeding claymores only had the
wire circuit on one side and an “inbound” detcord on the other. Second, the
wire backups on all the claymores were circuit-delayed to let the primary
daisy-chain sequence carry the detonation.
As
it turned out, the backups and redundancies were virtually unused except for
one point on the east side where a stray twenty-five-millimeter round had
severed the detcord daisy chain and, surprisingly enough, did not set the whole
ambush off. Elsewhere the entire sequence ran like a Swiss watch, a tribute to
Ms. Hunt’s consummate professionalism.
When
the first claymore detonated, it in turn fired the detcord that was wrapped
around it. This cord, like an exploding fuse, carried the explosion the few
meters to the next claymore in line which exploded and sent it to the next.
With a series of trip-hammer explosions sounding like the world’s largest
machine gun, five hundred yards of roadway flashed white and the air filled
with dust and smoke.
As
the air cleared, it revealed both sides of the roadway packed with dead and
dying Posleen, a monstrous abattoir of torn yellow flesh. In many cases of the
outer centaurs, only the finest of forensic analysis would be able to separate
one mangled centaur from another. In less than a second, over sixty-four
hundred Posleen, normals and God Kings, a full B-Dec command, was wiped off the
face of the earth.
The
lead companies checked, shocked by the destruction behind them and fighting the
conflicting stresses of justifiable fear of what they might face and the God
King bondings driving them on. As they checked, the first artillery started to
fall.
The
Posleen in the phalanxes following the erased companies checked as well—shocked
and terrified by the sight in front of them—but only for a moment. As some
units began to pour around the organic roadblock, other units began gathering
the dead and transporting them back to the nearest landers for processing. The
Posleen firmly believed in the doctrine of waste-not-want-not.
The
lead companies moved back up to a canter to try to close the distance to the
enemy through the beaten zone of the artillery but the combination was just too
strong. The time the Posleen had used up on Fredericksburg had been put to good
use by General Keeton and his staff. Most divisional artillery and all the
corps mobile artillery units had been moved forward to support the ambushes
while their revetments on Libby and Mosby Hills were being prepared. Over a
hundred 155mm artillery pieces—each with a thirty-meter “footprint”—were firing
into a zone only one hundred meters wide and five hundred deep.
Between
the accurate fire of the Bradleys and the massed artillery, the lead companies
of Posleen were erased in seconds before coming within five hundred meters of
the cav scouts.
The
cavalry had not escaped unscathed. The plasma cannon of the western God King
had accounted for two Bradleys and a lucky hit by the massed HVM for another.
But the reinforced platoon, the artillery and the ambush had accounted for over
seven thousand Posleen in less than five minutes. The destroyed tracks were
quickly replaced on the line with vehicles from the reserve platoon while
medics worked on the traumatized survivors.
It
takes approximately three minutes for a Posleen to gallop a kilometer. The forward
edge of the ambush zone had been placed at a kilometer and a half from the cav
unit while the surviving Posleen forces were an additional half a kilometer
back. The cavalry company commander called for fire to be adjusted outward as
the follow-on Posleen companies charged forward.
For
the first five hundred meters the centaurs slipped and slithered in the
offal-moistened soil of the verge. The unholy slurry slowed their movement
through that beaten zone and increased their time in the zone of fire. However,
within a few minutes Posleen battle units were up on the interstate and
pounding forward towards the cav unit.
Despite
the long gallop and the massed artillery fire, it was obvious that the tide of
Posleen would eventually break through. Even as the lead elements drove
forward—melting like a sugar cube in water—more forces poured around the
distant bend. It was an unending stream of centaurs.
The
company commander ordered his reserve up to the line and prepared to retreat as
the Bradleys and artillery began to pound the assaulting Posleen.
Meanwhile,
Mueller took one look at the charging army of centaurs and decided that this
was a better fight for the cav. He picked up the circuit board—also being a
great believer in waste-not-want-not—and trotted to the waiting Humvee. With a
sigh of relief, the driver pulled out as soon as he was on board.
CHAPTER 45
Richmond, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1125 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
“It’s going
well,” said Colonel Abrahamson, watching the bank of monitors set up in the
main conference room of the R.J. Reynolds Corporation.
With
the security of the north bank of the James questionable, corps command had
relocated south of the river and the Reynolds company had graciously offered
its facilities. The fact that the building was now the most heavily defended in
south Richmond was surely besides the point.
Whatever
the rationale, the logistical and information management facilities were
top-notch, befitting a Fortune Five Hundred company. The administrative
employees who had shown up were immediately press-ganged by the various corps
staff to handle the massive management headache involved in creating the
Richmond Defense from scratch in the midst of a “murthering great battle.”
John
Keene had gotten a start on that early by calling in the top five engineers
involved in Richmond’s previous defense design and winning them over to the new
plan. Despite their personal desires they could all see the rationale of the
plan and they were as familiar with the terrain as could be hoped.
He
gave each of them a specific task to organize, and blanket authorization to
dragoon anyone and anything they felt that they needed to accomplish it. One of
the corps Chief of Staff’s planning officers was slated with the unenviable
task of managing the flow of materials. Working from the same office complex in
Shockoe Circle where Keene and Mueller had paused in their survey, he set to
work coordinating the flow of personnel, equipment and supplies to the various
projects.
A
radio and television appeal for anyone with construction or demolition
equipment had generated massive response. Five assembly points in and around
Richmond were designated and practically before the police traffic control
could get set up, jams of lowboys with front-end loaders, backhoes, power
shovels and earth movers were at each site.
Along
with them came concrete and dump trucks, construction personnel and virtually
anyone who felt that it was time to volunteer. Some of the volunteers—those who
somehow impressed the military and civilian personnel arriving to inventory and
segregate the response—were immediately put to work sorting out the sheep from
the goats. Within two hours, starting from scratch, the complicated task of
receiving the equipment, determining what was where and determining where it
should be was running smoothly. In the meantime the engineers had called upon
their engineering firms and other firms for support, and by the time that the
requested equipment was arriving at the construction sites, the engineers had
sketched out plans and movement paths and were surveying the areas to be graded
and cut.
It
was from this appeal that Amanda Hunt, the volunteers stringing claymores and
the grading contractors who had dug the cavalry positions had sprung.
It
was quickly determined that the biggest time factor was not going to be cutting
out embankments to make walls or backfilling the mile-long floodwall—there was
enough heavy equipment in surplus to backfill it twice over in six hours—but
rather rubbling the three newer concrete factories along the James and turning
the rubble into a hasty wall.
The
preferred method for rubbling a factory was to lace it with explosives and drop
it in one piece. Unfortunately all the personnel who were adept at that task
were either rigging the bridges over the James or laying the ambushes on the
roads to the north. The civilian specialists on the ambush teams were about to
be called back when a junior officer on the corps staff had a brainstorm.
Less
than an hour later a brigade of the Seventy-Fifth Armored Division rolled
across the Mayo bridge and through Schockoe Bottom. Since it was also
determined that the two- and three-story brick buildings would offer far too
much cover to the, hopefully, trapped Posleen, the brigade paid little
attention to roads.
After
nearly a hundred seventy-ton M-1E tanks rolled, literally, through the area,
there was hardly a building left standing. A couple of the bars were
intentionally spared in case they still had liquor in them.
When
they reached the area of the concrete factories, each battalion singled out a
building. Each tank was given certain points to take under fire and clear fire
lanes. The area around and behind the factories was evacuated and the brigade
opened fire.
High
Explosive Anti-Tank (HEAT) rounds were used for breaching lower floors, while
senior NCO tank commanders used Discarding Sabot Armor Piercing Rounds, “silver
bullets,” to destroy key structural members. These members had been
thoughtfully highlighted by the engineering group with orange spray paint.
Under
the pounding assault the buildings gave way, finally crumbling to the ground
like slumping giants. One of the factories retained much of its structural
integrity even after the lower floors gave way, but that was dealt with by a
few rounds and a battalion road march, right center, front. Satisfied with the
start to their day, the brigade rolled back across the James to their laager
point and a chance to get some rest before the big game.
The
furious pace of work continued throughout the night of distant battle and a new
day dawned on Richmond transformed.
The
towering interstate and highway bridges that loomed over Schockoe Bottom were
either mined, ready to blow, or had had their concrete surfaces cut in such a
way that cranes, standing by with lift cables in place, could lift them up,
leaving a bridge of only narrow concrete beams for the Posleen to cross.
This
late idea was suggested in the hope that the bridges could be salvaged. There
were over twenty bridges that would have to be cut and the cost of replacing
all of them after the conflict would be staggering. Although the Posleen could
cross such a structure, they could only cross in a trickle, one line of centaurs
to a beam, making them easy meat for the human defenders. Afterwards the
bridges would have to be repaired, surveyed and recertified, but that was far
less expensive than the cost of replacement.
The
north-side floodwall had been backfilled, its gate controls reversed to lock
from the river side and the riverside road regraded and reinforced for heavy
vehicle traffic. Mayo Island had been transformed into a command bunker by
piling and interconnecting prefab concrete slabs and covering the temporary
structure with dirt and rubble. The upper portion overlooked the whole
floodwall and it was from this location that the Forty-Ninth and Sixtieth
Infantry Division commanders would maneuver their troops.
The
island also now held the reserve—a brigade of the Sixtieth Infantry
Division—that would respond to any breaches of the wall. It was anticipated
that eventually the defenders of the wall would have to retreat, and the Mayo
Island forces were also intended to establish a base of fire to enable a safe
and secure escape route. The Mayo bridges, both to the north and the south of
the island, were also mined and ready to drop.
On
the east side of the city, all along the I-95 corridor through Richmond, road
embankments had been joined and rubble had been piled creating a continuous
wall that would be well-nigh impossible for the Posleen to climb. To make it
even more difficult, angle iron welded with sharpened rebar, saw blades and
anything else sharp and metal that came to hand had been piled in front of the
embankments and laced with concertina wire.
Above
these embankments temporary “Jersey” walls, easily recognized as the low
temporary walls seen around highway construction, had been emplaced, creating a
continuous barrier from behind which the infantry and armor of the
Seventy-First Infantry Division could pour fire into the passing centaurs with
relative impunity. While the three-millimeter railguns and HVMs of the Posleen
would easily breach the wall, the majority 1mm and shotguns would bounce off.
Although there would be casualties, the defenders had an excellent position.
With
two brigades of the Seventy-First “up” and one back as reinforcement, any
temporary breaches in the lines would be easy to fill. All along the route, the
towering buildings overlooking the defenses held snipers, their .50 caliber
rifles zeroed onto the interstate. Their job was to dispense with any God King
that might try to overfly the defenses.
On
the north side of the city the roads and buildings had been blockaded with a
physical barrier of cross-piled Jersey walls and stacked cars. Thousands of
personal automobiles had gone into creating virtually impenetrable
multivehicle-deep barriers. Buildings had been sealed and faired over or had
concrete slabs piled in front of them to prevent any entry by the Posleen on
that side.
The
Sixty-Fourth Infantry Division awaited the Posleen in this sector, bunkered
into second-floor rooms with heavy sandbag emplacements.
The
roads leading out of Schockoe Bottom had been blockaded using all of the
previous methods and, in addition, engineers and armored fighting vehicles of
the Forty-Eighth ID had dropped the James Monroe building across Broad and
Franklin Streets. The multistory government building formed a massive barrier
of mangled concrete and steel which was further laced with concertina barbed
wire. The building demolition had not been the precision undertaking usually
associated with such an endeavor. In fact, it had impacted against the Consolidated
Laboratory building. If the city survived, that building might have to be
replaced. But better to replace a building than a state.
Despite
the obvious structural damage, the Lab building along with the Corporation
Commission, the Ferguson building and the DOT annex was packed with the troops
of the Forty-Eighth Infantry Division. With a perfect view of Schockoe Bottom
and plunging fire, the unit was poised to pound the Posleen as soon as they
came into view, while their armored fighting vehicles manned the barricades.
The joke among the troopers on the Lab building was that since the morgue was
just downstairs, they would not have far to go.
Around
the perimeter of Schockoe Bottom other tanks and engineers had been at work
removing the construction efforts of the last few decades to create hasty
fighting positions. The James Center, the First Union Bank, Riverside Plaza and
even the Federal Reserve had given of their structures to create a wall of
rubble around the heart of the city. Behind them, troops from the Seventy-Third
Infantry Division held a long, light line, designed to pin the Posleen in
place for destruction by the troops along the floodwall.
At
Riverfront Plaza, the wall finally necked off, joining with the end of the
floodwall. The “neck off” point of the defenses would probably come under heavy
attack, so it was reinforced with tanks of the Seventy-Fifth Armored Division
in the heaviest revetments possible to construct. Although the Posleen could
spread onto Browns Island, all of the foot bridges but one had been removed. It
was intended to act as a bleed off for their forces.
The
main reserve for the defense, the majority of the Seventy-Fifth Armored, was
laagered at the Ethyl Corporation building, overlooking the island. From those positions
they could pound the Posleen with direct 120mm canister fire, effectively
sweeping the area like a broom. The sole remaining footbridge led all the way
across the James and was defended by a battalion of the Twenty-Second Cavalry.
The idea was to lure the Posleen into thinking they were getting across the
river, while simultaneously setting them up like ducks in a shooting gallery.
The battalion had been issued extra manjacks, just to make sure.
In
addition to their personal weapons, fighting vehicles and automatic weapons
teams, every fire team in the various divisions had a Protean manjack. Accepted
only the year before, the Proteans were the brainchild of Hester L. Jacobs, a
man well-hated by Ground Force procurement officers everywhere.
Ground
Forces had intended to field manjacks, automated infantry weapon systems, all
along, but that was where the process had stymied. In the truest fashion of
every light weapon developed by a committee, the procurement system finally
developed specifications for the manjacks that transformed them from the
original concept of a light, relatively simple automatic weapon on an automated
tripod, into a virtual mini-tank.
Jacobs,
on the other hand, already had developed a weapon system that met the original
concept. Sure of his product, the former Marine gunnery sergeant had launched
an all-out assault on the Ground Forces procurement program. Jacobs visited
numerous infantry field officers and NCOs and, in violation of a slew of
regulations, demonstrated his system for them and got written suggestions and
testimonials.
In
a short time, from the point of view of hundreds of infantry lieutenants,
captains, first sergeants, sergeant majors and colonels, he had perfected a
battlefield weapon system.
With
those testimonials, and presentations on the cost difference and what it meant
to production numbers, between his system, already up and running, and the
systems being developed by the major corporations, behind schedule and over
budget, he pigeonholed congressmen and senators night and day, to the point
where those elected officials nearly had him arrested for harassment.
But
his arguments finally started to sink in and, in a rare burst of logic. The
Congress overrode the military procurement bureaucracy and ordered them to
accept the Jacobs Industries Protean Manjack as it was.
The
manjacks were heavy, bulky and awkward to carry in their large formed-plastic
cases, but they might be the weapon that turned this tide. Each manjack
consisted of an M-60F machine gun, the newest version of the venerable platoon
automatic weapon that had first seen service in Vietnam, and a removable
automated firing system. The firing system contained a mechanized tripod and a
simple autotarget system. Place the weapon on a vector, let it “read” the
area—get a laser picture of the zone of fire—and if the “picture” changed, if
anything broke the continuously sweeping infrared lasers, it would fire down
the broken vector. The weapon could be produced for one-third the cost and in a
fifth of the time of the first “correct” version to be fielded. Already, in
less than a year’s time, there were sufficient manjacks for all the forces and
more were being installed in the fixed defenses.
Since the M-60F
contained the latest in barrel technology, the barrels actively dissipated
heat. Thus the weapons could continue to fire as long as the ammunition held
out. To assist in that, each team had hooked the machine guns up to a
“battlecase,” boxes preloaded at the factory with twenty-five-thousand rounds
of 7.62mm ammunition. The boxes were backbreakingly heavy, one hundred rounds
of M-60 ammunition weighs seven pounds, and awkward to maneuver into some of
the manjack positions, but once in place they gave every team three times the
throw weight of fire they could otherwise expect. In addition, the boxes could
be ganged together, so that if one box ran dry, the weapon would be fed from a
second. The joke went that if you used up two boxes, fifty thousand rounds of
ammunition, you were officially having a bad hair day and could take the rest
of the day off.
But
the armor, the infantry, even the manjacks, were really only there to hold the
Posleen in place.
To
truly make the Posleen’s day miserable, and for the long-term defense of
Richmond, over fifty percent of the construction equipment had been detailed to
the Mosby and Libby Hill defenses.
The
two hills towered over Richmond, dominating the landscape at least as much as
the city skyline, and loomed doubly over the Schockoe Valley that separated
them from the city. While the sides towards the James and Schockoe Bottom were
extremely steep, far too steep for the quadrupedal Posleen to negotiate, the
north and east sides were another matter. Among other things they had roads
leading up to the numerous homes and monuments on the hills.
All
of the roads were initially left in place, but demolition of the slopes began
immediately. Where a slope was merely steep, it was made vertical by a
combination of explosives and graders. The many abandoned buildings again went
into the defenses, the rubble used to create hasty fighting positions for the
cavalry troops detailed for security. The cavalry, in the meantime, began
covering their front with antipersonnel mines, concertina barbed wire and
“tanglefoot,” barbed wire stretched tight at knee level, designed to slow the
advance of ground troops. Between the slopes and the obstacles, assaulting
Posleen should be effectively stopped, sitting ducks for the heavily armed
defenders. Their cavalry fighting vehicles were well back to avoid taking fire,
but they were ready to go if ordered to sally. The line would be held by troops
with rifles, grenades, machine guns and the ubiquitous manjacks.
The
outer edges of the defense boasted a brigade of cavalry. Then in the next ring
was the massed artillery of the infantry divisions. Over one hundred tubes of
155mm artillery were packed on the hills. In a few cases, the artillery was
placed so as to cover straight open steep roads, such as Broad Street, which
ran through downtown Richmond, through Schockoe Bottom, and up into the
Montrose Heights area.
When,
inevitably, the Posleen charged up that street, they would eventually be met by
batteries A and B of the One Hundred Ninety-Third Artillery, firing 155mm
canister rounds into them from revetments at point-blank. If they were able to
overcome the defenses anyway, the road was mined to blow out a crater large
enough to make the approach impenetrable.
In
the inner ring were better than half of the infantry division’s mortar
platoons, set up in their tracked vehicles. Since they were invisible to any
reasonable angle of fire from the Posleen, the feeling was that they might as
well stay in a mobile configuration in case they had to move off the hills for
some reason. They were behind the artillery because mortars have no direct-fire
capability. However, as John Keene had pointed out, mortars carry more
explosive-weight-to-size than rifled artillery. Because the mortars were fired
from smooth bores, they did not have to be able to withstand the rotational
force placed on an artillery shell. A 120mm mortar round has the same explosive
power as a 155mm artillery shell.
Mortars
are a lot of bang for very little buck and there were over one hundred packed
onto the hills. In addition, the mortar vehicles, unlike the unarmored mobile
artillery vehicles, were designed for close defense. And the mortarmen who
crewed those vehicles were trained and heavily armed for it; a mechanized
mortar platoon had twice the throw weight of a mechanized line platoon, including
just as many manjacks. If the Posleen penetrated the outer defenses, penetrated
the cav and the depressed artillery’s point-blank fire, they would still have
to penetrate the band of mortar infantrymen and women to take the command and
supply facilities.
Libby
Hill, Mosby Hill and Montrose Heights were a seething fortress of artillery,
eagerly awaiting the arrival of the centaurs. Troops in the open are the
artilleryman’s meat and drink.
While
there were heavy defenses along the north and east, the west side of the city
was virtually undefended; only scattered cavalry units were there as sentries.
The defense plan depended on the Posleen turning towards the east and Schockoe
Bottom. Barriers were being erected along the I-95/U.S. 1 corridor, designed to
physically and visually distract the Posleen away from the westerly route. And
when the Posleen approached, all of the roads to the west would be cratered by
the heavy charges being emplaced. General Keeton was prepared to move the
Seventy-Fifth Armored up in defense if small numbers moved in that direction,
otherwise—if the Posleen did turn westward en masse—the “good” plan would have
to be scrapped.
The
alternative plan was to use the Libby Hill defenses to create a curtain barrage
along the Posleen axis of assault. While the barrage would kill many Posleen,
it would not be nearly as effective as the slaughter possible in the fire-trap.
Deception and luring plans, some of them wild, others reasonable, were being
designed to draw the Posleen in the more favorable direction.
For
the inevitable moment when the north or west flank was turned, the Corps had
worked out precise and simple retreat routes to the south side of the James.
The heavy road infrastructure and plethora of bridges helped. Each unit had a
designated route which was color-coded; city road crews had worked through the
night putting up the new signs.
As
the primary defense points came on-line, the freed construction crews hurried
to the south side of the James and began construction of fighting positions
designed to maintain a permanent assault on Posleen in the Richmond area.
Craters and trenches began sprouting throughout the south Richmond area as
many of the people in the refugee enclaves came forward to help.
Ramps
and scaffolds began to sprout behind the south floodwall for direct fire from
infantry and even tanks. At the same time pits for mortars and larger positions
for artillery began to form throughout the city, wherever there was any sort of
angle of fire. In many cases abandoned buildings were demolished to both
improve angle of fire and donate their material for the defenses.
There
were three tiers of defense, and every one had written its signature on the
skyline of the city. As Keene had said, the city was writing a new chapter in
her history. But she was also getting a facelift.
“I
can’t believe it is going as well as it is,” said the corps commander.
“Well,”
said Colonel Abrahamson, scratching his head before redonning his Kevlar. “I
don’t know exactly how to put this. It’s complex but not complicated. Every
individual action either is something the military has trained for or is being
done by civilians who are experienced and highly motivated. With the exception
of my battalion’s job, it should be a simple, set-piece siege. It’s the poor
bastards in Tenth Corps I feel sorry for, sir.”
“Yes,
I would have liked a little longer to prepare, you’re never prepared enough.
But this is effectively a World War I scenario. Easier really, there’s no
artillery for us to worry about. But General Simosin’s divisions are about to
get hit by a blitzkrieg, and they have no time to prepare.”
“The
President shouldn’t have ordered them so far forward, General,” the cavalry
commander commented in a voice so neutral it was gray.
The
corps commander nodded his head. It was the first overt comment he had heard in
the negative about the President’s decision. “Possibly. I suppose ordering them
to defend before Alexandria made sense, some sense, but he should not have
ordered them to set up almost on the Posleen’s door.” He shook his head again.
“God save their poor brave souls.”
CHAPTER 46
Near Dale City,
VA, United States of America, Sol III
1258 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
It started with a
crackle of manjacks. The observation post was a regulation one-hundred meters
out from the company and in view of the Second platoon but, being barely in
view and after the stresses of the night with multiple moves and digging in not
once but a total of four times, as the division moved again and again and the
battalion adjusted lines, reassigned areas of responsibility, moved the company
forward and back, the two-man team had fallen asleep. They awoke to the
rattling burp from the manjack set up beside their foxhole and the cracking
whistle of railgun rounds in return.
In
his foxhole, Captain Brantley dropped the half-eaten remains of a hotdog loaded
with chili, onions and relish, and rotated his shoulders. To the captain’s
amazement the first sergeant had made it back. And although he had not found an
open restaurant, he had found enough supplies and cookware to feed the entire
company on hotdogs, hamburgers and a really horrible concoction of canned baked
beans and chili. After nearly two days on MREs, the troops consumed it so fast
that the first sergeant’s party had to make seconds and even thirds in the
ten-gallon pots hung over sooty fires.
The
commander had been a history major in college. To him, the scene was
reminiscent of the Union and Confederate Armies in the War Years. The same scene
was replicated over and over in the woods and fields around his position. The
soldiers digging their foxholes had turned up Civil War era “Minié” balls as
they dug and the ghosts in their tattered gray and blue seemed to hover around
them, urging them into battle. He heard them now, rattling their ramrods and
whispering in his ear of the terrible sights to come and he wrapped the
whispers around himself like armor.
He
looked at his thin line of troops—the few in view in the thick pine scrub—and
knew despair. What the situation called for was defense in depth, pillboxes and
wire, trenches and no-man’s-land. What it had was a thin screen of infantry,
dug-in deep, with a few mines and claymores out front, hoping against hope for
the strength to stop a force a hundred times their size.
The
one bright spot was artillery support. With the shift in emphasis from
human-human to human-Posleen combat, the Army had radically changed its
approach to artillery equipment. Although the bulk of the Army would remain
mechanized infantry, the lack of counterbattery ability—the ability of one
artillery unit to fire on another—by the Posleen meant that the division and
corps artillery did not need to be armored. Thus the M-222 “Reaver” was born.
Modified
from a South African mobile artillery piece, the Reaver was a six-wheeled
all-terrain vehicle mounting a 155mm howitzer. It had the speed to keep up with
mechanized forces and the ammunition capacity to support them effectively.
Three
full batteries of these artillery behemoths were in places to support the
division and the resultant firepower exceeded the artillery of three divisions
of the latter twentieth century. The Posleen might succeed in overrunning them,
but they should take massive casualties in the process.
The
captain had previously ensured that he was authenticated on the automated
central firing network, so he calmly picked up the microphone and called in his
first ever real-world call for fire.
“Central,
Central, this is Echo-Three-Five, fire mission, over.”
He
paused and waited a moment for a response. Usually, the newly fielded Central
Artificial Intelligence Targeting Artillery Fire Remote Command and Control
System, or Central for short (the military, for once, had universally decided not
to use the acronym), came back practically before you could unkey the
microphone. In this case it seemed to either not receive the call or be
overloaded.
“Central,
Central, this is Echo-Three-Five. Fire mission, over.”
“Echo-Three-Five,
this is Central, call fire.”
Better.
“Central, Central, fire
concentration, Echo-Two, say again, Echo-Two.”
There
was another pause. Fire was building on the line, but these Posleen seemed to
be the equivalent of scouts and there had yet to be a call for a medic. He
waited a moment longer then called again.
“Central,
Central, this is Echo-Three-Five. Say status fire mission, over.”
“Echo-Three-Five,
no fire mission in status, over.”
“What?!”
he shouted and stared at the radio in his foxhole. His RTO looked around,
puzzled.
“What’s
wrong, sir?”
“The—”
He realized a need to maintain a calm demeanor. Even if the one ace he thought
he had in a hole was starting to look like a deuce. “I’m having a little
trouble with the artillery net, I keep getting stepped on.” It was a bald-faced
lie, but better than the truth.
He
had used Central several times in Exercise Without Troops, map exercises and
field problems and it had never shown a bit of problem, once you got used to
the syntax. The system had been designed by the Advanced Technology Research
Board, a board formed in reaction to the “GalTech” group, and was the
brainchild of the former Ground Forces High Commander.
As
a concept it was deceptively simple; rather than having fallible humans make
numerous transmissions in the call for fire chain, let computers do the work.
Practically “off-the-shelf” voice-recognition software would “recognize” calls
for fire, given by authenticated individuals and in the proper form, register
them and pass them to a central computer. The computer would determine priorities,
make the fire calculations and both send out fire commands and update the units
calling for fire on the status of their request.
Combined
with the Inter Vehicle Information System and the Ground Tactical Positioning
System, it would eliminate “blue on blue” or “friendly” fire and distribute the
available fire more equitably and efficiently. As a salve to the technological
nay-sayers, there were both system overrides that commanders could invoke and
real human beings in the chain. And it was just about time to invoke one.
He
poked his head up to get a look at the situation and called again. “Central, Central, this is
Echo-Three-Five. Final protective fire, I say again, final protective fire.
Command override, priority one. Over.”
Nothing.
“Sir?”
said his RTO, as the first medic cry came from Second platoon, “where’s the
artillery?” One of the medics in the next foxhole crawled out towards the line,
just as a centaur group broke through the firelanes and into view. Shotgun
rounds flailed the foxholes, momentarily suppressing the company’s fire and
smashing the luckless medic into red paste. Captain Brantley dropped back into
the foxhole just as the radio crackled back into life.
“Echo-Three-Five,
authenticate Whiskey-Tango.”
I
already did that! The captain dug into his rucksack and dragged out his ANCD. “Victor! Over!”
“Say,
again, syntax not recognized, over.”
“Central,
this is Echo-Three-Five, authentication Victor, over.” He ground his teeth, seemingly
drawing patience out of the air.
“Echo-Three-Five,
say again full callsign, over.”
“Juliet-Mike-Echo-Three-Five,” he said, very slowly and
carefully.
“Juliet-Mike-Echo-Three-Five,
welcome to the net, say request, over.”
“Central,
this is Echo-Three-Five, fire mission, over.”
“Echo-Three-Five,
call fire, over.”
“Central, this is Echo-Three-Five, fire mission, concentration
Echo . . .” He popped his head up
and took a quick look towards the front. The Posleen had begun to thicken,
their fire beating down the company’s with the exception of the manjacks. As he
watched, a God King plasma cannon removed one of those, reducing the fire
pressure. A lane was being cleared through the minefield by the simple
expedient of pushing the Posleen normals through it. He saw two blown up in the
brief span he was up but there were thousands behind them, a mass of yellow
centaurs so great they were pushing down the trees, turning the forest into a
plain.
“Fire
mission, concentration Echo-One. Final Protective Fire, priority one. Say again,
FPF, Echo-One, Priority One, over.”
There
was a brief pause and panic set in as he feared he would have to start over
from the beginning. There was no time.
“Echo-Three-Five,
this is Central. FPF on the way. Splash in two-five seconds. One hundred rounds.”
Captain
Brantley switched to the platoon local net. “All Echo units, all Echo units, final protective fire,
One-Five-Five close. Twenty seconds! Incoming!” He clamped his hands over
his ears, hunkered down and smiled at the RTO. “Here it comes! Better late than
never!”
“Yes,
sir!” shouted the RTO, quickly stuffing earplugs in and dropping into the hole.
The captain noticed that his Kevlar helmet had a furrow across the left-hand
side. Good troop, he thought.
The
commander was still smiling when the first 155mm round dropped in his hole.
“Juliet
One-Five, Juliet One-Five, this is Whiskey One-Five, over!”
Keren
turned from the fire control computer and picked up the microphone. The
rumbling impact of heavy artillery to the front had been going on for nearly
two minutes, meaning that the captain must have called for Final Protective
Fire, but there had not been a command over the net for fire from the mortars.
Now Third platoon was calling and he still could find no request for fire. At
least the L-T had sent Sergeant Herd off to recon their secondary firing
position. Maybe if they gave him an hour or two he could be ready to lay in the
guns.
“Whiskey
One-Five, this is Juliet One-Five Papa, go ahead.”
“Juliet,
we’re getting pounded by this goddamn artillery! The fuckin’ CP is gone and so
is Second platoon. It’s got the horses stopped, but it’s killin’ us! Get ’em to
stop! We can’t reach anybody!”
Oh,
Jesus.
Keren used his free hand to wave at the platoon sergeant and lieutenant,
talking quietly by the Three Track. “Whiskey, sorry, confirm friendly-fire
call!”
“Yes,
confirm damnit! Blue fire! Blue fire!”
Keren
swung around and keyed the Central Fire Net. “Central, Central, blue on
blue! Say again, blue on blue! Check fire! Check fire!” At his shouts,
every head in sight turned towards him and the two leaders started running
towards his track.
“This
is Central, to calling station, say callsign and authenticate.”
“Central,
this is Juliet One-Five, check fire for Echo-Three-Five, say again, check fire,
check fire, blue on blue, check fire.” He waited for a response as the
thunder of artillery in the distance and the express train rumble overhead
continued. A checkfire for “friendly-fire” was supposed to occur immediately, then
authenticate. The cumbersome authentication problem was programmed to occur
after friendly artillery stopped killing human troops.
“Juliet
One-Five, authenticate Alpha Sierra.”
Shit.
Fuck this.
Something was obviously screwy with Central, he should not even have had to
state his callsign. He punched numbers on his ANCD. Since it was for a fire
direction track, it held all the “phone numbers” for the entire division. The
platoon leader started to reach for the ANCD and stepped back at the
involuntary feral snarl that crossed the specialist’s face.
He
now knew why Keren had gotten demoted; the officer suspected that if he had
tried to take the ANCD, the private would have simply shot him where he stood
and not even noticed.
“Charlie-Five-Papa-Five-Four,”
Keren called, using the callsign and frequency of the artillery battery tasked
to support his company. If Central was the problem, then simply take it out of
the loop. “This is Golf-Four-Juliet-One-Five, check fire! Check fire! Blue
on blue, say again, blue on blue! Check fire! Check fire!”
“Calling
station, say again callsign, check fire confirmed! Say again callsign!”
Thank
God. “This
is Golf-Four-Juliet-One-Five. Check fire!”
“Confirmed.”
The rumble of artillery died away overhead as the unit called back. “Juliet
One Five, authenticate Whiskey Romeo.”
“Roger,
stand by . . . authentication Del-Ta.”
“Juliet,
this is Papa, that fire was confirmed by Central, over.”
“Roger,
well, we don’t have a fuckin’ company anymore, Papa. I don’t know what’s wrong
with Central, but you just wiped out Alpha Company First Batt.”
“Jesus.
It’s a damn authenticated order! And . . .” There was a
pause, “Yeah, and the target point is forward of the company on our IVIS!
What the fuck, over?”
“What
do you have for the company coordinates?”
“Juliet,
this is Whiskey, over!” came another call from the Second platoon.
“Hang
on Arty!” Keren swung to the other radio as the platoon sergeant picked up
the microphone and continued the questioning of the artillery unit.
“Go
ahead, Third.”
“We
still need fire! The Posleen are massing for another attack!”
“Roger.
Stand by.” Keren picked up the intervehicle transmitter and almost called
for the pre-laid Final Protective Fire, then looked at the fire control
computer. Obeying an instinct he did not want to define, he dove across the
compartment and rummaged behind a seat in the Humvee until he found an
overlooked piece of equipment.
“What
are you doing with that?” asked Lieutenant Leper, trying to keep up with three
nearly incomprehensible situations at once.
Keren
continued sketching in positions and locations on the mortar plotting board. It
was nearly two years since he had last picked up the obsolete piece of
equipment and this was turning out to be a lousy time to try to remember how to
use it. But with the problems with Central, and the fact that the new Mortar
Ballistic Computers interacted with it, he was damned if he was going to depend
on anything else at that moment.
“Just
checking something, sir.”
“Well,
check fast.”
“Mortars,
this is Third platoon! We need some damn fire, over!”
Keren
picked up the mike without taking his eyes from his calculations, “You want
it on the Posleen or on your heads?”
“Keren!”
said the lieutenant.
“Sorry,
sir,” said the specialist. He pulled out a calculator, looked up a trajectory
in a book and made a final calculation. His shoulders slumped. “Shit.”
“What?”
asked the platoon leader. The platoon sergeant looked over as well, telling the
artillery to hold on.
“This
FPF is fucked, sir,” said Keren, scribbling furiously again. “Our
computer-calculated Final Protective Fire would have landed right on the
company command post. And the mistake is somewhere in the computer.”
CHAPTER 47
The Pentagon, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1342 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
Major George Nix
suspected that he was at the pinnacle of his career. As Tactical Systems
Manager for the Continental Army Command he got to control every aspect of
information going to and coming from the Continental Army commander. For him,
it was equivalent to being a colonel with a brigade or a Navy captain with a
ship. From here on out, even if he was called a commander or a manager, he
would not be involved in day-to-day hands-on managing of systems, and that was
his love. To gather and redistribute data efficiently and effectively was, to him,
the epitome of the military intelligence field. After all, accurate military
intelligence was half the battle and good orders were the other half. All the
actual fighting was just the cherry on the cake, so to speak.
So
when the first reports came in of garbled orders, like everyone he took it to
be the confusion of the moment, “the fog of war.” But as more and more reports
came in, an alarming pattern of data invalidation began developing.
For
him, the final straw was an overheard argument between the CONARC and the Tenth
Corps commander. CONARC had been informed, out of channels, that Tenth Corps
had given conflicting orders, some of them vocal orders from General Simosin
himself. General Simosin’s response was so angry, so absolutely sure, that Major
Nix, who had dealt with the general several times over the years, could not
decide which data to trust.
Given
a conflicting set of statements, only additional, preferably objective, data
could decide the answer. Major Nix set out to find that data. He was no
cyberpunk, but he could get the job done.
He
started with order logs. All electronic commands issued over Battlenet were
stored on the Cheyenne Mountain Secure Server. He first called up the initial
deployment orders for every unit in Tenth Corps. After that he called up the
logged unit responses. A short query indicated that twenty-five percent of the
units gave an invalid response. Logically, the higher commands receiving an
invalid response should have replied, but there were only three replies to invalid
responses. In addition, a plot of the logged responses had the units scattered
all over northern Virginia. If the encryption codes had been invalid, the units
would have either gotten no communications or map references scattered all over
the world. Puzzled, he queried the unit local servers.
It
was a little-known fact that communications within the local commands were also
stored locally. Unlike external communications, which were stored in Cheyenne,
these communications were purged after each exercise. Mostly it was
interdepartmental e-mail that would not be stored under any normal conditions,
or comments between the staff and their subordinates. Like “back channel
cables,” the information was in no particular style and often had nothing to do
with the exercise or even the military. In addition to local communications,
however, the precise information presented on the command screens was stored.
Since, logically, this would be the same as the commands stored at Cheyenne,
the information was considered of low priority and only existed as a debugging
tool. However, until purged it was available and purging only occurred during a
stand-down maintenance cycle. To Major Nix’s surprise, most of the Corps’s
databases had been purged, but Thirty-Third and Fiftieth still had some intact
files at battalion level and the data conflicted with Cheyenne. Not in every
case, but in several cases what the operators at battalion level saw was not
what had been transmitted from their division.
Tenth
Corps had been hacked.
Jack
Horner stared at the electronic map of northern Virginia and shuddered. Across
the map were red penetrations and friendly-fire markers. Now he knew how an
officer as experienced and capable as Arkady Simosin could have let the battle
fall apart like this.
He
turned to Colonel Tremont. “Begin the evacuation.”
“But . . . sir!”
“It’ll
take hours to do it in an orderly fashion, and if Major Nix is
right . . .”
“I
am . . .”
“We
don’t know how this is going to go. I don’t know if Ninth Corps is where that
map says it is without sending you out on a goddamned horse to tell me! If we
are penetrated, we have to assume the worst-case scenario for this battle.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“So
start the evacuation of the Pentagon. Now!”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Now,
Major, explain this. How pervasive is this penetration, and who did it?”
“I
don’t know, and I don’t know, sir, but here are the best guesses. I tickled
Second of the Four Fifty-Second’s battalion computer into sending me all its
files including a complete copy of its core programming. I ran that through
some analysis tools and it isn’t good. I’ve got a bunch of file snippets that
look . . . questionable, but this is the beaut.” He pointed
to a line of incomprensible text on the screen of his laptop.
“What
am I looking at, Major?” asked the general, smiling tightly. He looked like a
gray tiger about to teach a deer why it should learn to drink looking
backwards.
“This
is a portion of IVIS control code. It is telling the IVIS system to go to an
external file each time it sends a position fix. I don’t know what the external
file is, but I can guess.”
“It
tells it whether to tell the truth or not.”
“Yes,
sir. And if it’s in IVIS . . .”
“It’s
in everything.”
“Yes,
sir. These friendly-fire incidents . . .”
“Shit.”
The general swung around. “Operations, send out a priority order to all field
artillery units. Do not use the Central System for fire control! Go to voice
communication for all calls for fire.”
“Umm,
sir . . .” interjected the major.
“What?”
snapped the enraged general.
“Their
targeting computers might be corrupted as well. And the units might not know
where they are, precisely, without IVIS. It’s happened before.”
“Monsoon
Thunder,” said Jack, with an angry shake of his head. “But this time we’re the side
being hacked. Maybe renegade cyberpunks? Who’s that guy, got the Medal, quit
and then disappeared?”
“No,
sir,” said Major Nix, positively. “If it were King Arthur, we’d never know it
until you were out of the picture. His MO was to assassinate the command
elements then confuse the troops. No, sir, I think it’s someone else.
Because there’s this bit of code.” He flashed another line on the screen. In
this case, it was only ones and zeros.
“Binary,
so?”
“It’s
Galactic binary, sir, a translation program for a quantum algorithm.”
“Galactic?
Could it be Posleen penetration? They use similar code, don’t they?”
“It
could be, sir, but it doesn’t feel that way. I’m no GalTech expert, but this
line looks a lot like some of the code in the AIDs.” He gestured at the one
encircling the general’s wrist. “My guess is it’s someone with renegade
GalTech. I think that that external file was an AID program running somewhere
that gave more or less random units false data and then carefully backed up all
the lies.
“The
key is that the files in Cheyenne do not match what was received at battalion,
but battalion’s responses were ignored. I suspect that the ‘response’ was
crafted by this program to be what the higher unit originally sent out, and the
IVIS code was there to maintain the distraction as long as possible. In
addition, all of this was masked by legitimate ‘fog of war’ incidents. This is
sophisticated as hell; I don’t even know if cyberpunks could pull it off, not
for this many units. I would have to finger renegade Galactics. At this point
it is way out of my league. We need some Darhel investigators, or maybe
Tchpth.”
“Darhel,”
said the general, distractedly. “They’re the programmers, the Tchpth don’t
program. Damn, this means all of our automated systems could be corrupted. Even
the ACS could be vulnerable. There goes our ace in the hole.”
“I don’t think
it’s global, sir, but I can’t tell how widespread it is. I definitely think we
should go to full manual backup on call for fire and movement orders. We can
probably wait and see on logistics.”
“Right,
put it out along with an alert about the problem. And good work, Colonel.”
“Major,
sir.”
“Not
anymore.”
The
officer blinked. “Thank you, sir, but I need to send out that warning.”
“Get
on it, and send an order to Tenth group telling them to retreat through any
available route.”
“Gee,
thanks for the information,” muttered Keren. The cheep for arriving orders from
the now-useless ballistic computer distracted him momentarily from plotting the
next fire mission. He quickly read the terse code and went back to his board.
“Last
volley, Keren!” said the platoon sergeant, throwing personal gear into the
armored personnel carrier. A stray Kevlar helmet bounced once on the deck and
cracked cleanly in half.
“Mortars,
this is Third! You better be ready to pull out, we are about to bypass your
position!” The call was an effective punctuation.
“Roger, Third.”
Keren took one last glance at his charge sheet and stored the board; this one
was easy enough. He stood so he could look out of the Mortar Carrier and
called, “Deflection Two-Eight-Zero-Zero!” All the communications wire
was stored and the commanders had their heads out of the hatches, the better to
man their machine guns. Company was expected and it deserved a professional
reception.
“Elevation
fourteen hundred! Charge one!” Nearly the lowest charge and highest
elevation possible, the mortar rounds would not be going far. “Five rounds,
traverse, at will and run like hell!” Everyone had been instructed on the
route to use to reach their secondary positions. At the command the drivers all
started the big diesel engines, like race-car drivers at a tracked Indy race.
Keren
could see tracers from the Bradleys’ 25mm Bushmasters through the trees. A
bright flash indicated the erasure of another fighting vehicle from the
remnants of the company. He was just as glad that the sight was obscured by
trees.
“It’s
okay, Keren,” shouted the platoon leader. He climbed in and dogged the troop
door just as the first round went downrange.
As
the mortar tracks began firing, the driver of the FDC track pulled out. It
would take only moments for the rounds to be expended and then all three mortar
tracks would “run like hell.” Better to already be on the road than
contributing to the log jam.
“Don’t
matter,” continued the lieutenant, grabbing a stanchion. He smiled grimly.
“We’re fine as long as we’re not on charge zero!”
Arkady
Simosin looked at the scrawled-over paper map of Prince William County and
sighed internally. He refused to succumb to despair, despite what the map was
telling him. His units, his beautiful divisions, were so much scrap scattered
through the woods. But there were still troops to save.
“Reinforce
the order from CONARC, regarding the retreat.” He stared at the red arrow of
Posleen, charging up the I-95/U.S. 1 corridor. Unlike the horses they
resembled, Posleen seemed inured to fatigue. They would be to the Occoquan
bridges within the hour.
“Send
a message to the Thirty-Third and Forty-First to pull back to the beaches. See
if we can get some craft down to the water to pull them out. The battleships
were never tied into the fire net and they’ve been accurate so far. They might
be able to cover the withdrawal. Get on that stat.”
“I’ll
handle it,” said the planning officer.
“Okay,
all the rest, turn them towards Manassas, modify the original pivot plan. Tell
them to retreat as fast as possible, Nineteenth Armored to take the back door
and slow the Posleen.” He glanced at the map again. “The Thirty-Third,
Forty-First and Fiftieth DivArty should be able to make it across the bridges.
I’m sure they’ll hurry. Have them follow the back roads along the Occoquan.
They should be able to provide some fire from there.
“The
units are to retreat until they are in reserve of the Ninth Corps, in the area
of . . .” He looked at his chart and smiled grimly. “Bull Run
National Battlefield Park. We will reorganize there.”
He
paused and looked at his staff. “Gentlemen, we all know that a retreat under
fire is the most difficult maneuver of all to effect. This is, effectively, a
rout. We have to get to Manassas before our troops do, and get them stopped
behind Ninth Corps. We will use the units that are still combat-effective to
reinforce Ninth Corps and stop the Posleen on that axis. Prince William County
is as far as they go!”
CHAPTER 48
Occoquan, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1344 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
Lieutenant Ryan
tried not to listen to the quiet murmur of the troops around him, but the
rumors of defeat were reinforced by the continuous rumble of artillery vehicles
crossing the I-95 bridges. A few armored personnel carriers even rumbled across
the VA 123 bridge, tearing at high speed to the north. It was clear from every
sign that Tenth Corps had had its butt kicked and was escaping as fast as it
could. Even as his platoon continued its preparation for the Posleen, the
rumble of falling artillery came closer and closer.
He
had moved his command post to the high ridge on the north bank of the Occoquan.
Screened by a thicket of beech saplings—their palmate leaves turning brilliant
yellow in the autumn chill—he had a clear view of the town, including the
opposite ridge and both bridges. The last orders he had received were to blow
the bridges when the Posleen were in sight and remain in position to cover the
old dam. Until an infantry unit could be found to replace him, his platoon was
responsible for preventing the Posleen from crossing that vital defense work.
In preparation
for the oncoming tide, the engineering platoon had been busy little groundhogs.
A slit trench ran the length of the top of the ridge, with V-cut positions for
riflemen stretched along its length and intermittent reinforced positions for
machine guns. The slope was a mass of concertina and barbed-wire tanglefoot and
the road running across the south slope was mined for demolition. Should they
somehow force a crossing it would be extremely difficult for the inflexible Posleen
to establish a bridgehead without the road.
When
an artillery battery began firing from just behind the ridge, with impacts on
the south edge of the town sending woodwork flying into the autumn sunshine,
Ryan decided that knowing how to contact artillery might be a good thing. A
brief scroll through his ANCD, however, indicated that there might be a
problem. He did not have listings for Tenth Corps units.
Since
the platoon had been drawn from a training establishment, their chain of
command did not include any of the local tactical forces. The ANCD listed a
vast number of training units in the Belvoir local area and even higher command
frequencies that few platoon leaders would have under normal tactical
conditions. But, unfortunately, there was not a single artillery unit listed.
The closest thing to an artillery unit was the cryptic entry: “Continental
Indirect Fire Net.”
With
a shrug, he flipped his PRC-2000 to the listed frequency and keyed the
mike . . .
Since
the prohibition on automated indirect-fire, the Fire Direction Center had been
stymied. Even when automated fire was allowed, so few units had direct contact
that the Fire Control could only order fire on rough guesses of enemy location.
Even worse was the lack of feedback. Nothing got a gun crew hopping like the
word that they just destroyed an enemy.
So
when the crewwoman heard a faint whisper in her earphones, she clamped her
right hand over the earphone and responded instantly.
“Unit
on this net, unit on this net, you are coming in faint and broken. Say again
callsign.”
“Oscar-Fi—is—Romeo—”
“Unit
on this net, you are broken. Say again, or boost signal.”
“St—by.”
“Roger,
this is Oscar Five Uniform Four Seven, standing by.”
A
few minutes later the calling unit came back in, still faint but clear.
“Oscar
Five Uniform Four Seven, this is Mike Eight Romeo Six Seven, over.”
“Romeo
Six Seven, this is Uniform Four Seven. Authenticate Victor Hotel.”
Pause.
“Authentication, Bravo, over.”
“Romeo
Six Seven, welcome to the net, over.”
“Roger,
adjust fire, over.”
“Adjust
fire, out.” She began to enter the order as she hit the foot trip to switch
to intercom. “Fire mission!”
“Target,
Posleen in open, coordinates 654894. Can you range, over?”
“Romeo,
what map sheet are you on, over?”
The
lieutenant stared at the private next to him and realized that he was no help;
they were both trainees.
“Sergeant
Leo!”
“Yes,
sir?”
“I
got an artillery unit that needs to know what map sheet we’re on!” The platoon
leader looked at the military grid map covered in incomprehensible signals.
“Where the hell is it?”
“Why
do they need the map sheet, sir?”
“You
want me to take the time to ask?”
The
NCO forced his way through the troops between himself and the lieutenant and
ran a practiced eye over the map.
“There
it is, sir, in the upper right. Occoquan. That was next week’s course,” he
finished with a wry grin.
“Right.”
The lieutenant keyed the mike. “Occoquan, over.”
“Umm,”
the fire direction technician checked her map and eyeballed the range. “Roger.
say your position and condition, over.”
“Ridge
to north of Occoquan River, overlooking 123, dug-in, coordinates 654897.”
“Roger, stand by.”
“L-T,
we got movement on 123!”
Lieutenant Ryan
lifted his head out of the slit trench and peered into town. Down Main Street,
“Old 123,” trotted a swarm of yellow centaurs, their God King prominent in
their midst. He had been surprised by the female voice, but now just wished
she’d get her fanny in gear.
“Sergeant
Leo!”
“Yes,
sir?”
“Drop
the 123 bridge!”
“Yes,
sir. What about the footbridge?”
“Let’s
keep that up for a while.”
A
group of centaurs came around the shoulder of the hill, trotting down 123. At
the sight of the intact bridge they broke into a gallop. Almost simultaneously
there was a thundering racket from downstream where the I-95 and U.S. 1 bridges
went up simultaneously.
“Purple
Heart Bridge indeed,” muttered the lieutenant.
“What
was that, sir?” asked one of the waiting engineers.
“Nothing,
I think I’ve got some artillery on the way.”
“Great!
That battery behind us?”
“No, I don’t
have their frequency. Somebody else, I don’t know what.”
As
the 123 bridge blew up, the two hundred pounds of Composition-4 explosives
lifting concrete chunks and the first rank of centaurs into the air, the radio
crackled with a transmission.
“Say
again, over!” shouted the young officer, ears ringing. Despite orders and
pointed suggestions, he wasn’t wearing earplugs.
“This
is Uniform Four Seven, ranging round incoming. Danger close, say again, danger
close!”
The
lieutenant lifted his head up to see if the view had changed. No, he was still
over three hundred meters from the center of town. “Danger Close” for 155mm was
only two hundred yards. What the heck.
“Uniform,
this is Romeo Six Seven. We are three or four hundred meters from impact area,
over.”
“Roger,
incoming five seconds, danger close, I say again, danger close. Hunker down and
cover your ears, soldier-boy! Splash in five seconds!”
“Sir,
what’s that?”
The
lieutenant looked up and followed the private’s view to a rapidly descending
dot. As it lowered it loomed larger and larger. The precise size was hard to
determine, but it was the biggest shell the young officer had ever seen or
could possibly imagine. It looked like whatever it was was firing cars.
“Incoming!
Everybody down!” the lieutenant screamed and demonstrated by throwing
himself to the bottom of the slit trench.
The
impact of the shell rivaled the explosion of the much closer bridge. The
officer stumbled to his feet, partially stunned and shaking off good Virginia
loam to survey the damage. The round had impacted on the far ridge, near where
the now silent artillery had fallen, and the damage area was wider than that of
the damage from the full battery behind him. The area was covered in dust and
smoke from the explosion, but he could make a reasonable guess at adjustment.
With the “footprint” of whatever it was, “close” was going to be good enough.
“Jesus
Christ, sir,” yelled Sergeant Leo, “who the hell did you call?”
“Romeo
Six Seven,” the radio crackled, “Did you observe the fall of shot?”
The
shaken lieutenant picked up the microphone. “Uniform Four Seven, roger. Down
seven five meters and fire for effect. And careful with that seventy-five meters!
What unit is this, over?” It was lousy communications discipline to ask,
but he felt like he needed to know what he had called down upon their heads.
“Romeo
Six Seven, confirm down seventy-five meters and fire for effect. This is the
USS Missouri, at your service. Hunker down for a nine-gun salute, Romeo.”
* * *
Kenallai
cursed the evil harvest that inhabited this thrice-damned world.
“Threshkreen,
indeed, my edas’antai,” murmured Kenallurial as the nearby guns hammered the
remaining scouts of Sammadar as they swept down the main street of the small
town.
He
had convinced his edas’antai that the proper way to deal with this enemy was to
observe his methods, then develop ways to combat them. Sammadar had been
virtually wiped out assaulting the enemy lines to the south. But when the
enemy’s own guns destroyed their positions, Kenallurial’s oolt’os were in
position to exploit the break in the lines.
He
had maintained a forward position, capturing rich booty on the way. But on
approaching the town, which captured maps showed bisected by a large river, he
had slowed, probing forward carefully, and instructing his junior Kessentai,
with hard blows when necessary, to remain under cover. Now his oolts held a
strategic ridgeline—one without noticeable booty, but a commanding view—and he
and his edas’antai observed the destruction of the rival oolt’ondar from a
house on the ridge.
Houses
were a dangerous prospect on this thrice-damned planet, but the Posleen had
slowly begun to recognize the signs. A single oolt’os would be sent to,
carefully, open what looked to be the primary door of a building. If there was
a beeping sound and a black box with a flashing light, the oolt’os would run
like the demons of the sky were after it. Sometimes it made it, sometimes it did
not. But at least they were not losing oolt’os by the double hand anymore.
This
house had no flashing lights, nor demolition charges. It rested comfortably on
the riverward shoulder of the ridge overlooking the town. The sign on the
front, in the beastly language of this planet, said something about “Rock
Shelf,” which certainly described the terrain.
The
far bank of the river was steep as the side of a building, with a narrow road
winding around to the right. The left was obscured. He could see a four-lane
highway bridge downriver, and there was a small footbridge just below the house
they occupied.
“We
should send forces to seize that crossing!” snarled Ardan’aath, pointing to the
four-lane bridge. “Why do we skulk in buildings?”
“Hmmm,”
murmured Kenallai. The oolt’ondar was feeling unrecognized emotions. Among
others, doubt.
“If
you wish to try,” said Kenallurial, calmly, “go right ahead.”
Ardan’aath
had not gotten to where he was by being stupid. The thrice-eaten-by-demons
puppy had something up his sleeve. “Why don’t you?”
“I
prefer to live long enough to enjoy the fruits of my conquests,” answered the
younger Kessentai, with an almost contemptuous snout wrinkle.
Ardan’aath
started to say what he thought of such a cowardly approach, but was stopped by
the raised hand of Kenallai.
“The
argument is done,” he said, gesturing out the window.
They watched
as Sammadar charged his main force towards the bridge, and as the front two
oolt were swept away by the explosions.
“Sky
demon shit,” snarled Ardan’aath, rounding on the junior Kessentai, “you knew!”
“I
suspected.”
“Why?”
asked Kenallai.
“It
is what I would have done.”
“And
what would you do next?”
Kenallurial
looked towards the river below. “I would pound this valley to pieces as our
comrades rush to try a crossing.” He pulled out the captured map. Ardan’aath
turned away from the piece of alien garbage, but Kenallai bent over in
interest.
“Look,
we are here,” he said, pointing to the town. “This river stretches all the way
to here,” he continued, pointing to the town of Manassas. “That is the first
place that we can turn towards the treasures to the north.”
“What
about this?” asked Kenallai, pointing to a symbol. “Is this not a closer
bridge?” Near the possible defense point, but to the side, a bridge crossed.
“What
bridge, my edas’antai?” asked the junior, respectfully, keeping his eyes on the
map.
“Oh.”
Once he thought about it, it was obvious that the threshkreen would destroy the
bridge before it could be taken by the host.
“But
before the Po’oslenar can turn this corner, can take that booty to the north,”
continued the eson’antai, “there is this stretch here.” Near the end of the
Occoquan reservoir, a thin line of blue stretched to the south and widened to
become Lake Jackson. “The threshkreen can organize here and meet us in terrific
battle. Woe betide the force that first assaults them there!”
“It
would be an honorable battle,” snarled Ardan’aath, “none of this skulking and
running about. We could sweep them aside as we did their fellows to the south,
as we destroyed their town! As we shall sweep all these thresh into our pens!”
“We would be
like Sammadar!” snarled the junior, rounding on the older Kessentai in
challenge mode. “Without an oolt’os to our name, reduced to a castellaine!
Perhaps that is what you seek?”
“Enough!”
snapped the oolt’ondai, stepping between the two officers as they began to
close. “Each has his merits! I listen to both, and each decides for himself the
actions of his oolt’os. For himself! That is the Way and the Path. Ardan’aath,
I listen to this one, for he is often right before the battle. But as battle is
joined, do I not take your advice?”
“Aye,
my lord,” said the older advisor, calmer with the reminder.
“Then,
listen to this one. Take not anger from this conference, but wisdom.”
“I
listen. As to wisdom, when this puppy has seen the burning of the orna’adar,
when he has conquered worlds, then will I learn his wisdom.” He turned away and
stomped again to the window. As he did, a tremendous crash on the southern
ridge smashed the remaining glass inward, scattering it about the room and into
the God King’s crest. With an angry gesture, he shook his crocodilian head to
clear it. “Demons of the sky eat your souls, you gutless thresh!”
“My
edas’antai, we do not have much more time,” whispered the junior softly.
“The
firing of this valley? You are sure of that?”
“Yes,
here is the final quotient. If the thresh defend here,” he pointed once again
to the map, wondering for a moment about the mind of a species that would make
such a thing, the Po’oslenar had no equivalent, “then they will be strong. But
if we swing here,” he pointed south of Lake Jackson, “to the south, we can come
in behind them. They cannot be strong everywhere.”
“That
will take us hours out of our way, we will not be there before deep night!”
“That
is my suggestion. If you prefer to try that footbridge . . .” He
gestured pointedly out the window.
The
oolt’ondai winced, without looking again. He was experienced enough to
recognize a trap when he saw one. “I think not. Ardan’aath!”
“Oolt’ondai?”
“Are
you with us?”
“For
a long march with no prospect of battle for hours? When battle rages all around
us? What use am I?”
“Ardan’aath!
Yes, or no? We must move!”
“I
have traveled far with you, Kenallai. I continue, despite your dependence on
this puppy.”
“Then
we move!” With those words he led the way out of the room, already at a trot, a
terrible fear clutching at his soul.
* * *
They
passed the outskirts of the town of Occoquan, the normals of the brigade in a
ground-eating lope, just as the first salvo of sixteen-inch rounds landed in
the square.
“Big
Mo pour it on!” The condition of Ryan’s
ears, despite hastily jammed in earplugs, had gone beyond ringing to
probable permanent deafness. “I can’t hear any response! I think I’m deaf!
But you’ve wiped out hundreds so far.”
The
plan had worked beyond his wildest dreams, because somehow the word had gotten
around that there was an intact bridge at this location. Through the afternoon,
the Posleen poured into the valley, charging for their chance at taking the far
bank, and the shorter route to the prizes to the north. But as fast as they
charged, the guns of the Missouri pounded the narrow defilade where the
town had once stood.
Occoquan
was no more; not a single house was left standing throughout the entire valley.
As the engineer/forward observer walked the big sixteen-inch rounds back and
forth, the quaint one- and two-story wood and stone houses had been torn apart
under the hammer of the guns. Main Street was choked with rubble and in places
the big rounds struck so many times they had pummeled the underlying rock into
layers of gravel. The spot where the Occoquan Boatyard had once stood was now a
channel, dug by repeated impacts of the big rounds.
The
huge shells were briefly visible as they plunged into the maelstrom, each one
adding its load of dust and smoke to the surreal haze across the river.
Occasionally, the pall was blown away by the light north wind but not fast
enough for clear vision. Parties of the Posleen would make their way through
the holocaust, taking casualties that would turn back a human force, all the
way to the foot bridge and the dam, where they would run into more problems.
The
dug-in engineer platoon had festooned the bridge with command-detonated mines.
As the Posleen continued to reach the bridge, these were slowly used up, but
the base of the narrow bridge was within easy small-arms fire. As the Posleen
tried to cross, one at a time, they were brought under a hail of fire from the
M-16s and AIWs of the platoon. Three times God Kings had made it through the
curtain of battleship fire, but even their heavy weapons had been unable to
force the passage.
Trying
the old dam was no more use. In an inspired move one of the privates had found
a can of grease in the now-erased waterworks and spread grease all along the
top of the dam. The engineers rarely fired at the centaurs trying to cross
there, instead taking notional bets on how far they would make it. There was a
steady flow of white water across the top and the massive Posleen rapidly
drowned in the deep water at the base.
The
platoon had lost some trainee engineers, and the names of each would lie heavy
on his soul, but this day Lieutenant Ryan knew he had done a man’s job and done
it with style. The sun descending in the west was bringing on the night’s
bitter autumn cold when the private next to him yelled to get his attention.
The
sound barely penetrated the ringing as he called another adjustment, but the
hand on his shoulder turned him around. There was a captain in battledress on
his stomach behind him, camouflaged face split in a watermelon grin and
crossed-rifles on his collar.
“We’re
here to relieve you!” the lieutenant half-heard, half-lip read.
The
battle-shocked lieutenant just nodded his head. Combined with an infinite
feeling of relief as he saw fresh, trained and heavily armed infantryman swarm
over the lip and drop into the slit trench was a terrible sadness. It was the
feeling of a job not completely done, of leaving a battle to another, a feeling
similar to survivor guilt. It said “I am alive, and going to safety, but I
leave you here to carry on my work and die.”
It
was a silly feeling in the conditions; the infantry company was better trained
for this sort of battle, fresh, more heavily armed, with three times the
personnel. If his platoon of trainee engineers had been able to hold the bridge
through the day, then surely this unit would have no problems through the days
to come. And there must be a sore need for engineers in other battles. But it
still hurt.
He
nodded his head again at the captain now standing next to him. “I can’t hear
anything, sir, just nod your head!” To which the captain nodded.
“USS
Missouri,” Ryan shouted, gesturing with the microphone, “Uniform Four
Seven! Be careful how close you get.” The hammer of machine guns in the
background was washed out by another salvo of three rounds impacting. “You’re
sharing fire with the divisions getting pulled off at Deep Hole Point and over
in Maryland, but it’s enough.” He keyed the mike a last time.
“Uniform
Four Seven, this is Romeo Six Seven, over.”
“Romeo,
this is Mo, over.”
“Mo,
we are being relieved. I’m turning you over to . . .” He
glanced at the captain.
“Lima
Niner Two!” shouted the captain.
“Lima
Niner Two, over!”
“Roger,
I accept Lima Niner Two to this net, over.”
“Well,
thanks Mo, this is Romeo Six Seven, out.”
“Good
luck, Romeo, this is Juliet, out,” responded the unknown female on the
other end of the circuit.
With
a smile, the tired lieutenant carefully slid out of the trench and down the
back side of the hill to where the remains of his platoon was gathering.
CHAPTER 49
Richmond, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1320 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
Time was on the
side of Washington. The direct line distance between D.C. and Fredericksburg
was practically the same as the distance between Fredericksburg and Richmond.
But the dogleg around the Occoquan Reservoir and the resistance of the Ninth
and Tenth Corps ensured that the first city to be hit by the spreading
incursion would be Richmond.
And
in Richmond they were just about done laying in the drinks.
“Won’t
they spot that?” asked the specialist who had been assigned as Mueller’s
driver.
“Maybe,”
said Mueller, affixing the last connection on the sensor pod. The small device
was a surveillance tool that had been modified for long-range transmission. Set
up in a lightly armored shell, the tiny camera and transmitter looked northward
on I-95.
“But
we’ll be able to fire them up at least once with artillery. If they don’t
notice them, or do and don’t take them out, we’ll be able to use them for
long-range artillery fire and surveillance during the whole battle.”
“Sergeant
Ersin?”
“Yeah?”
Ersin turned from supervising the installation of a field of mines along the
northwest rim. The querying individual was one of the junior engineers assigned
to the area. The kid didn’t even have his professional license. He was a junior
flunky at one of the local engineering firms sent out as a last bit of support.
But at least he knew he was wet behind the ears and wasn’t afraid to ask
questions. He was accompanied by a tall, beefy civilian. Something about the
florid face and casual clothes spelled “salesman” to Ersin.
“This
guy is trying to explain something to me . . .” the engineer
started to say.
“Hi
there, Sergeant . . . Ersin, was it?” asked the civilian,
brushing aside the engineer and taking Ersin’s hand in a hearty shake. “Tolert,
Bob Tolert, I represent Advanced Materials Manufacturing here in
Richmond . . .”
“If
it’s about the Golden Girls . . .”
“No,
no, different company entirely. We have a line of . . .”
“We’re
a little busy here . . .”
“ . . . military
supplies that I . . .”
“ . . . and
I really don’t have time . . .”
“ . . . think
would be just perfect for . . .”
“You’re
not listening to a thing I’m saying, are you?” said Ersin in a dangerously calm
voice. The scars on the side of his neck and face were flushed.
“Oh, yes, I am,
sir; yes, I am,” said the salesman, smiling broadly in reply. “You have the
most important job in the entire United States right now, protecting our fair
city, and these little caltrops my company makes are just the thing to help.”
The smile was wide and patently insincere. The salesman was obviously figuring
on a hard sell.
Ersin
snapped forward like a snake until his scarred Eurasian face was inches from
the civilian’s. One hand snatched the collar of the Dockers shirt and dragged
the salesman the last inch. “What did you say?”
Bob
Tolert had dealt with difficult customers in his time. However, he’d never
dealt with ones who had an instant ability to remove him from the face of the
earth. He considered his next words carefully.
“We’re
under contract to produce something called caltrops for the mountain defenses,”
he croaked. “I don’t even know what they are. One of our foremen told me you
might want to buy a few.”
“Neither
did I,” said the civilian engineer. The junior engineer was waving his hands
around as if to try to suggest that maybe killing a civilian would not be a
good idea.
“How
many can we get?” asked Ersin, his smile turning feral.
“He
brought some dump trucks with him,” offered the engineer.
“Can
you let go now?” Tolert croaked. “Please?”
The
Posleen scout company trotted in good order down the broad highway. Their God
King followed them pensively despite the rearing buildings of the great prize
plain before him. His was the fifth company from the oolt’ondar to be in the
lead. Between the ambushes of the tenar and the ballistic weapons of the
thresh the horde had lost oolt after oolt. He was determined to last longer
than the rest.
To
avoid the ambushes that had plagued his fellows, he had a scout well out in the
lead of his oolt. The oolt’os was a superior individual, it could nearly talk.
The Kessentai’s sole eson’antai had been born from their coupling and he
trusted the oolt’os to respond effectively to mildly complex problems. If any
of the oolt’os would spot a problem, it would be that one.
So
he froze his tenar then slid to the side when the point let out a
surprised cry. However, the cry was not one of fear or anger and the point
almost immediately turned and ran towards him.
In
the oolt’os’s hand was a strange device. A metal stake, dirt dribbling to the
ground unnoticed, topped with a symbol. The metal of the symbol looked
like . . . but it couldn’t be . . .
The
God King let out a cry like that of his scout and practically snatched the
golden trinket from its hand. He patted the excited semimoron on the back and
gave it bits of thresh from his own hand in approval.
A
trailing scoutmaster slid his tenar forward, wondering what the
excitement was about.
The
God King held the implement overhead. “Pure heavy metal,” he crowed, waving it
back and forth.
“No,”
shouted the newcomer his crest standing straight up in excitement. “Is there
more?”
“Let
us find out,” he cried and waved to his oolt. “Forward, find more! Follow the
road!”
“They’re
at the first Babe,” said Mosovich, adjusting the sixty-power spotting scope. He
smiled faintly at the silent pantomime in the distance. “It looks like they
took it hook, line and sinker.”
“We
ought to fire ’em up,” said Ersin sourly, leaning back on the head of the
hotel-room bed. From the suite in the Marriott they had a clear view of the
advancing host. He took a bite out of the dehydrated peaches from his MRE and
wrinkled his face like a rat. “That’s what cannon-cockers are for.” He stopped
talking as the absorbent fruit removed all the moisture from his mouth.
“Suck ’em in,
General,” said John Keene to the air. “Don’t shoot till you see the yellow of
their eyes.” With the defenses completed, he found himself flapping around at
loose ends. After considering his options he decided that the best place to be
would be with the SF team. Among other things they were the only people in Richmond
he knew weren’t gunning for him. They also made fair bodyguards.
He
now lay on his back on the floor, nursing the first beer he’d had in two days.
He took another sip of the astringent brew and smacked his lips. “Let ’em get
in the sack.”
“Yeah,”
said Mueller, assembling a sandwich on the table. He carefully laid out a
sliver of ham, layered it with lettuce, then another layer of ham, lettuce,
pastrami . . . “We want as many of ’em as possible to reach
Schockoe Bottom.”
“Fine,”
snorted Ersin cynically. “Be complicated. All that complicated means is more to
go wrong.”
“It
looks good so far,” said Keene, defensively. He sat up and drained the bottle
to the dregs. “They’re going for it,” he finished with a belch and tossed the
bottle in the wastecan.
“That
they are,” agreed Mosovich. “But I don’t believe they’re going to get to
Schockoe without anybody firing. That’d take more discipline than this Army’s
got.”
“Come
to papa,” whispered Specialist Fourth-Class Jim Turner, snuggling the .50
caliber sniper rifle into his shoulder. For once he was able to use the tripod
that came with the beast and he now waited impatiently for the signal to fire.
The
interstate highway was marked at regular intervals by survey stakes with
colored ribbons attached to them. With the time they had to prepare, each
company was detailed with specific areas of fire and those were then broken
down to the point where every rifleman, grenadier and sniper had a specific
area to concentrate on. The snipers were given larger fields of fire to work
with, but even then the section of interstate that was “his” was only two
hundred yards long and a hundred deep. There were currently three God Kings,
his particular target, in his box. He had already decided to take the rearmost
one first and work his way forward. That one was moving faster than the main
force, coming up through the host with his normals trailing. As soon as the
signal came, he was history.
Jim
was of two minds about whether everyone could hold fire until the signal. The
order was to stay out of sight but ready and not watch the approach of the
enemy. Most of the troops had been ordered to sit on the floor, their manjacks
safed, and wait for the order. How many of them were doing that he didn’t know.
He wasn’t. And then there were the fifteen or twenty thousand manjacks set up
to cover the whole of the interstate and Schockoe Bottom. The only reason none
of them had fired yet was that all the ones the Posleen had come across were on
safe. Sooner or later they were going to cross the laser of one that was
overlooked. The odds of everybody getting the word and getting it right
were slim.
On
the other hand, virtually everybody had also gotten the word that the Posleen
reacted violently to fire. If they didn’t wait for the signal and somebody
fired on their own, the whole host would target that single individual. So,
when somebody did screw it up, it’d be Darwin Awards time. And the NCOs and
officers were supposed to be . . .
“Turner,
Goddamnit!” said Sergeant Dougherty from the doorway.
“I’m
just watching, Sergeant,” he answered reasonably. Dougherty was a hard case.
She ought to have gone Fleet Strike with the way she ran around all the time
like a spike was stuck up her ass. On the other hand, she was fair and, more to
the point, right. He wasn’t supposed to be where he was. “I’m not gonna fire.”
Nonetheless he stepped away from the rifle.
“I
don’t give a shit, get on the floor like everybody else! We’ve been taking
magazines away for less than that!”
“Yes,
ma’am.”
“You
ought to know better. If you can’t handle the responsibility of being a sniper,
we can find somebody who can! An’ don’t call me ma’am,” snapped the short,
heavy-set, dishwater blonde in summary. “I work for a living.”
Her
back straight and face set in a disapproving frown she stepped back into the
hallway to continue her circuit of positions. Time to go find some more ass to
chew.
Inevitably
everyone didn’t get the word.
“How
is the road to the east?” asked Artulosten. The returning scoutmaster looked
grumpy. Many of his oolt’os were limping and all looked miserable.
“Horrible,”
snapped Arstenoss. “There is nothing out there, the buildings burned, the roads
destroyed or scattered with these.” He held up a caltrop. “I’ve half my oolt
injured, many of them made to thresh by these damn things.”
The
battlemaster took the offending item and looked at it curiously. It was a small
bit of metal. He understood its purpose, to present a small knife turned
upwards. “How could these kill an oolt’os?”
“They
don’t kill. But when they are driven into a foot, many of the oolt’os panic and
roll. Then they are driven into them all over their body. I had to put nearly
two dozen down. I finally said enough and came back. There is nothing of
interest out there. I understand that there is a road of heavy metals here?”
“Indeed.
This must be a place of great worth. The lead force has encountered no
resistance and found marker after marker made of pure heavy metals. They are
all on the one road and appear to lead towards the other side of that river.”
He pointed to where the distant James was partially visible. “That would
normally be the objective.” He pointed up at the skyline. “And it is packed
with thresh, but the host seems content to follow the markers to their source.”
The
interstate had already started to bend away from the city proper. “Other scoutmasters
have returned from the west with much the same news. There is nothing of worth
out there now. What would have been of use has been destroyed or removed.”
“Those
buildings are packed with thresh,” noted the scoutmaster, studying his sensors.
Every looming skyscraper was patterned with red. “Why don’t they fire?”
“Fear
of the host,” snorted the battlemaster. He gestured to the front where they
were preceded by the thousands of Posleen of the vanguard and backward to where
another million and a half followed. “They are numerous but not nearly so
numerous as the host. They would be fools to fire.”
The
Posleen normal was responding to a call of nature. Posleen would drop solid and
liquid waste without question. But it was time for a birthing, and that
required a modicum of privacy lest a fellow oolt’os succumb to hunger. In camp,
even a temporary camp, there would be an egg pit where the leather-skinned egg
would be dropped until it hatched. And there would be designated nursemaids to
remove the hatchlings to the hatchling pens, there to fight for survival until
they reached maturity.
But
when the host was moving, the best that could be done was to set the eggs aside
and let the hatchlings free. Most would die, even more than in the pens. But
there was no easy way on the Path and the normal could care less. All it wanted
to do was relieve the discomfort and nausea of the fully mature egg.
It
trotted away from its group and down off the interstate to the east; the
western wall towards the thresh was a sheer bluff topped with barbed wire so
there was no going that way. It had to cut a fence, but that was easily done
with its monomolecular short sword. There was a small building of nondescript
purpose immediately available. It was under strict instructions not to enter
buildings without permission, but being out of sight was enough for the
purpose. It trotted around the back of the building and started the birthing
process.
Its
abdomen began to ripple and the ripples spread quickly up its neck. It had
almost waited too long. A bulge appeared at the base of its neck and traveled
upward like a python swallowing a cat in reverse. Finally it spat up a spotted,
leathery egg the size of a small chicken. It licked the last birth juices off
the egg, tossed it disdainfully against the wall of the abandoned subsidized
housing and trotted back towards the interstate. Mission complete.
The
normal’s company had gotten far ahead of it. It hurried through the smashed
buildings and hacked-down and burned trees along the interstate trying to catch
up to its god. As it did it passed through an invisible beam of light.
Everything
was wrong with the manjack. It was not on safe. It was pointed more or less
sideways into another brigade’s area. And the linked ammunition leading to it
was bent around the corner of a desk, ensuring that the weapon would fire for
the shortest time possible and then jam.
The
team from the Seventy-First Infantry Division had set up the weapon and its
bitchingly heavy ammunition cases with unseemly haste. They were more
interested in getting back to their crap game than whether the weapon was aimed
or the belts of ammunition run smoothly. The sergeant who was supposed to
ensure that the gun was aligned properly and on safe was enjoying the fruits of
her position with a good-looking and limber young soldier. The first sergeant
was playing poker with two of the platoon sergeants and a warrant officer from
supply. The company commander was at battalion ensuring that the battalion
commander knew just how well his company was being run.
In
the end it was all the same. The weapon fired twelve rounds and then jammed.
The 7.62mm bullets, two of them tracer, drifted with apparent laziness through
the air until they reached their point of aim and dug into the soil of Virginia.
Since the manjack had never been boresighted, they did not even strike their
erstwhile target, which continued on towards its objective oblivious of being
fired at.
Specialist
George Rendel had just thrown a three and snatched the dice back up. He rattled
them a few times and prepared to throw again when the manjack across the room
stuttered its twelve rounds. He froze, wide eyes echoed by everyone else in the
game.
“We
forgot . . .” someone said and the world fell in.
The
Posleen were used to fighting enemies who were visible. Most of their opponents
had no history of warfare and, therefore, had never heard of such items as
camouflage, cover or concealment.
However,
they had developed a process for dealing with humans’ cowardly tendency to hide
themselves while fighting. The God Kings’ saucers possessed not only weapons,
but excellent sensors. So, even if the position of a firing platform was not
clear, the sensors could pinpoint it. When there were hundreds of positions
firing they tended to become overloaded with information, but when there was a
single target it was easy. And wherever the God King fired, there fired its
company.
There
were over twenty God Kings in sight of the manjack. All of them fired at the
sensor point. And so did approximately eight thousand normals.
A
storm of flechettes and missiles slammed into the side of the skyscraper. Since
Posleen aim was weak at that range, the storm was diffused over two or three
floors and half the side of the building. Hundreds of soldiers throughout the
structure were killed and injured by the storm of fire. The only survivors of
the laggard company were the company commander, downstairs in the battalion
TOC, and the first sergeant and platoon sergeants in their poker game.
The
plasma cannons and hypervelocity missiles, designed to defeat plate armor, cut
upward through floor after floor, most of them passing entirely through the
building. Structural members were cut and the building reeled with the impact
of the storm of fire.
Throughout
the line, thousands of heads popped up to see why the storm of fire had
occurred. Some individuals, more panicked, brave or foolish than their fellows,
started to fire. However, in every case other, wiser, heads prevailed and
soldiers were ordered, cajoled or wrestled to the floor to prevent creating
another target. The single burst had proven the truth of the order and, despite
the ongoing hammer from the Posleen, the check fire held.
With
no further fire forthcoming, the Posleen resumed their interrupted advance
towards their distant El Dorado.
CHAPTER 50
Richmond, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1417 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
“This is scary,”
said General Keeton, staring at the hundreds of monitors set up throughout the
battle control room. The large meeting hall in the R.J. Reynolds facility was
crammed with intelligence technicians and a few conscripted secretaries. The
group was deciphering the data from the video cameras strung along the route of
advance and keying it into the battlefield control system. General Keeton was
left with the summarized version to work with. The twenty-four-inch monitor
appropriated from the head of Reynolds’ Management Information Systems
department was indicating that the Posleen vanguard had just reached the
floodwall and was spreading out to either side of the entrance.
He
almost felt embarrassed by the appropriation. The company had been surprisingly
enthusiastic in their support of the defense. The local vice president for
facilities had organized most of the support and had rousted out the MIS head
and dozens of technicians to cobble together the network Keeton was working
from. Integrating the military system and the various PCs and Macintoshes that
were being used would have taken a military contractor ten years and two
hundred billion dollars. The Reynolds’ MIS folks, told to just figure out a
way, had jury-rigged a fully functional system in hours. It just showed what
happened when you gave clear goals, plenty of resources and let competent
people get on with the job.
The
whole defense was like that. Once the plan was in place, he had barely been
able to keep up. So many little details had been handled by people who realized
there wasn’t time to argue. From Keene, who had been a veritable whirlwind,
directing projects here and there, to Sergeant Gleason from the SF team who had
strong-armed half a dozen intransigent hospital administrators into providing
impromptu MASH units.
There
had been the other side as well. He had generated a simple order. If a
situation came to the attention of a general officer in which an officer of
captain’s rank or above was slowing down the progress of the defense for
political or bureaucratic reasons, that officer was to be relieved of
commission and sent to the front to dig foxholes. He had fully twenty former
field-grade officers and three flag officers wielding shovels. When the defense
was all over he was going to have to sort it all out. The generals were likely
to be a problem.
In
the meantime he had a godlike view of the approaching enemy, a clear view of
the thousands of them spreading through the kill-box and enough support in
place to fight for days. And he’d only had to deal with three problems in the
last hour. Remarkable.
But
it was about time to give the signal to open fire. He suspected he was just
about to be very, very busy.
He
keyed the headset microphone that connected him to the Tactical Control
Officer. “Okay, ADC. Open the ball.”
The
technique was called time-on-target. Depending on the distance to the target
and the type of weapon, it takes a certain amount of time for an artillery
shell to reach its objective. Some artillery, like mortar, fires at a high
angle. These projectiles describe a high arc and take a relatively long time to
reach their target. Some artillery is fired on a flatter angle and takes less
time to reach a target.
This
phenomenon was known, but up until World War II no one had paid much attention
to it. However, early on during that war a senior American artillery officer
had determined that a better “punch” could be gotten if the initial salvo of an
artillery barrage arrived more or less simultaneously.
After
thinking about this for a relatively short time, he decided to try having guns
fire at timed intervals. With proper planning, all of the rounds would arrive
within seconds of each other. The technique was discovered to work quite well,
as surviving Germans were happy to attest after the war. And a new technique in
the old, old game of artillery was born.
Arstenoss
shot a spiteful plasma bolt at the towering wall. The lead Kessentai had loaded
their tenars with heavy metal and retreated to the rear. The treasure
could be bartered for prime genetic samples and fiefs, disdaining the necessity
to fight for them. Now the host had reached this demon-bedamned wall, with the
symbol of those thrice-damned and soul-chewed military technicians on it, and
there seemed no way to follow the trinkets onward. The few God Kings that had
floated their tenars above the wall had been removed from the Path. To
make matters worse the trinkets had been getting larger and larger as the road
progressed. Demons only knew what the eventual horde would look like. Faced
with the potential for riches and the sudden blockage, tens of thousands of the
host were packing into the valley, looking for more treasures or for the
cowardly thresh to at least show themselves. A small bridge had been found to
the east and many Kessentai were leaning that way, but it was both heavily defended
and very small. It would take days for the host to cross the river and take the
thresh from behind. Occasional blasts of fire out of frustration would drift up
towards the dots of positions in the towers without eliciting response.
“We’ll
have to go over it,” said Artulosten thoughtfully as the Posleen normals packed
around his tenar jostled it on its ground-effect. The tens of thousands
of oolt’os were reassuring. Surely nothing in the universe could stop such a
host. “If we get a number of the Kessentai together, we can assault over it and
take the gate from the far side. Then . . .” He stopped as a
sound over his shoulder made him look back and up. It appeared that the top of
the towering hill to his left had exploded as a ripple of purple fire and smoke
exploded upward. His sharp eye caught a flicker of objects lifted on the
columns of fire. There were hundreds of the things. He froze in indecision,
unsure what action would help the situation. A human would have screamed
“incoming.” That action would have been just as useful as paralysis.
There
were five divisions of infantry involved in the defense of Richmond. Three of
those divisions had contributed their mortars and artillery to the Libby and
Montrose Hill firebases. The relatively low velocity and high arc of mortars
ensured that they would be the first to fire. The 120mm rounds arced gracefully
upward to apogee then tilted over and headed down. It would take twenty-three
seconds for the one hundred fifteen rounds to reach their targets. Before they
were one-third of the way a second salvo was fired. And a third. At the third
salvo the ninety-seven artillery pieces finally fired.
The
Posleen were packed practically shoulder to shoulder in Schockoe Bottom. Many
of them had started to try to climb the obstacles into the city. Others had
started pressing against the wall of rubble across Williamsburg Road. A stream
was headed towards the Belle Isle footbridge. None were prepared for the
incoming salvo.
The
devastation was impossible to describe. Within seconds of each other two
hundred rounds of artillery landed in a space that could be occupied by four
football fields.
The
center artillery fire, well away from the infantry positions along the wall,
was set to variable timed fire. VT rounds exploded above the Posleen force,
scything downward in an oval pattern of death. Posleen caught under the hammer
of the guns were torn apart by the artillery bursting charges, their yellow
blood flying in an unnoticed mist from the fury of the charges.
The
mortar rounds were, if anything, more effective. Using a proximity fuse they
exploded a mere meter off the ground. The circle of death that spiraled outward
slaughtered packed centaurs by the dozen. And another salvo hit. And another.
The
infantrymen and women packing the buildings and defenses around the Bottom had
been told that they would know when to fire. “Fire when the artillery goes
off.” For a few moments they were shocked into immobility as the black
puffballs of VT and purple flashes of proximity rounds struck the world with a
jackhammer of the gods. But as the stunning overpressure of that first
devastating time-on-target passed and the guns set into the steady rhythm of
eight rounds a minute the forces arrayed along the line popped up, took the
safeties off the various weapons and started hunting targets.
The
manjacks started going off before the first rifle. The entire kill zone was
still packed with dazed and wounded Posleen, stumbling here and there under the
thunder of the guns. As one would cross the interlocking target beams of the
manjacks the robotic weapons would fire. Often the same Posleen would break
three or four beams at a time, so densely packed were the weapons. The 7.62mm
rounds, admirably designed for killing the centaurs, would tear the luckless
alien apart, adding the slime of its juices to the ichor-soaked ground.
Much
of the battlefield was already obscured by the smoke and dust thrown up from
the artillery when the first infantrymen looked over and through their
defensive walls. But there was the occasional flash of a centaur, most of them
reeling stunned through the hammer of the guns. Such were taken under fire with
glee; everyone had seen the news from Fredericksburg and the news media had
already started on the interviews of survivors and relatives. They engaged the
yellow centaurs with a fiery rage.
The
snipers, arrayed higher in the buildings with their tripod-mounted .50 caliber
sniper rifles, were having a field day. The surviving God Kings throughout the
mass were trying to rally their forces, trying to return fire, trying to
retreat out of the sudden abattoir that Twelfth Corps had made out of Schockoe
Bottom. But the snipers were having none of it. The occasional flash of a
plasma cannon or HVM, the white light so different from the black-orange of the
artillery or the orange-purple of the mortars, revealed them clearly. Then,
disdaining their target zones, dozens of snipers from as far as a kilometer
away would return fire. Any God King saucer pulling out of the maelstrom of
dust and smoke in the valley of death was targeted immediately. The plunging
fire of the .50 caliber rifles smashed the centaurs off their vehicles, smashed
through their inertial drivers, smashed through their energy crystals and
added their devastation to an afternoon of fire and smoke and death.
General
Keeton’s monitor had a battlefield schematic and four waterfall graphs. The
graphs were controlled by the Galactic AID that had been supplied to each corps
commander and higher. One graph tracked casualties among the human defenders,
the actual soldiers with rifles in their hand, who would keep the Posleen from
coming out of the Bottom. The second tracked live Posleen in the fire-sack. The
third tracked total Posleen that had entered the fire-sack. The fourth tracked
total Posleen numbers.
Despite
the fact that human numbers were less than a hundredth of the Posleen, they
were on the same scale. The number of defenders was limited, the Posleen
seemingly unlimited. When he had taken too many casualties he intended to
retreat across the James.
That,
however, looked a long way off. The graph indicating Posleen in the sack had
climbed and climbed and climbed. Then, when it was apparent that they were
about to stage a breakout, the Corps scale ambush had opened up. Now, there was
virtually nothing left alive in Schockoe Bottom and human casualties had been
next to nothing. If he had lost two hundred troops, excepting that company
erased by one idiot’s actions, he would be surprised. His total losses to date,
as far as had been reported, were two hundred fifty killed in action,
four-twenty wounded in action. And the Posleen had lost better than forty
thousand.
However,
there were still darn near two million left to kill. And the portion of the
host that had not entered the kill zone was spreading to either side, despite
the caltrops and craters.
Couldn’t
have that.
“Send
out the sally,” he whispered.
Lieutenant
Colonel Walter Abrahamson wrapped a yellow silk scarf around his face and waved
his hand overhead in a “wind-’em-up” signal. This was not, technically, the
place for a cavalry battalion commander to be, in the hatch of an Abrams
leading a do-or-die charge into the face of two million enemies. On the other
hand, be damned to where he was supposed to be. The mission was to give the
Posleen a sharp enough poke in the snout that they charged back into the
fire-sack. He could have left it up to his company commanders. Should have. Had
been ordered to. Sure. Like hell. Where else would a lifelong cavalry officer be?
“Stew, you better be damned sure those
cannon-cockers have got the word, over,” he shouted into his intervehicle
microphone. Despite the sound-proofed helmet the thunder of sixty jet-turbine
driven main battle tanks revving their engines was an aural Vesuvius.
“No problem,” said his fellow
battalion commander. The Second Battalion of the Twenty-Second Cavalry regiment
had been relegated to defending the Libby Hill defenses and the other officer
was bitterly envious of his comrade. “I’m
in the fire control center now. They’ve got the word. They’ll cease fire when
the gates start to open. Even the mortars will be landed by the time you get
through.
“Just
in case, you might want to go through buttoned up, though,” he joked.
“Yea verily,” shouted Abrahamson. He waved to the civil engineers manning
the gates. The hasty job done on the locking mechanism meant a hastier job done
on the opening system. The gates, multiton concrete and steel behemoths, had
been hooked to bulldozers to open them. The two structural engineers waved to
the drivers and started moving them forward carefully. If the gates warped
there might not be a way to get them closed again. And when the cavalry came
back they were really going to want to be able to close the gates.
“Okay, tell ’em the gates are moving
back,” he yelled and switched to intercom. “Move us up to the entrance,” he
said as he hit the switch to drop him into the belly of the beast.
As
the gates rolled back they revealed an alien world. The artillery still falling
in the bottom churned an indescribable stew of yellow Posleen corpses blended
indiscriminately with the shattered brick of the former buildings. There was no
living thing in sight. The hammer of the artillery combined with the fire of
the infantry had done what practically never happened in battles: the
combination had killed all of the enemy. Even in the most intense battles of
World Wars I and II there had been a few survivors. Not here. The slaughter of
the Posleen in Schockoe Bottom had been efficient, remorseless and complete.
“Pull
forward slowly a hundred meters,” he said over the intercom. “Then stop and
wait for the squadron to get on line.”
“Yea,
though I ride through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil,”
said Private First-Class Mills, the tank’s gunner.
“For
I am the baddest motherfucker in the valley,” laughed the colonel, ending the
military version of the psalm.
“Amen,”
whispered Private Hulm, the driver. The young private was as stunned as
everyone else by the grounds-eye view of the devastation, but he gunned the big
tank and pulled it slowly forward into the devastation.
The
surface of Fourteenth Street was coated in a layer of slime and the
rubbercoated tracks of the behemoth threw up a fine spray that looked like
orange mud. With the exception of the occasional shattered carcasses of God
King saucers, there were no obstacles. The occasional nearly intact Posleen
corpse was ground beneath the treads of the tank without notice or comment. The
seventy-ton armored juggernaut didn’t even lurch.
PFC
Mills swung the turret to the side. “Target.
Moving saucer.”
The
colonel checked his repeater display by reflex. The saucer was skewed to one
side, crabbing to the north and out of the firesack. As soon as it left the
overwhelming haze it would be a target for the snipers dotting the towers, but
it also could be a threat.
“Confirmed,”
said the
colonel. “Engage co-ax.”
“Roger,
co-ax,” responded the gunner, switching to coaxial fire instead of main
gun. “On the way.”
The
M-1E was a modification of the venerable Abrams main battle tank. Designed for
fighting the Posleen, it had improved frontal armor and thermal damping to make
it more survivable when hit by hypervelocity missiles and plasma cannons. It
also took a leaf out of the Russian Army’s book.
The
Russians, their tank markets faced by overwhelming air threats, had modified
their tanks to double as antiaircraft platforms. They had mounted a
twenty-three millimeter cannon on each side of the turret and slaved the fire
control to the tank gunner. With a little luck, the mass fire from a battalion of
tanks might take down an attacking aircraft.
The
Americans had looked at the idea and scoffed. Until the coming of the
Galactics. The Posleen depended on mass assaults, but their weapons were also
phenomenal. A conventional platform to combat them would have to be able to
survive plasma and hypervelocity missiles but still be able to kill large
numbers of troops. Rather than try to develop an entirely new platform, the
army had taken the Russian idea and improved it.
On
each side of the turret of the M-1E was a pod of four 25mm Bushmaster cannons.
The cannons turned with the turret and could swivel up and down for targeting.
The targeting computer of the Abrams, still the most advanced and capable of
any tank made by man, was modified to accommodate the new weapon, making it
incredibly accurate. But it really wasn’t about accuracy. It was about massive
firepower.
The
gunner chose “HE” from a menu of ammunition options. Then he stroked the
trigger.
The
Bushmaster cannon had a maximum fire rate of twenty-five hundred rounds per
minute. There were eight cannons targeted on the lone God King. The single
stroke of the trigger fired a burst of seven from each cannon. The fifty-six
rounds, each with nearly a pound of explosives and notched wire for shrapnel,
exploded across the saucer, shredding it and the riding God King.
“Target eliminated.”
The
gunner continued to search, but with the exception of the sole God King, no
targets showed themselves. The tank moved through the lifting cloud of dust and
smoke as the stench of the dead Posleen became thicker and thicker and the
other tanks of the squadron spread to either side.
The
artillery had stopped as promised and Colonel Abrahamson decided to pop the
hatch and look around. The alternative was staying inside, and the atmosphere
couldn’t be any worse outside.
It
was. The stench of the Posleen increased five-fold as he raised himself out the
hatch, but he controlled his desire to heave and looked around. The squadron
was spreading out and he was happy that he had talked the colonel into the
earlier reconnaissance mission. The squadron was fairly well trained, for this
day and age, but the battles to the north, small-scale as they were, had helped
immeasurably to put some polish on it. And it had gotten rid of some deadwood.
Now
the unaccompanied tanks spread out into an extended V formation without a
hitch, aligning on their pennon-flapping company commanders and platoon
leaders. He had decided not to bring any of the Bradleys or Humvees for this
mission. They knew, generally, where the enemy was and he did not intend to
press home an attack. The Bradleys were slower than the Abrams and more
vulnerable, while the Humvees were completely unsurvivable.
No,
this was a straightforward heavy cavalry charge: Run out, lower lances, hit the
barbarians and charge back through the gates. The barbarians always chased
after you. But the general had better have everybody off the Mayo Bridge when
they came back. Anybody in Walter Abrahamson’s way was going to be paste.
The
radio crackled. “Bravo troop,
in position.”
“Charlie troop in position.”
“Alpha,
rrready to rock-and-rolll.”
He
smiled. The Alpha commander was a bit of a personality, but he knew his
business. Abrahamson stopped noticing the stench as the moment came upon him.
He looked through the haze towards the distant and unseen enemy and nodded his
head. “Roger,” he said
over the radio. “Move forward
to phase-line Shenandoah. And may God defend the right.”
CHAPTER 51
Ravenwood, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
1923 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
“Mortars,
throw some rounds on the other side of that bridge we just passed over.”
So
much for fire control procedure, thought Keren bouncing along in the back of the
commandeered Suburban.
Military
equipment has a life of its own. The military spends billions of dollars every
year not on procurement of new equipment, but on maintaining the equipment they
have. Armored fighting vehicles, next to helicopters, have to be the worst.
They have thousands of moving parts, none of which, it seems, have sealed
bearings. The tracks of an AFV are only good for a few hundred miles, a
fraction of the life of a tire and a thousand times as expensive. Maintenance
is not a haphazard requirement, but a vital necessity.
Unfortunately,
the divisions committed to the defense of northern Virginia had only begun to
become coherent when the Posleen landed. Training had been sorely lacking.
Maintenance had been worse.
Of
the four armored mortar carriers the platoon had possessed at the start of the
bugout, only two remained. The Fire Direction Center track had been the first
to succumb, dying of a failed track bearing before they were five miles down
the road. But the Three Gun track had been destroyed soon after, casualty of
their one close brush with the Posleen.
The
FDC section had packed into the Two Gun track, still humming along like a top,
thanks in no small part to Keren’s efforts before the battle, until they found
the diesel Suburban by the side of Prince William Parkway. The SUV had turned
out to be victim of simple lack of fuel, and a few five-gallon cans of premium
military diesel fixed that.
But
hundreds of other tracked vehicles had failed to survive, and the troops from
those Bradleys and M-113s were strung along both sides of the road, marching as
fast as they could to try to outrun the oncoming horde. Both gun tracks were
covered with personnel, and wounded were packed all around him in the Suburban.
This really is “Needs must when devils drive,” Keren thought.
But
the problem of friendly-fire was on his mind with the last call for fire. He
looked out the window. If there were this many personnel along the road here,
the roads had to be packed back there.
“Boss,
are there friendly troops in the area, over?”
Their
mortar platoon leader was the last officer in the battalion and had taken
command of all the line tracks he could find. A few tracks had bugged out,
others had died from mechanical failure, but seven remained from the battalion,
with about half the crews for them, and the lieutenant had picked up
replacement personnel as he went. The deal was simple, you could ride if you
would fight. If you wouldn’t fight, you could walk. After the last Nineteenth
Armored Division unit was destroyed, the scratch unit continued a nearly single-handed
rear-guard throughout the afternoon and simultaneously replaced all its
casualties. Along the way, “Puppy-Dog” Leper had been forever changed.
“Not
any more. Engineers just blew the bridge with the last few stragglers on it.
The horses are bunching up on the other side. Fire ’em up, Keren, ten rounds
per gun then move on back.”
“Roger.”
He popped up through the sunroof and waved to the gun tracks on either side. “Fire
mission, hip shoot!” As he did he noticed a Humvee in the woods to one
side, with a soldier leaning against the hood. Well, if the stupid bastard
can’t figure out to run like hell, that’s his problem.
Arkady
Simosin silently watched the last unit crossing the Davis Ford bridge. Whoever
it was had fought a hell of a rearguard action after the last of the
Nineteenth Armored expended itself. “The Last Charge” would probably be
forgotten in the throes, but the final company of the armored unit had
shattered a flanking movement that would have cut off half the survivors of the
corps. It had been a heroic and ultimately suicidal charge.
He
had come to the conclusion that military disasters follow certain prepared
scripts. There is ample warning of the danger. There are critical moments, even
after the disaster is clear, where proper orders and actions can correct the
situation. And there is a reactionary political response in aftermath.
Given
the modern speed of information transfer and decision making, it appeared that
the reactionary aftermath was not even going to await the end of the battle. He
looked again at the bald prose ordering him to turn over his command to his
chief of staff and report to First Army Headquarters in New York. The e-mail
continued with the comment that a replacement was on the way. He knew the
general, a crony of General Olds; Olds would have done better to leave the COS
in charge.
So, he thought, this is
what a thirty-year career comes to. Better than the poor bastards caught in
the political-correctness witchhunts of the ’90s.
He
crumpled up the flashpaper and dropped it on the ground, adding one last bit of
litter to the battlefield. He turned and climbed in the Humvee as the first
crump of departing mortar rounds filled the air.
CHAPTER 52
The White House,
Washington, DC, United States of America, Sol III
2045 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
“That’s it,” said
General Taylor, glancing at the e-mail brought in by a communications
technician. He looked over to where the President was hunched into his chair.
“All the remaining units of Tenth Corps are through the Ninth Corps lines.”
“How
many are left?” asked the Secretary of Defense, staring at the electronic map
on the wall.
“Of
infantry, armor, engineers and other front-line units, there are less than two
thousand accounted for.”
“Okay,”
said the President, in a harsh voice, “put another way, how many did we lose?”
“Over
twenty-five thousand . . .”
“Twenty-five—?”
“We
sent in a heavy corps, Mister President,” said the general, in tones to
bend metal. “Five heavy divisions with full support. Of front-line troops we’ve
gotten back less than one battered brigade! We lost half the total number of
casualties in Vietnam; five times the estimate for the first day of the
Normandy invasion. We killed approximately nine thousand Posleen, according to
the last and only reports we received. All that did was add to their goddamn
supplies.”
“If
it hadn’t been for the hacking . . .” said the secretary.
“If
it hadn’t been for the hacking,” interrupted the general, “we would have killed
more Posleen. We still would have taken these losses.”
“We’ll
never know,” said the secretary.
“Yes . . . we . . . will,
Mr. Secretary,” responded the general, suddenly tired of the whole game.
“There’s Ninth Corps.” He gestured towards the screen. “It’s had hours to dig
in, lay wire and mines, which Tenth didn’t, and it has nearly secure flanks,
which Tenth didn’t, and it is not being hacked, which Tenth was, and it is not
going to be pasted by its own artillery and mortars, which Tenth was, and we
are going to lose them, too! Oh, they’ll kill more Posleen, but it doesn’t
damn well matter, Mr. Secretary, sir, because the Posleen can afford to lose a million
troops to destroy one of our corps! This is just the start of the damn war! The
only way we could win it from the beginning was to kill over a hundred Posleen
for every guy assigned to a gun! And we just took about twenty casualties for
every Posleen killed! At that rate we’ll lose every goddamn soldier in the
eastern United States to this single landing!”
The
High Commander suddenly realized that he was shouting at the secretary of
defense. On the other hand, no one seemed to care if he was. He also realized
that the secretary was not the one to be shouting at.
“What
if we recall Ninth Corps?” croaked the President, looking up at the map for the
first time in nearly an hour. His eyes burned. He had spent twenty years trying
to get into this chair. It had cost him most of a stomach, a marriage and his
children. And one mistake was all it took.
The
general shook his head in resignation. “Too late.” He looked down at the
briefing papers. The critical information on maintenance was damning. “The
Posleen can move faster than those units.”
“Tactical
mobility is one of the American Army’s strong suits,” said the secretary, his
tone resounding with surety.
“It
is when you have well-trained, experienced units,” said the High Commander,
raised back into fury by the fatuousness of the remark. “It is not a
strong suit when you have undertrained, inexperienced, unsure units. Patton’s
Third Army could have done it easily. Waffen SS? No problem. The Allied troops
in Desert Storm? Fuck, yeah. Give an order, pull out, run to the next position,
be it a mile or a hundred miles, reassemble. No problem, Can Do.
“Here
we have troops that have only had a filled chain of command for five months.
Units that were rioting three months ago. Units that are a year behind on
scheduled maintenance, almost two years behind on training. Units where half
the vehicles break down in the first fifteen miles. Units that will have a hard
time holding fixed positions, much less maneuvering.
“No,
sir,” he continued, looking the President square in the eye. “The best we can
hope is that Ninth Corps does more damage to the enemy than Tenth did, before
the bastards pull them down.”
“And
Richmond?” asked the secretary of defense.
“Well,
sir,” said the general, “if we could only get them to turn around and attack
Twelfth Corps.”
“How’s
it coming?” asked General Keeton.
John
Keene spun around in his swivel chair and stared at the commander with a blank,
distant expression for a moment. Then he shook his head and focused on the
reality of the moment.
“Sorry,”
he said, ruefully, “I was elsewhere.”
“I
could see that. How’s it going?”
“Remarkably
well. Good news: by the end of this battle, we’ll hardly have to do a thing to
prepare Richmond for the long-term projects.” That was good for a weary
chuckle.
“And
what about being prepared for this particular set of visitors?”
“Well,
the weakest points are still there. If they turn to the west, we are screwed
and if they turn to the east we have great difficulty. But we think we have a
good plan for centering their focus.”
“What’s
that?”
“Gold.”
“Gold?”
“Yep. The Posleen
are notorious looters and they seem to be particularly interested in heavy
metals and gems. It seems crazy, because you can get gold and diamonds much
more easily from an asteroid belt than you can from a hostile city. But they
really seem to crave it. Anyway, the Federal Reserve Bank here had a rather
large supply of it. We . . . came up with a designation for
Fourteenth Street as ‘Gold Avenue’ so to speak and have put what looks like
some sort of ornamentation, made out of pure gold, on the street every fifty
yards.”
“Oh,
joy . . .”
“Yep.
So, there will be a line of ornaments, on little stands, every fifty yards all
the way up to the floodwall gates.”
“And
that means that they’ll follow the yellow brick road and want to keep following
it.”
“Right.
And just to add a little fun to it, we had a choice of five different sizes, so
the first twenty were small, the second twenty were larger, and so on. By the
time the front rank gets to the wall and the word gets around among them, we
hope they’re in a frenzy. We had quite a bit left over, so as an added bonus we
put out larger ornaments from time to time. But only along Fourteenth Street.
If they use the logic . . .”
“They
will really want to cross that bridge when they come to it.”
“Yes,
sir. And if the word gets around, most of them should head for Schockoe
Bottom.”
Something
about the facile explanation started to bother the corps commander. The general
looked a little questioning for a moment. “How did you get the ornaments made
so quickly?”
“Well,
there is quite a bit of industry in the area,” Keene temporized.
“Or
perhaps I should be asking what kind of ornaments they are?” asked the general,
his suspicions now fully aroused.
“Well,
we didn’t have much of a choice . . .”
“What
are they, Keene?” asked General Keeton.
“Well,
you ever been behind a tractor-trailer, and noticed how on some of them, on the
mudflaps, there are these shiny silhouettes . . . ?”
Ersin
watched as the private hammered in the last iron stake topped with a golden
silhouette of two busty females in a reclined position and shook his head.
“Yah
know, boss,” said Mueller, “somebody’s bound to have a cow about this.”
“And
the defenses at Libby Hill are as complete as was planned for this battle,”
continued the High Commander. “Later on we’ll build concrete bunkers and such,
but the Twelfth Corps is going to have it as good as it gets on such short
notice. And we’re bringing in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Corps from the
Carolinas. Richmond is going to be a graveyard of Posleen,” he stated
definitively.
“What
about their data security?” asked the secretary of defense.
“There
was a cyberpunk team in Richmond on an unrelated mission,” answered the High
Commander. “They checked the Twelfth Corps’s IVIS and FireTac systems. Both
were infected by a virus that apparently noted the detection and performed an
autodestruct.
“They’re
picking apart the remnants right now and scratching their heads like everyone
else. But as far as NSA, the Cybers and CONARC’s own Data Security department
can determine, Twelfth Corps is fully mission capable, including all automated
systems. On the other hand, they’ve also zeroed every weapon in the Corps on
particular targets and are only awaiting the Posleen to open fire. They really
don’t need FireTac or IVIS.”
“So
you’re saying that this battle should go as planned?” asked the
secretary, sarcastically.
“I
did not plan the previous engagement,” said the High Commander.
“No,
General,” said the President. “I planned that engagement, as I made plain on
national television. What can we do about Ninth Corps?”
The
general shook his head again. “We can pull out some of the supply personnel,
but not many. I mean, there’s a reason for every person who is that far forward.
We don’t have a terrain obstacle to interpose between Posleen and our support
as we did with Tenth, so our downside is actually higher.
“If . . . when,
the Posleen break through the defenses, they’ll be able to engage the support
elements, including artillery and supply units, that they weren’t able to
assault at the Dale City defense. Casualty estimates on this battle are double
or triple the Tenth Corps battle.”
“And
there’s nothing we can do?” asked the secretary, incredulously.
“First
Army has committed all of the Tenth Corps units that are reasonably cohesive to
reinforce Ninth along with Tenth’s Corps and division artillery, which was
mainly behind the Occoquan. He was sending the Eighth and Eleventh Corps in to
reinforce them, but he was countermanded by CONARC.”
“Why?”
demanded the secretary.
“If
Ninth can hold with all six divisions, two corps of artillery, and fixed,
prepared positions, we’ll send them in to reinforce. If it can’t, and I do not
expect it to, it is futile to throw away another sixty thousand troops.
Besides,” he concluded, “First Army is strung from here to Boston. We’re
parceling them along the Potomac at crossings. We might have to use them to
extract the refugees.”
“What
about the ACS battalion?” asked the President.
“They
are on their way. They should be there about three hours after the battle is
joined. At that point the plan is to send them around Lake Jackson and hit the
Posleen in the flank.”
The
overloaded tractor-trailers carrying the Third Battalion Five-Fifty-Fifth
Mobile Infantry Regiment had left the secure Interstate 81 hours before. The
laboring trucks packed with half-ton suits had crossed the outer Blue Ridge
before descending into the Virginia horse country. This was no-man’s-land. Even
the police had evacuated with the last civilians, heading to the Blue Ridge and
safety.
To the troops,
packed like sardines in the trucks, it had been a nightmarish ride. Although
they each had hundreds of hours in their suits, lying on their backs under, in
some cases, a dozen suits while swaying from side to side for hours in a
tractor-trailer had been a shattering experience. There were several cases of
troopers panicking; in one case the spasmodic gyrations of the panicked troop
tore open the side of the truck, spilling two squads of ACS troopers out on the
interstate to the general detriment of any vehicle that hit them. Between panic
and motion nausea, the unit was in poor shape when the convoy ran into a
Posleen ambush outside of Warrenton, VA.
The
Posleen were not even skirmishers. The God King had gotten his fill of fighting
humans when he lost almost his entire oolt to the guns of the North Carolina.
Having lost all interest in engaging artillery he struck out in the direction
of least resistance. He was one of the rare Posleen that was not spoiling for a
fight.
Along
the way he lost a few more oolt’os to random armed humans. They mostly fired
at long range and from cover, but were remarkably accurate and persistent. And
the oolt learned quickly not to bother with the residences. The few that did
not explode in his face yielded only scraps of food and occasional bits of
light treasure. Many had been cleared of anything of value. The God King and
his forces followed U.S. 17 northward through the rolling hills of Spotsylvania,
Stafford and Fauquier counties, past country farms, mostly deserted, and
occasional clusters of houses. Nowhere did he encounter significant
storehouses, but on the other hand he also did not encounter significant
resistance; he felt it was a fair trade.
At the
junction of 17 and 15/29 the group encountered a large abandoned vehicle. The
cargo area revealed a vast storage of multiple types of foodstuffs. The side of
the vehicle sported a picture of a food beast he had already encountered. The
beast yielded a flat and tasteless food. The similarity in taste to the
threshkreen caused some of the Kessentai to speculate that these might be the
threshkreen’s nestlings. The disparate sizes and conformation argued against
it. But the Posleen had seen stranger methods of reproduction.
However,
the cargo vehicle had many other types of food, many of them oddly spiced and
prepared. Some of the material, sporting a picture of a white avian, tasted
remarkably like nestling.
Other
than the storehouses of the thresh it was the finest booty taken so far.
Obviously, the cargo vehicles were to be captured whenever possible. They had
found three more on the way north. Only one contained more foodstuffs but the
others had useful mixed supplies.
Thus,
when the four vehicles hove into view, the oolt’os followed their carefully
conveyed and simple orders to open fire on the motive portion of the lead
vehicle.
When
the tractor-trailer containing Alpha Company and part of the battalion staff
jackknifed, the heavy and refractory suits tumbled through the light sidewalls
of the trailer like buckshot through paper. The troopers were thrown through
the air and tumbled along the ground for multiple meters. The trailing trucks
slammed on their brakes and, as soon as they slowed to a survivable speed, the
truckers dove out and took shelter in the roadside ditch.
Most
of the troops tucked themselves into balls as they flew through the air, the
inertia of the thousand-pound suits carrying them hundreds of feet in an
uncontrolled tumble. Since the Posleen company was more or less in line with
the inertia of the vehicle, several of the troopers and the battalion
intelligence officer were carried into its midst.
The
GalTech Armored Infantry Design Team had been composed of knowledgeable and careful
individuals. They were people who had either experienced or extensively studied
a variety of calamities. To a man, or in one case, woman, they were pessimists
where combat was concerned; Murphy was an old and dear friend that they kept
always at the forefront of their brains.
In
addition, the conditions that the company was in were remarkably similar to an
insertion technique briefly considered during the initial phases of
development. Thus, when these particular conditions arose, a series of planned
and legacy software reactions occurred.
Inertial
compensators did not slow the suits, but rather served to remediate the effect
on the users. The apparent roll was significantly reduced, while the visual
conditions were matched to the apparent inertial effects. Thus, instead of
feeling like bowling balls, the luckless troopers found themselves wrestling
with molasses. But the reduction allowed them to see what was coming and, at
least partially, prepare.
Three
of the troops tumbled into the midst of the Posleen were from Alpha weapons:
Grim Reaper suits. Realizing that they might need close-range support on the
way, the platoon leader had switched out all four weapons points for flechette
cannons.
Composed
of twelve-barreled light flechette guns, each flechette cannon could spew forty
thousand lethal steel slivers a minute. Of course, like all Grim Reaper
systems, they could also run through the onboard munitions in less than six
minutes of combat. Grim Reapers always preferred to be close to their ammo sources.
Two
of the weapons troops, through a combination of luck and gymnastics, ended up
on their feet and practically side by side in the midst of the Posleen. Most of
the Posleen lining their backtrack were dead, or well on their way, but the
final group that cushioned their stop was struggling to their feet even as the
Reapers opened fire.
Dropping
all four cannons to horizontal, the two suit troops went back-to-back and began
to spin in place, throwing out a horizontal steel rain of destruction. The steel
razors shredded any Posleen in their path, the yellow centaurs tearing apart
under the fatal onslaught of the hypervelocity flechettes.
Unfortunately,
there was no way for two troops to cover the entire circuit. Posleen on every
side hurled themselves on the explosive dervishes in their midst, monomolecular
blades rising and falling in awful cadence. In moments the luckless Grim
Reapers were taken apart like lobsters.
However,
their sacrifice was not in vain. The violence of their entry into the Posleen
force had thrown it off balance just a moment too long. The moment’s breathing
space was enough time for many of the troopers of the ambushed ACS to regain
their feet and their wits.
Before
the Posleen could regain the upper hand, fast-thinking troopers whipped their
grav-guns to level and opened fire.
A
hurricane of silver lightning crashed into the remaining Posleen. The God King
had lost most of the oolt at Market Crossing. When the tsunami of fire crashed
into it the remainder was washed away in seconds; the few scattered defensive
rounds of the Posleen disappeared into nothingness.
The
faithless and luckless God King attempted to escape the tidal wave of
relativistic fire, but was picked out of the sky by a cone of fire from dozens
of troops. The detonation of the energy matrix was muted by the kinetic
explosions of thousands of rounds intersecting on the point in space once
occupied by the vanished saucer. Of the God King, naught was left but a whiff
of putrescence on the wind.
Lieutenant
Colonel Calvin Bishop pulled himself up out of the wrecked cab of the third
truck and sat on the mangled door. His AID was already cataloging the damage
and he grimaced at the digests. The battalion was mostly intact—the losses were
actually minimal—but the ambush on top of the devastating ride over the Blue
Ridge had combined into nightmare.
He
was in the middle of nowhere, thirty miles from the battle and already four
hours behind schedule. He wasn’t sure his lone battalion could exactly turn the
tide, but if they made it to the Ninth Corps’s line in time they might be able
to extract the corps. It had become something of an instant tradition among the
ACS.
He
took a brief moment to contemplate the situation and began to snap orders to
his company commanders. They had a battle to catch.
CHAPTER 53
Alexandria, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
2246 EDT October
10th, 2004 ad
Monsignor
O’Reilly carefully considered the items to carry with him. With the Posleen
rapidly approaching his small house in Arlington, he was rather certain that
he would be on foot for the majority of the next several days.
There
were so many things to choose from. His collection of books and manuscripts
dating back to the twelfth century. His antiques and archaeological treasures
gathered throughout the world. Complex electronics to decipher the secrets of
ancient and modern times. On the other hand several of those would have to be
thoroughly destroyed.
Finally,
recognizing that the only true treasure to the cause resided in his cranium, he
packed a bookbag with some socks, easy-to-prepare food and bottled water. He
took a last look around the comfortable room, set the autodestruct sequence and
walked out the front door. He didn’t bother to lock it.
He
debated whether to walk or drive the half mile to VA 123. He finally decided to
drive. The traffic might have cleared and, if it had not, every little bit of
energy savings would help. He shouldered the bag and started towards his
late-model Buick, but froze as a dark-tinted Suburban with its lights off
appeared out of the darkness and pulled up in front of his house.
He thought for a
moment if there was anything incriminating in the house or on his person. He quickly
decided that there was not and just as quickly decided that it probably
wouldn’t matter to his visitors. He braced himself for what would come next and
barely flinched when the back door was flung back to reveal the Indowy Aelool
and Paul des Jardins in the light from the interior.
“Get
in,” snapped Paul, all trace of the dapper dilettante vanished.
O’Reilly
considered the situation for a moment—it was a common trap—then hurried over to
the SUV. “Just because it’s a tank doesn’t mean you’re going to be able to
negotiate traffic.” The heavyset driver pulled away without a word and headed
away from VA 123.
“We
have made arrangements,” said the Indowy. “We will be picked up by a Himmit
stealth ship along the Burke Run.”
“There’s
another problem,” said des Jardins, gesturing towards the Indowy with his chin
and turning to look out the window. The large bag at his feet could only hold
weapons and O’Reilly smiled gently. You could take the boy out of DGSE but you
could never take DGSE out of the boy. The hand inside the fine Saville Row suit
undoubtedly cradled some lethal bit of French hardware.
“Indeed,”
continued the little Indowy. “We intercepted a termination order originating
from the Tir Dol Ron’s office.”
“Intercepted?”
asked the Jesuit incredulously.
“The
Bane Sidhe is very ancient and very well-represented among the Indowy,” stated
the diminutive alien. His batlike face wrinkled in a complicated fashion.
Scholar or no, the expression was far too complex for O’Reilly to decipher. It
seemed one part satisfaction and three parts exasperation. “Our ineffectiveness
at direct action stems from many of the same sources as the Darhel’s. And our response
has ever mirrored theirs: Let humans do the dirty work.”
The
former DGSE agent snorted. “To our discredit.”
“I
am aware that the difference is often not one of execution but of goals,”
admitted O’Reilly, wryly. “However, how does this termination order effect us?
Is it for a member of the Société? Or of the Franklins?”
“No,”
admitted the Indowy with another grimace. “The individual affected is unaware
of the actions of the societies. However, the Bane Sidhe are in the
individual’s debt. Furthermore, we believe that the individual may represent a
strong destabilizing factor to the Darhel.”
“One
individual is not worth risking the Société,” stated the Monsignor
definitively.
“Not
normally. However, this individual has repeatedly demonstrated traits that make
him outside the norm. And the Bane Sidhe ask it. We have aided the Société
much. This is nothing compared to what we have done for the Société!”
“What
about you, Paul?”
“All
of our Marion teams are in the Northeast right now. Otherwise we would
be handling it.”
“So,
you think it worth the risk. Where is it that you need help?” asked the Jesuit,
warily.
“We
need Team Conyers.”
The
monsignor smiled thinly and tried not to let the surprise show on his face. He
hoped like hell the Darhel did not have the Mother Church so thoroughly
penetrated.
The
robe-clad monk knelt in the dirt of the well-tended vineyard and carefully
tasted a grape. His mouth worked as he swirled the juices around, gathering
every last nuance. The harvest would have to be gathered soon or there might
not be one. The grape lacked that last bit of sweetness, but the lack might be
to the good. Surely the wine of such a bitter time should not be sweet. The
gentle wind of the night was a boon to his soul. The night was still the same,
even as the world had come apart around them. The sheltering night had not
changed.
He
rose to his feet with the grace of a dancer as one of the senior brothers
approached. The senior brother gestured for him to follow and headed towards
one of the outbuildings of the monastery without a word. The monk saw others
being gathered and realized that there must have been a special calling. The
senior brother turned aside as he entered the building.
The
assistant abbot would retire to his cell and pray continuously until the team
returned. He remembered his own days on the teams and feared that many would
not be at the next vespers. A call from the Société was so often a death
sentence. They were like the French Foreign Legion in a way; the only thing
that mattered to the Société was the mission and damn the casualties. To the
Benedictines, the importance was the ritual and the art. That is why, contrary
to popular myth, the special troops of the Catholic Church were not Jesuits.
Shao-Lin did not own the monopoly they thought.
The
monk perused the briefing under red “battle-lights” as his black- and gray-clad
brothers assembled the instruments of their arts. The mission was complex but
not terribly so. The gravest question was time. And of course going in with no
communications and limited intelligence.
The
monks had special dispensation to speak during briefings. There were, however,
no questions. They took up their equipment, changed their clothes and loaded
into the darkened vans without a word.
O’Neal
stared at his opponent across the dimly lit green expanse. The next move would
decide the outcome of the contest. The stakes were high, but Michael O’Neal,
Senior had been in tougher spots. There was always a way out if you tried hard
enough, thought about the situation and acted with precision and violence. But
he usually had better cards.
“Raise
you five,” said Cally.
“Call.”
“Two
pair, kings high.”
“Damn!”
said Papa O’Neal, throwing his cards down. The pair of aces lay forlornly on
the table as if mocking his inability to win a simple hand of poker against an
eight-year-old. It was well past midnight and he should have had her in bed
long before. But with news coming in from the fighting and her father on his
way to the front, Mike Senior was waiting for her to fall asleep naturally. So
far she was showing all the stamina of a professional gambler.
“One
more hand like that and you’ll be doing the dishes for a month,” Cally said
with a laugh.
“Yeah,
well . . .” He tried to think of a retort but just gave up. What
could he say?
His pager went off and he pulled it off his
belt. The device was hooked into the property sensors, not his phone; just
because he was in his sixties didn’t mean he couldn’t use modern technology.
And it showed that they had a visitor. First motion sensors and then metal
sensors had detected movement on the long road into the farm. However, the device
that monitored for subspace transmissions was quiescent.
So,
not Posleen then. Maybe the sheriff coming up to make sure he wasn’t making
moonshine. Or at least not at the house where it might get found and be
embarrassing. Best not to offer him a taste of the latest batch. Although it
made little or no sense at this time of night.
“We’ve
got a visitor,” he said.
“Friend
or foe?” Cally asked seriously. She tossed down the cards she had been
shuffling.
“Don’t
know,” he said. “I guess we ought to go look.”
It
was an unremarkable Ford Taurus. Probably a rental. The driver was a male.
There wasn’t much else Papa O’Neal could tell, even with the high-definition
light-amplifying binoculars. He waited in the front room of the house, screened
by the light curtains over the windows, until the car pulled up to the front
and stopped.
The
driver revealed in the glare of the security lights was a male, early twenties
and alone. He looked faintly Hispanic—mostly because of his swarthy
complexion—but could have been any of a hundred races and mixtures across the
world. He was wearing an old and battered field jacket. It had a Special Forces
patch on the right shoulder but was otherwise unadorned; “sterile” in the
parlance of the special ops community. He also looked familiar, but O’Neal
could not place the face.
Mike
Senior opened the front door and stepped out, watching the stranger warily.
There was no reason for a total stranger to come to the house. Come to think of
it, he had never had an uninvited visitor. With the exception of the law. But
it wasn’t like he had much choice.
“Mike,”
the guy said on first sight and his face broke into a broad grin. “Long time, ’mano!”
Papa
O’Neal’s face creased in thought but his expression remained wary. “Do I know
you?”
“Shit.” The
stranger shook his head in apparent chagrin. “How ’bout this: ‘Sometimes you
get the feathers, sometimes you get the bones.’ ”
Papa
O’Neal tilted his head sideways and his mind wandered down a lot of years of
memory. Then his eyes widened. “Harold?” he asked, incredulously.
“So
that’s the deal man. Got a new life, new identity and I’ve been workin’ for the
Man ever since. Just call me Lazarus,” he ended with a lopsided grin.
“You
work for the Company?” Mike asked, leaning back in his cowhide-covered chair.
“No,”
Harold said, with a shake of his head. “There really are groups nobody ever
talks about.” He suddenly leaned forward in his own chair. “You know
what fucked us, man. It was the bean counters in the States. The peaceniks and
the politicians in uniform that would never let us do our job the right way.
You know man, you did the job we were supposed to do!”
“Sure,
Harold,” said Mike Senior soothingly. “But that was then, man. Different world.
Different enemy.”
“No,”
said the visitor with a shake of the head. “The enemy’s still the same. The
rear-echelon bastards that sit in their air-conditioned offices and fuck
everything up for the poor bastards that have to do the job.”
“Harold,”
said Mike Senior, with a gesture at Cally. She was on the other side of the
room from him, behind the visitor’s chair, trying to work the puzzle box. He
was indicating that Harold might want to watch his language, but he also hoped
it would calm him down. He did calm down, but something else happened and it
snapped Mike’s attention down to earth like a bolt of lightning. A sixth sense
he had developed in more really bad places than he wanted to dwell on told him
that something had changed in his visitor. And he didn’t think it was for the
good.
“Look,
Mike,” said Harold, leaning forward and his voice dropping, “there’s a place
for you.” He nodded seriously, his eyes boring into the sergeant who had
trained him so many years before. “These are the people who know how to get the
job done. Sometimes there are problems, the REMFs that don’t know when to crap
or get off the pot. And sometimes they need a little lesson. You dig?”
“Harold,”
said Mike Senior, suddenly wishing that he knew what the hell was happening,
“this is my place. I’m old, man. Real old.”
“Don’
matter, man. So am I,” said the visitor, spreading his arms, “and look
at me! They want experienced people. And with the call-up they are getting
damned hard to find. Your name popped out of the computer and it was like a
sign from God.”
“I
was wondering why you looked so good. Rejuv?” asked O’Neal.
“We
got all the support anybody could want,” said Harold. He leaned forward and
swept his hands across in a negative gesture. “Whatever you want, we can get
it. No questions. Whatever you want.”
Mike
nodded seriously and finally realized where they were in the conversation. This
was not an offer that could be refused. Harold had told him that he was
involved with a group that was outside constitutional bounds, had access to
full Galactic medical technology and could obtain any weapon or support. The
fact that nobody had ever had an inkling that such a group existed simply
pointed out the fact that no one had ever talked about it. Ever.
Since
he had no intention of joining such a group, it would require that he never be
able to talk about it.
Leaving Cally
in the room was a deft touch on the part of his former pupil. Harold assumed,
perhaps correctly, that Mike would not want to kill him in front of the girl.
Harold, on the other hand, would have no such qualms. One of the problems with
being in the military is that you don’t always get to choose your acquaintances
or trainees. In the case of Harold, Mike Senior had always secretly despised
him. The man was the Compleat Sociopath. If he shot a five-year-old girl by
mistake the only thing he would feel was recoil.
This
left Mike Senior in a bit of a pickle. And it was one he wasn’t quite sure he
was going to survive. Harold had just as much experience as he did and he was
physiologically years younger. Since Harold knew that there was a chance Mike
Senior would turn down the job, he was undoubtedly armed and prepared to kill
Mike and Cally. He would also be prepared to ignore or end any distraction. If
Mike even offered to get up it would probably terminate the interview. With
prejudice.
The
only thing that he could do was play along. Of course, Harold would suspect
that he was playing along. That was what would make it so interesting.
“Well,”
said Papa O’Neal, steepling his fingers—the moment of thought had been a flash;
there should have been nothing to betray his sudden insight—“That’s an
interesting offer.” Just as he said it, his beeper went off. Again.
Harold
leaned forward so fast it made a cobra look slow and his hand moved towards his
side but Papa O’Neal simply sat very still and hoped for the best. When Harold
also froze Mike smiled thinly. “Beeper.”
Harold
laughed. “Huh. Yeah. Yours?” The assassin leaned forward with his hands on his
thighs.
The
weapon was either on his side or in a skeleton holster on the back. And who the
hell could be coming to call? Papa O’Neal lifted up his shirt, exposing the
beeper. The gesture looked totally normal as he pulled it off his left side. He
could only hope and pray that Harold still thought he was in the dark.
Harold’s
hands remained in sight on his thighs. Side then. Papa O’Neal made a show of
checking the beeper. “It’s my son,” he lied. “He’s on his way to rejoin his
unit.”
The
sensors showed another vehicle. This one had a heavy metal signature. Either a
large truck or a van with metal in it. The last time he had seen a signature
like that was when he and his buddies came back from Dahlonega after a weekend
shooting against the Rangers. It actually looked an awful lot like a van full
of door-kickers. Since he didn’t expect reinforcements, he had to assume that
it was friends of his visitor come to ensure the real orders were carried out.
“As
I said,” Papa O’Neal continued, “that’s a very interesting offer. Especially
the rejuv. That is what we’re talking about, right?”
“Yeah,”
said Harold relaxing ever so slightly. “That’s part of the package.”
“Well,
God knows I’ve done some wet work in my time . . .” he said when
Cally interrupted.
“Grandpa,
did Daddy give you the key to this puzzle box?”
“No,
honey,” he snapped, not taking his attention away from the visitor. At normal
speed the van would just about be clearing the woodline. They might unload
under cover and try to sneak up. Or they might barrel-ass right up to the door.
If the second, they would be here in less than a minute. Which meant that time
was about over for the conversation. “Figure it out yourself.”
“I’m
kind of in a hurry,” said Harold as if reading his mind. “I think I need a yes
or no. Now.” He leaned forward and his right hand drifted downward.
“Well,
I never did like the balance on that Galactic piece of shit,” Cally said to no
one in particular. There was a sound of a slide drawing back.
Mike
Senior closed his eyes just in time to block out the blood and brains from
Harold Locke’s head as an exploding .380 round from Cally’s Walther PPK opened
it up like a melon.
He
wiped his eyes, lunged to his feet and spit the soft-boiled-egg-like brains out
of his mouth. “Good work, girl, but we got company.”
“I
know,” she said. “That’s why I hurried. I was hoping he’d give some more away.
Bunker?”
“Yeah.”
He paused for just a moment as she carefully safed the small pistol and started
towards the command bunker. “How did you know?”
“Your
right hand twitches when you’ve got losing cards. That and you lied about the
beeper.” She didn’t mention her first reaction. Why she had started trying to
open the puzzle box right after they came in. It was because the man had looked
at her like Grandpa looked at a chicken he was about to harvest.
He
nodded his head and smiled. “I don’t think you learned that from your father,
did you?”
“No,”
she said, thumbing towards the door out in obvious emphasis. “But Dad didn’t
teach me how to play cards. Mom did. Let’s go.”
CHAPTER 54
Rabun County, GA,
United States Of America, Sol III
0325 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
The team leader’s
head came up at the crack of the pistol round and he shook it violently. There
were two protectees though. One was a young female and the profile on the
assassin did not make that a pretty picture. There was still a mission; the
question would be how to proceed.
He
waved for the point to stop and turned to the technical expert. That worthy
was deciphering the readout from the Galactic-supplied life sensors. He made a
motion for three humans, one terminated. One male, one female alive. Male and
female were moving.
The
team leader checked the location and gave the point hand signals to move to the
opposite side of the house and do a covert entry. He waited impatiently for
more intelligence.
Mike
Senior finished strapping Cally into the Kevlar battle armor and threw his own
on. Cally had pulled down her British 7.62 Bullpup and the sight of her with
pistol and rifle made him think of other ways to spell her name. The drying
blood flecked through her blonde hair was a sight to behold.
“You’re
a mess, Grandpa.”
“You
don’t look so hot yourself,” he snorted, fixing the last two straps in place
and picking up his MP-5. The friction sling rode smoothly and he hopped up and
down for a second to ensure there weren’t any rattles. “And the living room is
going to be a bitch to get cleaned up.”
“Sorry
about shooting him, then. Not.”
* * *
The
point monk checked the window for entry. He popped up a microcam and scanned
the bedroom beyond. It looked like a spare, bed made, no one around, no
personal items, no mess. Next he checked the window for tell-tales. It had
magnetic alarms but they were easily bypassed. There were motion sensors in the
room, however. He bypassed the window alarms, jimmied it and made a slow entry
into the room. As long as you moved very slowly, the sensors would not detect
you. If they were set to detect motion that slow, they would false-alarm on
every breath of air. He moved into the room, the camera on his shoulder
faithfully repeating the picture back to the team leader.
“They’re
in the downstairs guest bedroom,” said Papa O’Neal. The command bunker was
connected to the kitchen by a short tunnel. From it he had a commanding, and
camouflaged, view of the approaches. He also had readings from the sensors
scattered throughout the property and house. The sensors were not connected to
alarms, so they were set on the highest possible threshold. Detecting false
alarms from reality was something of an art. However, the bedroom also
contained a small sound mike and camera. Occasionally kinky but old habits die
hard.
“Who
is it?” asked Cally, sliding her Bullpup behind her back and checking the mine
controls. She got the fun part; her job was detonating them on Papa O’Neal’s
command. Well, she might let Papa O’Neal try a few. If he was nice.
“Hmm,
lemme see,” answered Mike Senior. “Black body armor. Black ski masks. Black
weapons. Black boots. Gee, Santa Claus?”
“Police?”
“No, they’d have
it across their backs in great big letters,” said Papa O’Neal, gesturing at the
picture of the point moving stealthily down the hallway. “They’re good, though.
Shame we’re gonna have to kill ’em.”
The
point froze at the entrance to the living room. The body slumped across the
rawhide chair was not one of the protectees. It appeared to be the target. He
began to relax out of his crouch.
“That’s
odd,” said Papa O’Neal.
“What?”
asked Cally, running a circuit check. The detonators were designed to take a
low-voltage test current without actually exploding. Only two circuits were
dead. Very good. And there was one claymore placed directly behind their
visitors. As soon as Papa O’Neal gave the word, one special operations team was
toast.
“He
just relaxed. If he was backup for Harold he should be more tense, not less.”
“What
else could he be?”
“I
don’t know. But it’s odd.”
The
team leader looked at the tech with a puzzled expression in his eyes. Then he
shrugged, picked up his cell phone and consulted a scrap of paper.
A
red light over the phone in the bunker began to blink. Papa O’Neal looked at it
with a puzzled expression and picked it up.
“Michael
O’Neal, Senior?” asked a faintly accented voice on the phone.
“Yes,”
said Papa O’Neal, warily.
“Are
you and Cally O’Neal in good condition?”
“Yes.”
“In
general, if I might ask, where are you?”
Mike
Senior chuckled evilly. “In a command bunker watching you and your point
scratching your heads. Smile for the cameras!”
“Ah,”
said the commando, cautiously. “We were ordered to respond to protect you from
one Harold Locke, an operative of . . . An operative who had
been given a contract on you. You are in good health?”
“Yes.”
“Oh.
That is good. We will withdraw then.”
“Okay,”
Papa O’Neal agreed warily. “You’ll understand if we don’t invite you to tea?”
There
was a dry chuckle. “Of course. Question: Do you want us to dispose of the body
or would you prefer to yourself?”
It
was a good question. If there was an investigation the body would be a mountain
of evidence pointing right at Cally. The fact that he was an assassin would not
even be worth bringing up in a trial. There was no proof.
The
question really was: Did he trust these people not only to dispose of the
evidence but to do so as perfectly as possible? In the end the answer surprised
him.
“Yeah.
Thanks. Come to tea some other time. With a few less friends.”
“God
be with you, Mr. O’Neal.”
On
that odd farewell the group broke into activity. The point opened the front
door of the house while three other black-clad troops slung their weapons and
trotted forward. Two vans pulled up within seconds and, as the four in black on
the inside bagged the body, another group in white exposure suits exited the
second van. These individuals lugged in a variety of materials, mostly cleaning
supplies and equipment, and began a thoroughgoing cleaning of the room.
Once
practically every scrap of blood and brain was cleaned up, they closed the
curtains to the room and doused the lights. Papa O’Neal could not determine
precisely what went on, but he had a pretty good idea. Many modern
investigation techniques involved materials that fluoresced or are visible only
under ultraviolet light. Undoubtedly the team was cleaning up these otherwise
invisible bits.
When
the lights came back on it was to reveal the last of the group exiting a
perfectly cleaned room. The only thing suspicious about it was that most living
rooms do not look like a factory clean room. The body bag had already
disappeared into the maw of the evidence van. Once both groups loaded up the
two vans pulled out without, as far as Papa O’Neal could determine, a single
word being exchanged. One of the white-suits had donned mufti and drove the
rent-a-car. From the time the point man entered the living room, less than an
hour had elapsed. The only face they saw was the white-suit and he was wearing
dark sunglasses and a beard.
“Damn,”
whispered Cally. “Who were those masked men?”
“I
dunno,” answered Papa O’Neal with a broad smile. “But they sure knew what they
were doing.” Fellow professionals were so hard to find.
CHAPTER 55
The Pentagon, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
0424 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
Jack Horner
stared at the map-screen and wondered what in hell he was supposed to do. The
roads out of the Arlington pocket were jammed with refugees. Turning the corps
around had thrown the whole evacuation plan into a cocked hat and it had yet to
recover. Although the interstates had been cleared of stalled vehicles, the
side roads had become so gridlocked that virtually no one could get on the
major arteries.
Most
of the evacuees had panicked when the Tenth Corps had been destroyed. They did
not understand that it would take the Posleen hours and hours to move around
the Occoquan Reservoir and that Ninth Corps was in the way. Quantico—which had
become the graveyard of the corps it once hosted—was a bare thirty minutes from
Arlington. Faced with a nonmoving traffic jam, many had turned off their cars
and started walking.
These vehicles
now created a nearly impassable obstacle to movement. Many of those on foot had
made it to the interstates where they were being picked up with buses. But many
were wandering aimlessly northward on back roads, imagining that the Posleen
were right behind them. These lost souls would eventually find their way to
the Potomac bridges and safety. But many would be caught on the wrong side. Too
many. The current guess was hundreds of thousands.
Normally,
in exercises, he would be sending in flying armored columns about now. Their
purpose would be to slow up and misdirect the Posleen while military police
backed by light armor would be rounding up, and in some cases driving, the
refugees.
Unfortunately
that would have been the task of either the Tenth Corps, which was no more, or
Ninth Corps, which was fading fast.
Part
of Eighth Corps, the One Hundred Fifth Infantry Division, had arrived in
northern D.C., but they were scattered hither and yon. It would take them a
while—quite a while if recent history was anything to judge by—to get all the
armored vehicles off the lowboys and the units assembled. And the idea of
flying columns with those troops was a joke. Three months before he had sent an
entire MP brigade from Fort Bragg to Fort Dix to put down a mutiny by the same
unit. They were just as likely to run back to New Jersey as throw themselves
between the Posleen and civilians.
And
then there were the landings. Over fourteen B-Decs had exited hyperspace in the
last twenty-four hours. Four had been totally destroyed by the remaining
fighters and frigates. But that had been at the cost of three frigates.
The
PDCs were still in their cleft fork. Designed to stop the landings, they were
unable to perform that function, instead being held back to stop liftoffs on
the part of the landers. Despite that, Europe had lost twelve of their total
of twenty Planetary Defense Centers. China had lost eight, America four.
But
the landings were occurring everywhere. There had even been one in Phoenix,
for Christ’s sake. With more Posleen coming in from God-knew-where, he could
not totally strip any area of its local defenders. But he needed to get troops
from somewhere.
He
knew that the maps and graphs were not reality, but they were all he had to
work with. The chart of Ninth Corps strength was dropping like a waterfall as
more and more Posleen charged into the gap between Lake Jackson and the
Occoquan. The icon of the Second of the Five-Fifty-Fifth was nearly to the
staging point behind Lake Jackson, but even a flank attack would hardly stop
the Posleen at this point. Hell, it might just point them to the way around. So
far they hadn’t tried that.
There
was only one mobile unit left at Indiantown Gap, the closest base to Arlington
that hadn’t been emptied. Harrisburg had a brigade of the Twenty-Eighth Mech to
defend the area. So. Time to dump out the tacklebox. And call a few people out
of hiding.
The
gentle rocking of the five-ton truck as it negotiated the stop-and-go traffic
of the interstate was at first maddening and then lulling. But Michael O’Neal
was heading to the sound of distant musketry as fast as he could.
Every
time a unit stopped for a rest or the truck he was riding on broke down he
hitched a ride with another unit. Usually the Fleet uniform alone would
guarantee a ride. Once he had traded on his name. Once it had been necessary to
get a higher chain of command involved. But it was slow going. He wasn’t
worried that the Posleen would go away; they were going to be around for weeks
at least. But he was worried about the company being thrown into battle with
Nightingale in command. It was his nightmare come true.
So
he was nearly asleep when the AID chirped.
“Incoming
call from General Horner.”
Mike
sighed and didn’t bother to open his eyes. “Accept.”
“Mike?”
“General.”
There
was a pause. “We tried.”
“I
know.”
Another
pause. “We’ve got a situation . . .”
“Refugees.”
“Yeah,”
the general sighed.
Mike
flicked his eyes open. At this point the AID could practically read his mind
and a hologram of the battlezone suddenly appeared in the troop compartment.
The soldiers who were awake stirred uneasily. Suddenly, without a word of
command from the Fleet Strike officer, a hologram of the battle over the
eastern United States was floating in the darkened interior of the truck. The
lights from the next truck in the convoy partially washed it out. But then the
AID polarized that area and created a shadow zone.
It
was as advanced as radio to an aborigine and just as alien. As superficially
sophisticated as the soldiers were, the technology was still stunning.
The
AID sketched out probable movement rates for the scattered evacuees in
Arlington. Then the time for the Posleen to reach them, assuming that the Ninth
Corps lasted as long as anticipated. Then it sketched in the best possible
movement time for the MI battalion. The three washes of color clearly missed
proper intersection.
“We’ll
be too late,” Mike said quietly. Everyone expected the cavalry, yellow flags
flying, to come rushing in at the last moment. Well, this time the cavalry was
just too far away and scattered to the winds. After all his careful
preparations, it was coming down to too little, too late.
“I’m
ordering the movement anyway. I’ve got a gut that the worst point is going to
be around the Fourteenth Street bridge.”
“Yeah,”
Mike nodded, “makes sense. It’s almost the last one in the line going east,
it’s a chokepoint and everybody knows where it is.” The bridge was overlooked
by Arlington Cemetery and led directly to the Lincoln Memorial.
“Yeah.
I’m expecting that once the refugees are in contact, that will be where the
biggest backup is. And the Third Infantry is planning on holding the south side
as long as they can.”
“Let
me guess.”
“Yeah,
the CO more or less said that the Posleen could have Arlington Heights over his
dead body.”
“And
he meant it literally.” The Old Guard was fanatical about Arlington. Much more
so than about any passing President or minor monuments. However, the unit was
primarily ceremonial and had virtually no heavy weapons. “Well, I suppose one
more stupid symbolic action won’t hurt any more than all the others.”
“He’s
our President, Captain O’Neal,” the general said quietly. The rebuke was clear
but Mike could tell the general’s heart wasn’t in it.
“Your
President,” Mike said just as quietly. “We renounce our citizenship when we
join the Fleet. Remember? Sir?”
The
statement was greeted by silence.
“Have
you told the battalion they’re moving, yet?” Mike asked, changing the subject.
“No,
I’m going to call Major Givens right after we get done.”
“I
need to be there, General.” Mike flicked the hologram away with a wave of his
hand and puffed out a breath of air. The fog from his breath was misty white in
the light from the following truck.
“Well,
I don’t see how, Captain.”
“Helicopter.”
“Are
you nuts! The Posleen’ll destroy it before you’re halfway to Indiantown Gap!
Hell, look at the ambush of Second batt!”
“Fluke,”
snapped Mike, pulling up the map again. This time he took command of the
display, tapping on vectors and assigning threat levels. “Shelly, cross-link
this to General Horner.”
At
those words, heard throughout the compartment, the troops realized who the
Fleet captain had been arguing with. Their heads ducked as if he were going to
be hit by lightning at any moment. Mike paid them no mind.
“We’re almost
to Winchester. Have a bird meet me there. Blackhawk, Kiowa, I don’t care.
We’ll stay low by slipping through the gap at Harper’s Ferry. I’ll intercept
the unit somewhere on Interstate 83.”
There
was silence on the other end as Horner studied the schematic. The hologram had
the plotted positions of Posleen and probable fields of fire. If an aircraft
stayed below one hundred feet, all the lines ended well short of the route he
had sketched in. “You’re assuming two things that are not true. One: that the
Posleen will not take off. If a lander lifts it throws this whole thing away.
Two: That there are no more landers coming in. We’ve had three landings in the
past hour.”
“And
if one is coming in, or lifts, the schematic changes. Shelly will keep it
continually updated. That’s what she’s for. We land if we have to until the
threat is past.”
“I
don’t like this, Mike. I feel it is an unnecessary risk of a vital asset.”
Mike
swallowed a lump in his throat. He considered Horner an alternate father but he
was never really sure what the general felt. That was about as good a
compliment as any son could want. “Were you talking about me, or the
helicopter?” he joked. “Never mind. I’m not vital, sir. But I do think that it
would be a good idea if I was in on this operation.”
Again
there was a long silence on the line. “I’ll get you the helicopter. I agree we
probably don’t have much time.”
CHAPTER 56
Brentsville, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
0446 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
“L-T,” Keren
hissed.
Lieutenant
Leper lurched awake, AIW in hand. Keren grabbed the barrel and pointed it
upward and away.
The
lieutenant shook his head a few times, then peered blearily at Keren. “What
time is it?” The inside of the Bradley was pitch black.
“Four
thirty, L-T. The ACS just got in. They’re assembling up behind us. The colonel,
he’d like to talk to you. I told him you was sleepin’ . . .”
Leper
snorted. Knowing Keren he’d done more than just tell the colonel. “It’s okay. I
was just back when we lost Three Track.”
“Yeah.
Like you said, L-T, we’re fine until we’re on charge zero.” Keren shuddered.
Mortar platoons aren’t ever supposed to see the enemy. Those that do
rarely survive the experience.
The
lieutenant lurched upward and automatically checked his AIW. He jacked a
grenade into the chamber, checked that both the rifle and grenade launcher were
on safe and scrambled across the scattered gear and sleeping bodies to the
troop hatch.
It
was black as pitch outside, the stars glittering in the clear sky. They added
nothing, however, to the illumination. Leper could hear the chuckle of Kettle
Run nearby. The run took a turn to the north as it approached the Occoquan
reservoir, then looped back. The remnants of the company were assembled in the
middle of the loop astride Brentsville Road.
He
regretted not grabbing a pair of night-vision goggles. The power had been
sundered to Manassas and the surrounding area, so the backscatter that was so
difficult to avoid, that contributed at least an erg of illumination on the
darkest night in the eastern United States, was entirely absent. He could
barely see his hand in front of his face.
He
took a step forward and his Kevlar ran into a metal wall.
Leper
could vaguely make out a looming presence. “Lieutenant Leper?” the apparition
asked.
“Yes,”
said the lieutenant, rubbing his forehead where the Kevlar helmet had gouged
him.
“Lieutenant
Colonel Bishop, Fleet Strike.”
“Yes,
sir,” said the tired lieutenant. Two hours sleep after all that they had been
through was simply not enough.
“What’s
the situation, Lieutenant?”
Leper
tried to digest the question and had a sudden urge to scream at the fresh,
technologically sophisticated officer. What’s the situation? The situation
is we’re all fucked! The word from Ninth Corps was that they couldn’t hold
out much longer. How anyone was going to retreat with the Posleen right at
their heels was a good question. It was going to be ten times as bad as
Occoquan. Then at least the Posleen had been scattered. In this case they would
be massed and right up the corps’s backside.
And
his units were on the wrong side of the Ninth Corps. Since they were guarding
the south flank, if the corps broke the Posleen would be swarming in behind
them. And that was just a matter of time. There was a pretty strong rumor that
MP units had been stationed behind the line with orders to shoot deserters.
None
of it would matter for much longer. When the levee broke, none of it would
matter a hill of beans.
“We’re
holding the south flank of the corps, sir.” Actually they were holding the
south flank of Lake Jackson. Lake Jackson itself was anchoring the south flank
of the corps. “The area has been quiet. We had one God King come this way with
one of their companies, but we took care of it without significant casualties.”
There
was less than a brigade in total holding the line. Most of them weren’t even
infantry. Clerks and cooks and the officers’ band. Everything that was left of
Tenth Corps less DivArty.
The
casualties when the Posleen company hit had been less than a platoon’s worth.
On the other hand, this was all that was left of a corps. There was some sort
of calculation there that he didn’t want to think about. Would that platoon be
the equivalent of a battalion to a corps? And if so, should they be considered
the same as the loss of a battalion? “So far so good?” he finished.
“I
understand that you were in the retreat from the interstate?” The question was
asked without any emotional overtones, but Leper felt Keren bristling behind
him.
“We
were the rear guard. Sir,” the lieutenant said in an absolute monotone.
“What
do you estimate the Posleen forces as?”
“Sir?”
“How
many of them are there, Lieutenant?” the colonel asked with iron patience.
The
exhausted officer goggled at him for a moment. “Is this a trick question?”
“No.”
The blank of faceted plasteel was nearly invisible and even if it weren’t there
was no way to see the officer’s expression. The question was nonsensical.
“Sir,
there are more than the stars in the sky, more than the blades of grass, more
than the trees in the forest. One good look is all it takes. They fill the
world from horizon to horizon and every fucking one of them is trying to kill
you!”
The
armor was still and silent for a pause. “So, how did you survive?”
Leper
blinked rapidly and thought about all the ones that didn’t. “I don’t know,” he
admitted. “I oughta be dead.” He closed his eyes and shook his head.
“We
lost—oh, Christ. Forget losing the company and the Old Man to the artillery. We
lost ’em like a river loses water! Sometimes I’d have fifty, sixty troops. The
next thing you know, we’d just stop for a second
to . . . to get a breather, to . . . to
reconsolidate, hell, to find out who the hell was hanging on the vehicles. And
then they’d come. And . . . and the next thing you
knew we were back on the road, running as fast as we could. And we’d have maybe
two squads. And that’d happen over and over.” His hand was over his eyes now
and he shook his head continuously.
“I
don’t know how many went through my hands, Colonel. I don’t know how many I
lost along the road. I don’t know how many we passed. Some of them just gave
up. Some of them were injured. Some of them were just tired of running. I don’t
know their names!” The lieutenant drew himself up and tried to clear his
eyes.
The
colonel reached up and removed his helmet. The solid pyramid of plasteel came
away with a sucking sound. A tap of a control and the suit began to glow a
faint blue, just enough to give some vision.
“Have
you been debriefed at all?” the senior officer asked in a gentle, surprised
voice.
“No,
sir,” Keren answered for the lieutenant when the officer just shook his head.
“When we rolled into Ninth Corps territory they got rid of us like we had the
plague. They just told us to come over here and get our shit together. And
don’t walk on the grass.”
The
colonel nodded his head at the answer. “Well, Lieutenant, I think you did just
fine.” The tone was firm and believable. The colonel put his hand on the
lieutenant’s shoulder. “Son, that was hell. I know. I’ve been in hell too.”
The
lieutenant looked up at the officer and took a deep, shuddering breath.
“My
company had a week-long firefight in Dak-To. We would lose a couple and then
get a resupply then lose them as often as not. I never knew who the hell was in
the holes. At the end of the whole thing the VC just melted back into the
jungle. I had fifteen left in the company that started the battle, including
me. I had worked my way through nearly two hundred troops in those weeks. I’d
use them like pouring water in a well. I didn’t recognize any of those names.
Nobody else in the company did either.”
“No
records, sir,” said the lieutenant, quietly.
“No.
And that will probably haunt you. But there is still a job to do. Are you gonna
do it?”
“Yes,
sir.”
“You
got observation posts out?”
“Yes,
sir. So far nothing except the one company.”
“Patrols?”
“No.
I’ve got one going out in a couple of hours. The Posleen have got to find this
edge sooner or later. But we only got finished digging in a couple of hours
ago. If I sent out a patrol right now, they’d go out a couple of hundred yards
and rack out.”
“All
right,” said the colonel. At least the lieutenant had a grasp on reality. “Just
as well you don’t have a patrol out there. We’re gonna pass through your lines
in about ten minutes. Then we’re gonna stroll on down Bristow Road and try to
take the Posleen like the monkey took the miller’s wife. It might work and it
might not. But there’s a chance that we’re gonna be coming back about as fast
as we went out. You gonna be here?”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Good.
Glad to hear it. How ’bout you, Keren?”
“Maybe,”
said the private. “Depends on who gets here first. If it’s the Posleen, you
better be ready to walk back to the mountains.”
“Fair
enough,” the colonel said and put his helmet back on. The blue glow of the
armor faded after a moment as he rolled his shoulders. “ ’Bout time to go, don’t
you think?”
* * *
Ardan’aath
snarled as yet another road to the north was bypassed. “Can we not turn yet?”
he raged. He pointed to the north with his plasma cannon, where the thunder of
artillery and rockets could be clearly heard. Beams of light and orange tracers
could be seen ascending into the sky. “There! There is where the battle
is!” He fired a spiteful plasma burst towards the distant battleline.
“Soon,”
soothed Kenallai. He glanced at his eson’antai. “Soon?”
“Soon,”
agreed the young Kessentai, fluffing his crest in thanks. “Up ahead is the
road. Arnata’dra has already turned up it.”
“Finally!”
snarled the older Kessentai. “The battle will be over before we can make this
stupid turn!”
“Ardan’aath,”
said Kenallai, “look you at the results of charging these thresh head on! There
are more oolt’ondai dead at the feet of these thresh than Po’os in the Swarm!”
Ardan’aath
fluffed his crest in anger but had to agree. The thrice-damned harvest of this
world was damnably capable at battle. He had finally reviewed the information
from Aradan 5, when no one was watching. The metal-clad thresh would be
formidable foes. He had begun to consider how to fight them and had a few
ideas. He hoped he would not be forced to test them.
It
was more than ten minutes. The Fleet Strike battalion had only gotten their
suits a month before. While the First of the Five-Fifty-Fifth averaged over a
thousand hours of suit time, most of Second Battalion had less than three
hundred hours. It took time for the officers to decipher the icons of their forces,
to set up the formation, to finalize briefings and recharge the suits before
going in harm’s way. They had been doing all of those things while the colonel
talked to the local commander. But it still took more than ten minutes.
In
the end, it took more time than they had.
As
the first scouts approached the Tenth Corps line, their sensors started to
scream.
“Colonel,”
said the S-3, traveling between the two lead companies and the reserve.
“See
it,” barked Bishop. He had two “up” companies in movement with the third
waiting to see if they ran into anything. If he had thought there were bad guys
out there it would be the other way around. “Stop Bravo and Charlie. Have
Charlie dig in with the Mech guys. Tell Bravo to cover Charlie until they’re
dug in. Send Alpha to the right to probe for a flank.”
It
was a normal out-of-the-book reaction of a combat veteran officer. But it was a
tactic for fighting humans, not Posleen.
* * *
The
scout’s eyes were flared wide to drink in every bit of luminance. The battle to
the north occasionally caused painful flares in his vision, but he paid it no
mind. He paid mind to few things, he was focused on the link between himself
and his god and the question of where the thresh were. He hungered for them,
for the approval of his god in the gathering and the harvest. Well down the
hierarchy was self-preservation or pain.
He
paused, dust-flaps lifting off his nostrils to scent the air. Behind him his
pack-brothers paused as well, scenting. The smell was an acrid mixture of chemicals
and organic respirations. He turned to look towards his god.
Arnata’dra
studied his readouts for a moment and then cross-linked them to Kenallurial.
The
Kessentai studied them for a moment and winced. “My edas’antai, we have a
problem.”
Kenallai
studied the readout for a moment and flared his crest. “Indeed.”
“We
could attempt to bypass them . . .”
“Gutless
babe . . .”
“Stop!”
Kenallai studied the readout again. The signatures were clearly the metal-clad
thresh and already they were extending their line. The next thing would be to
drive forward on his oolt’ondai. In addition they were supported by regular
troops lightly dug in. They appeared to be the warriors, thank the spirits of
the land, rather than those bastard military technicians. But there would still
be explosives and the ballistic weapons.
“No.
There is a time to maneuver and a time to strike. We must drive into the rear
of the thresh. Drive hard. If we maneuver around these thresh, the main body
will attempt a retreat. We will drive through these and destroy the resistance
in the pocket. The Net will recognize the worth and grant us extensions to our
fiefs.”
“Yes,
my edas’antai.”
“Ardan’aath.”
“My
oolt’ondar?”
“Destroy
them.”
Ardan’aath
had studied the reports from Barwhon and Diess. These threshkreen were
tricky and capable, more of a challenge in their way than the Po’oslenar in orna’adar.
But there were only three things present to fear. The ballistic weapons, the
fact that they dug like abat, and the metal-clad thresh.
The
only way to deal with the ballistic weapons was to close with the thresh. Once
his oolt’ondar was among the harvest, the ballistic weapons were forced to
cease fire. And, if he was among them, they could be dug out like the abat that
they were. The metal-clad thresh remained the only problem. However, they too
were vulnerable to the Posleen blades and, as usual, they were few. He could
overwhelm them with numbers, especially if he extended his line and
concentrated on them.
Everything
called for a wide front charge. It could not have been more perfect.
“Telaradan!
Forward! Assarnath! To the left. We shall eat their get! Forward! Spread out.
And kill the metal thresh first! Tel’enaa, fuscirto uut!”
“Dig
in!” The Charlie Company first sergeant was striding down the line of suits,
pushing them into position or juggling firepower. And giving a few hasty
lessons.
“No!
God dammit!” He yanked a cratering charge off the belt of the trooper who was
shoveling dirt with his armored gauntlets. The suits could move a massive
amount of dirt in a surprising hurry, but the digging charges were still
faster. “Use your foxhole charges!” the NCO snarled over the company push,
snatching another off a belt and slapping it into the gauntlet of a confused
trooper.
“Here
they come!” one of the outpost troops shouted and jumped out of his shallow
hole to try to make the security of the lines. He almost made it to safety
before his chest erupted in red. In the darkness a parachute flare floated
upward with a hiss. There was a pop overhead and the field in front of the
infantry company was lit like day. It was covered in centaurs.
The
first to fire was the Third platoon machine-gun post. The orange tracers
drifting lazily through the still night air towards the unexpected company
seemed to trigger a firestorm.
“Three
gun! Traverse flares. Preset five!” shouted Keren.
The
gun crew startled awake and stumbled to the gun. When the remnants of the Corps
were reassembled there were enough gun tracks to scatter them around. As a
reasonably intact unit, Alpha Mortars had received two orphan tracks to replace
their maintenance losses. They had also been offered an FDC track. Keren had
demurred. The Suburban was much more comfortable.
At
Keren’s suggestion the platoon had left their mortars set up to support the
company. Three gun’s mission was to fire flares and all that they had to do was
begin dropping rounds.
The
assistant gunner, the person who actually fires the mortar, had actually slept
curled around the cold metal of the weapon. At the cry from FDC she simply
rolled upward with a round in her hand. Before she was fully awake she had the
round in the tube and firing. It was a regular HE round instead of a flare, and
the setting of the gun sent it flying almost a mile downrange, behind the charging
Posleen. But it was the thought that counted.
The
next round was a flare.
Lieutenant
Leper ran forward towards the front-line CP. He was not only in charge of the
mortars, but of the company as well. That being the case he had completely
scrambled normal procedures. The mortars were well forward with his CP closer
to them than the line. He had planned on straightening things out in the
morning, but the Posleen hadn’t given him the time.
As
he reached the large hole scraped out of the Virginia loam, he got his first
clear view of the enemy and despaired. The company was in no shape to face that
mass; the Posleen must outnumber them a hundred to one. It looked like a full
Posleen brigade was charging them at a gallop.
He
dove into the hole and reached for the radio.
If there was one
thing that Keren had learned along the way, it was that there was no such thing
as too much information. Which was why he had one radio set to the company
frequency, another on the fire control frequency and two “off the books” radios
that he had picked up along the way set to battalion and brigade. So he was the
first person in the company to hear the lieutenant condemn them to death.
“Papa
One Five, this is November One Five, over.”
The
distant crack of railguns and the hammer of machine guns was echoed in the
transmission.
“November
One Five, this is Papa One Five, over.”
“Papa
One Five, we are in contact with approximately a regiment of Posleen. I do not
estimate that we will be able to hold them off, over.”
“Roger,
understood. ACS support is on the way. Over.”
“Papa,
they are already here. I still don’t estimate we’ll hold. The Posleen look
fresh and they are charging the line even as we’re talking. The ACS is spread
out and looks pretty confused. I don’t intend to do the bug out boogie, but I
don’t see us stoppin’ these guys, either. Tell corps to get ready to run. Over.”
“November
One Five. All of corps’s reserves are on the line. You are ordered to hold.
Over.”
“You’re
dreamin’, Papa. November out.”
“Tango Three Six, this is November One
Five, over.”
There
was a pause. The fire control center for the defense was busy; they were still
scrambling to replace the central fire net.
“Calling
unit say again callsign, over.”
“Tango
three six, this is November One Five. Final protective fire call, designation
One-One-Bravo. Posleen in close-contact. Final protective fire. Over.”
“November,
be advised we are tapped out for artillery at this time. We are in final
protective mode for the entire Ninth Corps, over.”
“Well,
if we get overrun you’re gonna have visitors pretty damn quick. So make up your
mind. Out.”
“All
guns!” yelled Keren, out the back of the Suburban. “Final Protective Fire!
Continuous fire!”
Specialist
Nick Warren crouched in his foxhole and tried to count kills. The foxhole had
been built for interlocking fire, with a mound of earth in front of it and the
firing slot angled out to the right at a forty-five degree angle. The idea was
to fire at everything from the side and not be shot at by the horses you were
shooting at. Which was fine except that the whole wall was being hammered by
railgun and shotgun rounds. Dirt drifted around him in streams as the pounding
fire tore apart the sandbags on the outer layer, then began to destroy the
packed dirt of the fill.
His
zone of fire was packed with horses. There were so many that he had stopped
bothering to aim. If he missed one the bullet was sure to hit the one behind.
He would run but he had done that once and knew what it brought. The horses
could run you down faster than you could escape. There was nothing to do but
kill them and keep killing them and hope it was enough. He had to keep them off
the other holes and hope that there were enough guys left to keep the horses
off his. He wished he’d saved some grenades, they’d be a treat. But he was out
of gun grenades and the hand kind both.
His
bolt flew back on an empty chamber and the plastic magazine dropped out. He was
patting his ammo pouches trying to find another magazine when he heard a sound
like a machete hitting a watermelon and looked over his shoulder.
The
other soldier in the foxhole was down, half her face torn away by the railgun
round that had finally punched through the wall of sandbags. He couldn’t even
remember her name, some chick from headquarters company. He had a moment of
shame at his first thought, which was joy that he could see she had two
magazines left. But he didn’t have much time to dwell on the shame. There was a
sudden shower of dirt, heavier than the earlier ones. He never even saw the
blade that clove into the back of his head, slicing through the Kevlar helmet,
bone and brain like butter.
There
just wasn’t enough concentrated firepower. Fighting Posleen had often been
described as trying to stop an avalanche with a fire hose. It only works if you
have enough fire hoses.
The
Posleen were on a narrow front, crossing an open beaten zone. They were, in
fact, a perfect target for a prepared veteran unit with backup or even an
intact, dug in, green ACS unit. But without massive artillery fire, without an
intact ACS battalion, without more troops and tangle-foot and barbwire and
mines, Ardan’aath drove his forces forward in a wild charge that overwhelmed
the defenders in bare minutes.
Bravo
Company of the ACS was the first to fall, left exposed on the flank of the
mechanized company. Their lines of silver lightning stretched out to the
charging Posleen and tore them apart like paper. The same carnage would have
shocked a human force into immobility. But there were over twelve thousand Posleen
charging down the narrow front and dozens of God Kings. And Posleen just don’t
stop.
The
Posleen focused on this danger first, striking the company with direct-fire.
The armor was usually proof against anything but a plasma cannon or an HVM. But
as the mass of fire pounded them, occasional three-millimeter rounds would find
a weakness. And there were over six hundred HVM launchers and nine hundred
heavy railguns in the force. Between those and the God Kings the exposed ACS
company was eliminated without killing more than five or six hundred of the
enemy.
The
dug-in forces fared better, but not so much that it mattered. The first to be
silenced was the partially dug-in Charlie Company as their grav-guns and Grim
Reapers were picked out for special attention by the heavy weapons of the
Posleen brigade. Charlie Company put up a hard fight but the whistling centaurs
drove forward against the wall of fire, piling up windrows of their dead in an
effort to close with the armored humans. It finally came down to hand-to-hand
as the Posleen reached the foxholes of the unit and overwhelmed it in a charge
with monomolecular blades.
In
the meantime the lighter railguns and shotguns of the Posleen normals
concentrated on the foxholes of the mechanized unit, in most cases hammering
them so hard they were unable to respond. Anyone who jumped out of a hole and
started to run was cut apart by massed fire. When the Posleen reached the
firing line it was all over. The forlorn troopers were butchered in place like
so many sheep. A few made it away in the confusion, but for all practical
purpose the unit had ceased to exist.
“We
cannot leave those metal thresh wandering around,” said Kenallurial, gesturing
at the display. Inside he was bitter with envy. He knew his worth, but a
successful te’naal charge like that one would be spoken of for a
thousand years. That it was his trickery and thought that brought them here
would be forgotten.
“Ardan’aath
will dispose of them in good time,” said Kenallai calmly. “Look at the thresh
run,” he continued, gesturing at the schematic. The remnants of the Tenth Corps
were pulling up stakes and backpedaling towards Manassas as fast as they could.
“Like abat from a corpse.”
“We
should press them,” said Kenallai. “We must not let them stop and build
defenses before the great prize to the north.”
“We
will, my eson’antai, we will,” the oolt’ondar said, fluffing his crest. “Don’t
be so envious.”
Kenallai
turned away at that insight, tapping the display to bring it wider. This was a
fine land, rich and with much booty to be won. There would be fine fiefs to be
had. If only the Net recognized his contributions.
In
the distance there was an end to the screaming and a fading sound of diesel
engines.
CHAPTER 57
Rabun County, GA,
United States of America, Sol III
0446 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
Cally rubbed the
orange solvent into the Cordura nylon, trying to get the last stains out. “I
wish those white-suits had stayed around long enough to clean this stuff.”
Papa
O’Neal chuckled, working a bit of bone out of a crevice. They had both taken
fast showers to get the bits of the late Harold Locke off, but the armor had
picked up quite a bit of evidence. Getting it cleaned up was a priority.
“Yeah,
well, I guess we’re just going to have to use a little elbow grease.” He took a
puff off his pipe and scrubbed at another spot of blood.
“Who
do you think they were, really?” she asked in a serious tone.
He
stopped looking for spots on the black cloth for a moment and leaned back. It
was a good question. “Honey, I don’t rightly know. They were obviously here to
save our bacon. Now, I’ve got a lot of friends in the business, but nobody that
could call up a team like that. And they knew Harold was coming to call. Now,
they might have figured on being able to cover things up so whoever sent him
didn’t figure out what happened. That’s more or less what happened. If the
question gets bandied around we can take quiet credit for it.
“But
that still begs the question of who sent ’em.”
She
nodded her head and went back to working, but he could tell from the expression
on her face she was thinking about something. “Penny for your thoughts,” he
said.
“I
think it was somebody that thought they owed Daddy a favor.”
He
started to open his mouth to dismiss the suggestion and stopped. Mike Junior
had told him about the present of the combat suit. At half a billion credits,
one of the suits was, to say the least, no small gift. Somebody who thought
they owed him a half-billion-credit suit might think they owed him a quick
response from a special actions team. Instead of dismissing the thought he
nodded his head in agreement. “Okay, I can buy that.”
She
nodded in turn and picked up the toothbrush as a sonic boom hit.
Both
of them looked upwards and cursed simultaneously.
“Oh,
fuck!” said Mike Senior.
“Batshit!”
echoed Cally.
Michael
O’Neal, Sr., looked at the wet, orange-scented armor in his hands and shook his
damp head. “What the hell else is going to go wrong today?” he asked with a
slightly hysterical laugh.
The
team leader pressed the fingers of his hand into his forehead, as if to press
in an idea. There were no safe houses nearby where the team could to go to
ground. Even if the lander did not land on them, the team would surely be
stopped, the vehicles might be commandeered by the local response teams. And
then the shit would well and truly hit the fan. Their hastily prepared covers
would not survive investigation.
There
was only one possible path to obscurity.
“Turn
around,” he snarled to the driver. The monk obeyed without a word, swerving
right and spinning the over-powered van into a fishtail. “Go to the O’Neal
house.” He pulled out his cell phone for the second time in an hour.
Papa O’Neal had
the local weather radio turned up loud as he and Cally battened down the
hatches. There was a protocol for a landing, one that they had not been able to
perform for their unexpected visitors. Shutters were closed across the
windows, even the ones that had cracked at the sonic boom. The horses were
brought into the barn. The cows could fend for themselves. Circuits were
rechecked, ammunition was laid out, spare weapons were set up to hand.
The
phone ringing was almost drowned out by the radio, the automated voice now
chanting a mantra of landing warnings. But Cally heard it and ran to pick it
up.
“Hello?”
she said.
“Miss
Cally O’Neal?” asked a faintly accented voice.
“Yes.”
“May
I speak to Mr. Michael O’Neal, Senior?”
“May
I ask who’s calling?”
“Recent
visitors,” said the voice with a note of faint humor.
“Oh.
Hang on.” She ran outside and clamped the cordless phone against her side. “Granpa!”
she shouted.
He
looked up, startled, from where he was fixing one of the defective firing
circuits.
She
waved the phone overhead vigorously. “He’ll be here in a second,” she said to
the “recent visitor.”
There
was a pause as they waited for the senior O’Neal to trot up the hill. Cally
could hear a background of a growling engine. Their visitors appeared to be in
a hurry.
“Might
I ask a question?” asked the accented voice in the interim.
“Sure.”
“How
to say it? The other visitor. He appeared to be . . .”
“Me.”
“Ah.
That would explain it.” The voice sounded somehow satisfied with the answer.
“Here’s
Grandpa. Bye.”
She
covered the mouthpiece again and smiled. “Our visitors seem to be coming back
to tea.”
“Oh,
shit,” said O’Neal, Sr., shaking his head. “Be careful what you ask for.”
“Hello?”
“Mr.
O’Neal?”
“Speaking.”
“This
is one of your recent visitors. We find ourselves somewhat at a
disadvantage . . .”
“Come
ahead. Put the vehicles in the garage. I’ll move the truck out so there’s room.
And hurry. If our friends get here before you I’m activating the minefield and
you’re on your own.”
“Of
course. We’re nearly there.”
In
the distance there was a thump of artillery and a rattle of machine-gun fire.
The Posleen lander had managed to land squarely between the Fifty-Third
Infantry, defending Rabun Gap, and the main positions of the supporting
Tennessee Volunteers. And only two miles from the entrance to the O’Neal
valley. In all likelihood they would bypass the small entrance to the valley.
The turn was deliberately obscure.
On
the other hand, the way the day had been going . . .
Papa
O’Neal rotated a shoulder to get the armor seated better. Either it had picked
up ten pounds of water in the cleaning, or he was getting too old for this
shit. He smiled at the black-masked commando coming up the walkway and held out
his hand. “Mike O’Neal. And you are? I didn’t quite catch the name before.”
“Call
me Raphael,” said the team leader. He took the proffered hand as his team
hurried up behind him. The “white-suits” were following them. Although the
black-suited commandos were armed, the white-suits were unarmed and without
armor.
“You
want to outfit them?” asked Papa O’Neal, gesturing with his chin at the
white-suits.
“It
would be fairly pointless,” said “Raphael.” “I doubt they could hit the side of
a mountain. But if you have some little hidey-hole it would be perfect.”
“Well,
can’t say as I’m sorry you came back,” admitted Papa O’Neal. “We can do with
the extra firepower if the Posleen come up here.” He gestured towards the house
and started walking.
“I
take comfort in the fact that we are not the only ones assailed by these
visitors,” said the visitor dryly. “Surely we are not forsaken by God if they
also land upon the Muslim.”
Lieutenant
Mashood Farmazan sighed as he gazed down at the enemy host through the ancient
Zeiss binoculars. The Posleen group was a remnant of the mass that had
descended upon Turkmenistan. The force had slashed through the impoverished country,
spreading out from their landing around devastated Chardzhou and destroying
every unit thrown against them. The force that was marching towards the Iranian
border was still tens of thousands strong and had cut a bloody swath through
Bagram-Ali and Mary following the Old Silk Road. Fellow forces had leveled
ancient Buchara and now pressed storied Tashkent. This force was presumably
headed for Teheran and the riches it hoarded.
He
would like to say that this was as far as they were going. The terrain at this
pass through the Koppeh Dagh was very favorable for stopping their advance.
However, he was the commander and sole officer of the single understrength
battalion that now stood between the Posleen and the Fars plateau.
The
unit was part of the First Armored Division, the Immortals. The division traced
its roots to the fabled days of the Medes and Cyrus. It had, however, fallen
upon hard times since the days of the Shah. The current regime seemed to
question the integrity of a unit that traced its genesis to Zoroaster.
But
the predecessors of the division had blooded their teeth repeatedly on
barbarian invaders in these very mountains. Smart barbarians took the long way
around through Pulichatum and up the flank of the Dasht-e-Kavir to capture
Mashad. Or to the north to the passes along the Caspian. Only very stupid
barbarians came through the little village of Bajgiran. Up through the
serpentine Bajgiran Pass. Through the easily defended pass.
Since
this was a well-known fact, the majority of the division, along with two other
regular infantry divisions, was assembled outside Mashad. Reserve divisions and
the Islamic Guard were assembling around Gorgan. Mazandaran might be lost but
the enemy would be stopped well short of Quramshar.
The
only unit available to defend the inconsequential Bajgiran pass was a
“battalion” of clap-trap M-60s from the days of the Shah. The total number of
working tanks was less than a company and those were held together with baling
wire. And a single unprepossessing, politically unconnected, overly
intellectual officer to command what was a battalion in name only. Such were
the defenders of Bajgiran.
The
village nestled in the high mountain valley behind him. A typical village of
the uplands, the green winter rye was just starting to sprout on the fields and
a stream chuckled between the fields and a large stand of poplars. The village
itself was a huddle of ancient mud and brick houses nestled at the base of the
soaring gray mountains, with a few more modern structures scattered among them.
Even these dated back to the heydays of the ’70s. Nothing much ever changed in
the upland villages.
Roads
were paved or cobbled, then faded back into dirt tracks. Empires waxed and
waned, power structures rose and fell in distant Teheran or Isfahan or
Tashkent, whichever owned them at the time. But the muezzin called the faithful
to prayer five times a day, regardless. And the goats ate the sparse grasses of
the mountains, regardless. And the snows of winter came, regardless. And the
occasional invader came through, regardless. Then the fields would be uprooted
by battle until a new tax collector was appointed. And life, for most, would go
on.
Lieutenant
Farmazan had had the most difficult time persuading the local mullah that such
was not the case with this invader. He had shown the old man pictures from
distant stars. They had been dismissed as fairy tales. He had shown him the
edicts of the revolutionary counsel, requiring evacuation in the face of the
oncoming horde. They had been dismissed with a long exposition on the Koran and
the inconsequence of mortal rulers. He had shown him videos from distant
America where battles ranged on land, air and sea. A well-known place of
perfidy was the response. Such could only be expected in such a Gomorrah.
Finally, nearly tearing his hair out, the lieutenant had invoked the demon
Tamerlane.
At
this dread name the stern old mullah had blanched. The Mongol invader had
reduced the fabled Aryan empire of old to a shadow of its former self, killing
every single lord, leader, official or member of the intelligentsia. The only
Persians that were left after Tamerlane swept through the country were the
peasants. And most of them had been killed or enslaved.
After hearing
further descriptions and having the similarities pointed out, the mullah
relented. With histrionic wailing and gnashing of teeth he had begun chivvying
the poor farmers and artisans of the remote town out of their houses and down
the long road towards distant Mashad. The last forlorn figure was still
visible at the final turn of the plateau as the terrible host on the plains
hove into view.
The
lieutenant had been able to scratch up a few artillery pieces and some rounds
to go with them. The artillery was laughable, mostly ancient 105mm cannons. The
guns were dated at the time of the last Pahlavi. They harked back to lend-lease
from the United States during World War II. Along with them were some
dilapidated British five-pounders. The sturdy cannon were the mainstay of
British artillery for decades but were now so antiquated that most countries
considered them museum pieces. None of the weapons would be allowed in any real
army. The tubes were practically worn to bare metal and the trunnions could
crack at any moment.
With
this scratch force of half-trained conscripts, antiquated weapons, limited
ammunition and short rations he was supposed to stop an alien army that had cut
through half a dozen Turkmen brigades. He hoped that they might turn to the
north where the remnant of the Turkmen army was digging in to defend Ashkabad.
They might, but somehow he doubted it. His luck just didn’t seem to be falling
that way.
He
supposed it could be worse, although how he was unsure. As he thought that,
fine flakes of snow began to fall on the arid, gray, rock-strewn mountains. He
sighed. Was there anyone in the world more accursed than he?
Pham
Mi shook his head and took the rifle out of the young recruit’s hand. He
quickly disassembled the venerable AK-47 and shook his head. The militia
recruit hung his head in shame as the veteran pointed to the rust on the bolt.
“Stupid
child,” snapped the scarred Pham. He hit the young man on the head with the
extracted bolt. “You may wish to die, but your comrades wish to live. Clean
this, then join the women digging the positions.”
It had been years since Pham had fired a shot
in anger. Many, many years. He had not been in the Democratic Army during either
the defense against China or the incursion into Cambodia. However, as the
leader of the People’s Militia for his village it was his responsibility to
slow the advancing enemy as much as possible. The leadership did not expect him
to stop them. However, the actions of all the aroused People’s Militias would
definitely hamper the enemy. They had hamstrung the enemies of the People again
and again. This was their thousand-year history. And this day would be no
different.
A
hundred women from the village were working on the slit trenches and bunkers
while the men of the militia worked on their weapons and equipment. He had to
snort at that. Most of the weapons were antiques, relics of the great struggle
against the French and the Yankees. The equipment, however—the boots,
backpacks, ammunition harnesses and uniforms—were all American.
The
equipment was used, assuredly, and much of the material in the crates and
crates the militia received was damaged beyond repair. There was much,
however, that was not. Only the Americans would be so spendthrift as to throw
away perfectly good equipment. And only the Americans would be so strange as to
give it to a former enemy for free.
In
addition, there were several crates of excellent American mines. The weapons
were familiar as an old friend; he had cut his teeth in the militia removing
such from the American lines for later reuse. This was actually the first time
he had seen them packaged for shipping and he marveled at the interlaced
packaging. The Americans apparently expected them to be shipped in a hurricane.
With
the weapons, ammunition, equipment and, especially, claymores and “Bouncing
Bettys” the People’s Militia would seriously sting the enemy. The force from
the small-scale landing would undoubtedly make it past the large-scale ambush.
And, despite the rhetoric of the local commissar, they would take Dak Tho. But
the militia would continue to sting them. And sting. Until they were no more.
It was the least they could do. America had its own problems; they would not be
coming to help. Humorous as that would be. To wish for a battalion of the
“puking chicken” soldiers to drop from the sky. Truly humorous.
“Oh,
this is truly humorous!” snapped Sharon O’Neal.
“What’ve
you got, mum?” asked Michaels over the radio.
Sharon
shook her head inside the bubble helmet of the battle suit and snarled, “The
clamps on Number Four launcher are bent!”
The
fast frigates had never been designed for war. But human ingenuity had managed
to work around some of the problems. The answer in this case was external
Missile/Launch Pod Assembly systems for antimatter armed and driven missiles;
the frigates could fit six of the big box launchers, each of which stored four
missiles. However, because the frigates also lacked storage space, there was
only room for two extra M/LPAs, and attaching them meant that a team had to go
out of the ship, presumably in the midst of a battle.
Despite
careful husbanding of the weapons, Captain Weston had finally used up all
twenty-four missiles. Although there were still occasional emergences, she had
determined that it was worth the risk to try attaching the spare stores. Which
was why Sharon, two human techs and an Indowy were EVA with a box launcher.
And a warped clamp.
Michaels
studied the picture of the clamp in the monitor. “We’ve got a spare that will
work, mum.”
“No,”
snapped Commander O’Neal. “We’ll shift to Number Five.”
“We
lost the feed to Five, mum,” Michaels reminded her.
Sharon
shook her head and snarled at the tiredness that was clouding her thinking.
Even with the near miraculous Provigil, combat fatigue crept up on you. She
had to remind herself from time to time that she wasn’t functioning at top
form, even if she thought she was.
“We
reloaded Three,” she said. “Two and Six are gone.” The blast from the Posleen
nuke had been too close. It was probably what had done the damage to the
current launcher. If it had exploded forward of the ship, where the deflector
screen still was not fixed, instead of under it, the entire crew would already
be talking to the angels.
“And
we’re getting intermittent faults from Three, mum,” Michaels finished. “I think
it’s repair the bloody thing or go with one launcher.”
Sharon
nodded. She knew her preference but it was really a decision for the captain.
As long as they were EVA, the team was sitting ducks. “Captain Weston?” she
asked, knowing the AID would switch channels.
“I
was listening,” answered Weston, her voice raspy from hours of giving commands.
Sharon winced at the fatigue in the officer’s voice. They all were on a thin
string. “We need all the launchers, Commander. Sorry.”
“That’s
fine, ma’am,” answered Sharon. “That was my call as well. Bosun?”
“I’ll
break the clamps out of stores, mum.”
“We’ll
get started on getting these removed.” She shook her head again. Working EVA
was hard under any condition; working EVA with the specter of suddenly being a
target was for the birds.
She
turned to the Indowy technician, to ask his help in removing the device, but
stopped as her eyes widened.
It
was a sight she never expected to see with her naked eyes, and one she expected
she would never see again, as the Posleen Battle Dodecahedron translated out of
hyperspace. The tear in reality caused localized energy buildups that caused
distortion of the stars behind it, so the ship seemed to almost appear out of
“cloak,” with a ripple like water. The surface of the ship sparkled for a
moment more with static electricity discharges and then it was there,
fully emerged and seemingly close enough to touch.
“Emergence,”
yelled the sensor tech, startled out of a fatigued half doze. “Angle
two-nine-four, mark five!” His eyes bulged at the distance reading. “Four
thousand meters!”
“Lock-on,”
called Tactical, the weapons tracking lidar and sub-space detectors locking
onto the gigantic signal.
“Fire,”
snapped Captain Weston, automatically. Then her eyes flew wide open. “Belay
that order!”
But
it was an eternity too late. The weapons tech had been on duty for eighteen
straight hours and fire orders were a reaction that bypassed the brain. His
thumb had already flipped up the safety cover and depressed the switch.
A
pyrotechnic gas generator fired as the clamps holding the missile flew open.
The gas pushed the eighteen-foot weapon far enough away from the ship that it
was safe for it to kick in its inertial thrusters and antimatter conversion
rocket.
Safe
for the ship. But not safe for the weapon installation team. Or the pod of
antimatter missiles they were installing.
CHAPTER 58
The White House,
Washington, DC, United States of America, Sol III
0526 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
“Mr. President,
it’s time to leave,” said the chief of the Secret Service Detail.
Thomas
Edwards stared at the view-screen on the wall of the Situation Room. The
occasional flickers of red across Fairfax County were getting closer and closer
to the Fairfax Parkway. A solid bar represented the advancing Posleen chasing
the remnants of Ninth and Tenth Corps up U.S. 28. He assumed that once they
reached U.S. 29 and I-66 they would turn east towards D.C. and the nearest
bridges. Unless the scattered forces could outrun the Posleen to the bridges,
none of them would survive.
He
had watched Monsoon Thunder. He knew all about retreats under fire. And
ignominious defeat. He had been sure that those well-supplied and prepared
corps could face the Posleen and live. All of his advisors had been sure. And
he and they had been wrong. Completely and totally wrong. And it had led to the
worst military disaster in American history.
And
that was not the worst of it.
The
view-screen also showed that the roads were packed with refugees. Most of them
were in Alexandria or almost across the Potomac, but the distance between them
and the enemy was reducing on a minute-by-minute basis. Soon the first reports
of refugee columns overrun by the Posleen would come in. And he could do
nothing about it.
“I’m
sorry,” he whispered to himself.
“Shit
happens, Mr. President,” said an unexpected voice.
The
President looked at the doorway. The Secret Service chief was accompanied by
Marine Captain Hadcraft, commander of the Guard Force. The hulking combat armor
seemed totally out of place in the White House.
“Shit
like this doesn’t happen,” snapped the President. “Not here. Not to us.”
“What?
You thought because this was Earth it would be different?” asked the
captain with a faint note of scorn. “Well, welcome to our world, sir.”
The President
turned his chair to look fully at the Marine, who was being glared at by the
Detail chief. Since the Marines were really loaners from the Fleet, there was
a certain amount of friction between them and the Secret Service, friction
that contradicted tradition.
The
Marines had protected the American President since the days of John Adams. They
had a longer and deeper tradition of it than even the Secret Service. But the
Service had always treated them as the hired help. It was the Marines who held
the perimeters while the Service took the close-in Protection detail.
With
the splitting of the Marines to the Fleet, the Detail had assumed that they
would take over full responsibility for Presidential protection. Instead,
personnel were rotated out of Fleet and detailed to the Presidential Protection
Unit. And that created two rifts between the Detail and the Marines. The first
had to do with cost and the second with divided loyalties.
American
ACS personnel who had distinguished themselves in combat on Barwhon and Diess
and had good records could apply for placement to the PPU. The cycle was two
years and it was, blessedly, out of combat.
On
acceptance, the troopers would be sent, along with their suits, back to Earth.
After a brief “refresher” course at Parris Island, they were sworn in as United
States Marines, outfitted with new Marine Dress Blues and sent to D.C.
Then
they could chase the girls, or boys as the case might be, turn their noses up
at the garritroopers of the Old Guard and generally start to decompress.
However,
they were still Fleet personnel. The suits and personnel were actually on loan
from the Fleet. And the Federation did not cut the United States any slack on
the cost. The reason that the American President, of all the chief officers in
the world, was the only one that had a full company of guardian ACS was that
they were horrendously expensive. The suits cost nearly a half billion credits
apiece and were amortized by the Darhel over twenty years. Add to that the inflated
Fleet Strike salary levels and the monthly cost for the company was nearly as
much as a division of regular troops.
Then there was
the problem of divided loyalty. The Fleet did not in fact require a person to
renounce their citizenship, but had a strong sentiment against nationalism. And
Fleet oaths were overriding. Under the laws of the Federation, the Marines were
still under Fleet orders and answered only to the Fleet, just like any other
ACS unit.
The
Marines knew better. Some of them had applied to get away from Barwhon, where
the hell of battle in the swamp ate away at the soul day by day. But most were
there because they were, at heart, Americans and proud to defend the country’s
chief executive. But the incredible cost of the unit and its ambiguous loyalty
was a cancer that ate at the Detail.
The
President thought about all of that as he contemplated the Marine captain. The
captain was the holder of the Silver Star and the Fleet Cross. The Star was an
award retained by the Fleet in deference to the heavy American influence. The
Cross was the equivalent of the Distinguished Service Cross.
No
one had been so openly scornful of him in months. It just didn’t happen to a
President. On the other hand, this was a Marine who had “seen the elephant”. He
was entitled.
“Yeah,”
husked the President. His smooth, well-trained voice was gone after hours of
talking. He had been awake for nearly thirty-six hours and felt like a
week-dead corpse. “Yeah,” he repeated, clearing his throat. “I did. Everybody
told me that the terrain and the situation was right. It was just a matter of
trying.”
The
suits, in deference to their position, displayed the seal of the President when
in noncombat mode. But with the faceted helmet on, a seal revealed no emotion.
The only hint was in the tone. “As I said, welcome to our world, Mr. President.
We come back here to “The World” and listen to the commentators and bunker
generals talk about how ‘mobile warfare’ and ‘focal terrain’ will defeat the
Posleen. And we laugh. And get drunk.
“ACS
troopers get drunk and stoned a lot, Mr. President. ’Cause we’re always the
ones who clean up the battlefields after the generals fuck us. And after all
the fucked-up calls on Barwhon, this one takes the cake.”
President
Edwards held a hand up to the Detail chief, who was about to explode. “So. What
do you think I should do? Resign?”
“No,”
said Hadcraft in a firm tone. “Running doesn’t get you anything but a blade in
the back. Another lesson of Barwhon. If you have to, you have to. But for what
it’s worth, I think you should stay. And I’ll say that in public. But you’d
better learn fast. This kind of mistake can only happen once.”
The
President nodded his head. “So it’s time to leave?”
“Yes,
Mr. President,” said the Detail chief, with a final glare at the Marine.
“Where
are we going?” asked the chief executive disinterestedly.
“Camp
David, Mr. President,” said the Detail chief.
“But
there’s a teensy problem,” noted the Marine. There was a note of grim humor in
his voice.
“We
can’t stay here. Because of all the bridges, General Horner won’t guarantee
that there won’t be a crossing. But we’ve had landings all over, Mr.
President,” noted the Detail chief with a harried sigh. “We just had another
one in Pennsylvania. So, I don’t feel that moving you is absolutely secure.”
“And
don’t forget,” noted the captain in a wry voice. “There’s a division between
here and there. And some of them might not be as forgiving of presidential
errors as I am.”
The
President held up his hand again to the Detail chief. “So, what’s the answer?”
“Put
you in a suit,” answered Hadcraft.
The
President blinked rapidly in surprise. “I thought that only one person could
wear a suit.”
“Well,”
said the Marine, turning his hands palm up. “There’s a long story there.”
“Make
it short,” said the President.
“Okay,”
sighed the captain. He walked over and sat on the edge of the conference table
without asking permission. The President noted that crumbs from the secretary
of defense’s last meal danced off the table top and hung momentarily in the
air. He finally realized that the suit’s antigravity system must have activated
to reduce the impact of the half-ton suit on the relatively fragile table.
“The
first thing is, suits are fitted to a person,” said the captain. “And once
they’ve been ‘hardened’ to that shape, it takes an act of God, or at least an
Indowy master-craftsman, to get ’em changed. That’s why we try to make sure
that people are gonna stay generally the same shape before we fit ’em. You can
change slowly over time, that’s okay. The suit will adjust itself to a
slow change. But sudden weight gain is really bad. So is loss. The underlayer
can expand and contract itself a fair amount, though, so generally we’re okay.
“But
somebody can put on another person’s suit. If they are generally the same
shape.”
“I
take it that I’m generally the same shape as someone in the Unit?” asked the
President, dryly.
The
suit was silent for a moment. The President was sure that if he could see the
face of the officer it would show a certain amount of chagrin.
“It’s
not something that we talk about, sir,” Hadcraft continued, reluctantly then
stopped.
“What?”
The
suit finally did the palm-up gesture again. The President realized that it
might be the only gesture open to a combat suit user. “More than half of the
Unit is chosen on the basis of the physiology of the sitting President. We always
realized that if the shit hit the fan we’d want the protectee in armor.”
“Oh.”
The President looked at the Detail chief, who was trying hard to hide a stunned
expression. “Well, Agent Rohrbach?”
The
Secret Service officer shook his head. “You guys planned this?”
“Hey,
Agent,” said the Marine with a grim chuckle, “ ‘expect victory and plan
for defeat’ is the only way to survive on Barwhon. So, yeah, we planned
this. Believe it or not we take our responsibility to the Pres very Goddamn
seriously.”
The
suit did not change position an iota, but something told the Secret Service
agent he was being regarded. He nodded in acceptance of that important point.
“Anyway,”
continued the Marine after a moment, “we’ve got an open suit. Sergeant Martinez
was on leave and won’t make it back anytime soon. Home of record is Los
Angeles.”
“I
take it that Sergeant Martinez is my size,” said the slight President with a
chuckle.
“Yeah,”
answered the captain. “That ain’t the other problem.”
“So
what is the other problem?”
“Well,
there’s two more. One major and the other minor.”
“Tell
me the major first,” said Rohrbach, humorlessly.
“Okay.
The way these things work is that they ‘read’ our nervous signals. It generally
takes about thirty hours for them to get fully worked in. And the program that
drives the pseudonerves is an autonomous AID that picks up not only our neural
signals but also our ‘personality.’ And it’s built off of a completely
different algorithm than the AID’s,” the Marine continued, pointing at the
President’s AID on the desktop. “So the ‘gestalt’ is capable of taking over
control of the suit if the human inside is injured and doing all sorts of
things that an AID would be constrained against. Like, surgery, combat, all
sorts of things.”
“Hold
it,” said the Detail chief. “You mean there’s a self-directing computer in
there with some sort of ‘personality’? How is it going to react to the
President being in there?”
“We
don’t know how it’s going to react,” admitted the Unit commander.
“No,”
snapped the Detail chief. “No way!”
“What,”
asked Hadcraft in a tired, cynical voice, “you want to truck him through a
landing in one of your fuckin’ Suburbans?”
“Wait,”
said the President. “Just stop. Captain, can we . . . talk
to this personality? Tell it what’s happening? Reason with it?”
“Yes,
probably and I don’t know. You see, we don’t even notice the gestalt. The thing
is us. Do you carry on a conversation with your spleen?” he asked
rhetorically.
“So
you’re going to try to talk to it before I try it on?”
“Yes,
sir. And if we think it’s too dangerous, we won’t proceed,” he continued, more
to the Detail chief than to the President.
The
President held up his hand to forestall the protest of the Detail chief and
nodded his head. “Okay, we’ll try it. I agree that wandering around in a
Suburban given the situation is not a good idea. You mentioned there was one
more minor problem?”
“Uh,
yeah,” said the Marine, with a chagrined tone.
Roselita
Martinez was apparently a very angry woman. If there was such a thing as ESP,
President Edwards was experiencing it. The rage of the suit transmitted up a
link that was supposed to be unnoticeable two-way communication. The reason for
the gestalt’s rage was ambiguous. It missed its proper user. It hated Posleen.
It hated “brass” and had one in its belly. But it loved the protectee. It
adored the protectee. It had to protect the protectee. It was very confused. It
was very angry. It was very, very angry.
“Mr.
President,” said the captain. The voice sounded odd, incredibly crisp and
relieved of all background noise by the transmission technology.
The
President tried to turn his head against the enveloping jelly in the helmet. He
could barely move against it, but the viewpoint of the helmet shifted wildly as
he struggled against the Jell-O. The way it flew around was dizzying.
“Mr.
President,” said the captain again, grabbing the suit and turning it. The
President finally got the viewpoint settled down and focused on the officer.
The view was cluttered by dozens of indecipherable readouts. “Just keep looking
forward and walk carefully. If the viewpoint starts shifting all over just look
forward and close your eyes.”
“There’s
all sorts of readouts,” the President said, closing his eyes as the viewpoint
started to swivel again.
“AID,
tell the suit to clear the view and reduce sensitivity to view shift by fifty
percent,” said the captain. “Sir, we don’t have time to get you trained to the
suit. We have to leave.”
“Okay,”
said the President, fighting against the waves of anger flooding through him.
He took a deep breath. “Okay, let’s go.” He started to shake his head and was
stopped by the gel of the underlayer. The viewpoint nonetheless shifted side to
side. How anyone got used to this insane device was a mystery to him.
CHAPTER 59
Near Harper’s
Ferry, VA, United States of America, Sol III
0546 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
“How the hell do
you guys get used to this?” asked Captain O’Neal, fighting down the nausea as
the OH-58 Kiowa banked past Harper’s Ferry and dropped down to follow
Interstate 70 towards Baltimore. The road was packed with military vehicles,
most of them at a standstill.
“Get
used to what?” asked the pilot, keeping a close eye out for wires. The
requirement to stay below one hundred feet was nerve wracking. You never knew
where some stupid electric company was going to stick their lines. And half the
time it seemed like they weren’t on the damn chart.
“Never
mind,” muttered Mike, wishing he was back in a suit. Even the interface using a
set of Milspecs was limited. He craved the total immersion of the suit like the
drug it was. But he had other things to worry about right now.
He
leaned back in the seat of the small helicopter and let the information flowing
from the Virtual Reality glasses sink in. The interstates were completely
overloaded, as were the side streets. But the mission was to get the battalion
to D.C. before the Posleen. There seemed to be no way, but that was an
illusion.
Back
under the hammer of necessity, doubts and fears started to fall away.
“Impossible” was a word that left his vocabulary as the information started
flooding through his synapses. The Posleen had torn his world apart and ended
the Golden Age he had grown up in. Such a species would not be permitted to continue
to live, breathe and breed. Earth was their last stop. He nodded his head as
the final piece of the plan fell into place and keyed the AID.
“Shelly,
get me Major Givens.” It was time to start the dance.
Bob
Givens was an experienced officer. Therefore, he knew that what he was in the
grip of was a classic military disaster, not a nightmare. There was a simple
difference. You woke up from nightmares.
“I
know, Sergeant Clarke. I agree,” he said to the battalion operations NCO. The
sergeant first class was one of the few battalion staff NCOs that was not
scattered to the four winds. And the NCO had a legitimate complaint. The
tasking from Continental Army Command was clearly impossible. The roads were
packed with military units scrambling in every direction and refugees heading
for the hills. Getting to Washington in anything under twenty hours would be a
miracle. “But those are the orders.”
“How
in hell does General Horner expect us to perform them, sir? Did he give a
hint?”
“No,
but we’ll have to figure something out.”
“I’ll
start getting transportation laid on,” said the NCO. “But I’m damned if I know
how it’s going to cut through the traffic jams.”
“Major
Givens,” chirped his AID. “Incoming call from Captain O’Neal.”
Givens’s
shoulders slumped. He shouldn’t be ashamed of his delight that the captain had
finally initiated communication. The colonel had told him that if O’Neal made
it back he would be taking over operations while Givens took command. And God
knew he needed all the help he could get. There was only one company commander
present and half the first sergeants were still out. There were no other
battalion staff officers. He was just about to shanghai senior lieutenants from
the companies to take up some of the administrative slack. Having a captain
back would be a bonus even if it weren’t O’Neal. But it was. And although
Givens was an experienced and capable field-grade officer, he still had a germ
of hope that the doughty captain would have thought of a miracle.
He
picked up the AID and decided that humor would be the best approach. “Dammit
O’Neal, where the hell have you been,” he said with a smile in his voice.
O’Neal’s
mind felt like a whirring machine and he neither acknowledged the humorous
greeting nor misunderstood it. “I’ve been fighting my way up I-81, Major, just
like the Eleventh Division.”
“Good
to have you back. Where are you?”
“In
a Kiowa headed up I-70. I’m planning on meeting you in Baltimore.”
“Well,
you’ll probably get there before we do.”
“Yes,
sir. But not long before you do.”
“I
estimate that it will take us nearly twelve hours to get there through the
traffic, Captain. Sergeant Clarke is calling for trucks right now.”
“Trucks,
sir?” said O’Neal in a bad Hispanic accent. “We don’ need no stinkin’ trucks.”
The command
track lurched to a halt and the following MP Humvee drove up to the man
standing by the side of the road. The vehicle commander dismounted and saluted
the boyish-looking colonel. “Colonel Cutprice?” he asked. The BDU uniform had
only rank insignia, no nametag, no United States Ground Force identifier.
“Yes,”
answered the colonel, shortly. He had spent two weeks going through rejuv
processes and he was still sore as hell. And cooling his heels with the rest of
the officer “heroes” while they watched “The Jig and The Kraut” screw things to
hell had been worse. In all honesty it did not seem to be Taylor and Horner’s
fault things had come apart so badly. They had inherited most of the problems
and had been working to remedy them. But the vision of those fine boys being
slaughtered through bad strategy and lack of training had been hard to take. It
was goddamn Korea all over again. And Kasserine. And Bull Run. And the Somme
for that matter. The goddamn Perfumed Princes just never ever seemed to learn.
“The
general would like to speak to you,” said the MP, leading the way to the back
of the track and opening the door.
Horner
was sitting in front of a video communicator smiling like a tiger. The colonel
the smile was directed at was not enjoying the call.
“Colonel,
when you receive orders from those units they will take priority over any
other orders below the level of this command. Is that clear?”
“Sir . . .”
the colonel started to respond.
“Goddamnit
I asked if that was clear!” Horner shouted, finally losing his normally
placid temper. “If I do not get a straight answer I will have an MP unit over
there so fast it will make your head swim! I have a half a dozen colonels
loading ammunition and driving trucks! Do you want to join them?”
“No,
sir, but . . .”
“Yes
or no?”
“Yes,
sir,” said the recalcitrant colonel. “I’ll pass on those orders.”
“Good,
now get off my monitor,” snarled the harassed general. He swung around and
pinned Cutprice with a glare.
The
colonel, however, had been glared at by the best of them, and it washed off him
like dew. He stood at attention and looked six inches over the general’s head.
“Colonel Cutprice, reporting as ordered.”
Horner
looked at him for a moment and spun around again. He rummaged in a desk and
came out with a small medal. “Take this,” he said, tossing it to the colonel.
“Wear it.”
The
device in question was a blue field with a rifle on it. Around the field was a
wreath and it was surmounted by two stars. The Combat Infantryman’s Badge
signified that the holder had been in infantry combat; actual firefights where
people were trying to kill you and you were doing your best to “do-unto-them”
first. The stars signified that the combat had occurred over the course of
three wars. There were very few people breathing entitled to wear one.
“Stand
at ease, damnit,” snapped the general. “I heard you weren’t even wearing a
goddamn nametag. So I acquired that for you. Do you feel like you need anything
else?”
“No
sir,” said Cutprice quietly. He shifted his feet shoulder width apart and
looked at the general, as the command allowed. The door behind him opened and
closed again and someone came up beside him and came to attention as well.
“Sergeant
Major Wacleva, reporting as ordered, sir,” said the soldier. Cutprice gave the
individual a quick glance. He was a short, skinny young man with sergeant
major’s stripes on his collar. Given his apparent age he had to be a rejuv and
he looked faintly familiar.
“At
ease, rest even, both of you,” said Horner shaking his head. “I think you’ve
met.”
“Have
we?” asked Cutprice.
The
sergeant major just smiled, extracted a pack of Pall Malls and tapped one out.
With a flick of a lighter the room was filled with the pungent odor of unfiltered
cigarette. “Yeah,” he answered in a surprisingly deep voice. It was almost
gravelly, which was unusual for a rejuvenated individual. “We did meet.
Briefly.” He blew a smoke ring. And coughed.
“Oh,
shit!” said Cutprice with a laugh. “You’re trying for new lungs already?”
Horner
just shook his head. “I want you two to get the rest of your respective groups
together and get down to the Washington Mall. Most of the units that survived
Lake Jackson and the rout are there. I want you to see if any of them are fit
to fight. I’ve got an ACS unit on the way and an intact division assembling.
I’m worried about the Posleen capturing a bridgehead. If they do, it will be
fight or die time.”
“Yes,
sir,” said Wacleva. “We let ’em get over the Potomac and it’s gonna screw us.”
Horner
nodded. “The big problem will be that we probably won’t be able to dislodge
them before the main landings. That means all the production and control that
is in this area will be lost. There’s actually not that much that was vital in
the area between the James and Potomac. Not that we’re not going to take it
back. But losing the area north of the Potomac this soon will kneecap us.
“So,
go get your band of brothers,” he continued with a faint, real, smile, “and get
down to the Mall. Find some that have a spine left and get them organized. Get
ready to use them, too. ’Cause I got a bad feeling about the Potomac.”
He
smiled again. “Fortunately, besides your ‘band of brothers’ there’s another
card up my sleeve.”
In
the dawning light O’Neal waited on the Crosby Road overpass of I-695, the
Baltimore Loop. The smell of jet fuel from the departed Kiowa still filled the
air when the first of the apparitions came in sight.
The
armored combat suits were delivered and stored in large Galactic-supplied
storage containers. The silvery “Morgues” looked like oversized shipping
containers and held forty suits. They came equipped with a Federation Class Two
fusion plant or antimatter generator for recharging.
The
Morgues were designed for the suits to be readily accessed, each suit stored in
an interior pod, the double row of pods aligned down both sides of the large
container. When the troopers suited up they went into the container, tossed
their uniforms in the provided laundry bin and loaded up in the pods. The
struggle of naked bodies in the narrow corridor normally led to a certain
amount of playful grab-ass, but it was an efficient process. The suits exited
through portals in the sides of the container.
The
Fleet Strike Armored Combat Suits included a full suite of inertial
compensators and drivers. Given enough power, the suits could and did “fly”
under the combination of compensator and drivers. The process, however, was
power-intensive. A normal combat suit could only sustain about ten minutes of flight,
a command suit twenty to thirty, compared to three days of use before having to
recharge if conditions were perfect.
However,
as stated, the Morgues had their own onboard power source. And they were
designed for high-intensity charging.
Mike
thought the silvery containers probably caused their fair share of accidents as
they floated down the interstate. The speed was not much, not more than seventy
or eighty miles per hour, but it had permitted the battalion to cover the
distance from Harrisburg to Baltimore in an hour. And it would permit them to
continue on to D.C. in no time at all—once they picked up a stray captain.
The
giant boxes floated noiselessly to a halt around the overpass and began to
drift downward to the roadway. The control on the way down, managed by forty
AIDs in each container, was spotty and most of them dropped to the roadway with
rumbles that shook the early morning air. Many of the remaining residents
rushed out to see if the sound was landing Posleen. When they saw the strange
and obviously alien objects scattered down the road many of them took it as a
final sign that it was high time to head for the hills.
The
nearest conex began to spit suits and Mike let go of a deep sigh. He had not
even realized how uneasy he had been until that moment. A soldier without his
unit is like a man with one arm. He was finally home.
The
first suit sprinting towards him was the unmistakable outline of Gunny Pappas.
He grinned wryly as the NCO slid to a halt. “What kept you, Gunny?”
“Goddamn,
am I glad to see you, boss,” said the NCO, quietly. “We’ve got a hell of a
situation on our hands.”
“Yeah,
same here. How’s the XO holding up?” he asked, almost afraid of the answer.
There
was a momentary hesitation. “Lieutenant Nightingale is doing fine, sir,” the
NCO answered baldly.
O’Neal
stopped and turned towards the NCO. He wished, not for the first time, that he
could see the first sergeant’s face. “Does that mean that she’s marginal?”
“No,”
said Pappas instantly and definitively. “She’s made a hell of a lot of
improvement. I think she’ll be fine.”
“This
is going to be the real deal, Top,” said the captain with steel in his voice.
“I can’t take any chances. She’d better be ready.”
“I
know that, sir,” answered the NCO. “She’s ready. I’d say that . . .
anyway. She’s ready.”
O’Neal
tilted his head to the side and wrinkled his forehead. “Say that again?”
“She’s
ready, sir. She’ll do fine. I’ll make sure of that.”
Mike
had thousands of hours in and around suits. They had virtually no body language,
but virtually was not the same thing as none. And the first sergeant’s body
language was contradicting his words. O’Neal placed both hands on his hips.
“Top, what the fuck is going on?”
The
gunny paused for a moment then made a negating gesture. “It doesn’t affect the
efficiency of the company or my analysis of Lieutenant Nightingale, sir. You
gotta take my word on that.”
Mike
shook his head and sighed. “Okay, Gunny. I’ll take you at your word.” The other
suits were a small security force. He wasn’t sure if someone had ordered it or
if the troopers had taken the responsibility themselves. “What’s with that?” he
asked.
“The
landers are everywhere, sir,” grumped the first sergeant as he gestured towards
the container. The subject of whatever nonsubject they had just not discussed
was obviously dropped. “We actually got jumped by a lander on our way down.”
“Any
casualties?” asked Captain O’Neal. He stripped quickly and unselfconsciously,
tossing his gear in the bin. The stuff would get sorted out if and when.
“No,
sir,” said the sergeant. “We mounted sensor balls all over these things so we
could see where we’re going. We spotted it coming in and landed our ownselfs.
The horses had a kinda hot reception.”
Mike
shook his head with a smile and headed for his pod. The container popped open
before he even reached it and the suit was opened up like a lobster as he
stepped up. “Missed me, did you?” he chuckled. He slapped Shelly into her
interface slot and stepped into the future.
CHAPTER 60
Fairfax, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
0606 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
Keren started
awake and yanked the wheel to the left as the Suburban drove off the road.
“Sorry,
man,” said the driver, shaking her head to wake up. He didn’t even know the
girl’s first name; her nametag read “Elgars.” She was wearing a Thirty-Third ID
patch, which put her miles away from her unit. How she had made it to Lake
Jackson and then out of the rat-fuck when the Ninth Corps came apart was a
mystery. He had picked her up when he saw her by the side of the road with a
disassembled AIW, carefully oiling the parts. It was obvious she’d decided she
had had enough running.
“Where
the fuck are we?” asked Keren, his voice rasping. He’d had barely three hours
of sleep in the last forty-eight. The division was supposed to be supplied the
new antisleep drugs but, like a lot of things, that hadn’t worked out. The
platoon was subsisting on caffeine. And it was starting to fail.
“We
just passed the Beltway,” said the female soldier in a husky contralto. “But we
got a problem.”
“Yeah,”
Keren agreed. “What else is new.”
Interstate
66 was the major thoroughfare through Fairfax County, Virginia, leading into
the nation’s capital. The Army had maintained a stranglehold on it for the
movement of troops and material until the Posleen cut through the Lake Jackson
defense. Since then, between panicked civilians who would not take “no” for
answer, routed units from Ninth and Tenth Corps and desertions among the MPs
tasked to maintain control, the interstate had become a solid grid of fleeing
vehicles.
From
where they were currently parked, the roadway gave a clear picture of the
surrounding secondary roads. At first the press of vehicles indicated to Keren
that taking the platoon off the interstate would be no better than pressing on.
But then he changed his mind. The major thoroughfares were thoroughly blocked,
but many of the neighborhood roads were open.
“The
good news,” he whispered, “is that this is gonna slow the horses up some.” He
picked up the radio and extended the whip antenna out the window. “Reed, you
there?” he said.
“Yep,”
came the response on the frequency-clipping radio.
“Looks
like we gotta take to the side streets,” he said, pulling out a DeLorme
gazetteer. The multipage map of Virginia had repeatedly come in handy when the
smaller scale tactical maps ran out. But now he needed even more detail.
“We’re
gonna cut the corner on Sixty-Six and head for Arlington,” he said over the
radio, trying to find a good route on the map. “There’s bound to be some sort
of units assembling around there. Reed, I want you to take the front. If
there’s a couple of cars blocking the way, try to push ’em out of the way with
your track. If we can’t push through a blockage we’ll go around. We’ll take to
the back roads and back yards if we have to. Go through houses and buildings.”
“Gotcha.”
“Okay,
turn off and take out the fence. I’ll follow, then Three Track then One Track.
Stay together but put your foot in it. The damn horses can’t be far behind.”
Kenallurial
looked at the report and his crest stood straight up in stunned amazement.
Ardan’aath
looked over his shoulder and grunted. “Apparently, the Net recognizes your
worth.” The senior Kessentai chuckled at the figure on his own monitor. “And
mine as well.”
The
area surrounding Fredericksburg had been designated as “secure” by the
information Net and the distributed processors were beginning the assignment of
resources. How the Net decided what area was to be distributed to what
Kessentai was not understood by the aliens; the technology predated their
recorded history. But it was generally fair and the best way to distribute
initial booty. Often, it was the only way to prevent an early descent into orna’adar,
the apocalypse of post-conquest worlds.
There
was even trade and wagering based on future conquests. Ardan’aath owed quite a
chunk of the area he had been bequeathed to the late Aarnadaha; a matter of a
wager on offspring hatched during the voyage. The debt was now void. All debts
were voided by death.
“And
as we take more of these lands from the thresh,” said Kenallai, joining the
conversation, “the amount will grow. At this rate we’ll be the richest
Kessentai in seven systems. You are going to need a castellaine soon.”
Kenallurial
flared his nostrils in agreement. His previous service as a scoutmaster had
granted him a bare minimum of range. A small farm, a bit of land for hunting
and a minor factory. All of them were managed through a proxy castellaine.
There had been no need for the expense of one of his own with such meager
resources.
The
results from the last three days’ work was not a minor fortune but a major one.
With the income from the miles of arable land, several industrial areas and
four chemical processing plants he could retire. The choice was retire or
refit. Ardan’aath, for example, had the most heavily armed oolt’os in the host.
He had been involved in five conquests and his only interest was the Path. That
being the case, he poured his riches into outfitting his oolt’ondar and eson’antais.
The result was that he took fewer casualties and was able to take more land;
paying for better refitting. His entire oolt was now armed with
three-millimeter railguns and the oolt of his “subordinates” were nearly as
heavily armed.
Kenallurial’s
plan had always been to retire from the Path so that he could start a long-term
genetic modification program. But he had not expected it to be so soon.
“This
is amazing,” he murmured, his mind awash in plans for the future. He had
already begun collecting prize genetic samples from the smartest of the
normals. His plan was to design a complete line of superior normals, standard
Posleen nearly as intelligent and independent as God Kings. The line could
fill in that fuzzy gap in labor caused by the shortage of Kenstain, the
cowardly “castellaines” who were used to manage the absentee estates of the Kessentai
battlemasters. The income from that prize would be enormous. Especially if
his newly acquired skill in cybernetic repair transferred to even a fraction of
the offspring.
The
income would be enough to equip a dozen eson’antai, to go forth and conquer
other worlds. And they would owe him for the equipment, as he had owed
Kenallai. That debt was settled before the landing, so he was clear.
“And
the greatest prize lies ahead!” Ardan’aath boomed. His crest fluffed once
again, finally standing straight up in excitement.
“As
long as it is not as bad as the ‘prize’ to the south,” said Kenallurial,
gloomily. But quietly also.
Kenallai
rattled his crest in response.
Colonel
Abrahamson led the way up the dirt ramp. The jaunty yellow scarf around his
throat was dark with soot and oil, stained with human and Posleen blood. He
strode with determination, but the set of his shoulders spoke of overriding
fatigue.
The
trailing General Keeton paused for a moment, causing a backup in the gaggle
that followed him, and stamped the soft earth. The ramp, and the rest of the
wall of earth along the interior side of the Richmond floodwall, was loose and
uncompacted, barely useable for foot traffic. The first serious flood would
wash it away but it had served its purpose and served it well.
General
Keeton shook his head at the thought of all this effort disappearing in the
first hard rain and continued up the slope. At the top of the ramp he looked at
the wall and shook his head again. It looked chewed. The top of the
smoking concrete and rebar was missing chunks and wedges, some of them leading
down to the uncompacted fill. The bodies of the Sixtieth Infantry Division dead
and wounded had already been removed, but the dark staining of the soil and
gouges of melted soil were eloquent testimony to the casualties the division
had suffered. As were the flickering fuel fires and smoking armored vehicles
along the support road.
Survivors
of the brigade in this, the hardest hit sector, were moving around performing
all the usual after-battle chores. Ammunition parties were coming up from the
trucks at the base of the wall and technicians were moving down the wall
repairing or replacing manjacks. All of the soldiers staggered about like
drunks, but the progress was steady.
The
general walked over to stand by the cavalry officer, who had moved to the wall
and now stood quietly looking out over the valley beyond. As far as the eye
could see there was a carpet of dead Posleen and smashed saucers. The general
leaned over and looked down. Sure enough, there was the ramp of Posleen
dead he had been told about. The mass of centaurs ran for at least a hundred
yards here near the Fourteenth Street gates. How many bodies were in that pile
alone was impossible to calculate. Most of them had been pounded into paste by
their fellows in a vain effort to surmount the fateful obstacles envisioned by
John Keene.
“ ‘They just came at us in
the same old way,’ ” he quoted quietly. The morning was quiet, with the
exception of the distant boom of artillery targeting concentrations of the
shattered enemy.
“Hmm,”
murmured Colonel Abrahamson in slight demurral. “The third wave was a little
different. They were finally starting to use some sense, or there were more God
Kings using sense than in the other attacks. They hit us while we were still
headed out to them.”
“That
was when you lost your track?” asked the general.
“Yeah.
Got a little hairy there for a bit.” They had slowed the Posleen by calling for
a full artillery concentration on his own position. He would go to his grave
remembering the sound of One-Five-Five shrapnel pinging off his tank like steel
rain while the vehicle took hit after hit from hypervelocity missiles. Why none
of the missiles had penetrated the main crew compartment would remain a
mystery. But he had lost his driver, six other tanks and a dozen troopers in
the counterambush. The remaining Posleen had still chased them back to the
Wall. That wave nearly overran the defenses, when a half million blood-mad
Posleen crowded into the killing zone, taking the hammer of the guns on the
chance that some of them could surmount the Wall or the obstacles along the
sides. The final straw was when nearly two hundred God Kings had sailed over
the Wall all along its length.
Snipers
from the skyscrapers had shot through the flying roadways above the defenses or
from the far side of the James while the defenders hammered the assaulting
saucers. The casualties had been fierce as plasma cannon played along the berm
and hypervelocity missiles slammed into the ammunition and fuel bowsers cached
behind the defenses.
But
in the end even that was not enough. The human defenders soaked up the charging
God Kings, taking the casualties and dishing them out, supporting the fire from
across the river. And the God Kings had died, one by one and in bunches. As had
the forlorn normals in the pocket. And in the end the survivors stumbling out
of that hell of death were less than one battalion. A paltry few hundreds of
the half million that had entered the valley of death.
Keeton
was of two minds how to respond. He almost sallied the Seventy-Fifth Armored to
drive into them one more time and lure some back. On the other hand, the
defenses were in sorry shape and the Posleen seemed to be headed back north.
Better
to chase them in good time, with prepared units. For all he believed in Bedford
Forrest’s aphorism about “keepin’ up the skeer,” he also knew that facing the
enemy in prepared positions was one thing; chasing them back up I-95 and U.S. 1
was another. The Eleventh MI was nearly on site. Let them go out in the open
and play tag with the Posleen. That was what combat suits were designed for. He
would husband his forces instead. It looked like being a long war.
“They’re
still trying to flank us,” said Colonel Abrahamson, apparently reading his
mind. “They still might.”
“Maybe,”
agreed the general. “They’ve still got the numbers for it. And I’ll worry about
that if it looks like they’re coming back in a serious way. And then I’ll send
somebody out to poke them in the snout.”
“Somebody
else, I hope,” the colonel said, dryly.
“Somebody
else,” the general agreed.
“Good,”
said the exhausted officer. “It’s about time somebody else had some fun.”
CHAPTER 61
Rabun County, GA,
United States of America, Sol III
0612 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
“Gee, isn’t this
fun?” snorted Papa O’Neal.
The
Tennessee Volunteers had thus far failed to live up to their name. The landing
was small, only a single lander. That meant no more than six hundred Posleen,
probably closer to four hundred. But the force had gone one way and run into
the unVolunteers. Then it had recoiled the other way and run into the Rabun Gap
defenses. Now it was milling around more or less at the head of O’Neal’s
Hollow. And the first trace of entering scouts had appeared on the sensors.
“That
was how you knew,” said “Raphael” quietly, watching the sensors.
“Yeah.
You guys made a signature like a rocket.” Papa O’Neal chuckled.
“Hmm.”
The special action team leader nodded. “My fellows are confused by your
granddaughter. They don’t know what to make of her.”
“Well,”
said O’Neal, dryly, “it’s more what she makes of them.”
“You
ever use one of these?” Cally asked the black-masked commando, gesturing at the
General Electric mini-gun. Since she would be handling the demo, putting one of
the commandos on the 7.62mm Gatling freed Grandpa up to handle overall actions.
At
his negative head shake she touched a control. “That arms it,” she said as the
barrel advanced with a whine. “Butterfly triggers just like a Ma-Deuce, but the
safety is on the side.” She pointed to the appropriate button then released it.
“Other than that it works just like a hose. Fires eight thousand rounds a
minute. Looks sort of like a laser going downrange. Just walk the fire onto the
enemy.” She stood on tiptoes to look out the slot of the bunker but declined to
fire. The Posleen weren’t in sight yet and they still might just go away.
The
commando nodded and stepped forward. He carefully put the safety back on and
advanced the barrels again. A single round flew out and dropped into an open
blue plastic fifty-five–gallon drum.
“Keeps
you from getting awash in brass,” said Cally, gesturing to the huge box of
ammunition under the weapon. “It’ll only catch ’em on a narrow traverse, but it
helps.”
The
commando nodded again and looked out the slit.
Cally
tapped her foot a few times and rotated her shoulders to relieve the chafing of
the armor. It was a lot more comfortable when it was dry. “You sure don’t talk
much.”
The
mask turned towards her and brown eyes regarded blue. He cleared his throat.
“We kin talk,” was all he said.
The
accent was faint, but completely different from the team leader’s. Cally nodded
and put that and a few other facts together. “Can I ask you one thing?” she
asked.
He
nodded.
“Can
I see your left hand?”
The
head of the commando tilted slightly to the side but then he pulled the thin
black Nomex glove off his hand. He held it up for a brief inspection, rotating
it so that she could get a good look and then waggling his fingers. He
obviously thought it a silly question. He put the glove back on.
Cally
glanced at the hand and smiled. When he was done with his little pantomime she
looked him straight in the eye and made the Sign of the Cross.
As
the commando’s eyes flew wide she smiled again, turned and left the bunker
without a word.
“Oh,
this is truly good!” snarled Monsignor O’Reilly, reading the missive on his
Palm Pilot.
The
message was written in Attic Greek, encrypted half a dozen ways, and used code
phrases. The message was, nonetheless, clear.
“What?”
asked Paul, looking up from the card game he was engaged in with the Indowy.
The Himmit stealth ship was in two hundred feet of water in Hudson Bay. And the
Indowy had explained that it would stay there until the majority of the Posleen
were destroyed and clear areas declared. Himmit would risk much on occasion,
but they believed that discretion was better than valor.
“Our
team is trapped at the O’Neal farm!” he snarled.
“Calmly,
Nathan, calmly,” soothed the Indowy. “The O’Neals are an inventive clan. The
team will be well taken care of.”
“Bit
of a turnabout for the books.” Paul smiled, taking a card off the stack on the
table. He grimaced. “Your move.” The cards were difficult to read in the odd
blue-green light. This Himmit ship, unlike some, had never been converted for
human use.
The
table was too low and the bench he sat on was designed to be used by lying on a
hairy belly. The air was thin, the gravity too heavy and the lighting set to
Himmit norm, which meant that it was mainly in shades of violet invisible to
human eyes. The result was an odd blue-green that made everything look as if it
was under deep water. There were odd sounds at the edge of hearing; the Himmit
communicated in hypercompressed squeaks that were barely in the human audible
range. There were strange chemical smells and occasional odd slurping noises.
All together it was one of the most uncomfortable environments the widely
traveled des Jardins had experienced.
Aelool
looked to the Monsignor, who finally gave a resigned gesture. “It is not as if
there haven’t been breaches before,” the little alien said.
“Hmm,”
said the Monsignor, irritably. “But there are reporters swarming nearly as
thick as the Posleen. There are already reports that there is a well-defended
farm near the landing. And the local commander says that the reason they
haven’t attacked Posleen yet is to see how the farm fairs. He says he’s afraid
of hitting the farm with friendly-fire, but it sounds more like he trusts the O’Neals
to take care of the attack. One old man and a young girl up against a Posleen
company?!”
Paul
smiled sardonically. “Well, they are Irish, no?”
Nathan’s
eyelids dropped, giving him a sleepy look and he stared at des Jardins’s back.
“This is a small ship, Paul, and the lighting is really getting on my nerves.
Don’t push it.”
“We
gotta push it, sir,” said Captain O’Neal, looking into the Virtual infinity of
data. He was in a trance of data assimilation as graphs and maps cascaded past.
The data included snippets of live video from the front lines, where reporters
were finally encountering the enemy firsthand.
In
many cases the locations of advancing Posleen had to be assumed. Here a
company not responding, there a transmission suddenly cut off. But the picture
was firming up. The battalion was still well short of the District while the
Posleen were well into Fairfax County and nearly over the border into
Arlington. They had spread up to the Potomac on the north side and were moving
rapidly down the Beltway towards the crossing to the east of Arlington.
The
movement was unconscious, but it was creating a pocket in the Arlington area.
All the survivors were being pushed towards the downtown D.C. bridges, just as
General Horner had anticipated.
“Agreed,
Captain,” responded the acting battalion commander. “Any more suggestions?”
“No,
sir. Not at this time.” The movement of the canisters was as fast as the AIDs
could handle the information load. Not only did each suit have to be
controlled, but the overall load had to be balanced among all the suits. The
current speed of an average of eighty miles per hour was the fastest they could
do. The alternative, exiting the containers and running, would be even slower.
The maximum sustainable speed for suits was about forty miles per hour, if the
roads were open.
The
roads, however, were packed with military units and refugees. First Army was
finally getting its combat power concentrated, with units flooding into the
area of the Potomac from all over the northeast. Like the units of Ninth and
Tenth Corps, most of the forces were undertrained and their equipment was in
pitiful shape. But with any luck they would be fighting from fixed positions.
Mike
glanced at the exterior view and his eyes narrowed. Somebody had had a rush of
sense, and the lead units were mostly artillery. By the time they were in
contact, there would be a mass of artillery available. Command and control,
however, was spotty.
“But
I’ll figure something out. I’ll get back to you soon, sir.”
“Okay,
Captain. We need a good plan if this is going to succeed.”
“Roger,
sir. Shelly,” he continued, looking back at the feeds. “What are you getting
from D.C.?”
“It’s
a bit of a dog’s breakfast, sir,” responded the AID.
Mike
smiled. The device had been getting more and more attuned to human interaction,
even starting to use some slang.
“There’s
a mishmash of units,” she continued. “Some of them are ordered there, like the
engineers that are rigging the bridges and the One-Oh-Fifth I-D. But most of
them are from Ninth and Tenth Corps.”
“Any
sign of leadership?”
“There
are small units that are coherent. But nothing over a company.”
“Hmm.
Bring up an appropriate scenario. Assume the Posleen take a bridge intact.” If
the Posleen did not take a bridge, the battalion could wait for Eighth Corps to
get its act together, then cross the river at leisure to sting the Posleen. It
was only if one of D.C.’s bridges fell that time would be critical.
“Is
there a scenario in the can for this?” Mike thought there was, but there were
so many developed “games” scenarios it was impossible to keep track.
“Bridge
over the River Die,” responded the AID. “On the basis of probable Posleen
numbers at contact and probable friendly support I would recommend responses
for difficulty level six.”
“Yeah,”
whispered the officer, reading the scenario as it scrolled down the left of his
heads-up view. He remembered it now. He had gamed it at least three times. It
wasn’t one of his favorites, but it had some interesting surprises. The
similarities to the current situation were remarkable. Even the buildings were
similar; the writer of the scenario had clearly envisioned Washington as a
target. That was not in the description and Mike had never noticed the
similarities. But it was obvious now. “Who wrote it?”
“A
teenager in Fredericksburg. Thomas Sunday, Junior.”
“Oh.
Damn.” Fredericksburg was, of course, gone. What a waste of a good mind. The
writer had obviously had a good grasp of suit tactics. Losing him this early in
the game sucked. “Shit happens. Shelly, can this one. Set it to level eight.
Now, what are we missing for an eighth-level response?”
“Command
and Staff. A level of response of that difficulty requires everything to hit
the ground running perfectly.”
“What’s
the first and most obvious lack? Take them in order downward.”
“Artillery
command and control. We do not have a Fire-Support Team.”
“Right.
Who do we have in the battalion with significant fire control experience?”
“Besides
yourself?” she asked dryly.
Mike
rolled his eyes at the ceiling. Save me from an AID with a sense of humor.
“Besides me.”
“There
are four NCOs in the battalion with fire control experience and one
lieutenant.”
“Who’s
the lieutenant?”
“Lieutenant
Arnold, your mortar pl—”
“Pass,”
he said. “I want Arnold right where he is.” In case he has to take over from
Nightingale.
“Then one of the four NCO’s.”
“Who
is senior?”
“An
E-6 in Bravo Company. Staff Sergeant Duncan.”
Mike
wrinkled his face in the flexible gel. He was unable to place the name in his
own company’s roster. And, as far as he knew, with the exception of Sergeant
Brook in the Mortar platoon none of Bravo’s NCOs had ever been in fire control.
“The name rings a bell,” he continued, “but not from Bravo Company.”
“He
joined Bravo Company while you were on leave.”
Mike
thought about the roster for a moment and grimaced. “Gimme Gunny Pappas.”
The
AID chirped after a moment and the Gunny’s voice came over. “Yessir?”
“This
new NCO that joined while I was on leave . . .”
“Duncan?”
“Yeah.
Let me guess. He got put in charge of Second Squad of Second Platoon.”
“Yup.
Only squad without a staff sergeant. Wasn’t much I could do.”
“Agreed.
So, how is Stewart taking it?”
“Fairly
well. Duncan’s a real experienced NCO as you know. Generally he lets Stewart
continue to run the squad and helps Boggy with training. Stewart’s actually
started to pump him for information and support. They work well together.”
“Hold
it,” Mike said after digesting this. “ ‘As I would know’? Is this Bob
Duncan?”
“Yeah.
Sorry, boss, I assumed you’d know.” The Old Man was damn near omniscient
normally. “Shelly didn’t tell you?”
“No.
Damn. Shelly, bring Sergeant Duncan in on this conversation.”
“Yes,
sir.” After a moment there was another chirp of connecting circuits.
“Captain
O’Neal?” asked the quiet voice.
“Duncan!
Who the hell let you into my company?” Mike snapped in a serious voice.
There
was a pause. “Well,” responded the quiet baritone, “they wanted me to take a
commission as a captain. They said there was this really screwed-up company
that needed straightening out. I told ’em I wanted to infiltrate it first as an
NCO. And here I am.”
Mike
and the first sergeant both chuckled. “Like I said,” said Pappas. “He’s a real
screwball.”
“Yeah,”
said Mike with a smile in his voice. “I’ve noticed that before.” He thought
about the situation for a moment. He had some of the best experience in the
battalion in the three way at the moment. He thought about bringing in Sergeant
Bogdanovich, but she was undoubtedly busy with her platoon. There were four
other combat veterans that he knew of in the battalion, but none of them were
officers. From the point of view of suggestions, this was as good as it got.
“We’ve
got a bit of a FUBAR situation in D.C.” He ran over the outline of what they
could expect. “There’s combat power to spare. But nobody has any sort of decent
control and most of the line units have just been through a rout. The first
problem on Shelly’s list was artillery support. We don’t have a Fire Support
Team. And the automated system has been taken off-line. We need someone to
coordinate artillery support.”
“Me,”
stated Duncan.
“Right.
If I had a FIST captain, it would be him. We don’t. So it’s you.”
“Is
the arty gonna go for that?” asked the first sergeant. It was a realistic
question. Duncan would effectively be ordering artillery battalions. Colonels
do not normally listen to sergeants.
“I’ll
take care of that,” said Mike. “Shelly, send General Horner an e-mail. Tell him
we are assuming control of the defense of the bridges of D.C. under Standing
Regulations for the interaction of Federation and Local forces.”
“Oh,
shit,” whispered Duncan.
“Did
you just say what I think you said?” asked Gunny Pappas in an incredulous
voice.
“Yep.
We now own the forces in D.C.,” said O’Neal in a definite voice. He suddenly
realized that Major Givens might have liked to be informed. He had just sent a
message to an Army General telling him that a lowly battalion, commanded by a
major, was taking command of one of his Armies. If it was anyone but Jack
Horner it would be impossible, whatever the standing orders. “Shelly, slug this
plan to him so he understands what we’re doing.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Are
they going to listen?” asked Duncan.
“That
is where you come in. The first order will be to reestablish the automated fire
control network. The AIDs will stomp any virus they find so security won’t be
an issue. Get that up. After that, we will have control. Without direct
orders to the contrary, the cannon cockers will follow the computer guidance.
And the computers will follow our orders.”
“Then
what?” asked Duncan. He knew his own AID would be taking in the details.
“Shelly?”
“The
next problem is Command. We are short three of four combat company commanders.”
“Pass.
Nightingale can carry the company,” said O’Neal. Lord, hear my prayer.
“Same for Alpha’s XO. We’ll use Bravo for the shock company and Alpha and
Charlie for support.”
“This
scenario will require all three line companies to interact perfectly,” the AID
demurred.
“If
needs be, I’ll take direct command of the suits. Start preparing a program to
lead every trooper in Alpha and Charlie by the hand. We can slug them to
replicate the actions of Bravo troops. That will give us three times the
firepower for each Bravo shooter. Delta’s Reapers will be under control of
fire-support. They won’t be a problem. Next.”
“Communications.”
“Handle
it.”
“Captain,
I cannot handle the entire communications strategy!” the AID responded. The
tone was almost hysterical. “There are too many variables.”
“Define
the problem,” Duncan interjected.
“We
will require the support of forces in the area to accomplish the mission,” his
own AID responded, unexpectedly. The device had a slightly different voice than
Shelly, more of a contralto. “Captain O’Neal, you yourself specified level
eight difficulty. Given that, we will need the majority of the forces in the
area for base of fire. We will need a complete fire control network. We will need
communications to higher headquarters for logistical support. And we will need
to maintain communications intelligence monitoring. We AIDs cannot handle all
of that alone. We will be heavily tasked to maintain local coordination.
Especially if you have to take direct suit command.”
“Agreed.
Okay, okay.” Mike suddenly wished he could scratch his head. Inside the pod he
couldn’t even pop the helmet; there was no room. “Pass for right now. Next.”
“That’s
it,” answered Shelly. “With the forces in the area or approaching it we will
have the force necessary to retake and destroy any two bridges that are no more
than six miles apart.”
“Okay.
Duncan, Pappas, I’m open to suggestions on the communications problem.”
“Debbie,”
said Duncan, “how are you planning on communicating out of the battalion? That
is, who are you planning on talking to?”
“We
would normally communicate with the local commander. However, there isn’t a
local commander. The units are fragments.” Suddenly on all three screens a map
of the area around the Washington Mall popped up. It was scattered with dots
and blobs of all the colors of the rainbow. There was little or no rhyme or
reason to the colors. “Each of the different colors represents a unit which has
made it to D.C. It is based on a spectrum of units from each of the divisions
involved. Therefore, units that are from vaguely similar units would have
vaguely similar colors.”
Mike
made an okay sign with his hand. It was the body signal the ACS had developed
to replace nodding the head. “Okay. Nice picture.”
“Thank
you.”
“And
of course,” he continued, “that’s not what’s there. These units are randomly
mixed.”
“Correct.
A complete higgledy-piggledy. A mishmash. A hodgepodge . . .”
“Yes,
thank you. We get the picture. So that is the communications problem. You’d be
required to find the frequency of each unit and broadcast to it.”
“Correct.
We actually have the frequencies of all the units that have communicated.
However, there are others that are not communicating at all. They might not
even have radios.”
“Are
they all at the Mall?” Duncan asked.
“Many
of them are,” Shelly answered. “It is a prime destination. The units from Ninth
Corps are trying to find transport to their bases. Tenth Corps units are just
lost.
“Christ,”
muttered Gunny Pappas. “What a rat-fuck.”
“Dantren,”
Duncan said, cryptically.
“Yeah,”
Mike agreed. “Remarkable how the Posleen keep doing this to us.” The first
expeditionary force to Diess had had its mobile units trapped by advancing
Posleen in an Indowy megascraper. The siege had been lifted by then-Lieutenant
O’Neal’s platoon. In that case the hard-hit American and British units had been
reduced to scattered squads.
“What
about artillery?” asked Duncan, taking a closer look at the unit data on the
screen. Most of the units seemed to be from front-line combat forces.
“Artillery and
Service and Support units generally have stayed together better,” answered
Shelly. “Although many of them have crossed farther upriver, those that were
caught in the Arlington pocket have mostly crossed the river and are assembling
in the area of Chevy Chase and Rock Creek Park. The remnants of Ninth Corps’s
Artillery are actually assembling at the Chevy Chase Country Club.”
The
first sergeant snorted. “Hate to see the bill for that.”
“Yeah,”
snorted O’Neal. “Anybody sends me a bill, I’ll tell ’em to stick it where the
monkey put the peanut. Duncan.”
“Sir?”
“This
is going to hinge on fire-support. Get with those units. Get them to not just
assemble but get ready to fire.”
“Yes,
sir,” he said dubiously.
“If
you get any guff, call General Horner, directly,” Mike said definitely.
“Okay,”
Duncan answered in the same tone.
“Do
it.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Gunny.”
“Sir.”
“Start
setting up some commo with those units on the mall. Figure out a scheme for
assembly and get them assembling. Get the units you can cajole to start making
signs for assembly areas. Use the color scheme you’ve already got.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Try
to put some spine into them. We’re going to have to get support. Remind
everyone and anyone that if the Posleen cross the Potomac, we’ll be running all
the way to the goddamn Susquehanna.”
“Right.”
“Ask
your AID for help.”
“Not
a problem, sir.”
“Okay.
Good.” Mike desperately wished he could rub his face. “Okay, Shelly. Anything
else.”
“Just
one thing,” she responded.
“Yes?”
“This
scenario will require forces that are willing to stand and fight. That is not a
normal characteristic of routed forces.”
“Well,”
said Mike softly. “We’ll just have to hope that the survivors were not just the
ones with the fastest horses, but also the best aim.”
CHAPTER 62
Fairfax, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
0726 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
The Suburban
lurched as it crossed the toothpick remains of a backyard fence.
The
fastest way through the neighborhoods of scattered one- and two-story houses
was often the yards. They had had to turn around at Glebe Road and backtrack up
Wilson Boulevard until they found a section not completely blocked by cars. The
choked roads had overflowed to the point of bursting and the abandoned vehicles
were scattered through the strip malls and fast-food restaurants along the
major thoroughfares. Once they got across Wilson they stayed as much as
possible on yards and side streets, only attempting crossings at the least
likely places.
They
could have abandoned the vehicles. There were military vehicles scattered
throughout the region. But if they left the tracks they would lose the mortars
and the .50 calibers. All in all, Keren was willing to chance the Posties
catching them to keep the firepower.
But
the circuitous route had other problems.
“Where
are we?” asked Elgars, leaning out the window and looking back at the two
following mortar carriers. Surprisingly, none of the vehicles had broken down
in the harum-scarum run from Manassas. Apparently all the deadwood had been
left in Prince William County. “You got any idea?”
“Not
really,” said Keren, handing her the map. They had switched drivers when the
going got bad. She was fine on streets but he had much more experience at
off-road.
She
found the last notations he had made, back at Wilson Boulevard. “That doesn’t
tell me much.”
He
picked up the microphone. After the third time he had pushed it out the window,
Elgars had found a roll of duct tape and fixed it so the antenna stuck out the
moonroof of the vehicle. It worked remarkably well and he wondered why he
hadn’t thought of it. Probably because the only time he hadn’t been running for
the last three days was when he was dead asleep.
“Reed.”
“Yeah?”
“Find
a road sign.”
“Right.”
The
mortar carrier made a hard left, kicking up a rooster tail of soil from the
manicured yard. It trampled a pink plastic tricycle then slipped into the space
between neighboring houses. The wooden fence between them turned to splinters
as the vehicle ran down its length. As he cleared the house he made another
abrupt turn to the right.
The
houses were halfway down a block. The mortar platoon proceeded to the end of
the street where the ubiquitous green sign finally fixed their location.
“Jackson
and Sixth,” said Reed over the radio.
“Damn,”
said Elgars. “Not bad. We’re nearly to Arlington Cemetery.”
“How
far?” asked Keren, peering ahead. There were skyscrapers ahead, which was not
good. The damn things drew Posleen like flies. He keyed the mike again.
“Anybody see a big hill? Should be at our nine o’clock.”
“I
got it,” said somebody from the Three Track. The squad was from another
brigade, added on to their nearly intact platoon at Jackson Lake. They still
didn’t feel like family, but at least they kept up. “Between two buildings. You
probably can’t see it from there.”
“Okay,”
Keren said, “that’s our objective . . .”
A
tremendous explosion tore the face off a skyscraper to the south and a tracer
kicked up and out crazily.
“Holy
Shit!” shouted Reed. “Posleen!” The .50 caliber on the top of the mortar
carrier tracked to the south down Sixth Street and began to spit fire.
“Goose
it!” shouted Keren over the radio, putting action to words as he dropped
the Suburban into gear. “Don’t just sit there!”
He turned into
the road just as the mortar carrier began to move. A hypervelocity missile
evaporated a section of roadway to their right as the Suburban slid crazily
into the intersection. Elgars had her AIW out and was climbing into the
moonroof. Out of the corner of his eye he saw the other tracks cutting across
the parking lot on the corner but he put his foot down and accelerated towards
the distant hill.
He
had just passed forty when Elgars kicked him painfully in the shoulder.
“Stop!”
she yelled as another HVM flew by. The shockwave of its passage shook the heavy
vehicle like a terrier and the missile itself demolished a gas station on the
corner.
“Fuck
you!” he shouted back and started weaving. The silver lance of plasma cannon came from nowhere and he
saw the Two Gun track erupt in fire. “Goddamnit!” The mortar carriers were
firing their .50 calibers but with the way they were jumping over curbs there
was no chance in hell of hitting the Posleen leader that must have fired that
accurate blast. He was barely in sight in the rearview, at nearly a thousand
yards. The distance was the only thing saving them from the notoriously
inaccurate Posleen. Distance, however, helped not a bit with God Kings.
“Stop
or we’re all FUCKED!” Elgars shouted again. Her feet were braced on the
backs of both front seats and the rifle was rock-steady.
He
stomped on the brakes and reached in the back for his own AIW. He was no
expert, but unless they took out that God King, they were all toast. Two rifles
were better than one. The 7.62 rifles had the ability, technically, to hit
something at that range. He’d never been able to hit the broad side of a barn
at over five hundred yards. But, hell, the horse might sing.
The
vehicle had barely lurched to a stop when there was a single crack from
overhead. “Go!”
He
looked in the rearview as a storm of fire erupted towards them. The Posleen
normals of the company were attacking berserkly. But they were firing at
everything in sight, not just the vehicles, and the fire was scattered. There
was enough to begin slamming into the Suburban, but the God King was clearly
dead. His saucer was barely in sight drifting off to the side. Keren dropped
the Suburban back into gear and floored the accelerator. The smoke from the
burning gas station was just ahead and if they made it to that obscurement they
might just survive.
“Holy
Mother of Acceleration, don’t fail us now!” shouted Elgars as she began pumping
out grenades. The 20mm rounds pounded out like a metronome, weaving a dance of
destruction in the wake of the retreating platoon.
The
platoon had torn through Fort Myer as if it weren’t there. Headquarters of the
Continental Army Command and one of the most famous facilities in the United
States, it was now a ghost town; it seemed that the only sentients in the world
were the platoon and the pursuing Posleen. The mortar unit had a blurry view of
the commissary and the clinic as they rushed past and then they were at the
wall around Arlington Cemetery.
Knowing
the barrier was coming up, Keren had slowed to let the tracks catch up. He
picked up the mike again. “Three Track. Run that thing over,” he said, pointing
at the wall.
“Idn’t
there a gate?” asked the person on the radio in One Track.
“You
wanna take time to find it?” asked the Three Track commander and waved at the
wall. The vehicle snorted forward and put its nose against the low stone wall.
With a burst of power a wide section of the wall came down.
“Now,
goose it. Three Track, FDC, First. Go!”
Keren
fell in behind Three Track as it began to weave a way up through the
headstones. The specialist looked around at the white markers drifting off into
the distance and shook his head. He suspected that the residents would
understand the unseemly nature of the platoon’s passage, but dislike the
running away part. Well, sooner or later they were going to find a real unit to
rejoin. And they could stop running.
Three
Track turned right on the first road and followed it around the hill. The trees
in the area shielded them from sight, but until they were on the back side of
the hill, Keren wouldn’t feel happy. Mortars are never, ever, ever supposed to
see the enemy. It was drilled into them from basic training. Unlike artillery,
they could not fire directly at an attacker. Used correctly, though, their big
120mm rounds could be devastating.
They
were just approaching a traffic circle when an officer came striding down the
hill towards them. The lieutenant colonel was in Dress Blues and carried an
MP-5 submachine gun. He walked out in front of the leading track and held up
one hand for them to stop. After a brief conversation with the vehicle
commander, he strode back to the Suburban.
Elgars
laid down her AIW and reached for the 9mm that was half-forgotten in Keren’s
holster.
Without
turning his head he said: “No.”
“Why?”
she asked. A brief glance in her direction revealed pale blue eyes as dead as a
shark’s.
Keren
gestured up the hill to his right. A line of foxholes could be seen running up
the ridge towards the Tomb of the Unknowns. The soldiers in them were hunkered
down waiting for the approaching centaurs. Their AIWs and crew-served machine
guns were plainly in evidence.
“You
want to take the chance that all of them are willing to have this guy fragged?”
he whispered as the officer approached.
“I’ll
think about it,” she said, leaning back into the passenger’s seat. “We’ll see.”
She was as determined as any of them to put a river between themselves and the
Posleen.
Keren
fixed a military expression on his face and saluted as the officer approached.
It was not precisely correct under the circumstances, but it never really hurt
to salute.
“Colonel,”
he said, “Specialist Keren, Mortar Platoon, Alpha Company First Battalion Four
Fifty-Second Infantry, Third Brigade Fiftieth Infantry Division.”
The colonel
was tall, slim and almost painfully handsome. He looked more like some movie
star in a truly screwed-up war movie. He returned the salute with parade ground
precision. “Lieutenant Colonel Alexander.” He looked at the Suburban. The
vehicle had been some yuppie’s pride and joy before it fell into the clutches
of the Infantry. Now it had only one remaining window, the side and rear panels
were pocked with flechette strikes, the left rear quarter panel had been mostly
torn off by a close encounter with a mortar track and the engine compartment
was spurting steam.
“Where
did you acquire the vehicle, specialist?” he asked in a dry and deadly voice.
Keren
blinked rapidly. It was the last question he had expected to be asked. Hell,
the platoon had stayed together, unlike most units. They had practically no
NCOs left, the tracks were on their last legs, they had no officers, no spare
ammo, no communications. And this stupid bastard wanted to know why they stole
a truck.
There
was only one option: Lie.
“Sir.
Our Fire Direction vehicle was struck by friendly-fire in the Occoquan Defense.
My company commander personally commandeered this vehicle, which was out of
fuel on the Prince William Parkway. We used it for an ammunition carrier and to
transport wounded in the withdrawal. We were overrun again, in company with an
Armored Combat Suit battalion, at Lake Jackson. We lost our company commander,
our platoon leader and all of our NCOs in the first contact at Lake Jackson.
I’ve been using it as an FDC vehicle ever since. Sir. We are the last unit in.
We have been performing a fighting withdrawal under fire. I could not have done
that without a vehicle. Sir.”
And
the colonel could believe as much or as little of that as he liked. If the
bastard made any more complaints, Keren would just let this hard-faced bitch do
her thing. And then the platoon could just perform another fighting retreat.
The
commander of a unit like this should have been a grizzled veteran as well as a
martinet. Keren knew that was what the President’s Marines were. Every swinging
dick was a veteran of Barwhon or Diess. And they still had lovely drill. So it
only made sense that the commander of the Old Guard would be the same. But the
fruit-salad on the Dress Blue uniform said otherwise.
Keren
wasn’t one of those guys who spent all their time memorizing the medals they
wanted to get someday. But he had seen fruit-salad before. And he knew a few
things to look for. He didn’t recognize the highest award on the colonel’s
chest, but it was probably a Legion of Merit. And that pretty much said it all.
An L-o-M was the sort of award a really proficient paper-pusher got for thirty
years’ slavery in the Pentagon.
After
careful but covert searching of the dangling medals, Keren determined a few
lacks. There were no Silver Stars. There were no Bronze Stars. The colonel was
infantry, he had the crossed rifles, but no Combat Infantry Badge. Expert
Infantry Badge, yes. Expert Marksmanship Medals, yes. Master Parachutist Wings,
yes. Combat Jump Star, no. His chest full of medals broadcast as plain as day
that the colonel had never heard a shot fired in anger.
Patton might have shown up at
a time like this in a dress uniform. He probably would have been in BDUs, but
Georgie was funny. The same with MacArthur. If he had been ordered to hold
Arlington Cemetery to the last man he probably would have had the entire unit
in Dress Blues. It was an impossible task and everyone was going to die anyway.
Might as well go out with style. But both of them had seen the elephant.
Keren’s
face was a polite mask but he knew the deal. This guy was a piker. He was
scared shitless and throwing away his unit to prove he wasn’t a coward. When
the time came he would probably be running down the hill for the bridges. And
praying like hell the engineers wouldn’t blow them before he was across.
The
colonel favored him with another cold look and nodded. “Very well. I am aware
that there have been certain exigencies of service in the last two days.” His
face twisted into a sour expression that ended as contempt. “Your division has
been on the run for quite a while.”
Keren
suppressed a deep angry breath as a last tiny trickle of adrenaline made it
into his overloaded system. After a brief pause he nodded. “Yes, sir. We have.”
“Well.”
The officer smiled coldly. “Lucky for you. Your running days are over.” He
gestured up the hill towards the barely visible Tomb on the hill. “Move
your . . . unit up there. And dig your mortars in. They
will be a useful addition to our firepower.”
Keren
nodded respectfully and reached for his map. “Yes, sir. Sir, might I point out
two items of mortar doctrine . . .”
The
officer’s face hardened. “I am quite aware of mortar doctrine, specialist. I
gave you an order.”
“ . . . which
point out that in close contact mortars are to be maintained on the mortar
vehicles. We can be in operation in four minutes after we stop if we stay in
the vehicles, sir. It will take time to dig in.” He looked the officer right in
the eye. “We were in contact less than two miles from here, sir.”
The
officer’s face tightened at that. He could not have missed the hypervelocity
missile impacts, but apparently he had hoped that the enemy was farther away.
“Where?”
“The
Posleen unit was at Arlington Hall, sir. Their God King was using a plasma
cannon. You did see the fire, sir?”
“Yes.
Specialist, we don’t have time to argue . . .”
I’ve got
all the time in the world, you jackass. If you put us on that hilltop we’ve got
maybe fifteen minutes of life left. “Sir,
we were heading for a traffic circle on King Drive. One-hundred-and
twenty–millimeter mortars have a minimum firing distance of nearly eight
hundred meters. I cannot provide Final Protective Fire for your unit from the
hilltop.” It was a bald-faced lie. The distance was a third of that. But he was
betting that this officer wouldn’t know it.
And
he was right.
“Very
well,” the officer snapped. “But if you attempt to move out of position once we
are in contact, I will have your vehicles destroyed. Your running days are
over, Specialist.”
“Yes,
sir!” said Keren. “What is your fire control frequency?”
The
officer was desperately attempting to not look over his shoulder towards the
encroaching Posleen. So his sudden look of shock was comical.
“Uhhh . . .”
“We’re
on Sixty-Three Seventy, sir,” said Keren, helpfully. He pulled out his leader’s
notebook and made a note. He tore the sheet of paper out and handed it to the
colonel. “Here, sir. We’ll go set up then?”
“Yes.
Go, I’ll . . .”
“Call
us.”
“Yes.”
Keren
saluted again and picked up the mike. “Three Track. Hold up. I’ll ground-guide
into position.” He was glad that the receiver was turned down and to his ear.
“What?
We’re stopping?” said Three Track. One Track responded similarly but the
response was garbled by Three’s response.
“Yes,
we’re going to the roundabout. I’ve got the map and the colonel has our
frequency. I’ll lead in. Get ready to get set up.” He smiled at the colonel and
saluted him without taking the mike out of his hand. Then he put the Suburban
into gear and gunned it around the big mortar track in front of him. The rear
wheels of the big SUV tore the carefully tended sod and threw a rooster tail of
loam back along his backtrack. He looked in the rearview to where the colonel
was still standing, holding the little slip of paper. What a dumbfuck.
“You dumbfuck,”
snarled the specialist, leaning in the window. Third squad’s leader was not
happy about stopping. Keren glanced up from his board and saw first squad’s
leader headed over to the Suburban as well. The sergeant was from another
battalion in Third Brigade and outranked Keren. But he was originally a rifle
team leader and did not know much about mortars. He also was not much of a
leader. He had been happy to defer to Keren throughout the entire flight. Keren
finished setting up his board just as the sergeant arrived.
“Yeah,
maybe,” Keren admitted. Then he jerked his chin towards the hill. “There’s
Dragon antitank missiles up there. And maybe those big goddamn sniper rifles.
If we try to run you want one of those up your ass?” He looked third squad’s
leader in the eye. “The fuckin’ Posties are gonna be here anytime. You think
maybe we better be ready to fire?”
The
squad leader was a big man, with fine blond hair that was cut down to the stubble.
The stubble on his face was nearly as long. His nostrils flared as he clenched
and unclenched his hands. Then, with a glance up the hill towards the rifle
positions and a curse, he turned around and stomped back to his track, shouting
for them to get the gun into action.
First
squad’s leader was an older guy, balding, fat and black as an ace of spades. He
stood with his arms crossed as the other squad leader stomped away and looked
at Keren somberly.
Keren
looked back. “Yeah?”
“How
long we gonna stay?” the squad leader asked.
Keren
shook his head in resignation. “The smart answer is until they,” he said with
another jerk of the chin towards the battalion, “have got it well and truly
stuck in the horses. When they don’t have any time to spare for a mortar unit
that is running away.”
The
sergeant nodded his head. “In other words, we gonna run at the worst possible
time.” The statement was toneless.
Keren
looked down at his shaking hands as they spun the board. “I’ve never been
accused of being smart,” he answered. “Stubborn, yeah. Stupid, yeah. A pain in
the ass. Oh yeah. But not smart.”
The
sergeant smiled faintly and nodded his head. With that he started walking back
to his track.
CHAPTER 63
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
0817 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
“Mr. President,”
said Captain Hadcraft, “this is stupid.”
The
commandeered Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle crabbed sideways as it fought
its way up the road embankment. The platoon from the One Hundred Fifth Infantry
Division had been reluctant to give up the vehicles. But the combination of a
direct presidential order and a platoon of Armored Combat Suits had won out.
Now the suits had transportation that was all-terrain to an even greater degree
than the Suburbans they had started out in.
But
that wasn’t going to help a bit if they were overrun by an angry mob.
U.S.
29 and U.S. 50 on the north side of D.C. were being ruthlessly cleared of
vehicles. Anyone who had not made it to the Beltway by this time was ordered
out of their car, truck or van and the vehicle pushed to the side by
dozerblade-mounted tanks. The refugees from this and the battles to the south
were being trucked to parks around the Veterans’ Hospital where a tent city was
forming.
The
Presidential Unit had been headed by the area when this came to the attention
of the Commander in Chief. And he had ordered that they detour immediately.
The
problem from the point of view of the Secret Service, and the Marines for that
matter, was that the President’s approval rating was not the highest at the
moment. By a result of a direct presidential order, the United States had just
lost more soldiers in a forty-eight–hour period than at any time in the last
century. There was a formless anger about this that had already been observed
on the still-functioning Internet. What form it had was directed at the
President. Add to this the anger of people forced from their homes and it meant
a good chance these people would attack the Chief Executive.
The
President turned the helmet over and over in his hands and finally shook his
head. “Maybe. I’ve never been called smart. Stubborn, yes. A pain in the ass,
yes. But not smart.” He looked up at the Marine officer hunched forward on the
crew seat. Bradleys were never designed to accommodate combat suits and it was
obvious. The squad in this one was crammed in like sardines. He looked directly
at where he figured the captain’s eyes would be. “But these are my people. This
is part of the job. Put it to you this way; when one of your soldiers is in the
hospital, do you go see him?”
The
suit was unmoving, but the President imagined there was a tiny change in the
set of the arms. “Yeah.”
“Same
deal. And sometimes they’re angry at you.”
The
captain turned his palms up in admission.
The
President turned the helmet over in his hands again, watching as the mobile gel
flowed and humped. It looked like something from a bad horror movie and he was
supposed to put it on his head. “I gotta see these people. If I blast past them
on my run to Camp David, it’ll be a slap in the face this administration might
never recover from.” He looked up and his face hardened. “So tell the driver to
head over there.”
The
refugees were a milling mass. Thousands of people, individuals and families,
had been transported to the area by truck and bus and dropped on the golf
course. A company of MPs was futilely trying to get the people sorted out and
tents erected, but by and large the people stood, sat or walked around as they
wished. The MP company commander had set aside a platoon for a reaction team
and they occasionally had to enter the mass to break up fights or stop
incipient riots. The management was becoming more and more like dealing with
prisoners of war as time went on.
The
Bradleys and Suburbans of the presidential caravan swung up Arnold’s Drive
towards the Soldiers’ Home then pulled to a stop. Because all the Marines had
not been able to fit in the Bradleys and SUVs, one squad had clamped onto the
outside of the fighting vehicles. These individuals dropped to the ground
before the tracks had stopped turning, their grav-guns dropping into place as
they searched for threats.
The
milling refugees had watched the caravan approach with mingled curiosity and
trepidation. The Suburbans indicated that it might be a higher government
official, although the usual limousine was missing. But the armored fighting
vehicles, tanks to most of those watching, were a scary reminder that the
government was not always a friend. Already treated as effective prisoners by
the necessities of the situation, seeing heavier firepower, and especially the
half-saint/half-demon Armored Combat warriors, was a mixed blessing. When the
Marines lowered their weapons, searching for an exterior threat and not
thinking about the effect on the civilians, the mob surged backward.
Newsies
had swarmed to the refugee camps like flies to jam. It was apparent from
several of their fellows’ transmissions that reporting on the Posleen advance
was tantamount to suicide. That being the case, the next best press was
governmental incompetence and bullying. Since the “government” had not been
able to instantaneously provide food and shelter for fifteen thousand refugees,
it was obviously incompetent. Along with the deaths of nearly a hundred
thousand soldiers in northern Virginia, this was proving to be a scoop of
legendary proportions. Or so it appeared.
In
the wake of the Posleen destruction of the satellites, most standard television
signals had been lost. Although cable companies were scrambling to connect
their networks back up through the Internet, most people had switched to the
nationally mandated broadband for their primary media link.
While
the regular media still had a significant share of that market, many viewers
had become savvy enough with the still-developing medium that they were
seeking out their own news venues.
Major
“alternative” news sources were sustaining such massive loads that servers were
failing left and right. However, enough of them remained up for the viewers at
home to zero in on each individual’s concept of “newsworthy.” For once a major
war was being sent into homes virtually unfettered.
Viewers
had a choice of live feeds from Inter-Vehicle Information Systems that clearly
indicated where the fighting was going on, or even live video from combat suits
headed to or involved in the fighting. An encounter between First Battalion
Five Hundred Eighth Mobile Infantry and a small landing outside Redmond,
Washington had the highest audience rating in history, surpassing even the
final hours of the Battle of Fredericksburg. The fact that it occurred at
primetime had something to do with it.
And
the highest rated “show” for the battle was not on any of the networks. The
output of a website dedicated to Armed Forces news and issues was the most
common “hit” on several major search engines for “combat news.” This relatively
minor website had nearly sixty million simultaneous connections for the full
three hours of the battle. The entire event was “commentated” by text box
overlays, unit descriptions and explanatory graphics.
The
“commentator” was a former Army colonel who was too old, even with regen, to
have been recalled. His expert analysis was compiled by a team of
communication-savvy internet geeks, then interactively viewed by over a hundred
million people in the United States alone. Not only did he determine in advance
the precise outcome of the battle, he was correct within two suits of the total
friendly casualties. The video was enhanced with audio clips from the battle
and erudite commentary on the similarity to battles ranging back to the
campaigns of Sargon. Sun Tzu was frequently quoted, leading to overloads in
most of the search engines that had led to the site. And their primary
advertiser, which was Barrett assault rifles, experienced the largest ordering
frenzy any site had ever seen. They and all their linked sales outlets
immediately went into terminal overload.
But
the “major media” ignored these quiet inroads on their market share and continued
to concentrate on the tactics that had worked for them in the past.
So
when the crowd surged back from the Marine Guards, the reporters crowded in.
The screams of the hysterical refugees, already driven to the brink of despair
by the loss of their homes and the possessions that they had accumulated over
the years, were faithfully broadcast across the world.
The Marine
captain put his hand on the President’s chest as the rest of the company
deployed. “Not until it’s safe,” he growled. The President, still holding the
hated helmet, just nodded his head. The sound of the plasteel armor slamming
through the troop doors and the diesel engine overrode any note from outside.
But a moment later the detail chief put his head in the door.
“Sir,”
he said, his face tight. He was in a dilemma. The crowd was about to turn into
a riot and the only person who might stop that was the President. But by the
same token, doing so would be nightmarishly dangerous.
Captain
Hadcraft put his hand up to his helmet, then cursed. Since he had been on
speaker it was faithfully reproduced. “Sir,” he said, grabbing the President by
the arm, “we got another problem.”
The
President ducked to keep from smashing his head on the troop door. The suit was
already trying to adjust to his shape and style of movement, but occasionally
it interpreted his sharp, precise movements as a command to jump. Fortunately
that had not happened while he was in the crew compartment with his helmet off.
Now it propelled him out and down the troop ramp in a near sprawl.
As
he came around the back of the AFV it was immediately apparent what the
problem was. He looked back and forth for a moment from the Marines with
lowered weapons to the surging crowd and the news cameras.
“Christ,”
he whispered, “what else is going to go wrong?”
He
thought for just a moment and the capacity for rapid and effective action that
had stood him in good stead in his climb up the political ladder came to the
fore.
“AID,
the suit can act as an amplifier, right? Like that suit unit did on Diess?”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Okay,
tell the damn Marines to raise their weapons.” He dragged himself up onto the
roof, unable to find the footholes he knew should be there.
He
reached the top of the vehicle just as the Marines raised their weapons. He
dropped the helmet, raised his hands and said, “Amplify.”
“My
fellow Americans!” were the words that boomed out of every suit at
tremendous volume. The tornado of sound, the words and the familiar voice
shocked the crowd from motion into inertia. The President put his hands on the
hips of the suit and leaned forward. “I came to see what I could do to
help!”
The
President was in the midst of the crowd and the Secret Service was frantic.
They could barely keep up with his rapidly moving suit as it shook hands and
gave bone-crushing hugs. The smell of the crowd was completely different from
any he had ever worked. It was not just the lack of baths. There was a stink of
fear to them that was palpable along with the effect of not having latrines. Unless
they got this camp under better control disease would begin breaking out. The
thought of cholera and typhus in modern America was mind-boggling. Especially
on the steps of a hospital.
“We’re
doing all we can,” he said, nodding at another problem. He stopped at the sight
of a mother with a sleeping child in her arms. The little boy had a large gash
on the side of his head, only partially healed.
“Ma’am,”
said the chief executive carefully. The woman had her eyes closed, rocking back
and forth. “Your son’s hurt.” There was no response as the woman continued
rocking and the President looked over his shoulder. He didn’t know what any of
the suits were but surely the company had medical supplies. “Captain Hadcraft,”
he snapped as the Detail finally caught up with him through the press of the
crowd.
“Sir.”
“Do
we have a medic?”
“You
mean a corpsman, sir? No, they’re not on our roster.”
“Any
medical equipment?”
“Just
the suits, sir.”
“Get
in here,” he finished, stepping towards the woman. “Ma’am?”
“Sir,”
cautioned Agent Rohrbach with a hand out to stop the executive as he stepped
forward. The massive man reached out gently and touched the woman’s arm.
The woman’s eyes flew open and she hissed at
the agent. “He’s dead!” she spat. “Dead! Leave me alone! He’s dead! Dead!”
The
President and the agent both stepped back as the woman started to cry. “AID?”
the President queried, “can you . . .”
“The child is
not dead, sir,” the device stated definitely. “His vital signs are not even
bad. He does, however, appear to have some cranial damage.” The sensors of the
suits were better than an MRI at that range. “He is probably unconscious and in
a coma. But not dead.”
The
crowd was pushing forward again to get a look at what was going on, and the
reporters were forcing their way to the fore as Captain Hadcraft arrived. He
didn’t even ask a question, just stepped forward with an injector and caught
both falling bodies. The mother was handed off to one of the Detail as he
cradled the child to his chest and headed back to the tracks.
“Captain?”
the President started to ask. The action had been so fast and smooth there had
been no time for reaction and the suit was halfway back already.
“I’ll
take him to the VA hospital, sir. You get the situation stable.”
The
Commander in Chief shook his head and smiled. Having good subordinates was a
treasure. The crowd was still pushing forward but there was enough room for a
conversation. It would have been better to be up on something to be able to see
more people and be seen but this appeared to be as good as it got.
He
looked around and caught the eye of one woman who looked composed. “What do you
need? Tents? They’re here and more are coming. What else?” His stare was like a
laser, daring her not to answer.
She
looked startled for a moment then responded. “Food. Most of us have hardly any.
And there are already fights over it. And we need more protection. It’s like
hell in here.” Her eyes went wide at that and she looked around.
“Okay.” He
nodded. “I’m going to do something about that right now.
But . . .” He looked around. He needed to address the crowd but
there was no podium or stand or anything. “AID, I need to get higher.”
“There
is a way. I can simply lift you up on antigravity. However, it might be viewed
negatively.”
The
President shook his head. Lifting himself up like Christ would not be a good
image. “Well, I can’t damn well stand on anyone’s shoulders.” The suit
weighed half a ton and it was fully loaded with ammunition.
“If
you wish I can reduce the effective weight of the suit to nearly zero. Then you
could stand on Agent Rohrbach’s shoulders. I also can stabilize it so that you
don’t fall over.”
“Do
it,” the President said, catching Rohrbach’s eye. “You heard?”
“Yep,”
said the burly former football player dubiously.
As
he felt the weight come off, the President swarmed up on the agent’s shoulders.
The Detail surrounded their chief to keep the crowd from jostling him.
He
looked around for a moment and decided that the only way to start was a joke. “Hi,
I’m from the government and I’m here to help you!”
Some
of the crowd looked nonplussed but there was actually a slight chuckle.
“Seriously,”
he continued, still amplified but not as loudly as the crowd stopped pushing
forward. “Help is on the way. I, personally, am not leaving until it gets here.
But you need to help too! There are tents over there that need setting
up. I’ll get more soldiers over here to help, but there’s enough of you here
that with a little organization you could have had them set up already.
“Food,”
he said and stopped. “AID?” The conversation was still amplified.
“Sir?”
“Is
there a large mess unit available that can be diverted over here? One that is
close?”
“Yes,
sir. The primary supply company for the Thirty-Third Division is assembled
less than four miles away.”
The
President looked out over the crowd. “I’ll get them on the move over here. And
other units to the other camps. You have given to your country your whole life
and now is when you get some of your own back.
“But
you have to help. Work together! Take care of each other! There’s a
hospital right over there,” he said, gesturing over his shoulder. “If there’s
someone who is injured, help them get there. Let the strong aid the weak until
we can rebuild and repair our lives!”
“When
can we go home?” a voice floated out of the crowd. There was a rumble of
discontent at that.
The
President’s face went grim. “I didn’t want most of you to have to leave! So I
made the biggest screwup in American history. I am never going to do
that again! When forces are assembled and prepared we’ll go home. When all
the units are ready. When we are damn well going to kick those Posleen
bastards’ asses we will go home!” The cheer that raised was faint-hearted
but the best that could be expected under the circumstances. He didn’t bother
to mention that most of the homes would probably have been destroyed. Those
that did not have mines would be first looted, then demolished by the Posleen
as they converted the area to their use.
“I
screwed up big time,” the politician admitted. “And as soon as there’s a
moment’s peace I am going to submit myself to the Congress for impeachment.”
The
shock of that statement was so great that one news cameraman actually dropped
his camera and several microphones were dropped.
“But
until then, I’m going to hang on. I’m in contact with Generals Horner and
Taylor. I don’t know if you know it, but we’ve totally smashed the invasion in
the south, using the tactics that were planned on before the landing. General
Keeton and Twelfth Corps have done a tremendous job.
“But
here in northern Virginia, the battle isn’t over yet. We still have random
landings going on and no real force in this area. So I’ll stay here until more
support arrives.”
At
that the Detail chief on whose shoulders he was standing began to curse quietly
and fluently.
“According
to plan I was headed to Camp David and then to a defense bunker,” he admitted,
shaking his head. “But seeing this, I can see where I’m really needed. Generals
Horner and Taylor can run this battle without me joggling their elbow. After
we’ve got this area squared away I’ll go to the other camps to make sure
they’re okay.”
He
looked around the sea of uplifted faces one last time as the mob seemed to
drink energy from him. The group was totally mixed. There might have been a few
more black faces than others, but there were white men in suits next to black
laborers, Hispanics next to Orientals, Hindus shoulder to shoulder with
Pakistanis. In the face of the alien horror, little differences like Shiva
versus Allah were temporarily forgotten.
And
all of them were looking to him for the strength to make it though the bad
times. Whatever mistakes he might have made, however bad it had been and would
be, he was their President and he was standing by them in need. It was nearly
worth a meal.
“Now
I’m going to detail my Marines to show you how to get these tents set up and
latrines dug. They’ll be getting people to help. Everyone is going to end up
with a job. And every job is important. I’ve got to go get some supplies and
support headed this way.”
“We
are Americans. Black, white, brown or yellow, we are the descendants of
survivors! And we have proven again and again that we are the toughest people
in the world because of it! Now is the time to prove that!” To the
sounds of cheering he jumped down off the Detail chief’s shoulders and shook
his head.
“What
a screwed-up situation,” he whispered to the agent.
Rohrbach
just rubbed a shoulder and frowned.
CHAPTER 64
Alexandria, VA,
United States of America, Sol III
0923 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
Keren frowned as
he tapped out a cancer stick. He lit the Pall Mall with a butane lighter and
leaned back in the comfortable driver’s seat of the Suburban. He had the
plotting table balanced on the steering wheel, a fresh cup of really lousy
coffee and a cigarette. It was as good as it got. Of course, that wasn’t all
that good.
“Those’ll
kill you,” said Elgars in a quiet voice. She snapped the freshly cleaned AIW
back together and gestured for him to pass over the pack. “Gimme.”
Keren
snorted and fished the pack back out.
Elgars
looked for a car lighter but the Suburban had only an empty socket marked
“12-Volt Power.” The vehicle also had no ashtray and a cute little trash hamper
now stuffed to overflowing with Meals Ready To Eat wrappers. Keren passed her
the lighter and she lit the cigarette and propped her feet up where the
windshield used to be.
“So,”
she said, getting her weapon laid across her lap just so. “What happens now?”
She took a deep pull on the unfiltered cigarette and coughed wrackingly. “Aw,
Jesus! That’s awful!”
Keren
blew out a cloud of blue smoke and laughed again. “Yeah, ain’t it. Well, in a
while the horses are gonna show up. And they’ll call for fire,” he said,
gesturing towards the hilltop. “I’ve set up all the probable avenues of
approach on this.” He tapped the mortar plotting board. “When they call for
fire, I’ll tell the guns. They shoot the mortars, the bad guys die. Everybody
who matters is happy.”
“Uh-huh,”
said the soldier who had fought her way out of two bloody defeats. “And when
the yellow bastards just keep coming?”
Keren
took another puff, blew it out and propped one boot up in the shattered
driver’s window. “Well, then it gets interesting.”
“Mortars,
what’s your callsign?”
Keren
picked up the handset. “Golf One One.”
“Golf
One One, this is Third Regiment fire control. Adjust fire, over.”
Keren
shook his head and snorted.
“What?”
Elgars asked, picking up her rifle. She had fallen into a cat nap in the
fifteen minutes or so they had been waiting.
“Hang
on,” he chuckled and composed his voice. “Roger, Third Regiment, adjust
fire, out.” He unkeyed the mike and snorted again. “They wanted to know our
callsign, which is used to keep the ‘enemy’ from knowing what unit is calling.
But they sent their own unit in the clear.”
“Oh,”
she said and frowned. It was obvious she didn’t think it was important.
“Elgars,
everybody in an infantry unit should know correct radio procedure. It’s
basic infantry training. But they don’t. What does that tell you?”
“Oh,”
she said again and nodded. “They don’t know shit?” she guessed.
“Yeaaah,”
said Keren, nodding. “Makes this real damn interesting, don’t it?”
“Uhmmm,”
the radio said and was silent again. “Golf . . .” It went
silent again.
“One
One,” offered Keren. “Or just say, ‘mortars.’ ”
“Golf
One One, fire mission, over.”
“Go
ahead.”
“The
Posleen are at the intersection of Washington and Fifty. And there’s more by
the annex.”
Keren
shook his head. The humor, though, was gone.
“What?”
said Elgars.
Keren
keyed the radio. “Roger, stand
by.” He spun the plotting
board: “Could you try to find something called ‘The Annex’ on that map,
please?” he asked Elgars.
He
picked up the microphone for the gun frequency as she said, “There’s something
called the Navy Annex. It’s over by the Pentagon.”
“Guns.
Deflection two seven three seven, elevation eleven hundred, charge three. Four
rounds.” He dropped the radio and spun the board again. “Where by the
Pentagon?”
The
Posleen normal stared up at the symbol. It was not one of the familiar ones.
There was the crossed projectile weapons; they were familiar and easy to deal
with. There was the two-turreted building of the military technicians. There
were orders to avoid that symbol at all times. This was a new one. It appeared
to be picture of a world with some device on it and rope around the device.
Perhaps it was a symbol of a group that chained the world. The normal looked
over its shoulder towards its God King. That worthy ordered it to open the
doors with a gesture of its crocodilian head.
C-9
was an atomic catalyst explosive. The President’s Marine Guard Force had easy
and unquestioned access to Galactic weaponry and explosives. They also were
veterans of Barwhon and Diess. Since they were well aware that the Posleen
first looted, then destroyed, most of the buildings they captured, they saw no
reason not to advance the timetable. Well, the destruction timetable. And there
was a whole lot of tradition attached to Henderson Hall. So there was no damn
reason at all to give it to the horses. It just wasn’t a Marine “thing.”
Keren
had discovered that there weren’t many safer places than under the steering
column of a Chevy Suburban. So when the white flash to his left transferred
palpable heat to his skin, he dove for the floorboards.
The
shockwaves from the series of triphammer micronuclear explosions rolled the
Suburban over onto its top then back up onto its springs. Shaken, Keren took a
moment to compose himself and make sure that the worst was over, then dragged
himself up into his seat and looked to the south.
From
the area where the Pentagon had been faintly visible a pall of smoke was
rising. The trees across Arlington Hill had been stripped of most of their fall
leaves and the tops of some of the southerly ones were sheared off. Several
fires had started on the south edge of the hill.
He
did a quick inventory to check the damage. One of the PRC-2000s, the one set to
support the regiment, was smashed. The other had apparently jammed under one of
the seats and physically survived. He’d check to see if it still transmitted in
a minute.
The
interior of the vehicle was trashed. All the personal gear that had accumulated
in the back along with half-eaten meals, open drinks and other debris had been
thoroughly mixed. On the other hand, it wasn’t much worse than it had been
before the explosion. There had been less spaghetti sauce on the royal blue
headliner. But not much less.
Elgars
was apparently alive. The soldier was braced against the door cradling her left
wrist with an expression of agony on her face.
First
things first. Elgars wasn’t dripping blood, so finding out if they still had
wheels was paramount. Keren turned the key and after a couple of cranks the
engine caught. There was some blue smoke but all the gauges dropped into the
green and the engine kept running. He cautiously put the Suburban into gear,
but the grinding sounds were no worse than they had been.
He
looked over at Elgars. “Broken or just sprained?” he asked.
“Broken,
I think,” she said through clenched teeth.
He
nodded his head. “Hang tight for a couple of minutes.” The last question was
whether the radio would key. The blasts had looked like nukes, which meant
Electro-Magnetic Pulse. EMP was supposed to destroy all electronics. But the
truck had started, which came as a surprise. Now if the radio had just
survived.
“Guns,
you there?” he asked.
“Roger,
FDC. What the fuck was that?” asked the sergeant from One Gun.
“Dunno,”
answered Keren. “Can anybody see any of the bridges?”
“Yeah,”
answered Three Gun. “I can see the Arlington Bridge. It’s still up.”
“Okay,
I gotta switch freqs. I’ll be right back. Is everybody okay?”
“We’re here,”
answered
One Gun.
“For a while,” Three added.
Keren
switched frequencies to the regiment’s and set the remaining radio for ease of
switching back and forth. “Regiment,
this is Mortars, over.” No response. He turned to Elgars. “Hang on a sec.”
He crawled into the back of the vehicle and started turning over the mass of
rucksacks, clothing, candy wrappers and sleeping gear. After a few moments’
search he found a medic’s kit he had picked up on the retreat. In it, as
expected, was an inflatable splint. A few moment’s later he had Elgars’ wrist
splinted and was back on the radio.
“Regiment, this is Mortars, over.”
He unkeyed the radio and took a deep breath. The fires on the hill were getting
worse, the small blazes joining and catching the dry grasses of the graveyard.
A few of the trees on the south side were smoldering as well. If it spread much
farther they were going to have to leave, good timing or not.
“Mortars, this is regiment,” came
another voice. The previous caller had clearly been young and extremely
confused. This was an older voice, full of assurance.
“Regiment, we have fires spreading
towards our position. We will have to move soon. Do you need fire, over?”
The
bleak humor of the responder was clear. “Mortars,
we need a hell of a lot more support than you can give us. What’s your ammo
situation, over?”
Keren
didn’t know who this person was, but it was a completely different cat than the
colonel in command. “Not so
hot. We’ve got about fifty mortar rounds a track left and we’re about out of Ma
deuce.”
“Roger.” There was a pause. “Gimme a volley of twenty
rounds of variable time per gun on the big twisty intersection right by the Marine
Memorial. Seems the Marines didn’t rig that for some strange reason. It’s grid
1762-8974 if you’re using a military map.”
Keren’s
face split in a grin. “Roger.
But who the fuck is this?”
“Major
Cummings. I’m the S-3.”
“Well,
Major, nice to talk to a professional for a change. Stand by.”
“Yeah, likewise mortars,” said Major Alfred Cummings, lowering the
radio. Not that it was going to matter. Alpha Company was heavily engaged by
the Posleen mass coming down from the north. In Andatha this would have been
the time for a shower of artillery, cluster ammunition for preference. What
really pissed him off was that he knew there were artillery units in range, but
he didn’t have the frequencies or codes to call for fire. Just another cock-up.
The
post was supposed to be a sinecure. A comfortable unit for a company commander
who had seen just a little too much combat. He and a few NCOs were there to add
a tone of reality to the purely ceremonial guard force.
But
now it was a different beast. The colonel had decided to make this stupid
stand. Naturally, when the C-9 went off and the pressure went on, he didn’t
make the grade. Major Cummings had hated polluting this holy ground with that
coward’s blood, but he was sure the ghosts would approve. Some of the boys had
run into the coffins as they dug in. Most were intact, but a few had spilled.
He told them to dig on, dig on. The soldiers, sailors and Marines who were
buried on this hill would have no argument with a little jostling. They
understood.
And
that boy on the radio had understood. The major could tell. That was a good
troop. He smiled as he heard the crump of the mortars firing in the background.
Only two tracks, which was a shame. Mortars were hell on the yellow devils.
“Sir,”
said Sergeant First Class Smale. “Them’s mostly through Alpha Company. Bravo
an’ Charlie’s holdin’, and thems that’s gonna stays from Delta, they’s up at
the Tomb.”
“But
we’re being flanked.”
“Yissir.”
“Should
we pull out?” he asked. It wasn’t much of a test, the sergeant was another
veteran.
“Nah,
Major. Whut’s da fuckin’ point? Landin’s right and left. Might as well die here
as anywhere. Better than fuckin’ Andatha.” The NCO turned to the side and spat.
“Yep.
But no reason to take everyone with us.”
“Golf
One One, this is Echo Niner Four, over.”
Keren
picked up the mike as he carefully watched the hill to his west. “Golf One One, over.” It was the S-3
by the voice.
“Golf One One, the explosions from the
complex slowed the tourists down on that side. However, we are being pushed
back to the north. We anticipate losing the bridge shortly. I recommend that
you move out on completion of the fire mission.”
Keren
smiled and his eyes misted slightly. “Roger,
Echo Niner-Four.” He wondered
how to ask the next question. “Will
we have company?”
The
smile on the radio was evident. “Not
unless you’re slow and our out of town visitors catch up. I think this is all
the farther I’m gonna go.”
Keren
nodded. “Well, there are worse
places.”
“Roger, that, Golf, and I’ve been to
most of them. Looks like only one to go.”
Keren
smiled. “Roger, Echo. See you
there. Golf One One out.” He
flipped frequencies. “Can you still use your rifle?” he asked Elgars. The
private was white-faced with pain, but had the weapon trained towards the fire
to the north.
“Yeah. When the hell are we getting out of
here?” As she asked that there was a large but distant explosion to the
southeast. “And what the hell was that?”
“Probably
a bridge going. And we need to be across one before we’re the main course.” He
keyed the mike again. “One Gun, how many left on that volley?”
“Just
about done. We sort of lost track.”
“Roger.
Three?”
“That
was the last.”
“Roger.
Button up and do the boogie. We’ve been waved off by the Regiment.” At the
words the Three Gun track jerked to life. The driver apparently did not think
it necessary to take the gun out of action. Keren had never turned the Suburban
off, so he put it into gear as well. One Gun still wasn’t moving.
“One
Gun, you mobile?”
“Roger.”
The track spat one more spiteful round skyward and lurched into movement.
“We’re outta here.”
“Let’s
just hope the engineers know we’re coming,” whispered Elgars pessimistically.
CHAPTER 65
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
0925 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
Lieutenant Ryan
was not lost. It was impossible to be lost on the Washington Mall. You always
knew right where you were. What he did not know was where he and his platoon
were supposed to be.
After
Occoquan the platoon had been unable to find anyone in their chain of command.
The trucks that had brought the rifle company to replace them had left
immediately. Without transportation they had walked northward, hopping the
occasional ride. Their target had been Belvoir; however, just short of their
goal they were directed away by MPs and told to join the bits and tatters of
units headed for Washington. They eventually found transportation but the bus
drivers had no better idea of where they were supposed to be than anyone else.
By
default they had ended up on the Mall. Most of the remnants of Ninth and Tenth
Corps were there, electronic intelligence units without divisions, mess halls
without battalions, the occasional artillery or infantry unit that had made it
out of the rat-fuck to the south. There was no attempt at organization; units
set up wherever they stopped.
Lieutenant
Ryan parked the platoon near the D.C. War Memorial and sent Sergeant Leo out on
a scrounging mission, hoping that he’d actually come back. The sergeant had and
reported that anything anyone wanted was available, for a price. Since nobody
had orders to release anything, the only way to get it was black market. There
had been one mess hall that had set up, but it had run out of food in no time.
Now it was cash on the barrelhead or go hungry.
However,
Leo also reported that engineer units were on their way to rig the bridges for
demolition. When they showed up the platoon might be able to attach themselves
and at least get some rations.
Lieutenant
Ryan passed around the hat for donations. After that was unsuccessful he and
Sergeant Leo shook down each of the engineer privates individually. This time
Lieutenant Ryan left Leo with the platoon and went out on his own. While he
fully recognized that the older soldier could probably negotiate a better deal,
that assumed that he came back with the rations.
Their
combined two hundred dollars was enough to secure two cases of MREs. His
Academy ring got them a heated tray meal. Water was still flowing in the city
so that was no problem. As the platoon shared a tray of lasagna, the lieutenant
pointed out that it was better than Ranger School. Within a day or so they
should be able to find a unit to attach to so the food only had to last that
long. Sergeant Leo pointed out that he had managed to avoid Ranger
School at least three times.
The approaching
sounds of battle had drawn many of the insanely curious towards the Potomac.
But Lieutenant Ryan had drifted that way in hopes of finding the engineers who
were sure to be rigging the Arlington Bridge. The MPs who were holding back the
curious let him through without comment when they saw the engineer tab. He
could see figures moving carefully along the bridge, stringing wire. It looked
like about a platoon of engineers, and he knew he was almost home. There was a
single figure leaning on a Humvee supervising the activity. Lieutenant Ryan
walked up to him and saluted.
“Ryan,
sir. Second Lieutenant, Corps of Engineers,” he said to the officer.
The
officer was a short, broad colonel smoking a cigar. He looked the lieutenant up
and down for a moment and then took the cigar out of his mouth. “What can I do
for you, Lieutenant?”
“Sir,
my platoon apparently has been lost by higher. We were deployed from Belvoir
and couldn’t get back in. We’re out of rations and don’t know where to report.”
The young officer paused as if unsure how to go on. “I don’t know what to do,
sir. I’m not even through the basic course!” he ended on a rising note. He
caught himself as he almost began to babble. Just because things were a little
fucked-up was no reason for an academy graduate to lose control. It could
always be worse.
The
colonel took another puff on his cigar and regarded him evenly. “Where were
you?”
The
lieutenant misinterpreted the query. “We’ve been camped on the Mall, sir.”
“No,”
said the colonel, flicking an ash. “Which bridge were you blowing? That’s what
all the Belvoir Boys were doing, right?”
“Oh.
Yes, sir. My platoon was tasked with the Virginia 123 bridge
at . . .”
“Occoquan.”
“Yes,
sir,” the lieutenant finished lamely. “How’d you know?”
The
colonel finally let a smile violate his face. “You’re the ‘Lost Platoon,’
Lieutenant.”
“Sir?”
“Where’s
the rest of your unit, Lieutenant?” asked the officer without answering either
query.
“Back
on the Mall,” said the thoroughly confused lieutenant.
“Well,
I’d offer you my Humvee, but you’re just going to have to walk a little longer.
Go find them and tell them to get their asses over here. I’ve got to get on the
radio.”
“Yes,
sir,” said the lieutenant. The colonel saluted in dismissal and the tired and
still confused lieutenant started trudging back to the platoon’s bivouac.
“Castle
Six this is Castle Five, over.”
The
officer who leaned in and snagged the microphone ahead of his RTO was a
mountain. Nearly seven feet tall and proportionately broad, his uniforms
required custom-tailoring from raw material. The crew-served M-60 machine gun
slung across his back looked like a toy. “Castle
Five, this is Six actual, over.” The voice was a deep, rich bass.
“Six,
we found the ‘Lost Platoon’, over.”
The
ebony face creased in a broad smile and the general gave a thumbs-up to the
distant and unseeing colonel. “Great!
which one was it?”
“Ryan.”
“Well,
the West Point Society is going to be pleased as punch to hear that.”
The
smile in the distant officer’s voice was evident. “Only the cream, boss.”
“Well, only the stuff that rises to the top,” corrected the general, a
graduate of a ‘lesser’ school. “How’s
it going otherwise?”
“Pretty
well. I’m gonna have to put those poor kids to work one more time, but we’ll be
ready.”
“Roger.
We’re about done laying in the champagne.”
“Sorry
I’m gonna miss the party.”
“So’m
I. But we all must have the occasional sacrifice. Good luck, Tom. Out here.”
The
general looked around and smiled. Most of the forces that had been sent out to
mine the bridges over the Occoquan had come back immediately. They had then
been sent back out in a less harum-scarum fashion to prepare other sites for
demolition and to establish fighting points. After those tasks were complete
they again returned to their base at Fort Belvoir.
With
the destruction of Ninth and Tenth Corps the general had put his personal plan
for Ragnarok into place. The ammunition dumps of Fort Belvoir, filled once
again for the training of recruits, had disgorged an amazing variety of
explosives and mines.
Since
he had at his disposal the equivalent of a brigade of Army Combat Engineers, he
was determined that the Posleen would have a very hot reception. On the other
hand, he was no fool and had no intention of being a hero. The force of
trainees and their instructors were put to work turning Belvoir into mechanical
hell.
Mining
and booby-trapping is a matter of art. The point is not just to kill the enemy,
but to frighten and shock them. Simple overwhelming force is usually the best
bet. But with all the munitions and time available to them, the general felt
that the “Home of the Engineers” could do a little better than that.
He
dug out a computer program a nasty-minded engineer had come up with and tried
it out. The program was called “Perfect Hell” and was a minefield design aid.
It created a fiendish series of concentric self-activating fields. The purpose
was to first suck a force in, then thoroughly trap it. Feed in an inventory of
available materials and personnel and it spit out a design and a timetable.
He
had run the available parameters and almost choked on the solution. It turned
Belvoir into a nightmarish set of mine nets. The nice part about it was that it
designed with the Posleen in mind. They could drive their forces right across
the mine zone, but it would cost them thousands and thousands of “troops” to
clear it that way. Of course, if he had to come back and take it out it would
not be pretty. But that was another bridge.
He’d
started the installation and the brigade had worked like demons. However, as
each section was completed he sent the trainees down to the fort’s marina,
where they were ferried across the Potomac.
He
now waited with a few remaining senior officers and NCOs. For the last hour
they had talked about old times and watched the monitors that had been
scattered along U.S. 1. He was currently outside getting a breath of air. But
at a yell from inside the boat house he strode back in rapidly.
“They’re
in sight,” said the Belvoir operations officer. The colonel was leaning
forward, hand on the shoulder of the tech managing the monitors.
The
general grabbed the back of the colonel’s battle dress uniform and pulled him
gently back. “You can’t make ’em come on any faster. And that’s practically the
only private we’ve got. She’s more important than any three of us.”
The
colonel shook himself and laughed deprecatingly. “Sorry, soldier,” he said.
The
tech nodded with a smile and switched screens. The new screen was from a sensor
ball placed on the sign at the main entrance. The mine fields started just on
the other side of the sign. The staff officers leaned forward like spectators
waiting for a crash and the general had to laugh. The operations officer was
actually washing his hands in anticipation.
“Sir,”
said Belvoir’s sergeant major, keeping one eye on the screen, “I made a little
foray on the officers’ bar.” The sergeant major held up two bottles of Moët
& Chandon. “I thought we might want to toast the first blast. Or
something.”
The
general laughed again. These guys were really getting into the spirit. “Sure,
why not,” he said then turned back to the screen at a gentle “Shit” from the
operations officer.
The
mass of Posleen on the screen had stopped. A single Posleen was forward of the
rest and it had stopped cold fifty meters in front of the Main Post welcome
sign. The mass of Posleen behind it was not a single company but thousands.
They had been concentrating on the drive up the U.S. highway and now milled in
front of the sign, shuffling back and forth and fidgeting.
A
God King came forward and then another. Their alien saucers were drifting from
side to side constantly, apparently to make it harder for snipers. Several of
them gathered in front of the sign and appeared to engage in an argument.
Slowly the saucers stopped moving back and forth as alien teeth were bared and
crests lifted and fluffed.
Another
one came forward, finally, who apparently was senior. This God King took one
look at the sign and backed away. Much further away. It then called the other
God Kings over and continued the discussion. Another argument ensued which was
finally cut off by the senior God King. At his gesture most of the God Kings
and their forces simply turned around and trotted back to the south away from
the facility.
One
leader was left with a single company. He watched the others retreat, then took
a last glance over his shoulder and headed after them.
The
jury-rigged control room in the boathouse was filled with stunned silence. The
general leaned forward and tapped the tech on the shoulder. “Switch to U.S. 1
north,” he said quietly.
There another
force was trotting, a single company in the lead without a “point” individual.
The God King was close to the front in the midst of the company and others were
visible farther up the road. The company trotted down U.S. 1 to the main
entrance and swung in. However, just as it neared the MP Post, which was where
the booby traps started on this side, it too stopped, piling up in its haste.
The God King came forward for a brief look and his crest went straight up in
the air. He appeared to shout something and lifted his saucer out of
ground-effect. Before the regular Posleen of his company could even get turned
around, their leader was back on U.S. 1 and accelerating to the north.
The
general was never sure where the laughter started. Some said it was the
sergeant major. Some said it was the female technician’s infectious giggle that
set it off. Some insisted it was the deep, bass laugh of the United States
Army’s Engineer. Whoever started it, it turned out to be impossible to stop for
nearly ten minutes as monitor after monitor showed untouched Posleen units in
full retreat.
For
years afterwards, in the midst of the worst of news, the few lucky souls who
were in that control room could look at one another in brief encounters and
crack the other up by a simple widening of the eye or a gesture of a crest
lifted in total fear. Utter, total and abject fear. Of a twin-turreted castle.
Of “Fort Belvoir, Home of the Engineer.” Of the Sapper.
CHAPTER 66
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
1045 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
“I think we shall
stay well away from there,” commented Kenallai. The notice had been ferreted
out by one of Kenallurial’s “Companions.” With the fief of the military
technicians finally neutralized, perhaps they would be fewer in number.
The crossed-rifle
warriors were becoming more and more of a challenge, however. This last group,
outnumbered and with pitiful weapons, had seriously mauled the oolt’ondar that
assaulted them. Their last stand atop the hill had been worthy of song and
there was still discussion as to which was the Kessentai. Given that there were
more than enough thresh to be had, including many on foot that were yet
untouched, they might declare the entire group piled on the monument at their
center Kessentai and give them a single Kessanalt.
The
place that they had stood made no sense. There was a fairly good shelter on the
ridge, but it was well away from the monument they had chosen to cluster upon.
And the entire ridge was covered in stones. He had set Kenallurial to
determining the purpose of the ridge as he and Ardan’aath surveyed the problem
to the east.
“So,
old friend,” he said, gesturing to the bridge below. It was still intact but
they had learned what happened when they tried to cross one. “What shall we
do?”
“That
I know not,” admitted the old oolt’ondai. “If we set claw on that structure it
will take us to the Fuscirt.”
“Yes,”
agreed Kenallai. “Fuscirto uut these ‘sappers’!”
“I
have, perhaps, two answers, edas’antai,” said Kenallurial, drifting up silently
from behind.
Ardan’aath
turned away as Kenallai queried with a lifted crest. But the older Kessentai
did not go so far as to not hear the suggestions of the younger.
“This
place is a ‘graveyard,’ a place where certain of the thresh are placed after
death.”
Kenallai
tilted his head to the side in query. “I don’t understand.”
“It
was difficult for me to comprehend as well, edas’antai. However, instead of
recycling their dead, the thresh apparently place them in boxes in the earth.”
He gestured at a headstone. “This lists who they were and when they lived.”
“That
is,” the Kessentai wrinkled his snout in distaste, “that is disgusting.”
The
younger Kessentai lifted his crest in assent and snorted. “Nonetheless it
appears to be the case. Furthermore, these in this place are not just thresh,
they are all threshkreen.”
At
that Ardan’aath turned and looked at the serried rows of headstones drifting
off in every direction. “Oh, abat shit,” he whispered.
Kenallai
looked at him questioningly. “What?”
“I
will make you a bet. Most or all of them are not just threshkreen. I will bet
you they are Kessanalt.”
At
those words both of the other Kessentai were flushed by combat hormones.
Kessanalt was accorded to only the most potent, the bravest. To be surrounded
by unrecycled souls of Kessanalt was like some nestling nightmare. At a
visceral level they were suddenly surrounded by the larger and fiercer teeth
that drove all the Posleen to become as secure as possible.
“Fuscirto
uut!” said Kenallai. “First metal threshkreen. Then where the Kessanalt go
to die. What is next?” he finished rhetorically. “You said you had two
answers?”
“Yes,
my edas’antai,” Kenallurial agreed. “I perceive a possible way to capture the
bridge.”
“Ah!”
exclaimed the oolt’ondai. “And will it work?”
“It
might,” admitted the younger Kessentai. He told them what it was.
Kenallai
watched a descending ship as it headed to the other side of the river. If they
did not make the crossing, the latecomers might make a bridgehead. He could
call his Oolt’pos forward to make the crossing. But many of the large command
ships had been destroyed doing just that and it would take precious time. No,
better to try the crossing with his eson’antai’s idea.
“Look
at those abat,” snorted Ardan’aath. “We do all the work and they come
wandering in to take our prize.”
“They
are landing on the other side of the river, Ardan’aath,” Kenallai retorted with
a snort. “They seem to be landing in a grat’s nest to me.”
The
sonic boom overhead was hardly noticeable after all the artillery and
demolitions they had endured. But Keren still looked up.
“Oh,
fuck,” he said as the Suburban bounced across the torn grass to the south of
Washington’s Monument. The lawn had already been abused by various tracked and
wheeled vehicles and was rutted and worn. They had seen the units scattered
across the mall and the monuments area and wondered where the hell their
assembly area was in the whole sea of tents, trucks and fighting vehicles.
“Just
another lander,” said Elgars. A couple of ibuprofen had apparently helped with
the wrist.
“Yeah,
but it’s gonna land on some poor bastards who are gonna have to do something
about it.”
“You
mean it’s landing in a hornet’s nest.”
“Yeah.
But it’s gonna kill a bunch of hornets.”
Sergeant
Carter had never set up a squad tent in his entire military career. But, not surprisingly,
the AID had precise directions. So, while one squad was laying out the grid for
the tent city, he and his squad were showing a group of civilians how to set
them up. The rest of the company was explaining field latrines in another area
or standing guard. The guards were still by the Bradleys, rather than around
the President, when the Posleen ship landed.
The
ship slowed to practically zero and drifted, light as gossamer, over to Fifth
Street. There it set down and dropped its ramp.
The
crowd had started to panic at the first sonic boom. The now familiar sound went
straight to the reptile hindbrain and triggered a flight. Unfortunately
everyone had a different idea of which direction to run in and the result was a
riot.
The
riot stopped when the ship arrived. As the shadow drifted across, the mob noted
distance and direction in its mob mind and headed the other way. The effect was
to sweep the Detail along with it.
The
President, on the other hand, in his half-ton battle armor was simply buffeted.
Once he was knocked over as he stood his ground but as the crowd thinned he
regained his feet.
The
golf course between the Posleen ship and him was scattered with injured and
dead from the panicked mob. Most of them were children or the old. As the ship drifted
to the ground the President shook his head. He looked around at all the poor
people who had been killed and injured in this last incident and put them
squarely on his ledger. He could have ordered them dispersed, put into
scattered and controlled groups. Then all those poor children who were lying
broken on the ground wouldn’t have been there. And if he had had the sense that
God gave a donkey all the poor children who were scattered across Prince
William County would still be alive.
He
shook his head one last time and looked into the depths of the hated helmet. He
really, really hoped that the gestalt knew what it was doing. He could feel it
pulsing against his control and he was about ready to let it take over.
He
put the helmet on and waited for it to open pockets over his eyes, nose and
mouth before opening his eyes. “AID?”
“Sir?”
“When
the first Posleen appears, begin taking your control from the gestalt.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“I
will attempt to not make distracting movements and sounds. However, if I move
in a major way, AID, you follow Sergeant Martinez. Clear?”
“Clear,”
said the AID. There was a strong but complex surge from the gestalt. He took it
as agreement.
He
reached behind him and lowered the M-300 grav-rifle. As the heavy weapon
dropped into place, a series of screens blossomed across his vision. The
information was surprisingly comprehensible for a change. Range and bearing
tracks crawled across as he shifted the weapon back and forth. A crack appeared
at the top of the ship’s deployment platform.
“Well,
guys,” he whispered to the electronic entities, “it is up to you. Do your
President proud.” At least he would be able to look his ghosts in the eye.
CHAPTER 67
Washington, DC
,United States of America, Sol III
1046 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
The gruff but
friendly colonel had left, after ensuring that Ryan’s platoon of trainees was
firmly attached to the local force. He had been replaced by a much more dour
captain. Lieutenant Ryan felt like he’d wandered into a play in the middle of
act three. The colonel and the captain seemed to communicate in some sort of
code. But he could tell that the captain was not pleased to make his
acquaintance. His only comment was something to the effect of points for the
WPPA.
Now,
Lieutenant Ryan had not been in the Army long, but he knew what the “West Point
Protective Association” was. Since it was normally invoked to save the career
of a West Point graduate, he had to assume that he was in deeper shit than he
thought over “losing” his platoon. The good work they had done at Occoquan had
been forgotten, of course, and the only thing that would be remembered was that
he had wandered around the Mall all day looking for a home. It didn’t seem fair
but, then again, the Army rarely was. All the “atta-boys” in the world were
erased with one “oh-shit.”
However,
whether the captain liked him or not, Ryan felt it was his duty to point a few
things out to him. So he screwed up his courage and approached.
“Sir?”
he said, diffidently. The captain turned from where he had been surveying the
work on the Arlington Bridge. The location was perfect for getting a good
overview, since the back side of the Lincoln Memorial looked directly across
the bridge. It did, however, have a few down sides.
“Yes,
Lieutenant Ryan?” he asked in a supercilious tone. Captain Spitman was a tall,
broad officer whose black eyes were piercing.
“I was just
wondering, sir,” said the lieutenant, hesitantly. He cleared his throat. “This
location is . . . sort of exposed.” Some of the engineers
on the deck had been blinded by the flashes of the Pentagon’s destruction. It
only highlighted how exposed the position was.
The
captain’s face tightened. It could just have been a question from a junior
officer requesting greater knowledge, but the captain obviously took it as an
attack. “And I suppose that that observation is from your mass of combat
experience, Lieutenant?” he snarled.
The
fact that the reaction was completely overboard was lost on the lieutenant.
Ryan’s first reaction, which he suppressed, was sarcastic. He wanted to say, No,
it’s from having my head somewhere above my waistline. The location was exposed.
The first Posleen approaching the bridge would be looking right at them. And if
they were even slightly on the ball they would shoot the shit out of this
half-ass “command post.”
But he
controlled himself manfully. “No, sir. I was just wondering.”
“This
is the best location to control the rigging and detonation of the charges,
Lieutenant. We have three separate methods of detonation leading to the command
center. I would hate to have one of those out where anyone could blow up the
bridge at whim. Furthermore, it permits me a clear view of approaching Posleen.
Last but not least this is well beyond the standard range of engagement for
Posleen forces.”
The
lieutenant nodded in agreement at this fatuous explanation. It immediately
called to mind Law Seven of Murphy’s Laws of War: If the enemy is in range,
so are you. “Very well, sir. Thank you very much for that explanation. I
was wondering, I have a few issues to discuss with my platoon sergeant. By your
leave, sir?” He finished in a ritual request to be excused.
The
captain grandly waved him away and went back to watching the last few wires
being rigged into the circuit board. The bridge did indeed have three backup
systems to drop it. One of the three would be guaranteed to work. Of course,
they all terminated at the command post, so it was a point failure source. A
minor item that had been glaringly obvious to the trainee lieutenant. A minor
item that was pointed out in all the “how not to do it” parts of the manuals.
But that had somehow completely escaped the engineer company commander.
* * *
“Echo Three Golf One One, this is
Whiskey Four Delta One Five, over.”
Keren
glanced at the radio with a puzzled expression and handed the mike to Elgars as
he pulled out his ANCD. The device was about to expire, and he had no idea
where to find another.
The
platoon had stopped on the back side of the Washington Monument mound. It put
them hull-down to any Posleen at the level of the Potomac, but they were still
in view of Arlington Hill. There were no more fireworks from the Hill, so he
had to assume that the Old Guard major was raising one with absent companions.
But, for the time being, the platoon was out of it.
They
had set up with the guns ready to fire, and Keren had automatically laid them
in and set up the plotting board, but now they were just resting. Eventually he
was planning on finding somebody in the mass who had some idea what was going
on. But for now he was content just to chill. They had done their bit and more.
So
the radio call, an unknown station trying to log onto their net, was
unexpected.
The
ANCD listed the caller as the Fiftieth Division Artillery Fire Direction
Center. But the hacking on the first day of battle made him cautious. He took
the mike back from Elgars. She stepped out of the Suburban with a whispered,
“Gotta go.”
“Whiskey Four Delta One Five, this is
Echo Three Golf One One. Authenticate Victor Charlie, over.” There was no
such authentication line. It was a trick.
“Golf One One, there is no such
authentication, over,” said the confused voice on the radio. On reflection
the voice sounded a bit rote. It could be a very good voice processor and Keren
was suddenly glad he had used the old trick.
“Sure there is, Delta. Figure it out or
get off my net.”
There
was a brief silence on the radio. Keren suddenly realized that Elgars was
striding steadily towards a cluster of soldiers about seventy meters in front
of the platoon. From the set of her shoulders there was a problem and as he
watched she drew his 9mm Beretta out of her BDU cargo pocket. He had assumed
from her words that she meant to find a latrine; that was obviously incorrect.
He flipped frequencies.
“Sergeant Chittock,” he yelled. “get somebody out there to cover
Elgars!”
The
private had walked into the midst of the group and up to a beefy soldier
showing the admiring crowd his .50-caliber sniper rifle. As Keren looked on in
horror she placed the barrel of his Beretta on the back of the soldier’s head
and thumbed back the hammer. It appeared that she was about to pull the
trigger.
One
of the group lunged towards her but stopped at a burst of overhead fire from
the .50-caliber machine gun on Three Track. The heavy machine gun would chop
the entire group into hamburger if the gunner dropped the barrel a few inches
lower. The tracers drifted past Washington’s Monument and towards the distant
enemy.
By
this time the crews from the two tracks were deployed and had their weapons
out. The array of leveled rifles and grenade launchers convinced the crowd that
making an issue of the lady’s informal declaration of war would be inadvisable.
Sergeant Chittock apparently talked Elgars into walking back to the Suburban.
She was carrying on a continuous harangue directed at the now white-faced
holder with the sniper rifle. Several of his former admirers were not looking
so admiring.
Keren
switched frequencies again as the milling crowd, herded by the platoon’s
weapons and covered by the two machine guns on the tracks, made its way towards
the Suburban.
“Whiskey Four Delta One Five, this is
Echo Three Golf One One, over.”
“Golf One One, this is One Five,”
said a different voice than the previous. “What
is this authentication problem? And where have you been?”
“Delta, we got some shit going down here, sorry. Authenticate
Victor Charlie or get off my net.” Keren was rapidly tiring of the game but
he was bound and determined not to get screwed by orders from nowhere again.
“Echo
Three Golf One One, this is Whiskey Four Delta One Fiver. I authenticate
Khe-Mother-Fucking-San. Now are there any other stupid radio tricks you want to
play?”
Keren
smiled. “Negative Delta One
Five, welcome to the net.”
“Roger,
what is your position and status, over?”
The
group of individuals, covered by the rifles of the platoon, had nearly reached
the Suburban. Sergeant Chittock was now carrying the sniper rifle and the
Beretta. Things had definitely gotten interesting. Keren was spot-on for a bit
of boring in the near future.
“Delta, I’m going to have to put you on standby soon. We’ve got
a personnel problem that has gotten out of hand. Our location is on the east
side of the Washington Monument mound just short of Fifteenth Street. We’re a
one-twenty mortar platoon with two remaining tubes on tracks. We have
approximately twenty rounds of H-E left per gun and some flares and Willi-Pete.
We badly need resupply of diesel, beans and bullets. We’ve been in the goddamn
last rank of the goddamn retreat since fucking Dale City and we are
about done in. That is our status. Over.”
“Roger, Golf One One,”
said the voice, cooly. “Understood.
We’ll try to scrounge up some supplies for you. Get back to us when you’re
under control. Out.”
Keren
nodded to the unseen fire center and flipped back to the platoon frequency. The
confrontation outside had been reduced to fluent cursing on the part of the
female soldier. Keren got out of the Suburban and lifted his palms in a calming
gesture as Sergeant Chittock handed him his Beretta back. “Okay, one at a time.
What the fuck just happened?”
“This
son of a bitch . . .” “This lying cunt . . .”
“She said he . . .”
Keren
lifted the 9mm and fired it towards the Potomac. “I said one at a time.
Sergeant Chittock?” He held the pistol barrel up and pointed downrange. If
anyone was wondering why a Specialist Fourth Class was ordering around a
sergeant, they weren’t asking.
The
sergeant’s round and normally friendly face was creased in hard lines. “She
says this is her rifle and that this soldier and some of his friends raped her
an’ took it off of her.”
Keren
thought about that. He had seen Elgars in several moods and easily rapable was
not one. “Okay.” He turned to Elgars and held up a finger in warning. “Calmly,”
he emphasized, “explain.”
She
took a deep breath and crossed her arms. “I was a sniper with the Thirty-Third.
Bravo Company, Second Battalion Five-Ninety-First Infantry. We were in Third
Brigade. My platoon got attached to the Twenty-First Cav in that rat-fuck at
Dale City. I was on the west side when it all came apart. I ended up with these
clowns.” She jerked her thumb at the beefy specialist who had been holding the
sniper rifle. “I don’t know where the rest of them are, but he was with a truck
unit. I stuck with them at Lake Jackson ’cause I didn’t know where the fuck to
go. He was always wanting to try my rifle and he tried to cop a feel a couple
of times. I didn’t think about it. That kind of shit happens all the time.
“Then
when it came apart again, I had just decided to catch some rest. We were in the
back of a truck headed up the road to Manassas.” She paused and took a deep
breath.
“I
woke up with two of ’em holding me down and Pig-Breath here pulling down my
pants. When the three of ’em were done they dumped me by the side of the road
with that piece of shit rifle and one fuckin’ magazine. I guess they
thought we were the back side of the retreat.” She took another deep breath.
“Which was where you found me.” She looked at Keren with eyes smoldering. “I
want my fuckin’ piece back and Pig-Breath charged! I’d prefer castrated, but I
wanna stay out of Leavenworth myself.”
Keren
nodded at her when he was sure she was done and turned to the beefy specialist.
He noted in passing that his nametag read “Pittets.” It was obvious where
Elgars had derived the name Pig-Breath.
“What
do you have to say?” he asked evenly. He was ninety-nine percent certain that
Elgars was telling the truth. But since for some ungodly reason everyone was
looking to him for judgement, he had to be impartial.
“This
cunt is lying,” snarled the heavyset specialist, flexing his fists. “I’d never
met her before she walked up and stuck a fuckin’ gun to my head. She just wants
my rifle, the bitch, and I can’t believe you’re letting her fuck me over like
this!”
Sergeant
Chittock grabbed Elgars by the collar of her BDUs just in time and got an elbow
in the stomach for his pains. But she subsided after she realized who she’d
hit.
Keren
nodded again. He rubbed the stubble on his chin in thought and nodded a last
time. “What’s the serial number of the piece?” he asked Pittets.
The
beefy specialist blinked a few times. “Why the hell would I memorize a serial
number? I don’t see what that . . .”
“BR
19784,” Elgars hissed. “It stands for Barrett Rifles. And my initials are
scratched on the bottom of the receiver pan. A-L-E.” She smiled thinly. “If I’ve
never met you, I’ve never met the rifle, right, Pig-Breath?”
Keren
looked at Sergeant Chittock, who was searching the rifle for the serial number.
He stopped, then looked up at Keren and nodded.
Keren’s
face tightened. He looked at Pittets. “Wrap him up with hundred-mile-an-hour
tape and strap him to the side of One Track. We’ll turn him over to proper
authorities if we ever find them. If he makes too much noise, put a piece of
tape over his fat mouth.”
“Hey,”
shouted the specialist as willing hands dragged him towards the Mortar Carrier.
“You can’t do this! I’ve got rights . . .”
Elgars
hefted the rifle and tried to support it with her broken left wrist. She
grimaced and let the barrel drop.
“Well,”
said Keren with a grim expression. “You’ve got it again. What the hell are you
going to do with it?”
She
slid the butt to the ground and opened the bipod one-handed. “Well, first I’m
gonna give ’im a good bath,” she said. “Then I’m gonna zero ’im back in.” She
lowered it onto its bipod and sat crossleg alongside. “What I don’t know is how
I’m gonna reload the magazines.”
“Well,”
said Keren with a faint smile. “I guess you’re gonna need some help.”
CHAPTER 68
Washington, DC,
United States Of America, Sol III
1048 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
“Is there
something we can do to help, L-T?” asked Sergeant Leo. The Old Man looked as
despondent as the NCO had ever seen him. Even worse than when he thought they
were gonna run out of chow.
The
lieutenant sat on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial looking at the reflecting
pool. It was another perfect fall day, as all these awful days of death and
devastation had been. It was as if nature was laughing at them all for their
silly games of war. The only effect of the kinetic bombardments, so far, had
been to make for some spectacular sunsets and sunrises.
Lieutenant
Ryan had chosen the perfect spot to capture the reflection of the Monument in
the water. He was vacillating between hysteria and depression, both riding on a
knife edge. He was an academy graduate whose first professional responsibility
had, from his point of view, gone better than anyone had any right to expect.
Lucking onto the Missouri had permitted him to slaughter the Posleen.
And his platoon had performed like veterans under fire.
So
they got lost from their unit. It wasn’t their fault. There wasn’t a unit to
rejoin. So now they were talking behind his back about how the WPPA was going
to have to recover his career. After turning most of a division of Posleen into
paste.
And
now this.
He’d
only been in combat for a few days, but he felt he’d developed a “gut.” And his
gut call was that the Posleen were gonna wipe out the only controller for the
demolition charges. That meant that they would capture the bridge. At that
point the fucked-up units on the Mall would shatter like glass. And the Posleen
would own America’s core.
Losing
the Mall would cut the heart out of the States. Hell, it would have a major
effect on the expeditionary forces. Americans complained about their government
all the time, but that was not the same as hating the symbols on this historic
piece of ground. And all because a single stupid officer wouldn’t pay attention
to what a manual, an experienced junior officer and good common sense told him.
But
Ryan was an officer. And a professional officer at that, a product of the long,
gray line.
“I’m
fine, Sergeant.” He stood up and took a deep breath. There was a hint of smoke
smell from the fires to the south where the Marines had mined the Pentagon with
micronukes. He fixed what he thought was an expression of reserved
contemplation on his face.
I
was right,
thought Leo, we’re fucked. The last time the L-T had gotten that
constipated-possum look was just before they latched on to the Mo and
got all the fire-support any rational human being could want.
Leo
knew what was bothering the L-T and agreed. He was, after all, a demolition instructor.
And the captain was totally fucked-up. When the L-T mined the 123 bridge, Leo
had been ready to help on the design. But the L-T figured just the right amount
of demo and not only had three ways to blast, but different firing points for
all three. That was way over the limit to conservative, but the Old Man was a
belt-and-suspenders kind of guy. Which was just fine by an NCO missing two
fingers from his left hand. Cutting corners around demo was a baaad idea.
“How
are the men?” the lieutenant asked. He stopped whatever he was going to say
next and his breathing deepened as he dropped into thought.
Leo
cocked his head to the side. “They’re fine, sir. We got a resupply of chow and
ammo. Hell, we even managed to scrounge some wheels.” He leaned over to look at
the officer who had suddenly stopped paying attention. “Sir?” He looked the way
the L-T was looking but all he could see was the reflecting pool and the
Monument.
The
lieutenant closed his eyes for a moment, then they flew open. “Get them up
here,” he snapped. “Full loadout. Now!”
“Yes,
sir!” said the sergeant and started trotting down the steps before he wondered
why. But he continued on. The Old Man was nobody to cross.
The
lieutenant strode across the echoing room dedicated to either the greatest
humanist or the greatest tyrant in American history, take your pick, and
stopped at an innocuous side door. He had visited the Memorial as a kid and
wondered where it went. Someone had already shot the lock off and he stepped
into the small room beyond. The staircase he had fully expected to see dropped
into the stygian depths and he smiled. Fuck with his country would they? Fuck
with engineers would they?
The
last of the platoon was starting down the stairway when the first gout of
plasma slammed into the Memorial.
The
wash of ionized deuterium caused the marble face of the Memorial to sublime.
The gaseous carbon mixed with the carbon from the squad on the portico and was
blown away in the wind from the superheated air. The flight of God Kings was at
first unnoticed, but the rapidly approaching saucers could be seen all along
the Mall as their cannons continued to wash the area between the Memorial and
the bridge.
Kenallurial
shouted in pure joy as his tenar flared out. So this was the te’naal
battle madness that was spoken of. He felt whole for once, concentrated wholly
on the task. The thresh burned beneath his guns, and that was good. The far
side of the bridge was taken and the hated military technicians had been
overcome for once. He detached Arnata’dra to begin clearing the demolitions as
he charged the huge building.
There
did not seem to be an entrance on this side, but that was no barrier. He
floated the tenar up to the level where the hated technicians had been
set up and landed. There was no sign of their devices, but wires still
lingered, melted to the face of the rock in places or dangling on the ground.
Without knowing their purpose he was loath to touch them; that was Arnata’dra’s
province.
He
raised his talons in triumph. Let Ardan’aath belittle this accomplishment. A
bridge across the river was in the hands of the Host. Let the thresh despair.
CHAPTER 69
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
1050 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
So this is
despair. Jack Horner
looked at the two messages in the light from the hatch of the swaying Bradley.
The ACS battalion was at the intersection of U.S. 1 and Capitol Avenue. They
were barely ten blocks from where the President was under attack.
They
had been planning on leaving their canisters when they were almost at the Mall.
The incoming lander, however, had forced them to ground. Once they were on the
ground they were not a target to the lander, but anything flying was fair game.
They were assembling even as he read the conflicting messages. If he sent them
north to the refugee camp that was under attack they would still not be able to
save the President, who was probably already dead. They might be able to save a
few more civilians, but the President’s Guard was probably going to do the job
just fine.
So
that meant south. But by the time they got there the Posleen were going to be
deployed. Which meant that most likely the battalion would be overrun just
like those poor bastards at Lake Jackson. It was precisely the sort of place
where he had told his subordinates to use regular forces to stop the Posleen,
not the ACS. The suits were a finite resource. He should use the Hundred and Fifth
to try to stem the tide. Using the ACS would be the wrong strategic decision.
But
the Hundred and Fifth wouldn’t stop the crossing. They were weak as a twig even
with the “band of heroes” that he could throw in. They would break just like
the other units; you can’t stiffen a bucket of spit with a handful of buckshot.
And then the Posleen would be across the Potomac. And that meant backing up to
the Susquehanna. And ceding Maryland and Delaware to the Posleen. And the
Washington Mall. When it came right down to it, it was the battalion or the
monument. And he just could not make the professional choice.
He
shook his head and tapped his AID. “Nag, get me Major Givens of the ACS.”
Mike
watched Major Givens giving unseen thumbs-up signs as he tapped one armored
boot on the ground. O’Neal had six different battle maps up on his display and
the lander to the north, President or no President, was not the problem.
Standing around and discussing it was just making it harder. He popped off his
helmet, clamped it to his side and took a whiff. The one thing the suits did
not replicate well was smell. There was a hit of wood smoke from the mess
around the mall. Some less savory burning smells in there as well. Probably the
Pentagon. And the slight waft, even from here, of unwashed humanity. Soon,
soon, there would be the stench of slaughtered Posleen. Or his name wasn’t
Michael Leonidas O’Neal.
There
was no room for failure; the choice was success or the ferryman. He inhaled the
last fresh air he was going to smell for a while and felt his center finally
click into place. No doubt. No fear. No failure. He’d sworn it on the graves of
his dead.
“Captain
O’Neal,” Major Givens finally said, cutting him in on the conversation, “we
have two problems.”
“The
Marines can handle the refugees, sirs,” Mike said, cutting him off abruptly.
“We need to get to the Mall. Now.” He opened up a belt pouch and extracted a
can of Skoal. The transceiver in the helmet seal broadcast his words
faithfully.
“Mike,”
said General Horner. “They’re going to be spread out . . .”
“Not
a problem,” he said shortly, taking one gauntlet off and clamping it onto the
outside of his suit.
“Mike . . .”
said General Horner over the circuit.
“Jack.
Do not tell us our job. We don’t have time for this.” He tamped the can
down hard and turned his head to the side to listen. The firing to the north,
felt and heard in the background, reached a crescendo and died away as a large
number of grav-guns opened fire. It sounded as if they were finally clear of an
intervening obstacle. And as if the users were very, very angry.
“Captain . . .”
Major Givens said.
“No,”
interrupted General Horner quietly. “Major, the captain is the expert.
If he says let’s go, then you better go.”
“We
have . . . fourteen seconds to continue this conversation,”
said Mike stonily, with a glance at a projected hologram. He had programmed
the time he thought it would take the Posleen to get assembled into a countdown
timer along with the minimum time to make the movement. The battalion was
ready. All they needed was the word.
No
doubt.
He’d gamed this a thousand times before. It would work.
The
suits were also useless for pinching snuff. He popped the can with his left
hand and pulled out a pinch. “General Horner,” he continued formally, “Fleet
Strike is not giving Washington to the Posleen.”
No
fear. They were invincible. The Posleen would kill individuals. But as a unit,
the only way to fail was to fail to try. This was a strightforward “Horatio at
the Bridge” action. He had forty scenarios prepared. Any of them would work.
“General?”
asked the acting commander. The officer was used to clear plans developed in
advance. While he could change them on the fly to an extent, he was not a “seat
of the pants” warrior. He found himself simultaneously in command and out of
his depth. It was a most uncomfortable feeling.
“Do
it,” said Horner. He had no idea what the plan was. But he knew Mike O’Neal. If
Mighty Mite said the sky was green, Horner would double-check the forecast and
then get a second opinion before doubting him.
“Okay,
Captain O’Neal,” said the commander, “what’s the plan?”
“I’ll
have to tell you on the way, Major,” said O’Neal. “We haven’t got any time at
all.” He then belied his own words by inserting the pinch between his cheek and
gum. He carefully closed the can and put it away, then reclamped the gauntlet
and helmet. He spit out a few stray bits of tobacco and keyed the frequency to
the battalion broadcast.
No
failure. He hadn’t read the book, he’d written it. “Okay boys and
girls. Lets go kill us some E-Ts.”
“Man,”
snarled Keren, “it seems like we never have any time together. All we’ve been
doin’ is killing Posties!” He helped Elgars up and got the big rifle hoisted
over her shoulder.
“Well,”
she smiled grimly, “maybe later.”
“Sure.”
Like there was going to be a later. He could see the Posleen pouring across the
bridge and the God Kings popping up and flitting around the Memorial. The whole
damn pack of demons was over the river and all hell was out for noon.
Elgars
trotted towards the Monument, supporting the weight of the bouncing rifle with
her right hand. Keren shook his head one more time and headed for the Suburban.
He was glad she finally got her gun back. He suddenly realized he’d never even
found out her first name.
A
blast of fire came from the area of the Memorial, but he never paid it any
attention.
The
area under the Memorial was not exactly a warren of tunnels, but it bade a fair
resemblance. And, as the Posleen were discovering, engineers above ground were
nothing compared to engineers in tunnels.
The
ball bearings from the claymore bounced off the walls and ceiling of the
stone-lined tunnel and tore the front rank of the assault apart. A few tossed
grenades finished off the rest and the engineers lunged forward to retake their
positions. The first private in kicked closed the brass-fitted door at the end
of the corridor and threw the bolt.
“Set
the charges!” shouted Sergeant Leo, spooling out the wire and preparing the
blasting caps. “Move! Move!” He handed one to each of the chosen privates as
they emplaced the charges to blow the tunnel. These young men, and one woman,
had experienced a crash course in demolitions over the last three days. The
survivors had become experts.
He rounded the
corner and nearly ran into the L-T and the security team. The security team
held everyone that, in Sergeant Leo’s opinion, really needed to become a
rifleman. They were the survivors who had not learned the lessons of demo
adequately. They were used for support of the “real” sappers. Leo intended to
suggest each one of them get a small medal then send them over to the infantry.
“We’ve
got the corridor secure,” said Lieutenant Ryan, gesturing over his shoulder.
“Once you blow that tunnel, there’s only one way in and one way out. And
they’ll have to dig us out.”
“Well,
we’re about done,” said Sergeant Leo as the sappers came around the corner. He
counted each one past then leaned around the corner for a visual check. The
look drew a violent response as flechettes spanged off the rock walls and
ricocheted down the side tunnel. There was a cry of pain from one of the
engineers as a ricochet caught him in the thigh.
“Fire
in the hole!” shouted Leo as he twisted the hand-dynamo generator up to
speed then pressed the firing switch.
There
was a blast of heat and a wash of marble dust. As the platoon coughed on the
dust there came a complicated sound of settling from overhead.
“Uh-oh,”
said one of the privates, quietly.
“Yeah,”
said Lieutenant Ryan. “I think we might be in a little trouble here.”
Elgars’s
jaw dropped as the statue of Lincoln in the distance settled slightly to the
left. “Holy shit.” But that was only one bad sight among many.
The
area around the Memorial was rapidly filling up with Posleen. The assaulting
God Kings had been joined by their units and the forces were deploying outward,
opening the wings of the Host to capture the city. Starting with the Memorials.
She
filtered out the shouting and sounds of panic behind her and set the familiar
stock into her shoulder. It was a long shot up the entire length of the
reflecting pool. The laser range finder gave a reading of forty-two hundred
feet to the steps of the Memorial. As she shifted her sights to the side,
trying to decide which one of the God Kings to gift with her attention, there
was another gout of dust and fire from the interior of the monument. At least
one other group was willing to fight. Behind her she could hear the fading
engines of those either smarter or more cowardly.
“I
am didee-mao, asshole!” snarled the specialist in charge of the Three Gun
track. The driver put words to action, backing out of their position and
spinning the track in a shower of carefully tended turf.
Keren
stepped up to the spinning treads, daring to be churned into paste. “Austin!”
he shouted.
As
the specialist turned to look, a grenade came flying through the air and landed
in the crew compartment in the rear.
Trailing
blue air, the gunner and ammo bearer dove out of the compartment, falling to
the ground in a heap. The driver took her foot off the gas and piled out as
well, as the heavy-set squad leader tried to struggle out of the TC’s hatch.
The
assistant gunner had been deep in the belly of the beast when the grenade came
flying into the compartment and rolled to the front. With nowhere to go he
picked it up in the vain hope of throwing it back out. And howled in rage.
“The
fuckin’ pin’s still in!” he shouted swarming up the side of the crew
compartment bent on killing a café au lait gadfly.
He
was met at the edge of the compartment by a cocked Beretta. Keren punched the
barrel of the gun into his nose hard enough to draw a spurt of blood and
followed his tumbling body into the interior of the track.
Austin
tried to train the .50-caliber machine gun to bear on the raging Keren. But the
pintle mount was designed to prevent accidents just like that. Keren kicked
the squirming assistant gunner in the crotch, turned and triggered a single
round into the squad leader’s face.
It
was a shot he never could have made on a range. The bullet entered just below
the squad leader’s nose. The top of the specialist’s head was lifted up into
the air in a spray of blood and brains. He slumped backwards over the front of
the Mortar Carrier and landed on the still-quivering driver.
Keren
pulled himself up on the top of the Mortar Carrier and pointed the pistol at
the gunner and ammo bearer just starting to get up from their crumpled heaps.
“You
will get into this vehicle,” he shouted. “And you will lay in the fuckin’ gun!
Or I will personally kill every one of you sons of bitches! Is that clear?!”
“The
fuckin’ horses are over the river!” the gunner shouted, then looked at the
unwavering pistol. He wondered where Austin was. Then he saw the faint trail of
smoke from the barrel and made a rapid guess.
“I
am not giving the horses the goddamn monument!” screamed Keren, leaping off
the track and striding over to shove the still-warm gun into the face of the
recalcitrant gunner. “We have run and run and run and we are not going to
run anymore! Are we clear on that? Or do you need the same lesson?!” The
barrel intersected the cheek-bone of the gunner hard enough to leave a bone
bruise. The gunner closed his eyes as urine trickled to darken his BDUs.
The
ammo bearer raised one shaking hand to wave at the pistol.
“We . . . we’re clear. Okay?”
Keren
jerked up and strode to the front. The slight specialist pulled the driver out
from under the former squad leader with a single jerk. The female private was
stuttering and shaking uncontrollably. Keren shook his head and dragged her
back to where the gunner and ammo bearer were just starting to regain their
feet.
“Get . . . the . . . gun . . . laid . . . in.
Now. And don’t ever try to cross me again.”
The
gunner nodded as the specialist strode away.
The
ammo bearer shook herself and hissed. “We could shoot up that piece-of-shit
Suburban. See it make it through some Ma-Deuce fire!”
The
gunner slapped her across the back of the head so hard it knocked her to the
ground. He sucked his knuckles and kicked her. “Don’t even think about
it. What if he lived? And One Gun would eat us alive. Now get in the
fuckin’ track.”
As
Keren strode towards the Suburban he noticed that One Track had been watching
the whole show. Sergeant Chittock was on the .50 caliber and the weapon was
pointed more or less towards the Three Gun track.
“Point
it that way!” he raged, pointing towards the Potomac, “and get ready to
fire the gun!”
Chittock
just watched him as he headed to the SUV. The rest of the crew flew to getting
the weapon trained towards the enemy; nobody was going to get in the way of the
sulphurous specialist. As Keren reached the truck Sergeant Chittock caught his
eye with a lifted chin. The specialist stopped and looked towards him with fury
in his eyes. But Chittock just saluted, very precisely. Keren stopped and
nodded. Then returned the salute, just as precisely. As he stepped into the
truck he realized that the stench of urine he was trailing was not from the
gunner of Three Track. We’re all fuckin’ cowards, he thought. And picked
up the firing board.
CHAPTER 70
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
1053 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
The private bit
her lip and caressed the unfamiliar rifle on her lap. There was still a
shortage of the Advanced Infantry Weapon, so rear area units were issued the
venerable M-16A2. She had shot it in the abbreviated basic course, but once she
reached her permanent post the situation was so messed up the chain of command
was not about to let soldiers have weapons. So the first time she had actually
had one in her hand since basic was three days before, when the ammo supply
unit scrambled out of Fort Indiantown Gap.
She
looked at the selector now and considered her options. There was the easy one,
which was to go along with the actions of the driver. That made a lot of sense,
really. Who the hell wanted to drive a truck full of ammunition towards
Posleen.
But
then there was the fact that they’d been ordered to go resupply a mortar unit
by the Washington Monument. The platoon had shot out all their ammo, which
meant they’d at least been fighting. And they were probably still there,
whatever Lee thought.
Let’s
see, she
thought. How hard can it be. It says “semi” right there.
“Turn
around,” she whispered. The voice was barely audible over the scream from the
overstressed engine of the five-ton truck.
“What?”
snarled Private Lee. The stupid bitch was always whispering shit. Just like she
never pulled her goddamn weight when they were unloading. He’d thought half a
dozen times about dropping her off as a present for the fuckin’ horses. One of
these days . . .
“Turn
around.” The voice was a bare whisper again, but something about the quiet
click as the rifle was taken off safe penetrated the thunder of the engine.
Lee
turned to look at her with disbelief in his eyes. “Are you fuckin’ nuts?
Point that goddamn thing somewhere else before I make you eat it, cunt!”
The
slightly built private looked like she had swallowed a lemon. Her mouth was dry
with fear, but she slowly lifted the rifle until it was pointed at the temple
of the driver and snuggled it into her shoulder. Take a breath and let it out,
just like the drill instructor said.
With
a jerk she pointed it to the side and shot out the driver’s side window. The
blast from the rifle tore the glasses off the driver’s face and peppered his
face with burns. “Turn us the
fuck around, you bastard,”
she screamed, “or I will spread your brains all over this cab.”
As
the truck rocked through a U-turn she felt that that was insufficient. “There, was that loud enough for you? Asshole!”
There
was a snort of diesel behind Elgars as a Bradley troop carrier spun around and
started disgorging troops. The squad spread out down the mound, using the
reverse of the gentle slope for cover. The guy in the lead was real young for a
lieutenant colonel, but as he dropped to the ground not far away she saw he was
wearing a dress uniform Combat Infantryman’s Badge with two stars. Either the
“fresh-faced” kid had been in three wars already and was working on his fourth
or he was a “PX Ranger.” From the calm expression on his face and the expert
way he surveyed the battlefield she was fairly certain which one it was.
The
Bradley spun on its axis again and moved to the other side of the Monument,
well away from the squad. The mound was just a bit higher than the top of the
vehicle but that was no problem. The barrel of the Bushmaster cannon canted
upward and fired a burst of tracers.
Elgars
watched with glee as the rounds drifted up and then down, splashing without
particular note into the Potomac. She nodded her head as the lieutenant colonel
“squad leader” whispered into a radio, directing the fire of the gun.
“Hey!”
she called, catching his eye. “Those mortar tracks behind us are on
sixty-three-seventy!”
He
grinned and gave her a thumbs-up then started switching frequencies.
There
was a thonk! from the rear and she realized that a 60mm mortar team had set
up right behind her. The squad leader, another “fresh-faced kid” with master
sergeant’s chevrons, was lifting his head up to spot the fall of the shot then
adjusting with hand and arm signals. It was the crudest of fire control, but
with the mass of Posleen forming on the sward it was effective. Elgars saw a
splash of Posleen thrown away from the fall of the one-pound shot and nodded in
satisfaction.
At
least she wasn’t gonna die alone. She could see more people moving up to the
mound, many of them obvious rejuvs by their rank and assurance but others just
simple soldiers responding to the threat to the nation’s soul. She understood
the call. As screwed up as her life had been, she was still an American. And
the thought of the Posleen taking the White House, or the Capitol or even the
stupid Monument was just more than she was willing to accept.
If
she fired at a God King without more covering fire she was doomed. But maybe if
she didn’t fire at a God King? Just one of the “normals?” She had to re-zero the
damn thing somehow. She used the splinted forearm to support herself as she
took a calming breath.
“Duncan?”
“Yeah, boss?”
the NCO responded, his breathing deep and regular.
Certain
anomalies of armored combat suits had modified long-standing military
practices. One of them was the ubiquitous “jody” calls, chants paced to a
running or marching beat. When ACS units ran, it was at a long open lope, the
rhythm of which had so far resisted every attempted choreography. The standard
ACS “double time” was approximately a four-and-half–count beat that carried the
unit forward at nearly thirty miles per hour.
What
had been discovered, however, was that certain popular music, especially “hard”
seventies and eighties rock and roll and the rhythm-similar “raker” rock of the
turn years fitted the pattern with remarkable congruity. Thus, units usually
pumped one or the other type of music through to the personnel, helping to set
the running beat. A fair simulation is to imagine listening to “Thunder Road”
by Bruce Springsteen while running on the moon. Long-forgotten, and in many
cases dead, artists were staging a quiet comeback among Armored Combat Suit
units.
Although
the physical strain was lower than a standard training run, it was fairly
equivalent to a “long slow distance run.” A well-trained unit in peak shape
could generally sustain the pace for two to three hours. This gave the ACS an
approximately sixty-mile range using the same technique, the difference being
that a unit doing a “long slow distance run” usually did it in PT uniform,
whereas the ACS did the same thing in battle armor.
This
time the movement was a relatively short distance. The battalion, less Bravo
Company, was in a four-column formation, running down Seventh Street in
Downtown D.C. to the beat of Heart’s “Crazy on You.” All Duncan had to worry
about was coordinating two corps’ worth of artillery while doing it.
“Status.”
The voice on the other end was cold and distant. Mighty Mite was obviously in
his prebattle trance.
“Up.”
It was not that the run was taking away air. This was barely breaking a sweat.
But that was all the Old Man needed to know. It was all he wanted to know.
“How
much?”
Well,
usually. “Three battalions of One-Five-Five and scattered mortars.”
There
was no answer and Duncan realized that the Man was gone. It was just as well.
The tubes were there, but he was still slamming out the plan, his fingers
flying across a virtual map. Each of the units that had responded positively
was available for fire as an icon along one side of the map. Dragging an icon
onto the target point called up a dialogue asking for fire type and quantity.
After the first the others called on the same locations took the first as a
default. It was a simple method of developing a fire plan, but the complex plan
the Old Man had laid out called for several separate fire plans with
contingencies. Setting it up was taking time but he kept slamming it out. To
the sound of the drums.
“Gunny.”
“Yes,
sir.” The NCO angled across the formation as they passed the MCI building. He
accelerated ahead, driving the pace and elongating his stride to get to the
front. He pushed it up to nearly fifty miles an hour down the nearly empty
street. An advance party of real runners had moved ahead to seal the Mall end,
preventing a general retreat up the route. But he had to get to the Mall ahead
of the battalion. He needed to have a heart-to-heart with a couple of units.
Sergeant First Class Clarke had done wonders getting the cluster fuck on the
Mall organized, but that was just organization. Some of the units were willing
to stand and fight. But most were running again. He was zeroing in on a few
that were critical to the plan. If he couldn’t get them to stand and deliver
the Old Man might as well throw in the towel.
“Status.” The
captain was at level four again. It wasn’t like anybody had to protect him or
keep him from tripping over the curb, he reacted faster in a trance than when
he was “here.” But it was mildly unsettling to hear a voice with no more
emotion than a new AID.
“Coming
along. They don’t want to deploy forward.”
“Push
it. Get some units to the Watergate. Any units. Stat.”
Pappas
swallowed the sigh. “Yes, sir.” There was no point arguing; he knew the plan
and the requirements. But doing the plan was something else. He put one
foot down on the hood of a Mercedes and soared off it, pushing the speed up
even further. If he was going to get somebody to the Gate, he had to step on
it. It was going to take direct, personal attention. The fucking Mall was a
mess. The Posleen were organized and ready to roll. It was gonna be a
slaughter.
Ardan’aath
snarled. “This puny bridge is creating a total hash of our units! The entire
host is pushing forward without any control! It will take forever to sort out.”
He drifted his tenar to the side, watching his junior Kessentai trying
to reform the oolt’ondar. His own oolt’os were somewhere in the mess as well,
but they would find him. Most had been with him through worlds. They would find
him in Hell.
“Well, at
least we have a bridge,” said Kenallurial, blowing a snort.
Kenallai
raised his crest to forestall fresh argument. “We are exposed here,” he said,
just as a wave of explosions tracked across the oolt to the south. The blasts
were small, the charges weak. But it killed several oolt’os outright and others
were rendered as a loss.
The
exuberant young commander waved off the blasts. “The fire is coming from near
that structure,” he said, gesturing to the distant obelisk behind him. “It is
random. The thresh cannot hi—” His chest exploded in yellow as a .50-caliber
bullet punched through his neural path and out through his chest.
The
head of the young Kessentai flew upwards and yellow blood spurted from his
mouth and nostrils. He slumped onto his tenar controls and his talons
scrabbled at them as he appeared to be trying to say something. The crocodilian
mouth appeared to shape the first syllables of the name of his lord, father and
master, then he slid out of the cradle and to the torn ground, his fiery eyes
going cold and glazed.
The
sensors on a half dozen tenars screamed and weapons automatically
swiveled towards the source of the fire. The weapons vomited a mixture of
coherent light, relativistic missiles and concentrated plasma. A corner of the
Monument was gouged out as the fire continued into the spot where someone had
had the temerity to assassinate a God King. In a moment it was joined by the
fire of dozens and then hundreds of Posleen normals, following the aiming
points of their gods.
Of
all that host, only one did not fire. Kenallai sat upon his unmoving tenar,
staring down at the body of his eson’antai. As the fire slacked off the oolt’os
came forward to start the rendering, but he held up his hand.
Finally,
finally, he understood the thresh and it made him fear. Suddenly he was forced
to wonder if there was not a better way than to make such a one into an
evening’s meal. Not even a special meal, but simply one bit mixed into the
ration chain. Was there not something to such a one as this brilliant
Kessentai? Something that lasted beyond the moment the thrice-Fistnal
threshkreen put a bit of metal through him? Was there not something that lived
on?
And
he finally understood something else. Sometime, somewhere, someone in the Host
had felt as he had. Had felt this for an eson’antai, for a beloved comrade, for
a beloved enemy. And had fought for a change. For a bit of tradition that
lifted out of the continuous cycle of conquest and orna’adar. For
something higher.
He
had never felt that calling. But he understood it now. Understood it at last.
He
reached down to his feet and snapped loose a staff. There was only one per
Kessentai, in keeping with tradition. Some cast them away as scoutmasters. Most
had cast them at one time or another. Three had been cast on the long ride to
this hellish spot. But never by him. He had never understood the need. Now he
did. Finally. He finally understood his son, who had cast his at the blasted
heath of the first conquest on this blasted planet. This thrice-damned, never
to be mentioned, horrid, horrid little planet.
And
he finally understood the thresh. And feared. For they felt this way for every
single death. To the threshkreen, all the gathered thresh, all the wasted
thresh, all the thresh on the hoof were Kessanalt. Each and every one. And every
single threshkreen felt the anger he did now. It was terrifying to
suddenly realize how thoroughly they had erred in landing on this white and
blue ball.
“We
are doomed,” he whispered, as he tossed the staff onto the body. He looked to
the oolt’os. They were of his personal oolt and all fairly intelligent. They
should be able to follow the instructions. “Carry him to the hill.” He pointed
to be sure they were clear on which hill he meant. “Place him on the pile of
threshkreen that are upon the top of the hill. Take the staff. Report back to
this location when you are done.”
Ardan’aath
drifted his tenar up behind him. “We have to get moving.” He pointed to
the distant obelisk. “We’ve killed that one, but more will be back.”
Kenallai
turned to the older Kessentai. The commander could not expect him to suddenly
change as he had. He had not had the vision. “Do you realize how thoroughly we
have failed?”
Ardan’aath
did not even turn his head. But a twitch of crest betrayed his discomfort. “I
never expected you to be one to throw the staff,” he said dubiously.
Kenallai
flared his nostrils in agreement. “Well, I have. And I will tell you. We are
caught in the grat’s nest. There is no escape.”
Ardan’aath
took a deep breath. “I will give you a moment to decide. After that you can
take the field or return to the rear.”
Kenallai
flared his crest in bleak humor. “You idiot. There is no rear. I will
take the field with or without you. And be damned to your threats. But it is
because we have no retreat! This is the end! We have thresh dug-in like abat
in this damn building,” he continued, gesturing to the monument behind him. “We
have the force to the south, which has destroyed the host there and we
are faced with this force here while the host trickles across the river.
We are fuscirto uut!”
Ardan’aath
gestured in negation. “You are made soft by the teachings of that young fool.”
He gestured towards the obelisk-topped mound. “They are few and already
running.”
The
sensors screamed again as another God King slumped off his tenar. This
time the fire raked from one end of the mound to the other, tearing across the
front of the obelisk. But even as the fire tore into the engineering work,
another target dot appeared on the OAS Annex. And another on the Agriculture
Building. Then a group of oolt’os splashed away from the explosion of the first
120mm mortar round.
The
.50-caliber rifles were not only powerful, they had enormous range. The snipers
were taking shots from nearly a mile. Most of them were falling among the
normals, causing unnoticed casualties. But the occasional shots, better or more
lucky than the others, were hitting the leaders. And drawing massive response.
But as more of the weapons joined the fray, the response of the God Kings was
becoming more diffused.
Kenallurial
fluffed his crest. “We have come far together. But now it is time to sever our
relationship.” He nodded at his old friend. “I go to the field. And I shall not
return.”
He
turned his tenar and sent it floating down towards his waiting oolt. The
heavily armed company would scythe into the distant defenders. But he already
knew it was for naught.
Suddenly
a targeting dot appeared at the top of the obelisk and a moment later the tenar
of Ardan’aath evaporated in actinic fire as a bullet penetrated the crystal
pack.
The
low-grade nuclear explosion washed the steps of the Monument clear of Posleen.
Kenallai had already moved away from his former comrade when it happened and he
controlled his tenar as the shock wave threatened to drown it in the
shallow reflecting pool.
He
was beyond cursing. He winced at the gouge riven across his back by a bit of
shrapnel and looked to the distant obelisk.
“That
is just about enough,” he whispered. “To the Alld’nt with this.” He
gestured to the members of his oolt’ondar. “Off your tenar!” He suited
action to words, climbing off his own saucer and removing the plasma cannon
from its pintle mount. The heavy power pack was lovingly placed across his back
as the other God Kings dismounted and began gathering the oolt’os of the late
Ardan’aath. “If we are among the oolt’os the fuscirto uut thresh cannot
pick us out!”
He
turned to the east and the distant monument as another line of explosions
tracked across the mass of oolt’os gathered before the pool. “Let us to
battle!” he cried. “It is a good day to die!”
The
cough tore wrackingly through her chest and more blood spotted the white dust.
The falling limestone cap stones had pretty well flailed her ribcage and put
the final whammy on her left arm, but it had been a good shot. She had stayed
in place long enough to see the God King saucer blow. Her eyes were still
mostly blind from it. But it had cost her.
She
knew all the long goddamn run up the stairs that it was stupid. But the thought
of the shot, when she’d managed to avoid getting killed after the first one,
was just too good to pass up. A shot from the top of the Washington Monument.
It was a sniper’s wet dream. And it had been a good shot. She knew it the
moment the stock slammed into her shoulder. Perfect, right through the fuckin’
X-ring. Despite the heaving breath. Despite the pounding heart.
The
heart still refused to stop pounding. Only, now it was pounding blood out on
the marble floor. But it was worth it. It had been a perfect moment. And her
life had had damn few perfect moments. It had been a good
shot. . . .
CHAPTER 71
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
1116 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
They
might not win, but they were taking their best shot. Keren had tossed aside his
board and was down to breaking rounds. The guns were traversing their fire,
walking the explosions across the front of the oncoming Posleen force. Two more
gun tracks had joined them and the four mortars stitched a seam across the
enemy.
Three
Gun seemed to have settled down now that more ammo and support had shown up. He
wished that the backup driver of the ammo truck would pitch in or at least put
down her rifle. But he had become familiar with the look in her eye and wasn’t
going to be the first to suggest it. And it wasn’t as if they needed the help.
The
troops helping wore every damn kind of unit patch. There were cavalry, infantry
and a mass of combat-support types. They didn’t really know what they were
doing, but the hands made the job much faster and the mortar rounds were
finally piling up quicker than the guns could pour them out. About half of them
had come with a cavalry bird colonel. The guy looked like he was seventeen,
which just meant he was another rejuv. As he strode around directing the support
force he displayed the most incredible command of invective Keren had ever
heard.
And
these were just the dregs, the ones without decent weapons, or any at all for
that matter. Most of the volunteers had joined the cavalry troop on Monument
Mound. Some of them, they were just tired of running. Some of them figured if
they didn’t stop the horses here it was all over; might as well die here as
anywhere. But plenty of them seemed to just be pissed about where it was. Sure,
take Virginia, who cares. Take Arlington Cemetery. We’ll take it back. But the
Monument? Fuck that. There were a bunch of obvious rejuvs; most of them arrived
together and seemed to know each other. He didn’t know who they were or where
they had come from; they weren’t from any regular unit. But they were coming
out of the woodwork now, leading any damn soldier that showed an ounce of
willingness.
He
had seen plenty of the soldiers on the Mall run. The tent city that had been
setting up was nearly empty. And most of them weren’t here. But a good few
were.
They
were black and white and oriental and Hispanic. Men and women. Most of ’em
stank from days of running. Plenty of ’em looked like they could use a good
meal, or a night or two with no guard duty and no nightmares.
But
they were here. And they were helping. The ammo truck carried a mixed load and
the volunteers swarmed over it, throwing down cases of .50 caliber to feed the
guns on the tracks, breaking open the mortar rounds and running forward to feed
the infantry positions.
The
infantry, in the meantime, was laying down a curtain of fire. At least six
hundred soldiers had crept up the mound and now fired at the oncoming Posleen.
They were belly down with just their heads and rifles showing. An occasional
HVM would strike a section and open it up or the odd round would strike an
individual, but more volunteers would creep forward to fill the gaps.
Sure,
most had run. But plenty more stayed. And the horses would have the Monument
over their dead bodies.
“First
Sergeant, I don’t care if you are Fleet. I don’t care if you have orders from
God Himself. I am going back there over my dead body. I’m not even going to
think about it. There’s no way to win and I’m not going to be a stupid hero.”
The tired and dirty first lieutenant was the last officer the cavalry company
had left. Of course, he was in charge of less than a platoon of Abrams so it
wasn’t like he was overtaxed.
Pappas
thought about the statement for a moment. “L-T, I need your tracks at the
Watergate. I’m getting part of an infantry battalion headed that way and
there’s a buncha artillery support. But I really, really need your tracks,
too.”
“No.
And what’s more—fuck, no,” snarled the lieutenant, tired of arguing with the
remorseless NCO. The upstart Fleet bastard had been nagging him for nearly an
hour before the horses crossed the river. If they hadn’t crossed he might have
stuck around, but as it was there was just no reason. No reason at all. No
force on Earth was going to stop the Posleen tide now that it was over the
Potomac. They might as well head back to New York city as stick around and get
eaten.
The
officer dug at the plasteel fingers holding onto the coaming of his TC hatch.
“Get off my track.” The lieutenant switched on the intercom. “Pauls, move out.”
As the Abrams sprang to life, the other four tanks fell in behind it, moving
down the Mall to the east, towards the Capitol and away from the fighting
around the Arlington Bridge.
Pappas
sighed and leaned forward. Steel fingers removed the helmet from the struggling
lieutenant’s head and pulled him in close. The writhing officer found that
fighting against them was like fighting a mechanical clamp.
“AID,
whisper mode,” said Pappas, calmly. Then he whispered to the lieutenant. “You
said that it would be over your dead body. Turn this platoon around or I will
squeeze your head until it pops. Literally.” Pappas palmed the back of the
officer’s head and applied a calculated amount of pressure.
The
officer writhed in the iron grasp and whined from the pain. It felt as if his
eyeballs were going to burst. “You can’t do this the whole way there!” he
shouted. One shin banged painfully against the thermal repeater but the lesser
pain went unnoticed.
Pappas
face hardened and he yanked the officer out of the tank. “AID, broadcast to all
tank units. All units. Stop right here. We have to have a little talk.” The
tanks continued to the east. Instead of stopping they actually increased speed.
“AID, did that get to them all?”
“All
tanks have active carrier waves and I shunted it to the intercom.”
“Right,”
snarled Pappas. He pulled out a roll of spacetape and secured the futilely
protesting officer to the turret. Then he walked across the tank to the
driver’s hatch, his EVA clamps holding him to the skin of the armored behemoth.
He knelt by the driver’s hatch and pounded on it. “OPEN UP!”
There
was no physical response, but he could have sworn he heard a faint “No!”
He
tapped a spot on his forearm and a two-foot blade sprang out from the underarm
of the suit. The blade had been suggested by Duncan, and the Indowy fitters had
been more than happy to oblige for the whole company. Now it came in handy as
the monomolecular vibroblade slid through the Chobham armor like butter and
sliced the hatch lock in two.
In
short order Pappas had the remaining members of the platoon lined up at
attention. Two or three were bruised and at least one had a broken arm. There
was a cooling spot on the turret of one tank from a glancing armor-piercing
round and there was a gunner who would require serious medical attention. But
most of them were there.
“I
tried to do this the easy way. I am now going to have to do it the hard way,”
he said in an iron tone. “This unit is guilty of desertion in the face of the
enemy. The life of every member of this unit is forfeit, under both the Uniform
Code of Military Justice and the Federation Procedures for the Prosecution of
War.” He stopped and looked at the figures. Most of them were still defiant.
Despite the regular hangings for desertion before the Posleen landed, the
bug-out in this case had been so widespread that it was unlikely they would be
charged. What they did not realize was that they were no longer under the
control of American Law.
“You
were given an order by a duly designated noncommissioned officer of the Fleet
Strike Forces. As such your offense falls under Federation law.” He stopped
again and lowered his voice. “What that means is that you have just entered
hell.”
He
picked up the securely bound lieutenant and held him again by the back of the
head. “This officer ignored a direct order. He led this retreat. He is
primarily at fault.” Pappas closed his fingers and the skull of the officer
exploded. The corpse of the lieutenant catapulted to the feet of the lined-up
troops along with a splatter of blood and brains that covered the arrayed
troopers in gray matter. The nearly decapitated body kicked and thrashed on the
ground as undirected nerve impulses continued to fire for a few more moments.
Most of the troop looked stunned, a couple looked satisfied. Then about half
doubled over in nausea.
“I
want you to understand something,” Pappas snarled. “The Posleen might
kill you. If you try to run again, I will kill you.” Pappas lifted his
M-300 and fired over the head of the platoon. The blast of relativistic
teardrops took out a section of the Longworth building, scattering debris into
the street. “This weapon will go through your fucking tin cans long ways. You will
be more terrified of me than of the enemy.”
“Mortars, they’re over Seventeenth
Street and spreading out,” said the cool voice on the radio. Keren had seen
him from time to time, pulling out the occasional wounded or dead, calling for
more volunteers, even, for God’s sake, giving marksmanship lessons. And he didn’t
sound any more flustered now. “Can
you get us any more fire-support, over?” The voice was young, but the
assurance wasn’t. Rejuv again.
“Negative,” responded Keren over the
radio in the Three Track. His hands dripped blood to the steel deck as the blisters
took another beating from the rounds. The members of Three Track had finally
had it, slipping out one by one in the crowd of volunteers. But it didn’t
matter. There was a halfway intelligent gun bunny dropping rounds. And two
chicks with signals intelligence patches cutting charges. And a dozen more men
and women preparing rounds. The bastards from Three didn’t matter a damn. “I’ve tried all the arty freqs. Nobody.”
Not even the Fiftieth Division control. The bastards had probably run.
“Well,”
said the guy on the radio in a voice that was both resigned and positive, “gotta die somewhere.”
Keren
twisted the traverse and dropped the range a crank. “Guess it’s that time.”
“Yep,” said the guy on the other end. “Well, I always said every day after the
Chosin was one I wasn’t meant to live. Thanks for the support, Mortars. Out
here.”
Keren
shook his head in wonder. Maybe the guy was talking about Valkyries or
something.
Mike
had some important decisions to make. As the battalion stepped out, crossing
the Twelfth Street Phase-line he was still in a quandary. But, after thinking
long and hard, he finally came to a decision.
“Duncan?”
he asked.
“We’re
up! Where do you want it?”
“Question.
What tune should I use?” he asked. The firing from the distant Monument was
clear. The forces had to be thinking they were doomed.
“What?”
“I’m
thinking ‘Ride of the Valkyries.’ ”
“What?”
“Or
should I go with tradition?”
“What
tradition? . . . Oh.”
“Yeah,
tradition wins. Pity, really. This is such a Wagnerian moment.”
Keren
looked up and snarled as the guy hanging rounds froze. Then, when he saw his
slack-jawed face he looked to the rear. The tune was familiar. At first he
could not for the life of him place it. But then, as the approaching unit began
singing, it came to him and he started to laugh so hard he thought he would
die.
Colonel
Cutprice looked up at the sound behind him and started to laugh. Just when you
thought you had lost the game, sometimes life handed you an ace. Some of the
riflemen on the mound turned to snarl at the misplaced mirth but then, as more
and more of the veterans began laughing, they looked to their rear and smiled.
They weren’t sure what the joke was—the song was familiar from basic training
but otherwise a mystery. But the old guys obviously got whatever the joke was.
And
to the strains of “Yellow Ribbon,” the anthem of the United States Cavalry, the
men and women of the First Battalion, Five Hundred Fifty-Fifth Mobile Infantry
Regiment, the “Triple-Nickles,” began to deploy.
CHAPTER 72
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
1116 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
Teri Nightingale
was not happy. The plan that battalion, which meant Captain O’Neal, had
downloaded was unnecessarily hazardous and invited defeat in detail. It also
left Bravo Company with an unsecured flank. The hazards of that were obvious to
a blind man. But not to the world’s greatest expert in combat suit tactics.
He
also had sent Ernie out on a forlorn hope. Trying to hold that force coming
across the bridge with a few infantry troops and some cowardly tank crews was
impossible. They would be slaughtered. And that would be the end of Ernie
Pappas.
She
was not happy with the direction that relationship had taken. She had never
intended to actually go to bed with him. But when the captain had turned her
training over to the NCO, she felt a certain amount of flirtation in order. A
good report from the NCO, much as it galled her, would go far towards restoring
her position in the captain’s eyes. Since the captain wrote her evaluation
report, her career depended on keeping this NCO happy.
Flirtation
had, unfortunately, quickly led to more. And now she was not sure she could end
the relationship without causing the exact opposite of the effect she had been
striving for. It was a hell of a predicament. Much as it bothered her to
consider it, Sergeant Pappas’s death would certainly permit her to be free and
clear.
Her
own death, however, might quickly follow. She swallowed at that thought and
caught her breath. For the first time she seriously regretted her change from
Intel to Infantry. A career in Intel would have meant slower promotion, but one
of the costs of being in combat arms was the chance of dying. That had never
been real to her until today. Despite the reality of the training systems, the
possibility that Teri Nightingale might cease to exist was a shock.
That
possibility was much on her mind as the company double-timed down New York
Avenue. Confident in his company and assured by the first sergeant that the XO
was capable of handling the load, Captain O’Neal had assigned Bravo the most
difficult assignment. It required moving across Washington at an oblique angle
and taking the Posleen forces in the flank. It also left them out on a limb,
unsupported by the rest of the companies in the battalion. And to get to the
point where they were truly in trouble required a headlong charge towards the
distant enemy.
Second
platoon was in the lead as they approached the back side of the White House.
Lieutenant Fallon had pushed his point out well in advance of their location,
but they were running without flankers, an invitation to ambush. That was not a
comforting feeling to the XO.
“Lieutenant
Fallon,” she said, carefully controlling her voice, “hold up at the
intersection of New York and Fifteenth Street. I don’t like this running
blindly towards the enemy. We need to get some scouts forward.”
“Ma’am,”
said the lieutenant, diffidently. “With all due respect we’re behind schedule
as it is. We need to be in position to support the battalion’s assault.”
“I am aware of
the plan, Lieutenant!” snapped the acting commander. “But if we get ambushed it
will not help the battalion either!”
“Yes,
ma’am,” said the officer, tightly.
The
company stopped in the open area to the east of the Treasury annex and
automatically trained weapons out. The unit had been moving in tactical
formation, the suits spaced twenty meters apart, weapons trained out to either
side. If any Posleen unit had ambushed them it would have been toast.
Wilson
tapped a grav-gun to get the rifleman on the correct axis and walked over to
where Stewart was standing, one foot tapping a rhythm on the concrete. He leaned
into the squad leader and set his communicator to private mode.
“Manuel,
we’re not supposed to be stopped here,” he hissed.
“No
shit,” snapped Stewart. He did not even correct the use of his former name. The
alias James Stewart was a bit of comedy that the gang had managed to keep
secret to everyone but the first sergeant. But right now he was worried more
about the colossal screwup the company was engaged in than in keeping his
former existence a secret.
“Well,
do something!”
“What
would you have me do?” he asked in exasperation. “Off the XO?”
The
response was resounding silence.
“Oh,
great,” Stewart responded. “Do you have any idea what a really bad idea
that is? No? You think that Rogers or Fallon would just pick up the ball if we
shot Nightingale? Or, maybe, they would have to deal with whoever shot her
first? Bad, bad, bad idea.”
“Okay,”
relented the former gang member. “But what the hell are we going to do?” he
asked plaintively. “We were supposed to be in position by now, not standing by
the White House with our thumbs up our butts!”
“Muy
trabajo, buddy. I know that, you know that, the L-T knows that. The only
one who doesn’t know it is the fuckin’ XO. So, when the Old Man figures out
what’s going on he’ll kick her ass and get it in gear. No problemo.”
“Sure,
sure, Jim,” snapped Wilson. “No problem for us. But the rest of the
battalion is going to get corncobbed.”
Stewart
snorted faintly and smiled in his armor. “Why, Juan, I didn’t think you cared
about anybody but the gang!” The sarcasm was gentle and ironic.
“Well.”
Wilson looked at the symbol across the street. “I guess maybe I figure this is
as much my turf as anybody’s. And you know damn well that if you’re standing
still, sooner or later the Bloods are gonna find you!”
Atalanara
had been part of Kenallurial’s charge across the Potomac. But, unlike most of
the other Kessentai, he had marshaled his oolt by the bridge, ready to cross.
So the force had made it across relatively intact. Seeing the massive confusion
near the Memorial he had struck out on his own.
A
very junior battlemaster, he had no interest in facing well-prepared forces.
His first movement to the north along the great river had been rebuffed by fire
from thresh dug-in among the buildings of a large complex. Although the complex
had looked desirable, he doubted his ability to drive the force of thresh out
of their positions.
Taking
a side street he sent teams of oolt’os into the buildings lining the roads.
They reported nothing of value. Some of the buildings had fine artwork or well-made
equipment, but nowhere were the heavy metals, refined chemicals or production
facilities that he craved. Such a find would assuredly be assigned by the Net
to the first to capture it. And it would permit him to equip his oolt with much
better weapons.
Of
course, the threshkreen had already helped in that regard. The oolt had exited
the lander equipped mostly with the cheapest of shotguns along with a few
missile launchers. The tenar that he had started off with sported the
company’s sole 3mm railgun.
The
tenar was the same, but it now was mounted with a gigawatt laser and a
new sensor suite. The Kessentai that had “improved” his vehicle would never
miss the equipment. And their oolt, scattered in death from the threshkreen’s
ballistic weapons, had yielded a mass of weapons. So, now, the normals of the
company were armed with a decent mix of weaponry. He had been able to double
the number of hypervelocity missile launchers in the company and most of the
remaining normals were now armed with railguns. True, many of those were 1mm
rather than 3mm. But there were several plasma cannons to make up the lack.
There was not a single shotgun left in the oolt; he was as well armed as a
senior battlemaster. Now if he only could avoid using all that might!
The map that
Kenallurial had been using indicated that there was a “Treasury” around here
somewhere. The translation of that term had been more than satisfactory. That
would be a prize worth fighting for.
“Okay,”
said Nightingale over the leader’s circuit. “I know you’re wondering why we’ve
stopped. I’m not happy with running around without scouts further out. We don’t
know what is out there and we could get hit at any second.”
“In
that case,” said Lieutenant Rogers, angrily, “we should be moving, not
stopped. And, in case you haven’t noticed, the rest of the battalion is about
to engage the enemy. They are expecting us to hit them in the flank and cover
the holes on that side! Which we are not doing standing around with our thumbs
up our butts!”
“Watch
your tongue,” snapped Nightingale. “I understand your concerns, but we need a
good op order on this.” She paused for a moment. “This plan is not complete. We
don’t have good intelligence on the enemy’s dispositions.”
“Ma’am,”
said Sergeant Bogdanovich, “that is the Infantry. We’re always the people who
are gathering the intel the hard way. And this isn’t about intel, it’s about
assault. We have to move.”
“We
will move when I am ready to move,” said Nightingale angrily. “And not
a moment sooner!”
“Boss,”
said Arnold, over a side channel.
“Yeah,”
sighed O’Neal. “I see it.” Bravo had stopped at the intersection of New York
Avenue and Fifteenth Street. Although it was not where he would have had a
pre-rally, a stop made sense. If they had moved on. But they hadn’t.
The
battalion had finally cleared the detritus on the Mall and was preparing to
cross Fifteenth Street. The forces on the Mound were getting hammered so he had
brought the unit up to a lope. As they cleared Fifteenth, Alpha Company opened
out like a fan. The edges of the company were already taking fire from distant
God Kings and as soon as they cleared the mound it was going to be a firestorm.
He needed to get Nightingale going. Fast.
“Top,”
he said, letting the AID switch him automatically.
“Yes,
sir,” said the first sergeant. According to the schematic he was not far from
Bravo, in the company of a platoon of tanks. “I got a more or less intact
battalion to move over to the Watergate. They got a brush from Posleen but beat
them off. I’m taking these tanks over and there’s some more forces that might
trickle along behind. If we get artillery and not too many bad guys we
should be fine.”
“That’s
great, Top,” said Mike quickly. “Just one problem. Look where Bravo is.”
Mike
waited a moment then snorted faintly at the fluent swearing that the AID
faithfully broadcast.
“Shit,”
the first sergeant finished. “I’m sorry, boss.”
“You
get one suggestion,” Mike answered. He was not terribly happy with the
situation he was in. Pappas was normally to be depended on for a logical
evaluation of personnel. In the case of Nightingale it had obviously failed and
he was beginning to suspect why.
Pappas
thought about the question furiously. If he left the Abrams unit they would
take off like a scalded cat. But if he tried to persuade Nightingale over the
radio it would be a waste of breath. He could see as clearly as the Old Man
that she had frozen, whatever she was telling the company. There was only one
choice, as painful as it was personally and professionally.
“Relieve
her, sir,” he said after the brief moment’s thought. “Put Rogers in charge. If
they’re stopped and get hit by a Posleen company, you’ll have a hell of a time
getting them started again.”
“Concur.
Out here,” said O’Neal, coldly.
Pappas
knew he was going to get his ass kicked at some time in the near future by the
little fireball. But that was only if they survived the upcoming battle.
Atalanara
was nearly there. All he had to do was take this “Treasury” building and
survive the battle. If he could, he would be set for all eternity; the treasury
of such a rich nation would be bulging with loot. As he cleared the
intervening bulk of the Old Executive Office Building the long-sought building
came into view. And so did an oolt of metal threshkreen.
“Posleen!”
shouted a private in First Platoon and sent a stream of relativistic teardrops
towards the Posleen company that had appeared around the corner.
The
fire was obscured by the fences and trees at the back of the White House as
well as the bulk of the government office building. This gave the company
enough time to react to the sudden appearance.
“Okay,”
said Nightingale, looking at her readouts, “we can do this.” She tapped her
gauntlets together and thought for a moment. “Okay, First platoon. Dig in and
prepare to lay down a base of fire. Second, swing to the right and prepare to
hit them in the flank. Third, get ready to pass through First to lay down more
fire. Mortars—”
“No,
no, no, no!” shouted Stewart over the command channel. “Kick their ass
don’t piss on them! The battalion is about to get fucked because we’re out of
position!”
“Stewart,”
the officer snarled. “One more word out of you and I’ll have you
court-martialed!”
“He’s
right, Nightingale,” snapped Rogers as he stepped into line with his
platoon and opened fire at the Posleen. The force was actually moving into the
Executive Building, using the mass of the structure as cover and concealment.
And the fire coming back was heavy. But they could bypass this resistance and
move to their positions with minimal casualties. If the intel-weenie bitch
could ever get off the stick. Giving vent to his frustration he sent a code to
the platoon to open fire with grenades.
The
small antimatter grenades sailed out in a volley, the spheres smashing through
windows and bouncing off of walls before detonating. The arc-light bright
flashes tore off the front of the building without noticeably impeding the
Posleen fire. Whoever the God King in charge was, he was starting to learn
human tactics.
“Cease
fire with grenades!” shrilled Nightingale, horrified by the damage done to the
building. It was on the grounds of the White House for God’s sake. The
consequences were going to be catastrophic.
“Nightingale,” came O’Neal’s voice, snapping
across the company general circuit. “You are relieved. Move immediately to the
area of the cargo canisters and remain there until further ordered. Lieutenant
Rogers, you are in tactical command. Move immediately down G Street to
Nineteenth. Take your positions along Constitution. You have three minutes to
effect this maneuver. If you hit resistance punch through. Kick their ass,
don’t piss on them!” he finished in unconscious mimicry of his most junior
squad leader.
“Yes,
sir!” said the new acting commander. “Bravo Company! Follow me!” He locked his
grav-gun and mortars on the building sheltering the entrenched Posleen and
began a cascade of fire as he trotted off. By the time he reached the end of
Lafayette Square he was at a full loping run, accelerating past forty miles per
hour.
Stewart
was right behind him with Lieutenant Fallon at his side and the rest of the
company charging behind them. The hurricane of destruction from the company
chewed away the north end of the Gothic structure, shattering the concrete and
stone around the Posleen and covering them with cascading debris. Stewart
realized halfway down the street that making the requisite turn was going to be
nearly impossible. If they turned to the left it would take them towards the
fire.
They
had the Posleen suppressed at the moment, but when they turned the fire would
break up, permitting the aliens to pick the suits off at the corner. However,
if they turned right it would put the Posleen behind them. That was no good
either since it would give the enemy a clear shot at the company for several
blocks.
However,
as they reached the end of Lafayette Square and faced the need to decelerate,
he realized that Rogers had no interest in turning.
Accelerating
past forty miles per hour, the combat suit of the acting company commander
smashed into a building at the end of the street without slowing. The concrete
and stone wall shattered at the impact of the thousand-pound suit, leaving a
vaguely human-shaped hole as the officer disappeared into the depths to the
echoed sound of destruction.
Laughing
like madmen Stewart and Lieutenant Fallon lowered their heads and prepared to
enlarge the hole.
CHAPTER 73
Washington, DC,
United States of America, Sol III
1121 EDT October
11th, 2004 ad
Mike had one eye
on the repeater from Stewart’s suit as the battalion reached the Mound and he
laughed as well. The two forces arrayed against one another were shaping up.
The Posleen had the advantage of numbers but, since they had to pulse the
forces across the Arlington Bridge, it would be difficult for them to gather
enough forces to dislodge the defenders. If, that was, the humans killed them
fast enough.
The
humans were at an apparent disadvantage. Most of the units were barely
recovered from a rout. There was no central command. And there was no vital
rationale to defend this spot. The location was not clearly critical terrain.
But
Mike could see that few agreed with that analysis. As he passed the line of
figures hunkered down on the mound and firing steadily he could see others
picking up weapons from the dead and thickening the line. The mortar tracks
were firing their guns steadily and adding the weight of their .50-caliber fire
to the mix. Snipers were interspersed with regular infantry, and officers and
NCOs were moving among the troops cajoling, correcting or ensuring that everyone
had enough ammo. The fact that they had barely slowed the Posleen advance was
apparently lost on the soldiers on the mound. They were done running.
The
Posleen, on the other hand, were advancing. The lead companies were already
past the Reflecting Pool and nearly to Seventeenth Street. Mike was surprised
that there were no saucers in the mix, but he quickly surmised by their regular
order that the God Kings must have dismounted to make themselves less of a
target. The force was not, however, solid. There was a large force advancing on
their position, but just as many or more were still milling around in the area
of the Memorial. If they stopped this force butt-cold they could deal with the
others at leisure. If.
This
was where having Bravo in place would have helped tremendously. Not only could
Bravo have taken the force with enfilading fire, but the plan called for the
battalion to wait for Bravo so that the shock of their first strike would turn
the Posleen towards the Monument and into the killing field he intended to make
of the monument area.
The
mound was now within effective range of the Posleen weapons and the forces on
the mound were starting to take serious casualties from the fire of the
approaching wave.
“Forward!”
shouted Kenallai. “If we take that monument we break their backs!” He did not
know what the obelisk was that had drawn the threshkreen to it. Perhaps it was
a power generator or some other important structure. Whatever it was, it was
obviously vital and he intended to capture it.
He
had the pleasure of seeing the thresh begin to fall, some to the plasma cannons
in the host around him, or thrown up and away by strikes from railguns. Still
others were hit square on by the massed HVM fire of the force around him. They
were being whittled away and in a few more moments the host would be upon them.
And then they would feed.
Duncan
took a suck on his suit rations and grimaced. The Old Man seemed to love fried
rice, but it wasn’t his favorite. He punched in the last few fire commands and
looked around for a good spot to sit. There was a badly beat-up Suburban
sitting forlorn on the torn lawn of the Mall. He walked over and sat on the
tail as he monitored his readouts. It looked like the ball was about to begin.
The fuckup with Bravo had cost them a few minutes and the poor bastards on the
mound a few casualties. But no plan worked perfectly. As it was, this one was
close. He compared the Posleen positions to his readouts and smiled. They were
not going to like what happened next. But he was gonna love every fucking
minute of it.
Mike
checked the feed from his rifle and smiled. The Posleen were making headway
against the fire; there weren’t really enough guns to stop them. The fire,
however, was having another, more salient, effect.
It
would be useful if the whole host became focused on the Monument. Not vital,
but useful. And it had required taking some casualties to let the Posleen live
long enough to draw attention away from the north. Now if Bravo would just get
in position they could fuck them all, not just the few.
Stewart
slid into position with a sigh. The Pharmaceutical Institute building on the
corner of Twenty-Third and Constitution had a wonderful view of the Potomac and
the Memorial, even on the ground floor. Well, normally. Now it had a wonderful
view of more Posleen than he had ever wanted to see in his life. The position
was horribly exposed and if the captain’s plan screwed up in even the smallest
detail it would be a death trap. But it was also the best possible place to
kill Posleen. And he found that he was looking forward to that.
His
squad had slipped in the back way and was now preparing to dig in. There had
been a few scattered normals on the ground floor, but without their God Kings
normals were cold meat and had been dispensed with quietly. The suits were in
place with their deception holograms on, waiting for orders to trigger their
cratering charges.
Mike glanced
at his readouts and waved at the rejuv colonel who seemed to be in charge of
the mound defenses. The officer had not even asked why they were just sitting
there, out of sight, while his soldiers were taking all the casualties. Which
meant he knew why, more or less. At the gesture he started shouting to the
riflemen along the slope to retreat. He had to pull some back by main strength.
Mike
smiled and punched in a few last-minute commands. The moment had to be timed
perfectly, not because it would effect the outcome of the battle, but because
it meant the difference between winning and winning with style.
“Duncan,”
he whispered. “Now.” And stood up.
“The thresh flee!” Kenallai shouted in glee.
He waved to the force. “Forward! Take the hill! The Host shall be invincible!”
He did not believe it, however. He knew full well the fact that the Host was
doomed. But the more damage he could do to the thresh that had taken his
eson’antai the better.
The
first of the host were at the base of the hill when the sky rang out with
thunder.
* * *
Over
the crest of the mound came a creature from nightmare. The beast was a dragon
of a hundred heads, every swiveling head spitting silver fire. It was preceded
by a horrible caterwauling and the thunder of drums as the silver lightning of
its breath tore the host apart.
The
Posleen of the host were shocked by the appearance of the fell beast but they
held their ground. There were tens of thousands of their fellows behind them
and their massed might was sure to bring it down. The breath flying down from
the height was opening huge rents in their wave but they drove forward against
the fire, clawing to engage the beast talon to talon.
Atalanara
had retained his tenar on the stumbling retreat to the Mall. The damage
from the metal threshkreen had been bad enough but to find that the “treasury”
was filled with nothing but paper and the offices of castellaines was enraging.
Now he simply hoped to rejoin a force with a decent oolt’ondai who might be
able to explain this strange world to him.
As
he crossed Virginia Avenue on Eighteenth Street, just short of the Mall, a
monitor on his new sensor suite chirped.
“Incoming
artillery fire,” it relayed in its androgynous tenor. The term was familiar. It
meant the hated ballistic weapons of the thresh. “Time on Target, fire. Forty
rounds.”
That
sounded like quite a lot. He started looking at the surrounding buildings,
wondering if it would be better under cover. Forty rounds would be very bad.
“Sixty
rounds. One hundred and twelve. One twenty. One sixty three. Two twenty-four.
Two fifty-eight. Splash.”
The
fire was a complicated curtain barrage. The technique had been developed in
World War I as a method to prevent movement of forces across no-man’s-land. In
this case it was being used to drive the Posleen into the anvil of the ACS.
Duncan
had had the full authority of the Continental Army Commander and the artillery
of two decimated corps. Most of it was 155mm mobile cannon. The variable time
and cluster rounds dropped in a veritable curtain of death along Constitution
Avenue, heaviest in the opening leading to the Watergate, but everywhere in
incredible density.
Forces
squeezing out of the press towards the north ran into this wall of death. The
few that stumbled out were hit from the side by the silver lightning of the ACS
now firmly dug-in on the ground floor of the pharmacy building and the distant
fire from the Watergate.
Duncan
switched to the next stage of the game, which was smoke. Four batteries were
tasked purely to obscurement missions and they began to lay a curtain of white
along the Potomac. This effectively stopped the Posleen across the river from
determining what was happening in the cauldron. Then he started to walk the
curtain barrage down from the north.
Kenallai
looked at the approaching wall of steel rain. Then he looked to the east where
the strange beast wrestled with the first ranks of the host. Steel-rain. Beast.
Steel-rain. Beast. His crest slowly lifted until it was straight up. He looked
at the Kessentai gathered around him and started snapping out orders.
“Alrantath,
take your oolt’ondar to the right. Tenal’ont, take the left. All the rest, form
behind them and my own oolt’ondar. Call to all the Kessentai in reach! Cry unto
the oolt’os! Upon my signal, we shall lead the host in a te’naal charge the
likes of which has never been seen!”
Mike
had expected the Posleen to move towards his position, had, in fact, depended
on it. But not with the immense unanimity they displayed. The word that came to
mind was stampede as the huge mass, the AID counted it as a quarter million,
turned ponderously to the east and made a concerted bolt for the monument and
freedom from the steel rain. He stopped the battalion and started snapping out
orders. As usual, timing would be everything.
Lieutenant Rogers
swore fluently. This was the moment that Bravo had been placed for, but the
reality exceeded the Old Man’s expectations by an order of magnitude. He wasn’t
sure that the original orders, to wait until the enemy was within two hundred
meters of the battalion before he opened fire, should be followed or not. He
finally decided that they were still extant. It would just be a lot more
exciting.
“Forward!”
shouted Kenallai, firing his plasma cannon over the heads of his personal oolt.
The ranks of his own forces had been swelled by the majority of Ardan’aath’s
oolt’os and the reinforced company was leading the charge.
The
fire of the beast was a silver waterfall, tearing the host asunder, but the
return fire of the host was as deadly. Already many of the heads had fallen to
the ground and were lying quiescent. They were finally reaching the point where
the mass fire of the host could have good effect and within moments the horrid
creature would be another trophy to brag upon.
* * *
“Jesus
Christ!” shouted Major Givens, stumbling backward under the hail of railgun
rounds.
The
God Kings were interspersed in the body of the Posleen forces, effectively
hidden by the intervening normals. However, every now and again they would
target a particular suit. When they did, thousands of normals would follow the
lead of their gods. Even catching the edge of such a hurricane of destruction
was enough to damage the suits, and the luckless individual at the center was
usually toast as a storm of 3mm railgun rounds and hypervelocity missiles
struck their suit.
The
exception, thus far, had been Captain O’Neal. Twice he had been targeted by God
Kings. In both cases he was able to evade the majority of the fire, including
the initial fire of the God King, while still managing to crank out a stream of
orders.
The diminutive
suit seemed to be everywhere. Whenever the fire of the Posleen forces appeared
sure to destroy a section of the line, he was in the thick of the fighting. He
was moving the suits in a complex pavane designed to avoid the majority of the
damage. Whenever a section became bogged down, he was sure to be there first,
loosening up the movement, directing the fire, calling for support.
Givens
realized he had been still for too long and began his next movement. Even the
acting commander followed the baton of the little hobgoblin.
“Why
aren’t they digging in!” shouted Lieutenant Nightingale. She had set her helmet
aside, but she continued to follow the course of the battle on a
computer-generated hologram. “He’s killing them! The sadistic little bastard!”
“Teri,
you need to get a grip,” Pappas snapped over the communications circuit. “If he
had them dig in, it would ruin the illusion. Right now, the Posleen believe
they are fighting a dragon. As soon as he’s sucked as many as possible into the
kill-box, he’ll go to ground. Until then, he’s doing his job, as an officer,
and accepting the casualties to further the mission.”
“That
is insane!” she shouted. “He is butchering the battalion
for . . . for nothing!”
Pappas
sighed quietly and decided he had more important things to do than continue
this pointless argument. “Lieutenant Nightingale, I think you need to find
another job. There are realities about combat I don’t think you will ever
grasp.” He tapped a control on the suit for privacy. “AID, unless I have to, I
don’t want to talk to Lieutenant Nightingale again.”
“Very
well, Gunny,” said the female contralto. There was a slight pause. “Does that
mean I’ll be seeing more of you?”
Mike
skipped past a private from Charlie Company and pointed to the right. “The
bouncing ball is that way, Private Vargas. Follow the bouncing ball.”
The
suit followed the directions, sidling off to the right just as a cone of
railgun fire tore through the space where it had paused.
“Nah,
nah, nah, nah,” Mike called, broadcasting the taunt over both speakers and the
battalion broadcast frequency. He stopped and directed the holographic dragon
head he projected to stick its tongue out at the advancing Posleen mass. “Youuu
caaan’t touch meee!” he taunted again, the cry this time going out in Posleen.
As the fire of the division twisted towards his location he popped out a string
of grenades and sidestepped. “Nah, nah, nah, nah,” he taunted as the storm of
fire swept by.
Gone
were the fear and uncertainty. Gone were the question and doubt. The high of
combat, the joy of battle had taken him and he was once again in his element.
There were at least four ways to win the current scenario and do maximum damage
to the Posleen. Each of them projected nearly identical casualties for the
battalion. Given the choices, he had chosen the one with the maximum style.
Even now with the casualty graph climbing and the whole mass of the Posleen
force charging them. Whatever the outcome of the battle, they’d fought it
“their way.”
But
the time for stylish destruction was coming to an end. The Posleen were getting
close enough that they could overwhelm the battalion with their massed fire.
They were still steering away from the curtain barrage to the north, but it was
time to teach them that there were worse things than artillery.
He
skipped to the left and hopped over a crossing trooper as he considered the
timing. With human troops it was usually better to withhold your heaviest fire
until they were within two hundred meters. At that point, human troops felt
that no matter how much fire there was, they still had a chance of overrunning
the position. So they would come on in droves, through any sort of maelstrom.
If your intent was to kill as many as possible, and his was just that, then
waiting until they were that close was best.
With
Posleen, this magic distance was still unclear. Simulations refused to
recognize it, instead opting for an almost suicidal determination on the part
of Posleen forces. But he had seen them break and run, even up close. So. When
to start the real massacre?
He
decided to let the music choose. They had started out the battle with Led
Zeppelin’s “Immigrant Song” pounding in the background. The tune had become
something of an instant tradition for the American ACS units after Diess. That
had segued to the Rolling Stones’ “Paint it Black” and that was good. But not
quite what he was looking for. Something . . . more. When
the next song started, he smiled ferally.
“Lieutenant
Rogers,” he whispered over the comm, trotting sideways towards his
predesignated position.
“Sir,”
responded the camouflaged acting-company commander.
“Prepare
for enfilading fire on my mark.”
“Roger,
sir.”
Mike
tapped a series of Virtual icons floating in the air in front of his face. The
AIDs accepted the commands, considered the current conditions and prepared
movement orders for all the individuals in the battalion.
“Execute,”
he whispered as the first bars of Black Sabbath’s “The Mob Rules” began to boom
out through the battalion’s suit speakers.
Kenallai
exalted as the mass of the Host approached the beast. Despite the beast’s
awesome fire and the writhing, difficult to strike heads, the host had passed
through the worst of the fire. In moments they would take the beast and drive
on to the prizes to the east. They were close enough that nothing could stop
the Host now. Some of the dragon’s heads had already fallen, their fire
stopped. The rest would fall soon enough. However, as the Host closed to
perfect range, everything changed.
Before
the eyes of the front rank of the Posleen the creature dissolved into an
oolt’ondar of metal-clad thresh. The thresh were visible for only a moment,
however, for as fast as they appeared they disappeared into holes dug by
special charges. A moment later their guns poked out of the holes and the only
thing visible was the guns and the scattered few bodies of metal thresh.
Even
as they were greeted by this horrid sight, worse horrors fell upon them.
“Bravo
Company, fire,” said the officer, quietly.
The
three companies of the battalion formed a box. Each of the suits could keep up
a continuous stream of fire for over thirty minutes with onboard munitions.
When a unit of ACS was faced with a unit of Posleen the usual method of
engagement was face-to-face. By waving the fire of the individuals back and
forth, the Posleen were, more or less, washed away with fire hoses.
However,
the current situation was perfect for enfilading fire. By firing the grav-guns
straight forward at knee-height each individual suit-trooper created a “beam”
of destruction. If a Posleen touched one of the beams, they died. And the fire
of the three companies was interlaced.
When
the beams of fire from Bravo Company reached out, they slaughtered Posleen by
the thousands, driving all the way through the mass of the host. The terrain
was nearly flat and there was nowhere for the centaurs to hide. Driving towards
the Monument, towards the submerged suits of the majority of the battalion,
meant crossing the beams of fire from Bravo. Turning and driving towards Bravo
meant crossing not only the fire of the battalion, but that deadly curtain of
steel rain which was still falling.
Then
the companies started panning their fire.
It
hadn’t been the direct fire of the horrid weapons of the threshkreen that had
struck him down. If it had he would have died instantly. The terrible weapons
of the threshkreen rended oolt’os and Kessentai alike in a single burst. When
one struck it was as if they were hit with a missile, their bodies exploding
outward. To be tapped with even a glancing blow was fatal.
No,
it had not been the terrible weapons of the thresh, but a weapon of the host
that had laid him low. When one of those terrible beams had struck the
power-pack of his bodyguard’s railgun, the resulting explosion had broken his
back and buried Kenallai under rendered Po’oslena’ar. Now he caught glimpses of
the terrible rendering going on on either side.
His
personal oolt and the Kessentai of his oolt’ondar were scattered in death
around him. There lay brave Alltandai, swift and fell. Behind him lay
Kenallurial and Ardan’aath. Before him lay only death.
The
battlemaster turned his head from side to side, looking at the piles. Finally
it was too hard to hold up and the broad head settled to the ground. It was as
well. The host was doomed. The thresh would destroy them somewhere. Somewhen.
Better that he not be there to see it. Strange that it was getting dark.
Dimly, he heard
the sounds of the other, older, nestlings out in the dark, screaming as they
fed. But here beneath his mound of treasured dead he was surely safe. Tonight
they would feed on another.
Might
they always feed on another.
The
mounding centaurs began to form a wall and the windrow finally obscured the
view for the battalion.
“Up
and at ’em!” Mike snapped, suiting actions to words as he stood up out of
his hole. He marked the next point for the battalion to move to on the
dispositions map. “Move to the Seventeenth Street phase-line with rolling
fire,” he continued. “Duncan, we need a rolling barrage.”
The
line of the battalion was slightly broken up by the windrow of bodies, but the
Posleen force was no longer a threat. The survivors had fled into the pocket
and very little fire came the way of the battalion as it advanced. Nonetheless
they kept up regular fire, picking out any individuals or groups that looked to
cause trouble.
The worth of
the suits was finally being proven as they followed the fire. Although the barrage
would eventually devastate the Posleen force, the fire that the battalion was
taking was enough to wipe out a conventional infantry force or even tanks. But
the suits shed all but the fiercest flame. In some cases the fire from the
Posleen force was so great it was like walking into a rainstorm, but it had as
much effect. Only the three-millimeter railguns could penetrate the suits, if a
round hit perfectly, and the rest of the 1mm and shotgun rounds were no
problem. The occasional HVM that fired out of the mass or the fire of a God
King’s plasma cannon would remove a luckless trooper. And then it would be
silenced by mass fire. The battalion was still able to advance with “acceptable
loss.”
Mike
pushed the battalion forward until they were on a line with the end of the
Reflecting Pool and dug-in one last time. There, with any conceivable Posleen
assault broken up by the topography of the monument area and with the Posleen
forces pushed into a relatively small area, the final phase of the artillery battle
could get underway.
The
three companies locked their forces into grazing fire across the paths out of
the pocket and Mike called for the final fire plan.
No
more bad guys seemed to be coming over the hill, so Keren took the long walk up
the Mound. The smoke across the Potomac was fading, but there was a solid core
of it around the Arlington Bridge and the Memorial. It was an eerie sensation
to look out over the battlefield. The view was famous from movies and TV shows,
the green lawn, the Memoria, the cherry trees. Now it was torn by fire and the
tracks of armored vehicles, with white obscurement smoke drifting in the light
wind, the scent of burning and slaughtered Posleen carried upon it.
What
was going on in the pocket around the Lincoln Memorial was invisible, but it
didn’t sound good. The occasional red-cored puff of VT could be seen above the
curtaining smoke and there was a continuous clatter from cluster rounds,
sounding like the world’s largest Chinese funeral. And that was exactly what it
was. The Posleen were being forced into a sausage grinder.
The
aliens, without any real internal communication, could not see what was
happening in the smoke. And the few who survived for a moment were pushed
willy-nilly into the caldron of fire by the pressure from behind. What was
happening, however, was clearly evident to the armored combat suits. Their
all-weather, all-conditions systems made it all too clear.
The
Posleen were literally being ground by the fire. The Variable Time fire would
explode overhead, scything down a cluster of Posleen. Then the cluster
ammunition would butcher the downed group. As wave after wave fell, the earlier
ones would be chopped into smaller and smaller bits under the hammer of the
guns. The ground was running with yellow blood, the flood pouring into the
Potomac, tinging the brown waters an unwonted sienna.
And
it was unrecognized by the oncoming tide. Thousands, hundreds of thousands,
millions of the centaurs poured across the bridge in a continuous flood. A few
made it through the caldron. A very, very few.
These
few were picked off by the interconnected grazing fire of the battalion. The
intersecting bars of lightning looked like a light show, but they were lines of
death for the Posleen. Bravo had been split, with half the company firing
across the Mall while the other half fired at an angle across the opening to
the north.
The
battalion had been similarly split, with half firing to the south side of the
memorial and the other to the north. Posleen in the pocket trying to escape to
the north ran into the intersecting beams of Bravo and Alpha Companies. Those
trying to escape towards Inlet Bridge ran into the fire of Charlie Company. And
all of them ran into artillery.
A few of the
survivors made it to the Roosevelt Park, on the south side of the pocket around
the Tidal Basin. These shell-shocked survivors were all that told the Posleen
something bad was happening.
The
forces massing to cross in Arlington could clearly see these battered and
bloody remnants of the horde. From that, some few began to deduce that entering
the smoke was a bad idea. These few told others. And they told others. Then
they started taking notes on the color of the river. North of the bridge,
brown. South of the bridge, yellow-brown with lots of yellow streaks. Those few
who had made a study of sensors studied them. And came to conclusions. And
turned away from the inviting bridge.
But . . . most
stayed. The Posleen were, by and large, a not very bright species. On that
horrible afternoon of blood and slaughter they went through a brutally
Darwinian evolution. The few, the smart ones, the ones who used their eyes and
the sensors wrested from the long-gone Alld’nt, turned away. The many,
the stupid and ignorant, those for whom being the warrior was the all and be
damned to the technological claptrap, crossed the bridge.
The
few survived. For the day.
Mike
watched the slaughter stonily. He had come to understand the Posleen in a way
that many humans did not. Sometime in the past of the species tinkering had
occurred. And that tinkering, rather than some “normal” process, had led them
on the long journey to this field of death. Led them on the quest for newer, fresher
worlds to conquer.
Understanding
them meant that he could not hate them. They were trapped in a cycle they had
not created. But he could be a professional about destroying them. And there
was a small, professional satisfaction in the carnage before him. He keyed the
AID. “Give me General Horner.”
“Captain
O’Neal,” said Horner.
Mike
thought he sounded more tired than ever. Maybe they could both get some rest.
“General, I would like to report that we have the infestation stopped at the
Potomac. As soon as forces are reassembled we can begin reducing them in
northern Virginia.”
“That
is good, Captain,” said Jack.
“So,
formal, sir?” he quipped. It was a heady high to have succeeded so totally in
the sight of his old mentor. “It’s okay, General. We’ve taken too much damage,
but we’ll take it to them next.”
“Yes,
we will, Mike,” said Horner. “Captain O’Neal . . .” he continued
with a catch and stopped.
“Jack,”
said Mike with a smile, “it’s okay . . .”
“No,
it’s not, Mike. Captain O’Neal, I regret to inform you that your wife,
Lieutenant Commander Sharon O’Neal, was lost in action this morning at
approximately oh-five hundred hours.”
“Oh,
shit!” said Mike, in a near wail. “Oh, fuck!”
“I
convey the regrets of the new President.”
“Oh,
goddamn, Jack!”
“I’ve
ensured a qualified contact team is on the way to the farm.” Horner waited
through the silence, not sure what was happening on the other end. “Mike?”
“Yes,
sir,” said Captain O’Neal in a toneless voice.
“Are
you going to be okay? I, you can ask for some time, if you want it.”
“No,
sir. That will be fine,” the captain said in a monotone. “I’ll be just fine.”
“Mike . . .”
“I
will be fine, sir.”
“If
you’re sure?” The general knew that this was not going to be the end of it. But
there were other demands on his time. Other needs to fill.
“I
will be just dandy, General, sir,” said the captain in an icy voice. “Just
dandy.”
And
he was, as he watched the remorseless destruction of the centaurs. As he led
his battalion in the part of the anvil. For the anvil never cries for the iron.
Visions
Fredericksburg,
VA, United States of America, Sol III
0926 EDT October
27th, 2004 ad
The sensor wand
was much more sensitive than the detectors on their suits. And Minnet was a
maestro. For all the damn good it was doing.
The
cold, pouring rain was washing the remaining soil and grit off the ridge. It
had already formed gullies around the bits of buildings and roads, uprooting
ancient flagstones and undercutting the three-hundred-year-old foundations that
were all that was left of Fredericksburg, Virginia.
Minnet
took another bound forward on the search grid and second squad bounded with
him, grav-guns tracking. In the last two weeks they had hammered the Posleen in
the Rappahanock Pocket into gravy. But there were still a few around. And dead
was dead.
Using the
untouched Fort Belvoir as a base, the battalion had split up into companies and
had ravaged through the remnant Posleen. When a unit found a concentration they
would call for fire then finish off the survivors. If the Posleen force was too
large the company could either join up with other companies or fall back on
Belvoir. The Army Engineer had been only too enthusiastic about turning his
base into a giant fortress. The work was still ongoing, with concrete slowly
replacing compacted dirt, but the facilities were more than adequate for the
purpose. When a couple of thousand Posleen came up to the walls topped with a
giant wooden effigy of the Engineer Corps symbol, they got the point. Just
before the battleship rounds started falling. In the south the same was being
done by a brigade from the Eleventh MID. With much the same result.
So
now the Posleen were down to nuisance levels. The new President was even
considering letting people back into northern Virginia. Those who wanted to.
Most
of the refugees were already being installed in the Sub-Urbs. The vast
underground cities were still under construction, but there was enough done to
take the trickle of Virginians. With their homes mostly destroyed and the area
still under threat of the Posleen, most of them opted to take the government
settlement payment and start a new life. It was better than seeing the wrack of
their once-beautiful state.
That
was left to the ACS. As usual. They had carefully swept the battlefields of the
Ninth and Tenth Corps, hoping against hope for a survivor. All they found was
the occasional warrior staff, with a hero beside it. Usually the story was unknown.
The biggest surprise had been on the first day of sweeps. They found nearly a
whole company of the Third Regiment and a single God King all piled on The
Tomb. And two staffs. There must have been a hell of a story there. But
there was no one left to tell it.
Now
they had come to the center. The detector would sniff out any living human, no
matter how damaged, no matter how buried. But so far they were coming up empty.
“Hey,
Sarge,” called Wilson, waving for Stewart to join him.
The
small NCO bounded over towards Wilson. He looked at his map and shook his head.
He should have been standing on the site of the oldest Presbyterian Church in
America. Instead there was a scoured flat waste. And one upthrust warrior staff
with a small device dangling from it.
“What
kind of unit was it here?” asked Wilson.
The
question was probably rhetorical. They had been briefed. But Stewart answered
anyway. “Engineers. A light battalion.”
Wilson
plucked the device off the staff. “Well, they must have been some bad news juju,”
he said grimly. He handed the scrap of cloth to Stewart.
Stewart
popped off his helmet and turned his face up to the pouring rain. The cold fall
would probably be sleet by morning. But now it worked admirably to wash away
the tears. The bloody scrap of cloth was a tab from an engineer officer’s
uniform.
“Bad
fuckin’ juju, man,” he agreed, his voice thick. He wiped his eyes and put the
helmet back on. The nannites scurried to carry away the intruding water. If
they had been human they might have clucked in approbation.
“Contact!”
shouted Minnet, swerving to the side. He bounded twenty feet through the air
and landed on a section of crumpled road. The point was damn near ground zero
of the fuel-air explosion. How anything could have survived was a mystery.
Stewart
caught a flash out of the corner of his eye and started to track on it before
he realized that it was the captain. The officer was taking full use of the
almost unlimited power available through the antimatter generator in his suit.
He now flew towards the reported contact. The lidar on Stewart’s suit clocked
him at over four hundred klicks an hour. When they all had those it would make
things a lot easier.
“Where?”
said O’Neal, landing next to the sensor-toting private.
“Right
under your feet, sir. Two forms. In hibernation or so it tells me.” The private
dropped and started to pull up the mixture of concrete, asphalt and glass that
overlaid the find.
O’Neal
laid a hand on his shoulder. “Hang on.” He slid out his monomolecular fighting
knife and cut into the mixture. A few slices and he had a cube of the overlay
which he threw to the side.
The
rest of the squad dove in and before long they were to a brick ceiling.
“What
the hell is this, sir?” asked Stewart. The captain was tracking again, which
was good. It had looked rocky the first day. But he seemed to be coming around.
If he didn’t, there wasn’t a hell of a lot they could do about it.
“Dunno,”
said O’Neal, flipping through his database on Fredericksburg. “There’s no mention
of structures like this.” A quick sonic pulse indicated that it was a single
layer of brick. Mike lifted himself on his AG drive and took a slice out of the
ceiling.
The
gray light and cold rain fell on two dust-covered forms, one male, one female.
The two young civilians lay in each other’s arms on a mattress of body armor.
To either side were automatic weapons. The sensors unnecessarily confirmed that
the weapons had seen use.
Mike
lifted himself out of the hole as the squad dropped in to extract the two. He
snorted a few times then gave a deep braying laugh. Shelly had enough
experience to know when he was talking to himself so the laugh was not
broadcast. Nor was the statement, “Those poor Posleen bastards.”
“Contact!”
shouted another sensor wielder, closer to the river. “Big contact!”
This
time the construction was a concrete bunker. Mike first wondered how the hell
the engineers had managed to make it during the battle, but a brief study
indicated that it was an earlier construction. Although what was not obvious.
“Whatta
we got?” asked Pappas, kicking the wall of the concrete monstrosity.
“Lots
of signal,” said the sensor wielder. “All hibernating as far as I can tell. If
there are any conscious, it’s lost in the mass.”
“How
many?” Mike barked.
“Don’t
know, sir,” said the tech. “Lots.”
Ampele
deployed his cutter and tackled an exposed corner. He was standing up to his
knees in the rising river, but he didn’t seem to notice. It took three cuts to
get a hole in the thick concrete walls. He lifted his head up to look in and
received a shotgun blast full in the face.
The
blast, gnatlike to a suit of combat armor, hardly fazed the phlegmatic
Hawaiian, but he dropped down anyway. Better to let whoever was on the other
side of the shotgun realize what they’d shot.
Mike
lifted himself on compensators and flew over to the opening. “This is Captain
Michael O’Neal of the Mobile Infantry. We’re friends.” He lifted up until he
was opposite the hole.
Inside
there was a woman in what appeared to be a soiled waitress’s uniform. She had
stringy, unwashed blonde hair and a wild expression in her eyes. Having been
trapped under a building one time, Mike could well appreciate her frame of
mind; he still got a bit panicky in the dark. So he could never afterwards
decide if he was brilliant or stupid to take off his helmet.
The
woman took one look at the human face and burst into tears.
Mike lifted
himself up so he could see in and almost recoiled in horror. The room was
filled with bodies and they at first appeared to be corpses or even vampires.
Their skin was waxy with red-flushed cheeks. Their lips were swollen and
flushed and their eyes were open and glassy. But the same effect was caused by
Hiberzine. It was just that he had never seen hibernation patients piled willy-nilly
in a sarcophagus before. He shook his head and offered his hand to the woman.
“Are you alone?” he asked solicitously.
The
answer was another flood of tears but the woman took his hand and slid through
the hole. “Ah, ah,” she gasped for a moment then caught her breath. “There was
a . . . a firewoman with me at first. But
she . . . she couldn’t take the walls. I had
to . . . to . . .”
“Sedate her,” said Mike. He shook his head again. Strength was an odd
commodity. Like hope, it sprouted in the strangest places.
Aberdeen Proving
Grounds, MD, United States of America, Sol III
1626 EDT October
13th, 2004 ad
Keren
watched the video for the umpteenth time. The networks, overrun with incredible
images of heroism and cowardice, competence and idiocy, had settled on this one
to wrap them all up in a nice neat network package.
The crowd
surged back. The lander had dropped perfectly; just far enough that none of the
humans were injured, but too close for them to run far. As the giant landing door
dropped the panicking crowd washed away from the single, still armored soldier
in its midst.
The
foreground held a crying child, her forearm obviously broken. If any parent had
been in that crowd they had been swept onward, as had the guards of the figure
standing in the background, perfectly poised against the foreground of the
sobbing child. As the door dropped, silently in this version, the grav-cannon
on the back of the figure dropped forward. The figure took a perfect position,
a picture from a Fort Benning textbook of a rifleman firing from the standing position.
One hand cradled the grav-cannon while the other pulled it into the shoulder.
One foot was cocked slightly backwards with feet shoulder-width apart, body
slightly canted towards the target.
As
the Posleen descended from their craft, harvesting swords held high, the figure
opened fire.
Cheyenne
Mountain, CO, United States of America, Sol III
1423 EDT October
14th, 2004 ad
She
had never planned on being President. Her position was to balance the ticket.
And she sure as hell did not want to be President stuck in a concrete bunker in
the middle of a mountain in Colorado.
But
she had to admit it made more sense than a combat suit in the middle of D.C.
The
cabinet was scattered to hell and gone. And so were the staffers. And there was
no conventional transport faster than trains. Trains. They were reduced to
using trains.
But
the Galactics weren’t. The Tir Dol Ron would be here any minute, courtesy of a
Himmit stealth ship. She supposed she could probably avail herself of one as
well. But reassembling a staff was still going to take months.
She had had damn
little staff with her when the landings started. And not many more had made it
here so far. One of those, though, had turned out to be a goldmine. The girl
was a total airhead about everything outside her narrow specialty, but she had
an immense understanding of the Galactics and their punctilious protocol.
Which
might make or break the war.
Washington
Monument, Washington, DC
United States of
America, Sol III
1430 EDT October
14th, 2004 ad
“It
is you people, and other soldiers like you, who will make or break the war to
come,” said General Taylor.
Immediately
following the battle, the two colonels and their sergeant majors had gathered
the survivors of the Battle of The Monument and made a list. The six hundred or
so that survived, along with a dazed platoon of engineers extracted with some
difficulty from the Memorial, were now gathered at the site of their triumph to
be decorated.
The tall black
general looked around at the group with a penetrating eye. “Many of you, in
years to come, will belittle that moment. That is a fundamental nature of true
heroes. But I tell you now, this battle will be remembered with Bunker Hill and
Lexington and Concord. Not only because those were battles that formed a great
nation, as this was a battle that saved one. But because they were small
skirmishes that presaged a great and terrible war. And the survivors from those
small skirmishes formed the core of the great army that arose from their
ashes.” He smiled faintly.
“But enough of
the words. We all know there ain’t no extra pay, and rations will be catch as
catch can. But we still got plenty of medals!”
Rabun County, GA,
United States of America, Sol III
1820 EDT October
14th, 2004 ad
The
reporter from the local station shook water from the hood of his raincoat and
looked at the camera.
“And
three, two, one . . . Good afternoon, this is Tom Speltzer
from WKGR, reporting from Habersham, Georgia. It seems like there are plenty of
medals for the soldiers, but it wasn’t only soldiers that beat the Posleen.
“I’m
talking with Mr. Michael O’Neal, of Rabun Gap, Georgia, and his eight-year-old
granddaughter, Cally O’Neal.” The reporter turned and proffered the microphone
to the elder O’Neal, standing in the pouring rain like a statue.
Mike
Senior’s camouflage raincoat shed the water like a duck and the hood worked
much better than the reporter’s. And he wasn’t about to let the newsie bastard
in the house.
“Mr.
O’Neal, can you tell us what it felt like to have the Posleen assault your
home?”
“Well,
first of all, they never got to the house. We had ’em pretty well stopped down in
the valley,” he said, gesturing towards the distant entrance.
“We?”
asked the reporter, surprised. “You had help?”
“From
me!” piped up the little girl. “I ran the demo!”
The
reporter’s face took on that special look of false pleased surprise that adults
affect when children interject unnecessarily. The report was going out live
nationwide and he just had to shut the kid up as fast as possible. But what the
hell was demo? “Really? Did that help?” he asked.
“Blew
the shit out of the bastards,” Cally said, ingenuously. “Must have killed half
the damn company. We had the whole fuckin’ woodline strung with claymores and I
just blew the fuck out of them.”
The
camerawoman suppressed her laughter but expertly caught the frozen look on the
reporter’s face as he attempted to come up with a response to this.
“Cut
to the old guy,” snapped the producer. “Ask him about the name.”
“And
Mr. O’Neal, there’s another O’Neal that has become famous, again. By exactly
the same name . . .”
“That’s
my daddy!” said Cally excitedly. “He really rolled those centaur sons of
bitches up, didn’t ’e?”
The
reporter had assumed that out of control runaway train expression again. Mike
Senior decided to twist the knife. He worked the wad in his cheek around and
spit. “I teached ’im ever’thang he knows,” he drawled, looking right in the
camera. And hoping like hell the damn monks could keep their vow of goddamned
silence and not laugh their asses off. There were enough damn problems in the
world without having to explain them.
In
the background, a green Army sedan appeared out of the woodline, headed to the
house. In the cold Georgia rain.
Walter Reed Army
Hospital, Washington, DC
United States of America, Sol III
2015 EDT October
15th, 2004 ad
Keren
knocked on the door of the room and nodded at the nurse who was just leaving.
The
room smelled of disinfectant. It was an odor that raised the hackles on the
back of his neck. To the lizard hindbrain, it meant that things were bad and
going to get worse.
He
looked down at the figure on the bed. There were three medals pinned to the
pillow; apparently something had made it into the database before it all came
apart at Lake Jackson. He shook his head and sat down.
“You
really missed a good party,” he whispered, pulling a bottle out of the recesses
of his coat. The gold bars of a second lieutenant winked for a moment in the
light over the bed. “The general was buying. Damn, he can drink. And that old
snake of a warrant officer that followed him around. And the general told this
story, damn it was funny, ’bout how come the warrant follows him around. It’s
all about an alligator and two bottles of bourbon.”
So he told his
friend the story. And he told her a couple of others, about how General Simosin
and General Ford finally had it out and Ford accused Simosin of incompetence in
front of a TV camera and Simosin dragged it all out in the open how Ford had opposed
integrating the old-timers and screwed around so bad that there was no damn way
anything could have gone right. So now Ford was out and Simosin was back at
Tenth Corps and General Keeton was First Army.
And
he told about the meeting between the new Prez and the Darhel. How the Prez had
threatened to recall all the expeditionary forces unless the Darhel ponied up
all the grav-guns we could stand. And how the Tir had finally agreed that all
equipment would be at no cost and that husbanding the humans was the most
important thing in the universe. But the pipeline was still plugged and the
Fleet was takin’ forever and most of the PDCs were smoking holes. . . .
And
he told how some rag-head had made a stand to equal theirs, taking a bit of
this unit and a bit of that and somehow putting enough steel in their spine to
hold a vital pass against a whole swarm. Or so they said.
But
India was a madhouse and nobody knew what was happening in the Africa swarm.
And the one in Kazakhstan was just wandering around trying to find its way out
of the plains. . . .
But
finally the bottle was empty and it was time to leave.
“Well,
Elgars. They say you might be able to hear me. And they tell me you might come
out of it someday. I left the e-mail to my . . . our unit
with them. They’re taking all the survivors from The Stand at the Monument and
making a special unit. You’re included as one of us. You and all the
other . . . wounded. And the dead. So, you can, you
know . . .”
He
stopped and wiped a tear away. “And I watched Pittets hang. You’d be happy to
hear that. They didn’t tie it the way I asked, I wanted him to kick for a
while. But he’s gone. And you know about the decorations.” He tried to think of
something else to say but nothing came. “I gotta go,” he said, looking at his
watch and trying not to look at the lovely face behind the tubes, as the
machine sucked in and out.
“The
Galactics, they’re picking up the tab now. So there’s no reason to, you
know . . . to take you off. And they’ll be moving you to a
Sub-Urb. They’ve got plenty of room and really good facilities. So they’re
gonna leave you hooked up in case . . .”
He
wished now he hadn’t finished the bottle. He could use a little taste. He took
her hand one last time. “Thanks for that shot on Sixth Street.” He nodded at
her, one soldier to another. “I know it saved you, too. But it still saved my
ass.” He nodded again, hoping that she would do the thing with grabbing his
hand, but there was no response. “Well, bye, Elgars. Take care.” Finally, he
turned and left the room. Behind him it was silent except for the suck and whir
of the machines.
Beyond the path
of the outmost sun though utter
darkness hurled—
Further than ever
comet flared or vagrant star-dust swirled–
Live such as
fought and sailed and ruled and loved and made
our world.
They are purged
of pride because they died, they know the
worth of their bays,
They sit at wine
with the Maidens Nine and the Gods of the
Elder Days,
It is their will
to serve or be still as fitteth Our Father’s Praise.
’Tis theirs to
sweep through the ringing deep where Azrael’s
outposts are,
Or buffet a path
through the Pit’s red wrath when God goes
out to war,
Or hang with the
reckless Seraphim on the rein of a
red-maned star.
They take their
mirth in the joy of the Earth–they dare not
grieve for her pain.
They know of toil
and the end of toil, they know God’s Law
is plain,
So they whistle the
Devil to make them sport who know that
Sin is vain.
And ofttimes
cometh our Wise Lord God, master of every
trade,
And tells them
tales of His daily toil, of Edens newly made;
And they rise to
their feet as He passes by, gentlemen
unafraid.
To these who are
cleansed of base Desire, Sorrow and
Lust and Shame—
Gods for they
knew the hearts of men, men for they
stooped to Fame,
Borne on the
breath that men call Death, my brother’s
spirit came.
He scarce had
need to doff his pride or slough the dross
of the Earth—
E’en as he trod
that day to God so walked he from his birth,
In simpleness and
gentleness and honour and clean mirth.
So cup to lip in
fellowship they gave him welcome high
And made him a
place at the banquet board—the Strong
Men ranged thereby,
Who had done his
work and held his peace and had no
fear to die.
Beyond the loom
of the last lone star, through open darkness
hurled,
Further than
rebel comet dared or hiving star-swarm swirled,
Sits he with
those that praise our God for that they served
His world.
Author’s
Afterword
On September 10,
1998, my father died of a stroke while watching a rerun of Seinfeld.
It
was the first cool day of the fall after an awful, sticky summer of blazing
heat, repeated heart attacks and kidney failures. The day had been his first
good one in six months and fall was his favorite time of year, so it was doubly
auspicious.
There
is no such thing as “a good day to die.” But there are better and worse. Taking
the alternative of D-Day or the Battle of the Bulge or the Hurtgen Forest or
Iwo Jima, where so many of his fellow age-mates died, an apparently fast stroke
while laughing at Jerry’s antics is fair.
I
mention my father for two reasons. The first is that I keep his generation in
mind while writing my books. The societal conditions that provided the soldiers
for the American Army in WWII were unprecedented in history. It was a society
that was as technologically adept as any in the world, but that had fallen upon
hard times so that there was a great need for work. Also those hard times had
hammered out some of the impurities in the metal already. What was left was
pretty good iron that was turned to steel by 1944.
Which,
if a similar situation were to occur today, would not be the case. Personally,
I like the present day. This is, unless anyone is confused, a golden age. With
all the ills of a golden age. (Read The Decameron and tell me that there
is a new ill under the sun.) But, given the choice between a decadent golden
age and a stoic time of privation and war . . . give me the
golden age.
But—there
is always a but, isn’t there? But, if a situation were to occur today which
called for a national will to survival, it would be difficult to replicate that
“Greatest Generation.” First we would have to go through the sort of
pre-tempering that occurred with the Great Depression, getting out all the
“lesser” impurities. Only then would we as a nation be prepared for the greater
tests.
And
I personally don’t think we would have the time. So, I always keep my father,
and his generation, in the forefront of my mind.
The second reason
that I mention my father is that he turned me on to Kipling. I spent about a
day of my week’s leave after Airborne school at home (hey, there were girls and
bottles out there pining for me). And just before I left, my dad handed me this
really beat-up old book. He told me that his dad had given it to him before he
went to England in 1944 and that it was time to pass it on. I didn’t really
think anything of it at the time (girls and bottles) but later, after I settled
in at my permanent party, I pulled it out and gave it a look.
The
Mandalay Edition of the Works of Rudyard Kipling, Departmental Ditties,
Barrack-Room Ballads and Other Verses/Five Nations and the Seven Seas by Rudyard Kipling.
Doubleday, Page & Company, Garden City, NY, 1925. Note the last poem is “To
Wolcott Balestier,” the dedication to Barrack-Room Ballads.
For
the longest time I thought I was the only person in the world who still read
Kipling. Then an old Vietnam Vet first sergeant (a guy I didn’t even know could
read) dropped a quote. Then I heard a general “kipple.” A battalion commander.
A sergeant. A visiting SAS sergeant major presented a bound collection to our
battalion CSM. And I found out a little secret; there are damn few warriors in
the world who don’t like Kipling. There are some who don’t know about him, but
the ones who do are fanatics. It’s almost a way to separate the sheep from the
goats.
For
anyone who has never read Kipling, if you like my books get a Kipling
collection. Rudyard could say it as no one before or since has been able to say
it. He speaks to the heart and soul of the soldier. In the end, we’re all
Tommies (or M.I. or Sappers or Oont drivers) at heart.
And
that is the other reason I bring up my dad.
William Pryor
Ringo, Captain US Army Corps Of Engineers (ret.) P.E.
Born: July 24,
1924
Died: September
10, 1998
Me that ’ave been
what I’ve been—
Me that ’ave gone
where I’ve gone—
Me that ’ave seen
what I’ve seen—
. . .
Me!
Glossary
Aarnadaha Posleen Senior Battlemaster
(Brigade commander).
abat A nearly
impossible to eradicate small pest on
Posleen
landers.
Adenast Federation world on the
far side of space from the
Posleen
invasion.
Aelool Indowy Master
Craftsman.
AFV Armored Fighting
Vehicle. Heavily armed personnel
carrier or
tank.
Agincourt Fast
Frigate in Earth Defense Region.
a-hoo-wah Motivational or “battle”
cry.
AirCav Air Cavalry.
Helicopter-borne scouts.
AIW Advanced Infantry
Weapon.
Alld’nt Demons or sky gods of
the Posleen pan-theology.
Reputed to
give great gifts but to also cause great
harm.
Alrantath Posleen battalion
commander subordinate to
Ardan’aath.
Althanara Posleen Scoutmaster.
Anarlaralta Posleen Scoutmaster
subordinate to Alrantath
(eson’antai).
Andatha Region on Barwhon where
majority of US
expeditionary
force is engaged.
APC Armored personnel
carrier. Lightly armed, lightly
armored
metal box on tracks.
Aradan Posleen name for the
star the Federation calls Diess.
Ardan’aath Posleen brigade commander.
Allied with Kenallai.
Arnata’dra Posleen Scoutmaster,
subordinate to Kenallurial.
Ashkabad City in Turkmenistan.
Atalanara Posleen company commander,
allied with
Kenallurial.
AWOL Absent Without Leave.
Barrett Firearms Manufacturer of a (really cool)
.50-caliber sniper
rifle.
Based in Murfreesboro, TN.
Barwhon Tchpth settled planet.
Cool and wet with almost
continuous
swamps, lakes, rivers and bogs.
battlecase Large ammunition box for
feeding a manjack.
BattleDec Short for Battle
dodecahedron. A Posleen
conglomerate
ship consisting of an inner
dodecahedral
command ship (C-Dec) and twelve
landers.
Battleglobe A large Posleen conglomerate
ship consisting of multiple
hundreds of B-Decs.
Battlemaster Posleen grade. Equivalent to
captain-full colonel.
Although
all Posleen God Kings (Kessentai) are
nominally
independent, in general junior officers
look to
senior officers for direction.
Battlenet Human Command Network
for Continental Defense.
B-Dec See BattleDec.
BDUs Battle Dress Uniform.
The US Ground Force
standard
camouflage field uniform.
Belvoir, Fort Headquarters of the US Army
Corps of Engineers.
Located
just outside of Washington, D.C.
Beretta Standard 9mm sidearm
of US Ground Force.
berm An elongated pile
of dirt used for cover.
Blackhawk Military medium lift
helicopter designated UH-60.
bowsers Military tanker trucks.
Bradleys Armored Fighting Vehicle
(AFV). Crew of two, holds eight
infantrymen. Armed with a 25mm chaingun
and a TOW-2
Missile Launcher.
Bragg, Fort Home of the Airborne.
Located in central North
Carolina.
Bullpup Design of assault
rifle. Places the ammunition
magazine
behind the firing hand thus shortening the
overall
length of the weapon.
Bushmaster 25mm chaingun mounted on a
Bradley Fighting
Vehicle.
caltrop Four-pointed spike
device designed so that one point
always
faces up.
castellaine The manager of a Posleen
estate.
cav Cavalry.
C-Dec Command Dodecahedron.
Holds the senior God
King of a
Posleen “B-Dec” conglomerate and its most
heavily
armed normals. Is usually the center ship of
a B-Dec.
Has interstellar drive. Holds 1400–1800
Normals and
3–6 God Kings along with some light,
simple
armor.
chai British Navy word
for tea.
circumvallated Surrounded by fortifications.
clacker Detonation device for
a claymore directional mine.
So called
because when compressed it makes a
distinctive
“clack” sound.
claymore Directional mine.
Consists of a convexly curved box
with two
ports for detonators on the top. The rear is
a thin
metal plate, then a sheet of explosive, then 750
ball
bearings.
CONARC Continental Army Command.
COS Chief of Staff.
cratering Detonating explosives so
as to cause a large crater.
This is
primarily used as an obstacle.
CSP Combat Space
Patrol.
Cyberpunk Elite information warfare
unit. Extremely secretive.
Dantren Indowy Megascraper
Deushi Megalopolis. Refuge for mobile
forces.
Darhel Galactic Federation
race.
DataNet Posleen information
network. Very similar to the
internet
except without any indexing tools.
defilade Maneuvering to obtain
cover from terrain
detcord Explosive cord.
Similar to fusecord, but explodes
instead of
burning.
didee-mao Vietnamese: Retreat.
Diess Indowy Planet.
Under assault by the Posleen.
DivArty Division Artillery.
Dunkirked Evacuated by water.
edan Posleen: Battle
madness.
edas’antai Posleen: Primary genetic
sponsor. Father.
emphysemic A person who has emphysema.
enfilading Fire from the flank.
esonal Posleen: Ovipositor.
eson’antai Posleen: Primary genetic
derivative. Son.
Farbase Primary military base
on the moon. Hidden on the
backside in
a crater to reduce chance of detection by
the
Posleen.
Fars Primary plateau of
the country of Iran.
FedCreds Federation Credits.
firebase Heavily defended base
where artillery is
concentrated.
FireTac Artillery Coordination
Network.
Fistnal Posleen: Damned.
(Lit. “Eaten” reduced from “Eaten by
sky demons.”)
flechette Finned metal dart.
flikker To turn in the air
like a hummingbird.
Fredericksburg Town in central Virginia.
Fort A.P. Hill Military base in central
Virginia.
fuscirt Posleen: Demons.
fuscirto Posleen: Demons. Part
of a wordy curse that
translates
more or less as “Demon Feces.”
Galil Name of an Israeli
assault rifle.
GalMed Galactic Medications.
General name for a wide
variety of
medications the Federation has supplied
to Earth.
GalTech Galactic Technologies.
General name for a wide
variety of
technologies the Federation has supplied
to Earth.
Gamalada Clan of the Po’oslenar.
Gatling Type of automatic
weapon that has multiple barrels.
ghillie Type of camouflage
suit used to break up the outline
of an
infantryman or sniper. Introduced by Scottish
gamekeepers
(or poachers alternately) during WWI.
Ghurka Elite Nepalese
Mercenary Infantry.
Glock Type of pistol.
grat Rare but
extremely unpleasant pest of the Posleen.
Resembles a
very large ant and forms colonies.
Hiberzine Galactic drug that causes
almost instantaneous
unconsciousness
and places the user in a state of
virtual
suspended animation for up to 180 days.
Combines
pharmacological substances with
nannites.
Dosage is managed internally to the
substance
so that there is no chance of an over- or
underdose.
Himmit Federation race.
Racial cowards and long-ranging
scouts.
Hummelstown Town outside of Fort Indiantown
Gap.
Humvee High Mobility Multi-Use
Vehicle (HMMV).
HVM Hypervelocity
Missiles.
Indiantown Gap,
Fort Military post in Pennsylvania
near Harrisburg.
Indowy Galactic race. Short
bipeds with apparently innate
ability
with technology and tools.
Irmansul Galactic planet under
threat of invasion by the
Posleen.
Isfahan Town in central Iran.
Famous for its rugs.
Kasserine Town in Morocco where the
US Army suffered an
early
defeat in WWII at the hands of the German
Afrikacorps.
Kenallai Posleen: Senior
battlemaster. Equivalent to a colonel
or
brigadier general.
Kenallurial Gene derivative of
Kenallai. Equivalent to a
lieutenant
or captain.
Kenstain Posleen: Term for a
castellaine. Castellaines are a
lower
“caste” God King and are formed from God
Kings that
have either voluntarily stopped fighting
or were
incompetent or cowardly.
Kessanalt Posleen: Battle honor.
Kessentai Posleen: God King
(translates literally as
“Philosopher”
or “Thinker”).
Kevlar Aramide fiber used in
body armor. Also used to refer
to the
helmets made of it that are worn by US
Ground
Force personnel.
Kiowa Scout helicopter.
klicks Short for “kilometer.”
laager Grouping of tanks or
other fighting vehicles.
lidar Laser detection
system.
Maglite Type of flashlight
often preferred by police and
special
operations personnel.
Manassas Town in north-central
Virginia.
manjack Automated machine gun.
Mashad Major city in
northeastern Iran.
Mayport City and naval base in
northeastern Florida near
Jacksonville.
McCall, Camp Small military base near the
much larger Fort Bragg.
Milnet Military internet
interface and analogue.
Milspecs Galactic Technology glasses.
In appearance simple
“wrap-around”
sunglasses. Provide full light
enhancement
ability.
Minié Type of bullet used
by both sides during the Civil
War.
monomolecular Single very large molecule. A
substance that is not
only
incredibly strong but also almost infinitely thin
and
therefore sharp.
Montrose Heights Large hill overlooking Richmond, VA.
Mosby Hill Large hill overlooking
Richmond, VA.
MRE Meals-Ready-To-Eat.
Military combat rations. Come
in plastic
packaging.
Myer, Fort Military base near
Washington, D.C.
nannites Very small
mechano-electric machines that are used
for a wide
variety of purposes by the Galactic
Federation.
NCO Noncommissioned
Officer.
Nomex Fireproof fabric.
Occoquan River, town and reservoir in
northern Virginia.
oolt Posleen: Group
or company. (Lit. “Pack”)
Oolton Posleen: Battalion or
brigade. Used interchangeably.
(Lit. “Big
Pack”)
oolt’ondai Posleen: Battalion or
brigade commander. (Lit. “Big
pack
leader”)
oolt’ondar Posleen: Battalion or
brigade.
oolt’os Posleen: Posleen
normal. (Lit. “Pack member”)
Oolt’pos Posleen: Command
Dodecahedron. Holds 1400–
1800
Normals and 3–6 God Kings along with some
light,
simple armor.
orna’adar Posleen: Final battle or
Ragnarok. A scramble for
dwindling
resources that leads to destruction of the
world and
extinction of all the Posleen on it.
Panatellas Long, thin cigars.
Panzergrenadier German Mechanized Infantry.
PDC Planetary Defense
Center.
plasteel Galactic armor
material.
Po’oslena’ar Posleen: “The People of the
Ships.”
Po’osol Posleen: Lander. Holds
400–600 normals and one
God King.
Posleen Enemy aliens.
Yellow-grey centauroids. Thirteen to
fifteen
hands high at the shoulder. Arms jut from a
combination
shoulder. Sauroid head with multiple
teeth is
mounted on a long, snake-like neck. “Hands”
are
four-fingered talons with an opposable talon,
similar to
a fish-eating bird of prey. Feet are
foreshortened
talons adapted for running and
slashing.
Proteans Term for current
generation of manjacks.
Provigil Anti-sleep drug.
Pyronics Manufacturer of the
world’s leading detonators,
preferred
by professional demolition personnel and
terrorists
the world over.
Qualtren Megascraper on Diess.
Quantico Military base in central
Virginia.
Quarles Gas Petroleum supply company
outside of
Fredericksburg,
VA.
Rabun Gap Low pass in the Appalachians
in northern Georgia.
radome Radar Dome.
Ragnarok The end of the world in
Norse mythology.
railguns Rifle that accelerates
its projectiles magnetically.
Rappahanock River in central Virginia.
Reaver 155mm wheeled mobile
artillery.
REMF Military acronym that
starts with “Rear” and
“Echelon”
and goes downhill from there.
Reticulan “Like a net.” Military
plan that called for distributed
forces so
that no single force would be landed upon
and
destroyed by the Posleen. Referred to as “victory
in detail”
by its proponents and “Ridicuplan” by its
opponents.
Richbrau Microbrewery in
Richmond, VA.
Robertson, Frank,
Commander of the 229th
Engineering Battalion,
Lieutenant Colonel Light. Fredericksburg, VA.
Rockledge Manor Restored home in Occoquan.
rubbling Destroying structures
to produce rubble for defenses.
Sammadar Posleen Battalion
commander.
Schockoe Bottom An area of late 19th-century
factories in Richmond,
VA.
SecDef Secretary of Defense.
Simosin, Arkady 10th Corps Commander.
SpecOps Special Operations.
Spotsylvania County in Virginia.
Stenarnatta Posleen Battalion commander.
Sten’lonoral Posleen Command
ship/battalion commander.
TacCO Tactical Actions
Officer for Continental Defense
Command.
TacSO Tactical Systems
Officer for Continental Defense
Command.
Tamerlane Name often used for Timur,
a Mongol invader of
Iran who
destroyed the last remnants of the Persian Empire.
tanglefoot Barbed wire stretched taut
at knee height designed to
catch and “tangle” assaulting enemy troops.
Tchpth Galactic race.
Pseudoarthropods with a remarkable resemblance,
other than being blue and red, to a
Dungeness
crab. Renowned scientists and
philosophers.
Tel’enaa Battle Demons. Part of a
wordy curse. (Demons of battle
eat and defecate their souls!)
te’naal Berserk charge.
Tenal’ont Posleen company
commander.
tenar Posleen God King’s
saucer vehicle. Has a heavy
weapon
mounted on it and a suite of sensors.
terawatt One trillion watts.
Thermopylae A famous defense in ancient
Greece. Also, a
primarily
automatic close defense system for
battleships.
thresh Posleen: Food.
Threshkreen Posleen: Enemy. (Translates
literally as “food with a
bite.”)
Thunderchiefs Air Force aerobatics
demonstration team.
Tindar Clan of the Darhel.
Tir Intermediate
rank Darhel.
Tir Dol Ron Darhel senior executive.
uut Posleen: Fecal
matter.
Zoroaster Primary god of the
religion that preceded Islam in
Persia.
MAPS