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Lines of Thunder: The First Days on the Front (Lines of Thunder Universe)

Page 12

by Walter Blaire


  “Without tongues, Sethlan, there is no speaking. No ancestors telling tales, sharing our secrets with them. No point even in building a fire for them to visit.”

  “Yes, sir.” Sethlan said. The bringing of tongues was an old Tachba concept from pre-Haphan days. Not the kind of thought a civilized northerner should entertain.

  “When I order their tongues, Sethlan, I mean so much more than merely killing Southies. I mean we must bury them forever, deeper than even the ancestors can dig. We must silence their souls, so they cannot share the wisdom of the dead.”

  Goldros stared over Sethlan’s shoulder. They were only four feet apart, but the colonel spoke as if bridging a vast distance.

  Sethlan wondered what would happen if he leaned out of the colonel’s line of sight. Then he imagined simply shooting the man. It would be a service to the Haphan Overlords. Tachba soldiers who grew old on the front often started circling—went insane—in different ways. It was an unlucky accident that Colonel Goldros had gone still.

  A still officer triggered the superstitions lurking in every soldier. Goldros was immobile and half buried, like a corpse embedded in the trench wall. To credulous eyes, he was a golem of earth and blood, frozen but thinking, dead but speaking. Very suggestive to trench simpletons who saw only a vanishing distinction between life and death. It was a matter of time before the Haphan Overlords noticed Colonel Goldros’s madness and removed him. Until then, he would be regarded as a direct, inerrant channel to the supposed ancestors.

  Sethlan had the feeling that, to Goldros, the tongues were not a figure of speech. “Can you be specific, colonel? Or will any tongues do?”

  “I’ve sent you on raids every night this month. Before you, it was someone else. The men you lost have been paid for. While you fought and died, we discovered a hole in the Southern barbed wire. We have a path into their trenches.”

  Sethlan straightened.

  “This man waiting to the side—” Goldros didn’t indicate him, but left it to Sethlan to glance over. “This is Lieutenant Pleural, an intelligence officer from the 314th Observers. He will show you the opening. You are to clear the enemy trench quietly, without drawing attention. Then search. Find something that would make the Southies clever.”

  “Clever.”

  “The enemy has become altogether too clever, don’t you notice?” The colonel went still, then woke again. “The Southies are our cousins, but they are not like us. They are atavistic primitives. With Haphan beam weapons we could carve through them like pissing in snow, and our only concern would be their vast numbers and the stench of rotting meat. But each year the Southern Tachba tighten themselves. They’re like the boys we induct at ten or twelve. The intemperacy of youth is flensed away under fire. The child is matured by the trench. He knits himself into a man. If he lives long enough, he becomes clever, maybe wise. So too with the South.”

  Sethlan silently agreed. The Southern Tachba had always been individually murderous, even terrifying. Now, collectively, they were worrisome as well. They had perceptibly improved by imperceptible degrees.

  “Sethlan, our enemy is making fewer mistakes. Something has altered their minds. I am slowly learning what changed, and who changed them. The intelligence you recover from this trench raid may be crucial. We are losing the war.”

  “Yes, sir,” Sethlan said, disappointed again. They were always losing the war. It was the constant theme of the Haphans. After last night’s barrage, he couldn’t be paid to care.

  “Let me be specific, Sethlan. We are losing the war within six months. The South will break our line before spring. They will flood into Sessera’s territory and burn it to the ground. The Haphans will fall back in disorder and lose the other Tachba territories they control. The Overlords will be eradicated in a year, all their good works reversed—it will be like losing language and thought at one stroke. We will return to barbarism. We will be no different from the South.”

  Goldros caught Sethlan’s doubtful look. “You think I’m mad, but I am merely old.”

  Sethlan considered that. Madness would make distracting claims and waylay the truth. On the other hand, Goldros was old in a rare way. He was past fifty, in a world where most Tachba died without a single gray hair. Sethlan had no idea how an old, wise Tachba might behave. Perhaps he would be a dirt-covered statue with blazing eyes.

  “I am merely old,” Goldros continued, “and slightly mad.”

  Lieutenant Pleural, the intelligence officer from the 314th Observers, followed Sethlan back to his unit.

  Pleural was slightly mad himself, in the compulsive way that presaged full collapse. He touched the walls every three steps and muttered under his breath—breath that reeked of bourbon.

  On their path through the trenches, they passed groups of men rocking wordlessly, pacing interlooping circles, or sitting still and “thinking small.” It was a circus of maladaptation.

  We are all polluted, Sethlan thought. We are nothing but madness.

  The Haphan Overlords must have been overjoyed to discover his tractable and violent race. All they had to do to conquer half the world was land in giant space ships, kill every Tachba who attacked using spear and sword, and then give food to those who remained. The Pollution took care of the rest. It was as if his people had been explicitly twisted to believe everything the Haphans, or any higher authority, told them. They would obey until madness took them.

  Sethlan’s fugitive thought returned: Not all of us obeyed. The South fought back. The Haphans used their servitor Tachba to fight the southerners. Perhaps the Haphans even wanted this war. Perhaps this war was their cynical method of population control.

  Pleural laughed and pointed to a stacked pair of ammunition crates: Oggie-Gees balanced on top of Doggie-Gees. Offensive grenades over defensive ones. The difference between the two kinds was in their strength and timing. One was suited for advancing toward the enemy, the other was better for slowing pursuit.

  Sethlan saw nothing funny in the munitions crates and gave Pleural a cold glance. Officers were only transferred to an Observer unit when they were found useless for real work. The Haphans didn’t trust them to lead Tachba soldiers. Line officers found their variability unnerving. The front itself seemed to find them inedible, the spit-out gristle of the last great meal.

  Observer officers patrolled between the trenches, going out again and again until madness kept them from returning. In the rolls, these casualties were listed as the “finally dead.”

  Perversely, this thought eased Sethlan’s mind. As an expendable, Pleural explored the enemy trenches every night. He was probably the local expert on this sector of the front.

  When Sethlan found his unit, his remaining men had been gathered by Tejj and Amphy. They filled the narrow trench. Mud smoothed the folds and details of their front-line kit, and hanging dust blurred their features. The very air between them stifled sound. It was bloated with smoke, unbreathable and foul.

  No doubt Colonel Goldros’s order had already reached them through other channels. They knew their assignment. They might even know why tonight was important: they had a rare chance to enter Southern trench. To make the fight personal.

  Sethlan said, “Tonight it’s no kit, no lug. We travel light and fast.”

  “La, no kit, no lug,” Tejj repeated, turning to the men. “So says the captain, and pass the word.”

  His men swarmed up the trench walls and into the air. They slid through clouds of barbed wire, following lines of dark tape laid out earlier by scouts. Behind them came the faint creak of the ladders being lifted down again, like doors closing slowly.

  After years on the front and hundreds of sorties, the deranged landscape between the trenches presented no difficulty to Sethlan’s men. They kept tight order as they bellied over the dirt, even as visibility shrank to just a few yards.

  Lieutenant Pleural pointed out false tape which would send them the wrong direction. He indicated tripwires that would detonate nearby mines. He steered them clear
of firing lanes and areas visible from the southern trenches. In under an hour, Pleural took them almost the entire fifty yards to the enemy line.

  The enemy barbed wire was in sight when the alarm sounded behind them.

  The alarm was simple, soup kettles rung by trenching tools. It was the North giving warning—the South never troubled over their own soldiers.

  “Gas!”

  Amphylon slapped Sethlan’s shoulder. “Passing the word, sir, and we have a gas attack.”

  They were huddled in a shell hole, waiting for Lieutenant Pleural to return from a scout. Sethlan raised his head over the edge and glanced around. His men were a sheet of gray shapes on a grayer landscape. In the distance, more men he couldn’t see.

  His unit numbered seventy, down from ninety the night before. Down from two hundred at the start of the rotation. He had planned to pull some of them through alive. That wouldn’t happen now.

  He had seventy men. Seventy dead men.

  Tejj slid in beside him. “Southie gas falling, sir.”

  Sethlan noticed the numbness at the back of his throat. The smoke drifting through his unit was already tinged poison blue.

  “And no kit nor lug to be found,” Amphylon said.

  Their gas masks were back in the trenches because Sethlan had ordered them to travel light. Because Goldros had ordered him to enter the southern trench. Because Pleural had discovered a gap in the barbed wire…

  Because the Southies had opened it to lure them in.

  Because they had grown clever.

  “I would have brought my mask despite orders,” Amphylon said, “except I’m very disciplined. I’m downright admirable.”

  Oh, Amphy. A wizened old boot like Amphy would never feel the need to shut up. But Sethlan heard no blame in his voice, only grim humor. I am sorry, soldier.

  “Fall back?” Tejj prompted. “Charge up?”

  Sethlan craned his head to look north. The action made him wheeze. Fuck, it’s in my lungs.

  Their home trench was fifty yards away over slow and broken ground. The blue gas was already among them with its noisome smell. There would be no falling back.

  We are an utter write-off. Nothing would remain of Sethlan’s unit but a pile of unused equipment in the trench.

  “Gas!” His men passed the word again, with growing hysteria.

  “Orders, captain?” Tejj asked again, his voice tightly controlled.

  Sethlan swung back to his aide, two feet away but now indistinct. His vision blurred for lack of air. Sethlan ravaged his mind for inspiration, for any way out, while the gas worked into his lungs.

  The gas would pool in the lowest points, the craters and trenches. His men might survive, if only they could raise their chins high enough and breathe through a cloth. He didn’t need to say this. Anything he might have told his soldiers, they already knew.

  He watched his men climb to their feet. They stood in the billowing blue smoke like sentinels.

  Southie bullets began to cut them down.

  Hell and fuck and damn. That oar beetle. My poor boys.

  Sethlan said, “Orders. Tell the boys to breathe deep.”

  His words came out in gasps, but Tejj was no longer next to him.

  The strength left Sethlan’s arms. He collapsed on Amphylon, who was already dead beside him. With numb fingers he opened Amphy’s coat, and then nestled his face into the man’s chest. He wrapped the wax-lined fabric tightly around his head and pressed his mouth into the knit sweater Amphylon wore underneath, some gift from home. Sethlan breathed into the dead man.

  Sethlan’s lungs flooded with pus and blood, but he did not perish. Instead, he drowned for hours and hocked up endless streams of phlegm. At daybreak, a pair of northern scouts stumbled across the fresh new charnel patch of his unit, already glistening with oar beetles. They heard Sethlan bubbling under Amphy’s corpse and pulled him out. They were twins, friendly strangers, curious about his pain. The smarter of the two bound Sethlan’s hands so he would not tear his throat out.

  They brought Sethlan before Colonel Goldros. In his war for air, Sethlan was only aware of two eyes glittering in a dusty face. The face belonged to a mud-caked statue that merged into the trench wall.

  The face spoke. “Good service, boys. This one will make a difference.”

  “Which he’s mostly phlegm, sir.”

  “Tag the captain for the good Haphan medicine, not our usual crud. You found that Tejj boy wandering between the trenches earlier?”

  “Which he’s around here somewhere, crying then laughing. The men are keeping their distance.”

  “Show the captain to him, let him wail, and then tell him I want him for my aide. It’s his choice, but he’s too good to waste. The boy could lead a brigade someday.”

  The boots didn’t like that kind of maneuvering. “Really, colonel? Which even a phlegmy captain needs a helpie.”

  The colonel went still again, for so long this time that the boots turned uncomfortable. The colonel didn’t even appear to be breathing.

  Finally, Colonel Goldros said, “Very well. Let Tejj take care of him in hospital as his lungs grow back. Let’s hope the captain has kept his sanity and keeps it a few months yet.”

  The full novel is coming November 2016! Join the newsletter for updates, news and announcements.

 

 

 


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